KU 2pt%
47-18=29
22-6=16
16/29=55%
KU 3pt%
6/18=.33
KU 3pt%effective
6x3=18/2=9/18=50%
BU 2pt%
56-23=33
21-8=13
13/33=.39
BU 3Pt%
8/23=.347
BU 3pt% effective
8x3=24/2=12/23=52%
FTAs
KU:29
BU 18
Above are the 2pt% and 3pt% and FT attempts for the KU victory over BU in AFH.
The numbers show both teams shot similar 3pt% with KU at an effective 3pt% of 50% and BU at an effective 3pt% of 52%.
KU had 16 3ptas and BU had 23 3ptas.
2pt% shooting hugely favored KU at 55% for KU and 39% for BU.
KU had a lot fewer 2ptas than BU: KU 29 and BU 33.
Refs favored KU with 11 more FTAs, not surprising since this was in AFH.
First, half BU looked like it might walk away from KU.
But the second half,when both sides started pounding it inside, all the foul calling went KU’s way.
So: what did Self do to win this game and/or what did Drew do to lose it?
Statistically, both teams performed similarly shooting, on the boards, and in TOs.
Self did not win this game, unless letting another coach beat himself.
Drew lost it, by beating himself.
How did he do this?
Drew coached the game as if he were going to get a fair whistle. He told his guys to pound it inside, which was a very sound strategy, if one were going to get a fair whistle.
But a wise coach NEVER bets on a fair whistle on the road. NEVER.
What should Scott have done instead? Three things.
Shoot 10-15 more 3s.
Stay with his 1-3-1 and stretch it to take away all but 30 feet 3ptas by KU.
Give KU anything inside it wanted without fouling, unless it was one of KU’s few bad FT shooters.
Scott’s team shot an effective 50% from trey. It shot 39% from 2. Each shot from two was a terrible waste of a possession. 3>2 Einstein. Shoot the trey, when you are not getting the calls banging inside.
Except for the zoning, Scott coached an almost Bill Self like game. And like Self, he was doomed by doing so.
Self has learned slowly but surely that on the road, or even at home when your guys are a step slow, you build a lead with outside shooting. Always. Always. Always. Always.
Then you defend by tightening it up, lengthening possessions and shortening the game.
Bill Self now understands that when you are playing the referees on the road, then you shoot threes to build leads, then defend the leads and expose yourself to as little referee risk as possible.
Scott has copied the old Bill Self.
Now he has to copy the new one.
At home, with a game on Monday night, you lengthen your bench the first half, try to hang around by half time, then come out and hang around till the right moment and the shoot the trey to build the lead, even though you have been sucking at the trey so far. You hang around playing inside. You make leads by shooting the trey. And you shoot the trey to make leads even when you aren’t making them. And when the refs are on your side, you stop as soon as you get a little lead and defend the lead and draw fouls.
The counter intuitive thing all coaches are still struggling with is that the lower your raw trey percentage is the more you want to shoot MORE treys, because the lower the raw percentage gets the higher the probability is that you will begin shooting back to your raw average.
Further, when ever you are on the road and shooting 33-35% raw, you are shooting around 50-52% effective. If your season average is around 40%, you are completely nuts if you don’t turn your trey ballers shooting 33-35% raw loose to shoot a bunch of treys and shoot back to their average.Why? Because your opponent, free riding on the referee bias at home, is going to be going inside to make inside treys. Your only chance, and it is a very good chance, is to stop all fouling near the bucket on defense, and start shooting treys for all you are worth. Your effective trey percentage and PPP will be so much higher than the home team that is trying unsuccessfully for inside treys you are refusing to give him (i.e., refusing to foul him), that you will build a lead you can then defend.
On the road, its you against the opponent and the referees.
At home, it is you and the referees against the opponent.
There are no fair games.
EVER.
Outside treys are one way to counteract the referee bias on the road.