Player A dribbles the ball of his foot, Player B throws the ball toward the opponents basket, Player C throws it to Player D 3 possessions in a row and Player D turns it over all 3 times, Player F catches the ball in the corner and steps back out of bounds. Graves has his flaws but these are just simple bone headed individual plays from the players. Now it's completely on Graves in regards to recruiting these players here. Graves can do all he can to tell the them not to turn the ball over and we still are going to make bone headed plays.Seems to be a problem during the Graves era. I think part of the problem is Graves himself was a very heady player and aware of situations so he might not emphasize it like he should because he didn’t need it as an athlete.
For me as a player, I went 100% during every drill, I never needed to be told or motivated to do that. It took me coaching a few years to realize “I need to motivate and remind these athletes before every drill to go 100%”. I think the same thing is happening on this staff. Odum for example was EXTREMELY situational (let the ball roll on the ground to get the last possession under the shot clock, I remember him missing a free throw to get the rebound and easy put-back when he saw no one paying attention, etc) the same might be happening there.
Last years team had the same issue. I specially remember making a comeback against Murray State last season. We were down maybe 6 with 2 minutes to go and K‘moni doughty made a lay-up, the ball proceeds to hit his foot on the way down and roll all the way to the other end of the court while he just casually looked at it and jogged back. It wasted about 15 seconds of game clock when we needed every second to win the game. And we wonder why “we are so close” to winning all these games….
