I only watched the whole game entirely focused on Kaminsky. Kaminsky drives around a post player like Tarc in isolation and gets enough space for a reverse layup if the defense doesn't collapse, in which case he dishes to an open and set teammate on the perimeter. And he gets the ball in the high post, passes to the wing and rolls to the perimeter and sets quickly to receive and shoot a 3-pointer. Against a smaller, more athletic lineup, he has more difficulty getting the initial pass and probably the second, and he has less ability to take a quicker defender in isolation. Once he really gets going, Tarc can't guard Kaminsky in the block one-on-one, because he nails turnaround jumpers with virtually no space. I don't know how I feel about this because of other defensive assignments, but on the few possessions RHJ guarded Kaminsky, Kaminsky was rendered useless by the havoc, quickness, and length.
The other thing that doesn't get noticed is that Kaminsky can't guard Tarc one-on-one. Tarc overpowers him, and given just enough space, shoots short midrange jumpers right over him. The difficulty in the first game, though, was that Kaminsky was able to find more ways of scoring on Tarc. When Tarc got benched and Gordon got the assignment, Arizona lost its ability to score in the paint. Gordon's main contribution for the game was an uncharacterstic 3-pointer during overtime, but he couldn't score down low or (obviously) at midrange in positions that Ashley would eat Wisconsin alive. I think this may be why Miller put Tarc back into the game midway through overtime.
Chicat wrote:They're the most efficient offense, but they're 65th in scoring. I encourage them to slow it down all they want, because if they aren't getting offensive rebounds then I think Arizona is going to get out to a lead that I'm not sure the Badgers have the firepower to come back from.
I agree, though they certainly do have the firepower if the defense allows players 1-6 to set up behind the arc. I know the percentages don't reflect that, but they shoot really well when playing from behind. Stanley isn't the same perimeter defender he was a month ago. He knows exactly what to do now. As for rebounds, the theory is that Tarc creates rebounding opportunities for others, even if he isn't grabbing them himself. If his minutes are limited, that possibility comes into play, but I'm not overly concerned with that. Arizona is an elite defensive rebounding team, period.