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Analysis: Letting it slip away in Maui


IndyHutch
  • This was supposed to have been a measuring stick trip for Indiana in Maui this week as it was expected to face teams like Vanderbilt, UCLA and Kansas. Instead, IU's belly flop Monday night against Wake Forest will be a tough pill to swallow.

The final five minutes of Indiana’s 82-78 loss to Wake Forest Monday night in the first game of the Maui Invitational was filled with less than stellar defense, poor shot selection, a key missed one-and-one free throw opportunity and a head-scratching final play coming out of a timeout.

 

Basically, this one turned out to be a debacle.

 

And with under 8 minutes to play, it looked as if Indiana had figured things out enough to advance to play Vanderbilt on Tuesday in the championship semifinals. A 9-0 run, capped by a Robert Johnson layup had given Indiana a 72-63 lead.

 

IU still led 75-67 after Thomas Bryant hit the second of two free throws with 4:50 remaining.

 

But that’s when Indiana’s defense went back into a slumber. Wake Forest scored on back-to-back drives to the basket then got a pair of rebound follow shots to fall. Two more drives by Bryant Crawford had Wake Forest on top with 3.2 seconds to play.

 

In between, Indiana looked bad on the offensive end. The Hoosiers settled time after time for shots.

 

It started with Yogi Ferrell, a normally adept free throw shooter, missing the front end of a one-and-one with 4:08 to play.

 

The next time down on offense James Blackmon Jr. missed a 3-pointer with 3:29 to play. After Yogi scored on a left-handed bank shot inside, the Hoosiers were back up by five.

 

After that it was back to questionable shooting. First, Ferrell misfired on a 3 from the right wing with 2:18 to play. I was just thinking to myself that Ferrell’s streak of consecutive games with a 3-point field goal was in jeopardy and then the senior guard put up that shot. It wasn’t close. It also wasn’t a good look.

 

Then Max Bielfeldt, with IU clinging to a one-point lead, launched a 3-pointer from the right corner that was an air ball.

 

IU’s next missed shot was a jumper by Yogi. It was a good enough shot, but it didn’t go down.

 

Troy Williams had a two shot free throw opportunity with 13.1 seconds to play and IU trailing by one. He missed the first and made the second.

 

Then after IU engaged in matador defense on the other end once again, IU called not one but two time outs back-to-back (its final two) with 3.2 seconds remaining. That’s when Collin Hartman launched a long pass into the middle of the court that was intercepted and the game basically ended there.

 

But how can that be your play after two timeouts and a slew of good 3-point shooters on your team? Why not a halfcourt pass to Yogi, Blackmon Jr. or Nick Zeisloft and let them take a few steps and get up a shot?

 

Why throw a Hail Mary right into the middle of the court?

 

That one mystified me.

 

Most Indiana basketball fans believed the Maui Invitational would at the very least give them a better idea of exactly what kind of team the Hoosiers will be in the 2015-16 season.

 

It was difficult to get a good read having facing Eastern Illinois, Austin Peay and Creighton.

 

It will still be difficult four days from now when the Hoosiers return to the Mainland.

 

That’s because the significance of that loss is that IU will now not have a chance to play in a measuring stick game against Vanderbilt, and likely won’t get to face UCLA or Kansas either. Instead, the Hoosiers will be in the loser’s bracket with a likely field of St. John’s. UNLV and Chaminade. IU will play St. John’s Tuesday at 2 p.m. ET.

 

The only thing Indiana fans can hope for now is that somehow UNLV is able to beat UCLA later tonight. At least then, Indiana would get to go up against a better foe. But that will be a long shot at best.

 

All in all, this was exactly the worst possible of scenarios for Indiana basketball when the Hoosiers went to Maui.

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At this point do we really want UCLA? Why, so they can beat us and then the rest of the season we have to listen to Alford fanboys scream that he should be our coach instead? No, I'd be more than happy to just beat St Johns. UNLV would be an extreme challenge with Zimmerman.

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At this point do we really want UCLA? Why, so they can beat us and then the rest of the season we have to listen to Alford fanboys scream that he should be our coach instead? No, I'd be more than happy to just beat St Johns. UNLV would be an extreme challenge with Zimmerman.

Forgot about Zimmerman. That would be interesting.

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After watching UNLV play in the first half I'm guessing that is who will be in the loser's bracket, too. If Indiana can't beat St. John's or UNLV, though, I think that would be the time to get a little worried.

 

IU should leave the islands 2-1.

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This game made me very nervous for our trip to Cameron

it relieved the pressure for me. Can't be embarrassed any worse than that performance. My expectations are for another 21-10 type season.

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This game made me very nervous for our trip to Cameron

Another way of looking at things is that this loss can take pressure off of a team with no one expecting them to go to Duke and win. If they do that....losing to Wake will be a distant memory.

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After watching UNLV play in the first half I'm guessing that is who will be in the loser's bracket, too. If Indiana can't beat St. John's or UNLV, though, I think that would be the time to get a little worried.

 

IU should leave the islands 2-1.

No doubt we will. Thats the MO. Do enough to keep the coaches head above water. I would expect another this type game in Indy vs Notre Dame.

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Another season of screaming at the T.V. about low basketball IQ mistakes. 

 

In the last couple minutes, please stop dribbling until 10 seconds are left on the clock and then throw up a jumper from 5 feet outside the arc. Is that on the player or the coach?

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Another season of screaming at the T.V. about low basketball IQ mistakes. 

 

In the last couple minutes, please stop dribbling until 10 seconds are left on the clock and then throw up a jumper from 5 feet outside the arc. Is that on the player or the coach?

 

I think the only way it's not on the coaches is if it changes beginning today. If the next time IU is in that situation we see something different we'll know a message was delivered. The problem is we've seen it so many times before.

 

Here is my question. If you handed the ball on the inbounds to Yogi and told him to race to the front court, you could have got a shot or a possible foul on a drive or something, right? 

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Wasn't sure where to put this, but did anyone in the media ask Tom Crean why he called to timeout to let WF draw up their game-winning possession? That was mind boggling.

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I think the only way it's not on the coaches is if it changes beginning today. If the next time IU is in that situation we see something different we'll know a message was delivered. The problem is we've seen it so many times before.

 

Here is my question. If you handed the ball on the inbounds to Yogi and told him to race to the front court, you could have got a shot or a possible foul on a drive or something, right? 

 

Butler v. Duke, 2010: Hayward grabbed the rebound under the basket with 3.6 seconds remaining and dribbled to just past half court before heaving the desperation three. Not sure that Yogi could make it that much further from an inbounds pass.

 

But IU still had a timeout. Pass to near half court, cross and call should at least have left 2 seconds on the clock.

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curl play at half court.  catch on the run and easily get to the 3 point line in 3+ seconds.  The last play is really just the cherry on top of a poorly played and coached game.  Too much lackadaisical play before that. 

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Butler v. Duke, 2010: Hayward grabbed the rebound under the basket with 3.6 seconds remaining and dribbled to just past half court before heaving the desperation three. Not sure that Yogi could make it that much further from an inbounds pass.

 

But IU still had a timeout. Pass to near half court, cross and call should at least have left 2 seconds on the clock.

This!

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He actually burned 3 timeouts in the final minute. Remember, he was kind enough to give Danny Manning one of our last 3, since Danny was out of them but needed time to draw up the game-winning play? Then he blew two trying to draw up his own play.

I thought he burned both of his final two timeouts before that final play.

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I thought he burned both of his final two timeouts before that final play.

Well, in this alternative universe he could figure out that plan during the first timeout instead of taking two.

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https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=kbYPFNfEa-Y this play might of worked better. Always pass the ball to give the ball handler momentum going toward the basket when time is running out If it goes in it goes in at least give it a chance to go in. Heck in 1995 I saw tyus edney drive the length of court in under 5 sec for a layup. Yogi might not have been able to get to the hoop for a layup but if u pass him the ball while he has momentum I like his chances of getting off a shot around the nba line. easy for me to say that watching at home though

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https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=kbYPFNfEa-Y this play might of worked better. Always pass the ball to give the ball handler momentum going toward the basket when time is running out If it goes in it goes in at least give it a chance to go in. Heck in 1995 I saw tyus edney drive the length of court in under 5 sec for a layup. Yogi might not have been able to get to the hoop for a layup but if u pass him the ball while he has momentum I like his chances of getting off a shot around the nba line. easy for me to say that watching at home though

we had a full second longer too.

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