St. Louis does it again...

I know Schertz said they couldn't pay Avila market ... but they paid him. SLU and VCU were tops with Dayton in A10 NIL spending. that's obviously where serious A10 programs need to be.
 
Right, Schertz sold him on a vision. I get it, most of the time money talks. But if it is close, you need to be able to sell the vision and fit. And I don't trust Mooney to do that. If insider is believed, AA is coming back and he already knows the whole story of "little guard U" if you have listened to his inteviews - and he got to play a lot this season. But it is the 6'3 to 6'7 guard athletic guard wings Mooney needs to sell, and have enough money for.
 
watching SLU play, you see the differences between their offensive gameplan and MilkMoonBall.

  1. When they weave it is not just to end up with the ball on the wing in the same spot every time. Tons of effective ball movement that led to actual different looks nonstop.
  2. They also then immediately run different actions out of their beginning passes, like using Avila / big guys to work pick and roll actions out of any beginning passes/weave. UR runs same 2 options, dribble handoff or corner pass, nonstop.
  3. Avila faced the basket with the ball becoming a threat to do more than just be a hand off or pass to the corner guy. One of the board's main complaints about how MilkMan utilizes our bigs. It was a clinic on how to use a skilled big man on offense.
  4. Avila was used all over the court, not just top of key. Baseline, wing, etc.
  5. They take a gigantic percentage of their 2 point attempts at the rim, not in the mid range. This was one of the grossest disparities for me. UR settles for 12 foot jumpers and has bigs shooting 1980s fadeaways. SLU took layups.
  6. SLU effectively ran out in transition a lot.
  7. Guys with 2 fouls were allowed to play after getting the 2nd foul. Trust by the coach.
  8. Guys who tried shit were not immediately benched if it didn't work out. Avila tried an ill-advised behind the back pass and it led to a UGa runout and score. He was not benched and shamed, but allowed to play through that mistake.
Maybe MilkMoon will learn from SLU the same way he learned about offensive rebounding last offseason. Though he probably found out about that because Hovde directly told him, so I'm not hopeful.
 
Yep brooklyn, the movement from SLU is just so crisp and intentional, and I mentioned the same, have guys that aggressivel attack the rim. Was listening to radio or maybe a youtube breakdown of brackets and SLU had maybe the highest level of shots that were either at the rim or from 3. It was some weird stat but basically said they had most combined shot percentage of being at the rim or at three point line - so hardly any mid range. I feel like Mooney is just too stubborn or lazy to learn new things anymore.
 
I feel like Mooney is just too stubborn or lazy to learn new things anymore.
You hear about basketball IQ all the time. Maybe the guy just doesn't have a mind for high level basketball. English major in college doesn't lend itself to high level analytics. Some of his basketball philosophy is mind boggling.
 
his whole philosophy is take what the defense gives you, the UR offense is predicated upon it. Unfortunately, they have given UR any mid range jumper we want for multiple years now and we don't coach it out of the players. It also gives poor shooters the ball on the perimeter with time running down on the shot clock and we also accept that.

We rarely dictate the shot, we let the defense do that. So we take terrible shots.

I'd love to see the UR shot charts from this year.
 
Watching SLU operate that offense makes me hate our program even more. YMCA looking big who carves up defenses with passes to back cuts, scoring at the rim or from 3. It’s just beautiful.

And we run the weave, pass, pass, pass, handoff, pass, turnaround mid-range jumper offense.
They put on an exhibition last night. Fun to watch the way they play. Great tv game.
 
I'll be honest, I didn't enjoy seeing what they did to us, but the Nebraska women's team also put on a clinic in handling and passing the ball, as well as running set plays. They moved the ball like a bunch of machines. It was really impressive.
 
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I'll be honest, I didn't enjoy seeing what they did to us, but the Nebraska women's team also put on a clinic in handling and passing the ball, as well as running set plays. They moved there ball like a bunch of machines. It was really impressive.
Much of what you're saying is you have to mave without the ball, available when you don't have the ball.
 
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