Tyler Smith returns for Junior season

The tallest of the Smith boys has made it official that he will remain a Vol for next season, per a press conference this morning and reported by Mike Strange and Mike Griffith of the KNS. This is HUGE news.

It’s huge news because now I can work on my 2008-2009 previews, knowing the official roster. It’s also pretty big for the UT team, but first things first. ;-)

What a couple of days for UT basketball; a 6′6″ premier wing signs on and a 6′7″ multitalented forward and team leader confirms that he’ll be in orange for another year. Bruce Pearl has to be on Cloud Nine.

Scotty Hopson inks with Vols

He made us all nervous with anticipation, waiting a week after the signing period began to officially put pen to paper on his LOI, but Scotty Hopson has now made himself officially a Volunteer. He signed his LOI in front of the 325 students at University Heights Academy, many sporting orange T shirts celebrating UT and Scotty.

Hopson, ranked 5th by Rivals (revised 4/23) and 11th by Scout in the 2008 class, is the first McDonald’s All-American to sign with Tennessee in 10 years and just the sixth ever. To illustrate what a “rich get richer” world college basketball recruiting is, Duke had 7 McDonald’s All-Americans on its 2007-2008 roster alone. Tennessee hopes to eventually get to that type talent level, and Scotty Hopson represents an excellent piece of that puzzle.

Scotty, a 6′6″ wing out of Hopkinsville, KY, is the AP Kentucky Player of the Year, and an All-American in many circles. While Duke Crews, Ramar Smith, Wayne Chism, J.P. Prince, and Tyler Smith were all highly regarded players, none ranked in the top 25 of recruits, so Hopson is easily the biggest fish Bruce Pearl and staff have landed since arriving in Knoxville.

It’s interesting to note that Elliot Williams, whose loss Vol fans mourned in the fall as he signed with Duke, is actually rated lower than Hopson by most services. So the story has ended well for the Vols, getting a prized wing in the end anyway.

Welcome to Knoxville, Scotty. I think I speak for all Vols when I say I can’t wait to see you in action and I expect big things. You’re a part of something special to us.

Everyone’s “sources” are saying Tyler Smith will stay

From Rob Lewis to Jimmy Hyams to random internet forum posters, everyone lately seems to have a source or two when it comes to basketball breaking news. For reliability, most people should be ignored, while media types like Hyams and especially Lewis should be given your ear. Regardless, all sources seem to be saying that Tyler’s NBA draft grade has him outside the first round which, according to Tyler’s recent comments, means that he will not be entering the draft and certainly not hiring an agent.

I’ll wait until we hear it from Tyler’s mouth, but I like the convergence of sources we’re getting. I’ve been figuring we’d get him back, but it will be nice to know for sure. Tyler is a great kid and a hell of a player, and he would be a major difference-maker for the 2009 Vols.

Welcome to Big Orange Country, Daniel West

Daniel West inked with the Vols today. The 6′1″ PG from Saginaw, MI is now officially a Vol. Despite him being rated just three stars, Vol fans already have high hopes for West. Word on the street is that he was ranked artificially low because of grade concerns early in his recruitment, which also caused him to miss out on AAU summer ball. Most seem to think he is more talented than the recruiting services give him credit for.

Glad to have you aboard, Daniel. I look forward to seeing you in action.

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The Bruce Pearl era to date: a geek’s look at the offense

There are obvious, easy to find metrics that say we’re getting better as a program under Bruce Pearl. Wins, for example, have increased from 22 to 24 to 31 in three years– and those are up from 14 in year 1 BB (Before Bruce).

But, as I am wont to do, I would like to take a look at a bunch of isolated statistics about all three of Bruce Pearl’s teams to see if there is a discernible pattern of direction in particular parts of BruceBall’s game. Let’s start on the offensive side of the ball.

Bruce’s run-and-gun and, barring that, Flex offense

In overall efficiency, Tennessee has ranked 8th, 14th, and 19th in 2006, 2007, and 2008, respectively. The 2006 team featured two experienced post players in Andre Patterson and Major Wingate, floor leader Dane Bradshaw, and of course outstanding senior PG C.J. Watson. To me, that experience and leadership is what put that team over the hump offensively, and explains why it has been the most efficient of the three. In 2007 we had to break in a lot of new players, making the small offensive dropoff pretty impressive. What we got in 2007 that we didn’t in 2008 was good PG play down the stretch from Ramar Smith and consistent play from Chris Lofton. Chris’s early and late shooting slumps were a big factor in our inefficiency, and along with PG play pretty much explain why the offense dropped off a notch. This is despite the addition of Tyler Smith and his ability to finish in the lane– without him the offense would have stagnated far worse than it did.

Now some of the details . . .

Shooting: In 2008, Tennessee finished 67th in eFG%. This is not that good, and was the clear weak point in an otherwise efficient offense. It was an improvement over last year though (81st), and possibly reflected some more consistency in JaJuan Smith and the addition of another efficient scorer in Tyler Smith. The more experienced 2006 team shot quite well, finishing 25th in eFG%.

The notion that Tennessee wins games by bombing threes was much more true in 2006 than it has been the last two years; in addition to ranking highly in eFG%, the Vols finished 19th in the nation in three-point shooting at 38.8%. Lofton and Watson each shot above 42%, while JaJuan Smith and Jordan Howell shot 38% and 40%, respectively. These four shot about 90% of the Vols’ threes, so it was a pretty efficient team from the perimeter. In 2007 and 2008, perimeter shooting became much less reliable, with the Vols finishing 100th and 141st, respectively, in three-point percentage. Unfortunately for Tennessee it took just as many threes as before, taking 41% of their shots in 2007 and 39% of their shots in 2008 from beyond the arc. This is the single biggest reason that the Vols became less efficient offensively.

Free throws: Free throw shooting has not been a strength for Tennessee since Bruce has been here, but we did far better in 2006 (139th) than in the two years since (282nd and 279th in 2007 and 2008, respectively). The biggest difference? C.J. Watson. Watson was an 88% shooter at the stripe, and got there 50% more than any other player on the team. Between Watson and Lofton the Vols had two strong shooters that they could give the ball to in the end-game and could count on them to make the clutch shots. For the next two seasons, the free throw line became the place where points go to die, with just two shooters above 70% in 2007 and just three in 2008. Perhaps the most damaging were Wayne Chism ands Ramar Smith, who were both pretty likely to get to the line but could not hit more than 66% in either season.

The stripe was also not the source of many points because we failed to get there enough to make it a weapon. The Vols have been below average (216th, 182nd, 183rd) in free throw rate all three years of Pearl’s tenure, largely because the team lacked the ability to get into the paint and draw contact, instead shooting a lot of jumpers (which was fine in 2006 but more of a problem in 2007 and 2008 with the FG% decline). Next year’s Vols figure to shoot a lot more FTs, since the team loses three perimeter shooters and gains some players with a real presence around the rim. If the Vols hit a higher percentage once there, the FT line could finally become a weapon.

Offensive rebounding: Fortunately for Tennessee, dramatic improvements on the offensive glass offset the subpar shooting and kept the Vol offense from sliding into mediocrity. On the offensive end, this is where the Vols showed the most improvement over the last two years, ranking 51st nationally after being average in 2007 (136th) and awful in 2006 (232nd). The Vols lost a solid offensive glass man in Andre Patterson, but replaced him with Wayne Chism and Duke Crews, both pretty good on that end, and then added transfers Tyler Smith and J.P. Prince in 2008, both very good offensive rebounders for their position. Brian Williams also contributed mightily to the cause despite not playing huge minutes. Second chances were the name of the game in several Vol victories this year and reflect a major turnaround in this statistical category.

Turnovers: Tennessee, despite a chaotic and frenzied appearance at times, has been very good at taking care of the ball under Bruce Pearl. Turnovers create extra possessions for the opponent, and Pearl has encouraged his teams to play fast but to value the ball. The team can sometimes be reckless with shot selection, but has typically not been so reckless as to not get off a shot at all. And let’s be honest– a bad shot beats a turnover every day of the week, as it still has some chance of going in, and then some chance of being rebounded after that. 5 bad shots beats 3 turnovers most of the time.

In 2008 Tennessee finished 26th in the nation in turnovers given up. Before turnovers became problematic in late February and throughout March, Tennessee was in the top 10 for most of the season. This was still an improvement from the 2007 Vols, who finished a respectable but not world-beating 53rd in TO rate. In 2006, the veteran-laden and Watson-led Vols finished 15th, a definite strong point all season.

The late season struggles in 2008 were troublesome, but at this point I have decided that mental fatigue played as big a role as anything else. Losing Lofton and JaJuan Smith, both in the top 400 in the nation in TO rate, won’t help the Vols in this area next year.

Blocked shots: This has been a weakness for the Vols for three straight years. Tennessee has seen a lot of its shots returned to sender, and not just by good shotblocking teams. The Vols have seen a lot of shots rejected by teams that weren’t even very good at it overall. In 2006-2008, the Vols finished 278nd, 308th, and 291st nationally in avoiding blocked shots.

This may seem to contradict a prior post in which I detailed how the Vols did just fine against dynamic shotblockers . . . but we’re really talking about two different things. In that post I detailed how the Vols have overcome great shotblockers to win some games, and that these shotblockers bother everybody because they are on great teams. Tennessee’s problem is that it allows lesser players, lesser athletes, and lesser teams to block shots– to the point where we are ranked among the low majors in this category. The dynamic shotblocker has been just another player for the Vols to worry about, but every opponent has been a threat to block a Vol shot now and again.

Assists: Last but not least we come to passing. Passing is, of course, crucial to success in the college game, and the Vols improved substantially in this area in 2008. After finishing 110th and 154th in 2006 and 2007, Tennessee wrapped up 2008 ranked 56th nationally in assist rate. Tyler Smith and Ramar Smith both ranked in the top 350 in assist rate. Ramar improved slightly over the prior year and Tyler almost replaced what the Vols lost when Dane Bradshaw graduated. But the interesting thing is that the team’s other players all just seemed to become better passers between 2007 and 2008. In 2007, only Bradshaw (27.4%), Ramar Smith (20.3%), Jordan Howell (12.9%) and Chris Lofton (12.5%) had assist rates above 10%. In 2008, the Vols had 8 players above 10%, and 5 of these players will return next year, building a solid foundation for another good passing team.

All in all, the Vols have been solid offensively and except for shooting (which is admittedly a big exception), they have improved quite a bit on that end of the floor– despite inconsistent play at point. With a possible improvement in shot selection upon the graduation of two gunners in JaJuan and Chris, maybe we will see some improvement in that regard as well. One thing is for sure– the Vols are no longer as one-dimensional as they were in 2006, despite the media and opposing fans’ rants to the contrary. The three ball was a big weapon but was just one piece of the puzzle in 2008, and figures to be of even less value in 2009.

Congrats to the Kansas Jayhawks

How very perfect that CDR and Rose had 4 FTs down the stretch that could have put the game out of reach, only to miss 3 of 4 and enable Kansas to force OT. Not only that, but Cal failed to learn a lesson from Bruce and foul before KU could shoot a three at the end. Sweet irony there if you are a UT fan.

Kansas battled very hard to come back in this game, and deserved the trophy big time. Congrats to Memphis on a great year, but I’m very glad to see Self hoisting the trophy instead of Calipari.

Memphis is impressive

I spent the better part of this season assuming that Memphis’s DDM offense would struggle against the better defensive teams in the country. I considered their effort against UT proof of this, as the Vols’ switching and sagging man defense slowed them down considerably. I figured at that point that the Tigers were toast as early as the second round of the NCAA Tourney.

That’s not exactly how it has happened. Last night, the Tigers impressed me again, for the 4th time in a row in this tournament. They handled a very good UCLA defense, scoring virtually at will at times. Derrick Rose and Chris Douglas-Roberts, the main weapons in Calipari’s offense, totally lit the Bruins up for 53 points. UCLA had been allowing a paltry 83.9 points per 100 possessions and Memphis scored at a rate of 112.2, just the 3rd time this season that the UCLA defense played at an efficiency worse than 110.

In the postseason, Rose and Douglas-Roberts have been virtually unstoppable. This Memphis team is more confident and smarter than the team I saw earlier this year. Give John Calipari credit for one thing– he managed to get his team to play its best ball in March and April.

If Memphis does the unthinkable and caps this tourney run with a win over Kansas, they will finish an impressive 39-1 and congratulations will certainly be in order. I just hope that it sticks in their craw– if only a little– to see that 1 hanging off the end of their record, knowing a certain team wearing Big Orange is responsible for the little blemish to an otherwise perfect season.

Bruce wins Rupp Cup

Coach Pearl got a bit of recognition today, selected as the winner of the 2008 Adolph Rupp cup for national coach of the year. Not bad for the co-SEC Coach of the Year. No word on why Billy Gillispie didn’t get a share.

Congratulations coach. You earned this honor and we are all proud and happy for you.

Scotty Hopson is a Vol

http://govolsxtra.com/news/2008/apr/01/hopson-commits-vols/

This is huge news, and a great get for Coach Pearl and his staff. Big big get, folks. Here is the Rivals page for Scotty, the #2 SG and #9 overall player in the 2008 class.

http://rivalshoops.rivals.com/viewprospect.asp?pr_key=50129&sport=2

Welcome to BIG ORANGE COUNTRY, Scotty. We’re looking forward to cheering you on.

John Calipari is the truthiest

Full of truthiness and such. The man is just plain truthy. Or something like that. I’m not Stephen Colbert.

I will link you to this Gary Parrish piece and give no further comment. You tell me what you get out of this, and whether it confirms what you already know about Calipari. You know what I think.

Thanks to Hoopsville for the heads-up.

http://www.sportsline.com/collegebasketball/story/10753571/1