Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Period 4 -Basketball

Due Date: Wednesday, October 1st
Because college basketball is just around the corner, I thought this would be a good assignment to get you thinking about college basketball and different coaching styles.
The article below is about 4 highly accomplished Division 1 college basketball coaches. Please read the article and answer the questions below. Please remember to put your name on your Blog so that I can give you credit.





John Calipari and Rick Pitino


ESPN.com


It ain't easy being John Calipari.


Oh, I know: Every coach in the country would volunteer his left pinkie for the star-studded lineup Calipari assembled this season, a glittering collection of NBA lottery talent. And most coaches would love to be the Official Governor of Big Blue Nation, spurred on by the devoted love of a state full of dedicated basketball maniacs. Calipari sits atop one of the few thrones in the sport, and he has worn the crown with style and pomp. Life in the Commonwealth is most definitely good.


But that doesn't mean it's easy.


In fact, the advantages of Calipari's job can frequently double as its drawbacks. That insane talent only raises expectations, expectations that create in fans not hope but demands: win or else. Every move on this team is scrutinized by a local media corps year-round, 24/7, 365. The position Calipari has put himself in with this team is enviable, sure, but it is also tenuous; there is absolutely no margin for error.


Which only makes the coaching job he's done this season all the more impressive. First, Calipari had to assemble this juggernaut. (Recruiting is often overlooked in coach-of-the-year discussions, but why?) Then, he had to solder disparate talented parts -- the kind of top-end AAU stars who might easily bristle against diminished roles -- into a basketball team even better than the sum of its parts. Then, he had to guide that team through the maelstrom that is basketball season in Kentucky, particularly a basketball season in which nothing but a national title can be considered a success.


The Wildcats are very nearly there. Does Calipari have the best talent in the country? No question. Are Calipari's problems of the high-class variety? Oh yeah. But high-class problems are still problems, and no coach in the country -- through the media, through point-perfect long-view guidance, through in-season adjustments designed to maximize each player's ability -- manages them better than the governor of BBN.


Sure, sure: Saying Calipari's job is hard is like saying driving a Maserati is too stressful. But the driver still has to hit his turns, and Coach Cal hasn't missed one.


-- Eamonn Brennan





Rick Pitino insisted that, outside the birth of his three children, no day in his life was better than this past Saturday, when Louisville topped Florida to make it to the Final Four.


It sounded like adrenaline-fueled hyperbole, but Pitino makes a valid point. On a résumé dotted with impressive results, this season just might be the most miraculous and magical, not to mention the best coaching job in Pitino's illustrious career.


Louisville is going to New Orleans thanks to a 2-guard who drives his coach crazy, a point guard who ranked 175th in assist-to-turnover ratio and a big man who, up until a year ago, didn't have a single offensive move in his repertoire.


Louisville is going to New Orleans despite a roster that read like an NFL injured reserve list -- Mike Marra (done for the season, ACL injury), Rakeem Buckles (done for the season, ACL injury),Stephan Van Treese (done for the season, patellar injury), Wayne Blackshear (out 25 games, shoulder injury), Peyton Siva (missed three games, ankle injury, concussion), Kyle Kuric (missed three games, ankle injury), Jared Swopshire (missed two games, groin injury).


But mostly Louisville is going to New Orleans because a would-be (should-be) Hall of Fame coach pushed every right button at every critical juncture. When injuries decimated his roster, Pitino slowed things down, and when everyone finally got healthy, he went back to his roots, pushing the tempo and turning a team that is short on offensive savvy into a defensive swarm.


No one will even try to argue that this is among Pitino's top-five (top 10?) talented teams, but what the Cards may lack in skill, they make up for in gumption. They are relentless, a team that never seems to accept the fact that it can't or shouldn't be able to come back.


In a high-end Final Four, Louisville is the only real underdog, a team that limped into the postseason, losing four of its final six regular-season games.


Yet Louisville is going to New Orleans because one of the most successful coaches in the game did the best job of his career.


-- Dana O'Neil


Thad Matta and Bill Self


ESPN.com


In late February, Thad Matta curtailed the bravado of a talented Buckeyes squad by kicking his team out of practice.


Matta knew that he had the pieces to reach New Orleans, but at the time, the promising crew seemed to lack the focus to get there.


Ohio State became a national title contender the moment that Jared Sullinger fulfilled his promise to return for his sophomore season. Lost in that signature development, however, was the team's reliance on youth and the leadership void left by three graduating seniors.


The Buckeyes endured a 2-3 stretch in February that warranted questions about the way they'd end the season. Yes, they had weapons, but without the proper drive, they'd never achieve what their abilities suggested they were capable of accomplishing.


Enter Matta.


His elite coaching prowess has been proved by the development within his program. Deshaun Thomas enters the Final Four as one of the most potent scorers in the field. Aaron Craft's defensive fortitude has disrupted offense strategies all season. Sullinger lost weight and added new offensive wrinkles to his game under Matta's watch, too.


But the head coach deserves just as much credit for his ability to mold this young group mentally. Matta didn't have the veteran leaders who had led some of his Buckeyes teams in recent years, and unlike his 2006-07 NCAA national runner-up squad, he didn't have three first-round picks.


Matta's tutelage, however, fueled a rapid maturation process that equipped the Buckeyes with the proper mindset in March, even though they didn't appear to have it in late February. Every time his youthful team moved off track, Matta brought it back. Sometimes, he had to praise players after tough outings. On other occasions, he had to humble them like the day he booted them from practice.


But in the best coaching performance of his career, Matta became Ohio State's maestro.


And that's why the Buckeyes are still making music.


-- Myron Medcalf





Back in October, a few days after the start of official workouts, Bill Self re-evaluated his expectations for this season's squad.


"I was hoping -- hoping -- we could get to the [NCAA] tournament," Self said.


Coaches often downplay the potential of their team, but in this case, Self's concern seemed genuine. The Jayhawks had lost four starters and six of the top eight players from a roster that finished 35-3 the previous season. Only two returning players -- point guard Tyshawn Taylor and forward Thomas Robinson -- averaged more than four points per game in 2010-11.


When Kansas defeated Ohio State at Allen Fieldhouse in December, Self was thrilled, for reasons you may not expect.


"We needed a feather in our cap," said Self, whose team had already lost to Kentucky and Duke. "We needed to beat someone to get into the tournament. At that point we hadn't done it."


Four months later, Kansas is preparing to play Ohio State again -- in the Final Four.


It happened because of Self, who has turned what was supposedly his worst team into one of his best. This is the second Final Four appearance for Self, who has won more games than any other college coach in America since his arrival at Kansas in 2003-04. Self sparked KU to the NCAA title in 2008. As impressive as his efforts were then, his excellence has been magnified more this season than in any other in his career.


In Robinson, Self took a player who averaged a little more than 14 minutes off the bench last season and turned him into a Wooden Award candidate.


Taylor, a third-team All-American, went from being one of the most criticized players in KU history to one of the most loved. Self transformed role players such as Jeff Withey, Elijah Johnson and Travis Releford -- all of whom averaged between two and four points last season -- into solid players and contributors.


Kansas advanced to the Final Four by beating a North Carolina team that played six McDonald's All-Americans. The Jayhawks don't have any. With Self on the sideline, it didn't matter.


It hasn't all season.


-- Jason King


1. Who was the winner of the 2014 NCAA Men's Basketball Championship?

2. Based on what you read, who is the best coach and why? Please give 2 reasons to support your answer.

3. When a team wins a championship, do you think that means that team had the best coach? Please give 2 reasons to support your answer.

14 comments:

Anonymous said...

Victoria Lising

1. The Connecticut Huskies was the winner of the 2014 NCAA Men's Basketball Championship.

2. Thad Matta is the best coach according to what I read because he was able to get his young, skilled team, that was not doing their best, focused, and he keep them focus all throughout the season by sometimes praising or humbling them.

3. The team that wins a championship does have the best coach because without a patient coach to guide the team, they would not have been able to even get to the championship to begin with and the coach, being the main source of motivation for the team, needs to keep them motivated all the time 24/7 even when championship teams are at their lowest point.

Anonymous said...

Khushi Soni
1. The winner of the 2014 NCAA Men's Basketball Championship is the Connecticut Huskies.

2. Thad Matta is the best coach because Matta helps to give a mature preparation to the team. He can help the team to become mentally prepared and keeping them focused with his prasing to make them feel better so they can work harder.

3. I do think that the team that wins the championship does have the best coach because without a skillful or humble coach to help them, it would be hard to win. They need a patient person that cared about them even outside of basketball games or practices. They are then motivated by the best coach which helps to win.

Anonymous said...

1. The Connecticut Huskies
2. Thad Matta war better because he got his team focused and gave praise when it was due
3. Yes because they coach is the main source of motivation for the team and the coach is the one who keeps the team together
-Adam Dawood

Darius Dudley said...

1.The winner of the 2014 NCAA Men's Basketball Championship was the Connecticut Huskies.

2.The best coach is Bill Self because he was the one who took what seemed to be his worst team into the best by making a well-over 14 minute bench player into a Wooden Award candidate and also made the role players Jeff Withey and Elijah Johnson who averaged 2 and 4 points to solid players and contributors.

3.When a team wins the championship,I think it does mean they have the best coach because it seems like the only reason why all of these teams made it to the championship because of their coaches.Since Coach Matta had pep-talked his team like in boot camp during championships,his team made runners-up in the NCAA Championship in 2006-07 and because of Bill Self's endless efforts in making his worst team the best,his team Kansas made The Final Four by beating North Carolina.

September 30,2014 at 2:57 PM

Unknown said...

1. The winners were the Connecticut Huskies
2. In my opinion, Pitino was the most successful coach due to the fact that his team was able to perform well even with the absence of many of their players due to injury. Additionally, he was able to train his team to perform well when they got in less practice due to so many of their players missing due to injury.
3. It depends on the definition of "Good Coach". Arguably, the best coach is the one who is able to recruit the best players to his team who have the most synergy together. If a team wins the championship, it is in part due to the work of the coach since he is the one who has to organize a team to begin with. A team can not have all the best players in the nation, and so as a result if they want to have hopes of winning the championship the coach must be patient with his team while enforcing discipline.

Anonymous said...

The Uconn Huskies won the 2014 NCAA men's basketball championship.
Rick Patino was the best of the coaches since he was a patient, humble, and kind coach that matured and perfected his team into great basketball players. Also any coach that can lead his team to the final four with the injured roster that he had has to be undoubtedly one of the greatest coaches of all time.
I can hardly believe that leading your team to a championship makes you the best coach in the Nava. The best coaches mature their players into humble young men that can work together and give everything they've got. Your team could win the championship, but that could happen just because you had the greatest players on the floor, not because someone coached them well.
- Haydn McGriff

Anonymous said...

Luke Russell

1. The 2014 NCAA mens basketball championships were the Connecticut Huskies.

2. Thad Matta was the best coach based on the reading. He was able to mold his elite squad into better one. When Matta became coach "Deshaun Thomas enters the Final Four as one of the most potent scorers in the field. Aaron Craft's defensive fortitude has disrupted offense strategies all season [and] [Jared] Sullinger added new offensive wrinkles to his game." THad was able to help his strong players stronger.

3. When a team wins a championship it means they have a good coach. Good coaches help their players play to their best abilities. They force their players out of their comfort zones to help them by the best they can be. For example, when Thad Matta took over coaching a Ohio State they've made an apperance almost every year he has been coaching their since 2004.

Anonymous said...

Hyacinth Ntchobo
Pd. 4

1. The Uconn huskies won the 2014 NCAA Men's Championship
2. The best coach of the ones above is Thad Matta. Coach Matta understood his teams talent and potential but still worked them really hard so they would be prepared.
3. I do not think that the team who wins the championship has the best coach because. Many times the coach is mediocre but the team functions very efficiently and effectively or the coach can inherit a bad team that can't win even though he or she is a very good coach.

Anonymous said...

Andy Lee
1. The winner of 2014 NCAA Men's Basketball championship was the Connecticut Huskies

2. Thad Matta is the best coach in my opinion because he had all the pieces to reach New Orleans, he used his skills and determination to reach it. He also helps the players keep focus and encourages them to do their best.

3. When a team wins a championship, it could be mean that they had the best coach, but that may not always be the case. You can have the best coach in the world, but when your players don't even know the rules of basketball, it's going to take a lot of time to train them. Coaches need to be patient and motivate the players, not play for them.

Anonymous said...

Bruce Chen
1.The winner of the 2014 NCAA Men's Basketball Championship is the Connecticut Huskies.
2.I think Thad Matta is the best coach because he has good mathod to training basketball players and let players focus to him.
3.Yes.For example Phil Jackson is a perfect basketball coach.He he guid the Bulls and Lakers get championships.I think a team neads a coach to make tacticals.If a team doesn't have a good coach.They will lose,although the team has all-starplayer.The other thing,a good coach have a good mathod to training the players.

September30,2014 at 20:20PM

Anonymous said...

Drew Shrager
1.)The Connecticut Huskies won the College Basketball Championship in 2014
2.) Thad Matta is the best coach because he matures his team in order to get them ready for the tournament. He gives them spirit
3.) The team that wins the championship doesn't have to have the best coach. They could just have amazing players and they lead the team and the coach doesn't know what he is doing. Its all based on how hard the players are willing to work.

Anonymous said...


Maxwell Redding
1. The Connecticut Huskies won the 2014 NCAA Men's basketball Championship
2. Thad Matta is the best coach according to what I read because he was ablbe to keep his young team focused and win.
3.The team that wins a championship is a team that has the best coach who helps them succeed.

Anonymous said...

phillip garrett
the Connecticut huskies won in 2014
thad matta is the best coach because he incorages his players motivates them and keeps them focuse and giving 100 percent
without a coach that tkes the blame when the team does bad and is always there for his or her players the team that wins does not always have the best coach.

Anonymous said...

kevin Choi
1. The huskies won the NCAA for 2014
2. thad Matta is the best coach because is well thought out and prepares a lot
3. Phil Jackson is a good role model for guiding the lakers and bulls to championships.