Siena Basketball Style of Play
Syracuse basketball is done for the year. I decided I am very excited about Siena making the NCAA tournament.
I haven't watched them play much this year, but I am intrigued by their success.
It also gives us a window into McNamara's coaching style. I think I might be trying to talk myself into wanting him to be our next coach, so beware.
Overall, Siena was 13-7 in conference, and 10-4 OOC, which leads one to believe they had an easy OOC schedule. Their 348th out of 365 Strength of Schedule confirms it. The MAAC is a weak conference at any rate, with the top 3 teams coming in 178, 181 and 182 in the current NET rankings. Depending on the rating system, the MAAC is either 21st, 25th or 26th best conference out of 31 D1 basketball conferences.
That said, McNamara put together a team that was better than most in his conference, and then performed well on the court.
His guys play good defense, with a little slow it down and grind type personality.
I saw three things I really liked about how they play.
1) Siena played to their talent. For most of the year, they played a single small guard and 3 swing men with a 6'10 Australian big playing center. They used their length to slow down the game, play good defense and win on the boards. They took only 55 shots per game and allowed 56, both among the slower paces in the game. They were terrible shooting threes, so they didn't. They shot .304 from 3, but only attempted 17.7 for the year, 348th in 3 pt attempts. They also have actual depth they used, with 10 players averaging 10 minutes or more per game.
2) They win the boards. Boxing out is a thing. Having a bunch of wings on the court most of the time makes rebounding harder, even against mid majors. They look unified in their priorities on the court, both on offense and defense. They find the open man, focusing on getting quality 2 pt shots. More than half their field goals came from assists. This is actually quite rare, but shows offensive continuity and cohesion. Especially in light of the fact that they had no single player we would trust to take a three to "spread the defense."
3) One of their starters, Antonio Chandler, a 6'6 215lb wing, was ruled ineligible right before the MAAC tournament. That could have been a crushing blow to the team. Instead they persevered and won.
I think this makes me even more excited for the team, even though they will likely have a bad matchup in the first round of the NCAA tournament.