Sunday, February 27, 2011

Calhoun rumored to have Read my Blog; UCONN 67-Cincinnati 59

Anyone who read my particularly insightful blog about Thursday night's loss to Marquette and then watched today's workmanlike Husky win over Cincinnati would have to believe the rumors in today's issue of a well know Connectict newspaper. It was reported from an undisclosed source that when Calhoun returned to Campus to re-join the team he requested a copy of my blog from Thursday. I can't be sure myself but he certainly incorporated my main suggestions from the get-go.
As I implored, Calhoun had either Lamb or Napier at the point the entire game, with Walker on the wing;this allowed Walker to preserve energy and prevented him from over dribbling. Both Frosh were very effective; Lamb played 38 minutes and had 17 points on 7-10 from the field, including 3-4 from 3 point land. Napier played 26 minutes as opposed to 11 against Marquette and scored 11 points in addition to running the offense well. I also made a very strong case that Calhoun had to commit totally to incorporating his Freshman into the offense if this team did not want an early trip home to Storrs. In fact, Walker took a season low 11 shots but made 5; his shot selection was better, he did not force the action and as a result Lamb, Napier, and Smith ( who had his best offensive showing of the campaign) got more shots. This resulted in better point distribution with Walker plus Lamb, Napier and Smith in Double figures. JCM also got more time on the floor and had a fairly quiet scoring night but played his usual effective all court game. Since Smith was hot, hit 3 treys and scored 11 JCM did not have a lot of minutes.
The Huskies were in control from start to finish and went home with a 67-59 win.
tonights win gives the Huskies a 9-7 conference record and with two to play the worst case scenario is a .500 record which makes them a lock for a dance card because of the quality wins early in the year and their strength of schedule. Their remaining games are Wednesday at West Virginia and Saturday at home against Notre Dame. These games are very important since if the Huskies run the table they will get a one round bye in the Big East Tournament. Of note is that both years the Huskies won the National Championship, 1999 and 2003, they also won the Big East Tournament. One would think that winning the conference tournament might be draining but this points to one of Steve Eliot's truisms. Teams that are hot and playing well at the end of the season do well in the Big Dance;conversely teams that are playing badly down the stretch do not turn it around in the NCAA's. For all you bracketologists entering pools put your money on teams that are hot in the stretch.
I think a great dark horse for the final four this year is Louisville. they continued their hot play today when they upset Pitt.
One last observation. I would say that Alex Oriakhi has been inconsistent and disappointing this year. I have concluded that his upside is much more limited than most people had hoped. Here is the reason; He is a slow jumper. By that I mean he is slow to get off the floor and as a result has a lot of shots blocked or deflected and misses opportunities for put-backs. he reminds me a lot of Jeff Adrien who had the same problem and was not drafted( although he just got a 10 day trial with I forget who) Oriakhi's slow jumping was evident at 16:00 of the first half when he was far ahead of the field and took a full court pass from Lamb. By the time he got off the ground for what should have been an easy dunk the shot was blocked.

"You Heard it here First"
steve

Friday, February 25, 2011

We Wuz Outcoached: Marquette 76- UCONN 67 in OT

It pains me to write this but the blame for a disastrous loss in a game that UCONN had in the bag with 3 minutes to go rests squarely on the shoulders of Associate Head Coach George Blaney.(Blaney had the helm because Jim Calhoun was attending a family funeral) My great respect for Blaney goes back to my adolescense when I frequently went to Madison Square Garden to watch college double headers in which Blaney coached at Holy Cross and then Seton Hall, both national powers in the 50's. I always and still do admire Blaney's technical knowledge and patient, encouraging approach to his players. Having said all that, I think that Blaney was not comfortable in the role of head honcho creating judgment impairing anxiety; in addition, he did not have sufficient sense of authority to stand up to Kemba Walker and insist that he stop trying to single handedly dribble through the Marquette defense at crunch time.
I had barely settled into my seat, two rows behind the UCONN, bench, when UCONN got off to a hot start and an 11-3 leaad. I liked Blaney's initial moves; he started JCM and had Lamb handling the ball up top with Walker on the wing leading to good ball distribution and four quick points by Walker on good shots. Oriakhi came out energized and was banging the offensive boards. Suddenly the Huskies went cold and scored 12 points in the last 16 minutes of the first half to fall behind 34-23 at the break. As the cold spell continued, UCONN reverted more and more to Walker trying to beat a 2-3 zone by driving the lane. JCM had started the game 2-5 and Blaney pulled him; I could not understand why Blaney stood by watching a now too familiar disaster unfold; Walker dribbled too much,tried to drive the lane when he was triple teamed, the big men stood motionless,Kemba took poor shots and was 30% from the field. Finally, Blaney read my mind, put JCM at the foul line and he hit a quick hoop against the zone- too little too late as the Huskies went into the locker room down 11 at the half.
At the beginning of the second half, Blaney had made some good adjustments. He put Walker back on the wing, brought in Napier, the defense stiffened and the Huskies went on a 20-4 run to turn an 11 point deficit into a 5 point lead. Napier made some beautiful dish offs in transition leading to (S)Lamb dunks. Giffey was having a break out game, passing well and finishing with a season high 9 points. Unfortuneately, Blaney seemed to freeze and in my opinion completely under utilized the bench. JCM virtually sat the entire second half and and Napier played 11 minutes. Walker ended up playing 43 minutes; combined with his over handling of the ball he was completely out of gas with two minutes left in regulation time. I don't know if it was evident on TV but from court side it was clear he could barely stand-up and Blaney did not rest him and give Napier more time.
As the game came down to the last three minutes, the Huskies still led by about 3 yet completely reverted to Walker dribbling to try to beat the zone on every possession. In the last 3 minutes of the game Walker got trapped twice and lost the ball and missed three forced shots. Of the Huskies last 9 shots Walker took seven and yet Blaney just could not bring himself to insist that Walker give up the ball.
The Huskies last shot in regulation time was an absurd off balance drive off the dribble; Walker never looked up to try to find an open man. In overtime, the same pattern continued and Marquette pulled away for a 7 point win.
Although Walker ended up with 27, he was 10-27 from the floor with at least 6 turn overs. Oriakhi finished with 12 points and 15 rebounds in a very good effort and Giffey broke out with 9 points. Roscoe Smith continues to disappoint. He had 4 points on 1-8 shooting from the floor but Blaney had him on the floor for 27 minutes while JCM only played 19 minutes; inexplicable and unexcusable.
The Huskies fell to 8-7 in the Big East with Cincinnati and West Virginia away and Notre Dame at home remaining in the Big East regular season. The Huskies only need to win one of the three to finish at .500 in the conference and secure an NCAA bid. But let's say the worst happens and they lose the last three and end up 8-10 in conference play. I have to believe that they would be very much on the bubble and might lose their Dance Card. Let's take a look at the current Big East standings.

) Pittsburgh Panthers 13-2 25-3
(9) Notre Dame Fighting Irish 11-4 22-5
(16) Louisville Cardinals 10-5 21-7
(23) St. John's Red Storm 10-5 18-9
(17) Syracuse Orange 10-6 23-6
(11) Georgetown Hoyas 10-6 21-7
Cincinnati Bearcats 9-6 22-6
(15) Villanova Wildcats 9-6 21-7
(14) Connecticut Huskies 8-7 20-7
West Virginia Mountaineers 8-7 17-10
Marquette Golden Eagles 8-7 17-11
Seton Hall Pirates 5-10 11-16
Rutgers Scarlet Knights 4-11 13-14
Providence Friars 3-12 14-14
South Florida Bulls 2-13 8-20
DePaul Blue Demons 1-14 7-20
an 8-10 record would put them 11th in the conference and certainly put things in jeopardy. I think that if this team has any chance in the Post-season the Husky brain trust has to give up the almost delusional wish that Walker will suddenly return to early season form, drive the lane at will and score 30ppg. The incredibly smart group of Big East coaches watched Jim boeheim's Orangemen shut down Walker and the Huskies on Feb.2 with a match up 2-3 zone. Every team (except Georgetown) since then has successfully employed the same strategy. Calhoun has to insist that Walker stop dribbling against the zone, alternate Lamb and Napier at the point, and use JCM at the foul line against these zones. He has to commit to this and not revert to "give the ball to Kemba and pray" when the game gets close at crunch time. Calhoun and Blaney are in love with Walker but if they don't commit 100% to these changes it is going to be an early trip home to Storrs for this year's Huskies.
"You Heard it Here First"
Steve

Friday, February 18, 2011

Cardinals stifle Walker and rout Huskies 71-58

The Louisville Cardinals used a swarming match-up zone to render Kemba Walker ineffective and led by Sophomore guard Peyton Siva's 15 points they routed the UCONN Huskies last night, 71-58. Yet another, fast, tough, well coached Big East team had 3 men surrounding Walker every time he had the ball forcing him into bad shots and a poor shooting night. (3-10 from the field) Walker scored 5 points in the first half, forced shots and was not finding open men. Most of his 16 points came from the charity stripe after the game was out of reach.
Down by nine at the half, the Huskies started the second period with a 9-0 run to tie the score on 3 treys in a row; however, they ran out of steam, JCM got his third foul and went to the bench and the rout was on. On offense for Louisville, Peyton Siva drove the lane at will and either scored or dished off to big men inside for easy lay-ups. For the Huskies Walker and JCM both finished with 16 points, however Walker shot poorly and JCM was 6-8 from the floor. Oriakhi played well with 13 hard earned points but Smith continues to disappoint and Lamb had an off night and didn't score.
The Huskies continue to have fits against good match up zones. I still feel there is not enough motion in their half court sets and as you all know I do not like Calhoun's substituting patterns. He reacts with anger to the slightest mistake and is constantly yanking players in and out. I thought one particularly destructive move came in the first half. JCM entered the game with about five minutes gone and played a sensational 10 minutes scoring 11 points and snaring 5 rebounds. Again, he found open spots, shot well and was always around the ball. When he picked up his third foul, Calhoun appropriately took him out and put in Niels Giffey. Giffey looked more confident than usual, seemed into the flow and without hesitation hit a nice three. About thirty seconds later he made a defensive mistake and Calhoun yanked him; he came back late in the second half and played poorly. Here you have a Freshman with a lot of potential who has played poorly all year. He looks confident for the first time this season and "bam" he gets yanked; you could almost hear his balloon deflating as he skulked back to the bench.
I thought that ESPN's "remind me what teams are playing again" announcing team of Brent "Oh, you want to know the names of the players?" Musberger and the pedantic, self absorbed Bob "over-inflated bag of hot air" Knight detracted from the game. Musberger spent most of the evening reverentially calling Knight "Coach" and as usual knew little about the action on the floor. Knight's time has past; his color commentary is canned and he was clearly unfamiliar with the teams. For example, one minute into the game he expressed surprise that Louisville was in a zone defense. "Hello" that is how they beat UCONN last time they played and the way Big East teams have stopped Walker and the Huskies. About one minute later, he said that Louisville would have trouble matching UCONN's inside scoring pressure. The Huskies have no inside presence, one of their most glaring weaknesses and, in fact, Louisville's freshman Center, Gorgui Dieng, dominated the paint, scored 13 points and led the game in rebounds. Third, when JCM entered the game he immediately scored 4 points and next time down got open inside for a lay-up. Knight's comment was a UCONN player got open inside. He did not know it was JCM and was not familiar with the story line on him over the last three games. Get these guys off the air.
Next week, the Huskies play Marquette at the Civic Center on Thursday (which this reporter will cover from courtside) and Cincinatti away on Sunday. The huskies need to win both these games before their two tough final Big East tilts against West Virginia and Notre Dame.

"You Heard it here First"
Steve

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

JAMAALEMBA! HUSKIES IN HUGE WIN OVER GEORGETOWN

In an electric atmosphere at the Hartford Civic the UCONN Huskies led by Kemba Walker in early season form and a second straight sensational effort by Jamaal Combs-McDaniel( who shall heretofore be known as JCM) ended an eight game win streak by the ninth ranked Georgetown Hoyas, 78-70. The intensity level in this game felt like a post-season contest and both teams played at a high level throughout. Kemba Walker put together his best game in a while and shot well, dished off crisp passes and drove the hoop with his old verve and energy. Early in the second half he made one of the most heads up hoops I have ever seen;he drove the lane in traffic then passed to himself by shooting the ball too hard above the rim and took the clean rebound for a lay-up-unreal. Combs-Mcdaniel followed Sunday's career high with 23 points on 7-10 shooting from the field. He also ran the floor well and added some nice defensive boards. Oriakhi had one of his good games with 10 points and 8 rebounds.
Well this reporter must concede that just last week I felt the Huskies had come as far as they could with this group, but if JCM continues to play with the confidence he has shown in the last two games the stakes are raised for this crew. JCM has great size, 6'7" and agility for a man this big. His release is quick and he just might be the highly touted "lights out" shooter Calhoun thought he had recruited last year. My hat is off to blog follower Pete Eliot who felt JCM's 25 against Providence represented a break out game and the Huskies had found another scorer for the late season push. I thought it is interesting that Walker seems to be making the adjustment to the smothering defenses stacked against him in the Big East. In the half-court he has stopped forcing shots and is making uncanny passes but in the open court it looks like he has regained his early season aggressiveness and tonight used his blinding speed to go coast to coast or hit his step-back jumper.
Friday night the Huskies go on the road to try to avenge a double overtime loss to Louisville. Two observations from tonight. My advice to Alex Oriakhi- stop complaining to the refs about every careless foul you commit- make less careless fouls and just play harder. Second, I suspect that Jon Walker has a job moonlighting under the alias Randy Katz the savvy SNY interview man. If Katz is not really Walker than he is his dopelganger.
"You Heard it here first"
Steve

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Huskies Roll over Providence; two tough Big East tilts this week

In a Sunday evening contest at Gampel Pavillion, the UCONN Huskies parlayed a well played second half into a 75-57 route over the Providence Friars. UCONN led 33-30 after a hard fought first half but switched into high gear in the second period to win by 18. Jamaal Combs-McDaniel led the Huskies with 25 points, his career high, Walker added 22 on 7-10 shooting from the field and Charles Okwandu had 11 boards and 4 blocked shots. Since Providence is 13th in the Big East right now it is hard to read too much significance into this win. The Huskies will be sorely tested this week as they take on Georgetown on Wed.night at the Civic Centre then play Louisville away on Friday night.
Kemba Walker returned to form on 7-10 shooting largely due to letting the game come to him more instead of forcing shots. As a result, he took fewer but better shots and gave up trying to drive the lane when he is triple teamed. He also made several beautiful passes to open men underneath. As the Huskies go down the stretch they only have three players who are performing consistently; Kemba Walker, Jeremy Lamb, and Shabazz Napier. You never know what you will get from Oriakhi, Smith, Okwondu and Combs Mcdaniel. So Combs-McDaniel has a career high 25 on Sunday but might just as well score 2 points against Georgetown.
The win coupled with UCONN's loss last Thursday to St. Johns dropped down to #13 in the AP Poll. A big week coming up.
"You Heard it Here First"
Steve

Thursday, February 10, 2011

The Wheels are Coming off the Bus; St.John's 89-UCONN 72

In their worst showing of the season tonight at Madison Square Garden UCONN was literally run off the court by the St. John's Red Storm. The Johnnies scored 28 fast break points to the Huskies 0( that's right, 0), shredded their interior defense as they drove at will, and shut down Kemba Walker and the UCONN offense.
As the season progresses the UCONN weaknesses are becoming glaring to the tough well coached Big East squads and they seem to be in reverse. This team just has no inside presence; as a result, they cannot break a zone and are completely dependent on the Guards for points. Opponents are taking their cue from Syracuse and playing 2-3 zone defenses; when Walker gets the ball he is immediately surrounded by three defenders and the lane has been taken away. He is forcing bad shots and had another terrible night from the floor, 4-16. The problem starts up front and there are no adjustments that can be made for lack of talent. Not much more to say about tonight's fiasco.
Don't be fooled by Roscoe Smith's 16 points tonight. Most of them came when the came was out of reach and were meaningless- he doesn't score under pressure.
I am just not sure where it goes from here. The Huskies play always tough Providence at Gampel on Sunday.
You Heard it here first
Steve

Friday, February 4, 2011

Huskies drop two in a row; this reporter away on assignment

I apologize for the lack of write-ups of the last two games but this reporter is away on special assignment at an undisclosed location for a non-sports related assignment. Enough said? As a result, I was unable to see either game in its entirety but saw snippets and spoke to some followers.
The Huskies lost a double overtime contest to Louisville by one point then were beaten, at home by Syracuse.On Monday, the Huskies were still #6 and #7 in both major polls but the loss to Syracuse might drop them out of the top 10. While I will not go into detail for each game I will make some mid-season observations.
First off, this team has already far exceeded expectations on the strength of Walker's indivdual play, very good defense and hustle, and the outstanding play of two of the five Freshmen (Lamb and Napier) On the downside, Walker is being shut down by tough Big East defenses which are double and triple teaming him when he has the ball. Roscoe Smith has been very inconsistent, flashes of real ability mixed with poor shooting and Wednesday's disappearing act against Syracuse (0 points).I am beginning to feel that Alex Oriakhi's upside was over rated in the early season. He is very inconsistent and has games where he seems inexplicably passive; he just doesn't have strong offensive instincts and he is a poor shooter. Finally, the Huskies are just very thin up front and are getting little scoring in the paint. The lack of a big man who can shoot and score killed them against Syracuse's vaunted 2-3 zone. One way to beat this zone comes off a first or second pass to a big man at the foul line. You need someone who can turn and shoot ( an easy 15 footer) or drive to the hoop. Lacking this, the Orange dropped off either Oriakhi or Oakwondo when they got the ball at the foul line and continued to smother outlet passes to Walker, Lamb or Napier.
I think the Huskies will remain an exciting, hustling, but inconsistent team for the rest of the season. They will definitely go to the Big Dance and I think move into the Sweet 16. From there, it is anyone's guess- If Oriakhi plays like he did in Hawaii and Walker gets hot they could go to the Final Four, but it is a long shot.
I don't think they have a real chance at the National Title because they are just too thin up front.
"YOU Heard it here First"
Steve