Story Poster
Photo by Jack Mackenzie - SicEm365
Baylor Basketball

Gameday Thread: #14 Baylor (12-2; 1-0) vs #18 BYU (12-2; 0-1)

January 8, 2024
53,626

#14 Baylor (12-2; 1-0) plays #18 BYU (12-2; 0-1) at Foster Pavilion in Waco January 9th at 8pm CST.  The game will be televised on ESPN+

KenPom Prediction:  Baylor 79 BYU 77

Torvik Prediction:  Baylor 78 BYU 77

Evan Miyakawa:  Baylor 80 BYU 78

Haslametrics:  BYU 76 Baylor 73


Coaches

BYU:  Mark Pope (51) 176-99 (99-43 at BYU); NCAA

Baylor:  Scott Drew (53); 453-245 overall (433-234 at Baylor); 11 NCAAs; 5 Sweet 16s; 3 Elite 8s; FF; 1 National Championship

Head to Head:  0-0


BYU Starters

Guard:  Dallin Hall (SO) 6-4 195 lbs; 9 ppg; 3 reb; 4 asst; 46% FG; 37% 3pt; 52% FT

Guard: Trevin Knell (JR) 6-5 185 lbs; 13 ppg; 4 reb; 2 asst; 51% FG; 47% 3pt; 65% FT

Guard: Spencer Johnson (SR) 6-5 195 lbs; 11 ppg; 6 reb; 5 asst; 42% FG; 28% 3pt; 83% FT

Forward:  Noah Watterman (SR) 6-11 220 lbs; 11 ppg; 7 reb; 47% FG; 39% 3pt; 79% FT

Forward:  Aly Khalifa (JR) 6-11 245 lbs; 4 ppg; 4 reb; 4 asst; 42% FG; 36% 3pt; 44% FT

BYU Bench

Forward:  Jaxson Robinson (SR) 6-7 190 lbs; 15 ppg; 3 reb; 2 asst; 47% FG; 40% 3pt; 93% FT

Forward:  Foussenyi Traore (JR) 6-6 240 lbs; 9 ppg; 5 reb; 63% FG; 67% 3pt; 91% FT

Guard: Richie Saunders (SO) 6-5 200 lbs; 10 ppg; 4 reb; 2 asst; 55% FG; 32% 3pt; 70% FT

Forward:  Atiki Ally Atiki (JR) 6-10 220 lbs; 5 ppg; 4 reb; 62% FG; 57% FT


Baylor Starters

Guard:  RayJ Dennis (SR) 6-3 180 lbs; 14 ppg; 4 reb; 6 asst; 53% FG; 43% 3pt; 74% FT

Guard:  Jayden Nunn (JR) 6-3 190 lbs; 10 ppg; 2 reb; 3 asst; 44% FG; 46% 3pt; 74% FT 

Guard:  Ja’Kobe Walter (FR) 6-5 185 lbs; 15 ppg; 4 reb; 2 asst; 43% FG; 40% 3pt; 87% FT

Forward:  Jalen Bridges (JR) 6-9 225 lbs; 10 ppg; 4 reb; 45% FG; 39% 3pt; 88% FT

Forward:  Yves Missi (FR) 6-11 220 lbs; 11 ppg; 7 reb; 2 blocks; 68% FG; 51% FT

Baylor Bench

Guard:  Langston Love (SO) 6-5 210 lbs; 11 ppg; 2 reb; 48% FG; 45% 3pt; 83% FT

Forward:  Caleb Lohner (JR) 6-8 235 lbs; 3 ppg; 3 reb; 59% FG; 40% 3pt; 78% FT

Forward:  Josh Ojianwuna (SO) 6-10 240 lbs; 5 ppg; 4 reb; 82% FG; 55% FT

Guard:  Dantwan Grimes (JR) 6-2 190 lbs; 5 ppg; 60% FG; 67% 3pt; 80% FT

Guard:  Miro Little (FR) 6-4 185 lbs; 4 ppg; 58% FG; 53% 3pt; 77% FT

Forward:  Jonathan Tchamwa Tchatchoua (SR) 6-8 245 lbs; 3 ppg; 2 reb; 53% FG; 43% 3pt

Discussion from...

Gameday Thread: #14 Baylor (12-2; 1-0) vs #18 BYU (12-2; 0-1)

22,690 Views | 284 Replies | Last: 4 mo ago by Mitch Henessey
Crawfoso1973
How long do you want to ignore this user?
I know I'm in the minority, but I always thought LJ gave effort and tried his best on defense. He was just naturally a very bad defender. And when Love and Key were as bad defensively as LJ or maybe worse, there was nowhere to hide any of them.
DallasBear9902
How long do you want to ignore this user?
GoodOleBaylorLine said:

TWD 1974 said:


I noticed in Kenpom our defensive rating has been getting better the past couple of weeks--down to the high 60s which is pretty good-sized drop. We are getting better defensively. Looking back over the 10-15 years, Baylor has been in the 30-60 range on adjusted defense (we were actually higher rated in the year after the NC and a couple of years in the Zone era). No we are not nearly as good as Houston defensively. Houston's problem, akin to a number of hyper defensive teams over the years, is the inability to make shots at times on offense (which is why UH went after Cryer). I remember an interview of Tom Landry (pardon the Football analogy) during the Aikman years, when he was asked what he thought of the Cowboy defense. Landry, who in my view was a great defensive mind, pointed out that the Cowboy-Aikman offense was so good, it put more pressure on the opposing offense. This, in my view is what Baylor does. If Baylor makes shots, it takes away transition points from a team like UH or Tennessee, which depends so much on them.
Good post. I would also point out that Baylor's offense often requires the other team to push on offense. Teams don't just get down by 12 or 14 and keep doing the same thing. So PPG will be higher.

We saw this with Briles' teams. PPG for the defense was high because the other team had to score to keep up.

I personally feel like defense is a more reliable as a team attribute, but a defensive oriented team is not likely to shoot themselves out of a bad night. We saw that versus UH in the Final Four. They couldn't stop us and they definitely didn't have the horses to keep up. At least a good offense has a chance to just outscore the other team.


KenPom stats are normalized for pace of play. The defensive and offensive stats are based on "points per possession". The basic gist is add (a) total shots plus (b) turnovers plus (c) a fraction of free throws and subtract (d) offensive rebounds then you have total possessions. Divide points scored for and against by the respective number of possessions and over the sample size of a season you have a really good points per possession number. By comparing per possession metrics, you eliminate pace of play from consideration.

There is some weird math in accounting for free throws but, in general, KenPom's statistical outlook is very solid and is really good at addressing pace of play issues.
Quinton
How long do you want to ignore this user?
I agree more with bear2 but I understand TWD's points.

Only balanced teams like Ku (not necessarily this year just in general) have excellent offense while demanding really strong D. College teams can't do both great generally. It's trade offs. I get that.

Examples like Tenn and Houston struggling with consistent offense. They simply stress and demand D and intensity over everything. This limits the offensive skill talent they get as highest level players don't want generally play in that type of system. There is a reason these programs have consistent FT woah. Their roster is often guys not really capable of high level offensive production

I favor elite offenses at the highest levels as talented elite offense can't be stopped by any college defense, no matter how much effort they give. BUT, you can still have a Ku level balance.. play really strong defense with elite offense. Our staff just struggles with defensive coaching. Bear2 is exactly right.

Again, not in support of a Sampson type obsession that sacrifices talent, offensive skill, etc.. for brute defense. But we could borrow some of that insistence on not accepting anything less than on that end. Some inevitable benching and tough love might be necessary to get that done

We have the physical pieces this year to be a top 35 defense (last year we didn't). No reason to be outside the top 50 on defense.
Mitch Henessey
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Quinton said:

I agree more with bear2 but I understand TWD's points.

Only balanced teams like Ku (not necessarily this year just in general) have excellent offense while demanding really strong D. College teams can't do both great generally. It's trade offs. I get that.

Examples like Tenn and Houston struggling with consistent offense. They simply stress and demand D and intensity over everything. This limits the offensive skill talent they get as highest level players don't want generally play in that type of system. There is a reason these programs have consistent FT woah. Their roster is often guys not really capable of high level offensive production

I favor elite offenses at the highest levels as talented elite offense can't be stopped by any college defense, no matter how much effort they give. BUT, you can still have a Ku level balance.. play really strong defense with elite offense. Our staff just struggles with defensive coaching. Bear2 is exactly right.

Again, not in support of a Sampson type obsession that sacrifices talent, offensive skill, etc.. for brute defense. But we could borrow some of that insistence on not accepting anything less than on that end. Some inevitable benching and tough love might be necessary to get that done

We have the physical pieces this year to be a top 35 defense (last year we didn't). No reason to be outside the top 50 on defense.
Kansas also consistently recruits at a higher level than we do. As much as we are an ascendant program, they are the blue-est of the blue bloods.

It's a lot easier to have an insistence for excellence on defense when you can bench your 5* stud for not playing great defense for a few possessions and replace him with another 5* stud. We're not there yet.
 
×
subscribe Verify your student status
See Subscription Benefits
Trial only available to users who have never subscribed or participated in a previous trial.