Because he's a legend in his own mind.Do you think it's a negative thing to call someone a dumbass?
Do you think calling a player terrible is a negative thing?
Why do you make point blank concrete statements about what a coach 'needs to do' if you don't have any actual inside information or experience from within the program or team?
Not only what TJ needs to do, but he also has said that TJ is making decisions arbitrarily, which @ZRF obviously has no way of knowing.Do you think it's a negative thing to call someone a dumbass?
Do you think calling a player terrible is a negative thing?
Why do you make point blank concrete statements about what a coach 'needs to do' if you don't have any actual inside information or experience from within the program or team?
Because he's a legend in his own mind.
TJ is 1000% not doing things arbitrarily and I know that for a fact. The man always has a plan. Sometimes the plan doesn't work but that's just life in college basketball, let alone the Big 12.
This lineup is the best in the country according to Evan Miyakawa
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Additionally these are how the players grade out on our team. Minimum 300 possessions
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I don't know, @ZRF was really, really adamant that TJ was arbitrarily limiting Ward's time.TJ is 1000% not doing things arbitrarily and I know that for a fact. The man always has a plan. Sometimes the plan doesn't work but that's just life in college basketball, let alone the Big 12.
Is making these kinds of statements...an arbitrary decision within itself?
RE Ward and Jones - after adding last night Ward is slightly ahead of Jones in Adj. Offense Eff. Jones is better in every other category. These are for the whole season, but they are adjusted for opponent:The bold simply is not true. I have no idea where you are getting these "numbers" from.
Ward actually leads the team in BPM during conference play. Better than Lipsey, better than Keshon...CuJo...everyone INCLUDING BRE. That's not to say BRE has played bad, he hasn't. What is abundantly clear is that length and athleticism become more valuable against elite competition (ie athleticism) which is exactly what happens during big 12 play. Relative to the rest of the year Pavs is passable against weak competition while Jones is borderline elite. The lack of athleticism is almost never exploited on the defensive end whereas moves constituting an utter lack of footspeed work. But in the Big 12? That **** doesn't work, and especially against mobile bigs (like a Disu or when we played Uconn last year) Rob's weaknesses are magnified. Hell, the entire team's weaknesses get magnifified but it's those extremely unathletic players that struggle moreso.
In a game with the lead Otz needs to utilize better rotations, leaning on his athletic mobile players that can defend, cover the floor, and maybe more importantly guard the 3. Lipsey, CuJo, Ward, Watson (he becomes more valuable here), Keshon, and even Milan are better players to have out there.
Ward is a better passer, defender, weakside defender, rebounder, transition player, rotational player, and a superior disruptor to Jones. Jones' big advantage on Ward his his moves/shot in the post. He has a superior hook/short range jumper. At the end of the game, ESPECIALLY with the lead and against a player like Disu, Ward is the infinitely better player to have on the floor. The eye test says it. The advance stats say it. It's not even close.
I'd be willing to be a large sum of money, if one could ask Big 12 coaches in confidence, who we should have on the floor at the end of the game I can guarantee you Ward would be the consensus answer. It's not a knock on Jones as much as it is stating Ward is the better player, and the player best suited for those situations.
I'm sorry, anyone that can't see Pavs is out of his league in Big 12 play is either blind, ignorant, or both. Putting him in any meaningful game when not ABSOLUTELY necessary is handicapping our ability to win. Don't believe what I said, just click on the link below. Then compare and contrast non-con to in-conference performance. It's pretty clear who should play (or play more) and who should sit. Both on the overall and situationally.
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T-Rank Player Stats - Customizable College Basketball Tempo Free Stats - T-Rank
T-Rank College Basketball Ratings and Rankings. And fun.barttorvik.com
Texas loves to try and speed you up with their guards and athletic bigs and that's exactly what they did. Now, they're not as fundamentally sound as other defensive teams and we took advantage of that. They tried jumping a lot of passes that ended up being buckets for us. The one that comes to mind is Tamin's final three pointer where Mitchell tried jumping the passing lane and Tamin hit a monstrous shot.I haven't seen it mentioned here yet so I will do so, Did it feel to anyone else that even though we don't try to play super fast, there were many possessions last night that felt out of control last night? Seemed like so often we lost control of the ball or took a hail mary pass or shot that didn't have a prayer of success. It worked out so not wanting to be overly critical here and we only had 1 turnover in the 2nd half (and that wasn't a live ball one)
Maybe it was just all the "handsy" play last night but, I had an uneasy feeling sometimes with our lack of control last night.
I haven't seen it mentioned here yet so I will do so, Did it feel to anyone else that even though we don't try to play super fast, there were many possessions last night that felt out of control last night? Seemed like so often we lost control of the ball or took a hail mary pass or shot that didn't have a prayer of success. It worked out so not wanting to be overly critical here and we only had 1 turnover in the 2nd half (and that wasn't a live ball one)
Maybe it was just all the "handsy" play last night but, I had an uneasy feeling sometimes with our lack of control last night.
I haven't seen it mentioned here yet so I will do so, Did it feel to anyone else that even though we don't try to play super fast, there were many possessions last night that felt out of control last night? Seemed like so often we lost control of the ball or took a hail mary pass or shot that didn't have a prayer of success. It worked out so not wanting to be overly critical here and we only had 1 turnover in the 2nd half (and that wasn't a live ball one)
Maybe it was just all the "handsy" play last night but, I had an uneasy feeling sometimes with our lack of control last night.
Do you ever get tired talking in circle?
If you hate my posts so much why no just put me on ignore? Wouldn't that make your life so much better?
I agree with Blum that we are a no. 3 seed knocking on the door of a 2 seed. Maybe too early to speculate, but I'll say it. If we somehow beat Houston and win the regular season title ( and make a deep run in the conference tourney), you almost have to put us in the conversation for No. 1 seed, wouldn't they? Can't leave the conference champion of the best conference in the NCAA out of talk for No. 1, the way I look at it.
Texas loves to try and speed you up with their guards and athletic bigs and that's exactly what they did. Now, they're not as fundamentally sound as other defensive teams and we took advantage of that. They tried jumping a lot of passes that ended up being buckets for us. The one that comes to mind is Tamin's final three pointer where Mitchell tried jumping the passing lane and Tamin hit a monstrous shot.
That and man I thought those rims were tight.The 'missed bunnies' thing imo gets overplayed and this aspect doesn't get acknowledged enough.
A lay up or good look at like a 5 footer gets different if you're anticipating someone coming in to alter the shot.
I've noticed that sometimes when they are rolling, they try to go for the big shiny highlight play, and overreach and turn it back over or clunk it somehow.I keep saying it but impatience seems to be something this team falls into.
I think it may be an effect of all the chaos they create on defense and that kind of rhythm bleeds into their own possessions.