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MUScoop => Hangin' at the Al => Topic started by: CrackedSidewalksSays on March 13, 2010, 01:15:05 PM

Title: [Cracked Sidewalks] Playing the hand you are dealt
Post by: CrackedSidewalksSays on March 13, 2010, 01:15:05 PM
Playing the hand you are dealt

Written by: noreply@blogger.com (Tim Blair)


(http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_wLC1BvCK-88/S5u5QC0ROfI/AAAAAAAAASM/zlfxbTBNjFA/s320/msg.JPG)
 (http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_wLC1BvCK-88/S5u5QC0ROfI/AAAAAAAAASM/zlfxbTBNjFA/s1600-h/msg.JPG)Three games in three days at the Big East Tournament brings to light the strengths and weaknesses of any team fortunate enough to advance.  For the Marquette Warriors life in the spotlight was productive, taking home a 2-1 record including a much-needed signature win against Villanova, an RPI top 20 opponent (http://statsheet.com/mcb/teams/villanova).

The St. John’s game showed once more that MU excels in tight games where the maturity of its three seniors enables the Warriors to maintain a puncher’s chance late, even when the team is not playing well. The grittiness Lazar Hayward displayed late in the game by making the team’s best defensive play of the season followed by clutch free throws was the latest example of Marquette's mettle.  In a classic ‘survive and advance’ game, the Warriors did just that.  Marquette can win ugly.

In the Villanova matchup, the best game Marquette played against a top Big East opponent this season, the Warriors again showed late-game toughness and displayed the value of the team’s extraordinary effort.  The Wildcats simply could not break Marquette from its rhythm in the game’s final eleven minutes where Buzz’s crew reversed the ball on offense leading to improved shot selection while defending well enough to maintain the lead.

David Cubillan’s extraordinary defensive effort on Scottie Reynolds proved this team has shut down capability against an opponent’s best backcourt player.  Marquette's defensive effectiveness didn't stop there - note the combined defensive effort on the Wildcats’ Reggie Redding, who struggled on 1-9 shooting thanks to blanket defense keyed by Jimmy Butler.

Another interesting note about the Villanova game was the now predictable result of a team playing two traditional post players against Marquette.  While Antonio Pena was superb with 14 points (http://sports.espn.go.com/ncb/boxscore?gameId=300700222), Mouphtaou Yarou played 15 ineffective minutes on Thursday.  Playing both players at the same time arguably made Villanova’s offense less effective (MU won the turnover battle convincingly) and they struggled to defend Marquette’s quicker roster.  Once again the Warriors dictated the style of play despite a thinner, smaller and less talented roster.

Georgetown was another story entirely.  Greg Monroe was Godzilla last night, destroying every defense the Warriors threw at him.  In every way Monroe was the difference and in particular his calm presence with the basketball was the key to Marquette’s misery.

For the first time all season the Warriors faced a team which thrived against their frenetic defense.  With Monroe at the center of it all the Hoyas maintained great spacing on its offensive sets, easily manipulating Marquette's defense.   With just nine turnovers on the night the Hoyas ran roughshod on MU, shooting 54% shooting from the field thanks to a patient offensive which yielded high-quality looks.  While MU was madly scrambling to disrupt the Hoyas’ offensive flow the Warriors’ own offense hit the wall as John Pudner noted in his recap (http://www.crackedsidewalks.com/2010/03/mus-weakness-cant-play-three-games-in.html).  Don’t expect Marquette to score like a Big Ten team in the NCAA Tournament; eight points over 20 possessions was a fatigue-induced anomaly.

Thankfully for Marquette there is no post player in the country like Greg Monroe (consider the results of the Villanova game) and the forgiving NCAA tournament schedule minimizes the need for a deep roster. Heading into the tournament Marquette is still a team opponents don’t want to see in their bracket.  As Brendon Desrochers from Baseline Stats (http://www.baselinestats.com/20100304/three-of-top-five-big-east-teams-are-true-surprises/) pointed out earlier this month the formula for Marquette’s success is unique,

Quote“The amazing thing about this year’s Marquette defense is its ability to combine forcing turnovers with not fouling. Last year’s team didn’t send its opponents to the line but didn’t force that many turnovers, which is normal. There is a strong correlation between forcing turnovers and fouling, as the more aggressive defensive teams tend to do both.

This year, though, Marquette enters the final weekend of the conference season first in turnovers forced (21.7 percent of possessions) and first in fewest free-throws allowed (26.2 free throws per 100 field goal attempts)”
No Monroe. No more three games in three nights.  No problem.  On to Selection Sunday.

A few Big East Tournament notes:
Media Updates
http://www.youtube.com/v/fc2EBmw92XI&hl=en_US&fs=1&

http://www.crackedsidewalks.com/2010/03/playing-hand-you-are-dealt.html
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