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No. 12 Rutgers wrestling (11-5, 3-3) faces Maryland (8-7, 3-2) on Friday night in College Park

Yeah...feels like something has to be off
I think that Shawver has been nursing an injury of some type all season, especially after he was held out of the Princeton dual. That dude wants to wrestle all the time. But, all you couch wrestlers can keep telling us that Shawver sucks and is content with his 7th place finish last year.

What makes a coach like Rick Pitino able to take a school, in just two years, high into the D1 rankings: opinions please?

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Don’t watch MBB much anymore but this was a nice read. Paywall but some excerpts.

From the article:

Pitino’s team at St. John’s, just like his teams at Louisville and Kentucky, and at Iona and in Greece, and with the New York Knicks and the Boston Celtics, spent early workouts going through individual sessions overseen by the head coach. Such one-on-ones are grueling to watch, let alone to endure. Fifteen shots in 30 seconds. Or timed attempts darting around stations scattered all over the court. Over and over. Pitino, the whole time, stands, hands behind his back, shouting directions until the player in front of him stands atop a pool of sweat. All along, every shot is counted and added to a tally. Those numbers, in part, determine how Pitino later decides who can shoot from where and when in what games. Sound strategy. He’s won everywhere.

But then came this preseason at St. John’s. Every day ended with an autopsy revealing a fatal flaw.

St. John’s couldn’t shoot.

“The lowest metrics I’ve seen from my team, ever,” Pitino recently told me.

This is what basketball looked like in bygone eras. There are caves out there with pictographs depicting men and women taking mid-range shots and long 2-pointers. Such play has been replaced by our modern analytic-focused game, a world where efficiency and shot quality carry the highest value. Rightly so. The most valuable shots are close to the basket and beyond the 3-point line. Fairly simple.

Only Pitino didn’t have such options. So, before this team ever played a game, he began devoting parts of his most valuable resource — those individual workouts — to players operating in what most other programs now consider no-man’s-land. Pitino’s 42-minute one-on-one training sessions began including 20 minutes of pull-up 15-footers, and mid-range shots off curls, and all variety of floaters. Many of the same timed shooting routines he used for 3-point shots were reimagined on the fly.

This is the same Rick Pitinowho, back when the 3-point line was first introduced, and immediately panned by many college coaches as an abomination, embraced the evolution. He put down tape on the floor and demanded his Providence players only shoot from behind those lines. The Friars eventually shot themselves into the Final Four and Pitino secured his place as a founding father in the game’s embrace of the 3.

Now he’s doing the exact opposite.

And then you go into a hallway in the bowels of Gampel Pavilion, following a snatch-and-grab 68-62 win over two-time defending national champion Connecticut, and you ask how does the same guy who modernized the game flip the switch back to peach baskets and set shots.

“It was easy to recognize,” Pitino said. “If (shooting) is not your team’s strength, but you’re great defensively, you gotta go with what you got. I’ve never had this type of team. So I had to change what I do.”

That’s about as uncomplicated as it gets. Except taking midrange shots and long 2s is one thing, but making them is another.

He’s not the only one. Opposing teams are stuck trying to figure out how to beat a team that is scoring nearly 60 percent of its points on 2-point baskets (best among all high-major teams) and holding opponents to under 44 percent shooting on 2s.

Pitino’s crude de evolution is only part in parcel to St. John’s overall success. Firstly, the defense is its own story, one with gruesome scenes of asphyxiation. Then there’s the maniacal rebounding.

But at the root, it’s the adaptability of finding different ways to win.
This is the kind of adjustment that separates good teams from mediocre ones.
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Pike 17 wins vs top 25

I disagree. Syracuse beats a ranked team every year. They seem to have no issue doing that.

Vanderbilt beat a ranked Alabama team this year.

Navy beats ranked teams.

The list goes on…

being outside the top 30 doesn’t doom you to lose every game you play against the top 25
Syracuse is perfect football team to compare to Rutgers.

The regional rivals came off 6-6 2023 seasons. Rutgers won the Pinstripe Bowl against Miami, Syracuse was blown out 45-0 by South Florida at the Boca Raton bowl. We all know these bowl games feature teams depleted of star players who choose not to participate.

In 2024, Syracuse hired a rookie head coach. The results in the 2024 season: Three victories against ranked teams against one loss. Rutgers lost its only game against a ranked team, Illinois.

The first year Syracuse coach, Fran Brown, earned the same number of wins over ranked teams in his first season as Greg Schiano has done in his past TEN seasons as a college football head coach, three wins.

When teams such as Syracuse slay three ranked teams in a season, Rutgers must be expected to match or exceed it.

Tennessee beats UConn

It was a great game to watch. Lady Vols have had some near misses recently and closed the deal on this one. They play a fun style of play and they seem to have a good young coach. Hopefully RU can do that soon….

Paige B is a very good player, but she’s no Caitlin Clark although the commentators try to make her like she is (so annoying). UCONN is going to have a tough time staying relevant in that terrible conference of glorified high school teams. Geno has to be the only reason recruits go there. Once he retires, could become the next LaTech.
The way UConn plays, Paige Bueckers isn't asked to be Caitlin Clark. She is extremely talented, but from what I've read, doesn't tend to enforce her will on a game.

The effect of UConn being in the Big East is a bit more complicated; given his strong OOC competition, he can earn high seeding that other teams in his conference can only dream of. That said, it isn't a one bid league, probably 2 this year but could maybe eke out 4 in a really good year. The payout to UConn due to being in the BE is probably part of the concern.

Currently, they win plenty. I still wouldn't bet against them as a potential Final Four team. That said, I wouldn't bet on them winning the championship.

Pike 17 wins vs top 25

These statistics are moronic. Like epically moronic. In football unless you are a top 30 type program your record against ranked teams is going to be terrible. What’s more meaningful is where you rank overall.
I disagree. Syracuse beats a ranked team every year. They seem to have no issue doing that.

Vanderbilt beat a ranked Alabama team this year.

Navy beats ranked teams.

The list goes on…

being outside the top 30 doesn’t doom you to lose every game you play against the top 25
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