Bill Marsh wrote:It's a double edged sword. Teams that play relentless defense like Louisville and Marquette can be hurt by the rules change as much as helped by it. The article only seems to focus on the offenses that will benefit without regard to what the consequences will be for those same teams on D.
stever20 wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:It's a double edged sword. Teams that play relentless defense like Louisville and Marquette can be hurt by the rules change as much as helped by it. The article only seems to focus on the offenses that will benefit without regard to what the consequences will be for those same teams on D.
I think that's a valid point. I think the teams that ultimately thrive on this are ones that have a lot of depth.
Bill Marsh wrote:stever20 wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:It's a double edged sword. Teams that play relentless defense like Louisville and Marquette can be hurt by the rules change as much as helped by it. The article only seems to focus on the offenses that will benefit without regard to what the consequences will be for those same teams on D.
I think that's a valid point. I think the teams that ultimately thrive on this are ones that have a lot of depth.
It will be interesting to see if there actually are a lot more fouls called by the time we get to the conference schedule. Some of these changes make the college game more like the NBA. We don't see rookies having a lot of trouble adjusting to the NBA differences from the college game when they get there.
The charge/block changes shouldn't result in any more fouls. It's just that the calls may go a different way, but it's still the same number of fouls called.
The coaches seem to like the changes. If they take to them readily and emphasize them with their players, it should help the transition occur more quickly than if they were fighting them.
Maybe they can next start working on calling walks as the rule is written and eliminating the ridiculous jump stop.
TheHall wrote:The jury's in. From Jeff Borzello:
"STAT OF THE DAY: yesterday, five teams attempted at least 50 free throws. Last season, 11 did -- the ENTIRE season."
https://twitter.com/jeffborzello/status/399170633118253056
stever20 wrote:TheHall wrote:The jury's in. From Jeff Borzello:
"STAT OF THE DAY: yesterday, five teams attempted at least 50 free throws. Last season, 11 did -- the ENTIRE season."
https://twitter.com/jeffborzello/status/399170633118253056
so? it's not going away.
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