Monday, March 21, 2011

It Wasn't Supposed To End This Way

It's okay to feel that way. It's completely okay for you to feel dejected this morning. I woke up and the first thing I thought about was the loss to VCU. Sure, losses don't affect me like they did a number of years ago (my son gives me some much-needed perspective, maybe), but this one will continue to sting for a while.

I don't think it would be hard to get most people to agree that this year's team entering the tourney was a lot better than last year's. Sure, you could argue they miss Chris Kramer's defense, but playing strong defense was not really a problem this year. Once they collectively got over losing Rob for the season -- and make no mistake, they got over it a lot faster than the rest of us -- this team came together. They gave us a strong start to the season, a couple of fairly minor hiccups, and then one of the greatest Februarys we've ever seen out of a Purdue basketball program.

All we asked at the start of the season was that the team be healthy and playing good ball heading into March. We sort of got our wish. There weren't any mega-injuries, obviously, but there were those proverbial "distractions." Barlow manages to screw up enough -- or so badly -- that he's dismissed for the season. Did that impact their focus? I know I said I was concerned that it did, but I really am not sure it could have been that big a factor. Losing your sixth man whose play had gone steadily downhill the last few weeks of the season doesn't seem like it could possibly be that impactful. Purdue still had their seniors and that's what should have mattered.

Last year's team perhaps had more of a chip on their shoulders because the Rob injury was fresh and they were really being counted out. And the thing that made the ending last year kind of tolerable was that they lost a game to the eventual national champs and clearly were out-manned and out-talented. This year? No disrespect to VCU -- who is a good team -- but it's not the same.

Purdue would have needed to beat a 14 seed, an 11 seed and then a 10 seed to get to the Elite Eight. If Richmond pulls off the huge upset of Kansas (not a completely insane idea), then the path for the Final Four would have been 14-11-10-12. All double digit seeds. We often lament that things rarely "line up" for Purdue. Well, let's not mince words: things were lined up for Purdue this year.

This is not to say the road would be easy, even with those double digit seeds. St. Peter's plays strong defense, VCU shoots the lights out, FSU just beat one of the Big East's elite, and Richmond already beat Purdue this year. So obviously I'm not saying it'd have been easy. But it's never easy to get four rounds into the tourney. But I would have very much liked these matchups for our boys.

So what happened? We're all so quick these days to place blame and we're always looking for the scapegoat. Perhaps that has led us to be even more frustrated by yesterday's game because there's no easy answer. When the game was about ten minutes old and Purdue led 22-19, I felt good because even without JJ or E'Twaun getting warm yet, Purdue had a lead. That had to bode well, I thought. But then VCU began hitting and somehow going through Purdue's defense like they weren't even there....uncontested layup after uncontested layup. And then, once they were up by double-digits, they began bombing away every time Purdue left them open for threes. And that's what a good shooting team should do. Get them on their heels and then deliver the haymakers, the knockout blows. It's something we've wished Purdue would do more but rarely did. VCU followed the recipe perfectly and then feasted on roasted Boilermaker.

There were people on Twitter giving grief to JaJuan Johnson, which we felt was unwarranted. JJ had 25 and 14, so it's hard to suggest he's the reason the Boilers lost. VCU also was doubling JJ a lot and leaving E'Twaun in single coverage -- yet Smooge couldn't cash in. And sure, you could blame 33 if you want, too. But this year, against unranked teams, Purdue has done fine when at least two guys show up as significant scorers. JJ having 25 and Ryne having 20 should have been enough of a base to win. And when you look at 76 points, well... if I told you Purdue would score 76 against a CAA team seeded 11th, I bet you'd take that.

Why did the defense simply fall apart? Why were the Boilers exhibiting body language that we haven't seen in years? How much of this is on the seniors? How much is on the coaches? There are no perfect answers, but it is probably on all of them, including underclassmen, etc. It was a collective failure. Failure to do what got them there, failure to adjust, failure to focus, failure to lead, failure to follow.

Being perfectly honest, I always felt that last year was "the year." I remember saying a while back that 2010 -- in Indy, no less -- was Purdue's best chance of several decades to go to the Final Four and/or win a title. They had the big three as juniors, CK's defense, Keaton's experience, LewJack as a sophomore and, until the season crumbled, a likely high seed. They got to #3 in the country before Rob's knee effectively ended the dream. I remember being crushed because I knew that was the year. I just knew it. And sure, we all pointed to this year with the guys as seniors, but the 2009-2010 team -- healthy -- was just right. This year's team was, as we've now seen, missing something.

We're very excited, actually, about the future of this program and, as Boilerdowd said to me last night, "I want to see next year's team right now." But going back to what I said at the beginning of this post....it's okay to feel dejected. We all had higher hopes for these seniors.

This wasn't how it was supposed to end.

16 comments:

COD said...

More and more, I'm thinking something happened before the Iowa game. I have no idea what, and I suspect we will never know. But something went down, maybe involving Barlow, that changed the team in a very bad way. Whatever it was, Painter couldn't coach his way around it.

Boiler_Ditsor said...

Even the Illinois game on senior night, they were in danger of getting too far behind to come back. They just looked like they were there going through the motions - it didn't work well in the other games.

dozer8589 said...

Next year's team:

Starting Five:

G - Jackson
G - Johnson
G - Smith
F - Hummel
F - Byrd

And then what...?

Justin said...

Again, thanks for posting this blog. So many times I read your stuff and I think, man that's exactly how I feel. Like last year was THE year. I think if we had Kramer on this team maybe his defensive tenacity and leadership could have brought this group together but why am I even thinking about that. It wasn't even a possibility.

I'm excited for next year. On paper maybe we don't look as good. I don't want to assume Rob fully heals and plays 100% or better than his old self but if he does I really believe in this team. I'm also assuming Kelsey will not be back. We may not have the exciting players like JJ and Smooge but there is something about more guys who are less talented but still capable having to the get the job done.

I think your starting 5 is too small dozer.

G - Jackson, T. Johnson
G - Smith, Hart, A. Johnson
F - Byrd, Barlow (maybe)
F - Hummel, Hale, Lawson
C - Carrol, Marcius (forget about Bade)

Yes that makes us look slow and unathletic (should I just say really white) but it works for some teams like Butler and BYU. I've seen some clips of Hale and he looks really athletic for a white guy and from what I read about Lawson he should be simalarly athletic to JJ but a few inches shorter and also coming off an injury.

BoilerBrian said...

I don't care what anyone says; JJ played terrible help defense. He's supposed to be the last line of defense and the Big Ten DPOY. He didn't show up. Sure the other guys got beat and didn't help well either, but at the end of the day his effort on the defensive end was nonexistent and that's inexcusable for a player of his talent level in my opinion.

boilerdowd said...

JJ didn't rotate and help on defense at all yesterday. And even when in the blocks one-on-one, he struggled being even a speedbump for VCU. Sad way for him to end.

I think Justin's rotation looks right...look for Hale or Lawson to play significant minutes right away.

Rob said...

If Barlow leaves, how would that extra scholarship affect our recruiting?

dozer8589 said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
dozer8589 said...

Justin, you did a better job of making my point than I did. We couldn't stop anyone outside of St Peters with the All-American center we had. I don't think Carrol or Marcius are realistic replacements, do you?

Maybe we can discuss it some more after your Klan meeting...

The OX said...

It was a defensive breakdown in total. You can point to JJ not collapsing, but really this team was terrible on ball from the PG on through the lane. LewJack was right that his defensive failure led to many breakdowns.

But like Hammer and Rails pointed out...our depth was severely strained by the time we got to this game. Hart wasn't himself after the foot. No Barlow. Our bigs outside of JJ have been missing all season (although Carroll has some game).

They've looked gassed and unfocused since Iowa. I expect Matt to learn from this. It's a speedbump on what should be a long and successful career for him at Purdue.

Zach said...

Good article. Similar perspective as ours. Funny that he also notices that something was off.

http://www.indystar.com/article/20110321/SPORTS15/103210332/?odyssey=mod%7Cnewswell%7Ctext%7CIndyStar.com%7Cp

jay.westfall said...

Just couldn't stand watching this team self destruct through the whole game. For them to work so hard to get theirselves in this position and then not show up to play, is really a shame for a team that maintains Defense is their calling card.

It will be interesting to see what next year's team will bring.

Zach said...

The first ten minutes of the game, Ryne shot a three and hit the iron hard bounced high. . . and still went in. At that point I thought to myself, well this is a good sign. Unfortunately it was not a sign of things to come.

What summed up the entire night for me was when JJ got a long rebound, watched as VCU quickly retreated down the court. . . and then realized that the rest of the Boilermakers had all made their way down the court too. Really?? Our 6'10 senior was left to play the PG and bring the ball up the court? That really summed up the night for me. Something was just off

Mommatried said...

BRUCE PEARL IS UNEMPLOYED! A small bit of something to celebrate anyway.

Brotherman85 said...

Being a Cubs fan has given me years of training for situations like this.

To name a few:

2003: Up 3 games to 1 in the NLCS, lose next 3.
2004: 9 games left and the Cubs need 3 wins to get in the playoffs, Cubs win only 2.
2005: White Sox win WS
2006: St. Louis Cardinals win WS
2007 swept in playoffs (enter with best record in NL)
2008 swept in playoffs (division champions)

Mark said...

I said at the beginning of the year that I didn't like Painter's "slow course" development of Carroll.

If Carroll was going to play the minutes he did in the Big Ten, then he needed more minutes in the pre-conference season.

I think Carroll has a lot of upside, but I just don't think he was used correctly. Carroll given more PT throughout the year allows him to be more ready for this game, and he could've helped make a difference.

I would've taken JJ out in the 1st half and let him sit for a while. He needed something to get motivated.

Lastly, recruiting and injuries caught up with us. Bade is unusable. Barlow was a gamble that backfired this year. Byrd, Hart, Hummel all were injured this year with fairly severe injuries.