Is it me or was ND just too timid on O both games against Syracuse? There were times where I thought their offense shot too quickly and too far out this year but at least they were being aggressive with taking shots. I still just didn't sense that urgency from them. It was like they just wanted to hold on to the ball a little longer to give their D a break...I don't know. I know I am frustrated and it's going to take me the full 9-10 days to get the positive vibes going for them again. What peaves me off the most is we were going to go to Philly on Saturday to watch them win the BE championship. Now they just totally ruined our plans.
Long winded response incoming...
This is the million dollar question for Notre Dame this year. First and foremost, we tried to "run" at times and it just failed. David Miller had one of the most stone cold easy 4 on 3 fastbreaks I've ever seen and it ended in a turnover. How does that happen? At the same time, when we played deliberate there were zero openings to attack.
The problem with the offense right now is a lack of initiators/ball handlers. Kavanagh is not a dodge first guy, but he's the best creator on the team right now... and that's sad. Typically, it's been the opposite problem for ND throughout the years... great dodgers/creators but no finishers. Let's take a quick look at the midfield for this year:
Marlatt - Big outside shot, not really a dodging threat. Mostly one-handed player. After teams started playing him tight he hasn't been a productive offensive player.
Foley - Best dodger we have, but has shot poorly all year. Typically draws the pole and isn't good enough to beat a good LSM consistently.
Corrigan - Good passer, lacks athleticism. Is not a dodging threat and therefor teams tend to have a blanket rule of not sliding to him.
Kimball - Hardest player to defend on our midfield right now. Athletic enough to dodge with authority and his shooting has been improving.
Murphy - One handed player that is athletic but lacks really high end stick skills... when he can out athlete his defender he is effective, when he can't he isn't a threat in really any facet.
Ossello - After taking over faceoff duties for injured O'Connor he gets very few reps... when he plays, he ha a solid all-around game and a powerful shot when he can step into it.
Hopkins - Really good dodger and inside finisher... lacks superior passing ability or an outside shot.
So basically all of our midfielders are 'flawed' players and teams now have solid scouting reports on how to defend them. This isn't a huge issue as long as our attack can do the heavy lifting... but when you have a loaded close D like Syracuse (or Maryland) then we're kinda effed.
How scary is this? Simply put, there are only a handful of teams with true shut down defenders and play the style of D that Syracuse employed. This is all a huge issue if and only if the other team has great 1v1 defenders and plays a 'no slide' or 'late slide' defense. Why did we lite up Denver for 13 goals? Because they played a zone where we could use passing/outside shooting as our primary method of attack. We do great against teams that we can out-athlete (e.g. Marquette) OR play a passive D (e.g. Denver) OR play an aggressive D with early slides/doubles (e.g. Duke).
What is the solution? Well, there isn't one that doesn't involve changing our offense. But really... we should be prepared to change our offense. It's actually quite easy to beat a 'no slide' team even without dodgers who can beat their man which is why most teams don't play that style of defense. First things first, we can't have people just standing around off ball. They need to be cutting in and out... rotating... picking for each other... otherwise creating chaos such that dodging lanes open up AND when a guy
does get beat the help is going to be VERY late or non-existent.
Second, when you work in off-ball movement you can really complicate things by setting picks both on or off ball. When you set a pick, the defender must either fight through the pick or switch... the switching can cause miscommunication and if they try to fight through the pick that can give you the step of separation you need to draw a slide or get a shot off. Even if they defend picks well you can use them to create matchup issues and get your couple good dodgers on players they can beat.
So hopefully this week and next week our staff is working in wrinkles that will help us if we run into a team that plays a tough brand of D. But Corrigian & Co. really believe in having an identity and executing well without 'junk' offenses and defenses... so I'm skeptical we will really change very much at all.