West Virginia

Initial Thoughts Following West Virginia’s Overtime Loss at Oklahoma State

Published

on


For the first time this season, the West Virginia Mountaineers have lost three straight. Tuesday night, they erased another 14-point deficit in the second half, but some miscues in the overtime frame led to a 91-84 loss. This drops them to 16-12 on the season and 7-8 in Big 12 play, the first time they’ve been under .500 in league play since the first conference game against Iowa State.

Advertisement

Here are a few of my thoughts from this one.

Interior defense has to be a main focus this offseason

The lack of physicality from Harlan Obioha and whoever else West Virginia throws at the five spot this season has been troubling, and that was evident tonight, particularly in the first half, when Obioha was all by himself in the post. The Cowboys were hunting that matchup with Fallah/Vuković on Obioha, and it was darn near automatic. An elite rim protector would be nice, but those guys don’t grow on trees. They just need a couple (yes, two) who can put their body into someone and knock them off their base. Obioha didn’t do much of that tonight, if at all.

Played Oklahoma State’s game

Advertisement

Very few teams in the country score more points per game or attempt more shots per game than Oklahoma State. They want to get out and run and waste very little time before they get shot up. Because of that, the ball pops around quickly and freely. WVU’s ball pressure was not good whatsoever, nor were their rotations. Playing with a high tempo is not something WVU is accustomed to, and neither is hoisting up 21 threes in the first half. The Cowboys dictated the pace of this game outside of that stretch in the second half where the Mountaineers made their run. You’re not going to beat them at their game.

Another massive late game miscue

For the third straight game, Jasper Floyd made a bad pass late in the game that proved to be a costly turnover. I understand the natural flow of an offense is going to hit the point guard’s hands, but he’s been careless way too many times with the basketball in key situations to have the rock with less than ten seconds on the shot clock. He has to be aware of his strengths and weaknesses as well and get the ball into the hands of Honor Huff, Chance Moore, or Treysen Eaglestaff before the shot clock hits single digits.

Advertisement



Source link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Trending

Exit mobile version