What Will the Gophers Look Like Without Amir Coffey?

BleedGopher

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 11, 2008
Messages
60,780
Reaction score
16,189
Points
113
per Ekstrom:

Here’s how Minnesota could look different next season.

Coffey was a born slasher, a dazzling contortionist around the rim (though he rarely stuck the landing, hitting the deck at a rate that had to make onlookers wince). Rightfully playing to his skillset, Coffey was most gifted as a rim-runner and mid-range jump shooter. He took only eight fewer two-point shots than Murphy, a classic post-up power forward, last season. In an effort to expand his 3-point range as a junior, Coffey took a career-high 135 3s but saw his percentage dip to 30.4 percent amidst a higher volume.Between Murphy, Coffey and Daniel Oturu, the three leading scorers took 920 2-point shots a season ago. That’s virtually the same number of 2s as the entire Villanova team (939). The Gophers had gifted athletes, but their top three scorers also lived in and around the paint, making Minnesota an inefficient offensive team that took few 3s (319th in the nation) and usually struggled on the attempts they did take (307th in percentage). With efficiency now playing a role in the tournament committee’s NET rankings system — a system that Pitino studies and cares about it — the Gophers could pivot to a floor-spreading offense that features sophomore Gabe Kalscheur, who shot a gaudy 41 percent on 188 3s last year while attempting just 95 shots inside the arc.Newcomers Tre Williams (freshman), Marcus Carr (transfer), Payton Willis (transfer), Isaiah Ihnen (freshman) and Alihan Demir (transfer) should all be able to shoot from 3-point range, which will offer Pitino an opportunity to retool his offense if he’d like.

With Washington, the once hotly-recruited point guard, seemingly regressing in his sophomore season, Coffey was given a ball dominant role as point guard while playing over 35 minutes per game. But he didn’t fulfill the traditional point guard duties given his role as a scorer. Coffey’s assists numbers came in at a modest 3.2 per game. Plus, Pitino’s offense emphasized ball-handoff action that allowed Coffey to move without the ball and catch passes off screens.The junior’s multi-purpose role also came about because the NCAA denied transfer Marcus Carr’s waiver to play immediately after leaving Pittsburgh.Carr might have Pitino’s starter last season had things played out differently, and he’ll likely be favored to start in 2019-20. The 6-foot-2, 200-pounder fits the billing of a more traditional point guard who averaged 4.0 assists per game in his lone year with the Panthers, including 11 games where he dished out five or more. But Carr should also provide offensive punch, having drawn comparisons to Purdue’s Carsen Edwards from Pitino, who got to watch Carr in practice last season.

“He was unstoppable,” Pitino said of Carr in a Star Tribune piece by Marcus Fuller. “I’m going to have to continue to tell him he can be Carsen Edwards next year. He looked really, really good.”

Naturally, the Gophers will need to figure out who their new end-of-game closer will be. Coffey was instrumental last season in Big Ten wins against Nebraska, Wisconsin, Purdue (twice) and numerous others down the stretch. Minnesota often went as Coffey did, going 14-5 when he scored 15 or more points versus 8-9 when he scored fewer.The late-game leadership lost between Coffey, Murphy and McBrayer could be noticeable early next season, but Kalscheur is the obvious choice to be the biggest clutch-time contributor. Shy off the court but certainly not on it, the freshman Kalscheur hit a game-winning 3 against Washington, a game-tying 3 at Michigan and scored 24 points in the team’s tournament win over Louisville.

https://zonecoverage.com/2019/gophers/what-will-the-gophers-look-like-without-amir-coffey/

Go Gophers!!
 

OK, so the new orthodoxy in basketball is shoot only 3-pointers or layups/dunks.

But - if you happen to have a team that does not shoot 3-pointers very well, what are you supposed to do? Forfeit?

Bottom line, team with the most points still wins. If you can make a lot of 3-pointers, great. If you can't, you need to hit a high percentage of 2-pointers, and shoot as many free throws as possible.

If everyone has to play the same style, the game is going to get boring. I would rather have some variety.
 




Top Bottom