Showing posts with label Washington. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Washington. Show all posts

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Guest Contributor Ray Floriani -- The Jimmy V Classic

by Ray Floriani

New York City – The annual Jimmy V Classic at Madison Square Garden gave us two interesting games. In the opener, Missouri had a little too much of everything in defeating Villanova 81-71.


Pre-game national anthem


The pace and efficiency:

Off.
Poss.Eff.
Villanova69103
Missouri69117

The Four Factors:

FTA
eFG%FGAOR%TO%
Villanova51173622
Missouri50233612



Jay Wright makes a point


Villanova coach Jay Wright watched all seven of Missouri’s previous games on tape. What he saw was a well coached, veteran team that defends and simply was a challenging task for his young Wildcats. “We were hoping to grind it out, keep it close near the end and possibly steal one,” Wright said.

Villanova trailed by double digits most of the second half but did close late to get it to a one possession game. Each time Villanova was unable to get any closer. The culprit was turnovers, untimely turnovers.

The Wildcats entered the game with a commendable 19% TO rate. Missouri, which exerts pressure in a half court setting forced Villanova into a 22% rate. That proved significant as Villanova shot well, got to the line and hit the boards hard. Transition points were crucial also as the Big Twelve representatives owned a 24-8 edge in fast break points.

Wildcats placed five players in double figures. Their points and Manley totals are as follows:

Manley
PtsEff.
Maalik Wayns1413
Darrun Hilliard138
Dom Cheek1214
Mouphtaou Yarou1114
JayVaughn Pinkston1012

Maalik Wayns canned three treys in the stretch. He added 9 assists but did commit five turnovers. Yarou is a nice player inside but needs help. Pinkston did some fine work in the lane. He is still coming around as Wright noted “he (Pinkston) is rusty.” The Villanova mentor noted Pinkston not only sat out suspended last year but worked nine hours a day and was able to get little gym time for himself. Hilliard is a freshman with a nice shooting stroke. Cheek does a good job in the open floor.

Marcus Denmon led all scorers with 28 points. The Missouri guard was 6 of 10 from the floor. Kim English added 15 while Ricardo Ratliffe scored 17 points while grabbing 11 boards. Ratliffe proved it’s quality not quantity. He is Missouri’s only legitimate big man but the 6-8 senior forward is very effective.

Learning experience. Wright and several of his Villanova players echoed that sentiment following the game. “we’ll learn from this,” Cheek said. “We’ll watch the tape, get back to practice and just get better.”


View of court from
upper press box

• Spent the first half recording possessions longhand. Came up with 34 per team, the same as the formula yielded off the box score. Missouri led 42-29 at the break with a noticeable 125-85 advantage in offensive efficiency.

• Missouri is 8-0. Villanova is now 5-3 with a Saturday game at Temple next on tap.

Marquette vs. Washington
The night cap of the V saw Marquette edge Washington 79-77 in a game settled on the last possession. The pace and efficiency:

Off.
Poss.Eff.
Marquette74107
Washington71109

One of those rare occurrences, Washington won the efficiency battle but not the won-lost ‘war’. Huskies had a 46-28% lead in offensive rebounding percentage. Interestingly, Marquette had the edge 31-7% in free throw rate. Usually teams ‘owning’ the glass get to the line more.

A reason Marquette visited the line (27 to 10 in free throw attempts) more was their ability to attack the basket. They led 10-0 in fast break points and penetrated well.


The scoreboard tells the story of game two


Marquette coach Buzz Williams is a tempo free advocate who discussed Washington’s efficiency in the post game press conference. Williams is a stickler in preaching the value and numerical meaning of a possession to his players. Little surprise that Marquette had an outstanding 14% TO rate, as opposed to the 23% of the Huskies.

Jae Crowder (18 points) hit one three all night. It was the deciding basket for Marquette as a Washington attempt pon the next possession missed at the buzzer.

The leading scorers and Manley numbers:

Manley
PtsEff.
Darius Johnson-Odom (MU)2317
Terrence Ross (WU)1924

• Marquette’s Jae Crowder had a Manley Efficiency of 17 along with his 18 points.

Chris Otule of Marqueete went out with a knee injury after the first two minutes. The 6-11 junior averages just over 5 p[oints per game but Williams felt his loss was significant in Marquette’s defending Washington’s ball screens.

• Marquette is 8-0, Washington is now 4-3.

• Huskies are spending a few more days in New York. They will take in a movie, two plays then on Saturday face Duke back at Madison Square Garden.


Villanova was the only schol to bring cheerleaders.
Here Ray is enjoying the company

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Guest Contributor Ray Floriani: A Quick Recap of North Carolina & Washington


by Ray Floriani

LYNDHURST, NJ - It wasn't decided until the final possession but North Carolina advanced to the Newark Regional. A last second Washington shot was short and the Tar Heels held on for an 86-83 victory. The numbers:

Off.
TeamPoss.Off.
Washington76109
North Carolina74116

* In a fast paced affair both clubs shot over 50% eFG percentage (Wash. 53, UNC 52) and had turnover rates under 20%. The Tar Heels, an outstanding 12% while the Pac-10 Huskies checked in at 18%. A big disparity was the free throw line. Washington had seven attempts, making all of them to UNC's 23 (18 converted). A closer look shows 26% of the Huskies field goal attempts were beyond the arc. Carolina, on the other hand, took 18% of their shots from deep. Getting to the line is difficult when a good fourth of your shots are long range. North Carolina spread the wealth with five double digit scorers, led by Tyler Zeller's 23 points. For Washington, 6-6 freshman Terrence Ross, a 7.7 scorer on the year, sparkled in relief with 19 points (3 of 5 from three) 6 rebounds in 24 minutes.

Monday, September 21, 2009

DeCourcy -- Fisher One of Top 10 Point Guards

Another dividend of the Final Four run last season? Or the extra exposure from the World University Games over the summer? According to Mike DeCourcy over at The Sporting News Villanova's Corey Fisher is the #9 point in DI ball. Says DeCourcy, "He should increase his 24.3-minute average. Others recognized include fellow Big East bballer Kemba Walker (#5) from UConn and former Big East bballer from Cincinnati (now at South Carolina), Devan Downey, who DeCourcy ranked at #4. DeCourcy also recognized freshmen John Wall (#2) and Abdul Gaddy (#7), who begin their DI careers at Kentucky and Washington respectively.


Congratulations Corey!