Game Thread: Lady Vols at Mississippi State; Thurs Jan 18 ; 5PM ; SEC Network win 75-64

#1

Coach Jumper

"the right words"
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#1

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Coach Jumper : 66-62

@Volfan2012 72-67
@Ladyvol777 75-65
@knoxvol52 74-71
@volnationnj 73-68
@VolFuture 75-68
@J-Dog 1313 78-63
@Go aeiou 79-78
@Golfteacher 75-65
@mudcat1973 68-66
@creekdipper 67-59

Miss st: TN:​

Shoots 45% 43%
3pt 35% 31%
PPG/OPP 77/59 78/71
Rebs 43 45
A/TO 322/244 246/265
Stl 156 86
Blk 104 48

Miss st primary players
#2 Jordan,,5'9",,17.3 PPG,,6.1 Reb,,45/39 ATO,,43 Stl
#4 Carter,,6'5",,15.0 PPG,,9.8 REB,,31 BLK
#3 Park-Lane,,5'3",,24-61=40% 3pt,,10.4PPG,,116-42 ATO,,17 Stl
#21 Powe,,6'1",,42-105=40% 3PT,,10.9 PPG
#5 Barnum,,6'2",,6.6 REb

Analysis:
very athletic team that relies on FB's, drives and 3pters,,very handsy defenders,,Do not turn the ball over
Game:
If we don't match them with athletic starters,,we will be in trouble
Best projected lineup: JP, RJ, JS, TK,(1-JH,2-KS)

(((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((())))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))​

Hoops Central: Lady Vols at Mississippi State​

GAMEDAY TIMES & BROADCAST INFO​


Women's BasketballJanuary 16, 2024

Tennessee (10-6, 3-1 SEC) wraps up a two-game stretch of road contests on Thursday evening, traveling to Starkville to face Mississippi State (15-4, 2-2 SEC). The Lady Vols and Bulldogs are set to tip inside Humphrey Coliseum at 6:02 p.m. CT (7:02 p.m. ET) on SEC Network. UT will try to bounce back after seeing its six-game winning streak and unbeaten SEC start end on Sunday, as Texas A&M prevailed, 71-56, in College Station.

The current five-game stretch for UT includes four of those on the road, with the A&M and MSU contests and visits to Ole Miss and Georgia sandwiched around Sunday's Vandy Knoxville visit. UT dealt with road woes after the A&M game, as winter weather foiled plans to fly home Sunday. The team arrived back in Knoxville just before 7 p.m. Monday, catching a charter flight out of Austin.

Mississippi State, meanwhile, enjoyed a Sunday home win over Ole Miss, 69-57. The Bulldogs evened their league record at 2-2 after opening 0-2 with losses to Vanderbilt and South Carolina. Their other SEC win was vs. Arkansas (Jan. 11).

NOTING THE LADY VOLS

  • UT remains in a tie for second place in the SEC standings, joining LSU and Vandy at 3-1 through Sunday's games.
  • Tennessee's schedule is rated No. 31 in the NCAA's Toughest Schedule Report.
  • The Lady Vols are No. 6 in that report for cumulative opposition (which factors past and future games this season).
  • The Lady Vols are scoring 76.5 ppg. in SEC play, which ranks as the third-best offensive attack behind LSU (88.25) and South Carolina (81.25).
  • In all games, UT puts up 77.7, which stacks up 33rd in NCAA Division I.
  • Tennessee is third in league play at 43.5 rebounds per contest and ranks No. 12 nationally at 45.19 for all games.
  • Tennessee has been led in SEC play by the strong one-two punch of Rickea Jackson and Jewel Spear.
  • Jackson ranks fifth in SEC play at 19.8 ppg., while Spear is tied for 18th at 14.8.
  • Sara Puckett's shooting against SEC competition has been impressive. She is hitting 51.9 percent from the field, 54.5 percent from the arc (6-11) and 100 percent from the free-throw line (4-4).
COMMON THREADS
  • Third-year UT assistant coach Samantha Williams and second-year Mississippi State head coach Sam Purcell were assistants together for Jeff Walz at Louisville for seven seasons from 2013-14 to 2019-20.
  • Purcell, Williams, Kellie Harper, Jon Harper and strength coach Bryan Tatum have Auburn connections as it pertains to former Tigers head coach Joe Ciampi.
  • Purcell was a student manager (2000-03) and video coordinator/admin. assistant (2003-05) at Auburn.
  • Kellie Harper was on Ciampi's staff (admin. asst., then asst. coach) from 1999-2001, while Jon Harper graduated from Auburn and spent three years as a practice player, manager and intern for Ciampi from 1996-99.
  • Samantha Williams played for the Tigers and Ciampi from 1992-96, connecting with Jon Harper during that time.
  • Lady Vol strength and conditioning coach Bryan Tatum worked with Auburn football from 2014-21.
  • MSU's Jessika Carter and Tennessee's Rickea Jackson were Bulldog teammates from 2019-22.
RECAPPING THE LAST GAME
  • The Lady Vols suffered their first SEC loss of the season on Sunday afternoon, falling to Texas A&M in College Station, 71-56.
  • Junior Sara Puckett led Tennessee (10-6, 3-1 SEC) with 12 points and seven rebounds. Senior Jewel Spear was close behind with 11 points, and fifth-year senior Rickea Jackson ended the day with 10 as UT saw its six-game winning streak come to an end.
  • Aicha Coulibaly was the high scorer for the Aggies (14-3, 2-2 SEC), finishing with 19 points. Sahara Jones and Endyia Rogers were also in double figures with 15 each.
POSTGAME NOTES VS. TEXAS A&M
  • PUCKETT PRODUCTION: Junior forward Sara Puckett led Tennessee in three statistical categories, carding 12 points, seven rebounds and five assists. Her five dimes tied her career and season highs (set vs. Liberty on Dec. 31, 2023) and stand as her best total vs. an SEC opponent. Her previous league high of four assists came on Feb. 24, 2022, vs. Mississippi State.
  • SPEAR FROM DEEP: Senior guard Jewel Spear was second in scoring, rebounding and assists for the Lady Vols with totals of 11, six and two, respectively. She knocked down a trio of three-pointers on five attempts, marking her highest total of long balls vs. an SEC foe and her most since swishing four vs. Wofford on Dec. 19.
MILESTONE WATCH
  • Kellie Harper is two wins away from her 100th as head coach at UT and 17 shy of 400 for her career.
  • Against Liberty, Tess Darby hit six three-pointers and surpassed Taber Spani (143) and Shannon Bobbitt (147) to move into eighth place on UT's career three-pointers list. She now has 150 through the Texas A&M game.
  • Darby now takes aim at Brittany Jackson (161, 2001-05), Shekinna Stricklen (163, 2008-12) and Ariel Massengale (164, 2011-15), who reside in seventh, sixth and fifth, respectively.
  • Rickea Jackson surpassed 600 career rebounds vs. Liberty and is 174 points shy of scoring 1,000 as a Lady Vol. She has 1,911 for her career, including 826 wearing a UT uniform.
  • With a blocked shot vs. MTSU on Dec. 6, Tamari Key reached 300 for her career and became the ninth player in SEC history to hit that mark.
  • After blocking eight shots over the past three games, Key now has 316 blocks through the A&M game and needs five to catch Sylvia Fowles (LSU, 321, 2004-08) in eighth on the SEC's all-time career list.
  • She also is 68 points away from becoming the 49th player in Lady Vol history to score 1,000 points here.
UT-MSU SERIES NOTES
  • Tennessee has a 39-8 all-time record vs. Mississippi State after winning two of the past three meetings.
  • UT is 18-3 vs. MSU in Knoxville, 17-3 vs. the Bulldogs in Starkville and 4-2 at neutral sites.
  • State has a 2-0 record in overtime games between these programs, winning a 65-63 affair in Starkville on Jan. 29, 2016, and a 91-90 double-overtime thriller at Humphrey Coliseum the last time these programs met on Feb. 26, 2023.
  • Kellie Harper is 2-2 in her career vs. Mississippi State, including 2-1 in Knoxville and 0-1 in Starkville.
  • Harper was 5-0 as a Lady Vol player vs. MSU from 1995-99.
  • UT and MSU have met six times in the SEC Tournament, with the Lady Vols owning a 4-2 record.
A LOOK AT THE BULLDOGS
  • Mississippi State has four scoring in double figures, including Jerkaila Jordan (17.3), Jessika Carter (15.0), Debreasha Powe (10.9) and Lauren Park-Lane (10.4).
  • Powe has drained 42 threes, hitting 40 percent.
  • Carter paces MSU on the boards at 9.8 rpg.
  • The Bulldogs allow only 59.4 ppg. (69.0 vs. SEC).
  • State grabs 8.2 steals per contest.
ABOUT THE HEAD COACH
  • Sam Purcell is 37-15 in his second season as head coach of the Bulldogs.
  • Last season, Purcell became the winningest first-year head coach in Mississippi State women's basketball history at 22-11 overall and 9-7 in SEC play.
  • He also guided MSU to the NCAA Tournament after a three-year hiatus.
  • Purcell cut his teeth at Auburn (student manager/video coordinator/admin. assistant), Tulsa (assistant coach), Georgia Tech (video coordinator/assistant coach) and Louisville (assistant coach/associate coach).
STATE'S MOST RECENT GAME
  • Graduate student center Jessika Carter finished with 23 points on 11-of-15 shooting from the field with five rebounds in 37 minutes to lead Mississippi State to a 69-57 victory over rival Ole Miss inside Humphrey Coliseum on Sunday.
  • With the win, Mississippi State has won consecutive SEC contests and improved to 15-4 on the season.
  • Graduate student guard Lauren Park-Lane posted 13 points and a team-high eight assists in 35 minutes, while freshman guard Mjracle Sheppard added eight points and three assists in 22 minutes. All eight of Sheppard's points came in the first half on a 4-of-4 effort from the field.
  • Mississippi State held Ole Miss scoreless over the final 5:52 minutes of action and ended the contest on a 13-2 run over the final 7:11.
LAST UT-MSU CONTEST
  • The Lady Vols suffered a 91-90 loss to Mississippi State on Feb. 6, 2023, in a double-overtime thriller that featured 17 lead changes and 14 ties inside Humphrey Coliseum.
  • Senior Rickea Jackson recorded a double-double to lead UT (17-9, 9-2 SEC), tying her season highs of 28 points and 11 rebounds. Sophomore Jillian Hollingshead recorded the first double-double of her career with 18 points and 12 rebounds, setting career highs in both categories. Senior Tess Darby was also in double figures, turning in 10 points on the night.
  • MSU (16-7, 5-5 SEC) was led by Jerkaila Jordan, who tallied 24 points. Asianae Johnson and Anastasia Hayes were also in double figures with 16 and 14, respectively.
UP NEXT
  • After its trip to Starkville, the Lady Vols return home to host in-state rival Vanderbilt on Sunday at 3 p.m. ET before getting an open date on Jan. 25. The UT-VU contest will be televised by SEC Network.
  • The game vs. the Commodores is Tennessee's We Back Pat game as part of the Southeastern Conference's week-long initiative focused on bringing awareness and recognition to the Pat Summitt Foundation, a fund of East Tennessee Foundation, and its fight against Alzheimer's disease.
 
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#2
#2
Tess

Hoops Central: Lady Vols at Mississippi State​

GAMEDAY TIMES & BROADCAST INFO​


Women's BasketballJanuary 16, 2024

Tennessee (10-6, 3-1 SEC) wraps up a two-game stretch of road contests on Thursday evening, traveling to Starkville to face Mississippi State (15-4, 2-2 SEC). The Lady Vols and Bulldogs are set to tip inside Humphrey Coliseum at 6:02 p.m. CT (7:02 p.m. ET) on SEC Network. UT will try to bounce back after seeing its six-game winning streak and unbeaten SEC start end on Sunday, as Texas A&M prevailed, 71-56, in College Station.

The current five-game stretch for UT includes four of those on the road, with the A&M and MSU contests and visits to Ole Miss and Georgia sandwiched around Sunday's Vandy Knoxville visit. UT dealt with road woes after the A&M game, as winter weather foiled plans to fly home Sunday. The team arrived back in Knoxville just before 7 p.m. Monday, catching a charter flight out of Austin.

Mississippi State, meanwhile, enjoyed a Sunday home win over Ole Miss, 69-57. The Bulldogs evened their league record at 2-2 after opening 0-2 with losses to Vanderbilt and South Carolina. Their other SEC win was vs. Arkansas (Jan. 11).

NOTING THE LADY VOLS

  • UT remains in a tie for second place in the SEC standings, joining LSU and Vandy at 3-1 through Sunday's games.
  • Tennessee's schedule is rated No. 31 in the NCAA's Toughest Schedule Report.
  • The Lady Vols are No. 6 in that report for cumulative opposition (which factors past and future games this season).
  • The Lady Vols are scoring 76.5 ppg. in SEC play, which ranks as the third-best offensive attack behind LSU (88.25) and South Carolina (81.25).
  • In all games, UT puts up 77.7, which stacks up 33rd in NCAA Division I.
  • Tennessee is third in league play at 43.5 rebounds per contest and ranks No. 12 nationally at 45.19 for all games.
  • Tennessee has been led in SEC play by the strong one-two punch of Rickea Jackson and Jewel Spear.
  • Jackson ranks fifth in SEC play at 19.8 ppg., while Spear is tied for 18th at 14.8.
  • Sara Puckett's shooting against SEC competition has been impressive. She is hitting 51.9 percent from the field, 54.5 percent from the arc (6-11) and 100 percent from the free-throw line (4-4).
COMMON THREADS
  • Third-year UT assistant coach Samantha Williams and second-year Mississippi State head coach Sam Purcell were assistants together for Jeff Walz at Louisville for seven seasons from 2013-14 to 2019-20.
  • Purcell, Williams, Kellie Harper, Jon Harper and strength coach Bryan Tatum have Auburn connections as it pertains to former Tigers head coach Joe Ciampi.
  • Purcell was a student manager (2000-03) and video coordinator/admin. assistant (2003-05) at Auburn.
  • Kellie Harper was on Ciampi's staff (admin. asst., then asst. coach) from 1999-2001, while Jon Harper graduated from Auburn and spent three years as a practice player, manager and intern for Ciampi from 1996-99.
  • Samantha Williams played for the Tigers and Ciampi from 1992-96, connecting with Jon Harper during that time.
  • Lady Vol strength and conditioning coach Bryan Tatum worked with Auburn football from 2014-21.
  • MSU's Jessika Carter and Tennessee's Rickea Jackson were Bulldog teammates from 2019-22.
RECAPPING THE LAST GAME
  • The Lady Vols suffered their first SEC loss of the season on Sunday afternoon, falling to Texas A&M in College Station, 71-56.
  • Junior Sara Puckett led Tennessee (10-6, 3-1 SEC) with 12 points and seven rebounds. Senior Jewel Spear was close behind with 11 points, and fifth-year senior Rickea Jackson ended the day with 10 as UT saw its six-game winning streak come to an end.
  • Aicha Coulibaly was the high scorer for the Aggies (14-3, 2-2 SEC), finishing with 19 points. Sahara Jones and Endyia Rogers were also in double figures with 15 each.
POSTGAME NOTES VS. TEXAS A&M
  • PUCKETT PRODUCTION: Junior forward Sara Puckett led Tennessee in three statistical categories, carding 12 points, seven rebounds and five assists. Her five dimes tied her career and season highs (set vs. Liberty on Dec. 31, 2023) and stand as her best total vs. an SEC opponent. Her previous league high of four assists came on Feb. 24, 2022, vs. Mississippi State.
  • SPEAR FROM DEEP: Senior guard Jewel Spear was second in scoring, rebounding and assists for the Lady Vols with totals of 11, six and two, respectively. She knocked down a trio of three-pointers on five attempts, marking her highest total of long balls vs. an SEC foe and her most since swishing four vs. Wofford on Dec. 19.
MILESTONE WATCH
  • Kellie Harper is two wins away from her 100th as head coach at UT and 17 shy of 400 for her career.
  • Against Liberty, Tess Darby hit six three-pointers and surpassed Taber Spani (143) and Shannon Bobbitt (147) to move into eighth place on UT's career three-pointers list. She now has 150 through the Texas A&M game.
  • Darby now takes aim at Brittany Jackson (161, 2001-05), Shekinna Stricklen (163, 2008-12) and Ariel Massengale (164, 2011-15), who reside in seventh, sixth and fifth, respectively.
  • Rickea Jackson surpassed 600 career rebounds vs. Liberty and is 174 points shy of scoring 1,000 as a Lady Vol. She has 1,911 for her career, including 826 wearing a UT uniform.
  • With a blocked shot vs. MTSU on Dec. 6, Tamari Key reached 300 for her career and became the ninth player in SEC history to hit that mark.
  • After blocking eight shots over the past three games, Key now has 316 blocks through the A&M game and needs five to catch Sylvia Fowles (LSU, 321, 2004-08) in eighth on the SEC's all-time career list.
  • She also is 68 points away from becoming the 49th player in Lady Vol history to score 1,000 points here.
UT-MSU SERIES NOTES
  • Tennessee has a 39-8 all-time record vs. Mississippi State after winning two of the past three meetings.
  • UT is 18-3 vs. MSU in Knoxville, 17-3 vs. the Bulldogs in Starkville and 4-2 at neutral sites.
  • State has a 2-0 record in overtime games between these programs, winning a 65-63 affair in Starkville on Jan. 29, 2016, and a 91-90 double-overtime thriller at Humphrey Coliseum the last time these programs met on Feb. 26, 2023.
  • Kellie Harper is 2-2 in her career vs. Mississippi State, including 2-1 in Knoxville and 0-1 in Starkville.
  • Harper was 5-0 as a Lady Vol player vs. MSU from 1995-99.
  • UT and MSU have met six times in the SEC Tournament, with the Lady Vols owning a 4-2 record.
A LOOK AT THE BULLDOGS
  • Mississippi State has four scoring in double figures, including Jerkaila Jordan (17.3), Jessika Carter (15.0), Debreasha Powe (10.9) and Lauren Park-Lane (10.4).
  • Powe has drained 42 threes, hitting 40 percent.
  • Carter paces MSU on the boards at 9.8 rpg.
  • The Bulldogs allow only 59.4 ppg. (69.0 vs. SEC).
  • State grabs 8.2 steals per contest.
ABOUT THE HEAD COACH
  • Sam Purcell is 37-15 in his second season as head coach of the Bulldogs.
  • Last season, Purcell became the winningest first-year head coach in Mississippi State women's basketball history at 22-11 overall and 9-7 in SEC play.
  • He also guided MSU to the NCAA Tournament after a three-year hiatus.
  • Purcell cut his teeth at Auburn (student manager/video coordinator/admin. assistant), Tulsa (assistant coach), Georgia Tech (video coordinator/assistant coach) and Louisville (assistant coach/associate coach).
STATE'S MOST RECENT GAME
  • Graduate student center Jessika Carter finished with 23 points on 11-of-15 shooting from the field with five rebounds in 37 minutes to lead Mississippi State to a 69-57 victory over rival Ole Miss inside Humphrey Coliseum on Sunday.
  • With the win, Mississippi State has won consecutive SEC contests and improved to 15-4 on the season.
  • Graduate student guard Lauren Park-Lane posted 13 points and a team-high eight assists in 35 minutes, while freshman guard Mjracle Sheppard added eight points and three assists in 22 minutes. All eight of Sheppard's points came in the first half on a 4-of-4 effort from the field.
  • Mississippi State held Ole Miss scoreless over the final 5:52 minutes of action and ended the contest on a 13-2 run over the final 7:11.
LAST UT-MSU CONTEST
  • The Lady Vols suffered a 91-90 loss to Mississippi State on Feb. 6, 2023, in a double-overtime thriller that featured 17 lead changes and 14 ties inside Humphrey Coliseum.
  • Senior Rickea Jackson recorded a double-double to lead UT (17-9, 9-2 SEC), tying her season highs of 28 points and 11 rebounds. Sophomore Jillian Hollingshead recorded the first double-double of her career with 18 points and 12 rebounds, setting career highs in both categories. Junior Tess Darby was also in double figures, turning in 10 points on the night.
  • MSU (16-7, 5-5 SEC) was led by Jerkaila Jordan, who tallied 24 points. Asianae Johnson and Anastasia Hayes were also in double figures with 16 and 14, respectively.
UP NEXT
  • After its trip to Starkville, the Lady Vols return home to host in-state rival Vanderbilt on Sunday at 3 p.m. ET before getting an open date on Jan. 25. The UT-VU contest will be televised by SEC Network.
  • The game vs. the Commodores is Tennessee's We Back Pat game as part of the Southeastern Conference's week-long initiative focused on bringing awareness and recognition to the Pat Summitt Foundation, a fund of East Tennessee Foundation, and its fight against Alzheimer's disease.
Tess is senior.
Not a junior
But is her taking COVID-19 year.

Thanks for all your hard work on the game thread.
Easy spot small mistakes in others
And overlook our own bigger mistakes.
 
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#4
#4
Tennessee 72 Miss St 67

Every SEC team they have played has kept them in the sixties. If we can't we'll be the first that couldn't. Vandy they scored 66, Ark 66, Sc 66, Ole Miss 69. So they are averaging 67 in SEC games. Logic says you get to 70 we win, but considering our team this season it is a wait and see which team shows up.
 
#7
#7
Toss a coin. Who knows. It's been a nightmare logistical week. Starkville is not a friendly place for us right now. Tough spot for RJ to bounce back. Jordan and Carter are both playing well. We haven't had a whole decent game since Liberty (I know) but have had some very good halves. Totally screwed the pooch last time out.

Literally no one knows how these LVs will play at any given time. Just throwing a dart at the board and trying to find a shred of hope, LVs 74- 69
 
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#8
#8
Toss a coin. Who knows. It's been a nightmare logistical week. Starkville is not a friendly place for us right now. Tough spot for RJ to bounce back. Jordan and Carter are both playing well. We haven't had a whole decent game since Liberty (I know) but have had some very good halves. Totally screwed the pouch last time out.

Literally no one knows how these LVs will play at any given time. Just throwing a dart at the board and trying to find a shred of hope, LVs 74- 69
Rickea will be fine, she’s mentally tough and thrives on games like this, now it’s everyone else I’m worried about.
 
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#15
#15
LV's 73-68. Similar to the A&M game, I can't bring myself to actually type a Tennessee loss. So I'll just hope for the best. Limit turnovers, keep your opponent in front of you on defense and make a decent percentage of open shots.
That "keep your opponent in front of you" has been an ongoing issue for years. It appears our ladies are a step or half step slower than most guards who glide by so easily apparently.
 
#16
#16
That "keep your opponent in front of you" has been an ongoing issue for years. It appears our ladies are a step or half step slower than most guards who glide by so easily apparently.
Even more concerning, blow bys on the LVs are equal opportunity. They also happen to our faster players. There's something systematically wrong w our D, starting with losing the rim protector who makes up for the blow bys.
 
#17
#17
Even more concerning, blow bys on the LVs are equal opportunity. They also happen to our faster players. There's something systematically wrong w our D, starting with losing the rim protector who makes up for the blow bys.
The blow by plays are happening, but what really stands out to me is opposing teams 3pt % against UT, it’s almost uncanny tbh how every team shoots lights out from there against UT this season. UT is ranked 304/348 in that category. Perimeter defense does not require the greatest athletes but it takes focus, court awareness and organization. I’m not into calling out names, but I watch every LV game and though I am just a fan watching WBB, I think I see the issues. Again, I’m just a fan with an opinion, means nothing.

Key and JH need to be ready to take over the 5 spot duties now and be rim protectors. Strip needs to play 4 and some 3 occasionally. The 1-2-3 players need to figure out perimeter defense, no way this group should be ranked in the 300’s in this. The +/- stat for players when they are on the court tells us a lot, pay attention to that stat….it highlights the weak spots…
 
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#18
#18
The blow by plays are happening, but what really stands out to me is opposing teams 3pt % against UT, it’s almost uncanny tbh how every team shoots lights out from there against UT this season. UT is ranked 304/348 in that category. Perimeter defense does not require the greatest athletes but it takes focus, court awareness and organization. I’m not into calling out names, but I watch every LV game and though I am just a fan watching WBB, I think I see the issues. Again, I’m just a fan with an opinion, means nothing.

Key and JH need to be ready to take over the 5 spot duties now and be rim protectors. Strip needs to play 4 and some 3 occasionally. The 1-2-3 players need to figure out perimeter defense, no way this group should be ranked in the 300’s in this. The +/- stat for players when they are on the court tells us a lot, pay attention to that stat….it highlights the point.

Perimeter defense has been a problem for several years. Even with Key in her best season, teams eventually realized that a center who could shoot from the perimeter was the LV kryptonite. Key lacked the quickness to close them out and if she tried to guard on the perimeter, then that left a huge gap in the lane to exploit. The situation is worse this season because we don't have Jordan Horston who helped compensate for many of those defensive deficiencies.

At this point in the season, I don;t think this problem gets fixed. We need to score more and dominate the boards to cut down on the opportunities given to the other team.

Our best defense is a better offense.
 
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#20
#20
Perimeter defense has been a problem for several years. Even with Key in her best season, teams eventually realized that a center who could shoot from the perimeter was the LV kryptonite. Key lacked the quickness to close them out and if she tried to guard on the perimeter, then that left a huge gap in the lane to exploit. The situation is worse this season because we don't have Jordan Horston who helped compensate for many of those defensive deficiencies.

At this point in the season, I don;t think this problem gets fixed. We need to score more and dominant the boards to cut down on the opportunities given to the other team.

Our best defense is a better offense.
Best defense is getting organized on the perimeter and stop opposing teams from lighting it up from 3 above their averages when they play UT. Just my opinion, that’s all.
 
#21
#21
Best defense is getting organized on the perimeter and stop opposing teams from lighting it up from 3 above their averages when they play UT. Just my opinion, that’s all.

As an outsider, I'd like your opinion. Do you think the LVs play "soft defense"? I'm not saying low-effort because I see effort (and a lot of frustration). I'm asking because as I point out in another thread, the LVs draw less fouls than 93% of other teams. I suspect that they are not creating the "friction" needed to throw off the timing of the opposing offense and thus opponents are getting to their spots easily and shooting in rhythm.
 
#22
#22
As an outsider, I'd like your opinion. Do you think the LVs play "soft defense"? I'm not saying low-effort because I see effort (and a lot of frustration). I'm asking because as I point out in another thread, the LVs draw less fouls than 93% of other teams. I suspect that they are not creating the "friction" needed to throw off the timing of the opposing offense and thus opponents are getting to their spots easily and shooting in rhythm.
@3762OVOL
, just my opinion, but the LV‘s need new defensive coaching leadership, it’s not effort as you say, but you cannot deny that their perimeter defense is really bad, and that is not all on the players, they are better than 304 in the country there.
 
#24
#24

Game moved up to 5 p.m. Gets our team home earlier I guess but I'm not sure how much 2 nighttime hours helps. Probably changed for their crowd's safety.

And freakin Geno has given their point guard a reason to want to show out. Great. Park-Lane and Sam Purcell answered Geno's idiot diss about her transfer in the presser today. They're all insulted. Great.
 
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#25
#25
I have high hopes for the LVs, however, they need to hold down the mistakes and play good defense. We need to start the game as if we have to win this game to be in the NCAAs and play every game there after in the same manner. If we do, we win 75 to 65.
 
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