Connect with us

If you read this site regularly, then you know that we had constantly preached patience with this Wolfpack team. We have defended Gottfried and did our best to help you understand that young teams take time to mature. We explained that as the season wears on and the team builds experience, that they will start to show signs of improvement, and that we would start to see kinks being worked out, deficiencies becoming strengths.

At this point, however, over halfway through the ACC season, I think it’s fair to say that we were wrong and that there is a bigger problem at hand than ‘simple youth.’ I think it’s fair now to start asking some tough questions.

What is going on? The turnovers make sense. The team IS young, and we all have to be aware that with youth comes mental lapses. But we aren’t just seeing momentary lapses in judgment. We are seeing a team that has yet to find any identity at all. We are seeing a team that plays extremely soft and fails over and over again to make any significant adjustments to their style of play. We are watching an offense that puts up points but doesn’t have much fluidity or consistency in their sets. And most obviously, we are watching a defense that looks like they are defending as a team for the very first time each time they take the floor.

This is not a rant that’s aimed to tear down the current team or staff. Believe me, we want more than anything to focus on the positives and point out areas of growth and how this team can continue to build itself into a contender. The problem is, as hard as we search, there simply isn’t concrete evidence to back up that notion. This team isn’t growing. They aren’t getting better game by game. They are losing the same way over and over again. They continue to play isolation, one on one offense. They continue to get abused physically by every team they face, and they continue to play some of the worst defense we’ve seen in our years of watching the Wolfpack.

So what are we supposed to write? I was brought up being told, if you can’t say anything nice, don’t say anything at all. So, should the site just go dark for a while? What about the people who visit our site in hopes of figuring out what is wrong? Should we not provide them with some breakdown or some theory as to what we believe is happening? Believe me, it’s a tough spot to be in. We started PackInsider.com because we wanted to be a site that delivers in-depth game breakdowns in a positive fashion. We wanted to be able to filter out the negative voices whose complaints were over-exaggerated and at times unwarranted. But at this point, with the product that we are watching on the floor, we can’t help but agree that something is very wrong with this basketball team and something needs to change quick and drastically.

Florida State is one of the best teams in the country, so NC State losing to them was not something to get bent out of shape over. Losing to UNC stings, but it’s not something you have to have any kind of deep worry about. Some of NC State’s losses are just that; losses. That’s not the focus here. The focus here is how they are losing. There is a very deep lack of pride on this basketball team. Time after time, defensive assignments are missed and the opponent gets an easy bucket. Time after time, a ‘who wants it more’ rebound comes down and an NC State is on the losing end of the battle. Time after time a player takes a quick, out-of-rhythm shot that kills momentum. These things happen with a young team, but most of the time it’s early in the season and most of the time the correction is quick and harsh. Usually, after a missed assignment on defense, a veteran gets in your face and demands you keep focus and don’t miss that assignment again. If it’s not a veteran player, then usually it is a coach who yanks you out of the basketball game, sits you down and chews you out until you are very clear on what you did wrong and understand that if it happens again there are consequences to be paid.

Why isn’t any of this happening with this Wofpack team? When these mistakes are made or when a player loses focus or lacks hustle, there is very little bickering amongst the team. It’s just a head-shake, a quick word or two and then back to the other end. These are not the actions of a team with pride. These are not the actions of a team who are on the same page and out for the same goal. These are actions of apathy.

I’m not saying this team doesn’t want to win, because no one ‘doesn’t want to win,’ but their on-court actions say otherwise. Their lack of physicality on the court says otherwise.Their inconsistency in hustle says otherwise. Their failure to hold each other accountable says otherwise.

Maybe it’s not that they ‘don’t want to win.’ Maybe it’s that they simply don’t know how yet. That is where you have to look to coaching. That’s where the buck stops. Mark Gottfried has missed the mark with this team. We can argue all day about what is the root problem. Is he too soft on them? Is he too hard on them? Is his system too complicated? Are they just not in good enough shape? Are they not paying attention?

You can go on and on about what went wrong, but at the end of the day it’s the coaches job to be creative, be flexible and provide his team with whatever it needs to be successful. If that means a dictatorship coaching style, then so be it. If that means a player-first coaching style, then ok. A different offensive approach, a different defensive approach, maybe a different style of communication. No one here knows exactly what is wrong, but everyone here knows that something is and this late in the season, the burden falls on Mark Gottfried. He didn’t push the right buttons this time and because of that his team looks lost.

There is time left this season, but the interest and intrigue this team once had is waning and we really can’t argue with those who have tuned it out. The talent is there. Man for man, NC State has the horses to compete, but mental lapses, lack of physicality, and lack of pride has turned what should be a contender into a team currently in shambles.

3 Comments
Subscribe
Notify of
3 Comments
newest
oldest most Upvoted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
yakima2k
yakima2k
7 years ago

I think we need only look to UCLA to see what might have been this year. Sort of ironic given Gottfried’s coaching tree.

wolfpack74
wolfpack74
7 years ago

If this team could stay together longer, then maybe just maybe they could be much better new year. The problem with this logic is transfers, graduation, and leaving early will kill this program. This is much worst than with any other coach that I have seen.

Tarhater
Tarhater
7 years ago

It can be boiled down to 3 primary areas 1) freshman point guards very seldom get it done consistently. DS,jr looks like he expends effort at an 60% rate and his talent takes him the rest of the way 2) Anya’s lack of eating discipline cost his team a defensive leader and 3) Abu is fundamentally awful-boxing out, rebounding, etc Consistently inconsistent. Coach Gott made few adjustments this year.

NC State Basketball

Georgetown Transfer Dontrez Styles Commits to NC State!

Published

on

Georgetown Forward Transfer Dontrez Styles (6’6″/212) has committed to NC State!

Styles was the 2nd leading scorer for Georgetown this season, averaging 12.8 points per game, while grabbing 5.8 boards. He shot 36.8% from three.

Originally, Sytles was a consensus 4-Star prospect in UNC’s 2021 recruiting class. 247Sports ranked him as the #62 overall player nationally, and the #2 player in the state of North Carolina, playing for Kinston High School.

After two seasons with the Tar Heels, Styles entered the Portal, and took an Official Visit to NC State and Georgetown, and ultimately chose the Hoyas.

ON3 ranks Styles as the #104 overall player in the Portal.

With his final year of eligibility, Styles’ made the right choice this time.

NC State now has 2 scholarships remaining after Styles’ commitment.

Continue Reading

NC State Basketball

NC State Forward Katie Peneueta Enters the Transfer Portal

Published

on

NC State Forward Katie Peneueta is entering the Transfer Portal.

Peneueta transferred to NC State last offseason from Sacramento State, where she averaged 8.4 points, shooting 45.5% from three.

In her one year at NC State, Peneueta only played 8 games for the Wolfpack, battling injuries throughout the year. Peneueta has 1 year of eligibility.

With Peneueta entering the Portal, NC State now has 3 scholarships available heading into the 2024-25 season.

Continue Reading

NC State Basketball

Boston Center Caitlin Weimar is on an Official Visit to NC State

Published

on

Boston Transfer Center Caitlin Weimar (6’4″) is currently on an Official Visit to NC State.

Weimar is the reigning Patriot League Player of the Year, and has been named Defensive Player of the Year the past two years. She has earned 1st Team Patriot League Honors the past two seasons.

This year, Weimar averaged 18.7 points, 10.6 rebounds and 2.8 blocks. As a Junior, she averaged 15.5 points and 10.0 rebounds. She shot 55.5% this year, and 59.7% last year.

With NC State not having River Baldwin at Center next year, adding Weimar is an extremely exciting possibility.

Continue Reading

NC State Basketball

What did an ACC Title & Final Four Mean to NC State Legend TJ Warren?

Published

on

What did an ACC Title & Final Four mean to NC State Legend TJ Warren? I caught up with the man who won the ACC Player of the Year Award in 2014 to get his take.

What was it like for you watching NC State go from the #10 seed in the ACC Tournament, to winning the Championship, to going to the Final Four?

I’m a second generation Wolfpack basketball player. Wolf blood runs through my veins, so to be able to witness a ride like that was truly amazing.

What did this run say about Kevin Keatts and these players? In what ways did you see them adapt, change or persevere?

I think that is speaks to the heart that the players have. As a 10th seed in the ACC tournament, it’s easy to pack it in and look towards the offseason, but they did the opposite. They bonded together over adversity and that’s what made them so endearing. Hard work in the face of adversity, that’s something that Wolfpack fans can relate to.

As one of the best players to ever wear the Red & White, what did this run mean to you personally?

As I mentioned earlier, NCSU hoops has been in my family for a long time, so it meant a whole lot personally. This run definitely took me back to some of the fond memories I have of putting on the Red & White and playing in front of a packed house at the PNC.

What was the most memorable moment for you?

I think Mike’s shot to tie the game at the end of regulation. It just felt like destiny at that point. Anytime you get to beat UNC and Duke days apart is special too.

How do you think this run can change things for the NC State Basketball program going forward?

I think that it puts us back on the national radar where we belong. After a magical run like that, I think it makes players want to be a part of that. A run like that reinvigorates a program definitely.

_______

Warren is 1 of only 6 NC State players to ever be named the ACC Player of the Year. In his Sophomore season, Warren was named a 2nd Team All-American by Sporting News and the AP. He averaged 24.9 points per game, which is the 5th best mark in a single season in NC State history. Warren scored 871 points that year, which is the most points ever scored in a single season by a Wolfpack player.

TJ was selected by the Phoenix Suns with the 14th overall pick in the 2014 NBA Draft.

Continue Reading