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In keeping with SB Nation’s innovative use of social media in reshaping sports journalism, our vision is a women's basketball site that goes beyond merely providing game reports; instead, we want to capture the narratives that fuel our passion for the game, while maintaining the critical stance that helps us understand the game better.
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Stanford Cardinal (11-1)
If there is any team that you definitely can't judge based on non-conference play, it's the Stanford Cardinal.
Over the last couple of seasons, it seems that Stanford takes a tough non-conference loss, people worry about how good they are without acknowledging a rather simple truth: the Cardinal generally start slow.
A large part is that they have lost significant contributors to the first round of the WNBA Draft for each of the last three seasons, which means that coach Tara VanDerveer has tweaked the offense to maximize the strengths of their remaining personnel. So they have their hiccups, maybe fight through a few early injuries or illness, and then end up back in the Final Four where they are looking to return to for the sixth straight time this season.
This season, it was hard not to watch their blowout loss to UConn at home and wonder if they had what it takes to even win the Pac-12, something that feels weird to even think about. So taking the broader view, what did the non-conference statistics say about Stanford?
Statistical profile:
eFg% Fta/Fga Oreb% Tov% TeamFacs Stan 52.05% 25.88% 40.31% 0.16 6.12 Opp 35.49% 18.58% 29.06% 0.13 4.05
Weighted eFg% fta/fga Oreb% Tov%
Stan 1.66 0.15 0.47 -0.21
Four Factors statistics for the Stanford Cardinal during non-conference play.
Pace PPP Mev/Poss Adj Syn 65.33 1.11 1.18 0.50 65.31 0.80 0.50 0.33
Efficiency statistics for the Stanford Cardinal during non-conference play.
Narrative description: Among the slowest paced teams in the nation, Stanford beats opponents with superior ball movement and execution while limiting their mistakes. That execution carries over to the defensive end, where they held non-conference opponents to the lowest efficiency among Pac-12 teams this year despite not forcing many turnovers.
SOS: 63.35 (1st nationally)
Upset wins: N/A
Upset losses: N/A
MVP: Chiney Ogwumike, F (6'3", Jr., 22.96 MVP)
You don't need me to tell you Ogwumike is good, but this season she enters conference play as the overwhelming favorite for Pac-12 Player of the Year. She is a high usage (30.39% usage rate), high efficiency (62.56% true shooting percentage) forward who is an elite rebounder (18.42% offensive rebounding percentage), which contributes to that major strength above.
Among the most impressive things is that she has a very low turnover rate (10.47%) for someone that is responsible for so much of her team's offensive and spends so much time fighting off double teams. The only way to really "stop" her is to do what UConn did well: force left when she faces up and try to force her into taking tough, contested shots.
Strengths:
Weaknesses:
X-Factor: Toni Kokenis, G (5'11", Jr., 4.91 MVP)
There are a lot of players who game-to-game we could look at as x-factors for Stanford. Tinkle is playing well and Ruef has done some great things for Stanford this year that don't show up in the numbers and
Yet Kokenis stands out because she is having a bit of a down year and one thing that really stands out is her efficiency as a distributor. Last season, Kokenis had a pure point rating of 2.58; during non-conference play, she had a pure point rating of -1.85, which in the world of point guard play is a significant swing (not that we're talking about Kokenis as a draft prospect yet but if you recall, 2.5 is above the threshold for a WNBA point guard prospect and -1.85 usually marks a poor college point guard).
Amber Orrange's efficiency as a distributor is down as well and while a certain major departure from last season could very well explain both starting guards' declining efficiency as distributors, Kokenis' is a bit more problematic for the team because she's also the more efficient scorer because she can hit the three and she got to the free throw line at almost twice the rate of Orrange during non-conference play (Kokenis, 34.88%, Orrange, 18.26%). Orrange can certainly bring some of the ball handling and speed that Kokenis brings to the court, but the scoring punch from a lead ball handler is something Stanford otherwise lacks and is a reason why it felt like Kokenis had to stay on the court even during a subpar game against UConn.
Of course, there is an explanation for Kokenis' decline: she missed a pair of exhibition games (as well as their Pac-12 game against Utah) due to an unspecified health issue, as described by Jake Curtis of the Examiner. But if indeed that is having an affect on her season, the extent to which she can recover could have an impact on how Stanford does against Cal this week and possibly their performance in the NCAA tournament.
Key question: Where does Stanford rank among the elite?
UConn exploited two things: first, Stanford's inability to respond well to an uptempo game with guard pressure and, second, their inability to find other options once a team turns Ogwumike into a less efficient scorer by forcing her out of her comfort zone. Those two things could certainly make one wonder whether they can actually compete with the other elite teams in the nation.
The flip side: we can't ignore that Stanford had the toughest schedule in non-conference play, is facing a much tougher than usual Pac-12 schedule, and still has outstanding numbers that most teams couldn't put up against a much weaker schedule.
Yet fast forwarding from non-conference play and to the present, Women's Basketball State has them ranked third as of today in their statistical rankings sandwiched in between Duke and Baylor. Sagarin Ratings have Stanford third in a virtual tie with Notre Dame. Stanford was ranked fifth in the newly released AP poll, which is difficult, though not impossible, to dispute after that big loss to UConn but ends up being the lowest ranking of any of those ratings.
In other words, most reasonable rankings have an almost interchangeable five team elite with Stanford somewhere between 3-5 (there is a next tier of sixth-best teams that includes some variation of Cal, Kentucky, and Tennessee). And that's perfectly fair.
The dilemma comes when deciding who gets those top four seeds in the NCAA tournament. Even if they run the table in the Pac-12, which is possible though it would be quite a feat this season, the case to get back into the top four might be difficult after that crushing loss to UConn. If Stanford falls to Cal - generally in the 6-8 range in those ratings - the question is how that will affect their ability to get one of those top four seeds.
The fact is that Cal is a very good team and has what it takes to knock off Stanford using a game plan similar to what UConn implemented - at least once, if not twice this season - especially if Kokenis is still struggling with unspecified health issues. But how would even one loss to Cal combined with the UConn rout affect how people think about Stanford, a team that generally peaks at the end of the season once VanDerveer's system is fully taken up by players?
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