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Anonymous wrote:For those coaches out there that have watched the St. John’s team play. Who do you put your number 1 cover guy on?
Shut off Rhoa. None of their other mids can score. No scoring depth without Duley and Garza.
Except the 16 other D1 players on SJC
11, 13, and 50 aren’t going to do anything. My St Mary’s, please. Maybe the UMBC commit. But yesterday, it was all #1. He had 5.
Wish you would put your name to this comment so everyone will know what an idiot you are during the course of the season.
Those kids will shred Ryken and O’Connell but watch the BL game and tell me what mid is going to do anything against the good teams other than #1. No dodging or athleticism. The kids that left were on the field for over the new mids for a reason. Question was how to defend. The attack are ridiculously strong, so shutting of #1 is key. He’s too good to leave open on step downs. A big difference in BL game was fogo. Wow is he good. Anyone know if they are streaming Calvert Hall. Definitely would be a good watch.
The key to beat SJC is score first and let the goalie start the blame game. He has always had the benefit of a really good defense in front of him. Next we will fine out how good he really is. Put best poles on 42 and 1 make them beat you the other players
The way offense is played by the best coached teams at the high school and college levels now makes eliminating someone with a one-on-one matchup very difficult and often disruptive to defensive game planning. Offenses have all sorts of tools at their disposal with the expansion of pick and roll, off-ball screens, and fluid position-less offensive sets, and it can compromise team defensive concepts trying overly hard to maintain a matchup. I think too often posters on here equate strategies from mostly uncoached club ball to the spring seasons, and the two are worlds apart (see Georgetown Prep offense so far this season for reference).