CC has brought enthusiasm and recruiting success to NU that a brow beaten BC could not. BC was a brilliant coach ,whose time at NU had run out as a result of recruiting indifference, dismal facilities and a lack of administration support. BC led NU to a modicum of success relative to its history by employing a complicated offense and gimmick defense to occasionally beat more talented teams but in the long run talent reigns supreme.
CC is bringing talent to NU that did not occur in the past. My concern was whether he could win using Duke's system with NU talent, albeit improved. The willingness to use a zone, I believe, is CC's first step to becoming his own man. If you analyze NU's talent , the 2-3 zone is much better suited to utilize Olah's size and minimize his defensive mobility issues. Likewise, Taphorn can now be an integral part of the player rotation
I don't think the 2-3 is the answer but using a defense that allows better use of his personnel, shows progression of CC's coaching maturity
Someone posted, sarcastically, that they didn't want to see the 1-3-1 but I would disagree. I would love to see us be able to go from the 2-3 to man to the 1-3-1. The 1-3-1 can be very effective against teams without an athletic big man accepting over the top passes. I think Skelly would be the ideal player on the baseline in the 1-3-1, an energetic mobile big man would be a lot different than having a small point guard there. CC would have to make sure he balances offense with defense but I could see McIntosh out front with Law and Lindsey on the wings with Olah in the middle. Vassar and Demps could play out front as well with McIntosh on one of the wings occasionally. NU has to think outside the box and maybe CC is reaching that point in his career
I give a big thumbs up for CC's new flexibility. He even admitted that he had to learn how to coach a zone. That is progress that hopefully will continue