@justanotherfan
"Point Guard is a difficult position to play. It's hard to find a point guard at the high school level that is a true PG moving to the next level."
I believe you nailed it.
And I don't think most D1 coaches know what to look for. It sounds silly... but most have never experienced the depths of what a true leader PG will bring to a team. Self fits in there. We've never had a PG who is also babysitter for the rest of the team. Someone who leads his team on and OFF the court.
Self goes for athletic combo guards, especially if he can find one with height. That's the same approach many D1 coaches have. Get some height out on the perimeter to defend the 3, and that same height will be able to shoot over defenses and nail the 3.
Self doesn't attempt to run dribble-drive offense. His big motto on offense is not letting the ball stick. His offense is about quick passing with well-spaced perimeter players, then look for hi/lo into the post.
Self's offense works very well throughout the main part of the season, like through league play. We can credit his offense for doing it's part to win 10 conference championships. But there are problems with his offense in March.
What beats Self's offense is hustle. Defenses hustling throughout the entire shot clock. Defenses that know how to flex and not break. Teams get better at this as the season progresses, and March is a high motivator for teams to hustle on defense all game. (see Stanford)
What wins in March is dribble-drive. There is no way to stop a super speed, quality guard from penetrating. Then the best defenses can do is offer good weak side help. That's why teams like UCONN continue to win National Championships with less overall team talent. UCONN is a guard school, especially PG school. 6'1" Napier dismantled the best team in March last weekend. The PG position is not about height. Height will get you beat most of the time by a quality, little PG who can thrash through your defense like momma whips potatoes. Once Napier penetrates, the remaining 4 players for UCONN look to get open, or look to hit the glass for a rebound as the defense shifts to offer weak side help.
That's why UCONN has been a lot more successful than Kansas during the Bill Self era.
Can we say... "Kembo Walker?" Does that name ring a bell?
UCONN is the last team to beat Florida this year. It should be some pretty good basketball this coming weekend. And Wilbekin is no slouch!
UCONN has doubled the success of Kansas over the Bill Self era, winning 2 NCs, and 4 FFs.... we can now change that to 5 FFs, and we'll know on Monday if it is 3 NCs.
Might we have our heads shoved a bit too high up our backside and should remove it to take a look at why UCONN is kicking our arse in March?!
Mason has some potential. Not sure he can be a premiere PG... but he at least has some serious dribble-drive potential. As the season progressed, he was throttled down off the drive. His drive seemed to be a bit more reserved for late in games when we sort of give up on anything else working. Tharpe just flat out stopped penetrating all together. That was our demise. But then... the other 4 players simply watched when Mason drove the ball. They weren't coached into making something good happen. Mason was alone on his drive and it would often end without a score. We just didn't work on dribble-drive offense... period!
What I really, really hated with this team is we finally get into an open court possession, and Tharpe would drive into the lane, and then not finish. He would pull the ball out and start a half court possession. Very basic basketball here. When you have a 1-on-1 or 2-on-2 in the open court you finish at the rim or with a small pull up (especially when the ball is in the hands of your PG). It's a situation where you have the advantage and must finish the play. You either get fouled, score the basket, or both (most of the time).
Those open court bobbles we had not only cost us a few points, it gave a message to our opponents that we really weren't a threat in the open court. Opponent guards could focus on scoring 100% of the time on their possessions, instead of worrying about us in a fast break opportunity.
That was a major screw up we did all year. Self never reacted, and I guess he thought it might save us another costly TO.