I get the fact he gives us great defense. But given he gives nothing else in the way of rebounding and offense - and lots of turnovers - is it a net benefit when he’s on the floor? I don’t know how to crunch the numbers to figure it out.
I don’t know what ORTG is but I agree.It's essentially impossible for him to be good enough on defense to make up for how bad his offense has been. 74.1 ORtg has gotta be the worst in the Big Ten for anyone at 10+ minutes per game.
I agree. However, in a tough conference game we need him ready to give us all he’s got on D. Despite his offensive woes, I do believe he can be a difference maker on a game by game basis.It's essentially impossible for him to be good enough on defense to make up for how bad his offense has been. 74.1 ORtg has gotta be the worst in the Big Ten for anyone at 10+ minutes per game.
It's essentially impossible for him to be good enough on defense to make up for how bad his offense has been. 74.1 ORtg has gotta be the worst in the Big Ten for anyone at 10+ minutes per game.
I won’t say which player it was but one guy on our team I can tell is getting quite frustrated with Jacob. In the first half, when Jacob hoisted an ill advised 3, he threw his hands up in disgust.
I get the fact he gives us great defense. But given he gives nothing else in the way of rebounding and offense - and lots of turnovers - is it a net benefit when he’s on the floor? I don’t know how to crunch the numbers to figure it out.
I would argue that he’s very quick (obviously) but not actually athletic. He regularly finishes his drives, when tightly defended, in a way I don’t recall seeing before at this level. He leans his upper body back away from the hoop, rather than leaning or moving forward, and his legs kick forward. If he were more athletic, specifically if he jumped better, he would take it to the hoop directly and challenge the defender. Or if he had better body control he could use his body to protect the ball when he drives. He doesn’t do either of these and that’s not going to change. I would be shocked if he becomes in any way effective on offense in the next 2 years. He should sit a lot more.I think Pike knows that Young is a project to some extent. Above average ball handler with supreme confidence to go 1:1, good on the ball defender, and athletic. His development needs to be made between the ears and as a team ball player. I think it’ll come for Jacob with time.
I won’t say which player it was but one guy on our team I can tell is getting quite frustrated with Jacob. In the first half, when Jacob hoisted an ill advised 3, he threw his hands up in disgust.
He’s shooting 13% from 3 and his shot looks even uglier than that. If he’s allowed to take them, then Myles Johnson might as well be hoisting them up also.
I saw him play more than a few times with Texas and didn’t think much of him. Now, I only wish he was as good as the player I saw with Texas. He definitely has regressed.
You don’t just develop a floater midseason. That takes loads of practice in the offseason.It's all mental with Jacob. That's why Coach is giving him such a long leash in these early games. Give him a chance to figure it out. He needs to start figuring it out soon though because there is definitely more on the line with these conference games coming up. I think he needs to work on a tear drop floater. (Far enough from the rim, but close enough to let go with one hand. He can have that look pretty often if he wanted it, but he hasn't found his go-to scoring move.)
What is this?Ranking +/- Avg. thru 11 games(not included today)
1) Myles +9.9 2) Caleb +8.2 3) Geo +7.7
4) RHJ +7.0 5) Akwasi +6.7 6) Mathis +3.9
7) Mulcahy +2.9 8) Carter -0.8 9) Doucoure -1.0
10) Young -2.9 (-4.0 Offense +1.1 defense)
Myles was first by wide margin 8.1 to Doorson 2nd 4.9 last year too.
I think he gets too much credit for his defense too. He falls asleep more than most of our players.
He got beat on a backdoor cut for an easy basket in the first half against Lafayette, just one play but it was noticeable.I'm not a Young apologist, but this is simply not true. DVR the game and when RU is on D, don't watch the ball.....watch off the ball. What you will find is guys like Young and Matthis neutralizing the perimeter for much of the game against a Layfayette team that lives and dies from the arc.
I'm not a Young apologist, but this is simply not true. DVR the game and when RU is on D, don't watch the ball.....watch off the ball. What you will find is guys like Young and Matthis neutralizing the perimeter for much of the game against a Layfayette team that lives and dies from the arc.
He got beat on a backdoor cut for an easy basket in the first half against Lafayette, just one play but it was noticeable.
What is this?
Agreed, and it was just one play.Against Lafayette, you can live with the occasional backdoor cut if you are sealing off the perimeter. We held them to 1-15 from three point range over the first 30 min as we dug them a hole they couldn't get out of. By the time Jaworski hit his first at 9:51 left (which triggered a flurry to the finish where they shot 6/10), they were down 32 points.
The Avg. +/- through 11 games for each player when they are on the court and how much the score changes. Ex. You enter when the score is 12-12 and while you're on the court for 4 minutes the score becomes 20-14, you're a +6. Myles Johnson at +9.9, has averaged +10 every game for the first 11 games when he's on the court, the best on the team.
That's how it's calculated and that's why it should be taken with a huge grain of salt. Tough to evaluate an individual player when he is one of five. You could have a player play lousy individually and still have a + rating.Are you sure these are actual + / - numbers and not numbers estimated based on stats?
Real + / - has some relevance. 2 or 3 grains of pink Himalayan salt thoughThat's how it's calculated and that's why it should be taken with a huge grain of salt. Tough to evaluate an individual player when he is one of five. You could have a player play lousy individually and still have a + rating.