They are pushing in the back on a lot of their O boards and not getting called. The same thing Pardon got away with against Nebraska.HAve you seen the hugely lopsided rebounding margin? We cannot hang with them phhsically, so we foul.
It was on BMac...which is code for "I blew the whistle for no reason, but now I have to make it up, let's not give it on the big guy."That wasn't even a foul on Olah he didn't touch him
This is complete bs. After calling a completely lopsided game for 35 minutes all of a sudden they decided to call 3 fouls in 45 seconds on them once they got up 14 to try to even the final numbers up. Screw job tonight.It was on BMac...which is code for "I blew the whistle for no reason, but now I have to make it up, let's not give it on the big guy."
AJ Hammons crashes through Olah's body...no call.This is complete bs. After calling a completely lopsided game for 35 minutes all of a sudden they decided to call 3 fouls in 45 seconds on them once they got up 14 to try to even the final numbers up. Screw job tonight.
That was as blatant of a hatchet job as I've seen in a while. I mean granted we did a poor job of moving our feet on D inside and a bad job of blocking out. But the disparity on how it was called on the two sides of the court was ridiculous. And then how they flipped back all of a sudden with 3-4 mins to go once they got up 14 to try to even up the final numbers. They were in the bonus with more than 13 mins left in 2H and there had been I think 1 foul called on them? That was egregious. I think it was 24 to 9 in total fouls at one point. So frustrating. I hope Collins was screaming on the sidelines.AJ Hammons crashes through Olah's body...no call.
According to the Purdue board, the refs screwed them in the first half when Haas and Hammons couldn't get a call. Then in the 2nd half, NU was basically doing hackashaq, deserved every call against them and there should've been more. Hilarious.That was as blatant of a hatchet job as I've seen in a while. I mean granted we did a poor job of moving our feet on D inside and a bad job of blocking out. But the disparity on how it was called on the two sides of the court was ridiculous. And then how they flipped back all of a sudden with 3-4 mins to go once they got up 14 to try to even up the final numbers. They were in the bonus with more than 13 mins left in 2H and there had been I think 1 foul called on them? That was egregious. I think it was 24 to 9 in total fouls at one point. So frustrating. I hope Collins was screaming on the sidelines.
That IS amazing. I guess Purdue isn’t the place for applied Math majors, or Logic for that matter. When one team gets 20 more free throw attempts (28 vs 8), and makes 21 vs 5, it’s possible (even likely) that some portion of that disparity would be earned legitimately due to style of play or poor defensive technique, but not likely that all or even most of it would be considered legit.According to the Purdue board, the refs screwed them in the first half when Haas and Hammonds couldn't get a call. Then in the 2nd half, NU was basically doing hackashaq, deserved every call against them and there should've been more. Hilarious.
I have no problem with the foul difference. Northwestern's bigs played lazy, didn't move their feet and barely gave any effort. When your point guard is your leading rebounder that tells you how soft your bigs played. Olah, Pardon and JVZ should be embarrassed by how they performed tonight. That was a pathetic effort.
In one sense, I feel better after reading your explanation. Shooters can get hot and carry a team despite not being exceptional in most other games. But the big men are not going to “get hot” defensively. The best that can be hoped for is that they find some chinks in the opponent’s armor that they can exploit for a while until a substitution or different offensive alignment takes back the domination. We ARE better defensively than most NU teams historically, I think. Nevertheless physical, speed, agility and skill deficiencies will be exploited by a top tier team if they are even moderately eager to do so.I agree with you on the foul disparity. Minus a few questionable ones, I thought the vast majority of the fouls called on us were justified.
I wouldn't say our bigs played lazy though. Purdue has the best 1-2 punch of big men in the country. Their bugs are not only bigger than ours, they are athletic big men. Olah has that size, but not the athleticism. JVZ has the height and athleticism, but not the body mass, and Pardon is green and doesn't have that size. Their bigs are very good- both future NBA players. I don't think our bigs were lazy. Just not good enough against that level of talent.
Again, I fully agree that our big men got outplayed and outmuscled and lazy with their feet and deserved to be called for fouls. However, there were a number of over the back or illegal touching or tick tack fouls that were NOT called on the other end. If you're calling a fairly tight game on one side then you have to do the same on the other. That was certainly not the case tonight, or at least not until the comical last 3 minutes when they called 5 fouls on Purdue, most similar to the tick tack stuff they called against us all game (with the exception of one legit call on a driving layup), to get them to a grand total of 14 on the game. So 9 in the first 36.5 minutes, and 5 in the last 3.5 minutes. Same personnel. Right, I believe that was random......In one sense, I feel better after reading your explanation. Shooters can get hot and carry a team despite not being exceptional in most other games. But the big men are not going to “get hot” defensively. The best that can be hoped for is that they find some chinks in the opponent’s armor that they can exploit for a while until a substitution or different offensive alignment takes back the domination. We ARE better defensively than most NU teams historically, I think. Nevertheless physical, speed, agility and skill deficiencies will be exploited by a top tier team if they are even moderately eager to do so.
Their bigs are very good- both future NBA players. I don't think our bigs were lazy. Just not good enough against that level of talent.
For the record I'm not saying we should have beaten them. They clearly outplayed us in the first half. But we executed and shot better on offense for most of the second half- it should have been a 2-6 pt game heading into the final couple minutes if not for the absurd reffing. We probably still would have lost, but in a close game rather than them walking away with it. And we would've had an outside shot for some Tre Demps or BMac magic maybe.Again, I fully agree that our big men got outplayed and outmuscled and lazy with their feet and deserved to be called for fouls. However, there were a number of over the back or illegal touching or tick tack fouls that were NOT called on the other end. If you're calling a fairly tight game on one side then you have to do the same on the other. That was certainly not the case tonight, or at least not until the comical last 3 minutes when they called 5 fouls on Purdue, most similar to the tick tack stuff they called against us all game (with the exception of one legit call on a driving layup), to get them to a grand total of 14 on the game. So 9 in the first 36.5 minutes, and 5 in the last 3.5 minutes. Same personnel. Right, I believe that was random......
There was one sequence where I think they called 4 fouls on us in 1 possession, and I believe on 2 of those the ball had not been or barely had been inbounded. That was a joke. If you are going to call a tight game and whistle every handcheck fine, but do it both ways. Part of the problem is our bigs don't have the credibility, and sadly the stars get the calls.
I agree that their bigs including Swanigan are better than NU's bigs. But while Hammons is going to play at the next level, Haas isn't.
I wasn’t able to follow the game consistently due to a family birthday celebration with the game on in the bar area of the restaurant. So all I can react to is “the numbers”, not the calls themselves. The lopsidedness is pretty much unprecedented in my experience as a fan.
Really? IMO, Haas is an NBA-caliber center as well.
Our "big" problem in the last minute was Olah's inability to block out Hammons who then got an easy put-back to effectively ice the game. I put this on coaching. Once the shot is up, you find your man and block out, then go for the rebound.
The reason I don't think so it because his game is so one dimensional around the bucket. He is slow footed, not terribly athletic, and can't shoot from the outside. He may stick as a bench player for a year or two but the difference between him and AJ is night and day.
He's 7'1" tall, 300 lbs of muscle, and he moves pretty well for his size. Nice quick move along the baseline for a slam, for example. He's also only a sophomore and is ahead of where Hammon was as a sophomore, IMO.
Really? IMO, Haas is an NBA-caliber center as well.
Could make the argument that Haas is a BETTER NBA prospect that Hammonds.
And BIGs take longer to develop so I would expect him to move up those rankings.,DraftExpress has Haas as the #30 ranked Sophomore. I definitely think he has NBA potential.
No need to be so deterministic. I would agree that Hammons is probably likely to be a higher draft pick than Haas, but it's far from certain. AJ was pretty green in his younger years too. And Haas has the measurables that might get NBA squads excited. I wouldn't say it's the most likely outcome, but I think it's entirely feasible he develops into a top 10 pick before he goes pro.One could, but one would be wrong. Hammons runs better, blocks shots better, shoots better, has more of an all-around game. Haas is dominant in college because he is HUGE, bigger than anyone including Hammons that he plays against. That advantage will diminish at the next level.