College Sports (Basketball)

#76      
Mike Boynton orchestrated arguably the best defense in college basketball history
He had a 7'3 long armed rim protector that was touted as a lottery pick before coming to the US and two physical 6'9 guys that had the ability to guard 1-5(it's incredibly rare in college to have one 6'9 guy that can do that).

Nothing against Boynton but the personnel made that defense special. Just like it was Clingan and Castle that made the 24 UConn defense incredible, not a super revolutionary scheme.

Josh Schertz with the resources that Michigan has is a terrifying thought. Mike Boynton would likely be far more successful than he was at Ok St but is far preferable to them getting Schertz or someone of that caliber.
 
#77      
Obligatory "not to dog pile", because it's easy to argue against Michigan having the best defense in history last year;

But I was curious about actual stats for where Michigan, the number #1 defense last year, was ranked next to other #1 defenses, so I took the last 10 years as a sample set, and used Kenpom's Drtg. It turns out that Michigan was the lowest-rated #1 defense of the last 10 years:

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It seems like the only thing truly remarkable about their defense is that they were the first team since 2013 to be the team with the #1 defense that won the Championship. Otherwise, they were just a physically imposing team, which is why they also had a highly rated offense.
 
#78      
He had a 7'3 long armed rim protector that was touted as a lottery pick before coming to the US and two physical 6'9 guys that had the ability to guard 1-5(it's incredibly rare in college to have one 6'9 guy that can do that).
Mara was the ultimate anchor defensively.

• Opponents shot just 54.7 percent at the rim when Mara was on the court versus 60.6 percent at the rim when he was off the court

• Teams shot just 36.8 percent on non-restricted-area paint shots with him on the court

• teams took only 20.4 percent of their shots at the rim when Mara was on the court

Lendeborg and Morez was also tremendous defensively.

It's a lightning in the bottle situation no doubt. Probably the 3 best defensive players in the country at their respective positions (SF / PF / C).
 
#79      
Obligatory "not to dog pile", because it's easy to argue against Michigan having the best defense in history last year;

But I was curious about actual stats for where Michigan, the number #1 defense last year, was ranked next to other #1 defenses, so I took the last 10 years as a sample set, and used Kenpom's Drtg. It turns out that Michigan was the lowest-rated #1 defense of the last 10 years:

View attachment 50762

It seems like the only thing truly remarkable about their defense is that they were the first team since 2013 to be the team with the #1 defense that won the Championship. Otherwise, they were just a physically imposing team, which is why they also had a highly rated offense.
didn't Tennessee have a be really low defensive rating within last 5 years. like a 79.5 or something? I could be imagining this
 
#80      
Obligatory "not to dog pile", because it's easy to argue against Michigan having the best defense in history last year;

But I was curious about actual stats for where Michigan, the number #1 defense last year, was ranked next to other #1 defenses, so I took the last 10 years as a sample set, and used Kenpom's Drtg. It turns out that Michigan was the lowest-rated #1 defense of the last 10 years:

View attachment 50762

It seems like the only thing truly remarkable about their defense is that they were the first team since 2013 to be the team with the #1 defense that won the Championship. Otherwise, they were just a physically imposing team, which is why they also had a highly rated offense.
The annual trend though, is that offenses are getting better while defenses are getting worse.

Offensive efficiency increases every year. Hence, due to the increasingly potent offenses, the defensive numbers should in theory take a step back.
 
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