Teams shoot better at home.
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Vic is a top-notch recruiter and a good coach. We aren't done getting talented players in Starkville.
Ah, Elite Dawgs... where the best coaches in America reside.
I think some are sleeping on Promise Taylor.. She was all-SEC freshman and now has a year under Vic. I think She will be a force. She is 6'5'' and can score. Put Her Carter and Bibby on the floor, you are 6'5", 6'5" and 6'1".
Exactly and Carter is long and rangy as well. We will have more depth and better scorers next season. Defense will be a question mark as well as rebounding, but I am willing to bet we compete again for the SEC title. We are going to have really good outside shooting next season. Which will allow better spacing teams keys on Hunter at the end of the year with Danberry and Holmes never taking 3 pt baskets.
Not sure with this lineup we could guard from the outside. Carter has potential and lets hope she puts in the work this summer to improve. I'm not familiar about Taylor's skill, Bibby's outside shooting will be a plus.
Btw, I read about Cardosa, seems some think she is a UConn lean. Geno has been seen at some of her games, I think she is rated #2 for a Center. Her team lost the in the Tn state finals.
Yeah, not true. What do you think coaches do? One of the main jobs is to refine the raw material they have been given. Pressure that coal until it becomes a diamond, take a diamond and cut it, then take a cut diamond and polish it. No mistake, a player has the biggest role in their own development but great coaches get the players to buy in to that development.
Now if you want to discuss how raw an athlete coaches have to start with because of their recruiting, reputation etc., that?s a totally different discussion. Saban developed well raw athletes when he was not able to cherry pick the best diamonds but he still developed. He still coached and taught the players and had a good plan.
Go back and watch McGown as a Fresh/Soph...compare to today and you don?t think the coaches had much to do with that????
So basically you are saying that Vic should get credit for turning a terrible player into the most dominant big player in the game and the SEC player of the year
While he was performing that miracle of coaching why didn’t he coach her on being able to play the pick and roll so we can win in Oregon?
I wish the rest of the world worked like that
You get credit for other people success and blame them when you fail
Huh?
I don't know why we have to separate all these things. McCowan had a good bit of natural talent (read: being 6'7"). Schaefer did a great job of coaching her up, she did a great job of responding and implementing that coaching. She still had some weaknesses, which teams were able to exploit. Schaefer did a very good coaching job this year, the roster had a good bit of talent but also some pretty glaring holes, and ultimately there were some things Schaefer could have possibly done differently.
All those things can be true.
Schaefer is a great recruiter. He is also a great coach. To deny any of that is asinine.
Coach Schaefer has stated many times that he thinks power forward is J Carter?s best position. I?m sure it will depend on how much P Taylor develops and depth in the post. If we are getting a grad transfer I?d hope it?s a post player. That or we could rotate Bibby back down to power forward when we need to rest P Taylor or J Carter.
The world does work like that but that’s not what I’m saying and irrelevant. Stay on topic. When the players not only acknowledge coach help but give the coaches bulk of credit for their development, then they know and believe that’s what happened. Why is this even a question? Maybe you had terrible peewee coaches but that’s not true with a lot of coaches at that level. Some are much better at developing different aspects of the game and the staff have roles but for the most part a HC does get the bulk of the credit. Why would you think otherwise and is a separate issue from the player growth from within, as I already stated.
That has nothing to do with blaming whatever on wins and losses. Totally different discussion. But if you don’t give the Vic and the staff credit for developing McGown...then either you are just ignorant or have an agenda.
The original post said that coaches don’t make dominant players
They just don’t
Coaching doesn’t make greatness, they help marginally
In the case of the Oregon game Vic hurt T by taking a dominant low post player and asking her to guard on the perimeter
To suggest otherwise is asinine
Looks like an agenda 47 post bad-mouthing.
And game situation has a totally different discussion...has nothing to do with player development. That’s not even close to the same discussion.
As far what role a coach develops...if you think this particular player would have been as good as she is on her on...that’s a clueless and ignorant statement or you have an agenda. Coaching and discipline absolutely had a lot to do with where she is today. Shouldn’t even be a question to be raised about that.
I read an article where Oregon said their strategy was to drag T around the floor to wear her out. They said that the player and was guarding wouldn't shoot 3s, but they wanted her out of the lane. They also said they wanted to pick and roll her to death. Kinda weird for Vic to play an opponent again and not change up the strategy at all.
It depends.
Sometimes they help marginally. See Maya Moore, Brittany Griner, Diana Taurasi, etc. who were huge recruits, were beasts from day 1 in college, and got better from there.
Sometimes they help quite a bit. See Teaira McCowan, Megan Gustafson on the women's side, Jarrett Culver and Rui Hachimura on the men's side.
No one is denying that there needs to be something there to work with, the makings of greatness. No one would argue a great coach can take any player and make them great. But to deny that they can really help much at all is ridiculous. All of those players had the makings of what they are today, sure. McCowan was a very good recruit; not one of the top handful in the country, but certainly highly regarded. But was she destined to become the #1 pick no matter what? Heck no. She shot under 50% from the field as a freshman.