Bill Self came to the WUG at an apparent disadvantage.
No inside game.
Some of his best players not allowed to play.
And then injuries robbed him of still more talent.
But Bill held one ace up his sleeve.
The world's coaches had never coached against a guy that lets the other team set tempo.
They had never come up against the Tumbleweed Buddhist from sub-tropical Edmond, Oklahoma.
They had never watched their teams appear to win until the last ten minutes and then watch them lose looking as if they had dominated their opponent.
They had not yet seen what happens, when one comes up against the son of Oklahoma public school educators tutored by Paul Hansen, lectured to on core strategy by Hank Iba, allowed to watch Lawrence Brown draw up plays on the spot and teach the Carolina Passing Offense, shown the basketball world through the eyes of one of the early African American coaches---Leonard Hamilton-- in D1, and initiated into the 70-point take-what-they-give-us priesthood of Father Edward Sutton.
They had not seen their manly drives to dominate opponents lead them into being out-maneuvered and beaten.
They had not walked off the court muttering, "How did he DO that!!!!"
Don't feel bad, WUG coaches.
It happens .82 percent of the time in NCAA Division 1 College Basketball.
It happens whether he has the best players, or not.
Again and again it happens.
They enter confident in knowing what they are supposed to do.
They know they have a game plan to execute, a tempo to impose.
They expect their opponent to try to stop them from running their game plan.
But instead are confronted by a team willing to play it any way they want.
Willing to play at any tempo they set.
And after their own game plan and tempo are mirrored and they find themselves unable to win by playing the way they had planned, they find they coach loosing his confidence and 'adjusting" their game plan, telling them to do something other than that which he had promised them would work. And that is the beginning of the end.
They exit doubting themselves, because they have just played at exactly the tempo they like and set--a tempo they usually win at when they oppose it.
They exit having just lost.
And they really haven't a clue how it happened.
Go, Bill, go!!!