Is Purdue Basketball good enough to win it all in 2021-22 season?
Trevion Williams #50 of the Purdue Boilermakers (Photo by Justin Casterline/Getty Images)
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Purdue Boilermakers
by Matt Moore Follow @MattHoopsGuy1
Purdue Basketball looks to be deep enough and talented enough to put themselves in a position to finally break through and do it–to make it to the Final Four and to win the thing. This could be the year. Sure, they were good enough last year and they should have performed much better than they did in the NCAA Tournament. But that is all spilled milk now. It’s time to move on.
So that is exactly what we will do. Instead of talking about last season’s disappointing ending, let focus our attention on what lies ahead for the Boilermakers.
Matt Painter was able to do something that few coaches in the country were able to do, he managed to keep his roster intact. This means, as good as Purdue was last season, they not only returned everyone, they added a couple of really special freshmen in Caleb Furst and Trey Kaufman-Renn.
Furst was chosen Indiana’s 2021 Mr. Basketball, with Kaufman-Renn coming in second in voting for the award. That is pretty impressive. They also added what I believe is a very under-rated recruit in Brian Waddell. Brian is the son of former Boiler great Matt Waddell who played for Coach Keady from 1991-95.
You add that influx of talent onto a team that was already a top-tier team in the Big Ten last year, and what you have is something special.
Trevion Williams’s decision to stay at Purdue was huge for the Boilers. Williams in combination with Jaden Ivey is lethal. That is especially true when you start adding the other pieces Matt Painter has at his disposal around them.
Pieces like 7-4 Zach Edey who was a pleasant surprise last season, and sharpshooting, Sasha Stefanovic, who averaged just under double figures last season at 9. 3 points per game, while shooting 40% from behind the arc.
And then there is Bradon Newman, who had a very good freshman campaign, and Eric Hunter Jr. who adds experience in the backcourt. Mason Gillis also showed some flashed last year, reaching double figures in scoring four times.
If each of these pieces come into the season improved, as you would hope they would, the Boilers are going to be hard to handle this season.
The player I am most excited to see is not a surprise, it is Caleb Furst. I can’t wait to see Furst in action. The 6-10 freshman was chosen Indiana’s Mr. Basketball in 2021, and he brings a ton of talent to the floor for the Boilermakers. As does the runner-up in the Mr. Basketball voting, Trey Kaufman-Renn. Both of these young men add tremendous size and skill to the Purdue frontcourt.
It’s easy to see that Coach Painter has one of his most talented teams in West Lafayette in a long time, and the Boilers seemed poised to be even better than last year’s 13-6 record in the Big Ten (18-10 overall). If the Boilers can improve on that record by even a couple of games, which they certainly seem capable of, they should find themselves right in the mix for their league-leading 25th Big Ten Championship.
That should be their focus, winning the Big Ten regular season. If they do that, in what appears to be another strong Big Ten in 2021-22, they will go into the NCAA Tournament good enough to compete with anyone. And with the experience they gained from last season’s disappointing tournament finish, combined with the uber-talented players they have added, there is no reason to think that Purdue can not make a deep run in the NCAA Tournament. I am not alone in this thought.
This could be Matt Painter and Purdue’s year to make it back to the Final Four for the first time since 1980. There is no doubt that all the right pieces are in place. The task before the Boilers right now is simply to put it all together. If they do, they are certainly capable of beating anyone.
Is Purdue good enough to make it to the Final Four? Are they capable of getting hot at the right time and winning it all?
My answer is yes.
(And for what it’s worth, this is not the opinion of a Purdue homer. In fact, quite the opposite is true. I am an Indiana guy though and through, but even I can recognize a special team when I see one.)
2022-23 Purdue Basketball Homework: Matt Painter
It is time for the final entry in this series for the spring, and it is on coach Matt Painter. Coach has been upfront that he is always looking to evolve and we have seen that evolution over his time at Purdue. There is no question that he is a better coach now than he was in 2010, or even 2015. He has adapted his teams well based on the talent he has each year. In many years his teams have tremendous balance. In 2019 it was the Carsen Edwards Show. He has changed his recruiting philosophy and it has paid off in a run of solid recent results with four Sweet 16s, two Big Ten championships, two runner-up finishes, and five NCAA appearances in the last six years.
The 2021-22 season was a disappointment though.
It is very hard to say that about a year where Purdue was 29-8, achieved its first No. 1 overall ranking in program history, and was in the top 10 nationally for the entire season, but it is a year where so much was left on the table. Purdue lost out on a Big Ten championship because it lost four conference games on last second shots. It lost to a 15 seed in the NCAA Tournament by three points. It was a year where expectations were sky high, and with good reason, but it ultimately ended in frustration because this team was agonizingly close to fulfilling said expectations, all while not looking that great for long stretches.
This team had a lot of similarities to the 2017-18 team that won 30 games. That team also finished with no hardware and a Sweet 16 loss. Both teams lost at least a share of the Big Ten title on a single play (a failed box out vs. Ohio State and a miracle heave at Rutgers, respectively). That team consistently felt like it played 10-15% above its ceiling for most of the year. There is no question it was a great team, but it exceeded expectations for much of the season.
This year was different. On paper this was a more talented team than 2017-18, but it feels like it played 10-15% below its lofty ceiling regularly. Purdue was downright terrible in the first half at Indiana and for much of the second half against St. Peter’s. In four of the eight losses (St. Peter’s, Rutgers, Indiana, and at home vs. Wisconsin) Purdue was either tied or leading at the game’s final media timeout. Against Michigan State and at Wisconsin, additionally, it was either tied or leading within the final minute. Against Iowa in the Big Ten Tournament Purdue was within a point with three minutes left. Five losses were by three points each, and when Jaden’s Ivey’s three-pointer against St. Peter’s missed while the Rutgers, Indiana, Michigan State, and Wisconsin threes went down it felt like a particularly cruel ending.
Purdue ended up playing 17 games that were within a possession in the last five minutes, but if it plays to its ability it turns a few of those games into more comfortable wins. If it plays to its ability half those losses become wins.
It looked like Purdue had finishing issues, and even in a few wins it was far too close. Purdue mucked around and very nearly lost at home to a bad Rutgers team. It took an extraordinary comeback to beat an even worse NC State team. The Ohio State game was a complete collapse late that was overshadowed by Jaden Ivey’s game-winning three. The home game against Indiana was another survival. I recognize that it is very difficult to be on night-in, night-out, but ever since Ron Harper Jr. hit that miracle heave in December Purdue was never the same.
This team was more than good enough to be special. It showed that early on by handling two teams that would eventually make the Final Four. It showed it later in impressive road wins at Iowa and Illinois, as well as a second half dismantling of the Illini in West Lafayette.
All of this goes back to coach Painter. What went wrong? This team had a unique balance of talent, depth, and experience. That ratcheted expectations through the roof, and when Purdue was truly on, I don’t think anyone in America could beat it. Unfortunately, it was not often fully on after that Rutgers game.
I think the largest knock on Painter this year was his loyalty and inflexibility in lineups. That is hard to knock him on, but there were games where some guys just flat weren’t performing and the rotation stayed set in stone. As much as I defended him, by late in the season Isaiah Thompson was an outright liability on defense and was struggling on offense, yet he continued to be a part of the rotation. Against St. Peter’s Purdue struggled to shoot from three and Jaden Ivey was terrible, but the offense continued to be perimeter oriented instead of pounding it inside against the smaller Peacocks. Purdue never had an answer for “We got the rare awful game from Jaden, now what?” when it had the talent to overcome it against that opponent.
Even then, it was a strange season because a lot of times Purdue was still in position to succeed, but it couldn’t execute. The biggest liability all year, the defense, showed improvement down the stretch, but the offensive efficiency that Purdue rode in the first half of the season eroded late. Being a great three-point shooting team means nothing when you shoot 25% from there in the St. Peter’s loss, or 25% vs. Iowa, or 11% against Michigan State. Purdue was getting open looks in those games too and they weren’t falling.
How much blame can you really lay on Painter if the shots aren’t falling? Purdue was under 30% from three in five of the eight losses: Rutgers, Michigan State, St. Peter’s, Iowa, and Michigan. You can throw out that Michigan game, as it was by far the worst loss of the season. In the other four if Purdue simply hits its average, it wins, likely going away. Ultimately, Painter can’t make the shots himself, and Purdue was often in a position with good shots and they didn’t fall.
So where does he evolve from here? It is difficult to say, really. Purdue was loaded this year. It had depth and a top 5 NBA draft pick. It had experience. It had size. It had shooting. We couldn’t ask for a more perfect team, but it underperformed and struggled in close games (10-7 in games that were within a possession with less than 5 minutes left). At one point this year I said that the most dangerous lead in sports is Purdue up seven or less at the last media timeout. It turned out to be prescient, as the Rutgers, Indiana, and St. Peter’s losses were near mirror images to the losses at Maryland and Minnesota the year before. For whatever reason, Purdue got tight in those games. You could see it. In watching you could almost hear the inner monologue of “I have to be perfect and score on this play” every time.
I don’t really know what to say about coach Painter. There is no question he is one of the best in the business. For the faults I have with this team, we’re probably about five plays away from having another Big Ten banner in the rafters and an Elite Eight appearance at minimum. He had the guys in position for success time and again this year, and if Purdue merely hits its average from three it is likely a 33 game winner and in the Elite Eight (if not further).
The results speak for themselves though. For the second straight season Purdue was eliminated by a mid-to-low-major that simply outworked them up and down the floor. That was the other thing I noticed this year. When things went bad it was because the opponent was just outworking us. St. Peter’s and North Texas have a lot in common because in the stretches of those games where Purdue was on, it was dominant, but for the majority of the game it was getting worked by a lesser opponent.
Matt Painter is not going anywhere. He has earned a significant leash at Purdue and it would take, at minimum, three straight losing seasons to even consider firing him. With him you know what you’re going to get at this point. Purdue is going to be in contention in the Big Ten year-in, year-out and making the second weekend of the NCAAs is not going to be a rarity. Even losing what we lose going into next season I still expect an upper half Big Ten finish and NCAA bid. The vast majority of college basketball would take that.
Still, it is going to be year 18. He was the hand-picked successor to Gene Keady, who made it 25 years. That’s 43 years of basketball where Purdue has been in that “Really good, but not elite” territory, and the March record speaks for itself. Painter is now 1-5 in Sweet 16 games, and the one win had a huge collapse and was very, very close to being a loss. At some point he has got to find a way to break through, and that is why he is getting paid what he is getting paid. He will never get as good of a shot as this year, right down to the bracket clearing out before us once the tournament started. Purdue is still in the basketball purgatory of “great team until the lights are brightest”. After this season I went back to “if” Painter gets us to a Final Four instead of a “when”, because if we didn’t do it this year I won’t believe it can happen again until we’re actually there.
The best basketball players in history - Sportmaster Media Internet portal
This is a material about the greatest players in the history of basketball. We also have a text about the basic rules of the game.
Basketball in its modern form is already over 130 years old, and the best tournament on the planet — the championship of the National Basketball Association — turned 75 in 2021. During this time, dozens and hundreds of outstanding athletes have taken part in the most prestigious sports competition. We collected seven of the greatest basketball players who ever took to the floor.
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1979-92 Boston Celtics
3 NBA championships
There are many NBA Hall of Famers among the legends of Boston, but even among them Larry Bird holds a special place. The three-time league champion won three consecutive MVP awards in the mid-80s, and his duels with Magic Johnson breathed new life into the rivalry between the Celtics and the Lakers. Byrd's versatility and attacking skill is a guarantee of getting into any tops of basketball legends.
1956-69 Boston Celtics
11 NBA Championships 90,080 90,003 90,002 Russell is one of the league's greatest defensemen. Bill has five MVP awards on his trophy shelf, won three in a row from 1960 to 1962, and in 2009, the Finals Series MVP award was renamed in his honor. Russell's individual achievements pale in comparison to his team achievements - he became a record 11 NBA champion with Boston.
1959-62 Philadelphia Warriors; 1962-65 San Francisco Warriors; 1965-68 Philadelphia 76ers 1968-73 Los Angeles Lakers
2 NBA Championships
Very few players hold records that will most likely never be broken. Chamberlain is one of them. Against the Knicks in March 1962, Wilt had a mind-blowing 100 points and six of the 11 highest-scoring individual performances in league history.
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1979-91, 1996 Los Angeles Lakers
5 NBA Championships
The arrival of the Magic in 1979 ushered in another golden era for the Lakers. Johnson helped the team win a championship as a rookie, and then won four more titles for the Los Angeles club. Johnson took home the Regular Season and Finals MVP awards three times each.
1969-75 Milwaukee Bucks; 1975-89 Los Angeles Lakers
6 NBA Championships
Before Michael Jordan and LeBron, Kareem ruled basketball. With six league titles, six regular season MVPs, two Finals MVPs and 38,387 career points, Abdul-Jabbar still holds the league's all-time scoring record with a resume that stands the test of time. His skyhook did not spare anyone - see for yourself.
2003-10, 2014-18 Cleveland Cavaliers; 2010-14 Miami Heat; 2018-present Los Angeles Lakers
4 NBA Championships
LeBron James is synonymous with greatness. From the first appearance on the court and up to the present moment, he has done nothing but meet the huge expectations of basketball fans around the world. Only 1,300 points separate him from Abdul-Jabbar's scoring record, and LeBron is not going to stop.
He has two wins at the Olympics, four championship titles, four awards for the most valuable player of the regular season and the final series. All-Star games have been around without James since 2005, and it's impossible to imagine modern sport without him. There is only one basketball player to whom he (so far) is inferior in the size of the legacy.
1984-93, 1995-98 Chicago Bulls; 2001-03 Washington Wizards
6 NBA Championships
Jordan is universally acknowledged as the greatest basketball player of all time. Not only has he changed the game in so many different ways, but he has become a global brand on and off the court, primarily due to the cosmic level of the game. On his way to becoming the King of Basketball, he led the Bulls to championship six times, becoming the Finals Series Most Valuable Player in each.
This person won three titles in a row, went to baseball, came back and won three championships back-to-back. There will never be another Michael Jordan. Wins, huge advertising deals, off-site successes, legendary sneakers and an eternal legacy. He achieved everything in basketball and did it with a smile on his face.
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To score three-pointers in every match you need quality equipment that will make you feel comfortable on the court. Look for clothes, shoes and accessories for basketball in a special section on the Sportmaster website.
Basketball for children - what is useful, at what age to play
Basketball is one of the most popular sports games. Basketball for children is considered one of the early sports, because kids can be enrolled in the first lessons from the age of 3. But the most important advantage of basketball is its accessibility.
There are sections for children in schools and neighborhood clubs, and classes are often free. And if you are not ready to give the child to the section, just buy him a ring and a ball and hang it on your site and the kid will already be busy in sports, which means he will get the maximum benefit for development.
Benefits of basketball for children, what qualities it develops
Before sending a child to a section, parents should know how basketball is useful for children and what qualities it develops.
First of all, like any team sport, basketball develops social skills. Working in a team, children learn to help each other, care about common interests and work for the good of the team.
Moreover, this basketball is an excellent emotional release. It helps the guys throw out negative energy and get positive emotions. Along with this, character is tempered during classes, and the child learns to go towards the goal, sacrificing his own desires and needs.
Basketball also helps to get rid of complexes. This is especially true for tall girls who are noticeably taller than their peers. In a team where all players are taller than average, the girls no longer feel like a black sheep, but gain self-confidence and begin to be proud of their height.
The influence of playing basketball on the physical development of a child
The influence of playing basketball on the physical development of a child is also strong. First of all, the guys involved in this sport develop endurance, and all muscle groups are strengthened. Basketball practice - these are jumping, running, swinging arms, tilts and squats, which allow you to develop all muscle groups and strengthen the heart and blood vessels.
In addition to the general health benefits, basketball will also help prevent the development of certain diseases that result from an inactive lifestyle.
Moreover basketball develops:
Review of vision. Due to the fact that the player must constantly keep an eye on the ball and other players, the field of view is improved. Children learn to manage peripheral vision and train their eyes;
Reaction speed. Often during a match, an athlete must make lightning-fast decisions on which the outcome of the game depends. This helps children learn to respond quickly to emergency situations;
Mindfulness. Through intense play, attention and memory develop, which not only has a beneficial effect on the playground, but also in studies and everyday life.
Given these facts, the question of what basketball gives a child can be answered that classes will strengthen physical, mental and mental health. That is why basketball is often recommended to children suffering from reduced attention and weak immunity. But not all children can benefit from basketball, you can find out what kind of sport is suitable for a child here.
Does playing basketball make children grow
We often hear that basketball makes children grow, but is it really true? Recent studies have shown that yes, indeed, he can help the baby grow up, but is not able to grow a giant out of him.
The increase in height is due to the straightening of the spine, which is stretched during jumps. Also, a slight increase in growth contributes to the strengthening of the muscles of the back and legs.
But to say that basketball can significantly affect the growth of an athlete is wrong, there is no scientific justification for this.
The fact that in the sections all children are really tall is explained simply - short children simply leave this sport, because they cannot compete with tall athletes, as a result they move on to other sports, for example, volleyball, where they need both tall and undersized athletes.
At what age can a child play basketball
For preschool children, basketball is available from 3 years of age. Often this game is played in physical education classes in kindergarten. Of course, such a crumb will not be taken to the section, but at this age the child can already be introduced to the ball and the net.
Professional basketball training for children starts at the age of 5-6 years. At this age, you can enroll in a section at the sports palace, both boys and girls are accepted. The first 4-5 years the guys work out together, and only at the age of 10 the coach forms the men's and women's teams.
Basketball for beginners is more about general physical training and familiarity with the ball. In the first years of training, the coach pays special attention to the development of endurance, so most of the training takes place in the fresh air.
In the gym, the guys learn different techniques and combinations, and also learn how to hit the basket. According to statistics, it is in their youth that children are more likely to encounter injuries in basketball. This is due to not yet developed coordination and lack of skills in programming movements.
That is why sports insurance for basketball at this age is a necessity, because it will reimburse the costs of treatment and provide the young athlete with high-quality rehabilitation, which will prevent the occurrence of fatigue injuries and chronic injuries in the future.
Age characteristics of children in basketball
Age characteristics of children in basketball are a fundamental factor in drawing up a schedule and training plan.
Consider how the load of basketball players changes with age:
3-5 years. At this age, kids still do not know how to memorize the rules of the game and listen to the coach. All classes are held in a playful way and are aimed at developing coordination of movements and mindfulness;
5-7 years old. During this period, special attention is paid to the physical development and increasing the flexibility of the child. The goal of the trainer is to maximize endurance and strengthen all muscle groups. Also at this stage, children begin to learn the rules of basketball and learn various tactical and dynamic techniques;
7-9 years old. This is the age at which real training starts. At the age of 8, children can already participate in competitions. Now all their work is aimed at the result of the whole team. During these years, the main task of the coach is to teach the guys to interact with each other;
10-12 years old. At this age, men's and women's teams are formed. Now the team is becoming a real family with common goals and objectives. Most often, it is at this age that the first victories occur;
12-14 years old. At this age, children learn to program their movements. This is a very important stage for every basketball player, because the final result of the maneuver depends on it. At this time, the main task of the coach is to hone the movements of each player to the ideal;
14-16 years old. This is the time to master tactical thinking. The brain of a teenager is already ready to solve tactical problems and make quick decisions. At this moment, the coach already sees which of the guys can become a real champion;
16-18 years old. This is the age when a teenager must show all the acquired skills. Strong players are formed into teams to participate in important competitions.