7.30.2008

Prosser's death hasn't changed coaches on the recruiting grind

"This is not tough. Sitting in a gym all day and watching games is not tough. This is the lifeline of your program. It's not the X's and O's. It's the Jimmys and Joes. "

--West Virginia assistant Billy Hahn

FROM ESPN.com July 29
By Dana O'Neil

LAS VEGAS -- Before NCAA rules required coaches to come off the road during the July recruiting period, Billy Gillispie would pack his bags and go.

Not just a little carry-on. He'd pack up every last stitch of clothing in his closet, every personal memento or trinket. All of it.

"I'd get an 11-month lease and pack everything up [for storage], forward my mail to my office and not come back 'til August," Gillispie said. "I loved it."

A year ago, college basketball paused in shock and grief to bury former Wake Forest coach Skip Prosser. Many college basketball coaches had flown on the same red-eye that Prosser took -- in the endless search for new talent from the Las Vegas tournaments to the Orlando AAU event a day earlier -- and were sitting in the stands of Disney's Milk House when the news of Prosser's death began to spread.

Even miles away in Vegas, the mood shift was palpable. Coaches who still remained in town that Thursday looked haggard and worn, some still asking if the news was really true.

Sudden, shocking deaths often lead to promises of change and restructure. After Lyle Alzado's death, athletes vowed to avoid steroids; and Len Bias' untimely passing was supposed to scare people off cocaine.

Prosser's passing was no different. In the days immediately following his July 26, 2007, death from a heart attack, coaches nodded their heads and agreed that the recruiting cycle had become too demanding, that coaches were wearing themselves out with crazy travel calendars and unhealthy eating habits.

Yet last week, planes stuffed with coaches trying to see the last game in the desert and the first one in Orlando still left Las Vegas in the wee hours. The P.F. Chang's near the Strip remained jammed with coaches at 11 p.m., just then grabbing their dinners, and In-N-Out Burger drive-throughs saw a steady stream of rental cars, their drivers too busy to stop and actually get out of the car to eat.

Nothing has changed at all, and it's not just because the rules dictate it.

It's because coaches' hard wiring would be short-circuited if things ever really changed.

"We all secretly love it," Michigan coach John Beilein said. "Most of us have been doing this all of our lives. We don't know what a July vacation is and to be honest, I've never packed my bags with regret. I look forward to it, most of us do."

Spend the recruiting week in Vegas and you're bound to hear laments about the travel grind and faulty GPS systems to navigate from one gym to the next. Coaches will stuff themselves with hot dogs at gym concession stands and then wonder how in the world they came to Vegas, a town filled with top restaurants, and managed never to eat anything good.

Life on the summer recruiting trail is an endless, tiring month of games and cross-country travel. But good luck getting one coach to take an AAU tournament off.

They will bemoan the nasty case of bleacher butt and wander aimlessly in parking lots, pointing their remotes in the hopes that their car will click back its location.

But they will also sit in the stands and tell war stories as they laugh and smile like kids reuniting at the annual summer camp jamboree.

This is as comfortable to them as putting together a game plan or drawing up an inbounds play.

"I think like all jobs, there are pluses and minuses," College of Charleston coach Bobby Cremins said. "But we love to be in the gyms. We love to be around good players and watch good games. I don't think this had anything to do with Skip's death. I really don't."

Competitive by nature, coaches view recruiting as just another season they have to win. They spend hours folded into the bleacher seats because they want to make sure they don't miss anything and (perhaps even more so) that the other guy doesn't find anything.

Just listen to the language: schools "lose out" on a prospect or get "beat out." The implication is obvious -- someone worked harder, went to more games, opted for more hoops over dinner.

You may not win a recruit, but you surely can lose one.

So they will spend hours in the gym babysitting kids from whom they already have commitments, lest it looks as if they've lost interest and thereby have opened the door for a competitor to swoop in and undo a verbal commitment.

They'll search for that undiscovered talent (Bob McKillop discovered Stephen Curry here and Beilein spied Joe Alexander) and salivate over unsigned kids who dangle like carrots (the star coach power quotient ratcheted up a few notches every time 2009 top talents Kenny Boynton and Renardo Sidney played in Vegas).

"Sometimes I think this is the most important thing we do, more important than coaching games," new South Carolina coach Darrin Horn said.

Back in the day, camps were smaller. Cremins remembered attending the old Nike camp in Princeton, where afternoons without games allowed for a tennis match against former Princeton coach Pete Carril.

No more. Most camps feature rising sophomores, juniors and seniors. Pair that with a condensed NCAA recruiting calendar, and there's no choice but to pack a day with dawn-to-dusk hoops. At the Reebok All-American camp in Philadelphia, officials had to eliminate what was supposed to be a two-hour break between sessions because the camp drew more players than expected.

In Las Vegas, games tip off between 8 a.m. and 9 p.m., sometimes in gyms as far apart as 45 minutes.

"There are days where I walk into a gym and think, 'Do I eat or do I go to the bathroom?'" Beilein said. "Three hours will go by, and I realize I've done neither."

Coaches wear their dietary blunders like badges of courage. Gillispie ate at a McDonald's. Beilein showed off his crunchy peanut butter protein bar before putting it back in his pocket. It was 4:30 in the afternoon, and he still hadn't had lunch.

Like a creepy subspecies of hoops zombies, they all have survival tricks and proudly share them like insider tips on stocks. Villanova associate head coach Brett Gunning found an all-you-can eat sushi spot that fills you up fast and is conveniently located near a couple gyms. Texas coach Rick Barnes' scout pre-scouted a yoga place for him. Beilein never leaves his room, not even to fill an ice bucket, without his ID.

"You'll have your key but the problem is you don't remember what room number it's for," he said. "Is it 306 or 406 or 506? They all run together, so you have to bring your ID. That way you can go down to the front desk and tell them, 'I have my room key, I just don't know where to go.'"

Without fail, the conversation will turn to where have you been and where are you going as coaches discuss itineraries made by sociopathic travel agents. Las Vegas isn't exactly close to Orlando, yet the two mega tourneys bump right into one another, turning late-week red-eyes into coaches' express jets.

It is only then, when they crisscross the country, that they give pause to think about Prosser. It is a momentary reflection at best.

"You can't dwell on it," McKillop said. "You just can't because you can't change it."

At the beginning of July, West Virginia assistant Billy Hahn drove to Bethany Beach, Del., for a two-day vacation. On July 4, a Friday, he drove from Delaware to the Philadelphia airport and boarded a flight to Akron, Ohio, for the LeBron James Skills Academy. Three days later, on Monday morning, he drove from Akron back to Morgantown to "pass the baton" (NCAA rules allow only three coaches on the road at one time, so one coach literally has to come off the road so another can go out).

That night, July 7, Hahn drove from Morgantown to the Pittsburgh airport and flew back to Philadelphia. He fetched his car that had been sitting in long-term parking since he got back from Bethany Beach. The next morning, he checked in at the Reebok All-American Camp. Technically he stayed in Philly three days, but one day he watched the morning sessions in Philly, drove to Ewing, N.J., for the Eastern Invitational team camp in the afternoon and drove back to Philadelphia for the night games. When the Philly camp ended, he headed to Lawrenceville, N.J., for the Summer Classic.

On July 13, the following Sunday, Hahn then drove back to Morgantown for the last two days of Jamfest in West Virginia. NCAA rules took him off the road for a week, but on July 21, he drove to Pittsburgh where he boarded a flight to Las Vegas. On the morning of July 24, he flew out of Vegas so he could pass the baton in Morgantown again. That night, he went back to the Pittsburgh airport so he could fly to Orlando. Hahn was back on duty through the weekend there. On Monday, he flew back into Pittsburgh and drove back to Morgantown. But on Tuesday, he headed back to New Jersey.

That's 8,490 miles, seven states, a handful of five-hour car rides and two cross-country flights.

And West Virginia already had its incoming class for 2009 completed.

Yet you never met a man giddier than Hahn.

"This is the best thing in the world," he said as he sat in the stands alongside his son, Matt, an assistant at Vermont who clearly has the hoops gene in his blood. "This is not tough. Sitting in a gym all day and watching games is not tough. This is the lifeline of your program. It's not the X's and O's. It's the Jimmys and Joes."

Certainly not everyone is quite as ebullient as Hahn and Gillispie. McKillop admitted he is more "immune" to the schedule than in love with it, and Saint Joseph's head coach Phil Martelli believes in the need for balance. He'll send his assistant coaches home every third or fourth day so they can reconnect with their families.

But as the anniversary of Prosser's death passed, the coaches were still out there. The recruiting season ends on July 31, and there are still gyms to visit.

Frankly, there is nowhere these guys would rather be.

"If this is work, then life is pretty good," Texas' Barnes said. "I'm sitting in a gym, talking with my friends, watching games. How awful can it be?"

7.29.2008

Book Notes: "Cinderella: Inside the Rise of Mid-Major College Basketball"

Nearly two-thirds through the book, here are my unorganized notes thus far.

This book definitely makes my mandatory reading list for coaches. It provides incredible depth into the dynamics of mid-major budgets, scheduling, staffing, recruiting, facilities, AD roles, and the importance of post season play, the uneven playing field, and philosophies of successful mid-major programs. The financially driven decisions seem to dictate the direction most of these programs go.

Jay Bilas says "basketball is a game of resources"

He says the disparity in resources "makes it more difficult to recruit, to retain coaches, to get exposure, and to schedule quality opponents. Still, the coaches, players, and administrations seem to have the same expectations."

He outlines mid-majors have it tougher in 4 areas:

1. recruiting: "some coaches can lose with talent, but no coach can win without it". He notes that all the rules make it harder for mid-majors to outwork majors.

2. retaining coaches: unreasonable expectations contribute to the need for coaches to trade up quickly for a higher paying job rather than wait around to be fired.

3. television exposure: Bilas says, "television exposure, not whether a team can really play, is the most significant difference between the majors and mid-majors." He says TV exposure "affects everything from scheduling, to recruiting, to perceptions of accomplishment". Interesting to note that he points out several mid-major conferences including the WCC are one bid conferences and the power of having 2 bids is significant. Since the publishing of the book, the WCC moved into the late Big Monday spot on ESPN. They had 3 bids last season.

4. scheduling: the home team wins nearly 70 percent of the time. Big budget teams play at home and buy games. Thats what fills the arena and season tickets, keeps coaches their job, and playing a mid-major on the road is a lose/lose proposition. If they win, they were supposed to. If they lose, its a catastrophe.

Bilas says that kids leaving for the NBA draft helps level the field somewhat.

Other Notes:

ODU's Blaine Taylor frequently says it takes everybody "rowing in the same direction."

Tom Pecora of Hofstra listed 4 keys to winning a game:
1. championship possessions (he uses this more than once)
2. defend the post with passion
3. our stops will lead to scores
4. attack and handle pressure

"it's one thing to play a tough schedule and its another to lose those tough games."

Jeff Capel says winning is "the most important thing for job security." He says, "theres an old line: 'if your administration is complaing about your team's graduation rates, you're about to be fired"

Capel said his dad always said, "never lose control of your schedule."

"The most distinct and beautiful statement of any truth must take at last the mathematical form." -Henry David Thoreau

After a tough loss, Jeff Capel rode his team for being selfish. He corrected himself and offered an apology. He said if the team was being selfish, someone would've grabbed ten rebounds. Instead, he said, "you were all out for yourselves."

Blaine Taylor said mid-major ball is like a triple crown. The upped tier teams in a conference play twice in the regular season and will meet in the postseason tournament. "The idea is to beat the best teams more often than not."

Brad Brownell of UNCW said his home court advantage: "i think over the years, any place that's had success and is difficult to play, the first factor is because you have good players."

Tom Pecora says he was fortunate to be able to make mistakes on the JC level where he could hone his craft.

Pecora plays zone early in the year because teams have not had much time working on their zone offense. He doesn't go over other team's personnel directly but rather will work on what they will do against the other team in drills.

Pecora has a "no shoot around policy". He wants his guys to be excited to show up at the gym. He says getting used to the shooting background is coaches justifying their existence in a gym. He does walk throughs at pregame meal where they will go over video, get quizzed, then walk through on a court that is taped down on the dining room carpet.

Before games, Pecora has his team stand and join hands, and bow heads. There is no prayer, Pecora just asks everyone to close their eyes and take a minute to think about "win". Not winning, just win.

Christmas break is a good time to throw all the players out of practice. It breaks the monotony and attempts to refocus the players duing a time when finals, homesickness, holiday cheer, dorms are vacant, & bodies are breaking down. Its a good time for needed rest.

Hofstra was a classic example of how international recruiting ties can work. A Lithuanian commit said, "if one Lithuanian could play here and be comfortable, I figured it could be the same with me."

Pecora says, "when players come for an official visit and some here speaks their language, right away there is a comfort level and thats huge. And the their families back home feel more comfortable as well."

Jim Larranaga says, "As a coach, you cant get hung up on the end result. You have to look at the process. Are we rebounding, are we defending? Are we making our free throws? You're always dissapointed when you lose, but you have to evaluate: Did we do the things we need to do to win? We've adopted a philosophy: What we have to do is be great at what we do."

The biggest diffence in the CAA and Missouri Valley in 05-06 was that the Missouri Valley's teams won from top to bottom. The bottom third of the MVC didn't play big games (or buy games) but won some games. The bottom tier of the CAA got buy games vs. SEC, Big East games on the schedule but lost them all which hurt the conference RPI. In the MVC the top teams play the heavyweights, and the bottom teams schedule wins.

The CAA commissior Don Yeager said the secret is "just win games, really. I don't care who you beat, just win games."

Tom Percora knew he had to start a young freshman but alleviate the any nerves, he didn't give the kid time to think about it and told him only 5 minutes before the game.

Pecora teaches his kids time management, sense of preparation. He teaches them how to dress. He has a guy come in to talk about gambling and a guy talk about handling the media.

"The only use of an obstacle is to be overcome. All that an obstacle does with brave men is, not to frighten them, but to challenge them." - Woodrow Wilson

"When I was younger I didn't think putting four players on the baseline was coaching, now that I'm older it's great." Tom Pecora on how he exploits mismatches or uses a hot player.

A couple nice paragraphs about teams:
"The group eats, lives, trains, works, shares, and plays together for a significant portion of their waking hours. They fight for the same goals, both on and off the court. When one of them hurts, they all feel the pain."

"For the kids, the game is their bond. It is the great equalizer in any conversation, transcending backgrounds and upbringing. It is what each player, coach, trainer, and manager can point to as the basis for their togetherness. After all, the player have been doing this since they were about 5 years old. Coaches, too."

"It is an odd bound, too, since they compete for floor time. One man's sprained ankle is another man's oppurtunity. The competition is always there, and actually spawns togetherness. They all feel the pain because at some point in their basketball lives, each has felt that pain."


Blaine Taylor after one of his players was shot and the team had to play two nights later: "I'm proud of our maturity, our kids did a good job compartmentalizing [the situation]." He makes a nice point in that maturity can be directly related to how well kids compartmentalize different aspects of their lives and different parts of the game. Being able to separate a bad day at school and practive or separating a cold shooting day from affecting defense is maturity.

"The art of field goal precentage comes down to two things," Jim Larranaga says. "One, make a shot; two, get shots you want to make."

Blaine Taylor thinks coaches don't give other teams enough credit sometimes. He says, "the story is not what we did not do, it's what they did."

Blaine Taylor had a "take-no-prisoners" practice. He told his team he's "burning the stat sheets, burn the roles. I'm starting over."

"There is a real magic in enthusiasm. It spells the difference between mediocrity and accomplishment...It gives warmth and good feeling to all your personal relationships." -Norman Vincent Peale

The author's main theme seemed to be hammered home in one line regarding George Mason's final four run: "It also serves notice. This is what happen with opportunity." He really waves the flag for giving the mids a chance to prove themselves vs. majors on level playing field.

"Win your games and everything else will follow."

Author rightly and consitantly argues that mid-major doesn't really define anything. Kyle Whelliston says the closest analogy is that mid majors are like AAA minor league baseball compared to the power conferences playing in the big leagues.

Darren Rovell of ESPN.com said George Mason received between $5 million & $10 million in marketing value by their final four run.

Tom Yeager, commission of CAA, said everything the conference does for the 20 sports it sponsors is run through basketball. He compared the attention he gives to basketball as compared to the success the CAA has in minor sports by saying, "Don't win warmups".

CAA coach of the year Brad Brownell left for a job in a smaller conference after feeling slighted by the 2 year deal offered by his AD. The AD was not happy that the X's and O's guru Brownell was unwilling to schmooze alumni and donors.

Tom Pecora said, "people get blind by ambition, but quality of life for someone like me is very important."

Tom Yeager said not only did the conference's check of 2.1 million for the tournament success help, the biggest thing was "that it provided credibility to the fan base of this league. For all those fans that love their team but in the back of their mind wonder...it translates into better belief."

7.07.2008

Scouting Perceptions & the Myth of Measureables

Draftexpress.com does an amazing job with their draft and prospect coverage. Recently they compiled a database of predraft measurements spanning the decade. In studying it, I came away with several thoughts.

First, i'm firm believer that measurables lie. Here's a couple thoughts:

What is the value of measuring height from heal to top of head. What value does a head and long neck serve?

I understand measuring height without shoes eliminates the shoe variable but honestly how much of a purpose does it serve considering its a game normally played with shoes.

SCOUTING PERCEPTIONS MYTHS

The labels scouts, announcers, writers, and coaches put on players stick. The image that you conjure up of a player that is "long & athletic" is considerably different than the image u get when a player has "good size & hustles".

There is a big difference when you get an athlete that's labeled a 7-footer and an athlete that is 6'9.

MATCH UP THE MEASURABLES

An interesting way to evaluate this years players is to match the measurables to the athlete. The following 6 athletes and their measurements are randomly scattered below:

Joey Dorsey
Trent Plaisted
Sasha Kaun
Michael Beasley
Darell Arthur
Kevin Love

PROSPECT NUMBER Height w/o Shoes Height w/shoes
Wingspan Standing Reach
Max Vert Bench Press Lane Agility 3/4 Court Sprint

PROSPECT 1
6' 9.25"6' 10.25"
6' 10.5"

30.5
35.514

11.323.17

PROSPECT 2
6' 6.25"6' 7.25"
7' 1.75"

27.533.019
11.843.20

PROSPECT 3
6' 7"6' 8.25"
7' 0.25"

30.035.019
11.063.24

PROSPECT 4
6' 7.75"6' 9.5"
6' 11.25"

29.535.018
11.173.22


PROSPECT 5
6' 7.5"6' 8.5"
6' 10.75"

28.530.012
12.183.14

PROSPECT 6
6' 9"6' 10.75"
7' 6"

29.0
32.01312.063.20



SO WHO & WHAT IS "LONG"?

I would surmise that "long" would perhaps equate to wingspan and standing reach. By the numbers then, I'd say Prospect 6 is longest and Prospect 2 is 2nd. If you argue that "long" includes height then I'd say Prospect 3 & 4 gain value.

RANKINGS: LONG = WINGSPAN + STANDING REACH

1.PROSPECT 6 200 combined inches
2.PROSPECT 2 192.75
3.PROSPECT 3 191.25
4.PROSPECT 5 189.75
5.PROSPECT 4 189.25
6.PROSPECT 1 188

By this definition of "Long", Sasha Kaun is longest by far with Joey Dorsey second longest. Michael Beasley and Kevin Love are within 1 percentile of each other in length followed by Darrell Arthur and lastly, Trent Plaisted. Interestingly, Shan Foster is 188 combined and Pat Calathes is a combined 187.75.

If height deserves to be mentioned as part of this attractive "Long" characteristic then the rankings look like this:

RANKINGS: LONG = WINGSPAN + STANDING REACH + HEIGHT

1.PROSPECT 6 281 combined inches
2.PROSPECT 2 271
3.PROSPECT 3 270.25
4.PROSPECT 5 269.25
5.PROSPECT 4 269
6.PROSPECT 1 269.25

By this definition there is practically no difference in "length" between Michael Beasley, Kevin Love, Trent Plaisted, Darell Arthur, and Joey Dorsey but if you picture each of these athletes you would see distinctly different body types. On the other hand, Kansas Russian big man Sasha Kaun (PROSPECT) is very long which only translated to 7.1 points and 3.9 rebounds per game.


WHO & WHAT IS ATHLETIC?

The best place to find athletes is probably at a track meet so falling in love with runners and leapers doesn't seem functional for building a basketball team. Consistantly guys are raved about being "a big time athlete". For instance, NBADraft.net described Darrell Arthur as having "tremendous athleticism", "bigtime hops and laterall quickness" and having a "quick, explosive vertical leap". But if leaping ability, agility, and speed are the most common indicators of athleticism it is interesting who is labeled those appealing athletic traits and who is not.

MAX VERTICAL LEAP RANKINGS

1.TRENT PLAISTED 35.5'
2.KEVIN LOVE 35'
2.MICHAEL BEASLEY 35'
4.JOEY DORSEY 33'
5.SASHA KAUN 32'
6.DARELL ARTHUR 30'

LANE AGILITY RANKINGS

1.MICHAEL BEASLEY 11.06
2.KEVIN LOVE 11.17
2.TRENT PLAISTED 11.32
4.JOEY DORSEY 11.84
5.SASHA KAUN 12.06
6.DARELL ARTHUR 12.18

3/4 COURT SPRINT RANKINGS

1.DARELL ARTHUR 3.14
2.TRENT PLAISTED 3.17
4.JOEY DORSEY 3.20
5.SASHA KAUN 3.20
5.KEVIN LOVE 3.22
6.MICHAEL BEASLEY 3.24

Of these 6 players, Trent Plaisted seems to be the big time athlete that is the most athletic and explosive. Kevin Love is faster in the 3/4 court than Beasley, has the same vertical, and is a tenth of a second slower in the lane agility drill. Teammates Sasha Kaun and Darell Arthur are an interesting comparison. Kaun has 2 inches on the vertical, .12 seconds in the lane drill, but is .06 of second slower in the 3/4 court sprint. Kaun is 6'9 and 247 lbs., while Arthur is 6'7.5 and 216 lbs. No where in Kaun's description is he explosive, athletic, or a "big time" athlete. He is described as having "good hustle", "solid agility for a big man", and a "level of energy".

BENEFITS OF MEASUREMENTS

While I think measurements bring little value to the table, I do believe you can gather information about a prospect from some of the numbers. For instance, I think that a player's body fat percentage can tell u how serious a player is about taking care of his body or it can tell you a little bit about the schools strength & conditioning program he comes from. In some instances I'd be excited to see the potential if a player got in elite shape but in other cases I'd see red flags that a player isn't committed to putting himself in the best position to succeed. An example of this is Jason Maxiell who was a very productive college player that was only 6'5 without shoes but had the 4th largest wingspan of those in the 2005 draft. More importantly, he had plenty of production. The fact that he produced as a 258lb. wide body made the intrigue of his potential when he changed his body that much more enticing.

In addition, measurements provide another tool of analysis but should be kept in perspective. Measuring production and those things you cannot put a number on such as effort and desire may be the best indicators of success.

7.02.2008

Seeing Basketball Through the Football Lens

A HIGH SCHOOL COACH POSTED SOME NOTES FROM A RICH RODRIGUEZ MICHIGAN FOOTBALL CLINIC THAT MADE ITS WAY ONTO BOSCHEMBLOGGER.COM.

I THINK A LOT OF WHAT THEY COVER CAN APPLY TO BASKETBALL. MY COMMENTS ARE IN CAPS.

HERE ARE THE RE-PRODUCED NOTES:

Rich Rodriguez:

Conditioning is the most underrated thing in football.

This is how Coach R Rod recommends teaching his offense:
-- #1 teach from back end up: teach RBs and QBs 1st and then to slots, Olinemen and SEs.
-- #2, Shrink what the defense can do, this gives you less to prepare for and makes reads and blocking the defense easier.
-- #3, Attack the defense where they are not, make them run to cover you, either high to low, or east to west.
-- #4, Make them defend what they are defending. If defense is trying to take away RB in QB read option, make them defend the RB before using QB.
-- #5 QB gives the defense a false snap look to fake defense into tipping what they are doing. After this coaches will take 2nd read of defense and signal new play/scheme to QB.

I AGREE THAT CONDITIONING IS UNDERRATED ESPECIALLY SINCE IT IS A CONTROLLABLE ASPECT OF PREPARATION. I LIKE #2, WHERE I THINK IN BASKETBALL, PLAYING UP TEMPO AND NOT LETTING DEFENSES GET SET CAN OPEN 0PPURTUNITIES. #3/#4 REMIND ME OF THE PHILOSOPHIES OF PUTTING YOUR LIMITED PLAYERS IN POSITION TO BE DEFENDED, STRETCHING DEFENSES WITH SHOOTERS WIDE OR SPACING UP, RUNNING WINGS TO THE CORNERS, AND MAKING YOUR BIGS "RUN THE HIGHWAY" OR AS LARRY BROWNS SAYS "STAY AHEAD OF THE BALL ON OFFENSE & DEFENSE".


Coach Calvin Magee, Michigan Football Associate Head Coach & Offensive Coordinator:

Coach Magee used a slightly different tact in his lecture. He gave us two lists of things the offense needs to accomplish, or make the defense do.

1st list is things offense needs to do.
-- 1. Create mismatches- biggest is slots on OLBers or safeties
-- 2. Get the ball to your play makers
-- 3. Use Shotgun/so QB can see the defense
-- 4. Make the defense defend all skill players, including the QB
-- 5. Keep it simple for the O line, confused O-linemen can kill an offense faster than anything.
-- 6. Make the defense play in space

THESE ARE RIGHT ON THE MONEY FOR GREAT BASKETBALL OFFENSE:
1. CREATING AND CAPITALIZING ON MISMATCHES IS GREAT OFFENSE BUT OFTEN GOES EITHER UNIDENTIFIED OR UTILIZED. THE NBA SEEMS TO BE ALL ABOUT MATCH UPS.

2. PLAYMAKERS: RIGHT PLAYER, RIGHT SHOT.

4. MAKE DEFENSES DEFEND ALL SKILL PLAYERS: SPACING, CUTTING, SCREENING

5. KEEP IT SIMPLE STUPID: AVOID PARALYSIS BY ANALYSIS

6. MAKE THE DEFENSE PLAY IN SPACE: SOUNDS LIKE THE DRIBBLE DRIVE MOTION THATS ALL OVER

Magee's 2nd list is what offense does in a game.
-- 1. make defenses defend the entire field ... QB has presnap and post snap reads (BREAK, SECONDARY BREAK, CHANGING SIDES OF THE FLOOR, MAINTAIN SPACING & CREATE/EXPLOIT THE MISMATCH)
-- 2. Always play at multiple tempos to keep defense off balance and control their substitution patterns (DRIBBLE HAND OFFS, BACK CUTS, HANDBACKS, BACK PICKS, DIVES, POPS, SLIP SCREENS ACHIEVE SIMILAR PURPOSE IF MIXED IN AN OFFENSE)
-- 3.make defense prepare for dual threat QB, both run and pass (GOTTA HAVE PLAYERS THAT CAN DO MULTIPLE SKILLS INCLUDING THE BASICS OF SHOOTING, DRIBBLING, PASSING)
-- 4. EXECUTION- You want a simple, not predictable offense. (BE GOOD AT SOMETHING RATHER THAN BAD AT A LOT OF THINGS)
-- 5. Execute your base plays to perfection: Reps and Reps, and more reps, get good at something! (WHATS YOUR IDENTITY, GET GOOD ENOUGH THAT THEY KNOW ITS COMING AND YOU STILL EXECUTE)
-- 6. numbers game
----- a. 1st key number is 1 or 2 safeties. it tells you what OLBers and CBs are going to do.
------ b. How many defenders in box is next read
(ON THE DRIBBLE DRIVE, WHATS YOUR READS: WHERE IS THE HELP COMING FROM? HOW DEEP CAN YOU GET? WHERES MY SHOOTERS DEFENDER?)
-- 7. Create best angles to block for both linemen and SEs (SET UP SCREENS, HOWS MY SCREENER SET, DRIVE THE BLOCKS & ELBOWS, KEEP 15' SPACING)
-- 8. And the final one - Find Empty Grass! (FIND THE RIM, FIND OPEN SHOTS. BASKETBALL IS PLAYING THE NUMBERS GAME: GETTING TO THE RIM PRODUCES POINTS IN A NUMBER OF WAYS. GETTING SHOOTERS SHOTS WITH THEIR FEET SET AND A CLEAR LOOK IS LIKE RUNNING TO DAYLIGHT)

NBA DRAFT: Which Schools Produce Picks?

THE AUTHOR DID A GREAT JOB WITH A CHART WITH THE BREAKDOWN OF ALL THE SCHOOLS & CONFERENCES THAT PRODUCED A PICK SINCE 2000.

CHECK OUT THE LINK: http://collegebasketball.rivals.com/content.asp?CID=820905

INTERESTING TO NOTE THAT THE PAC-10 SENT THE MOST TO THE DRAFT PER SCHOOL AND THAT THE ACC SENT THE MOST IN THE FIRST ROUND.

A COUPLE 'WOWS' IN THERE SUCH AS FRESNO HAVING MORE PICKS THAN KENTUCKY, INDIANA, ARKANSAS, OR LOUISVILLE.

AFTER THIS YEARS DRAFT, ONLY 6 BIG SIX CONFERENCE SCHOOLS HAVEN'T HAD A DRAFT PICK: Baylor, Clemson, Nebraska, Northwestern, Oregon State, & Penn State.

ALSO SURPRISING IS THE LACK OF PICKS FROM THE MID-MAJORS OVER THE 7 YEAR SPAN SUCH AS THE MISSOURI VALLEY (1 PICK), MAC (2 PICKS), CAA (1 PICK), AND SEVERAL OTHERS.


CONFERENCE RANKING DRAFT PICKS PER TEAM ('00 THRU '07)
1.PAC 10 4.70
2.ACC 4.33
3.BIG EAST 3.38
4.BIG TEN 3.27
5.SEC 3.17
6.BIG 12 2.75
7.A-10 1.20
8.WAC 1.11
9.MWC .89
10.CONF USA .67
11.WCC .63

ALL OTHERS .08 (18 PICKS FOR 226 TEAMS)

MAC 1 pick, MVC 2, BIG SKY 1, BIG WEST 1, COLONIAL 1,
HORIZON 1, METRO 3, NEC 1, OVC 3, SOUTHERN 1, SUN BELT 3, INDEPENDENTS 1


Andrew Skwara
Rivals.com College Basketball Staff Writer

BY THE NUMBERS: NBA Draft picks by school, 2000-2007

Only one conference has had each of its teams produce at least one NBA draft pick this decade – but it's probably not the one you are thinking of.

The football-crazed SEC holds that unique distinction, and it's not as if half the league is just reaching the minimum requirement. Ten of the 12 SEC schools have produced multiple picks since 2000.

Rivals.com looked at each draft this decade and where the prospects played in college. While we found that the NBA-caliber talent in the SEC is particularly widespread, we also found that it isn't particularly abundant.

The Big East has combined for 56 draft picks over the time span, the most of any of the "Big Six" conferences. The SEC has 38, which is fourth, behind the ACC (52) and Pac-10 (47) but ahead of the Big Ten (36) and the Big 12 (33). The Big East has a significant advantage in that it expanded to 16 teams three years ago. For the purpose of this exercise, a school's current conference affiliation is what matters.

The "Big Six" league with the highest average of picks per school is the Pac-10, with an average of 4.7 per its 10 schools.

Only 19 (40 percent) of those were first-round picks. The ACC has produced 30 first-round picks, which makes up 64 percent of its 52 picks, the highest percentage among the "Big Six." The Big 12 is second with 20 of its 33 (60 percent) being first-rounders.

Duke's 12 picks are the most of any school this decade. UCLA has 10 picks and will add at least two more Thursday night. UCLA sophomore Russell Westbrook and freshman Kevin Love almost assuredly will be taken among the top 20 picks. Junior Luc Richard Mbah a Moute is not considered a first-round pick but could go in the second.

Duke has one player eligible for the draft, DeMarcus Nelson, and he isn't expected to be drafted.

Connecticut has produced the most first-round picks – eight – of any school this decade. The Huskies tied a record with four first-rounders (Rudy Gay, Hilton Armstrong, Marcus Williams and Josh Boone) in the 2006 draft.

The non-"Big Six" school with the most draftees is Fresno State with five, which is more than 33 "Big Six" schools, including Kentucky (four), Indiana (four), Arkansas (two) and Louisville (two).

Ten "Big Six" schools haven't had a player drafted this decade: Baylor, Clemson, Kansas State, Nebraska, Northwestern, Oregon State, Penn State, Virginia Tech, Washington State and West Virginia. That list promises to shrink soon. Kansas State's Michael Beasley, Rivals.com's 2007-08 national player of the year, is expected to go No. 1 or No. 2 during Thursday's draft. Beasley will be the first Wildcat drafted since Steve Henson in 1990. West Virginia's Joe Alexander is projected as a first-rounder as well. He would be the first Mountaineer drafted since Gordon Malone in 1997.

There have been nearly as many international players drafted (106) than the combined picks produced from the Big 12, Big Ten and the SEC (107)
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College Basketball: Transfers are causing instability

THE TRANSFER LISTS ARE LONG THIS YEAR BUT IN THE BIG PICTURE WHERE THERE IS 330 OR SO DIVISION 1 PROGRAMS, THE OVER 120 TRANSFERS IS NOT THAT STAGGERING TO ME. WE STRESS TO OUR KIDS THAT THEY NEED TO FIND THE PROGRAM AND COACH THAT IS THE RIGHT "FIT". SINCE PLAYING TIME IS NORMALLY THE ROOT OF THE ISSUE, PERHAPS MORE EVALUATION TIME IS THE SOLUTION TO THE PROBLEM SO THAT COACHES DON'T "MISS" ON KIDS AND PLAYERS DON'T GET IN OVER THEIR HEAD.

Published Friday June 13, 2008

BY LEE BARFKNECHT
WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER

When major college basketball coaches discuss climate change, global warming isn't on their minds.

The climate they talk about is cultural, and involves the willingness of players to change schools in what seems to be ever-increasing numbers.

"It is just amazing how many players have decided to transfer this spring — over 120 and counting," recruiting analyst Van Coleman of Hoopmasters.com and CSTV wrote recently.

The NCAA thought it would reduce transfers and the practice of some coaches "running off" players by instituting academic progress guidelines known as the APR. Programs can be penalized scholarships and practice time for too much roster flipping if those who leave aren't academically on track.

Consider that mission not accomplished.

"The climate in our sport has become such a 'what have you done for me lately approach,'" Iowa State coach Greg McDermott said.

"If things don't happen immediately, not only are the young people not patient enough, but the adults advising them are not patient, either."

Transferring has been common through the years among benchwarmers seeking more playing time or players wanting to escape struggling programs.

But this spring, heavy anecdotal evidence shows regulars at top programs moving on.

NCAA tourney qualifier Georgetown had three players transfer, two of whom played in 34 games each. The Hoyas then got a transfer who played in 31 games for NIT qualifier Florida State.

Purdue, an NCAA team, saw freshman Scott Martin take off for Notre Dame even after starting eight games and playing in 32. Notre Dame also picked up sophomore Ben Hansbrough, who started 28 games at Mississippi State last season and averaged 10.5 points a game.

"I don't understand," Nebraska coach Doc Sadler said, "how kids transfer when they are playing quality minutes in a great conference and are doing well in school."

Iowa State was stung last month when sophomore forward Wesley Johnson, a two-year starter and a Big 12 all-freshman pick in 2007, emptied his apartment without telling coaches or teammates, went home to Texas and announced he would transfer.

"It's difficult in May to replace guys you were really counting on," McDermott said. "But it's kind of become the nature of this business, unfortunately."

Is more stability on the horizon?

"I hope so," McDermott said. "This job is hard enough the way it is."

Texas Tech coach Pat Knight isn't counting on happier days just ahead.

"I've had a problem with kids going home and parents getting in their ear and saying, 'Maybe his style of play isn't suited for you,'" Knight said. "It's getting out of hand.

"They all want a quick fix, and they all want to play right away. It's a real pain."

Parents aren't the only adults inserting themselves into college athletes' lives.

Knight said he got an oral commitment from a player this spring, then couldn't reach him for a couple of weeks.

"I find out he has taken two other visits and decides to go somewhere else," Knight said. "His AAU coach got hold of him. Too many people have their hands on these kids."

The reach of others doesn't just start in college, coaches say.

"We're seeing more and more kids in high school change schools," Sadler said. "And we see more and more kids start on one summer team and end up playing on two or three others by the end of the summer."

Sadler said coaches tried to warn those pushing NCAA legislation such as the old 5-and-8 rule and the current APR that such measures wouldn't necessarily stabilize rosters.

"Those things were implemented as if coaches were just running kids in and out of their programs," he said. "It's not so much a coach getting rid of kids as it is kids leaving on their own."

All three coaches interviewed said many players discover transferring doesn't cure all their ills.

Nebraska sophomore guard Jay-R Strowbridge left this spring, publicly saying it was for family reasons. But phone calls from family members made it plain that their desire for him to be a featured player was a key factor.

Strowbridge, who averaged 18.7 minutes a game at NU, hasn't found a new school yet. Those showing the most interest, sources said, are Jacksonville (Ala.) State of the Ohio Valley Conference and Middle Tennessee State of the Sun Belt.

How do coaches move on after players leave?

"You stay committed to the guys who remain," McDermott said. "And you map out a plan early in their career for your expectations — and then try to get the parents or the high school coach or the AAU coach to agree with what you're asking them to do."

Lowe: Wolfpack will buckle down

COACH LOWE LEAVES LITTLE TO THE IMAGINATION WHEN EXPRESSING HIS FEELINGS ABOUT LAST SEASON'S TEAM. COACHES NOT ONLY HAVE TO MANAGE THEIR TEAM CULTURE AND CHEMISTRY BUT NOW MORE THAN EVER THEY HAVE TO MANAGE THE PEOPLE IN THE KID'S "CAMP".

LOWE HAS TWO REQUIREMENTS TO PUTTING TOGETHER A WINNING PROGRAM:
#1: IS THE KID TALENTED
#2: DOES HE WANT TO WIN & CARE ABOUT THE TEAM MORE THAN HIMSELF

I THINK AN IMPORTANT QUESTION TO ADD TO COACH LOWES LIST IS:
#3: DOES THE ATHLETES CAMP (BY CAMP I MEAN AAU COACH, PARENTS, EXTENDED FAMILY, HIGH SCHOOL COACH, NEIGHBOR, ETC.) WANT TO WIN & WILL THEY SUPPORT THE HIGH/LOWS OF THE TEAM AND LEARNING PROCESS.

Coach Sidney Lowe says his players are going to do things his way next season.

By John Delong

JOURNAL REPORTER

Published: June 20, 2008

RALEIGH - RALEIGH - Sidney Lowe has apparently laid down the law to N.C. State's basketball team.

Lowe held his annual off-season media-availability session yesterday, and while he didn't want to dwell on last season's struggles, he made it clear that some things will not be tolerated in the future.

"We had post-season meetings," Lowe said. "They understand me and where I'm coming from. It's going to be my way and that's it. It's real simple. They are players and I'm the coach and they are going to do it my way. If they don't, then they don't want to be here."

N.C. State lost its final nine games last season to finish 15-16 overall, and fell all the way into a tie for last place in the ACC regular-season standings at 4-12. N.C. State had been picked to finish third in the ACC preseason poll and was ranked nationally early in the season.

Throughout the season, Lowe pointed to a season-ending injury to guard Farnold Degand in December as the biggest reason for the team's collapse. Yesterday, though, there was more acknowledgment of internal issues.

Asked how he planned to turn things back around, he said bluntly:

"You go to work. You get back to working. You get guys on the same page and you put the guys out there that are going to do the things you want them to do. There's no mystery to winning. It's real simple. One, you have to have talent. You have to have better players than they have. Two, you have to have guys that are on the same page and playing to win, (who) care more about the team than themselves."

N.C. State loses two key players from last year's team -- forward Gavin Grant, a senior, and center J.J. Hickson, who entered the NBA Draft after leading the team in scoring and rebounding as a freshman. Among the top returnees will be center Ben McCauley and guard Courtney Fells, both rising seniors, forward Brandon Costner, a redshirt junior, and Degand, a rising junior who was lost with a knee injury in December but is ahead of his rehabilitation schedule, according to Lowe.

Lowe refused to say that the Wolfpack had a "chemistry" problem last season. But his response to the question was revealing anyway.

"In my dictionary, chemistry only means one thing and I'm going to stay away from that," Lowe said. "I'll say this. Kevin Garnett went to the Boston Celtics and became the guy. Paul Pierce had been there for eight, nine, 10 years, great player, but he welcomed (Garnett) in. Ray Allen welcomed him in. And they win the NBA championship. If they didn't like him, they didn't want to play with him, chemistry would have been bad.

"That word chemistry that people throw out there, in my dictionary, is only one thing. It's just players not accepting and players being selfish. I'll say it. That's what it is. That chemistry thing, we use it as a broad word, but chemistry is people accepting their roles and playing well.... I'm not going there, but I'm just defining chemistry to me. That's all it is. It's just people accepting their roles."

Lowe said that his comments weren't directed at any specific player. He also spoke of the outside influences, citing the media, AAU coaches, parents and girlfriends as those who had influences on the players and their attitudes.

"As a basketball coach on this level, I think you have to take more control of that and really try to keep them (his players) closer to you and try to guide them," Lowe said. "When I say that, it's not so much the players. It's just people around that have an effect on the players. The players try to do what we tell them to do. It's not the players."

Lowe said that he has seen a new attitude among many of the players returning, and singled out Fells, McCauley and Costner as the core of next year's team. Costner and McCauley, whose production dipped last season, have both worked hard and shown a new commitment this spring. Lowe said that Costner had lost "13 or 14" pounds, and McCauley "maybe eight to 10."

"I'm excited about this year," Lowe said. "These guys, they understand and they are in there working. I think they feel good about what they are doing. I'll say this one thing about last year. No one was more disappointed than we were. That hurt. That hurt those guys. So they want to certainly take care of that this year. I think they show it by what they are doing this summer."

Future Stars Can Learn From Athletes Fiscal Irresponsibility

I WILL BE PASSING THIS ON TO OUR ATHLETES. REALLY EMPHASIZES IN A SATIRICAL WAY HOW EASY IT IS TO "UN-MAKE IT" AFTER "MAKING IT".

Tuesday, July 1, 2008
Updated: July 2, 11:17 AM ET
LIFE OF REILLY

By Rick Reilly

Congrats, newly minted NBA rookie!

Now you've been drafted. Next comes the delicious multimillion-dollar contract. And that's when you must do what most NBA players do: start going through cash like Jack Black through the Keebler factory.

Filing for bankruptcy is a long-standing tradition for NBA players, 60% of whom, according to the Toronto Star, are broke five years after they retire. The other 40% deliver the Toronto Star.

It's not just NBA players who have the fiscal sense of the Taco Bell Chihuahua. All kinds of athletes wind up with nothing but lint in their pockets. And if everyone from Johnny Unitas to Sheryl Swoopes to Lawrence Taylor can do it, so can you! With my How to Go Bankrupt* DVD series, it's a layup to go belly-up!

Ten essentials, just to get you started:

1. Screw up, deny it, then fight by using every lawyer and dime you have. Roger Clemens just sold his Bentley, reportedly to pay legal bills. Marion Jones lawyered herself broke before she finally copped and went to prison. Paging Mr. Bonds, Mr. Barry Bonds.

2. Buy a house the size of Delaware. Evander Holyfield was in danger of losing his 54,000-square-foot pad outside Atlanta, and it's a shame. He had almost visited all 109 rooms!

3. Buy many, many cars. Baseball slugger Jack Clark had 18 cars and owed money on 17 when he went broke. And don't get just boring Porsches and Mercedes. Go for Maybachs. They sell for as much as $375,000—even though they look like Chrysler 300s—and nobody will ever know how to pronounce them, much less fix them.

4. Buy a jet. They burn money like the Pentagon. Do you realize it costs $50,000 just to fix the windshield on one? Scottie Pippen borrowed $4.375 million to buy some wings and spent God knows how much more for insurance, pilots and fuel. Finally, his wallet cried uncle. The courts say he still owes $5 million, including interest. See you in coach, Scottie! (For that matter, why not a yacht? Latrell Sprewell kept his 70-foot Italian-made yacht tied up in storage until the bank repossessed it, in August 2007. He probably sat at home and cried about that—until the bank foreclosed on his house, this past May.)

5. Spend stupid money on other really stupid stuff. In going from $300 million up to $27 million down, Mike Tyson once spent $9,180 in two months to care for his white tiger. That's why Iron Mike's picture is on our logo!

6. Hire an agent who sniffs a lot and/or is constantly checking the scores on his BlackBerry. Those are the kinds of guys who will suck up your dough like a street-sweeper. Ex-Knick Mark Jackson once had a business manager he thought he could trust. Turned out the guy was forging Jackson's signature on checks—an estimated $2.6 million worth—to feed a gambling jones. "And it wasn't like I was a rookie—I was a veteran," Jackson says. The only reason he says he's getting some money back is because he didn't …

7. Sign over power of attorney. What's it mean? Who cares? Just sign! The guy you're signing it over to knows. And while you play Xbox, he'll be buying large portions of Switzerland for himself. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar let an agent named Tom Collins have power of attorney once, and it cost Kareem $9 million before he figured it out.

8. Spend like the checks will never stop. Also known as the Darren McCarty method. Despite earning $2.1 million a year, Red Wing McCarty, who started a rock band called Grinder, went splat by investing in everything but fur socks ($490,000 in unlikely-to-be-repaid loans) and gambling large ($185,000 in casino markers). In other words, a Tuesday for John Daly.

9. Just ball. Don't write your own checks. Don't drive your own car. Don't raise your own kids. Just be a tall slab of skilled meat for others to feast on. Not to worry. It'll be over before you know it.

10. Most of all, set up a huge support system around you. It'll be years before you'll realize they call it a support system because you're the only one supporting it. They're all on full-ride scholarships at the University of You. "Guys go broke because they surround themselves with people who help them go broke," says ex-NBA center Danny Schayes, who now runs No Limits Investing in Phoenix. "I know all-time NBA, top-50 guys who sold their trophies to recover."

See, kid? You can be a top-50 guy!

So order my How to Go Bankrupt series now, and get this empty refrigerator box to sleep in, absolutely free!
*(Only $1,449 plus shipping, handling, service fee, dealer prep and undercoating. Per month.)