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Showing content with the highest reputation on 02/10/2024 in all areas

  1. 1 point
    Adjustments need to be made mid-game...not only at halftime. Watching the Delaware game and seeing the poor rotation for 3 point shots, it seemed as though there were no mid game adjustments to force Delaware to make changes. As much as it sounds repetitive....it all comes down to coaching. Especially MID-GAME, without predetermined substitutions.
  2. 1 point
    That's been my main gripe most of the season. It was like we took 20 games to find the right fits and then it seemed we had them in the 3-game winning streak. We throw up an offensive stinker against Hofstra and it's back into scramble mode. Whatever offense we do have has to get more reps and more time on the floor to build cohesion. We shouldn't be sitting here on February 10 still throwing ingredients into the stew to see if it makes it taste better. That stew should have already been cooked and served once Tarke had 5-6 games under his belt.
  3. 1 point
    here is the The Sun article from Ed Lee Five days after the end of one streak, Towson men’s basketball has begun another. The Tigers couldn’t match visiting Delaware’s prowess from 3-point range and failed to bounce back from Saturday’s three-point loss at Hostra, falling to the Blue Hens, 74-62, on Thursday night before an announced 3,505 at TU Arena. Towson (14-10, 7-4 Coastal Athletic Association) had enjoyed five victories in a row until losing 59-56 against the Pride last weekend. Righting the ship should have been a top priority for the players, but they were overwhelmed by a Blue Hens team that found its rhythm early and often. Delaware shot a season-high 57.9% behind the 3-point line, and its 11 threes in 19 attempts tied a season-best. The offense missed a few more 3-point shots than free throws (five) and converted 55.3% (26 of 47) from the field for the game. “We were just running uphill the whole night,” Tigers coach Pat Skerry said. “Our team has a narrow path to have success. We’re aware of that. I’ve done a poor job of keeping us focused on that, but it starts for us on our defense, and five of the last six halves, we have just not guarded to the level we need to. And we were shredded tonight.” The setback ruined what had been an unblemished record at home for the Tigers. They slid to 10-1 this season at TU Arena and 18-1 in their past 19 home games, absorbing their first loss in Towson since a 76-74 overtime defeat to the College of Charleston on Dec. 31, 2022. The 18-game run at home had been the second-longest active streak in the NCAA. Skerry had planned to give the players Friday off before Monday night’s home game against Elon, but canceled that idea after Thursday’s performance and said the players will practice. “We’ve got to get back a little bit of our edge,” he said. “There very well could be some lineup changes. We’ve got to keep playing a lot of guys. It’s one game, it’s against a good team, and there are a lot of good teams in the league. The thing I’m frustrated with is, since school has started, we haven’t guarded the way our teams normally guard. So we’ve got to get back to that.” Graduate student power forward Charles Thompson led Towson with 18 points and 11 rebounds for his fifth double-double of the season. Redshirt junior point guard Nendah Tarke chipped in 13 points, four rebounds and three assists, and freshman shooting guard Tyler Tejada added 12 points and four rebounds. But the Tigers got little from a pair of starters. Sophomore shooting guard Christian May, their leading scorer at 12.1 points per game, was limited to two points on 1 of 6 shooting, including 0 of 3 from 3-point range. Senior small forward Messiah Jones finished with zero points, two rebounds, one assist, one turnover and one personal foul. Skerry pointed out that May played more than 26 minutes without collecting one offensive rebound. “That just tells you he was kind of hanging around the perimeter hoping to get some jump shots,” he said. “Making shots would be great. That’s like the toppings on top of the sundae. We’re just not going to consistently have the success that we can have if we do that. And he wasn’t great defensively either.” It was probably going to take a torrid-shooting opponent to end the Tigers’ home winning streak, and Delaware seemed more than happy to play that role. The team drained its first four shots — all behind the 3-point line — and added another 3-pointer after two misses inside the line to assume a 15-6 advantage with 15:01 left in the first half. Towson responded with an 11-4 burst to narrow the deficit to 19-17 with 10:23 remaining. But the Blue Hens used timely buckets to go up 26-21 with 8:04 left. Delaware then scored eight unanswered points in a 2:54 span to enjoy its largest advantage of the period at 34-21 with 4:50 remaining. The Tigers went 4:44 without a point until junior small forward Tomiwa Sulaiman hit a 3-pointer from the right wing at the 3:20 mark. Towson got a layup from Tarke to trim the gap to eight, 34-26, and held the Blue Hens scoreless for 4:49. But graduate student point guard Gerald Drumoogle Jr. grabbed an offensive rebound and slammed home a dunk with one second left to send Delaware into halftime with a 36-26 advantage. Drumoogle paced Delaware, which has won three straight and five of its past seven games, with a game-high 20 points on 7 of 10 shooting (3 of 6 from 3-point range), four assists and three rebounds. Senior small forward Jyare Davis contributed 15 points, 15 rebounds, three assists and three blocks for his fifth double-double of the season, sophomore shooting guard Cavan Reilly had 12 points and three rebounds, and senior shooting guard Niels Lane added 11 points and three assists. The victory allowed the Blue Hens to end a three-game skid in the all-time series and avoid a season sweep by the Tigers — who won the first meeting, 67-56, on Jan. 27 — for the second time in the last three seasons. “This was a big night for us,” Delaware coach Martin Ingelsby said. “We lost at home against them. I think to be able to stay near the top in the league standings and keep pressure on some of the teams above us is really important to get. And we have some mature guys and experienced guys like [fifth-year senior shooting guard] Christian Ray and Jyare that were aware of that. So that message hit home pretty clear to our group that this was an important one.” Elon at Towson Monday, 9 p.m. TV: CBS Sports Network
  4. 1 point
    hard for players to get hot when they are rotated in and our every 3 minutes

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