[Video still credit: BTN.com]
The game in brief: Iowa got absolutely murdered, giving up 83 points in a relatively slow 60-possession game, allowing 13 three-pointers and an almost unheard of 70% effective field goal percentage while turning the ball over one out of every three possessions. And all this to a team that only played six players significant minutes. This was Iowa's worst defensive performance of the year in terms of points per possession; worse than Indiana, worse than Michigan State, worse than Creighton. The only bright spots were that Aaron White played another outstanding all-around game, scoring 17 points on just 10 shots and grabbing 12 rebounds, that Matt Gatens had a good shooting game, and that the team as a whole actually shot very well, finishing with a 58.9% eFG%. In a normal game, that kind of shooting would have been more than enough to win, but this was not a normal game.
Northwestern is basically Iowa's kryptonite, an excellent three-point shooting team that spreads the floor, passes intelligently, and moves constantly. They had Iowa both coming and going, generating excellent spacing on the perimeter and then cutting to the basket whenever Iowa overplayed. MVP of the game would probably go to the Wildcats' impressive freshman Dave Sobolewski, who took advantage of the clean looks he was getting and finished with 23 points on just eight shots and put up an astounding 106% eFG% thanks to 3-3 on threes and 4-5 on twos. But really you could give the award to any one of the Wildcat starters. They are a very good shooting team, and their offense worked like a machine to generate open looks. Four players finished with three three-pointers, and 22 of their 27 field goals were assisted. That's mighty impressive.

It was a blood-bath, and most Iowa fans were probably prepared for that (although perhaps not to that insane degree). Northwestern is a very solid team, especially with the addition of Sobolewski. Looking at their schedule, they only have two losses that could really be described as "bad": their 23-point defeat at Minnesota and their 20-point defeat at Wisconsin. Other than that, they've lost to #8 Baylor, #21 Creighton, #2 Ohio State, and then a trio of very close games (they lost to Illinois, Michigan and Purdue by a combined five points). It may be of comfort for Iowa fans to know that this Northwestern team is truly an elite offensive unit: 10th in the country in Ken Pomeroy's offensive efficiency rankings. If the game felt similar to the Creighton, Indiana or Michigan State games, it might be because those are all elite offensive teams (#6, #3 and #17 in KenPom's offensive efficiency ratings).
The only really surprising thing was how much Iowa struggled against Northwestern's 1-3-1 zone. Bryce Cartwright really seemed flustered by the zone, committing five turnovers and struggling to make good decisions all night. Cartwright does best when he can use his speed to get around defenders, but Northwestern's zone negated that strength. He seemed to want to dribble through the zone, when the best approach seemed to be passing quickly around the zone. To be fair to him, though, his small stature made it difficult for him to throw passes over the defenders at the top of the zone, making dribbling through it his best option. The Hawks shot well when they managed to get shots off, but the fact that Northwestern forced them into their highest turnover/possession number of the season meant that they had fewer chances to shoot than they should have.
But enough about this game. I would like to zoom out and look at the question of what, exactly, makes Iowa so prone to these defensive meltdowns. The topic has been on my mind ever since someone brought up the question in the comments about what kind of team gave Iowa the most trouble. The commenter (whose name I apologize for forgetting) suggested that it was teams with dominant centers. My initial reaction was that this wasn't quite right: Ohio State and Michigan State both had quality big men and gave Iowa trouble, but they give everyone trouble. My impression was that Iowa struggled most against teams with excellent three-point shooting, but I wasn't sure, so I decided to do some research.
My basic approach was as follows: calculate the points/possession differential* in each game, then compare that to a variety of team and opponent statistics to see what factors correlate the most with wins and losses. This isn't a conclusive proof of what causes Iowa to win or lose (correlation is not causation and all that), but it does at least give us a few suggestions.
*For example, against Northwestern, Iowa scored 1.07 points per possession and Northwestern scored 1.39 points per possession for a differential (from Iowa's point of view) of -.32 points per possession. The advantage of looking at differential on a possession basis is that it allows us to compare fast-paced games (e.g. Indiana) to slow-paced games (e.g. Northwestern).
So what we are looking at are comparisons like the following:
It looks like there's a fairly strong correlation between efficiency differential (on the y-axis) and opponent thee-point shooting (on the x-axis), and it turns out there is: the two statistics have a correlation coefficient of -.62 over the course of the season. A perfect correlation, where the two statistics were related in some exact linear way, would have a coefficient of 1 (or -1), so -.62 represents a fairly strong relationship. Not perfect, but it appears that the better Iowa's opponents shoots from three, the lower the scoring differential. I didn't have time to put together graphs for all the statistics, but the following table lists the correlation coefficients for a variety of tempo-free statistics for Iowa and their opponents for their games so far this year:
You can see some pretty predictable correlations, at least in terms of direction: the better Iowa shoots (eFG%), the higher the efficiency differential from Iowa's point of view, and vice-versa for their opponents; the better Iowa does on the offensive glass (OR%), the better they do in the game, and the more they turn the ball over (TO%), the worse they do. And so on. But what's interesting is the strength of the relationships. The two statistics most strongly correlated with Iowa's efficiency differential are opponent's effective field goal percentage and opponent's three-point percentage. The relationships are much stronger than that of the various rebounding statistics, block statistics, or even Iowa's own shooting.
It isn't conclusive, but it suggests that my intuitions were correct: Iowa struggles with teams that shoot well, especially from the outside, more than they struggle against teams that rebound well (i.e. teams with strong interior play). It's possible, of course, that opponents shoot well from outside because they have strong interior play, but my impression is that this hasn't been the case. Iowa has had trouble with a few interior players (e.g. Jared Sullinger, Cody Zeller, that guy from Campbell), but those were all games where opponents didn't shoot the three particularly well (Campbell made four threes, Ohio State made eight, Indiana made four). And they arguably have played their best against a team that is very strong inside but weak from the perimeter: Minnesota. Their troubles seem to revolve around teams that can shoot accurately from deep. Iowa just has no idea how to defend them.
Earlier in the year, my theory about Iowa's poor defense was that their lack of interior strength forced them to help more to the interior and thus left the perimeter exposed, but as the season has gone on, that just hasn't seemed to fit the facts. Why did teams not post up against Iowa more, why did they take so few mid-range shots? Then it hit me: it's about the perimeter, it's always been about the perimeter. Iowa's problem is not that they can't defend the post; they're actually not terrible at that. Zach McCabe is a very strong interior defender, Melsahn Basabe is a decent shot-blocker, and Andrew Brommer and Devon Archie can both provide some useful minutes if (and only if) they are matched up against true post players. But on the perimeter, Iowa is filled with very weak defenders. And it all comes down, I think, to two things: short arms and slow feet. I haven't done any measurements, but my impression is that almost all Iowa's perimeter defenders, save for Devyn Marble and Aaron White, have short arms: McCabe, Gatens, Cartwright, Oglesby, May. That means it is very difficult for them to contest shots in any meaningful way without getting very tight on their men. If they do go close enough, they leave themselves open to easy drives to the basket. Combine that with some slow feet (I'm mainly thinking McCabe here, but even Gatens, May and Oglesby don't have the best lateral quickness), and you can see why it's difficult for Iowa to contest shots.2 recs | 47 comments
Don't forget
Now that Norm is gone, Iowa doesn’t have anyone to fight those commie bastards, this make them susceptible to the 3pt shot. Aaron has Red hair, White name, and Blue blood (i have no evidence to back this up but he has an aversion for blue shoes so i couldn’t use that). But alas, he is only a freshman and you can’t expect a freshman to take up this fight.
hawkeye0485 - February 10, 2012
Great Post, I think you nailed about
why Iowa can’t defend the perimeter. It’s the lack of speed/quickness. I think it’ll get better next year with new recruits, but being in position helps, too, and I’ve noticed that Iowa backside perimeter defender is sagging inside a lot. Iowa gets into trouble here when teams pass the ball quickly or skip pass, uncontested 3 pointers all day. In addition, they crash inside when the ball goes inside and the lack of quickness prevents them from recovering to contest a 3 point shot. Adding Woodbury and Meyer to go with Basabe will help a ton. Perimeter defenders won’t have to crash as much. I believe on of the recruits for next year is supposed to be more of shut down defender than anything, could be wrong.
In other news, I see these blowouts, starters staying in late, as teams saying we’re going to kick your @$$ now while we can because we know you’re going to improve a lot in the next few years, IMHO.
IowaFan81 - February 10, 2012
Great Stats
This is actually good news. As this season progressed, I was tempted to go with the generalized statement that “Fran has good athletes, but is having trouble coaching them.” This reinforces the problem of the Lickliter years and Fran’s first 2 years- we don’t have the athletes to fully compete at a big ten level yet. This is good news for Fran, because it means, with his recruiting skills, that once he gets better athletes, he’ll be able to coach them into a winning team.
Also, McCabe is bad, but Oglesby is by far the least athletic person out there. I don’t care how good of a shooter he is, boy needs to run some sprints with a parachute and do some squats before he plays any more minutes.
Hubbard gives me sad too…I can hardly play frisbee in that park near the IMU anymore without crying.
TangerinePony - February 10, 2012
I don't know if McCabe is bad.
He played poorly last night but often times this year he’s been the reason we get our early leads. He has the ability to play well and he’s definitely the most physical guy on our team, which has been my problem with the team most of the time.
Crowdog - February 10, 2012
Wait, "McCabe is bad" as in he's not particularly athletic or that he's just bad?
Because McCabe has actually had a really strong season and was the victim yesterday of some really inconsistent officiating which certainly didn’t help Iowa out of the blocks.
Great post from HEC (as if there’s any other kind), especially the detailed looks at just how stymied Iowa seemed by the 1-3-1. As maddening as it was to see Cartwright and Marble repeatedly try to dribble through the trap, it was equally annoying that players refused to rotate around to the ball to bail out the ball handlers.
The good news: this game will provide a ton of coaching opportunities.
Kyle McCann't - February 10, 2012
Hubbard
Can you elaborate here? Did I miss something?
isHawkeye - February 10, 2012
Hubbard Park is next to the IMU
I’m assuming its the same Hubbard.
TangerinePony - February 14, 2012
Hubbard gives me sad?
R U DRUNK?
And McCabe has shown leaps and bounds this year. He’s a completely different player than he was last year.
mikjones24 - February 10, 2012
All the cool kids nowadays say "gives me a sad." I just wanted to be like them.
and yes, I’m drunk.
TangerinePony - February 14, 2012
Interesting stats.
So is there much reason to hope the Iowa-jNW game in CHA in a few weeks will go much differently than this one? Do we need to pray for food poisoning? Or just for jNW to have their worst shooting night of the year?
RossWB - February 10, 2012
One thing BOC and Iowa noticed early on
is that Iowa seemed highly reticent to run on NU. On the occasions that they did there was still a tentativeness to their drives (except from Aaron White: the Ginja Ninja) that didn’t exactly help their cause.
I have to wonder if a straight man-to-man, full-court press won’t be the best way to attack them back in CHA. It will be a tall order, no doubt, because it will leave them highly vulnerable to the notorious back-door cuts you see from Carmody’s Princeton offense but I don’t see what else they could hope to do other than have different players.
Kyle McCann't - February 10, 2012
Uh, that should read "BOC and I".
Sadly the Iowa bench is not consulting Bucket.
Kyle McCann't - February 10, 2012
What I don't know about
is how effective that’d honestly be, risk-reward. When they did try it (once or twice, if memory serves), we broke it pretty fast and got an easy layup on the other end. But that was a 1-2-2 full court zone, I believe—perhaps a hand in Sobolewski’s face could be effective as he tries to bring the ball up, along with a full man defense. Like you say, it’d be a tall order, but it could pay some dividends; I just think they’d be limited.
I honestly thought last night that Iowa should go to something more akin to a 3-2 or matchup zone on defense—something that allowed them to switch on picks and let the backdoor cuts run behind a defender who isn’t moving out of position, while keeping three men on the perimeter to close out quickly on the threes, along with someone baseline watching those corners.
MNWildcat - February 10, 2012
Well, the other tough thing about Iowa's zone last night
was that more than a few times players simply missed picking up assignments or overcommited to switches. I know Marble and got lost defending no one at the top of the key a few times and that McCabe surrendered his ground for weak-side help on several occasions which both led to wide open threes. Discipline will come with this team, I just hope it starts to come this year.
Kyle McCann't - February 10, 2012
Definitely
there was a very noticeable lack of discipline on both ends of the floor—some of the alley-oop passes left me saying “Damn, this team could be good; I see how they beat Wisconsin and Minnesota.” Some, though, made me say “What the fuck are you thinking; just set up your offense!”
The matchup zone, I feel, would (with discipline, as you note) lead to Iowa perhaps better committing to the outside shooting, which murdered y’all last night. It almost might be easier to acknowledge that a couple cuts are going to lead to easy layups and just commit to forcing us inside by taking away the 3 with outside aggression. We haven’t responded terribly well to being forced to play an inside game this year.
MNWildcat - February 10, 2012
The other side of the coin, and HEC talked a lot about it,
is that Northwestern shot the fucking lights out. Yeah, there were a ton of open shots but they still have to hit those open shots. That’s not to excuse Iowa’s dismal defensive effort but the offense, for all the positive efficiency stats, simply needs to be better in order to make up ground. Slowing the game down against a team that is so economical with their possessions is very unwise (let’s be honest, Iowa’s win at Wisconsin had a lot to do with the Badgers not being able to hit the side of a barn with their shots).
Kyle McCann't - February 10, 2012
For sure.
So, if I’m reading this right, the solution for Iowa would be some combination of offensive discipline and defensive pressure? How do you reconcile the faster tempo into that?
(Sorry, not trying to be demanding answers or anything on the Iowa blog—I actually like watching this Iowa team and was surprised we romped like we did last night.)
MNWildcat - February 10, 2012
Offensive discipline doesn't
always mean playing a slower tempo. It means being more under control and better passing with wiser shot attempts. Too many times Iowa’s guards get out of control and force bad passes.
IowaFan81 - February 10, 2012
Well sure.
But can this Iowa team do that against a junk zone like the 1-3-1? It seemed like this team could do more off the dribble than of the swing-the-ball for 20 seconds and find a hole in the zone.
MNWildcat - February 10, 2012
Good post. But didn't explain all of the game imo
I don’t think we got screwed by the refs and I’m not going to blame them for a 20 point loss. However, the first half looked like a wrestling match and we got called for 5 team fouls. We got away with a few and so did jNW. Very little was called. And then comes the second half (and firstly, fuck ESPN for thinking I cared about the Murray state game. They didn’t take me back to the Iowa game until 16:30 left in the second.) jNW was in the bonus after 4 minutes. I spit out my drink, literally, because WTFWTF?? I don’t know if we got new refs or if the refs were also watching the Murray game, but how did we give up 7 fouls in 4 minutes? To me it just looked like a horribly called game and inconsistent would be a nice description.
And we looked slow on defense. Their perimeter picks worked way too well. Granted they took most of their shots from 3 feet beyond the arc so they spaced themselves a bit anyways, but the way we looked getting around the picks we didn’t stand a chance at contesting the shot.
And the offense looked confused the whole time. Every pass was telegraphed or lobbed, nobody looked comfortable dribbling, and we were out of sync on transition passing. Let’s take this week off and then kill Penn state again please.
Crowdog - February 10, 2012
Want to talk about officiating,
I didn’t watch the Illinois/Indy game, but Illinois shot 15 FT’s while Indy shot 42. It was 30 fouls vs 16, that’s some home cooking.
IowaFan81 - February 10, 2012
Iowa has nobody to blame but themselves
but the refs were horrendous. Was Ted Valentine the head official last night? I loved when the ball went off a Northwestern player in the second half and all Carmody had to do was walk up to the official, point at an Iowa player and the ref was like “oh, OK, that sounds good” and reversed the call.
Kyle McCann't - February 10, 2012
This dumbass came.
And he was pretty bad. Usually he hates Northwestern (Crawford in particular, it’s seemed) a lot more, so it was curious that we got some benefits. But they were mystifyingly all over the board.
Being in the band (and walking around the court to play for the team, if you saw), we walked right by him as we were returning to our seats, and I had the opportunity to be 2 feet from him and say to a friend “Aw shit, we got the Big Ten C-Squad refereeing tonight.” He turned his head. It felt wonderful.
MNWildcat - February 10, 2012
I remember that reversal of call,
nobody said squat about it. He pointed to Iowa then all of sudden NW was inbounding. WTF, and the difference of calls being made in the two halves was just terrible, teams should be able to adjust, but refs need to be more consistent and allow a better game.
IowaFan81 - February 10, 2012
It was the inconsistancies that were most irritating.
There was a drive where Shurna used his forearm to clear his defender out on the way to the hoop that was met with absolutely no scrutiny. On the other end the was a play were a NU player landed on Gatens after a rebound who, in turn, fell back onto Crawford’s ankles, knocking him to the ground. I’m not even sure if a foul was called. The refs seemed to think it better just to start all over and give NU the ball out of bounds. It was really weird.
Kyle McCann't - February 10, 2012
What I didn't like before I shut it off
was that Iowa didn’t really attack the 1-3-1 very much. The guards would dribble into the trap then pick it up and try to pass over it, not going to work usually. Maybe more of a start to dribble to the trap, pass, then get the ball back driving to the basket where you can either finish, pass to the other inside guy when the defender comes to help or pass to the corner for a 3 when his defender crashes.
And is it just me or does Cartwright look slow when defending, but quick when he has the ball. Bad thing is when he’s quick with the ball, he’s too out of control.
IowaFan81 - February 10, 2012
That was driving me crazy last night
Just watched the first half but it seemed against the 1-3-1 Marble or Cartwright had the ball and four other guys staring at him flat footed. jNW extended the defense so 3 guys were a couple feet beyond the free throw line so when the trap hit we lobbed a pass to the other side of the key and let all three defenders get over to cover the next guy. I don’t know the idea behind attacking a 1-3-1 but it seems with 2 defenders and 3-4 offensive guys below the FT line a couple of snappy passes should be able to find someone open or Marble/White 1 on 1 who can work their guy off the dribble for a good look or a kick out to an open shooter.
It seems we don’t have enough (more than 2) guys that can create their own offense and are waiting for an open look which isn’t going to happen that often with the speed of D1 defenders.
The Bacon Explosion - February 10, 2012
I watched the UNI/WSU game
Wednesday night, these 2 games were eerily similar.
IowaFan81 - February 10, 2012
I'm not any good at statistics
and I never have been. In fact, I had to take the class twice to graduate from college. However, when field goal percentages of any kind go over 100%, I have to call shennannigans.
Hawkaloogie - February 10, 2012
Which stat is this in reference to?
Perhaps I missed it…
Crowdog - February 10, 2012
Here it is, I believe
“MVP of the game would probably go to the Wildcats’ impressive freshman Dave Sobolewski, who took advantage of the clean looks he was getting and finished with 23 points on just eight shots and put up an astounding 106% eFG% thanks to 3-3 on threes and 4-5 on twos.”
IowaFan81 - February 10, 2012
my take on it
is that he was more than 100% because he scored 17 points on 8 shots. Switch that to all 2 pointers and he could have only scored 16. So by shooting so freakin’ well from outside he was more effective than a post guy who makes all 8 from less than 15 feet. Same number of shots yields one extra point.
The Bacon Explosion - February 10, 2012
Also
because he can do this and because he plays for a team other than Iowa, he is a dickbag.
The Bacon Explosion - February 10, 2012
And he's from Naperville.
All people from Naperville are dickbags. Dickbags with three car garages.
Kyle McCann't - February 10, 2012
I live in Naperville
But, I know you weren’t talking about me because I have a 4 car garage
Reggie Roby's Wrist Watch - February 10, 2012
Well, I'm from Naperville if that clears things up for you.
But we only had a two car garage…and a car port.
Kyle McCann't - February 11, 2012
That's right
The way it works with effective field goal percentage is that you add .5 FG makes for every three pointer made, then divide by the original number of FG attempts. It’s a way to recognize that threes are worth more than twos, and basically tells you what percentage you would need to shoot if you only shot twos to generate that number of points.
He made 7 shots, 3 of which were threes, so his eFG% = (7+1.5)/8 = 1.06
Which is just another way of saying that it would be impossible to score 17 points on eight two-point shots.
Horace E. Cow - February 10, 2012
Thank you for the clarification...
I assumed it had something to do with that.
Hawkaloogie - February 10, 2012
Wow, this hurts. Did they bring in the potato?
’has a sad
The Bacon Explosion - February 10, 2012
I have been saying all season that I think Iowa
can play with any team without a legitimate post threat. It’s the inside-out theory you described, I know you disagree with me on this thought. I think this still holds true, minus Northwestern.
I just think NW is Iowa’s kryptonite like explained here. They don’t fit the mold of any of the other teams in the conference. They are a team that imposes their style of play on the offensive end and we are hopelessly unable to defend it.
I think this is more due to our poor defensive IQ than our length and athleticism. Time and again last night I saw defenders sloughing off in the lane for some unknown reason, only to be out of position when their man was passed the ball, giving them an open shot. The team doesn’t seem to learn from their mistakes and gave open looks over and over.
isHawkeye - February 10, 2012
Without reading the entire post or any of the comments (hey! I'm a busy guy!)
I just want to say Iowa needs to learn the value of and exercise hard fouls. Don’t ever, ever, ever let a little man run up you for a lay up. Put his ass on the ground. He’ll think twice about doing it again. It’s old school but go ask Bill Lambeer if it works.
I’m not advocating hurting anyone. I’m advocating a “no lay ups” policy while we are on defense. It can be a real mind fuck for the opposition. All of the sudden they aren’t stroking as many 3s because they are so pissed about the hard fouls.
FiveSecondRuleChef - February 10, 2012
At least they weren't able to shout "just like football"
TAKE THAT.
mikjones24 - February 10, 2012
Hey, neither was Minnesota, for that matter.
So far Michigan State and Nebraska are the only teams to beat us in football and basketball. (And Iowa’s done the reverse just once – against Michigan.)
RossWB - February 10, 2012
Honestly
As bad as we played last night, I am still ore upset with ESPN than anything else. Horrible announcers and playing the Murray State game over everything makes me wish we just broadcast on BTN.
KC_HAWKEYE - February 10, 2012
I have never seen a player who can hurt his team more in 1 minute than Brommer
3 fouls in a minute? are you KIDDING ME?
i like how Iowa switches between “OMG THIS TEAM WILL BE AMAZING NEXT YEAR” and “OMG WE WILL SUCK FOREVER AND EVER!” every other game. for every Michigan game we have a Northwestern game, which is frustrating as all hell.
justsomehawkeyefan - February 10, 2012
"OMG THIS TEAM WILL BE AMAZING NEXT YEAR"
The ESecPN announcer said this very thing last night. Pretty much said, don’t worry Hawk fans, better times are ahead. Man, I hope so.
IowaFan81 - February 10, 2012
We are a poor defensive team due to focus and discipline
Its not athleticism. We are out of position on our rotations. We allow cutters to either cross our face or slip behind us. When that happens, either teams get wide open shots or the defense fouls. Sound familiar?
As for the offense, we made the zone easier on the defense. Our guys off the ball continued to hide and not be easy receivers. They did not give the passer a straight line site to throw the ball. Hence, slow high passes. We needed to spread the offense out, and then either quick ball reversals (which jNU did a great job of), or dribble penetrate the gaps.
Overall, it was just a crappy performance.
Next game and Go Hawks!!!
vahawk - February 10, 2012
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