Thursday, February 26, 2015

Intensity And Emotional Leadership

To quote football coach Vince Lombardi "What the hell is going on out here?" After one of their best performances of the year against Georgia Tech, the UNC Tarheel basketball team followed that up with a lackluster performance against NC State that resulted in a 58-46 loss. That was their second games of the season in which they have only scored 40 something points in Chapel Hill.

The Tarheels have lacked the ability to bring intensity to every game this season and they still have not found an emotional leader on the team. They need to find someone that can fire them up when they need it, hit the big shot, make the great pass, and make the big defensive play that swings the momentum in their favor. This player also has to have the ability to calm the ream down when their in-game emotions start getting the best of them and they start losing control.

Marcus Paige provided that leadership last season but he has stepped back into the shadows this season. The Tarheels really have no Senior leadership to speak of outside of Jackson Simmons and he does not get more than a couple of minutes of playing time a game. Brice Johnson is an emotional player but he is up and down, Kennedy Meeks' demeanor reminds me of Sam Perkins, and J.P. Tokoto has all of the physical talent in the world but his basketball skills have yet to reach that point.

The Tarheels have played some great basketball this season and they have played some bad basketball but they need to find that consistency that can take them a long way in the ACC Tournament and the NCAA's.

Saturday, February 21, 2015

The Four Corners

Roy Williams and the North Carolina Tarheels honored Dean Smith by starting today's game against Georgia Tech running the Four Corners offense. Roy Williams had on a vintage Dean Smith Sports Jacket and as soon as Marcus Paige gained control of the basketball, Roy Williams held up four fingers. It took about five seconds for the Tarheels to score as Brice Johnson went back door and Marcus Paige fed him the ball for a layup. The Georgia Tech players were not sure what was going on because I am sure they have never seen that before.

Dean Smith installed the Four Corners offense as a means to control the ball and kill the clock and to create easy scoring opportunities with a lead late in the game. Phil Ford was the force behind the Four Corners in the days before the shot clock.

Many point to the North Carolina- Virginia game in 1982 pitting James Worthy vs. Ralph Sampson as to why the Shot Clock was instituted in the college game. North Carolina went into the Four Corners offense nursing a 2 or 4 point lead with about 9 or 10 minutes to go in the game. They ended up winning the game because of the Four Corners and most fans felt that when Dean Smith took the air out of the ball, it changed the competitive balance of the game and did not give Ralph Sampson an opportunity to win the game.

Sunday, February 15, 2015

The Diamond Tarheels Opening Series

The North Carolina Tarheels Baseball team opened up the season with a three-game sweep of Seton Hall. Pitching is going to be the Tarheels strength this season and that was proven in the sweep of Seton Hall.

Senior Benton Moss got his 20th win as a Tarheel, Reliever Spencer Trayner got a win in relief with 2 2/3 scoreless innings behind starter Trent Thornton, and Freshman starter J.B. Bukauskas picked up his first win as a Tarheel with 5 innings and only giving up one unearned run. Bukauskas was a 20th Round Draft Pick of the Arizona Diamondbacks in spite of his request that he be taken off Major league Draft Boards because of his desire to be a Tarheel. He was still drafted on the strength of his Fastball that can run up to 98 MPH.

The offensive standouts against Seton Hall were Adrian Chacon with 6 hits in the series, Joe Dudek with a Homerun and 4 RBI's, and Tyler Ramirez had a Homerun and 6 RBI's. The Tarheels batted .327 in the three games and had a 2.67 team ERA.

The Defense Is Offensive

As a lifelong, diehard Tarheel fan, yesterday's game against Pittsburgh was difficult to watch. The Pittsburgh offense Pittsburgh dictated the play on both ends of the court. Pittsburgh ran at will on the Tarheels, they ran their halfcourt offense to perfection, and ended up shooting 65% for the game. They repeatedly drove the ball down the middle of the lane and either hit layups or kicked it out for wide open jumpers. Pittsburgh was not considered a good offensive team before this game. Pittsburgh had 30 assists on 37 made field goals and only had 4 turnovers in the game. Only towards the end of the game did North Carolina apply anything remotely resembling defensive pressure. By then the Tarheels were down by 20 points.

On offense, the Tarheels played well enough to win. They shot almost 50% and only had 5 turnovers. Brice Johnson had 19 points and Kennedy Meeks had 15. Marcus Paige cannot get going. Paige only had 8 points and 6 assists but was only 1 for 7 from the three point line.

In my limited coaching experience, defense is mostly "want to" and "desire". As a coach, you can preach and teach defense all you want to, but the team or player has to want to play great defense. Some teams get after it more than others. Right now, it looks like the 'Heels have lost the desire to play defense.

Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Dean Smith

Legendary coaching icon Dean Smith passed away Saturday night at the age of 83. I grew up in the 1970's and Dean Smith's name was revered in my house. He was the standard in which coaching excellence was measured. He believed in sportmanship, respect for the other team, and his innovations for the game of college basketball have been well documented.

I do not know who coined the term "Carolina Family" but it also became legendary throughout college and pro basketball. This family also extended to players that transferred out of the program. Current and ex-Tarheels used to gather in Chapel Hill over the summer to play pick up games and to see Dean Smith and stay involved with the Carolina Program.

Dean Smith's biggest contributions may have come off the court. He recruited the first African American, Charles Scott, to play in the ACC ands not for any politically motivated reasons but because he felt it was the right thing to do.

He retired as the all-time winningest coach in College Basketball but he knew the time was right for him to leave. His coaching tree extends far and wide and the roots run deep and his impact will be felt for a long, long time.

I met Dean Smith one time when he was at Owen High School near Asheville, NC recruiting future Tar Heel Brad Daugherty. My team East Henderson, was playing Owen in an exhibition game and I had the opportunity to go say a few words to him and get an autograph. He obliged but I knew he had better things to do but he still took the time.