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Stanford Recap

In a game that was played in a virtual tomb setting, believe me I was there, Texas controlled a very good if not elite college basketball team for nearly 35 minutes of the basketball game. Hell the venue was the only thing wrong with the evening, other than Memphis’ UNLV circa 1991 performance vs. Michigan State. Very worrisome, but that’s for another post. Honestly, it would have been nice if the game was played at a bar in Waikiki. I have the feeling it was. But in any event, it was a game that Longhorn basketball fans should be proud of, and know that Stanford, Michigan State, and even Elvis impersonating Memphis fans were very impressed with the performance. If we haven’t arrived we’re real real close. On to the recap.

Offense

Texas didn’t shoot the ball overly well from deep hitting just 7-22, but the Horns did manage to knock down nearly 50% from the field overall which is a testament to getting to the rim and efficient midrange shooting. The key to both was taking advantage of the Cardinal’s overzealousness closing out on three point perimeter players as well as forcing the Lopez bros away from the cup using high ball screens and the double stack look discussed here with Mason running point. This particular set led to several plays that ended with dunks, lay-ins, and point blank misses leading to easy putbacks. And the reason? The double stack forced the Stanford interior men to guard the entire arc instead of roaming to clean up penetration and cutters. It was high comedy watching Robin hedge a ballscreen and then frantically recover to a cutting Damion James, as Mason or DJ dribble penetrated right behind him like the ‘fridge leading Walter Payton to the hole.

It was also striking just how much quicker not only Texas bigs were to their counterparts, but the speed differential between the backcourts was surprising as well. Mitch Johnson looked like a garden variety point guard you’d see at most Texas 5A high schools. Anthony Goods couldn’t stay in front of anybody, and Washington the team’s best on ball defender was shook repeatedly by Augustin in route to the basket. And make no mistake, Stanford is a very good defensive basketball team.

Defensively

Going in, we knew Texas would struggle with Stanford’s size, and I even lamented to Sailor Ripley that my preview had too much information because I listed everything under the sun defensively that Texas would throw at the Lopi to mitigate their size advantage. Well, Texas indeed tried every defensive angle and finally found something that led to some empty possessions.

To list them, we saw zone, we saw some man doubling with Mason, we saw man doubling with the offside block defender, we saw some 3 quarter court token pressure, and we saw some head-up man with Pittman. And really the only effective defense was Big Dex who seemed to surprise Brook with his size and strength. I don’t know if this showed up on TV but Brook spent much of the second half complaining to the officials about Dex either pushing him or hanging out in the lane for longer than 3 seconds offensively. It was the most important, meaningful performance of Dexter’s career, and with all the NBA scouts in attendance, the Big man certainly got on their radar and made himself some money down the road.

Keys to the game

Big Dex forcing 4 or 5 empty possessions after Stanford went on their run in the second half.

Clint Chapman’s two putbacks in the first ten minutes were gravy.

Mason’s play at point that served to rest DJ, and forced Stanford to chase two shooters on the perimeter.

Mason’s 8 rebounds while Texas’ two bigs were busy guarding the twins.

Texas perimeter defense not allowing Stanford to penentrate and expose the Texas big men to help.

Connor Atchley and Damion James early perimeter jumpers making the Lopi respect their perimeter games.

Rick Barnes defensive gameplan that held Stanford to 18 free throws and 33% from the field.

Certainly one of the biggest wins in the program’s history which sets Texas up for what should be an entertaining tilt against a semi-pro team in the Memphis Wildcats. And I mean that as a compliment. I’ll have a preview of that game this afternoon. Oh, and here’s another great recap from our friends at Longhornroadtrip. I’m off to tee-ball and I’ll be sure to give the aggie parents hell. Unless I misremembered Texas was too small and weak to give the Tree a game. Man it’s going to be a beautiful Saturday.

Hook ‘Em

  1. PatronSaint
    March 29, 2008 at 7:04 am

    I think at first we were guilty of over-scouting them. So many of our short shots looked like we were too aware that there were 7 footers around — even when the shot was not at risk of being blocked. We were throwing up rainbows from 4 feet and missing more of them than we should.

    We settled down and stopped respecting the Lopi so much after about 10 minutes and I got confident in the win.

  2. dick
    March 29, 2008 at 8:13 am

    I get the criticism of the stadium and setup because it is not ideal for watching basketball but the atmosphere far exceeded my expectations. I especially don’t get the longing for the days of the Alamodome setup. That sucks too and I thought this setup was cooler from the first level perspective.

    All the sections save the Memphis section was filled with burnt orange who did what they normally do at basketball games. Cheered loudly when something good happened. There were some dam good “Texas Fight” cheers during the tv timeouts. This is a “neutral” court regional site. Our team would not get 1/10th the support if it was playing in Detroit right now.

    Maybe Packer and Nance were right and there was no home court advantage for the team bc they couldn’t hear 20k longhorns cheering for them. I’m ok with thinking we really are just 20 points better than Stanford.

  3. RansomStoddard
    March 29, 2008 at 10:06 am

    I’m not sure who all those people were but they appeared to be deaf mutes wearing burnt orange. That crowd was really humiliating. At their loudest, it sounded like a junior high crowd

  4. zizzybalubah
    March 29, 2008 at 11:54 am

    Sheer Genius! Pulling Pittman off the bench and having him lean all over the Lopez brothers to wear them down was one of the most creative moves I’ve seen Rick come up with. From a guy full of great strategy, this one was — brilliant!

    It is a pity that a “football school” can be so full of basketball strategy and yet so devoid of creativity on the gridiorn.

    Hey Deloss — instead of cramming Mack’s pockets at every mediocre turn, how ’bout channeling some of those funds to the new Rick Barnes School of Brains & Balls (aka large testicles). Mack and Davis could ride the short bus to the remedial class where they can water paint, dot-to-dot, go potty, and drink Kool-aid from a paper cup while Devo’s “Mongoloid” plays in the background.

  5. Trips Right
    March 29, 2008 at 12:29 pm

    Barnes pulled all the right levers in a game with a bunch of moving parts. And as one of his early detractors, I’m happy to say I was dead wrong. We’re lucky to have him.

  6. srr50
    March 29, 2008 at 2:53 pm

    I have had my worries about his gameday actions, but he has to be one of the best if not the best at developing players. I don’t care if it is a Ford or a Durant or an Ivey or a Atchley — they all get better under his watch.

  7. Huckleberry
    March 29, 2008 at 5:28 pm

    A large portion of that development can be credited to Jeff “Mad Dog” Madden. Although not well-publicized, it’s interesting to note that Todd Wright leans heavily on Madden for advice on individualized S&C programs best-suited for each player on a one-by-one basis.

    Additionally, Wright (who credits all of his success to Madden - who he considers his mentor) has learned an incalculable amount of wisdom regarding improving flexibility, coordination, and other skills required for high-level athletic performance.

  8. Trips Right
    March 29, 2008 at 5:39 pm

    Whiskey or wine tonight Huck Daddy?

  9. Kafka
    March 29, 2008 at 7:51 pm

    Dex had no turnovers because he was shooting quickly (typically a jump hook). This is a big improvement by Dex. The next step is to sometimes fake the jump hook immediately when he gets the ball and then shoot the jump hook after his defender leaves his feet. With Dex’s huge hands, he can easily control the ball with one hand while faking the shot and just keep his shooting arm extended (i.e. after faking, shoot the jump hook strictly with his hand). The advantage of this approach is that the foot work is ultra simple (i.e. no footwork required) and it takes advantage of Dex’s amazing hands. It will also cause uncertainty for the defender.

    SI rated Barnes about 20th in the country. That sounds about right to me. There are better coaches than Barnes but not a bunch. I thought Barnes having Connor try to guard Brook Lopez one on one without any help was pretty stupid. Connor is just too light to deny B. Lopez position.

    Dex had Brook Lopez upset and definitely got into his head. I just hope Dex will get into really good shape next season so we/he can see just how explosive he can be.

  10. Sailor Ripley
    March 29, 2008 at 9:26 pm

    We all continue to marvel at the Dex metamorphosis.

    Can you find me the link that ranks college coaches or was it only print?

    I found this: SI

  11. longhornmatt
    March 29, 2008 at 10:51 pm

    “Additionally, Wright (who credits all of his success to Madden - who he considers his mentor) has learned an incalculable amount of wisdom regarding improving flexibility, coordination, and other skills required for high-level athletic performance.”

    You can make your fancy satirical jokes about Mad Dog all you want, but I guarantee he would have had Kevin Durant benching 185 pounds last year even if it meant that Durant couldn’t lift his arms above his head.

  12. Kafka
    March 30, 2008 at 3:43 pm

    Sailor,

    I got it from the same SI article that you linked to. Rick was in a group of coaches that occupied ranks 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23 which makes for an average rank of 19.5. I rounded to 20.

  13. dick
    March 30, 2008 at 7:30 pm

    When that list is spelled out like that, Barnes around 16-22 is about right. He has the opportunity to move up but he needs some final four success first. I have faith he’ll get there.

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