uniftw wrote:I'd say the game plan worked better than hoped for sure, but Jake knew exactly what he was doing. He knows WSU has St. Louis. He knows the players carry the attitude of Gregg. He knows how quickly things can/do head south for WSU in St Louis when a bump happens. He forced the bump. He forced jump shooters to take long jump shots during their second game in 24 hours. He gambled that if a couple rimmed out frustration would grow and things would snow ball a bit. Well, they avalanched better than he probably planned, but that's what Jake's defense does.Cdizzle wrote:Agreed. Now, I also think Jacobsen is a better offensive coach than Muller. But the modified pack-line defense has been their staple for years. The names change, but the defense pretty much stays the same, both in style and effectiveness.
And, while UNI does play good (sometimes great) defense which leads to many teams bemoaning their shooting performance (as a WSU fan, I definitely get where you're coming from), I think it would be fair to characterize shooting 2-24 (8%) from 3 as a bit of an anomaly, even for what turned out to be a very poor shooting team.
Education jokes about UNI aside I'm not sure I can count how many times over the last decade we've heard the same "It was clearly just an off shooting night" or "We just played poorly" excuse after a loss to UNI. I bet it's close to 85% of the time. It's because UNI plays "ugly". They force you into making the mistake, they don't force the mistake. It's a very subtle difference that leads to the "We just played bad. UNI isn't that good" thing we hear all of the time.
At this point even you say that UNI plays "good (sometimes great) defense". The reality is, after a decade the UNI defense is known as the UNI defense and just seen as status quo for UNI. I love that quote. At this point UNI plays better defense than anyone in the conference - sans WSU - night in and night out and it still isn't "respected" like WSU's. That's perfectly fine. You said it best - names change but nothing else does. It's a machine and the names on the back of the jersey's (as much as we may grow to the love the person in that jersey) don't matter.
It's why I don't buy into the "advanced metrics" showing Muller is a better defensive coach than Jake. Simply put, it's not true. Jake's scheme is the anti-advanced metrics - offense and defense. I've already pointed out exactly how UNI's defensive ranking is hurt in the link provided by that other poster. Steals and blocks were heavily factored into that. UNI focuses on position defense and forcing contested late clock jumpers. Steals and blocks are great when they happen, but aren't the primary goal.
It's why I pointed out another "advanced metric" that had UNI 20 spots a head of Illinois State. It's pretty easy to find an advanced metric that takes your side of the argument given the dozens of stat sites and different ratings there are out there right now.
Side note...but Jake has been in the conference longer than any other coach and is top 5-10 all time in total wins and conference wins, can we (as a board) start spelling his name correctly? Not aimed directly at you, as I'd guess 70% of non-UNI fans don't get it right. I just happened to see it in your post.
There's a reason that WSU almost always (always?) finishes at the top of the MVC when it comes to whatever advanced defensive measure you choose. And that was true before VanVleet and whoever else arrived. If you played basketball--even crappily and at as low a level as I did--it's really remarkable to see how they pressure the ball, provide help-side defense, move off the ball, fill passing lanes to prevent passes, and do all the little things that often go unnoticed.
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