The issues we saw yesterday are the same ones that ended last season early. We let an inferior team beat us because they were able to dictate the pace and play of the game. That should never happen to a team with the talent of KU.
This is Kansas. We have been one of the 10-15 most talented teams in the country basically every single year since 2007. We will never lack for talent. But when we run into certain styles, we fail to adjust and, as a result, we get beat.
The NCAA tournament is all about being able to adapt quickly and play a number of styles at a high level. Charles Barkley and Kenny Smith made a great point on Saturday about being able to win in a variety of ways, and how that makes all the difference in March when you have to beat different teams with different officials and different styles on a short preparation schedule.
Coach Self wants to win a certain way, so he tries to play that way every night. You hear it in his comments - "play our way", "play our game", "run our stuff", etc. Yesterday, WSU was ready for all of our stuff. I think WSU knew our sets as well as we did. We couldn't beat WSU with X's and O's yesterday, because they knew our X's and O's.
Thankfully, we had talent, so we should have been alright. Mason started off the game by killing Van Vleet off the dribble. It was pretty obvious that Mason felt like he could get to any spot he wanted against Van Vleet. Unfortunately, foul trouble sent Mason to the bench, but KU started the game by just exploiting matchups, which is where they had the huge advantage.
We have seen Perry dominate undersized guys his whole career. Heck, most of his really big games have been against undersized front lines. But Marshall Jedi mind tricked Perry by covering him with his high school buddy and teammate. Perry should have had a huge game, at least commanding double teams on every possession as he punished Wessel inside. Instead, Perry was pretty pedestrian.
The key is to find and recruit guys with an edge. The team won in 08 because Mario and Sherron had a nasty edge to them. Tyshawn and TRob had that edge. The Morris twins had that edge. Ben McLemore was a really gifted athlete, but nobody would say that he had a nasty edge to him. He's a really nice guy. Same with Wiggins, although NBA life is giving him a bit of an edge because he can't succeed at that level without it. Same with Oubre. Definitely with Ellis. It isn't talent or effort. It's saying I will dominate the guy across from me because I am simply better. It's Frank Mason looking at Fred Van Vleet and saying "this guy can't guard me, and the fact they put him on me is openly disrespectful."
If Perry had looked at Wessel yesterday and said, "I'm an all conference post player and you're putting a guy four inches shorter than me on me one on one?" Perry should have been offended at the audacity of Gregg Marshall to even pretend that Wessel could handle him in the post. But Wessel was counting on Perry not going after Wessel time after time until he crushed his spirit.
You will see the difference if WSU faces UK. Whoever Wessel guards will attack him, much like they did last year when Wessel posted a line of 0 points, o rebounds, o steals, o blocks, o assists, 2 missed free throws, 2 personal fouls and giving up 8 points in just 3 minutes. UK destroyed Wessel last year and by doing so wrecked his confidence. They did the same to Kadeem Coleby, WSU's starting center last year, who played just 7 minutes and posted only a missed shot and a personal foul. That's two of WSU's role players that contributed absolutely nothing in a close game because they were attacked until they were taken out of the game.
Compare that to yesterday, when Wessel hit four huge threes and Zach Brown had 7 points in 13 very productive minutes. KU let WSU's role players get confidence by not attacking them, and paid a huge price because those guys were productive.
Bill Self must embrace matchup advantages, or he will always be vulnerable to early round upsets.