- Joined
- Aug 16, 2011
- Messages
- 98,775
- Like
- 199,387
If MG could have played this year he would have been the 3rd guard.
How do you know that?
Sent using my Commodore 64
If MG could have played this year he would have been the 3rd guard.
Good at every other phase?...seems a stretch...Cooney did give good hustle on D but was not a prolific scorer. All the inexperienced candidates will be hustling on D. And the D potential of MG and Patterson exceeds that of Cooney.his shooting was woeful,to be sure . . . but he was good-to-very good at every other phase of the game, especially on defense. He is the most experienced defender available at the top of the zone - you know, the tool that has made JB a legend and has fired this amazing five year run.
He can play himself out of the starting lineup, but I'm betting he'll be there game 1.
Conference play won't be tougher than what we've been accustomed to (and perhaps easier). The team certainly has a lot of unproven pieces though.
The toughest games here are against Pitt...as usual.We have a vicious schedule next year. We start out Maui ( I will be there) with potential games with Baylor, Georgetown (ugh), Cal, Arkansas and Minnesota. We move into an ACC Schedule with Duke 2x, Miami (the ACC Champions) 2x, North Carolina, Notre Dame, NC State and Pitt (whom I hate to play) 2x. The only relief is the away schedule in the ACC (VaTech, Maryland, Clemson, Virginia and BC).
If we are not on top at the start, it's going to be a long season. We have six guys who have never played in an SU game and 5 who've never played zone.
his shooting was woeful,to be sure . . . but he was good-to-very good at every other phase of the game, especially on defense. He is the most experienced defender available at the top of the zone - you know, the tool that has made JB a legend and has fired this amazing five year run.
He can play himself out of the starting lineup, but I'm betting he'll be there game 1.
The toughest games here are against Pitt...as usual.
Take out the tournament and a typical BE schedule would be tougher.
We have a vicious schedule next year. We start out Maui ( I will be there) with potential games with Baylor, Georgetown (ugh), Cal, Arkansas and Minnesota. We move into an ACC Schedule with Duke 2x, Miami (the ACC Champions) 2x, North Carolina, Notre Dame, NC State and Pitt (whom I hate to play) 2x. The only relief is the away schedule in the ACC (VaTech, Maryland, Clemson, Virginia and BC).
If we are not on top at the start, it's going to be a long season. We have six guys who have never played in an SU game and 5 who've never played zone.
*Unless Gbiinije does some crazy Wes Johnson stuff in Italy and back here in October.
But Boeheim doesn't want two zone neophytes starting together up top unless they are head-and-shoulders more capable than the other options. As of now, as you say, it's Cooney's job to lose.
MG has already done the Wes J impersonation all last season. What he will be doing in Italy is showing that it translates to the games. Does anyone really think MG wouldn't have been the 3rd guard going into the NCAAT last year?
MG is not a neophyte. He is as much a neophyte as WesJ was. He has a full year in our system, another in Dukes. He is probably as old as Cooney. And he was higher rated.
Yes, prior to last season the starting gig in '13-'14 was Cooney's job to lose. And he lost it. It is now MG's job.
MG has already done the Wes J impersonation all last season. What he will be doing in Italy is showing that it translates to the games. Does anyone really think MG wouldn't have been the 3rd guard going into the NCAAT last year?
MG is not a neophyte. He is as much a neophyte as WesJ was. He has a full year in our system, another in Dukes. He is probably as old as Cooney. And he was higher rated.
Yes, prior to last season the starting gig in '13-'14 was Cooney's job to lose. And he lost it. It is now MG's job.
Do you know that MG is as good as Wes was? I have not heard that. During the year the Wes sat out, JB said several times that the best player on the team isn't even playing in the games. he was spot on there. I just haven't heard the same accolades about MG.MG has already done the Wes J impersonation all last season. What he will be doing in Italy is showing that it translates to the games. Does anyone really think MG wouldn't have been the 3rd guard going into the NCAAT last year?
MG is not a neophyte. He is as much a neophyte as WesJ was. He has a full year in our system, another in Dukes. He is probably as old as Cooney. And he was higher rated.
Yes, prior to last season the starting gig in '13-'14 was Cooney's job to lose. And he lost it. It is now MG's job.
Do you know that MG is as good as Wes was? I have not heard that. During the year the Wes sat out, JB said several times that the best player on the team isn't even playing in the games. he was spot on there. I just haven't heard the same accolades about MG.
MG dominated the midnight madness. A lot of buzz back then.Do you know that MG is as good as Wes was? I have not heard that. During the year the Wes sat out, JB said several times that the best player on the team isn't even playing in the games. he was spot on there. I just haven't heard the same accolades about MG.
I think the recent zone success has people overemphazing JBs reliance on it as a determinant of who will play. Last year for instance, it was Dirty who saw the floor over Grant, not for any D reasons but for the O he could provide.Cooney and Gbinije are basking in the glow of this new era (now four years in and the winningest such period in school history). Boeheim doesn't need to replace a guy who is persona non grata; he's not looking to send messages. He's not in a situation where one player has a distinct physical advantage over the other. He's just looking at two guys, one of whom has capably played 39 games' worth of zone defense and another who has never played a meaningful second of it.
When it comes to defense, practice time doesn't count (funny - we saw that with Wes, whose physical attributes somewhat made up for the fact that he was the worst defender of our starting five in 2010). Cooney has the distinct advantage.
And ratings don't matter.
The Wes analogy is popular, but flawed.
Wes was a consistent scorer who had three or four inches on the guy who played his position during the redshirt year. The redshirt year was the last of a somewhat up-and-down (to be kind) era, after which the coaching staff felt the players needed a change in focus and discipline. The message was clear: defense is the name of the game. We're tightening up on guys who won't play defense (so long, Mssrs. Devendorf and Flynn) and we're not experimenting with players who can't play defense at a particular position (Buh-bye, Rautins and Harris on the wing).
Cooney and Gbinije are basking in the glow of this new era (now four years in and the winningest such period in school history). Boeheim doesn't need to replace a guy who is persona non grata; he's not looking to send messages. He's not in a situation where one player has a distinct physical advantage over the other. He's just looking at two guys, one of whom has capably played 39 games' worth of zone defense and another who has never played a meaningful second of it.
When it comes to defense, practice time doesn't count (funny - we saw that with Wes, whose physical attributes somewhat made up for the fact that he was the worst defender of our starting five in 2010). Cooney has the distinct advantage.
And ratings don't matter.
I'll bet you a pre-paid year's subscription to the payside that Cooney begins the season as the starting 2 guard and Silent but Deadly fills the Dion Waiters role as super sixth man
I'm with you. And I really am pulling for Cooney to improve and contribute. I like the program guys who make good.I still have a very positive outlook for Cooney. I think he will wind up being great for us, but more on an Andy Rautins timescale than a GMac timescale. I would be highly surprised if he starts at the beginning of the season next year, however.
I think the recent zone success has people overemphazing JBs reliance on it as a determinant of who will play. Last year for instance, it was Dirty who saw the floor over Grant, not for any D reasons but for the O he could provide.
Next years team needs some scoring. There is CJ and a bunch of unknowns or worse non-producers. Cooney was one of the non-producers. And yes, JB can tell a lot about practice D, I think that translates quite well to games. Unlike his broken trust of Cooney's O, where what difference will it really make how he does in practice there anymore. His game fear will take time to fix.
And there is quite a physical advantage to MG (and Buss). He is significantly taller. I do not think Cooney can ascend to a starting role based on hustling on D.
This analogy is also flawed though. Under this, it will not be Mike G that sits, it will be Ennis. My assumption is that JB thinks in-person practice evaluation for a full season and two off-seasons at Syracuse to be meaningful in terms of Mike picking up the zone. Ennis will have none of that when he comes in. This is the advantage of the Europe trip (which would be so awesome if it happens, btw), but even that will give JB about 1/20th of the evaluation information for Tyler as he has had for Mike.
Yeah. The enthusiasm for the home slate is clouding the overall view of the schedule. The hhome sched is made up of what looks like the best the league has to offer. And the road sched is a gift in terms of how easy it looks. Might be the easiest since like 00-02.It's funny, I'm starting to pick up this vibehin the media. Really started noticing it in the "CJ Returns" articles. The new media story line reads like we are coming from the America East to the powerhouse ACC. It is sort of funny that the only real reason to consider the ACC a big powerhouse is because we are coming. They weren't a monster powerhouse last year, or the year before, or the year before that, etc. The Big East was the 500 lb gorilla when we were there - now it is a middling conference that we have left and the ACC is suddenly godzilla.
MG dominated the midnight madness. A lot of buzz back then.
and that article doesn't even mention Gbinje, let alone calls his performance "dominating"Dominated midnight madness? Really? I don't remember if he did or didn't but if you're gonna use a midnight madness which is nothing more than playground 1 on none basketball, then you must remember that a lot of the talk after it was about Cooney. Here's one articles quote about him.
" Keep in mind that little-to-no defense is played during the scrimmage, so it’s hard to make good observations about players. But Trevor Cooney is one player who really stuck out. His shot looked so pure as he hit multiple three-point shots."
Sent using my Commodore 64