KU looking for answers
Even before the Kentucky debacle, Bill Self had questions. Even before the humiliation of a 32-point loss, the Kansas coach had concerns. Publicly, Self worried about his team’s offensive bandwidth — its ability to score in the paint and manufacture easy buckets. Privately, he did the same.
On a Wednesday in October, Self sat inside the Sprint Center at Big 12 media day and boiled his concerns into one overriding theme.
“I don’t know how well we can score inside,” Self said then. “We’ve always been a team that played on angles, but it doesn’t look like that’s coming quite as naturally for this group as it has for some of the other teams we’ve had.”
During 11 seasons at Kansas, Self has never lacked for confidence, nor strayed from a persona of affable optimism. Give the coach enough time, provide him enough quality pieces, and Self will find a way . But even in October, weeks before an early-season litmus test against No. 1 Kentucky, Self could see that this Kansas team would offer a new kind of challenge.
Self, of course, did not expect a 72-40 loss at the Champions Classic. He did not foresee the Jayhawks shooting 19 percent or finishing with as many field goals (11) as shots blocked.
“You know, 40 points was kind of … it wasn’t really who we were based on how we play,” Self said.
So, who are these Jayhawks?
While Kansas’ offense has adapted and evolved over Self’s tenure, he still believes in a high-low offense that establishes an inside game first. In the last 11 seasons, the Jayhawks have ranked outside the country’s top 30 in two-point field-goal percentage just once (62nd in 2005-06), and in most years, they are a regular in the top 20. Last year, with future NBA big men Joel Embiid and Tarik Black in the paint, the Jayhawks shot 55 percent inside the three-point line, the seventh-best mark in the country.
Or consider this: Last season, Kansas shot 67 percent on field-goal attempts at the rim, according to numbers at Hoop-Math.com. In two games this season, the Jayhawks have finished on just 28.3 percent of shots at the rim. Some of this can be chalked up to the Kentucky factor. Is there any team that can score inside against the Wildcats’ band of 7-footer? But some of it might say something about Kansas.
“In the game, we had nothing we knew we could go to,” sophomore guard Brannen Greene said. “In past teams, they knew they had something they could do. They knew they could throw it in the post, and that guy was going to seal.”
Here is an illustration of Self’s preseason concerns: Kansas’ coach wants to play inside-out, but do the Jayhawks have somebody to throw it to consistently? The Jayhawks’ top low-post scoring options are junior Perry Ellis, a 6-foot-8 power forward who has struggled against bigger opponents, and 6-8 freshman Cliff Alexander, who is still learning how to score in Kansas’ offense.
In high school, Self says, Alexander could just maul opponents. In college, he can’t. And that makes the little details more important.
“We never ran offense one time the way we’re supposed to, to give it a chance,” Self said. “I would like to see us be able to learn how to score through what we run. We run good stuff.”
So as Kansas returns to the floor against Rider on Monday night at Allen Fieldhouse, Self is focused on running offense the right way. If the Jayhawks can’t overwhelm opponents with size, they will have to do it with angles, ball movement and crisp execution.
“It (was) all screwed up,” Self said. “And that’s where we were the whole time. We never caught the ball in the right spot; our screened angles weren’t correct; we bounced it one too many times; (we) didn’t drive to pass.
“There were a lot of things we didn’t do very well that I think we can correct, but it’ll take another time.”
Reach Rustin Dodd at rdodd@wichitaeagle.com. Follow him on Twitter: @rustindodd.
Rider at No. 5 Kansas
When: 7 p.m. Monday
Where: Allen Fieldhouse, Lawrence
Records: Rider 1-1, KU 1-1
Radio: KFH 1240-AM, 98.7-FM
TV: Cox 22
Rider at No. 5 Kansas
P | Rider | Ht. | Yr. | Pts | Reb |
C | Matt Lopez | 6-4 | Jr. | 7.3 | 3.7 |
F | Kahlil Thomas | 6-7 | Sr. | 4.7 | 4.7 |
G | Teddy Okereafor | 6-2 | Sr. | 15.7 | x-3.3 |
G | Jimmie Taylor | 6-0 | Jr. | 10.7 | 4.0 |
G | Zedric Sadler | 6-4 | Jr. | 12.7 | 3.3 |
P | Kansas | Ht. | Yr. | Pts | Reb |
F | Jamari Traylor | 6-4 | Jr. | 2.0 | 8.5 |
F | Perry Ellis | 6-7 | Jr. | 8.5 | 6.0 |
G | Devonte’ Graham | 6-2 | Fr. | 14.0 | 3.0 |
G | Wayne Selden | 6-0 | So. | 9.5 | 2.5 |
G | Frank Mason | 6-4 | So. | 9.5 | 1.5 |
x-assists
Rider (1-1): Located in Lawrenceville, N.J., Rider was projected to finish seventh in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference, according to a preseason vote by the league’s coaches. Led by third-year coach Kevin Baggett, the program is 34-33 over the last two seasons. The Broncs lost their season opener to Princeton 64-58, and then scored a 73-57 victory over Penn last Tuesday. On Friday, Rider improved to 2-1 in a 78-74 against Lehigh. For Kansas, it should be a considerable step down in competition after a season-opening victory over UC Santa Barbara and last Tuesday’s 32-point loss to Kentucky. After its last victory, Rider ranked 191st in the country in KenPom.com’s efficiency rankings — though the Broncs do have some size in 7-foot senior center Matt Lopez
Kansas (1-1): Six days after the worst loss of the Bill Self era, Kansas will be happy to return to the floor at Allen Fieldhouse. The Jayhawks’ matchup with Rider marks the official start of the Orlando Classic. Following Monday’s game, the Jayhawks will travel to Orlando to play three games at Disney’s Wide World of Sports Complex, beginning against Rhode Island on Thursday. For now, though, Kansas can shake off the Kentucky loss with a home game against an overmatched opponent. In two games, the Jayhawks have looked like a group of disparate pieces on offense. Kentucky walled off Kansas’ inside game with a collection of 7-footers, and the Jayhawks have shot just 20 percent from three (five of 25) in two games. Entering the season, Self expected junior forward Perry Ellis to be the kind of player who would average 15-to-18 points per game. But in two games, Ellis has been limited to just 17 total points on five-of-13 shooting. Freshman guard Devonte’ Graham is expected to play after suffering a sprained shoulder against Kentucky. Graham missed a few practices after the Jayhawks returned to Lawrence.
This story was originally published November 23, 2014 at 6:41 PM with the headline "KU looking for answers."