Counting Down to Four

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Counting Down to Four 

Post#1 » by RealGM Articles » Sun Mar 30, 2014 5:13 am

Note: This post will update following the conclusion of Sunday’s games.


#2 Wisconsin defeated #1 Arizona


Bo Ryan no longer has to hear that phrase, “Best Coach never to make the Final Four.”


But why did he have that reputation? People have different reasons for that statement, but the following table is how I made the argument. For all active coaches, this table shows their per possession performance in the 12 years Ken Pomeroy has been tracking the stats. In that time frame, Bo Ryan has been the fourth most dominant coach. And for the first time on Saturday, he made the Final Four.


NT = National Titles in Last 12 Years


FF = Final Fours in Last 12 Years








































































































































Rnk



Coach



Current Team



Avg Off



Avg Def



Avg Pyth



NT



FF



1



Bill Self



Kansas



113.6



90.2



0.930



1



1



2



Mike Krzyzewski



Duke



116.2



92.8



0.926



1



2



3



Roy Williams



N. Carolina



114.9



92.6



0.911



2



4



4



Bo Ryan



Wisconsin



112.5



92.2



0.903



0



1



5



Rick Pitino



Louisville



111.1



90.7



0.902



1



3



6



Thad Matta



Ohio St.



113.3



92.5



0.901



0



2



7



John Calipari



Kentucky



112.7



91.8



0.896



1



3



8



Billy Donovan



Florida



115.1



94.5



0.894



2



3



9



Jamie Dixon



Pittsburgh



113.8



93.9



0.892



0



0



10



Tom Izzo



Michigan St.



112.6



93.2



0.891



0



3



11



Jim Boeheim



Syracuse



112.5



93.7



0.884



1



2



12



Rick Barnes



Texas



113.1



95.4



0.863



0



1



Note: By taking the average, this type of calculation does not reward coaches who started the decade at smaller schools. Scroll to the bottom of this post for a list of the top per possession coaches over the last 5 years.


Having said all that, I do think this table is a little misleading. Bo Ryan’s biggest strength is that his teams are consistently good. But he has never been able to put together that one super-elite team that dominated college basketball. The next table shows the peak Pythagorean Rating for active coaches in the last 12 years.


Bo Ryan’s best team by this measure was the 2008 squad that went 16-2 in the Big Ten. But that was a largely defense-oriented team. And when they ran into Steph Curry in the NCAA tournament, they simply lacked the offense to keep up.


Based on this measure of peak performance, Sean Miller is now the one who should complain. Despite having a dominant team this season, he still has no Final Four trip to show for it.




























































































































































































Rnk



Coach



Current Team



Best Pyth



Year



1



Bill Self



Kansas



0.976



2008



2



Rick Pitino



Louisville



0.971



2013



3



John Calipari



Kentucky



0.969



2012



4



Bruce Weber



Kansas St.



0.968



2005



5



M. Krzyzewski



Duke



0.967



2010



6



Thad Matta



Ohio St.



0.966



2011



7



Roy Williams



N. Carolina



0.964



2005



8



Billy Donovan



Florida



0.958



2007



9



Sean Miller



Arizona



0.952



2014



10



Tubby Smith



Texas Tech



0.952



2003



11



Jamie Dixon



Pittsburgh



0.949



2004



12



Tom Izzo



Michigan St.



0.948



2012



13



John Thompson



Georgetown



0.948



2007



14



Tom Crean



Indiana



0.943



2013



15



Tony Bennett



Virginia



0.943



2014



16



Phil Martelli



St. Joseph's



0.943



2004



17



John Beilein



Michigan



0.943



2013



18



Bo Ryan



Wisconsin



0.942



2008



19



Mark Few



Gonzaga



0.941



2013



20



Gregg Marshall



Wichita St.



0.938



2014



21



Jim Boeheim



Syracuse



0.936



2012



22



Bob McKillop



Davidson



0.936



2008



23



Rick Barnes



Texas



0.932



2011



24



Frank Martin



S. Carolina



0.932



2010



25



Scott Drew



Baylor



0.930



2010



For my detailed take on Wisconsin's win over Arizona, click here. I scouted Aaron Gordon from the opening tip to the closing horn. But while I focus on Gordon, Wisconsin deserves all the credit for making Gordon look like a bad defensive player. This was truly a game where outstanding offense beat outstanding defense. One possession was probably symbolic of the whole game. From 11:16 to 10:08 in the first half, Arizona played incredible defense. And the Badgers still scored.


#1 Florida defeated #11 Dayton


Florida’s win was not without drama. It was a joy to see Patric Young make the Final Four for the first time after three straight losses in the Elite Eight. I was also enthralled with the sequence after Dayton cut the lead to 58-50. Florida held the ball for over a minute thanks to a flurry of offensive rebounds, and that possession crushed the Flyer’s momentum.


But with the game becoming a blowout late in the first half, I spent more time thinking how wise the Turner channels are to use the multi-channel simulcast approach at the Final Four next weekend. When ESPN rolled it out for college football’s national title game, it was fabulous to be able to hear the different voices and opinions call the game. And I think we need as many channels as possible in these single game situations.


I wanted a full channel dedicated to those fans sitting in Dayton, Ohio and watching the game on a big screen in an auditorium. Early on they cheered when Scoochie Smith hit a rare three. Later they were shown holding their arms up in free throw position when Matt Kavanaugh went to the line. When the game was beyond double digits, I would have rather watched that fanbase cringe at every moment then watch Dayton continue to fail to get the ball inside against the Florida defense.


Top PPP Coaches Last 5 Years, Minimum 3 Seasons




























































































































































































































































































































Coach



Current Team



Avg Off



Rank



Avg Def



Rank



Avg Pyth



Rank



Bill Self



Kansas



114.7



4th



90.4



2nd



0.9361



1st



Thad Matta



Ohio St.



115.2



2nd



90.9



3rd



0.9324



2nd



M. Krzyzewski



Duke



118.5



1st



94.9



24th



0.9211



3rd



Jim Boeheim



Syracuse



113.2



13th



91.7



4th



0.9162



4th



Bo Ryan



Wisconsin



113.8



8th



92.5



8th



0.9152



5th



Rick Pitino



Louisville



111.7



21st



89.8



1st



0.9106



6th



Billy Donovan



Florida



114.7



3rd



93.3



13th



0.9049



7th



John Calipari



Kentucky



114.7



5th



93.0



10th



0.8971



8th



Tom Izzo



Michigan St.



111.6



22nd



91.8



5th



0.8964



9th



Gregg Marshall



Wichita St.



112.3



19th



94.2



16th



0.8713



10th



Jamie Dixon



Pittsburgh



113.1



14th



94.8



21st



0.8713



11th



Mark Few



Gonzaga



112.4



18th



94.8



22nd



0.8684



12th



Roy Williams



N. Carolina



110.4



29th



93.2



12th



0.8669



13th



John Beilein



Michigan



114.4



6th



96.3



38th



0.8660



14th



Steve Alford



UCLA



111.3



24th



95.1



28th



0.8565



15th



John Thompson



Georgetown



110.6



28th



94.1



15th



0.8564



16th



Steve Fisher



S. Diego St.



107.9



58th



92.1



7th



0.8497



17th



Scott Drew



Baylor



113.8



9th



96.9



49th



0.8463



18th



Shaka Smart



VCU



109.7



36th



94.6



20th



0.8431



19th



Buzz Williams



V. Tech



110.7



26th



95.4



32nd



0.8394



20th



Sean Miller



Arizona



111.3



23rd



94.9



25th



0.8380



21st



Mick Cronin



Cincinnati



106.3



73rd



92.1



6th



0.8336



22nd



Jay Wright



Villanova



110.4



30th



95.9



36th



0.8238



23rd



Rick Barnes



Texas



109.8



35th



95.0



26th



0.8230



24th



Dave Rose



BYU



110.9



25th



96.3



40th



0.8219



25th



Fred Hoiberg



Iowa St.



113.1



15th



98.4



78th



0.8180



26th



Frank Haith



Missouri



114.2



7th



99.6



99th



0.8156



27th



Mike Brey



Notre Dame



113.7



11th



99.1



93rd



0.8151



28th



Matt Painter



Purdue



109.6



37th



95.4



30th



0.8130



29th



Bruce Weber



Kansas St.



107.5



60th



94.3



17th



0.8108



30th



This last table speaks for itself, but I want to point to one fact that might be missed. Look at the gap in average offense between Mike Krzyzewski and the rest of the coaches! He is not only the top offensive coach of the last five years, he is the top offensive coach by a wide margin.

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