The Standard Journal

Virginia, Texas Tech ride tough defenses into Final Four

- By Aaron Beard AP Basketball Writer

Virginia’s climb to its Final Four breakthrou­gh began with a sound defensive scheme, a steadfast foundation allowing the Cavaliers to grind down even the best and most balanced of offenses for years.

At Texas Tech, it’s as much about pairing an aggressive edge with the X’s and O’s and scouting work that has led to defensive efficiency not seen in years.

Their presence in Minneapoli­s for Saturday’s national semifinals is the biggest reason why this is such a defensive-minded Final Four. The approaches differ for the Cavaliers and Red Raiders, but the results can look awfully similar — with opponents seeing their best options taken away while finishing with low scoring totals, bad shooting percentage­s and high levels of frustratio­n.

There’s one other common thread, too.

“If you don’t want to play defense,” Texas Tech’s Kyler Edwards said, “you’re not going to play.”

The Cavaliers, the lone No. 1 seed to make it to the tournament’s final weekend, have been a fixture in the top 10 of Ken Pomeroy’s defensive efficiency rankings since their breakout 2014 season under Tony Bennett. They enter Saturday’s semifinal against Auburn ranked fifth nationally, surrenderi­ng 88.7 points per 100 possession­s, a metric that factors out Virginia’s slower offensive pace and offers a better measure of performanc­e than scoring averages depressed by slower tempos and low-possession games.

Texas Tech has made a rapid rise in three seasons under Chris Beard, entering its semifinal against Michigan State leading in defensive efficiency (84.0) with the lowest score in KenPom’s records dating to the 2002 season.

So how do they do it? For Virginia, it’s all about the pack-line defense — a man-to-man scheme that packs four defenders inside an imaginary arc to clog the paint against driving lanes while having one player applying pressure on the ball.

When working right, there’s crowd of defenders to greet any driver. Those driving lanes open if the players are in the wrong spot, and lacking that ball pressure allows a ball handler to — as Alabama transfer Braxton Key put it — “window shop” for an easy pass.

It’s a simple approach, just not so easy to beat.

“They’re very vanilla,” said ESPN analyst Fran Fraschilla, a former coach at Manhattan, St. John’s and New Mexico. “There’s not a lot of deviation. There’s not a lot of adjusting for opponents’ strengths. It’s more, ‘This is what we do and you’re going to have to beat us by making outside shots,’ because most nights we’re not letting you to get into the paint.”

Still, it takes adjustment­s for players in learning that unwavering approach.

 ?? / ap ?? Texas Tech head coach Chris Beard laughs with his players in a huddle during a practice session for the semifinals of the Final Four tournament in Minneapoli­s on Friday.
/ ap Texas Tech head coach Chris Beard laughs with his players in a huddle during a practice session for the semifinals of the Final Four tournament in Minneapoli­s on Friday.
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