Xman95
04-08-2008, 12:26 AM
Coach Miller was ripped in the media (not just by XU fans) for the decision to not foul Ron Lewis prior to taking the game-tying three at the end of regulation against tOSU. Will the media treat John Calipari the same way?
I actually thought they would foul, but it's really not a decision that is as black-and-white as people think. The odds are against a kid hitting a three to begin with, let alone hitting it with the clock winding down and all the pressure of his team's season on his shoulders.
There's also the chance that if you foul too early, a made free throw, then a miss and follow ties the game. (Not to mention a follow that the player is fouled on, now setting up a possible winning FT.)
Of course, hitting the three means only one thing has to happen. After a foul, the make, miss, follow requires three things happening.
Ultimately, it's just a "pick your poison" situation. I have seen many games end when a team misses a three to tie at the buzzer and I have seen my share of shots that fall.
Anyway, I remember Miller's decision being a big topic in the X community and nationally. Will it be the same way for Calipari?
FYI -- On the postgame, Clark Kellogg did mention this and said he's in favor of fouling. Also, Calipari said they were trying to foul but it wasn't called (said he understood why too, because it wasn't obvious).
I actually thought they would foul, but it's really not a decision that is as black-and-white as people think. The odds are against a kid hitting a three to begin with, let alone hitting it with the clock winding down and all the pressure of his team's season on his shoulders.
There's also the chance that if you foul too early, a made free throw, then a miss and follow ties the game. (Not to mention a follow that the player is fouled on, now setting up a possible winning FT.)
Of course, hitting the three means only one thing has to happen. After a foul, the make, miss, follow requires three things happening.
Ultimately, it's just a "pick your poison" situation. I have seen many games end when a team misses a three to tie at the buzzer and I have seen my share of shots that fall.
Anyway, I remember Miller's decision being a big topic in the X community and nationally. Will it be the same way for Calipari?
FYI -- On the postgame, Clark Kellogg did mention this and said he's in favor of fouling. Also, Calipari said they were trying to foul but it wasn't called (said he understood why too, because it wasn't obvious).