The biggest component of defense is effort. Plenty of guys with average quickness have made themselves competent defenders by simply showing up and trying.
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it's certainly an important component but not the only one. it takes smarts and experience to be a good bball defender the same way it does to play good defense in football or baseball. simply trying hard ain't enough.
Effort should be a given; what separates the great ones is knowing how to play defense.
I'll disagree. Man-to-man defense is not complicated.
Force your man the opposite direction he likes to go, call out screens, stay between you man and the basket, the further you are from the ball the more you sag off into passing lanes, box out and form a triangle if close to the basket, establish if you switch on screens, hand in the face of the shooter, challenge all shots, if you get beat follow the ball etc...
It's stuff you learn in middle school or early high school. There are other variables but it's not that difficult IMO.
95% is desire and hustle.
reading your post validates mine, as evidenced by the incomplete list of 10 fundamentals of playing good defense. and the "other variables" you mention. defense isn't that difficult if you know what you're doing. it is if you're constantly scratching your head.
you're right on one point though - most players learn this stuff growing up. most of our players apparently didn't, or they're refusing to play smart, for what reason I'd have no idea whatsoever.
Yeah, no way it could be a coach who acts more like their pal than their superior. Has to be the players fault.
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That's what I can't understand either.
That's the other thing, what this team is doing (not finding your man, not stopping the ball on a fast break, not contesting shots is elementary type stuff.
The only thing it can be is lack of desire, hustle and laziness.
But at this level one would think at least one player (T. Smith) would take ownership and bust the butts of his teammates.
Yeah, no way it could be a coach who acts more like their pal than their superior.
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this is precisely why I think it has more to do with bball ABCs than effort. Tyler Smith can bark at his mates, and I think he and others do. His job isn't to teach them ball-you-man defense though.
Yeah, no way it could be a coach who acts more like their pal than their superior. Has to be the players fault.
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Oooh, he actually yelled at someone during a game. Petrifying. When was the last time he rooted somebody to the bench? There's a reason teams coached by K, Calhoun, and Huggins, to name a few don't make the same defensive mistakes over and over. Consequences.Hang on there.
Multiple times this year I've seen Bruce blow a gasket on the court for players screwing up. E.g., he called timeout against Asheville, I believe, when we were up by 15+ and we let a guy get off a clean 3, and he absolutely laid into Renaldo.
Perhaps he lets them off the hook sometimes when he shouldn't, but I don't see what you see.
Oooh, he actually yelled at someone during a game. Petrifying. When was the last time he rooted somebody to the bench? There's a reason teams coached by K, Calhoun, and Huggins, to name a few don't make the same defensive mistakes over and over. Consequences.
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Oooh, he actually yelled at someone during a game. Petrifying. When was the last time he rooted somebody to the bench? There's a reason teams coached by K, Calhoun, and Huggins, to name a few don't make the same defensive mistakes over and over. Consequences.
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