Showing posts with label jimmy patsos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jimmy patsos. Show all posts

1.03.2010

Dec. 3, 2008

On 16point8.blogspot.com:

For two decades Bob McKillop worked to build Davidson basketball into a program that matters and is respected and is part of college basketball’s national conversation. He did that. He did it, always, with a team-first philosophy, every player playing his role, one five beats five ones, BALANCE.

The irony heading into this year, then, was that it ultimately took the emergence of one brilliant kid.

It doesn’t play that way in McKillop’s head, and not in Stephen’s head, either, and not anywhere in that little locker room in Belk, and it shouldn’t.

But being a part of the national conversation means you lose a good deal of control over who tells your story and how.

And it felt, sort of, at least to me, like some kind of line had been crossed, or was starting to be crossed, with Stephen’s 44-point game in the loss at Oklahoma. The one-man-team talk was getting louder.

Stephen is the show.

He is.

He’s a good show even on a bad night. On most nights he’s a great show. And on transcendent nights? Davidson wins tournament games.

The hope, though, is that it never turns into show for the sake of show, at the expense of sport. That it doesn’t go sideshow or freak show. It’s the difference between a concert and the circus.

So.

The zero game.

What it did, in retrospect, was offer a clear answer to anybody who had started to wonder: Points or wins?

Show or sport?

Concert or circus?

Here’s what Jimmy Patsos ended up doing: He helped shift the national narrative back to where McKillop and Stephen and the team and the program and really the college as a whole had wanted it to stay all along.

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1.01.2010

Nov. 26, 2008

Kruse on 16point8.blogspot.com:
Loyola of Maryland wasn't going to beat Davidson Tuesday night, probably not, almost certainly not, so why not try something really, REALLY different? What was there to lose?

Some might say a lot.

Pride.

Dignity.

Reputation.

Respect from the players on your team.

Folks are talking about this all over the place today. Most of them are using words like "dumb" and "ridiculous" and phrases like "an embarrassment to his profession" and "continues to lose his mind."

For now, from here, two thoughts:

1. It's a coach's Hippocratic Oath of sorts to prepare his players, and to give those players a chance, the very best possible chance, to compete and to win. That is not what happened here. Jimmy Patsos did not do that. Maybe he thought at some point, the day before the game, the morning of the game, at the start of the game, that this was in fact his team's best chance to win -- that's totally possible -- but he HAD to realize by at least halftime that it wasn't working. Davidson finished the half on a 35-8 run. Not working.

2. Seasons and the games that add up to seasons are all about adjustments. One team does this, the other team does that, the one team does something different, the other team tries to counter, and so on and so on. It never stops. To do one thing, and only one thing, for a full 40 minutes -- no matter what that thing is -- is a pretty good way to lose. I once was having beers with an attorney whose cases I used to write a good bit about and I asked him what made somebody good in his line of work. A malleable mind, he said. A good thinker is a flexible thinker. Loyola was losing 39-17 at the break. It got worse from there: 46-22, 52-24, 60-31, 71-38. And STILL: two men face-guarding Stephen standing in the corner. Rigidity is stupidity.

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Nov. 25, 2008

My journal from England:

Get this --

Steph didn't score.

And we won by 30.

WAHOOO!

Due to the fact that LMD's Coach Jimmy Patsos decided to double team Steph into a corner the whole game. But the legend grew even more because Steph didn't force anything -- he only attempted 3 shots and then distracted his guards so Andrew could get 20 pts, BBarr 18, Will 13, AARON BOND 11, Steve 6, Brendan 6, Ben 4...

One-man team? Who the hell are you talking about?

Patsos is an idiot though -- he kept up the strategy when it obviously wasn't working -- Bob was mad, Kilgo was mad, the fans were mad -- not because Steph didn't score (I think it's AWESOME that Steph didn't score. It's a great confidence booster for everyone) but because Patsos embarrassed his players, his school, and himself. After the game he said -- "What are they gonna remember -- that we held Curry scoreless or that we lost by 30?"

Uhhhh... we'll remember that you were a jerk so we pounded you and showed the talent of other guys besides Curry and also showed his graceful team spirit, therefore reinforcing how special we are?

I skyped with Patty the whole time and with Dad and Mason the 2nd half and I had a running commentary for Joe.

ONLY 2 MORE GAMES UNTIL I AM THERE!!!!!


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Nov. 24, 2008

Lauren Biggers on The View From Press Row:

If you were there, you're gonna wanna remember this one. "Put it in your memory bank" along with Gonzaga, Greensboro and Elon, but for the most opposite of reasons.

0-3, three fouls.

The rest of the band:

Lovedale: 8-for-14, 20 points, 10 boards.

The WL: 6-for-12 (all treys!), 18 points.

Bond, Aaron Bond: 4-for-5, 11 points, nine minutes.

Will Archambault: 5-for-9, 13 points, four assists.

SteVe: six points, six boards, six assists.

And afterwards, I turned over most of my post-game duties to assistant SID Matt Harris to attend press conferences. Standing in the classroom listening to the Band Leader, there's a tap on the window, and there's the Cheese, making faces while waiting his turn.

I'm sure there's some disappointment -- scorers like to score after all -- but you wouldn't know. In the press conference there is laughter and joking, as he concedes to "not knowing what position" he was playing and having "the best view in Belk Arena tonight."

And so it went, and in the greatest of dramatic twists, the one seeking the spotlight was upstaged by the one who can't avoid it.

Without scoring a point.

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