I agree with your assessment of what we have been doing defensively. However, nothing is forcing us to continue doing what we've been doing. Collins knows that Nicholson is a better post defender than he thought at the beginning of the season, when Verhoeven was his starter. The defensive scheme (always double the post) was probably built around Verhoeven. I really hope we are modifying our approach, because what worked against weak non-conference teams is NOT working against the Big Ten.I think this is clearly a choice the coaches have made. Very few teams, and certainly not us, have the athletes to cover everything. We have made a choice that we are going to double down low and overplay the passing lanes. When you make that commitment, you are going to have to leave some shooters more room than you'd like. If a team shoots like Michigan, or one guy gets hot, like Spencer, it will be a problem, but on the whole, I think it's been a good strategy, successful and fun to watch.
Relating to the defense, I wonder if anyone else is seeing this. Often on defense I see the Cats swarm the ball, try to force a bad pass and then if a pass gets through, fly out at the shooter. That kind of reminds me of Joe McKeown's Blizzard defense. Am I just imagining things, or are there some similarities?
| Opponent | 2PT / 2PTA | 2PT% | 3PT / 3PTA | 3PT% | e3FG% |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mich St | 15/33 | 45.4 | 8/22 | 36.4 | 54.6 |
| Ohio St | 20/41 | 48.8 | 6/15 | 40.0 | 60.0 |
| Illinois | 15/30 | 50.0 | 8/28 | 28.6 | 42.9 |
| Indiana | 23/44 | 52.2 | 9/18 | 50.0 | 75.0 |
| Rutgers | 12/36 | 33.3 | 11/18 | 61.1 | 91.7 |
| Michigan | 19/34 | 55.9 | 10/22 | 45.5 | 68.2 |
The philosophy is to limit possessions by forcing turnovers. If a turnover isn't forced, then teams will tend to take the most open looks, and against NU's defense, that results in open looks from beyond the arc.What’s most interesting is that NU is not effectively limiting attempts. On a per-game basis, also in the top 2 or 3 in 3FGA.
I still don’t know what Pack Line means, nor whether NU runs those concepts any longer, but I know that limiting deep attempts is a core philosophy of the system.
Your eFG calculation is completely incorrect if these are the shooting numbers from the games.I agree with your assessment of what we have been doing defensively. However, nothing is forcing us to continue doing what we've been doing. Collins knows that Nicholson is a better post defender than he thought at the beginning of the season, when Verhoeven was his starter. The defensive scheme (always double the post) was probably built around Verhoeven. I really hope we are modifying our approach, because what worked against weak non-conference teams is NOT working against the Big Ten.
The stats are screaming at us...
Opponent 2PT / 2PTA 2PT% 3PT / 3PTA 3PT% e3FG% Mich St 15/33 45.4 8/22 36.4 54.6 Ohio St 20/41 48.8 6/15 40.0 60.0 Illinois 15/30 50.0 8/28 28.6 42.9 Indiana 23/44 52.2 9/18 50.0 75.0 Rutgers 12/36 33.3 11/18 61.1 91.7 Michigan 19/34 55.9 10/22 45.5 68.2
The effective field goal percentage tells the story, especially in the last 3 games. Shots we allow from outside the arc are doing much more damage than the 2 point shots we allow.
Corrected numbers per Kenpom. Not quite so dire.
Opponent 2PT / 2PTA 2PT% 3PT / 3PTA 3PT% eFG% Mich St 15/33 45.4 8/22 36.4 49.1 Ohio St 20/41 48.8 6/15 40.0 51.8 Illinois 15/30 50.0 8/28 28.6 46.5 Indiana 23/44 52.2 9/18 50.0 58.9 Rutgers 12/36 33.3 11/18 61.1 52.8 Michigan 19/34 55.9 10/22 45.5 60.7
Looks like you misunderstood what I was doing with the last column.Corrected numbers per Kenpom. Not quite so dire.
You might want to rethink your premise. The total points for 3 are always 1.5 times greater than the same shots from two. That's automatic. You can't compare the effect of the three vs. the two in a percentage ("Shots we allow from outside the arc are doing much more damage than the 2 point shots we allow") by completely ignoring the twos attempted in each game.Looks like you misunderstood what I was doing with the last column.
If a team makes 50% of their 3's against us, thats like making 75% of their 2's.
So the e3FG% is 1.5 times the 3FG%.
Your column combines the 2's and the 3's, which obscures the difference.
My e3FG% shows how much more we are being hurt by shots from 3 versus shots from 2.
(essentially its the percentage of 2 points our opponent gets per shot attempt from 3)
the Effective Field Goal percentage (a somewhat common stat) combines the 3's and the 2's into a single shooting percentage. Thats what Cappy's column above represents. EFG% = (2FG + 1.5 * 3FG) / (2FGA + 3FGA)You might want to rethink your premise. The total points for 3 are always 1.5 times greater than the same shots from two. That's automatic. You can't compare the effect of the three vs. the two in a percentage ("Shots we allow from outside the arc are doing much more damage than the 2 point shots we allow") by completely ignoring the twos attempted in each game.
If a team goes 2-4 from 3 but 27-36 from 2, the PWB e3FG% would be 75%. Two 3s does not do more damage than 75% on 36 shots from 2.
| Opponent | 2PT / 2PTA | Pts / 2PTA | 3PT / 3PTA | Pts / 3PTA |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mich St | 15/33 | 0.91 | 8/22 | 1.09 |
| Ohio St | 20/41 | 0.98 | 6/15 | 1.2 |
| Illinois | 15/30 | 1.0 | 8/28 | 0.86 |
| Indiana | 23/44 | 1.04 | 9/18 | 1.50 |
| Rutgers | 12/36 | 0.67 | 11/18 | 1.83 |
| Michigan | 19/34 | 1.12 | 10/22 | 1.37 |
The context is "percentage of 2 points scored per shot attempted."
... my numbers tell you how effective our opponents have been against us from 2 or 3.
I just don't quite understand how this tells us much of anything, when you can just compare eFG% to regular FG% to see how 3-pointers affect us, but it's always possible I haven't had enough coffee for my brain to properly understand.Looks like you misunderstood what I was doing with the last column.
If a team makes 50% of their 3's against us, thats like making 75% of their 2's.
So the e3FG% is 1.5 times the 3FG%.
Your column combines the 2's and the 3's, which obscures the difference.
My e3FG% shows how much more we are being hurt by shots from 3 versus shots from 2.
(essentially its the percentage of 2 points our opponent gets per shot attempt from 3)