Understand the transition to 30 seconds, but don't love it. We're an athletic, but cerebral, team. That's our counterpunch against the teams who roll out 5 poorly coached super athletes with length. The more time we have to variate the tempo of our offensive attack, the better.
I liken it to a pitcher in baseball. If his fastball is 96 MPH but his change up is only 91 MPH, he won't be fooling many hitters. If it's a 94 MPH fastball with a 77 MPH change up, it's going to be a lot tougher to get timed up. May be a bit apples and oranges, but I really do think that extra 5 seconds has a major effect on mixing up the tempo. If we're taking a shot with :02 left on one possession, then with :32 on the next possession, that is a terror to defend against. This may be my bias, but in the NCAA tourney, there were a lot of situations where athletic teams mentally blew up on D with < 5 seconds on the shot clock. 35 seconds is a sleepy pace, and a long time to think for some folks who are not used to it, so the mental lapses are expected. Did not see as many mental breakdowns late with the 30 second clock.
Whatever puts the most athletic teams out of their comfort zone, I'm all for. NCAA basketball is special, please don't turn it into a watered down version of the NBA.
This post was edited on 3/29 12:59 PM by HuntsmanSpider