I hate losing. I was also very strongly encouraged by what I saw against Tennessee today. The ‘Threes R Us’ offense has evolved into a vastly more impressive and multipronged offense, which after the Northwestern performance I honestly find very reassuring. The improvement since Northwestern is extraordinary.
After having had a chance to read through comments here tonight, I see many here expressing thoughts that I share. In essence, Coach Underwood is an excellent coach overall (recruiting, culture and chemistry and trust, team-building, leadership, offensive strategy, teaching defense, strength and conditioning and nutrition, representing the School, as examples.)
And yet: he and the current staff have evidently not yet been able to effectively teach or incorporate every single aspect of basketball that is needed for a team to win championships (Underwood’s goals, yours I think, and mine). This evaluation, fleshed out briefly below and pertinent to this season’s team, is based on Coach Underwood’s entire body of work at Illinois, and at the programs he led before we were fortunate enough to recruit him here. In my view, improvements needed to finish sculpting a championship-level team include:
--Passing: the issue here is primarily on the perimeter, where every game we throw a lot of casual, low-velocity passes. Some of these get picked off for easy transition baskets for the other team. It would be a good idea to use a few more ball fakes, fake throwing passes I mean.
--Sideline out of bounds: my God are we panicky and unprepared! This can be outright embarrassing at times. We need to devote some practice time to this, ASAP.
--Baseline out of bounds plays. I saw a very good one tonight, so we’re getting better. But we could do -- literally, and I know what the term means -- an order of magnitude better. Bruce Weber's teams absolutely feasted on this action, (like him or not as a coach in general, and he was not my kind of coach
--Defense: getting much, much better but we still handle screens in a black-and-white fashion when it would be smarter to use a variety of approaches depending on individual defender/attacker matchups, location on court, time and score. We can do a little better here.
--Rebounding is getting better. Ben H is just not a rebounder, but he can improve his blocking-out. In general, a bit quicker recognition of emerging blockouts and moving to the ball off the rim around the perimeter would help some. It’s a recognition issue, not physical speed that I’m talking about, and this can be tuned up.
--Handling pressure: we are outrageously suspect against pressure, with our scheme (is there one?) and tactics right now rating “poor” even by the standard of a successful HS team. Yes, I mean that.
--Staff personnel, and probably responsibilities for the various phases of the game, need to be changed in the coming year in order to fill in key gaps. I don’t think this can be improved until next year, but maybe I’m wrong. Coach Underwood is pretty slow to implement effective changes in-game, but remarkably successful over his long career in making game-to-game and season-long changes that dramatically help his teams win.
I have all but certainly missed some issues, but I am confident fellow posters here will correct the errors, oversights, omissions and misguided views expressed here. *wink*
And I want to note that I think this season’s team has extraordinary potential, that the job of molding the team into one that wins championships is very daunting, and that I badly hope and wish that our head coach and his staff (and for Pete’s sakes, the players!) succeed.
ILL ---