National Post

Everyone can score in March Madness

Today’s game encourages player versatilit­y

- AARON BEARD

Hubert Davis remembers the inside-out emphasis of playing for North Carolina Hall of Famer Dean Smith before a 12-year NBA career.

“When I was here at Carolina or in the NBA, you had two big bigs and you threw the ball into the post,” the Tar Heels coach said. “Then they threw it back out to me. My job was to throw it right back into the post. And then they threw it back out to me, and it was late shot clock, maybe I could shoot the three.”

Things look different today across U.S. college basketball when it comes to the way offences operate.

As March Madness arrives, offensive efficiency is at its highest point in almost three decades, according to Kenpom’s national statistics. The lumbering space-eaters in the post have been largely replaced by playmakers with length and shooting range. Players have become more versatile in an age of positionle­ss skill sets. And that has created more freedom for coaches to add wrinkles to tried-and-true philosophi­es aided by readily accessible film and analytics data.

“There are all these different angles, just different places on the court,” said Connecticu­t coach Dan Hurley, whose Huskies won last year’s national championsh­ip and are this year’s No. 1 overall seed in the NCAA Tournament.

That has led to an uptick in Kenpom’s efficiency metrics.

Division 1 teams have averaged 105.1 points scored per 100 possession­s, marking the fourth straight increase from 100.8 in the 2019-20 season. This year’s average is the highest Kenpom has charted in data since the 1996-97 season.

So is this more about offences evolving into a more sophistica­ted version of themselves? Michigan State coach Tom Izzo, whose Spartans are in the NCAA tourney for the 26th straight time, thinks the answer is simpler.

“I don’t think the plays have changed,” Izzo said. “The people running them have changed a little bit more. You used to have two centres, a point guard who wasn’t a good shooter and two wings that could shoot. Now you’ve almost got four, sometimes five guys that can shoot.”

A further look into the data reveals a few other telling numbers that line up with Izzo’s assessment.

For one, turnover percentage for possession­s checked in at 17.1 per cent, the lowest figure dating to 1996-97. And the assist rate has dropped to 50.7 per cent — the lowest figure in data dating to the 1992-93 season. That indicates players’ expanded skill sets translate into fewer mistakes when handling the ball or being more capable of creating shots rather than depending on a teammate for a post entry.

“The players have gotten so good with the basketball,” said Arkansas assistant Keith Smart, a former Indiana player under Bob Knight and NBA head coach for three franchises.

“Every guy for the most part who handles the ball can make a play, can make a shot. I think the players have gotten so much craftier with that.

“I don’t think the offences are so much where you’re like, ‘Wow, I don’t know what they’re doing, I can’t figure this out.’ ”

Hurley knew he had to re-evaluate his program’s approach to running offence after three straight March Madness losses that turned into what he called “rock fights” with Uconn averaging 54 points. Getting perimeter scoring through the transfer portal was important. So, too, was making offence a bigger priority.

This year, the Huskies are No. 1 nationally in adjusted offensive efficiency (126.4).

“Yeah, it’s sophistica­ted,” he said. “And, you know, the ‘dumb jock’ or the ‘dumb athlete’ idea? You’ve got to know a completely separate language and some of the principles that you have to understand to be able to get on the court.”

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