Drives me crazy. We wait until 6 seconds to engage and then force up a bad shot. We are more worried to leave 1 second than score. Start at 10 and get a decent shot. It happens a lot. Our last shot offense has to be under 20%.
JP1037 said:
Drives me crazy. We wait until 6 seconds to engage and then force up a bad shot. We are more worried to leave 1 second than score. Start at 10 and get a decent shot. It happens a lot. Our last shot offense has to be under 20%.
JP1037 said:
Drives me crazy. We wait until 6 seconds to engage and then force up a bad shot. We are more worried to leave 1 second than score. Start at 10 and get a decent shot. It happens a lot. Our last shot offense has to be under 20%.
We got a great look to end the first half tonight off the inbounds. Just didn't make it.JP1037 said:
Drives me crazy. We wait until 6 seconds to engage and then force up a bad shot. We are more worried to leave 1 second than score. Start at 10 and get a decent shot. It happens a lot. Our last shot offense has to be under 20%.
Dennis fired the pass with between 3.5 and 4 seconds left; it was deflected so high that it didn't come down until 0.7 left.bear2be2 said:We got a great look to end the first half tonight off the inbounds. Just didn't make it.JP1037 said:
Drives me crazy. We wait until 6 seconds to engage and then force up a bad shot. We are more worried to leave 1 second than score. Start at 10 and get a decent shot. It happens a lot. Our last shot offense has to be under 20%.
And even preceding that, Dennis had an open shooter. He just couldn't quite get the pass to him. It was just bad luck that the ball was deflected way up in the air and cost us most of the time remaining on the clock.
You don't want to get a last shot off before then, so I thought he initiated the offense at a good time. He just didn't get the pass off cleanly. It happens.whitetrash said:Dennis fired the pass with between 3.5 and 4 seconds left; it was deflected so high that it didn't come down until 0.7 left.bear2be2 said:We got a great look to end the first half tonight off the inbounds. Just didn't make it.JP1037 said:
Drives me crazy. We wait until 6 seconds to engage and then force up a bad shot. We are more worried to leave 1 second than score. Start at 10 and get a decent shot. It happens a lot. Our last shot offense has to be under 20%.
And even preceding that, Dennis had an open shooter. He just couldn't quite get the pass to him. It was just bad luck that the ball was deflected way up in the air and cost us most of the time remaining on the clock.
If you had decided not to live with it, what were your options?Wade said:
I have decided to just live with.
Fre3dombear said:JP1037 said:
Drives me crazy. We wait until 6 seconds to engage and then force up a bad shot. We are more worried to leave 1 second than score. Start at 10 and get a decent shot. It happens a lot. Our last shot offense has to be under 20%.
The strategy is with 4 seconds or more and us having the ball, the other team still scores inexplicably 79% of the time
Griz said:If you had decided not to live with it, what were your options?Wade said:
I have decided to just live with.
Neither researched or out of thin air. I watch every game and rewatch home games (so I can enjoy the camera angle) and this issue has stood out as I think we engage 3 or 4 seconds too late consistently. Never claimed I got it from hard data but it drives my MBB group crazy too so I know I am not alone.historian said:Fre3dombear said:JP1037 said:
Drives me crazy. We wait until 6 seconds to engage and then force up a bad shot. We are more worried to leave 1 second than score. Start at 10 and get a decent shot. It happens a lot. Our last shot offense has to be under 20%.
The strategy is with 4 seconds or more and us having the ball, the other team still scores inexplicably 79% of the time
What is the source of that stat? Did you pull it out of thin air or did someone actually do the work to research & calculate it?
historian said:Fre3dombear said:JP1037 said:
Drives me crazy. We wait until 6 seconds to engage and then force up a bad shot. We are more worried to leave 1 second than score. Start at 10 and get a decent shot. It happens a lot. Our last shot offense has to be under 20%.
The strategy is with 4 seconds or more and us having the ball, the other team still scores inexplicably 79% of the time
What is the source of that stat? Did you pull it out of thin air or did someone actually do the work to research & calculate it?
Quinton said:
You have a valid view. I think the number Drew cites is okay (6 seconds ) but I think 7-7.5 is best to start heading downhill. In theory shot goes up at + or - 3.5 seconds leaving just enough time for a putback/quick shot off rebound.
Won't really argue with 6 seconds but the issue is we've waited until 5 or less many times which is a lot different than starting to accelerate at 6.
Sounds inconsequential but makes a huge difference. So I think execution of the 6 concept hasn't been great.
Griz said:If you had decided not to live with it, what were your options?Wade said:
I have decided to just live with.