Chris89128
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I swear you only comment on things to be an ass. My point is she was our best player, so that is why I chose those two.
The reality is, we could have won last night's game with the players on the floor. We were in it till the end, but couldn't finish. MD is a good team, but their focus and confidence prevailed. We faltered down the stretch, while they had key players step up.
Who is Maryland's go-to player? They /don't have one./
UT has a team full of players who were ranked top 20 in the country--every one of them. So I don't buy this notion that you have to have a star to be a good, efficient offense. You don't need a star to shoot better than 30 percent or make more than 4 of 22 three-point shots. That much I know. One can argue that we needed a go-to player to save us from our absurdly bad shooting. But one could also argue that maybe some of the highly recruited players we DO have ought to be able to make more than 20 percent of their shots. That was an decidedly winnable game with the players we had.
Having a star certainly helps IF they play within a sound, efficient system as the stars do at ND and UConn. I'm not sure UT knows how to effectively integrate stars into our system. I guess we'll find out next year. PS basically hoped her stars would bail out her bad offense, and they often did. Whenever Parker went to the bench, our offense went in the toilet despite the fact that we still had five highly recruited players on the floor. We lost a national title one year because Holdsclaw--our star--had a horrendous game against duke (as I recall) in the national semifinal. She kept shooting and missing, shooting and missing. PS easily could have spread the ball around, but she hoped Holdsclaw would find the range and she didn't. We lost a game we should have easily won. Holdsclaw did help us win a national title (or two)--but you can rely too much on stars if you are not smart. How about the title game we lost to UConn when Taurasi was a senior. She was the star on a young husky team. We had Kara Lawson, senior, and a good senior forward and a more veteran team. I thought Taurasi would spend the night shooting; instead, she set up a lot of shots by her younger teammates, made a few shots--and of course they beat us. They had a better offense, players who made big shots while we struggled--yea, it goes way back.
Warlick thought Simmons was our star and let her shoot too much. If I know Warlick, she will hope, like her mentor, that DeShields will bail out her sketchy offense. I'm pretty sure we'll see our players standing around next year, watching DeShields do her thing. Maybe DeShields will have to do it all. I hope not--but as of now, we have no reliable outside shooters for next year.
Maryland's guards aren't more talented than Carter--but they contribute more offensively. I can't explain why. This is why we are frustrating. Forget greatness--but we should be better than we are.
Let me add this: Players are who they are. We didn't have any dependable scorers this year after Izzy went down except Burdick and, sometimes, Graves. Everyone else was completely erratic. I guess my problem is that I expect our players to be better offensively than they are, and I blame coaching and a lack of confidence (which comes in part from coaching) for it. Carter ought to be better offensively than she is. Graves should be shooting jumpers from the foul line WITHOUT hesitation. She's at the end of her junior year! Instead, she hesitates. She always hesitates. She is a good athlete and has a great BB build and she has a pretty nice shooting touch when she does it. So, why, as a junior, does she stand at the foul line with the ball and hesitate to shoot--wondering if she should perhaps drive through heavy traffic and try to score? Our coaches should have gotten that hesitation and slow decision-making out of her by now, IMO. Maryland's guards aren't more talented than Carter--but they contribute more offensively. I can't explain why. This is why we are frustrating. Forget greatness--but we should be better than we are.
Maryland's guards, each and every one of them, are more talented than Carter.
This is why they contribute more offensively: because they know how to do something on the offensive end other than dribble around in circles. They are not afraid to shoot or drive to the basket. They have confidence in their shot. Carter has none of these attributes, and that's why she is about half as good as they are. She may be a better defensive player, but not by so much that it comes close to offsetting how they put her to shame when it comes to offensive skills.
You know what they call a "defensive specialist"? It's a mediocre basketball player.
They would not be in the FF. Everything revolves around Stewart.
And, just for the fun of it, take away two more of Ucons big girls, and one of their guards, and like the Da Bears in the 80's, Ucon would still win it all.
Amb - I agree with this. I think many are conflating physical athletic talent with basketball skills and treating them as one and the same. Carter can run and jump out of the gym. She's quick, fast, and can move like a gazelle. Yet as you point out she brings very little to the game in the way of actual scoring and impacting the game. And as for her defense - I think it is overrated. She is no lock-down defender and cannot stop dribble penetration. She lacks basketball skills. And that means she is less talented than her Maryland counterparts.