Despite having what may be his most physically talented team in his five years at Marquette, many fans seem pessimistic on this team's odds of making the tournament this year. Regardless of talent, it seems this team is giving its faithful more questions than answers. Will Trent Lockett find his Arizona State form? Can Junior Cadougan limit his turnovers? Does Jamil Wilson have the ability to translate his physical gifts into on-court dominance? And can a Marquette team that struggled with cupcakes hope to manage their Big East schedule?
I'm still confident Marquette can battle through and reach the NCAA Tournament. Not only that, I think this team could still make a deep run in March. The necessary pieces are there, but those pieces have to work together to make that possible. Here are my keys to Marquette finishing the season strong:
1) Manage the Point: Junior has turned the ball over 18 times in the past 4 games as opposed to 16 turnovers in the first 8 games. Even still, he made key plays that led to wins against LSU and NCCU. Earlier in the season, Buzz alluded to Derrick Wilson showing starting ability but sticking with Junior out of loyalty. When Junior is faltering, Buzz has to be willing to give DW the keys. Per 40 minutes, Junior is averaging 4.3 turnovers to Derrick's 2.1, but their turnover rate is actually fairly similar: Junior turns the ball over 26.6% of the time he has the ball (slightly high for a PG) while Derrick turns it over 22.7% of the time (about average). The difference of the per 40 numbers and turnover rate indicates DW is more willing to share ball-handling duties with the other guys on the court. While Junior is scoring more and assisting at a higher rate, his proclivity for turning the ball over puts is par of the reason Marquette has needed late-game heroics. Buzz should be quicker with the hook to force Junior to understand that turning the ball over won't be tolerated. Hopefully better ball management will lessen the need for those heroics.
2) Step Up, Jamil: Jamil Wilson has the highest offensive rating of players that average 60% of the team's minutes, but is fourth of those players in terms of usage behind Cadougan, Blue, and Lockett. In the NCCU broadcast, Jim McIlvaine talked about how Stanton Kidd, the Eagles' best offensive player, needed to shoot because by being selfish he gave his team the best chance at winning. The same could be said for Jamil. He can score many ways but often passes up good looks and is unwilling to take over a game. In the opening 30 minutes against Green Bay, Wilson scored 14 points on 5/9 shooting including 4/5 behind the arc. In the final 10 minutes, he took only one shot, a dunk that he made. With the game on the line, the best players have to be willing to play. Jamil has to be willing to take the ball as he did consistently through the first 30 minutes and continue scoring and step on the opposition's throat. Instead, he allowed others to shoot and Marquette went 3/10 from the field over the final 10 minutes with one of the three makes being his basket. As Jim McIlvaine inferred your best players need to play. In the case of Jamil Wilson, that's him.
3) Manage the Schedule: The first 8 games will be key. Marquette takes on Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, and Louisville on the road, games in which their odds of winning per Pomeroy are never better than 19%. That means winning at home early is important. Marquette should look to win at least 4/5 at home in that span against Connecticut, Georgetown, Seton Hall, Providence, and South Florida. After that, Marquette only plays three games against Pomeroy top-40 teams and all three are at home (Pitt, Syracuse, Notre Dame). While they do play on the road in 6 of their last 10 games, only one is against a team in Pomeroy's top-80 (#43 Georgetown). This is a schedule set up to get MU to the tournament.
There are, of course, other questions. Will Lockett and Jake Thomas start producing offensively like they did at their previous stops? Can Vander Blue find consistency? Where will Todd Mayo fit in? Can the defense start stringing together consecutive stops? But those I'm not as worried about. Those are all things that should improve with time, and if not, there are other players that can make up for the deficiencies.
Monday, December 31, 2012
Keys to a Marquette NCAA Bid
Written by Alan Bykowski at 4:06 PM 0 comments
Saturday, December 29, 2012
Jerome Whitehead dead at age 56
Jerome Whitehead was found dead on December 20th in Southern California. Whitehead helped lead the Warriors to the national championship in 1977 and played in the NBA for 11 seasons.
At Marquette, he earned All American honors from Converse and NABC during the '77-'78 season. He is currently 4th all time in FG% at 54.8%. He is also in the top 20 all time for career rebounds. He earned the MVP of the Milwaukee Classic in 1977.
Whitehead may best be remembered for the winning basket with less than one second left against UNCC in the Final Four. With the game tied 49-49, Butch Lee sent a full court pass down to Whitehead who caught it off a deflection from Cornbread Maxwell, dribbled once and banked the layup in to win 51-49. It took the referees several minutes to confirm the basket was good which sent the Warriors into pandemonium and into the championship game against the Tarheels.
RIP Jerome Whitehead
Written by muwarrior92 at 11:37 AM 0 comments
Friday, December 28, 2012
Gardner about to crack top 100 players in the country
We are planning a national release of the Value Add stats early next week, but we can preview the Marquette rankings before the rest are public and on www.valueaddbasketball.com.
Many were surprised when I wrote preseason that I just didn't believe MU had a top 100 player, and now I may be wrong. Davante Gardner has shot up 141 spots to 114th - putting him in the top 3% of all basketball players and in a spot where he could give Marquette an All-Big East selection.
I realize Chris Otule is playing great defense and Davante let a big man that Otule had contained go baseline on him verses LSU, but Gardner is getting so dominant in just 20 minutes a game that I almost believe you need to start Chris but perhaps go to a 15/25 minute rotation to get Davante a few more minutes. In addition to unbelievably efficient numbers including the only 270-pound or better player hitting over 75% of his free throws (81% to be exact), he is truly a force. His two 5-steal games make up for a few defensive lapses - the guy is just clever. Who would believe he would be one of only a few players in the country to be among the national leaders in both blocked shots and steals.
Rnk | Marquette player | Ht | Yr | Off | Def | PG/Per | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
114 | Davante Gardner | 6' 8" | Jr | 4.40 | -1.55 | 5.95 | |
332 | Jamil Wilson | 6' 7" | Jr | 3.12 | -0.82 | 3.93 | |
713 | Junior Cadougan | 6' 1" | Sr | 1.17 | 0.24 | 1.50 | 2.43 |
1051 | Chris Otule | 6' 11" | Sr | 1.38 | -0.25 | 1.63 | |
1179 | Juan Anderson | 6' 6" | So | 0.17 | -1.23 | 1.39 | |
1194 | Derrick Wilson | 6' 1" | So | 0.35 | -0.53 | 0.50 | 1.38 |
1196 | Vander Blue | 6' 4" | Jr | 1.00 | 0.12 | 0.50 | 1.37 |
1261 | Steve Taylor | 6' 7" | Fr | 0.99 | -0.29 | 1.29 | |
1327 | Jake Thomas | 6' 3" | Jr | 0.96 | -0.22 | 1.18 | |
1542 | Trent Lockett | 6' 5" | Sr | 0.16 | -0.74 | 0.90 | |
1881 | Jamal Ferguson | 6' 4" | Fr | 0.18 | -0.38 | 0.56 |
Overall, the story continues to be incredibly balances as everyone on the roster is in the top half of all players, except for Todd Mayo who doesn't have enough minutes but was projected to be the 4th best player on the team behind Gardner, J. Wilson, Blue.
Despite fluctuations from game-to-game, Jamil Wilson has been very consistent over every few game stretches. He was projected at 329th, was 366th early this month, and is now 332nd, always in the top 10% of all players.
Despite the bad outing verses Green Bay, Junior Cadougan held very steady as the third best player due to dominating Wisconsin and second most valuable player against LSU.
Chris Otule's defensive presence cannot be measured, and when you account for that on top of him already ranking as the 4th most valuable on the team, you can see why it is a tough choice for Buzz to decide which of his four most valuable players to play.
While certainly we see the key moments from Vander Blue and Trent Lockett, missed shots and turnovers have them both below the average 1.00 overall offensive rating in www.kenpom.com as doing a little more to hurt the offense than help it - but we can see they could take off.
Written by JohnPudner at 5:00 AM 0 comments
Monday, December 24, 2012
MU’s best FT of the Century (96%) beats LSU; Gardner’s 81% tops of any BIG man in country
I’m not sure if MU fans realize what they saw Saturday when
MU hit 24 of 25 free throws to beat LSU 84-80. The 96% from the line is the best Marquette has shot in 409 games this century (since the 2000-2001 season began). It is very rare for a team's free throw shooting to change who wins or loses the game, but the was not only the greatest shooting percentage of the century but MU did it in a game in which MU would have LOST the game with average free throw shooting of 17 of 25.
The team was led by a 9-9 performance by 6-foot-8, 270 pound Davante
Gardner. There are 49 players 270 pounds
or bigger in D1 basketball, and they average 56% from the line and Davante’s
81% for the season makes him the only of these 49 above 75%.
FTM
|
FTA
|
FT%
|
Plus/Minus
|
|
Steve Novak
|
243
|
261
|
93%
|
63
|
All other MU this century
|
6,297
|
8,852
|
71%
|
189
|
Total 21st century
|
6,540
|
9,113
|
72%
|
252
|
Rank
|
Result
|
Opponent
|
MU pts
|
FT
|
FTA
|
FT%
|
Plus/minus
|
Season
|
Change result?
|
1
|
W
|
LSU
|
84
|
24
|
25
|
96
|
6.75
|
2013
|
Lost 77-80
|
2
|
W
|
@DEP
|
89
|
22
|
23
|
95.7
|
6.13
|
2012
|
No
|
3
|
L
|
Lville
|
70
|
21
|
22
|
95.5
|
5.82
|
2003
|
No
|
4
|
W
|
Mizzou
|
101
|
19
|
20
|
95
|
5.2
|
2003
|
L Reg (W96-92 OT)
|
5
|
L
|
UAB
|
76
|
18
|
19
|
94.7
|
4.89
|
2003
|
No
|
6
|
W
|
@Cinci
|
79
|
16
|
17
|
94.1
|
4.27
|
2010
|
Lost 75-76 OT
|
7
|
W
|
UH
|
76
|
28
|
30
|
93.3
|
7.3
|
2005
|
No
|
8
|
W
|
UWM
|
64
|
18
|
20
|
90
|
4.2
|
2012
|
No
|
9
|
L
|
@PITT
|
79
|
17
|
19
|
89.5
|
3.89
|
2007
|
No
|
10
|
W
|
UAB
|
98
|
33
|
37
|
89.2
|
7.47
|
2003
|
No
|
11
|
W
|
WVU
|
75
|
24
|
27
|
88.9
|
5.37
|
2009
|
No
|
12
|
W
|
CSU
|
89
|
24
|
27
|
88.9
|
5.37
|
2008
|
No
|
13
|
W
|
Lville
|
74
|
16
|
18
|
88.9
|
3.58
|
2012
|
No
|
14
|
W
|
Nova
|
80
|
31
|
35
|
88.6
|
6.85
|
2007
|
No
|
15
|
L
|
@ND
|
75
|
15
|
17
|
88.2
|
3.27
|
2011
|
No
|
16
|
W
|
DEP
|
79
|
15
|
17
|
88.2
|
3.27
|
2008
|
No
|
17
|
W
|
UH
|
85
|
15
|
17
|
88.2
|
3.27
|
2002
|
No
|
18
|
W
|
PC
|
96
|
22
|
25
|
88
|
4.75
|
2008
|
No
|
19
|
W
|
@Lville
|
77
|
22
|
25
|
88
|
4.75
|
2004
|
No
|
20
|
W
|
DEP
|
82
|
22
|
25
|
88
|
4.75
|
2001
|
No
|
335
|
W
|
@TUL
|
82
|
11
|
21
|
52.4
|
-3.49
|
2005
|
No
|
336
|
W
|
IPFW
|
80
|
12
|
23
|
52.2
|
-3.87
|
2008
|
No
|
337
|
W
|
ISU
|
59
|
16
|
31
|
51.6
|
-5.39
|
2007
|
No
|
338
|
W
|
@WVU
|
61
|
10
|
20
|
50
|
-3.8
|
2012
|
No
|
339
|
L
|
@Cinci
|
68
|
8
|
16
|
50
|
-3.04
|
2005
|
No
|
340
|
L
|
@USF
|
56
|
10
|
23
|
43.5
|
-5.87
|
2009
|
Won 61-57
|
341
|
W
|
WISC
|
60
|
7
|
17
|
41.2
|
-4.73
|
2013
|
No
|
342
|
L
|
SU
|
58
|
6
|
15
|
40
|
-4.35
|
2007
|
No
|
343
|
W
|
@USF
|
59
|
7
|
19
|
36.8
|
-6.11
|
2011
|
No
|
344
|
W
|
UMBC
|
68
|
6
|
18
|
33.3
|
-6.42
|
2007
|
No
|
Jer
|
270-pound or bigger FT
|
Team
|
Ft
|
In
|
Wt
|
Yr
|
FTM
|
FTA
|
FT%
|
54
|
Davante Gardner
|
Marquette
|
6
|
8
|
290
|
Jr
|
34
|
42
|
81%
|
44
|
Shaquille Cleare
|
Maryland
|
6
|
9
|
270
|
Fr
|
15
|
20
|
75%
|
50
|
Ian Chiles
|
Morgan St.
|
7
|
2
|
270
|
Jr
|
18
|
24
|
75%
|
34
|
Derrick Williams
|
Richmond
|
6
|
6
|
270
|
Jr
|
74
|
99
|
75%
|
42
|
Reggie Johnson
|
Miami
|
6
|
10
|
292
|
Sr
|
35
|
49
|
71%
|
25
|
Derrick Nix
|
Michigan St.
|
6
|
9
|
270
|
Sr
|
35
|
50
|
70%
|
41
|
Stephen Hurt
|
Lipscomb
|
6
|
10
|
285
|
Fr
|
21
|
30
|
70%
|
40
|
Kendrick Washington
|
Arkansas St.
|
6
|
7
|
274
|
Jr
|
22
|
33
|
67%
|
32
|
Andre Almeida
|
Nebraska
|
6
|
11
|
314
|
Sr
|
13
|
20
|
65%
|
20
|
A.J. Hammons
|
Purdue
|
7
|
1
|
280
|
Fr
|
20
|
31
|
65%
|
Impact | Off Reb Pts | Total impact | |
---|---|---|---|
Made front of 1-1 (10%) | 1.00 | - | 1.00 |
Made any other (90%) | 0.31 | - | 0.31 |
Estimated impact of all made FT | 0.38 | ||
Miss 2nd of 2, 3rd of 3 or "and 1" (43% of misses) | (0.69) | 0.25 | (0.44) |
Miss technical (3%) | (0.69) | - | (0.69) |
Miss 1st of 2 or 2nd of 3 (44%) | (0.69) | - | (0.69) |
Miss front of 1-1 (10%) | (1.38) | 0.25 | (1.13) |
Estimated impact of all misses | (0.64) |
Written by JohnPudner at 12:30 AM 1 comments