AbeVigodaLive wrote:Q-was-here wrote:AbeVigodaLive wrote:Q-was-here wrote:Banchero is a very smooth operator. Really love the poise he plays with as a freshman.
So many of these guys nowadays come in to college incredibly poised on the court. Pretty incredible.
Speaking of poise, I was a little surprised at Gonzaga's lack of it. It felt like they were over-reliant on Timme on offense. I have never watched Gonzaga this season until the tourney, but for the #1 seed to be so one-dimensional in their halfcourt sets seemed a bit odd. Are their guards really that limited?
I really dig/dug Nembhard. But Arkansas completely cut him off last night and exposed his limitations. As for poise, he's a senior with 120+ starts in his career! Everything went downhill from there. I think two of the wings combined to shoot 2 - 22 for the tourney on threes. And Gonzaga also struggled from the line.
Eric Musselman is a really good coach. I always thought he got screwed a bit in the pros, too. And the worst part... didn't he want to come to Minnesota?!?!? I think there was a chance he would have stuck around awhile, too with the legacy connection to the school and basketball in the area.
[Note: I know it's a tired topic today... but that officiating was atrocious. Although it might have actually helped Holmgren in the eyes of pro scouts... since he seems to know how to defend and use his size while going with the verticality thing.]
That one call where he went straight up, he did have his arms lowered a bit, so I can kinda give the officials a bit of a pass on that one. He wasn't totally vertical. The call before that where the guy put his shoulder into his chest and blatantly initiated contact was definitely a bad call. If Holmgren had flopped instead of trying to hold his ground, they absolutely would have called a charge.
As for Musselman, that guy just wins at every level as a head coach. Man, talk about a lifer. He's like one of the all-time winningest coaches in the old CBA and he was super young back then. He's been an NBA assistant. He put Nevada on the map and now he's having success at Arkansas.