Free Throw Shooting
Throughout the year, I've been amazed by how well the Illini have been shooting free throws. Last year we lost several games down the stretch because we couldn't hit the freebies. This year, the Illini are putting games away with their proficiency at the line. Our good buddy Mark Pinsof hypothesized that the loss of Brian Randle and Shaun Pruit alone gave the Illini free throw shooting surge. We brow beat him into doing the research, and here is what he found...
We shot 62% from the line last year, and five players from last years team's free throw % have increased DRAMATICALLY:
Mike Davis up from 46.9% to 75.6% this year
McCamey up from 62.7% to 81.8% this year
Frasier up from 51.9% to 68.8% this year
Tisdale up from 63.3% to 80.0% this year
and even Meachum is up from 74.7% to 89.7% this year
Speaking of Shaun
Spitzer sent me a story the other day about Shaun Pruitt. As of Saturday, the big boy was the leading rebounder and 3rd highest scorer in a European league. Unfortunately, the article wasn't praising his great play, it was reporting that he had been cut from the team. "If you're a league's leading rebounder and third leading scorer, how do you get released? Let's ask Shaun Pruitt," wrote spitzer.
http://www.eurobasket.com/Czech-Republic/basketball.asp?NewsID=152398
"While statistically Pruitt was very impressive, a closer examination of his game showed some serious rookie-flaws that Prostejov, currently fourth in the NBL, felt they could no longer deal with. For example, Pruitt did not possess great court-vision, apparent in his 0.9 assist per game averages and numerous offensive fouls he accumulated per game. Also, while a dominant force inside, Pruitt has not been able to correct his horrendous free-throw shooting (46.2%) to capitalize on the fouls he draws. But aside from these performance flaws, as most players have, Pruitts lack of commitment to defense was probably the final nail in the coffin for his time at Prostejov."
WOW. MOM. WOW.
The Illini Nation Invades Evanston
The Northwestern Mildcats have been completely baffling this year. They've roared to wins against #25 FSU, Minnesota, #9 MSU, and Wisconsin, but they lost to I.O.W.A. and were taken to the wire by Indiana (you know, the team that lost to Lipscomb). So what I am saying is, who the hell knows which Wildcat team will show up.
Kevin Coble is Northwestern's top player. He's averaging 15.2 points per game. When the sweet shooting Junior is on, the Cats are tough to beat, but NU has not won a game when Coble scores less than 10 points. Coble is a good match-up for Davis or JuCo Transfer Dominique Keller because they are both tall and can defend off the dribble.
Chester Frazier has been guarding the oppositions top scorer for most of the season, but his hands will be full against speedy sophomore Michael Thompson (10ppg, 4apg). Thompson will take you off the dribble and will finish or dish to an open man (hopefully not to Coble for 3).
On defense, the Cats play a tricked out match-up zone or a 1-3-1 (they also play man). Watch the way they switch and match-up when they play a 2-3. It is fascinating. When Illini Assistant Jay Price scouted NU for the first time, he watched an entire season's worth of tape, but couldn't figure out what they were doing - it almost drove him looney. We've had problems against their unorthodox but organized style in the past, however this year's team speciallizes in finding the open man. Zones typically have a weaknesses at the short corner and the hi-post. These are sweet spots for Davis and Tisdale. If the Mike's are shooting well, we will roll.Illinois - 67
Cats - 59
Sincerely,
Jeff Jordan's Scholarship
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