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Kentucky Basketball: Are the Wildcats Over-Thinking the Game?

Terrence Jones is going to have to deal with pain in his hand for the rest of the year.

Andy Lyons - Getty Images

Terrence Jones is going to have to deal with pain in his hand for the rest of the year.

One of the things that you learn fairly early on in sports, and by that I mean by the time you get into you twenties, usually, is that "paralysis by analysis" is not just a term that applies to business. Over-thinking the game ... any game, really ... makes it harder to play, less fun, and generally produces poor results.

Because of the speed of basketball, and the tiny little things that go into making a particular play a success or failure, it's pretty easy to "over-think" the game. Classic signs of this problem are hesitations or careful approaches to something that should be more of a reaction than a deliberate act.

Terrence Jones discusses just this problem with Jerry Tipton of the Lexington Herald-Leader:

"I'm just not thinking as much," Jones said after UK beat Arkansas on Tuesday night.

When asked to elaborate, Jones noted the distraction of more than one preoccupation.

"Just being less conscious about my hand," he said, a reference to the finger he dislocated against Chattanooga on Dec. 17. "Worrying about messing up because I wasn't playing like I was" as a freshman. "Just thinking too much about every little play."

Jones is right. Trying to think too much about the game is counterproductive, especially in basketball, where instinctive decisions are often required. As you play the game for years and years, you learn the fundamentals -- blocking out your man, two handed rebounds, the easy pass, the open shot -- and you practice them so that they become second nature.

Star-divide

But it's absolutely critical to trust your instincts in basketball. Sometimes instincts are wrong, but usually only in a very limited set of circumstances. Basketball, despite the complexity of some of the patterns coaches run to get shots and defend certain situations, is a very simple game -- run, jump, dribble, shoot, and pass. If you do all these things as hard as you can, take a limited number of risks, be unselfish, and just have fun playing the game, you will usually play well. Sometimes not in every way, of course -- all players have off nights -- but if one thing isn't working and you are working hard at everything else, it usually takes care of itself.

So kudos to Terrence for thinking less and playing more, and it would be useful if everyone on the team took note -- it's possible that Jones is not the only one with this problem, and I'm looking at you, Marquis Teague. I'm really excited by what Teague did against the Arkansas Razorbacks, and I hope he has finally reached the tipping point in his freshman season where it all starts to make sense.

Enjoy the game, play hard, and react. Players must trust their coaching, and themselves, equally. They didn't get to be Kentucky basketball players by doing bad things on the basketball court, but rather by doing good things.

One other note -- that finger is still an issue for Jones, and will be for the rest of the season. Dislocations like that take many months to heal completely. You can play through it, but dislocated fingers are highly subject to re-injury. It won't be 100% healed until summer at the least, assuming he doesn't hurt it again between now and then.

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Comments

Aha!!

Jones nailed it – that is EXACTLY what I meant in previous statements noting “Jones has something on his mind.” It was the finger AND afraid of making mistakes.

I am glad that Jones figured it out, and I expect him to be himself this point out :)

Fear is the mind killer...............
Dune Fan?

So says the Bene Gesserit =). Great article, and I think it’s dead-on.

Yeah, it can happen with any athlete, and considering how good some of these kids are

it is not surprising either.

I figured Cal had decided to let TJ sort it out himself, and it looks like he has. Handling psyches and egos seems to be just one of his true strengths.

There is nothing to fear but fear itself.

I’m afraid that is just how it is.

Kevin Costner to Tim Robbins in Bull Durham

“Don’t think, just throw.”

I'm not sure if the players are over-thinking or not.

But I know that we fans (myself included) certainly do.

oh yeah......we do big time
Very true

But understandable as we have nothing else to do. I do use muscle memory to handle my remote without thinking. According to my wife, I do a number of things without thinking.

it isn't just you.

You can find some comfort in the fact that you are not alone, my husband has the same condition.

That's a crime.

You deserve someone who knows how to push those buttons. Wait, are we still talking about remotes?

Experience's Biggest Asset

Tennis great Stan Smith stated it well:

"Experience tells you what to do; confidence allows you to do it."

That’s why freshman grow into sophomores, rookies into veterans, precocious into wise. In competitive athletics there is no substitute; one reason that older competitors can match and surpass those younger and with more physical skills. Of course the process requires more time for some, never enough time for a few. Alas, the principle liability of the one-and-done.

Started Having Flashbacks

To the WVA and UCONN games while I was reading your post…

The good news is I think we have a solid core of 3 guys (Darius, Doron, and Terrence) who have been there, and two real, bonafide winners in MKG and AD.

Marquis Teague

Was over thinking things lately has seem to have a better handle on the offense. I hope this trend continues. He is much better when he lets the offense flow. I am liking what I am seeing from him. Just play ball, young man.

Indeed.

I badly want to see him succeed, and he has most of the tools.

Really needs a left hand, though.

Cal Knows This....

I was lucky enough to attend the walk thru before the Loyala game at the craft center. As the team was running thru a few plays, they kept messing up. Cal stopped them and said “We are not running plays, we are playing basketball.” that’s when it hit me about what make’s cal a good coach – he does not try to control every step they take on the court but rather put them in a position to make plays. that is also why kids love to play for him – freedom within a structure…..

I actually think...

Marquis Teague doesn’t think enough out there. Just my 2 cents.

Teague will get a handle on all his perceived problems and soon I have no fear about that

He was magnificent last game and I think he has turned the corner – fingers crossed.

This is just me, and what do I know

But I’m thinking MKG doesn’t overthink things. He just flat out balls.

Exactly.

He plays hard, instinctive basketball. If everybody just did what he did, I think we’d be unbeatable.

If you will notice, anyone that is really good at any particular skill,

Usually doesn’t think about it much. It just flows.

I cant help it.....it's a gift!.....lol
Thinking is overrated.

Conditioned responses are far more efficient.

Tell that to your boss on a low productivity day that you have a new stategy to get the work out
Lord help the opposition..

if Wiltjer reaches this satori of play this season. Now there is a boy who looks like he is trying to think his way through every move, instead of just “doing it”.
Maybe we should look at getting a Bene Gesserit “witch” on the training staff. Is that Cal’s secret, he is really a mentat?

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