Why This Purdue Team is Different
13:10
The Perfect Basketball Game
7:01
2 жыл бұрын
The Fastest Team in the Country
13:15
The Team That Doesn't Dribble
12:30
3 жыл бұрын
The Rise and Fall of the Flex Offense
21:39
Пікірлер
@christopherpietsch147
@christopherpietsch147 2 күн бұрын
00:18 PG -> Iso RW 01:33 Scissors 03:09 Chin Series 03:26 Chin Zoom for V/Stud 03:38 Chin Zoom for V/Stud with Counter/Screen slips 03:46 Chin Flex with V/Stud flex screen for PG 07:39 Stagger Series: V receives stagger, then SB for PG, then V receives screen from higher of the stagger screeners 08:04 Counter: V rejects last screen of previous play, then flex screens on weak side, then receives SD 08:30 V rejects initial stagger, then back screens for passer 09:59 23 Skip 10:28 23 Skip for 2nd shooter who starts on right block
@QuinnenWilliamsDPOY
@QuinnenWilliamsDPOY 2 күн бұрын
How do you find these games
@段瑞翔
@段瑞翔 3 күн бұрын
chicago?
@Ti-tus
@Ti-tus 7 күн бұрын
Come back please I miss i
@Ti-tus
@Ti-tus 7 күн бұрын
Come back I miss u
@daleyakin2053
@daleyakin2053 8 күн бұрын
Really interesting. I think you're making some conclusions about the 70's that don't take into account the individual talents of the star players, which dictates how coaches design offenses and the moves that the players make in a game. Especially in the 1977 championship - Dr. J played with his back to the basket at times because he was such a good leaper but not much of an outside shooter or a great 1-1 ballhandler. He was one of the best ever at slicing to the basket, catch followed creative athletic driving dunk. Amare Stoudamire had that skill while at Phoenix. Walton was an exceptional passer for a center, so why not call plays that utilize that. To say the game was "beginning to evolve" at that time is wrong - there were many great ballhandlers (actually going back to Cousy), and offensive patterns in the 70's were almost the same as today. But you have to watch the college game to see that more clearly. NBA games could be miserable in mid-70's because the 1-1 defense requirement and isolation ball was bad to watch. That's why the league was failing, in my opinion. Watching "World" Free jack up bad 3-pointers when you were a Dr. J fan wasn't much fun either. You used Celtic-Lakers to show that things were still very focused on inside game in the 80's, but that was specific to two teams with HoF scorers inside. Watch Lakers in early 70's when West was still there and Goodrich was a scoring option. Teams needed a good inside game to win Championships in the 70's, but there were many great perimeter scorers and slashers like David Thompson, Walter Davis, Maravich, English, Archibald - list is very long. Inside/outside - Gervin, McGinnis, Havilcek (going even earlier). Bird and Magic's game was formed around their styles. So was Barkley and Karl Malone - running the floor, good mid-range games. Physicality was allowed in the 70's, but offensive players were kept somewhat honest with respect to travelling and charging. The 80's brought intensity, competitive spirit, and teams had an identity - a set of core players that fans could get behind. Lakers with Magic and Kareem, Celtics' big 3 and great team ball, Detroit, Cleveland, Houston, Portland. Hoping Chicago and Philly could get some solid help for MJ and Barkley. Worst thing about the 80's was that by the end of the decade, physicality had overtaken basketball skills as a priority. As a result, shooting percentages went way down in the early 90's. Shaq entered the league during that period and adjusted his (previously) great game to just backing over people and going to the line. Every year in mid-90's was a free agent frenzy. There weren't many "teams", just that year's collection of players. Without MJ, I think the league would have been in trouble again. Penny and Grant Hill would have carried interest in the league in late 90's after MJ, but they got injured. Thankfully, Garnett was a phenom, Phoenix and Detroit brought back team ball, and the Shaq-Kobe ego wars were interesting to some.
@jacobporter419
@jacobporter419 8 күн бұрын
The Mark Pope scheme has the Wildcats UNDEFEATED so far & even though we don't have bucket getters the gritty veterans we do have role with this offense until the very end Can't wait until we get some better talent over these next few years!
@KnotSandy
@KnotSandy 10 күн бұрын
come back hoop vision please bro
@DarnerienMcCants-t6j
@DarnerienMcCants-t6j 10 күн бұрын
John Thompsons Georgetown Hoyas
@Papriqa
@Papriqa 12 күн бұрын
I'm just trying to imagine what would happen if you plugged in LeBron into 1950
@cetrick_yeanay
@cetrick_yeanay 13 күн бұрын
This is amazing
@slicedbread5409
@slicedbread5409 16 күн бұрын
Come back! We need your analysis!!!
@chadspencer954
@chadspencer954 16 күн бұрын
Do you know of any College Women’s team that run this ?
@dmav522
@dmav522 21 күн бұрын
As a current Carleton student.... GO RAVENS!!!!!!!!!!!!
@Mr.56Goldtop
@Mr.56Goldtop 21 күн бұрын
So you made your determinations after watching only ONE game per decade?? Wow, that's very scientific.
@virtualawakening2299
@virtualawakening2299 25 күн бұрын
The solution to the switch is changing the 3 point shot to the 2.5 point shot. Let's face it, the 3 point shot is OP beyond even Star Trek analytics. The only solution of endless switching is to reduce the incredibly 16.67% ridiculous linear advantage that the 3 point shot has. I remember watching Phoenix with Dan Marley and Danny Ainge 3 point shooting their way above Seattle in the Western Conference Championship only to be defeated by Michael Jordan. I really thought that linear 16.67% advantage would have changed the game, but it wasn't until Stephan Curry proved it to be so effective. Sometimes change comes very slow. The 3 point shot is now the #1 option. Thus Russel Westbrook's downfall. The international leagues and the NBA has got to do something about this super OP 3 point system, and moving the 3 point line out isn't enough. We really need to change the 3 point shot to 2.5 or maybe 2.25 points.
@glenosborne9807
@glenosborne9807 27 күн бұрын
Back door cuts are debilitating, ask Cal. We got broken down at Kentucky by opponents doing it to us.
@asherwolthers5596
@asherwolthers5596 Ай бұрын
This video did wonders for the Kentucky fanbase
@ElTuco84
@ElTuco84 Ай бұрын
Came across this video after watching the season opener with the Celtics decimating the Knicks with 29 3-pointers. The youtube algorythm is something else.
@305cm420date
@305cm420date Ай бұрын
It`s pretty easy to play ice ,switching guard to guard on hand off, before pick with big man
@zane631
@zane631 Ай бұрын
I like the flex/swing for amateur teams that train and play a game once or twice a week. There are so many resources with different X&O's so you can cherrypick from and it will not look like an flex offense, it is just a way to start an offensive possession. I see so many amateur teams playing a ballscreen offense, but their individual skillsets are not adequate to consistently create and score easy buckets or make 3's.
@Golf-eb1xb
@Golf-eb1xb Ай бұрын
isn't this just a matchup zone
@Dougmolls
@Dougmolls Ай бұрын
Great analysis!
@tylerriley2587
@tylerriley2587 Ай бұрын
The Celtics took a page out of their book.
@jeoffbenzos4959
@jeoffbenzos4959 Ай бұрын
BYU fan here. This offense lives and dies by the 3. Some nights shots just aren't falling and you lose to teams you should have never lost to. Other nights everything is falling and you beat teams nobody expected you to. BYU always recruited 3 star guys who could shoot lights out (Jimmer) because they couldn't land 4 star talent very often, and this system worked great for those types of players. I don't think Pope will run the same system at UK since he'll have a lot more talent and athleticism to drive the ball in a way BYU couldn't, but he'll probably run a dialed back version of this with less emphasis on 3s. If anything, it shows how Pope can adapt his coaching to his team's strengths.
@richdevaysolid1
@richdevaysolid1 Ай бұрын
To beat this defense the offense has to be in sync, knowing where they gaps will be,
@sakiiwata5586
@sakiiwata5586 Ай бұрын
Beautiful basketball!!
@lightingwarr02
@lightingwarr02 2 ай бұрын
Ran Dribble Drive Offense in California, the offense was created by Vance Wallberg. I graduated in 2020
@FitzGeraldDuncan-p7i
@FitzGeraldDuncan-p7i 2 ай бұрын
Thomas Nancy Lopez Jeffrey Lopez Edward
@BigFellah
@BigFellah 2 ай бұрын
This is why Lebron is galaxies ahead of everyone, the best player of all time and its not even close.
@johnpalcon7570
@johnpalcon7570 2 ай бұрын
Shead to Toronto will be great. Darko will use European defense philosophy hopefully this season and we will clamp up
@TaroZak
@TaroZak 2 ай бұрын
😭😭🐐
@TroyTaylor-i7m
@TroyTaylor-i7m 2 ай бұрын
Martinez Ronald Robinson Donald Rodriguez Susan
@WarrenLundy-x9n
@WarrenLundy-x9n 2 ай бұрын
Larkin Village
@DobbinZachary-m3r
@DobbinZachary-m3r 2 ай бұрын
Perez Matthew Perez Karen White Daniel
@jabedon
@jabedon 2 ай бұрын
I know that Ginobili Duncan and Parker were playing together for 12-14 years, but the one who gave this collective mood was definitely boris Diaw
@cop_n_tod
@cop_n_tod 2 ай бұрын
In your opinion, how much of their offense is plays/sets that are scripted, and how much is “if this doesn’t work then flow into this, and then flow into another action”?
@macandcheese30
@macandcheese30 2 ай бұрын
Always funny when people say players don't play defense no more lmao they don't wanna aknowledge the fact that offense has advanced so much that it makes it more difficult than ever to play elite defense today. Man, in basketball spacing is almost everything
@nyxego5378
@nyxego5378 2 ай бұрын
Shohoku did this when they faced Ryonan guarding Sendoh
@GkjcAmpj-s2g
@GkjcAmpj-s2g 2 ай бұрын
Wilson Robert Martinez Mark Thomas Barbara
@MARUCCI29293
@MARUCCI29293 2 ай бұрын
We have to admit, Purdue proved a lot of us wrong this year.
@beegeebad3193
@beegeebad3193 2 ай бұрын
Wrong Year to feature the bulls
@beegeebad3193
@beegeebad3193 2 ай бұрын
Algorithm brought me here after watching Anthony Edwards "skill" comments.. a little bias presentation, it doesnt prove thoe whole of each era
@carlodangio6201
@carlodangio6201 2 ай бұрын
Common Donny Marshall L
@dmos3976
@dmos3976 3 ай бұрын
Its a hard show what they are doing
@moonjen24
@moonjen24 3 ай бұрын
Great material but why do your voice hurts my ears?
@Jimmy-fu3lq
@Jimmy-fu3lq 3 ай бұрын
17:48 Steve Kerr getting completely ran over by Malone
@dustypflugner1347
@dustypflugner1347 3 ай бұрын
@hoopvision68 do you think lifting the big from the block to the slot on the weakside works if the big is a non shooting threat? Maybe defensive big stays home and plugs the nail and allows offensive big to get into the next action on the other side of the court unattached on the kickout. Thoughts ?
@genjutsu123
@genjutsu123 3 ай бұрын
Part of the problem i see in the video was really bad screens. Really good video though showing the importance of distance management and forcing the handler far away from the action