by billyjack » Tue Dec 19, 2017 8:41 am
Thanks forvthe feedback, good points from everyone.
I'm joking about this being about Belmont and Stony Brook. I've felt this way for a long time actually.
Lol on the dork thing... that totally fits me too.
I don't like the idea that a team can outplay their opponent for 35 minutes, and build a 12-14-16 point lead, yet an quick barrage of late threes can allow the losing team to come back.
Like, a 12 point lead with 4 minutes left is not safe. Toss in the fact that, in my opinion, the refs casually screw up calls late in games. Last night Creighton had a double-digit lead all night. Game was a 10 to 14 point lead with under 4.
The refs gave a series of 50-50 or completely shitty calls to Arlington... the Harrell offensive foul on his drive to the hoop where he basically blew by the guy... omg the over-the-back call on an offensive rebound on Krampelj... the play where a UTA guy cut across the lane and literally threw the ball out of bounds and they said in flicked off Creighton... UTA guy no call on Eurostep probable travel for layup... the wtf UTA elbow to Harrell's jaw that they didn't call which would have been the 4th foul on UTA's big guy... there were like 3-4-5 possessions where they hosed Creighton, and up 12 it's a 4 possession game.
With the ultra-short 3 point line, it's like a bogus way to reward suckiness in the guise of giving a weaker team a chance at an upset.
I hate the idea of college hoops being more like the NBA where teams often easily come back from 20 point leads. Ironically i'm looking to remedy the situation by adopting the NBA 23'-9" distance.
Couple of other points...
- the high school distance being at 19-9 is irrelevant to the college game changing to 23-9. Who cares. The freshmen would need to adjust. We have 22 year old senior college kids shooting threes from 20-9... i mean, i could almost get a urination stream to reach that distance, that's how short it is.
- in the PC games, i think 1st half 3-point shooting percentages for those opponents were very high, forcing the Friars to play out on the perimeter, and leading to some easy layups (aling with sucky slow defense). I don't have numbers in front of me, would be a great assignment for Stever, but i would guess that Stony Brook and Brown were close to 50% from 3 in the 1st half. And Stony Brook hit their first 2 threes in the 2nd, so at that point they were 6 for 10. Rider also hit their first 2 threes in the 2nd.
Providence