Missourigopherfan
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- Feb 10, 2013
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I retired after coaching high school basketball for 32 years, regrettably something not many coaches do anymore (the 32 years part, not the retiring.) I realize that there is a lot that goes on during a game that we don't always see from the stands. Coach Smith has had a very good career, and I don't assume to know as much as he does about the game especially at the college level. But at any level, you do what works and discard what doesn't. I watch a lot of college games, including Mizzou games since I moved from Minnesota to Missouri. There is not another coach out there that I see who gets five substitutes into the game together as early in the game as Coach Smith does, if at all. I can see two possible rationales for doing so. 1) To keep your starters fresh for late in the game. This doesn't seem to be working since the Gophers don't seem to be steamrolling other teams late in the game. 2) You are legitimately ten players deep. This is obviously not the case since the second group struggles to score. We have jumped out to early leads and then let them dwindle while the starters sit on the bench. Nearly every other coach out there will rest his starters 2 or 3 at a time leaving someone in the game who can still score points. This substitution pattern is killing our momentum. Doesn't anyone on Coach Smith's staff analyze stats? It is really time at this point in the season to shorten the bench.