College basketball has been a roller coaster ride ever since
Duke started the season by routing Kentucky in October. It feels like the five
months since have contained ten different seasons, with teams pin-balling up
and down throughout the year. After all of that, Saturday treated us to two
excellent Final Four games, leaving just one college basketball game on the
calendar this season.
Monday will provide two programs a chance at the national
championship, but first, let’s examine what happened in Minneapolis in the
semifinal games.
1. TWO CALLS IN
THE FINAL SECONDS SWING THE GAME
Virginia took control of the game in the second half against
Auburn, building a lead of 10 points in the final minutes. Auburn knifed into
that lead with a 14-0 run, holding Virginia scoreless for more than five
minutes of game play.
Auburn held a two-point lead with less than ten seconds to
play. As Virginia attempted to advance the ball, the Tigers used their two
remaining available fouls-to-give to slow the Hoos. Before Auburn could commit
its sixth team foul, Virginal guard Ty Jerome dribbled the ball off his own foot before
retrieving it and recommencing his dribble. Because no Auburn player touched
the ball, a double-dribble should have been called, essentially ending the game
with an Auburn win.
Instead, the refs allowed Jerome’s mistake, Auburn took a
foul, and Virginia had a chance to inbound to tie or win the game.
The Hoos inbounded to Kyle Guy, who rose for a 3-pointer to
win the game. Guy missed the shot, yet was fouled by Samir Doughty. For a
referee, calling a foul on the game’s final possession and essentially deciding
the outcome requires courage and certainty. At full speed in the moment, the
call seemed debatable. In slow motion on replay, Doughty absolutely fouled Guy by leaving his feet and
contacting Guy’s legs.
Both plays ended up favoring Virginia, sealing the win late
for the Cavaliers.
2. TY JEROME WAS
THE BEST PLAYER ON THE FLOOR
For 35 of the game’s 40 minutes, Virginia outplayed Auburn,
thanks in large part to Ty Jerome. The junior guard controlled the tempo for
Virginia, initiated everything the Cavaliers did offensively, and scored within
the flow of the game.
Jerome finished the game with 21 points, nine rebounds, and
six assists. He made four of Virginia’s seven 3-point baskets in the game,
almost seemingly whenever the Hoos needed a bucket.
When Jerome left the game with four fouls late, Virginia
looked to be cruising to a victory. Without Jerome on the floor, the Cavaliers’
offense broke down. Auburn used Virginia’s offensive incompetence to spark the
run that would help the Tigers take the lead.
3. VIRGINIA
DOMINATED THE PAINT
Auburn came to the Final Four without its best frontcourt
player after Chuma Okeke tore his ACL last weekend. It showed on Saturday
night, with Virginia’s big men controlling the game at the rim.
Even though Virginia plays most of the game with three
guards on the floor, the Hoos’ frontcourt stymied Auburn all game in the paint.
The Cavaliers finished the game with nine blocks. Mamadi Diakite led the way
with five rejections.
So much of what Auburn was looking to accomplish offensively
was turned away at the rim, turning the Tigers into a jump-shooting team.
4. TEXAS TECH’S
DEFENSE PREVAILS
Chris Beard has built a defensive juggernaut in Lubbock. The
Red Raiders rank first in the nation in defensive efficiency, holding teams to
just 84 points per 100 possessions this season. Every time Texas Tech takes the
floor, the Red Raiders make life very difficult for their opponents for 40
consecutive minutes.
Saturday night was no exception. Michigan State was slowed
to a stop by the Texas Tech defense. Only five Spartans scored in the game,
with Michigan State shooting under 32% as a team. For just the seventh time
this season, Michigan State committed more turnovers than it had assists. In
fact, Texas Tech held Michigan State to its fewest assists of the season, as
the Spartans posted a season low of six assists.
Cassius Winston and the Spartans constantly failed to find
an answer, never getting into a rhythm offensively.
5. MATT MOONEY
MADE UP FOR JARRETT CULVER’S SLOW NIGHT
Texas Tech’s offensive attack leans heavily on Big XII
Player of the Year and future lottery pick Jarrett Culver. Against Michigan
State on Saturday night, Culver struggled. The Spartans clearly game planned to
bottle up Culver, holding him to only 3-of-12 shooting from the floor.
The Red Raiders were in need of a scoring pop with Culver
contained, and Matt Mooney provided enough to put Texas Tech ahead. Mooney, at
his third school in his collegiate career, scored 22 points on Saturday. He hit
4-of-8 from outside the arc, sparking the Tech offense.
Texas Tech’s biggest problems this season have come when no
Red Raider other than Culver steps up and provides scoring. If Mooney can
continue to shoot the way he did Saturday, Virginia’s defense will face a
tougher test than expected.
6. MONDAY’S TITLE
GAME SHOULD BE A BRUISING BATTLE
Texas Tech and Virginia will now meet to determine the
national champion on Monday night in Minneapolis. Both teams have earned their
way to the national final, beating some of the nation’s best teams as they
advanced through the tournament. Prior to the NCAA Tournament, both won or shared
the regular season crown in their respective conferences, two of the nation’s
best leagues.
These two teams have succeeded this season in similar ways.
Both are defined by their defense, each ranking in the top 3 in the nation in
points allowed. Virginia and Texas Tech both allow less than 60 points a game,
due to suffocating defense and a preference for a slow tempo.
We should be expecting a slugfest on Monday, a rock fight
for the ages. Vegas can’t set the over-under total low enough for these two defensive
bullies.
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