On the road by 7:30, and home around 4- 4:30.I love 11am Saturday starts
On the road 915 , home by 2:15-2:30
On the road by 7:30, and home around 4- 4:30.I love 11am Saturday starts
On the road 915 , home by 2:15-2:30
Good post.. Yes, this team is as fun to watch as any I have seen since the mid-50s...Flyin Illini being the exception. What adds so much is the awareness of a freshman bench player who can defend anyone on the perimeter and mostly keep them bottled up. Harris gets the attention of every fan when he is on an outstanding perimeter player who has great handles and can either bury a three at a high rate of get to the rim and finsish. Sencire takes both away most of the time and makes those kind of players work both ends....and they hate it!!!! We don't know what he can contribute for 38 minutes yet, but he does not have to do that...just 15-20 is a huge contribution and sorely needed....and it makes him a hero without having to make free throws in the last minute.I always worry a bit about playing teams that can shoot the three because a hot shooting night is the great equalizer, but I think PSU will struggle a bit with our length and we should be able to get what we want in the paint. It'll be interesting to see who we put on Pickett since his drive and kick game with three or four shooters around him is the core of their offense. I'd like to see us put a bigger guy on him to make his life a bit more difficult, maybe Shannon? Fortunately, we've got three or four guys who are really, really good at staying in front of their man so we should be able to keep Pickett under wraps and hopefully that allows other guys to stay at home a bit on the shooters.
I also hope that Harris gets a few minutes guarding him just because I think it'll be fun as hell to watch. Not relevant to the PSU game, but I think the funniest thing about this year's team is when Sincire gets switched onto a big in the post and just absolutely bodies his guy. He'll get called for it eventually, but last night he went into either Allen or Mitchell at about a full sprint and completely took him out of the play for a few seconds. Kid's like a chihuahua that's got no idea that the mastiff he's barking at is ten times his size, it's awesome.
Agree...don't know why more young players don't work on the John Stockton 'tear drop'/One thing I've noticed is Sky not being super effective in the half court when he dribbles past his defender. He really needs a floater or push shot or some way to score going to the basket other than trying to go over bigs. He's a great athlete but isn't a Derick Rose (young) or Jae Morant type jumper. If can consistently provide this aspect to his game"The Sky's the limit"
His shot blocking is also impressive. Pretty good springs.Good post.. Yes, this team is as fun to watch as any I have seen since the mid-50s...Flyin Illini being the exception. What adds so much is the awareness of a freshman bench player who can defend anyone on the perimeter and mostly keep them bottled up. Harris gets the attention of every fan when he is on an outstanding perimeter player who has great handles and can either bury a three at a high rate of get to the rim and finsish. Sencire takes both away most of the time and makes those kind of players work both ends....and they hate it!!!! We don't know what he can contribute for 38 minutes yet, but he does not have to do that...just 15-20 is a huge contribution and sorely needed....and it makes him a hero without having to make free throws in the last minute.
NOISE, NOISE, NOISE TOMORROW!!!His shot blocking is also impressive. Pretty good springs.
When do we get Bruce again? Thought he was great in the first game he did.Bilas' comment about Illinois "over helping" was probably his only valuable insight.
Not only that one, but 2006 too. *shudders*When do we get Bruce again? Thought he was great in the first game he did.
Maybe after the PSU game would be best…
No need to reminisce over that sh*tshow in ‘09 (38-33)
Not only that one, but 2006 too. *shudders*
Baseball has that now where it grades the umps each game. It's all computer automated though.What we really need is an impartial judge of the reffing each game. I’d love to be validated when I feel like they’re skewing the game against us (but they’d obviously be wrong if they thought it was the other way around).
I remember discussions in the past, sorry I do not remember exactly when, that the coaches "grade" or provide feedback of some sort on the officials each year (possibly each game). Watching the games last night I noticed all coaches going pretty hard at the same officials we see them go at season after season. I gotta believe these certain officials are not highly rated based on this observation year after year. So my question is, what is the B10 doing about the presumed poorly rated officials? They certainly are not being penalized by not doing games. In addition, what is the B10 doing to make sure the officiating is held to a standard of performance and/or improvement? What is the B10 doing to recruit up and coming officials? Why has the league not adopted a policy of hiring full time officials who train and perfect their craft in the off season while games are not occurring? These question exist, in my mind, because it is something the league never communicates about unless their is intense scrutiny - usually involving Mich, OSU. I think I know the answers to most of these questions, but again, without any sort of communication we are left to guess whether those answers are fair or not.Baseball has that now where it grades the umps each game. It's all computer automated though.
Would be awesome to have some sort of tracking of the number of missed calls and an estimated point value to those based on the type of missed call. Then you could estimate how much the refs skewed a game one direction or the other and how well they called the game. Unfortunately, it seems almost impossible to do that in basketball.
I don't think anyone is questioning Skyy has the talent to get the job done. His decision making (see trying to hot dog his way out of a double team and the dunk result vs Texas) makes me want to play Epps more. Epps and Harris just seem more advanced and mature than Clark and Rodgers (Almost no one guessed that pre season)The knee jerk overreactions to players having an off night here is hilarious. Skyy has serious talent. He's a freshman. These guys have only been playing games together for ~4ish months.
Give it a minute.
I remember discussions in the past, sorry I do not remember exactly when, that the coaches "grade" or provide feedback of some sort on the officials each year (possibly each game). Watching the games last night I noticed all coaches going pretty hard at the same officials we see them go at season after season. I gotta believe these certain officials are not highly rated based on this observation year after year. So my question is, what is the B10 doing about the presumed poorly rated officials? They certainly are not being penalized by not doing games. In addition, what is the B10 doing to make sure the officiating is held to a standard of performance and/or improvement? What is the B10 doing to recruit up and coming officials? Why has the league not adopted a policy of hiring full time officials who train and perfect their craft in the off season while games are not occurring? These question exist, in my mind, because it is something the league never communicates about unless their is intense scrutiny - usually involving Mich, OSU. I think I know the answers to most of these questions, but again, without any sort of communication we are left to guess whether those answers are fair or not.
It is fun indeed. I think that all four freshmen are still adjusting to the speed of the game, especially on offense, but what a blessing to have them basically be plug and play on defense. Folks often overlook that there’s an actual skill component to playing D — everyone focuses on effort and the mental side of it, but there are actual skills involved (e.g. footwork, etc.) that need to be learned and often elite athletes are never forced to learn them at lower levels. These guys seem to have those skills already and that’s enormously important.Good post.. Yes, this team is as fun to watch as any I have seen since the mid-50s...Flyin Illini being the exception. What adds so much is the awareness of a freshman bench player who can defend anyone on the perimeter and mostly keep them bottled up. Harris gets the attention of every fan when he is on an outstanding perimeter player who has great handles and can either bury a three at a high rate of get to the rim and finsish. Sencire takes both away most of the time and makes those kind of players work both ends....and they hate it!!!! We don't know what he can contribute for 38 minutes yet, but he does not have to do that...just 15-20 is a huge contribution and sorely needed....and it makes him a hero without having to make free throws in the last minute.
he reminds me of that Tasmanian devil character..............full bore relentless pressure and such a warrior dog..........................It is fun indeed. I think that all four freshmen are still adjusting to the speed of the game, especially on offense, but what a blessing to have them basically be plug and play on defense. Folks often overlook that there’s an actual skill component to playing D — everyone focuses on effort and the mental side of it, but there are actual skills involved (e.g. footwork, etc.) that need to be learned and often elite athletes are never forced to learn them at lower levels. These guys seem to have those skills already and that’s enormously important.
For now, I like Harris in his current role. Just be a human hand grenade coming off the bench, make someone’s life extremely difficult for a couple of minutes, and leave it all out there.
Seemed to me like the refs swallowed their whistles and let Dainja and Mayer play with their 4 fouls so there's that.Great One ! Why do the Illini always get homered, even on Neutral Court. We beat 8 tonight. 5 From Texas and 3 Zebras.
I'm sure if Texas fans cared about basketball, they would be screaming that they were jobbed by the refs.Seemed to me like the refs swallowed their whistles and let Dainja and Mayer play with their 4 fouls so there's that.
In other college sports, officials have day jobs. As a result, the pool you’re pulling from is dictated by availability as much as quality. I assume it’s the same for basketball.I remember discussions in the past, sorry I do not remember exactly when, that the coaches "grade" or provide feedback of some sort on the officials each year (possibly each game). Watching the games last night I noticed all coaches going pretty hard at the same officials we see them go at season after season. I gotta believe these certain officials are not highly rated based on this observation year after year. So my question is, what is the B10 doing about the presumed poorly rated officials? They certainly are not being penalized by not doing games. In addition, what is the B10 doing to make sure the officiating is held to a standard of performance and/or improvement? What is the B10 doing to recruit up and coming officials? Why has the league not adopted a policy of hiring full time officials who train and perfect their craft in the off season while games are not occurring? These question exist, in my mind, because it is something the league never communicates about unless their is intense scrutiny - usually involving Mich, OSU. I think I know the answers to most of these questions, but again, without any sort of communication we are left to guess whether those answers are fair or not.
Some officials can do both at the same time..In other college sports, officials have day jobs. As a result, the pool you’re pulling from is dictated by availability as much as quality. I assume it’s the same for basketball.
I don't understand why they don't have a ref in a separate location with a large tv to be able to see the replay so much quicker and clearer. With 3 officials this may be a little difficult, but in the NFL, adding one more official would be nothing. Does MLB and some leagues already do this?Baseball has that now where it grades the umps each game. It's all computer automated though.
Would be awesome to have some sort of tracking of the number of missed calls and an estimated point value to those based on the type of missed call. Then you could estimate how much the refs skewed a game one direction or the other and how well they called the game. Unfortunately, it seems almost impossible to do that in basketball.
I believe NHL still has a central location that handles the video reviews all over the country so that they don't need an extra person at every venue. But I'm pretty sure replay only occurs on a coach's challenge, so they don't have to be constantly monitoring every game.I don't understand why they don't have a ref in a separate location with a large tv to be able to see the replay so much quicker and clearer. With 3 officials this may be a little difficult, but in the NFL, adding one more official would be nothing. Does MLB and some leagues already do this?
(Dr.) Ed Hightower was the Superintendent of Schools at Edwardsville for 19 years during his 36 year tenure as an NCAA official. Could never figure out how he handled that combination.In other college sports, officials have day jobs. As a result, the pool you’re pulling from is dictated by availability as much as quality. I assume it’s the same for basketball.
THIS is my beef with college football. Asking a referee to run 50 yards sometimes to watch a replay of his call (looking for anything to prove him right) on a tiny little 13" monitor with a bright background often when the call is so obvious a ref in a booth or across the country could change or confirm it in a few secondsI believe NHL still has a central location that handles the video reviews all over the country so that they don't need an extra person at every venue. But I'm pretty sure replay only occurs on a coach's challenge, so they don't have to be constantly monitoring every game.
(Dr.) Ed Hightower was the Superintendent of Schools at Edwardsville for 19 years during his 36 year tenure as an NCAA official. Could never figure out how he handled that combination.