Watched Virginia whip Syracuse last night. Cavs shot 18 3's to burn the fabled Orange 2-3 zone. Was into watching Tony Bennett, the VA coach. Dude is very cool, never screams and hollers at his kids or the refs, yet the kids seem to do OK. Quite a contrast with Jim Boeheim, the master of the whiney expressions and constant commentary with the refs. Would like to see Collins chill a little and let his team play rather than obsess over every possession.Let the kids play through their mistakes. Dude, you are killing the confidence of the players.
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Let the kids play through their mistakes. Dude, you are killing the confidence of the players.
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The vast majority of college coaches pull underclassmen when they make mistakes; about as much merit to thus claim as the claim that CC overuses his players, which Haywood obliterated.I think there is a balance but CC does seem to pull kids or get on them quick. Team has played tight all year and even CC has said that they are better shooters than they are showing. Not sure it’s CC but I think he pulls kids quick other than Law, Pardon.
Izzo just pulled Casius Winston in the second half. He told Molly McGrath after halftime that he didn't want any more turnovers, and Winston threw and bad alley-oop and Izzo yanked him.The vast majority of college coaches pull underclassmen when they make mistakes; about as much merit to thus claim as the claim that CC overuses his players, which Haywood obliterated.
Yeah, I didn't even mention coaches like Izzo and Underwood, who pull EVERYONE who makes mistakes.Izzo just pulled Casius Winston in the second half. He told Molly McGrath after halftime that he didn't want any more turnovers, and Winston threw and bad alley-oop and Izzo yanked him.
That was horrendous officiating by the refs. Wheb you make a terrible mistake like that, you don't compound it by giving the coach a T in a tight game. You just don'tMaybe CC pulls young players too quickly, but the biggest example of him needing to pull back on the emotions a bit was getting that technical on the missed goal-tending call against Gonzaga.
While it was totally understandable to be upset about it, that wasn't the time to get on the refs (at least not like that).
^ Yeah, it was a horrible call, but as the head coach, you don't compound a terrible mistake like that by getting a technical and pretty much letting the team's chance of a comeback slip away.
If a player had reacted like that (which they didn't; having more composure), we (or at least most of us) would have said that the player needed to have more composure (and awareness) in such situations and not let his emotions control him.
That hold's even more so for the coaches (and in particular, the HC) - who is supposed to set an example for the team, much less, place the team in a position to win.
Would advise you watch the post-game interview of BMac - where it was pretty clear that he wished that CC didn't react the way he did and get that tech.
Yeah, some emotion at times is a good thing, but in most instances, you want your leader to be cool, calm and collected under pressure situations.
^ It was by the letter of the book; so if it was definitive, it was the other way.
No way a HC should risk whether the refs were going to swallow their whistle to make up for their own mistake (esp. when refs are known not to do that, esp. in the case when the HC is yelling at them).
He ran out onto the court during play. He was halfway to the foul line. Sorry, but even Coach K gets a T for that.CC did not warrant a technical for what he did in that game situation. Period.
Right, and remember, too, that at the time, the refs thought their call was correct. Against that backdrop, Collins' histrionics could hardly have resulted in anything but a T. If they'd known instantly that they were wrong, one of them would've stepped in and overruled the call.He ran out onto the court during play. He was halfway to the foul line. Sorry, but even Coach K gets a T for that.
Rewatch the video. He stopped play.
https://www.nydailynews.com/sports/college/video-gonzaga-referees-win-northwestern-article-1.3002346
He ran out onto the court during play. He was halfway to the foul line. Sorry, but even Coach K gets a T for that.
Rewatch the video. He stopped play.
https://www.nydailynews.com/sports/college/video-gonzaga-referees-win-northwestern-article-1.3002346
Northwestern coach Chris Collins -- who admitted afterward he was flirting with a technical foul all afternoon -- then scurried onto the floor to object to the missed call. He was slammed with a technical
But that’s only part of the story. Collins, by both the letter of the rules and the spirit of them, very much earned his technical. In an emotionally charged game that devolved into a foul-fest in the second half — 17 on Northwestern, 12 on Gonzaga — his protests crept closer and closer to the line as the game wore on.
One Division I coach who requested anonymity, in fact, actually sent a text to a USA TODAY Sports reporter midway through the second half: “I like Chris, but can’t believe he hasn’t gotten a T.”
Well, he did.
And even though it had disastrous consequences for the Wildcats, he didn’t seem to think he did anything wrong.
How many technical fouls has CC gotten his entire time here? Do you think he knows the line and not to cross it? The NCAA stepped in and announced their mistake immediately and reprimanded the refs for a reason...
Tl/dr, but link to the NCAA "backing up" the T? FYI, in the Illini game tonight. Brad Underwood was on the court multiple times, with no T. This happens a lotThe NCAA apologized for the refs missing the goal tend call and not for the ref T'up CC (the NCAA actually backed up the ref for calling the T).
And one doesn't run onto the court and risk getting a T (exacerbating a negative turn of events at a crucial time), esp. when this was the case...
https://www.cbssports.com/college-b...-northwestern-but-thats-not-helping-wildcats/
https://www.usatoday.com/story/spor...es-missed-call-northwestern-gonzaga/99367820/
Doesn't matter if CC had gotten a # of technical fouls prior or none at all.
Don't run the risk of getting one at what was the most crucial time in NU basketball history.
And apparently, he knew that he was dangerously getting close to the line all game.
This doesn't mean that the refs didn't suck, but you don't make a bad situation worse.
Again, if a player had reacted in that manner (running up to the ref, gesticulating wildly) and got hit w/ a T, many of us would be saying that he needed to act w/ more composure (cooler head), understanding what was at stake.