Originally posted by Big_Daddy_Bearcat_07
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Houston 2/27 7:00 ESPN2
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Originally posted by Lobot View PostLeo, I don't disagree here. I said at the top of this thread that the first 8:00 would determine the game. I said that because Houston likes to jump on you from the opening tip. I'm not patting myself on the back here but that was a failure on the Bearcats part because you'd think the staff and team knew that was coming. The result was us never leading during the entire game despite fighting back the whole time.
Regardless of Houston's M.O., we are very often not ready to play out of the gate even at home and it puzzles me as to why.
Every team wants to jump out in front from the opening tip. I don't think Houston does it any more than expected given they are winning most games by double digits. They've had a lot of games where they fell behind early (Utah, Texas A&M, Iowa St, Kansas). In all of those games they were down at least 7 in the opening 5 minutes. Even against bad teams, Texas A&M Corpus Christi was winning 8 minutes into the game. Rice was winning 7 minutes in. Jackson St had a lead 10 minutes in.
I guess my point is it's not worth splitting the game up into segments. We're not a top 40 team in efficiency (on Kenpom or Torvik). That's where we need to be if we want to consistently make the tournament. It's not like we're a good team that just starts slow. We're just not that good. There are some good pieces to build on though.
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Originally posted by sedz View PostWhat should the staff have done differently to prepare? In the opening four minutes we got 3 shots from deep from our best perimeter shooters (Simas and Jizzle), 4 shots at the rim, 3 offensive rebounds, and no turnovers. Only got two points out of that. Not sure what else the staff can do. The players have to put the ball in the basket.
Every team wants to jump out in front from the opening tip. I don't think Houston does it any more than expected given they are winning most games by double digits. They've had a lot of games where they fell behind early (Utah, Texas A&M, Iowa St, Kansas). In all of those games they were down at least 7 in the opening 5 minutes. Even against bad teams, Texas A&M Corpus Christi was winning 8 minutes into the game. Rice was winning 7 minutes in. Jackson St had a lead 10 minutes in.
I guess my point is it's not worth splitting the game up into segments. We're not a top 40 team in efficiency (on Kenpom or Torvik). That's where we need to be if we want to consistently make the tournament. It's not like we're a good team that just starts slow. We're just not that good. There are some good pieces to build on though.
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Originally posted by sedz View PostWhat should the staff have done differently to prepare? In the opening four minutes we got 3 shots from deep from our best perimeter shooters (Simas and Jizzle), 4 shots at the rim, 3 offensive rebounds, and no turnovers. Only got two points out of that. Not sure what else the staff can do. The players have to put the ball in the basket.
Every team wants to jump out in front from the opening tip. I don't think Houston does it any more than expected given they are winning most games by double digits. They've had a lot of games where they fell behind early (Utah, Texas A&M, Iowa St, Kansas). In all of those games they were down at least 7 in the opening 5 minutes. Even against bad teams, Texas A&M Corpus Christi was winning 8 minutes into the game. Rice was winning 7 minutes in. Jackson St had a lead 10 minutes in.
I guess my point is it's not worth splitting the game up into segments. We're not a top 40 team in efficiency (on Kenpom or Torvik). That's where we need to be if we want to consistently make the tournament. It's not like we're a good team that just starts slow. We're just not that good. There are some good pieces to build on though.
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I don't think we're seeing slow starts over and over. It's happened the last two games, so we're talking about it. But we jumped out to huge early leads at UCF and against OK St. We were within 5 points of Iowa St for the first 18 minutes. We were up 9 at Texas Tech after 6 minutes. We had a 5 point lead at West Virginia after 4 minutes. A 9 point lead after 4 minutes at home against UCF. An early 5 point lead against Oklahoma. A 5-0 start against Dayton.
Short term issues are hot topics for fans. But many of them revert to averages over the course of a season.
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Originally posted by sedz View PostI don't think we're seeing slow starts over and over. It's happened the last two games, so we're talking about it. But we jumped out to huge early leads at UCF and against OK St. We were within 5 points of Iowa St for the first 18 minutes. We were up 9 at Texas Tech after 6 minutes. We had a 5 point lead at West Virginia after 4 minutes. A 9 point lead after 4 minutes at home against UCF. An early 5 point lead against Oklahoma. A 5-0 start against Dayton.
Short term issues are hot topics for fans. But many of them revert to averages over the course of a season.
“You never know how a horse will pull until you hook him to a heavy load.” ~ Bear Bryant
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Originally posted by leo from jersey View PostEach game is its own separate entity. A coach has to get inside the heads of his players and steer them to positive results. We have discussed over and over the horrid first halves the Cats have had and many say they are a second half team.
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Originally posted by sedz View PostSo when we have fast starts, Wes gets the credit? If a team has en equal number of fast starts and slow starts, is their coach just average? And since that's true of almost every team, is the coach irrelevant?
Paul Brown said that the key to winning is poise under stress.-- There are many kinds of stress that a past stat can't determine. Each game is different or why would we even play them. This isn't strat o matic or computerized games. Again, consider the stats but consider your team at the particular moment and adapt accordingly. “Earn your Leadership everyday.” – Michael Jordan
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4 minutes was the difference. The team wasn't ready (mentally) again. They were on edge and it showed in their shooting. They couldn't relax to concentrate. They were not poised under pressure and the Coaches needed to have dealt with it. Different game different pressures, but they need to be recognized and dealt with You are changing the people aspect with judging on 4 minutes. Why do you avoid the human aspect of a game and just the static stats. Don't you see that you win and lose with people, and it is the people who play the games.
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Is Wes Miller not a person? Why does he not get any of your leadership quotes when he leads us to a fast start? Why do we only comment on the slow starts?
This discussion is about psychology, the most human of the sciences. It's about us, as people, not stats. What we choose to focus on.
The clustering illusion is the tendency to erroneously consider the inevitable "streaks" or "clusters" arising in small samples from random distributions to be non-random. The illusion is caused by a human tendency to underpredict the amount of variability likely to appear in a small sample.
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Sedz - May I ask you this question. If the stats and not the people is what wins a game, why did CWM say stop ragging on my guys on social media. They are not indifferent to extra things besides past game stats in the equation. ( I also think he was just upset and he had to lay the blame somewhere). Why did Huggins kick E. Martin off the court?
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Originally posted by leo from jersey View PostSedz - May I ask you this question. If the stats and not the people is what wins a game, why did CWM say stop ragging on my guys on social media. They are not indifferent to extra things besides past game stats in the equation. ( I also think he was just upset and he had to lay the blame somewhere). Why did Huggins kick E. Martin off the court?
The main benefit of statistics is they can overcome our human biases. Fans have seen two consecutive slow starts and are prone to conclude that we always start slow. But our slow starts aren't any more common than would be expected with random variability.Last edited by sedz; 02-28-2024, 04:20 PM.
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All I know is this, we played the #1 team on the road, and it was a two possession game under a minute to go. There is nothing to complain about there.
How other teams lost at Houston:
West Virginia 89-55
Texas Tech 79-54
UCF 57-42
K-State 74-52
OK-State 79-63
Texas 82-61
Iowa State 73-65
ISU and UC had the closest margins there. Nobody else even close. So I guess the complaint is that we couldn’t beat #1 on the road.
Fire Scott Satterfield
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