Well said except the end. It is all on Treyton.
Being a coach you know the biggest factor in developing stroke and touch is coaching at junior high level. It becomes ingrained at that early age. By college you can only improve free throw fundamentals and the mental aspect of understanding when you have a shot in rhythm and when you don't.
Ben can recruit good shooters but he can't build them.
It's really helpful to learn how to shoot as a grade schooler or junior high kid IF somebody knew what they were doing to teach you...very few do or more people could shoot.
!00% disagree college kids can't improve shooting. Poor shooters in the NBA improve their shooting in dramatic fashion over the summer with the right instruction quite often.
100% true the way a shooter with a nice stroke can go from bad to good is mental. Not so much with what's a good shot versus bad is but in confidence, swagger, mindset. You need a shot whisperer who can get your stroke consistent and your mind convinced nobody shoots better than you do. Mindset, visualization is the secret. It's all mental...any thought but swish creeps in your head and you'll miss.
Free throws the same is true but you need a routine...it is a completely different shot. The others you walk into or dribble into and quick release is a thought. Free throws all different. You stand alone, everybody in the gym is watching you shoot. You MUST have a routine..Gophers do not!!
And it has become obvious Ben can't recruit or develop good shooters. There is no easier shot in basketball than the free throw. We can't shoot them. You can't be a shooter and not make free throws...certainly not with someone who knows how to get your shot fixed.
Shooting is 100% confidence if you have some competence as a shooter...if you can't impart that in your players as the head coach, then you sure need an assistant who can and who will become the head coach. They do keep score. You gotta score to win.
Or if you were able to teach Virginia defense so well that you could recruit 10 guys like Ola Joseph...teach em how to play defense...throw it at the rim and chase it and put it back in...hold your opponent under 48 and scrap together 50 points. That might work and be fun. But, that ain't happening either. Our defense has no calling cards.
The "ferocious defense" and "most important thing is recruiting guys who can shoot" philosophy has statistical shortcomings for verification, so far.