In the middle of the first half of this game it appeared Kansas was going to give TTech their typical beat down. The Jayhawks were up by 10 and making it look way, way, way too easy!
Then something changed. Then the war over who owned the pace shifted over to TTech's advantage! They didn't really change their game as much as just kept trying to slow the pace of the game down... to a snail's pace. This entire game they probably didn't shoot the ball with more than 10 second on the shot clock more than a handful of times. We knew they would attempt this before we arrived in Lubbock. It has been their strategy all year, and it has helped them lead the B12 in holding down opponents to 68.5 ppg. Their strategy definitely worked against the high-powered Kansas offense, holding us to 64 points.
But for a while there, in the first half, Kansas was winning the pace battle and they were getting out on primary and secondary breaks. Even though this team could easily become the best open court team in America, it seems to refuse to push the pace, even turning away from a faster pace when it is working and stretching a lead.
For those of you who have the game on DVR, go back and watch our first possession of the game. We had an open court opportunity and we pulled it out instead to run our half court offense, only to turn the ball over. When I saw that first play, I immediately had a feeling we were in for a long night in Lubbock.
In the early part of this season, we were exposed by teams like Villanova, who proved they could use high ball pressure and disrupt our offense. For the most part, we resolved that issue. And then teams started attacking our bigs, trying to win the foul war. We haven't resolved this issue but we've reduced it as a problem. Now... as we move forward to March, teams are realizing that the way to beat Kansas is to control the pace, and to bring it to a dead still. This is, by far, the main problem we must solve moving forward.
When our opponents take the air out of the ball they, essentially, take the air out of our team. We have one of the best offenses in the country... definitely in the open court, but also good in the half court. Until.... until our guys slow down. When the pace of the game drops our guys slow down and they stop fighting for effective offense. When they do that players like Tharpe get anxious. When players like Tharpe get anxious, we turn the ball over. And... we settle for bad shots. At one point in the second half, Tharpe turned the ball over on consecutive plays.
When we push the tempo, we create scoring opportunities in the open court... both on primary breaks and on secondary breaks. We score points in clusters... and we can quickly explode a lead. In doing so, we put pressure on our opponents to speed up their game. When we get them to speed up their game they miss more shots and they turn the ball over more. Another benefit... when we push pace it makes it hard for our opposition to tweak their half court defense to give us fits. Once the game slowed down, TTech was able to run shifting defenses that made it even tougher for us to attack. Many times they would shift from a zone to M2M in the middle of our possession.
When we control pace on a team like TTech, who is by far less talented, we run them out of the gym, regardless if it is in Lawrence or Lubbock. We should have cruised to an easy win in Lubbock last night. All we had to do was maintain control of the pace.
The person in charge of controlling the pace and controlling the game is Naadir Tharpe. He should have seen (and felt) the shift happening in that game and then he should have put up a fight to push the tempo. He should have been vocal with his teammates, to keep up the pace and high energy. Good point guards fight to keep momentum going in their direction.
Tharpe isn't the only guilty person in letting the pace battle slip away. Controlling pace is a team effort. But Tharpe is the leader of this team and controlling pace is one of his responsibilities. So now he must be held accountable. It would be nice if his teammates would make it easier on him by noticing and reacting to shifts in the game without having to be pushed so hard to pick it up. Tharpe is also responsible for making sure these guys react, and when a player or players don't, he should call them out on it! Perry Ellis didn't seem to respond to much of anything last night. He wasn't into the game and it might have helped if Tharpe had gone up and tapped him on the head to "wake up!"
I hope the guys go back to Lawrence and visit the video room. This is an excellent game to learn from. This game clearly showed how owning the pace meant owning the game!
We were extremely fortunate to leave Lubbock with a win. If we don't take the lesson that was clearly exposed in this game then the net outcome from Lubbock is a loss! If we don't learn the lesson we would have been better off if Wiggins had missed the bunny in the closing seconds!