Indiana
Opponents will see a brand new IU basketball: ‘They can be pretty darn good.’
Indiana vs. Marian: Zach Osterman, Michael Niziolek discuss the game
The Indiana men’s basketball team defeated Marian in exhibition play Friday night. Zach Osterman and Michael Niziolek discuss the game.
BLOOMINGTON – Scott Heady nodded, smiling, as he began to analyze the transition offense that’s now scored 49 points in its past three halves of basketball.
Heady’s Marian team had just finished a 94-61 exhibition loss to Indiana, in a repeat of these teams’ preseason meeting a year ago. That team was built around a player who didn’t see the floor that day, Trayce Jackson-Davis sidelined by an injury but nevertheless the Hoosiers’ clear north star.
Friday night, Heady had to contend with a team still figuring out its alphas and its roles and its strengths and its weaknesses. But his Knights got a steady dose of the length, athleticism and, yes, breakneck fastbreak offense it seems will underpin what success the Hoosiers have this winter.
IU beats Marian: What we learned from 94-61 exhibition win
Insider: Why we’ll never see another coach like Bob Knight
“They really get it out and go,” Heady said. “We were sending two and three guys back on the shot, and we were still getting beat down the floor. They just get it out and run, and attack.
“When they get their defense active and they get running, and they’re hitting shots like they were in the second half, they can be pretty darn good.”
Five Hoosiers scored in double figures in the second of their two preseason games, this one a more complete team performance than the win over UIndy last Sunday.
IU’s offense clicked from the tip and never stopped humming, the Hoosiers scoring 45-plus in each half and averaging 1.47 points per possession. Indiana turned the ball over just twice to Marian’s 15 giveaways, the Knights averaging just 0.88 PPP. That number would’ve been lower but for nine first-half 3-pointers from the visitors, a failing rectified when Marian shot just 2-of-16 from 3 in the latter 20 minutes.
“I thought they picked up their defense a little bit in the second half,” Heady said. “Last week, when they played UIndy, they did the same thing. When they came out in the second half, they had a little more intensity.”
Heady acknowledged, understandably, the expected gap in qualities like athleticism and reach between the Hoosiers and their NAIA visitors.
But Marian is no slouch at that level, having led the Knights to the NAIA tournament in each of his six seasons in charge. And he’ll have known Indiana well conceptually, at least, having prepared for the same opponent a year ago.
The Hoosiers aren’t the same opponent they were a year ago. In some ways better, in some ways worse, IU is in any case a dramatically different team than it was the last time Heady drew up his game plan.
No player embodied that turnover better than the one tasked with replacing — at least positionally — Indiana’s All-American in the post.
Kel’el Ware isn’t Trayce Jackson-Davis, and no one will ask him to be. Mike Woodson makes no secret of the fact his Jackson-Davis offense was not his preferred style, and that it isn’t necessarily what he’ll lean on going forward.
Woodson wants athleticism, versatility and disruptive length. Ware, 7-2 with prodigious reach, gives him all three. The Oregon transfer led all players Friday with 20 points and 11 rebounds. He hit baseline jumpers and a 3-pointer. His length deterred a Marian team that attempted just 10 layups and no dunks.
The tests will be tougher when the competition stiffens. But there are elements of Ware’s profile that will play anywhere, against anyone.
“Man he is long, gosh,” Heady said. “He’s really long and really athletic, very versatile. He got going. I don’t know what he had in the second half, but it seems like that first 10 minutes, he got going pretty good.
“He doesn’t force it. He just kind of lets the game come to him, but he’s definitely a tough matchup for our guys.”
For both Marian and Indiana, the games will mean more when they count. The Hoosiers get Florida Gulf Coast to open the regular season Tuesday, and they won’t have to wait three weeks to face UConn (plus one) at Madison Square Garden in New York.
There will be plenty of moments when this team looks like a work in progress, as it certainly did in patches of these two exhibitions. Even as they polish their rough edges, it’s easy to see why opposing coaches’ eyes get wide talking about their potential.
Follow IndyStar reporter Zach Osterman on Twitter: @ZachOsterman.
Indiana
Teen struck, killed by train in Northwest Indiana
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
Indiana
Pacers Injury Report: Crucial Indiana Forward Remains Out vs Cavaliers
The Indiana Pacers have slowly but surely started to get healthy this season. After losing both backup centers, a starting guard, a starting forward, and a reserve guard to injuries, they have mostly gotten back to being healthy.
These injuries were the primary reason why the Pacers started out just 6-10 on the season. They weren’t able to win games with regularity because they didn’t have any continuity in the lineup.
Now that they do have continuity, the Pacers are playing much better basketball. They have won five straight games as well as 11 of their last 14.
More Pacers: Pacers’ Andrew Nembhard Explains Why Young Players Need to Follow Pascal Siakam
As healthy as they are right now, there is still one player who continues to be out. That is starting small forward Aaron Nesmith.
Nesmith has played in just six games this season due to a severe ankle sprain that he suffered. He has been slowly working his way back to the court.
As the Pacers get ready to face the best team in the NBA, Nesmith remains out. He is the only player who is in the rotation listed on the injury report for the Pacers.
There is still no firm timetable for his return. All Rick Carlisle will say when he is asked about Nesmith is that he is making progress.
Read more: Pacers’ Johnny Furphy Makes Case for More NBA Time With Dominant G League Performance
Nesmith has been a crucial player for the Indiana Pacers, especially last season. He emerged as their best perimeter defender and one of their best 3-point shooters.
Indiana has back-to-back games against the Cavs coming up. This will be a great litmus test for them to determine if they need to make a big move at the trade deadline or if they can stand pat.
Because he has been hurt for most of the season, there’s a chance that Nesmith could be in a trade package for the right player. Any move the Pacers would make would likely be closer to the deadline.
Aaron Nesmith is averaging 9.2 points, four rebounds, and one assist this season. He’s also shooting 52.8 percent from the field and 54.5 percent from beyond the 3-point line.
More Indiana Pacers news: Pacers Must Go All In Ahead of Trade Deadline Following Strong 14-Game Run
Pacers ‘Recently Held Trade Discussions’ for Rival Star Forward: Report
Indiana
The Minute After: Iowa
Thoughts on an 85-60 loss to Iowa:
Iowa City is a long way from the Bahamas.
But tonight’s game from Indiana could have fit right into its Battle 4 Atlantis performance.
As Iowa began to pull away early in the second half, the Hoosiers completely folded. They failed to compete. The body language was poor. They couldn’t defend. They couldn’t score. They looked like a team that had given up.
Iowa got up by as much as 30 before settling on a 25-point victory. That 25-point defeat for the Hoosiers? It’s the largest loss during regular season Big Ten play in the Mike Woodson era.
Iowa entered this game 121st on KenPom in adjusted defensive efficiency but held Indiana to just .83 points per possession tonight. That’s Indiana’s lowest output of the season. The previous low? The .85 points per possession it scored against Louisville in the Bahamas.
The Hoosiers have played well against zone defense this season, but that wasn’t the case tonight. Iowa’s 2-3 zone turned them into jump shooters. The Hoosiers just couldn’t find a consistent rhythm against it. On paper, Indiana entered this one as the far superior rebounding team. It’s an area that’s helped the Hoosiers succeed during their three-game conference winning streak. But the Hawkeyes snagged 29 percent of their offensive rebounds tonight, while the Hoosiers rebounded just 24 percent.
Iowa also absolutely feasted off Indiana’s 16 turnovers. The Hawkeyes scored 24 points off turnovers on a night the Hoosiers turned the ball over on 22 percent of their possessions. Indiana was particularly poor with the ball in the first half and entered the locker room turning it over on 32 percent of its possessions.
Oumar Ballo had a rough start. Iowa doubled him from the get-go and Owen Freeman poked at him, too. The Arizona transfer had four turnovers by the 14:38 mark in the first half when he was yanked from the game by Woodson. Ballo has been a dominant force for Indiana of late. And while he still posted a double-double — 10 points, 13 rebounds — Freeman bested him tonight. The sophomore can play out on the perimeter and his quickness and array of moves made him a tough matchup for the bigger Ballo. Freeman finished with 16 points (8-of-13) and 12 boards. He also defended the paint well, racking up a game-high four blocks while also adding three steals. Ballo didn’t block a shot this evening.
Mackenzie Mgbako played only 16 minutes and scored six points. He’s 2-of-14 from the floor over his last two games.
Iowa hit 11-of-24 (46 percent) from 3-point range. Indiana made just 4-of-16 (25 percent). After heating up in the second half, Payton Sandfort led all scorers with 23 points.
“When you go out on the road in the Big Ten, you can’t turn it over, you gotta rebound with your opponent and you gotta make shots,” Woodson said after the game. “We failed in all three areas tonight.”
Fail Indiana did tonight. The start of its toughest stretch of the season was a disaster. With better teams just over the horizon, the Hoosiers need to forget about this one and not let it affect them.
We’ll soon see how they respond with the Illini coming to Bloomington for a Tuesday night bout.
(Photo credit: Big Ten Basketball on X)
Filed to: Iowa Hawkeyes
-
Politics1 week ago
Carter's judicial picks reshaped the federal bench across the country
-
Politics1 week ago
Who Are the Recipients of the Presidential Medal of Freedom?
-
Health1 week ago
Ozempic ‘microdosing’ is the new weight-loss trend: Should you try it?
-
World1 week ago
South Korea extends Boeing 737-800 inspections as Jeju Air wreckage lifted
-
Technology4 days ago
Meta is highlighting a splintering global approach to online speech
-
News1 week ago
Seeking to heal the country, Jimmy Carter pardoned men who evaded the Vietnam War draft
-
Science1 day ago
Metro will offer free rides in L.A. through Sunday due to fires
-
News1 week ago
Trump Has Reeled in More Than $200 Million Since Election Day