In his post-game presser, Cal coach Wyking Jones said this:
"UCLA is a talented team. They shoot the ball at all five positions. We pressed them, and they took the shot we wanted them to take issue is, they made them. Your five man, your four man shooting three's against the press we want that, the odds are in our favor in situations like that. Unfortunately, they made those shots and I think that was the difference in the game."
In over 60 years of watching basketball and listening to coaches, this is probably the strangest statement I ever heard from a basketball coach.
I may be old-fashioned, but my coaches never told me the objective of a press was to give the other team a shot, any kind of shot. They taught me that objective of the press was to keep the ball from getting over the half-court line, either by stealing it, causing a turnover, or getting a 10 second violation called on the opponent. In any case you get the ball. The ultimate objective is to steal the ball and convert it into a score for yourself. There are secondary objectives, like forcing the opponent to use up clock, or don't make it easy to start his offense, or get his guards tired out, and so on, but in no case was the object to give him a certain kind of shot. Hell, the objective was to keep him from getting a shot. Any kind of shot.
I've seen the great presses, Newell's, Wooden's, the Razorback press and more. I never saw a press that had an objective that had anything to do with letting the other team shoot a shot and have a chance to score. The objective is to give them no shot, no chance to score, isn't it? Have basketball rules and players and coaches changed so much since my day that now we plan for our press to fail to cause a turnover and we plan more for what happens after our press has failed than we plan to execute our press in the first place?
This kind of thinking goes against a player's basketball instincts. For example, if Jason Kidd is pressing a guard in the backcourt, is he thinking about letting this guy dribble over the line, or letting him pass the ball down the floor? Heck no. Jason Kidd is thinking about two things: stealing the ball from that guard, or forcing him into a turnover, or not letting him get the ball over that half court line. That is it. If Kidd fails to stop the guard, then he is thinking only about quickly recovering and getting back into position on defense.
To me, if this is the objective of our press, to give certain opponent players an open shot, it is defeatist thinking, expecting to fail, so why bother pressing in the first place?
"UCLA is a talented team. They shoot the ball at all five positions. We pressed them, and they took the shot we wanted them to take issue is, they made them. Your five man, your four man shooting three's against the press we want that, the odds are in our favor in situations like that. Unfortunately, they made those shots and I think that was the difference in the game."
In over 60 years of watching basketball and listening to coaches, this is probably the strangest statement I ever heard from a basketball coach.
I may be old-fashioned, but my coaches never told me the objective of a press was to give the other team a shot, any kind of shot. They taught me that objective of the press was to keep the ball from getting over the half-court line, either by stealing it, causing a turnover, or getting a 10 second violation called on the opponent. In any case you get the ball. The ultimate objective is to steal the ball and convert it into a score for yourself. There are secondary objectives, like forcing the opponent to use up clock, or don't make it easy to start his offense, or get his guards tired out, and so on, but in no case was the object to give him a certain kind of shot. Hell, the objective was to keep him from getting a shot. Any kind of shot.
I've seen the great presses, Newell's, Wooden's, the Razorback press and more. I never saw a press that had an objective that had anything to do with letting the other team shoot a shot and have a chance to score. The objective is to give them no shot, no chance to score, isn't it? Have basketball rules and players and coaches changed so much since my day that now we plan for our press to fail to cause a turnover and we plan more for what happens after our press has failed than we plan to execute our press in the first place?
This kind of thinking goes against a player's basketball instincts. For example, if Jason Kidd is pressing a guard in the backcourt, is he thinking about letting this guy dribble over the line, or letting him pass the ball down the floor? Heck no. Jason Kidd is thinking about two things: stealing the ball from that guard, or forcing him into a turnover, or not letting him get the ball over that half court line. That is it. If Kidd fails to stop the guard, then he is thinking only about quickly recovering and getting back into position on defense.
To me, if this is the objective of our press, to give certain opponent players an open shot, it is defeatist thinking, expecting to fail, so why bother pressing in the first place?
SFCityBear