Weekend in Review: 10 Thoughts After a Full Slate of Husky Hoops

Ryan Petitt / UDubSports.com

Ryan Petitt / UDubSports.com

The Huskies had a very good weekend, starting 3-0, and playing better each night. We’ve been discussing the team here at Montlake Madness for such a long time without any actual basketball happening. Finally, some games to discuss.

Now that we’ve actually gotten to see this year’s team play a few times, here are 10 thoughts and observations about the Dawgs so far:

1. Timing is everything: If the Huskies had played these three games in the opposite order, starting with the huge blowout and finishing with the five-point victory, the entire weekend would feel different. But, it was clear that the team grew from Friday to Sunday, shaking off some jitters, and maybe discovering for themselves just how good they can be.

2. The new and improved Isaiah Thomas: Even last season, it was almost a given that Isaiah was going to get his points, even on nights when he didn’t necessarily have his best stuff. He was so good as a freshman that I never could’ve imagined saying that, at least on first glance, Isaiah looks like a much better player this season. More on this in a full post very soon.

3. Free Throws: The Dawgs shot 79.3% from the line over these three games. Sure, it’ll be different when games are closer, and the free throw matter more, but I saw plenty of evidence this weekend that the Huskies are quite capable of beating last year’s 70% mark as a team.

4. Manic substitution pattern: Coach has a very nice problem to contend with in trying to whittle down a rotation of 11 players all of whom deserve to see significant minutes. There’s no way for me to figure out exactly how many rotations Coach LoRo used this weekend, but it felt like every imaginable combination was put on the court together. The only combo I can think of that wasn’t explored was putting three of the Huskies’ four “bigs” (MBA, Gant, Trent, and Breshers) on the court at once.

5. Speaking of the oft-overlooked Darnell Gant: It’s so easy to overlook Gant until you watch him play that stifling post defense, or come out on a half-court trap, and realize that he’s just one of those guys who plays best away from the ball. Consider that, while Gant only totaled seven rebounds over the three games, five were on the offensive side. Gant is busy on defense using his spaghetti arms to front his mand and deny passes into the post. Unfortunately, he has trouble, once the shot goes up, getting into good position to rebound.

6. Venoy Overton and Abdul Gaddy: Overton was the better player this weekend. Not perfect, but more good things seemed to happen when Venoy was on the floor than when he wasn’t. For now, we’ve got two point guards who make different kinds of mistakes.

Abdul Gaddy looks like a freshman. A good freshman, but one still learning to play real defense and be an assertive floor leader at this level. Overton doesn’t seem like he’s ever going to be a typical, floor-general point guard, but at least his mistakes tend to happen when he’s trying to force something good to happen. Sure, he requires some patience to watch, but at least he’s thinking big.

7. More on Gaddy: Abdul will look better and better not only as he gains experience, but as his teammates learn to expect what he’s got coming for them. There were several look-what-I-found moments when Husky players found themselves on the receiving end of dazzling passes from Gaddy they just weren’t ready for.

8. Defensive vulnerabilities: Anyone scouting the Huskies’ first three games will advise their players to try to beat the Huskies to the rim on backdoor cuts, because they worked against the Dawgs all weekend. While the Huskies played good defense for the most part, they could stand to improve on their defensive rotations, and also showed a vulnerability to the back-cutting typical of teams like Oregon State.

9. Tyreese Breshers: Breshers missed the Portland State game after jamming his finger in first half against Belmont. It’s not expected to keep him out of any more action, but he’s the guy I least want to see missing any time as he tries to get back into game shape and become a major factor in the Huskies’ post game.

10. The Turner/Suggs/Holiday Quandary: Of all of his rotational quandaries, it looks to me like Coach is having the most trouble trying to figure out where and when to play his three reserve wing players. Each brings a unique skill set, but none has shown a complete enough game to push ahead of the other two. I’m certain that I don’t think all three should play together as they did for stretches this weekend. But, past that, I’m stumped.

Turner is, theoretically, our best shooter, but didn’t show it this weekend, going 2-9 from the field and 1-5 from deep. Holiday is a defensive specialist, but wants to assert himself more on offense, with mixed results so far: 2-11 shooting the first two games, but 4-7 with 10 points Sunday night. Suggs clearly won the weekend, playing good defense overall, hitting 3-6 on three-pointers, and averaging six points and three rebounds in about 17 minutes per game. But my eyes tell me that he’s the least ready for prime time of the three.

In case you missed our game-by-game analysis, check each of them out at UDubSports.com:

Wright State game analysis

Belmont game analysis

Portland State game analysis

Thanks for coming!

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  1. James’s avatar

    I disagree regarding Suggs. I think he and holiday will make turner one of the last guys off the bench. The exception being when teams play zone and we are having trouble cracking it. Suggs is going to be a stud imho. I would take him over Elston. His decision making seems better to me. He also seems to do a lot of little things well.

    Good work. Keep it coming!

  2. Paul’s avatar

    Great recap. Very well laid out with a lot of good points, I enjoyed it immensely. Thanks.

  3. blkdawg’s avatar

    Your eyes are wrong about Suggs. He’s the most talented of the three you mentioned he can dribble and pass. The more he plays he will calm down and not over dribble himself into a bad situation. Of the three he has the most complete game and his defense has improved alot he just needs to get stronger still. Once he starts penetrating watch out because he always hits his shots when he’s open.

  4. Gersen’s avatar

    Thank you Josh, good recap of the weekend. QP is quite the MAN now. Wow, he is great out there. Terrence Jones if you are watching the games, that’s you out there taking Quincy’s spot. If we are going to play like that, it’s going to be a fun year. Tenacious D.

  5. howitzer’s avatar

    Very nice analysis Josh.

    I agree the Turner/Suggs/Holiday issue is a tough one. As much as I like all three I have a hunch Holiday will continue to assert himself offensively and win the battle for minutes.

  6. BRETT’s avatar

    Great recap. I was at the game and I thought the most impressive thing about the Huskies was how they played so fast, but not out of control.

    I actually think Gaddy is just what they need at PG to keep things in control a bit. He didn’t play great. But he looked calm and poised.

    Gaddy
    Thomas
    Pondexter
    Gant
    MBA

    That’s my starting 5. With lots of minutes for Venoy, Holliday, and Turner. I know we all root for Suggs, but he just doesn’t have IT. He looks scared.

    Very impressive win against a real bad team.

  7. Paul’s avatar

    That is interesting Brett. I need to pay better attention to Gant playing away from the ball I guess. I recognize he plays solid defense and I like it that he doesn’t turn the ball over…but I’ve been underwhelmed with everything else regarding his inside game. I don’ t think I would have put him in my top 5.

    Also, from what I’ve seen (only the games on FSN though) I’ve liked what Suggs has shown.

    I have been a tremendous fan of Turner…going so far as to pre-season predicting he’d get starter’s minutes…but from the two games I saw this weekend I felt Suggs outplayed him.

    The thing is…I love what I’ve seen from all 11 guys and keep hoping Romar works some magic to figure out a way to rotate all of them.

    Similarly…I couldn’t pick a starting 5…VO and Gaddy both bring such different skills I’m always disappointed when either one leaves the floor.

    So far it seems like 7 or 8 guys deserver stater’s minutes.

    It’s shaping up to be a great season.

  8. GrantUW’s avatar

    What is with the Suggs hate? Now Brett is saying he played well but doesn’t have “it”…what kind of analysis is that? Did you watch all three games? Suggs was the most productive and most consistent of the three (Suggs/Turner/Holiday) wings. He is out shooting Turner, our “best shooter”, rebounds well, defends well (so much better than last year), and handles the ball better than Turner and Holiday. Right now he is the most improved player on this team. Holiday still edges him on defense, but Suggs has gone from a lost and confused freshman to a hustling sophomore…he was the one that dove for the loose ball that led to the Gaddy to Trent alley oop to end the game…dude is diving on the floor up by 50+ with less than a minute to play. He is efficient scoring the ball, and has turned his biggest weakness (defense) into an asset. What more can you ask? Right now I’d rate him ahead of Trent and Turner, Breshers (injury) and roughly even with Holiday on the depth chart (provided Holiday continues to play a more rounded game like against Portland St). Suggs is 7-8 on the depth chart based on performance thus far

  9. howitzer’s avatar

    Some good observations grantuw. Suggs is doing really well with limited time and looks to be a limited role, meaning I don’t see them running anything specifically for him.

    I do think it a valuable pov to think of having two depth charts-guards and bigs. So right now my guard depth chart is IT, Abdul, Venoy, Suggs and Turner.

    My bigs depth chart is Qpon, MBA, Brashers, Gant, Holiday and Trent. I’d be looking to move Trent up and Brashers up based on more playing time as both look like possible enforcer types(meaning Brockman replacements).

    Could have 3 charts with wings being the third but too much overlap.

  10. Daniel’s avatar

    Seattle times poll shows suggs is the most surprising players (as of now). Suggs still as work to do but is getting more relaxed in this system. He’s also doing the little things that maybe some people don’t notice. Yesterday he set a perfect screen that led to overton hitting the open three. Stats don’t always show the total picture.

  11. blkdawg’s avatar

    Suggs has a great basketball IQ. He came here out of HS as a good shooter and good all around player. I think he just needs to gain weight. He naturally has skills Holiday and Turner don’t. I can see him grow more confident with each game. The kid was a big time national recruit. the truth is last year he needed to redshirt. I think the game is slowing down for him. He basically didn’t play last year so even though he’s playing now he has to be allowed to grow on the court. With the core group of players IT QP and VO he has to find out where he fits in or carve a spot for himself, same for everyone coming off the bench.