by billyjack » Sun Mar 29, 2020 11:46 pm
Yeah, with the lack of a shot clock, the defense needed to go out and defend... like, the offense would say if you don't want us to stall, get out and guard on the perimeter... the defense would try to get 5 second calls, or try to pick up charge calls. Actually, this led to a ridiculous amount of charges called on ballhandlers 35 feet from the hoop, with the defenders flopping like European soccer players. So, a lot of the game had to do with whether or not the referee was an effing idiot.
Famously for PC fans, in the 1973 Elite-8 game win vs Maryland, Ernie DiGregorio fouled out with 5 offensive fouls with 10+ minutes still on the clock. The Final Four game vs Memphis State, mid first half PC was blowing them off the court by 10 or so early, but our All-America center Barnes blew out his knee, and our backup was a huge downgrade. The common strategy back then, often, was to play stall ball; but Gavitt correctly decided to play for real, and unfortunately we lost the game.
Generally, stalling was employed if an important player picked up his 4th foul. I've babbled a lot in the past about being at the 1980 NCAA at the Dunk, Georgetown vs Iona... this is all from memory, but it went something like the Hoyas had a tight lead and with maybe 12 minutes left one of their key big guys picked up his 4th foul and needed to sit... must've been either Ed Spriggs or another big man (Frazier)... anyway, Georgetown stalled til the gameclock was down to maybe 5 minutes, which then forced Iona to get more aggressive... during the stall, every time the PG (Sleepy Floyd maybe?) dribbled, the crowd would clap on the bounce, and it was a heavy Georgetown crowd cuz John Thompson Jr is a Friar alum... anyway, what am i babbling about?
A double-digit lead back then was the equivalent of a 20 point lead today. Often the D would need to aggressively and dangerously over-extend, leading to easy baskets.
Also, a shot clock was always being considered each year, but old school college hoops fans resisted for years. There were a couple of nutty games in the early 80's where the final scores were like 24-10 and other crazy ones, which eventually helped lead to a change. The first shot clock was i think 45 seconds long. That was a long time, and an offensive rebound re-set it back to 45.
Providence