Right, none of this matters when IL blows out an opponent 116 to 65, as we did in this game (or anything close to that). Heck, be happy if we just win, which I admit we definitely did by a wide margin against Ottawa.
But you caught my complaint on shooting too many 3s in about 80% of our games last season, right? Okay, but I'm complaining about a bunch of other wins there too, so let me ignore about half of those, and just focus in on our 13 losses from last season.
I added that to the spreadsheet tonight, got score differentials (always negative for an IL loss by my convention), then I added what more we would have scored in those games had we maximized our scoring based on whichever shots (2s or 3s) was proving most effective for us in that game (which I forced to be always positive to maximize our score). Sure, this assumes we could make real-time adjustments to our shot selection w/o altering these percentages and/or changing the quality of these shots. The result was that out of our 13 losses last season we could have won 12 of them! The only game that looked unwinnable this way was the game we lost at Indiana by 3 pts, in a game where we struck almost a perfect balance in our pts-per-shot on 2s vs. our pts-per-shot on 3s, so maximizing this couldn't much help us.
So, unless you figure that the Illini are going undefeated this season, then, as soon as we lose (say this coming Sunday against KU or two games later against Marquette or eventually, if you stick with having at least one loss on the season), then that loss (or those losses) probably would have been turned into a win (or wins) had we just maximized our scoring in this way.
BTW, if you are really thinking about this deeply, and you are thinking this "maximizing" means going all or nothing on the 3s, then you are on the right track. Basically, in these extremes, it means we are literally getting all 2s because we figured out (near the very start of the game) we do that best on that night. Or, conversely and more rarely, we figure out that we're killing it from 3 and we go with nothing but 3s since near the start of the game, since that was working for us that night. And, yes, the maximization requires that our opponents don't notice that we went all-in on 2s (more often) or we went all-in-on-3s (less often) and they keep guarding us just the same, but that essentially what is happening when this stuff is maximized. To keep it sane though, the difference in the losing score and maximizing or scoring often didn't require us to get every last point in this way. For example, if we left even 4 pts unacquired by mixing thing up (to confuse our defending opponents), then we could have still won 9 of the 13 games we lost last season. And even less predictably, had we left 18 points unacquired, we still could have won 8 of the 13 games we lost last season. That could mean going about 20+8=28 wins and just 13-8=5 losses (not counting the very likely extension of our BT and NCAA tourney play). That is certainly nothing to sneeze at, something I think Underwood would be wise to do. Simply pay more attention to what is working that night go with it. Most of time, this simply means "stop shooting so darn many 3s when your team isn't that good at shooting 3s". That simple logic could have won us a bunch of games we lost last season, and it can work the same this season too (even with Goode heathy and Domask on the team), if we wise up.