Game #4: Nov. 24, 2018; Rhode Island Rams (1-2) at New Hampshire Wildcats (1-2)
We finally have a home court game. Fortunately 6 of our next 8 games are at home. Rhode Island prefers a slow pace on offense and primarily deploys a man-to-man defense. They have balanced scoring throughout their lineup.
We held a lead throughout most of the 1st half. Rhode Island controlled the boards 20-11, but we turned the ball over just twice while forcing the Rams to make 12 turnovers. We went to the locker room with a 30-22 lead. Nate Augustus, William Kamara, and Bobby Havens each scored 6 points for us. Even though we led, I wasn’t impressed by our play and let the team know that they needed to step things up in the 2nd half.
We came out flat and let Rhode Island cut our lead to 1 early in the half, but then drew away to take an 11 point lead. But we couldn’t hold onto it and the Rams went ahead by 2 with 6 minutes to play. We then rallied in the final 5 minutes to win going away.
Final Score: New Hampshire-65, Rhode Island-51. New Hampshire season record: 2-2.
Scoring leaders: Havens-20, Strickland-12, Kamara-8
Rebound leaders: Kress-8, L. Smith-7, Havens-5.
Assist leaders: Augustus-3.
Player of the Game: SG Bobby Havens-20 pts, 5 reb, 1 assist, 2 steals.
Coach’s Pat on the Back Award: C Andrew Kresse-7 pts, 6 reb, 1 assist.
Other notes: We hit just 38% of our shots primarily because we went just 4 for 21 (19%) from beyond the arc. We let the Rams hit 47% of their shots and also out-rebound us 32-24. We won the game by forcing Rhode Island to turn the ball over 21 times while we had just 8 turnovers. We also hit 19 of 21 shots from the foul line.
Vernard Strickland hasn’t been shooting well (33%), while Nate Augustus has (46%). Augustus has had fewer turnovers also, so I have decided to replace Strickland with Augustus as PG in the starting lineup for a few games and see how things work out. Strickland will still get a significant amount of playing time, though.
Looking over out stats thus far, our guards are scoring most of our points, but they’re taking a lot of shots to do it. None of them are hitting a high percentage of their shots. They need better shot selection. Our staring big men (Andrew Kresse and Luis Smith) are both hitting over 70% of their shots, but are passing up a lot of shots.