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ANALYSIS: Troubleshooting NIU"s offensive woes

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The Huskies have turned the ball over more than their opponents have in each of the past eight games and it coincides with a nine-game losing streak.

Lack of assists/dribble penetration

One thing that stands out when watching NIU’s game tape is a dearth of assisted baskets and open shots.

NIU averages only 8.1 assists a game, which is last in the country. Breaking it down further, the Huskies record an assist on only one of every eight possessions. In their loss to Toledo on Tuesday, NIU had a season-low three helpers.

Most of their assisted baskets come on the perimeter from made jumpers and 3-pointers. Overall, there is little dribble penetration into the paint. Balls and Baker aren’t big threats from beyond the arc – neither shoots better than 25 percent – allowing defenders to sag off and play help defense on others when needed.

Against Buffalo in half-court sets, there were only 13 instances of dribble penetration into the paint that forced a secondary defender to come help off his man. However, of those 13, more than half resulted in scores or open shots.

Points in the paint

The Huskies are not overly reliant on jumpshots. They take more than 34 percent of their shots around the rim, putting them around the national average.

However, the shots NIU takes around the rim usually aren’t high-percentage attempts, resulting in contested fadeaways or off-balance hook shots. According to Hoop-math.com, NIU makes only 52 percent of its shots near the rim, the 13th-worst mark in the nation.

This likely is a result of not having a true post player on the roster and the aforementioned lack of dribble penetration. Keith Gray and Darrell Bowie are NIU’s most utilized options in the post, yet the two are listed at only 6-foot-8 and 6-6, respectively.

Guards and wings aren’t creating many easy shots for forwards at the rim either, as less than one of every three made shots in close are assisted.

Tempo/transition offense

Before the season started, Montgomery said he wanted his team to play more up-tempo. With a smaller, quicker roster, it would make sense for the Huskies to get up and down the floor, hoping to wear out teams and beat opposing big men down the floor.


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