Oregon Showing Signs of Life
Posted by Bennet Hayes on December 15th, 2014It’s very much still football season for Oregon fans, but the basketball team offered Ducks’ faithful a reason Saturday night to also pay attention to them. While Marcus Mariota was busy accepting college football’s highest individual honor at the Heisman Trophy ceremony in New York City, Dana Altman’s band of Ducks was carving out their best win of the season against a solid Illinois team playing in its home state. The end result in Chicago – a 77-70 Oregon victory – had to generate minimal buzz back in Eugene (the school’s first Heisman winner casts a substantial shadow), but it represented an important first step for a young team. Nobody should expect the Ducks to become any more predictable than they have been over the course of an up-and-down first month of the season, but consider Oregon’s upside flashed. The good news is that in this year’s wide-open Pac 12 – a league with no proven teams outside of Arizona and Utah — a little potential might go a long way.
It’s always been about offense in Eugene. Whether discussing the gridiron or the hardwood, Oregon’s success has classically been predicated on dynamic offenses. The recipe should remain the same for the Ducks this season. They haven’t been terrible on the offensive end (51st nationally in offensive efficiency), but both Dana Altman and John Groce agreed that Saturday featured their crispest execution to date. Altman said that decisions to pass up good shots for great ones on three early second-half possessions set the tone for a selflessly efficient half of basketball. Joseph Young (who didn’t start due to a violation of team rules) garnered praise from Groce for his passing, while Dillon Brooks scored an effortless 24 points to lead the Ducks. The freshman will be a key player moving forward. Young is willing and able to shoulder the bulk of the offensive load, but finding a capable second option is imperative. Brooks has yet to display the consistency needed to fill that full-time role, but the stocky forward’s inside (10.1% offensive rebound percentage)-outside (45% three-point) game could make him a nice complement to a gunner like Young.
This win wasn’t a resume-maker for the Ducks, but there’s ample reason to expect it to still look nice in March. The Illini’s two prior losses came to Top 25 outfits Villanova and Miami (FL), and they handed Baylor its only loss on November 28. John Groce’s team could easily become an NCAA Tournament club. The opportunity is certainly there for the Ducks to become the same. The list of Pac-12 Tournament candidates (outside of Utah and Arizona) is long — Washington, UCLA, Stanford, Cal, Colorado and Arizona State all qualify – but no one team has staked a legitimate claim as a presumptive March participant. Dana Altman’s team still has plenty to prove, but Saturday’s win revealed a unit that Oregon fans might want to begin paying attention to, football season be damned. The Pac-12 would be wise to do the same.