Subscribe to get access
Read more of this content when you subscribe today.
Read more of this content when you subscribe today.
Read more of this content when you subscribe today.
Read more of this content when you subscribe today.
Obviously we have a historical precedent for our other Saturday matchup, with Illinois and Iowa having faced each other just once in the regular season in B1G play. Illinois won that game with a dominant start against an Iowa team that reportedly had teamwide flu at the time. The flu primarily affected Manyawu, who could only play 8 minutes, but his absence on the floor did lead to some interesting 5 out looks for the Hawkeyes, which negated the Illini size advantage and led to Iowa creeping back in the game but never quite getting over the hump due to poor perimeter shooting (9-29 from 3). Bennett Stirtz had close to his worst game of the season as well, with Boswell really hounding him and Crocker even dialing up more hedge with Mirkovic than the typical Illini drop coverage. Iowa scored a season low .25 PPP via ball screen, and were similarly inefficient in roll offense (although Banks was an efficient passer out of short roll), but did find efficient offense via cut when Illinois overplayed Stirtz.
Illinois offensively created 20 unguarded catch and shoots, the highest Iowa allowed all season until Nebraska in the Sweet 16, but a high rate of those came from players Iowa wanted to leave open while in their typical hedge against Wagler. Illinois however routinely got to the rim out of their high PNR rate, landing on a 96th percentile 2PT attempt proximity rate, highlighting the size advantage the Illini enjoyed, especially with Manyawu mostly unavailable. Illinois was much more efficient in their similarly high PNR rate than the Hawkeyes, and also found isolation matchups they could exploit, as they tend to do. Iowa actually won the offensive glass and turnover battle slightly, and thus had a small shot volume win, but the Illini were simply more efficient on the ball offensively in a battle of two high PNR rate offenses.
Iowa of course has been outstanding in this tournament offensively, scoring 1.24 PPP in 3 games against the 24th, 6th, and 7th most efficient defenses in the country, per KenPom adjusted efficiency rating. The most impressive part about that efficiency in the March has been the fact they’ve done with only one good shooting game (the shotmaking extravaganza against Nebraska), and Stirtz shooting 6-28 from 3. My concern would be that Stirtz was really neutralized as a scorer by Boswell in that regular season meeting, and the “secret weapon” of going 5 out with Manyawu was already seen by the Illini when he was flu ridden. Iowa meanwhile just simply wasn’t very good defensively against an Illinois spread offense that can space out and really burn hedge base schemes like Iowa.
Giving Ben McCollum multiple possessions in this tournament is almost insane to pass up at this point, and we saw his gameplan on short prep against a one seed that he had no prior familiarity with, but I don’t like the schematics for the Hawkeyes nor do I like how that first matchup with the Illini played out. Lean Illinois.
Read more of this content when you subscribe today.
SOUTH REGION
IOWA vs NEBRASKA
HOUSTON vs ILLINOIS
WEST REGION
ARIZONA vs ARKANSAS
PURDUE vs TEXAS
MIDWEST REGION
MICHIGAN vs ALABAMA
IOWA STATE vs TENNESSEE
Read more of this content when you subscribe today.
Read more of this content when you subscribe today.
Read more of this content when you subscribe today.
Read more of this content when you subscribe today.
Read more of this content when you subscribe today.
SOUTH REGION:
SOUTH PREDICTIONS: Florida over Iowa, Nebraska over Vandy, Illinois over VCU, Houston over St. Mary’s
Florida over Nebraska, Houston over Illinois
SOUTH CHAMPION: Florida over Houston
MIDWEST REGION:
MIDWEST PREDICTIONS: Michigan over St. Louis, Texas Tech over Alabama (although very tempted by Akron), Tennessee over Virginia, Iowa State over Kentucky
Texas Tech over Michigan, Iowa State over Tennessee
MIDWEST CHAMP: Texas Tech over Iowa State
FINAL FOUR: Florida over Duke, Arizona over Texas Tech
CHAMPIONSHIP: Arizona over Florida
Read more of this content when you subscribe today.
Recent Comments