HOKIES HOOPS CENTRAL: Louisville (4-3) at Virginia Tech (5-3) 4PM ACCN

HOKIES HOOPS CENTRAL: Louisville (4-3) at Virginia Tech (5-3) 4PM ACCN

Louisville (4-3)
At Virginia Tech (5-3)
December 3rd, 2023
Cassell Coliseum
4 p.m. ET
ACCN
Virginia Tech Sports Network

ACCN
Play-by-Play: Connor Onion
Analyst: Josh Pastner

Local Radio
Virginia Tech Sports Network
Play-by-Play: Zach Mackey
Analyst: Mike Burnop

Current Spread: Hokies -13.5
Over/Under: -147.5

ACC Opener
The Hokies start ACC play with Louisville coming to Cassell Coliseum. The Hokies return home for the first time in two weeks. The Louisville Cardinals squad comes in 4-3. This will be the 47th meeting between the Hokies and Louisville. The Hokies are 10-36 but come in winners of two in a row after last years win at Louisville 71-54, the Hokies first win there since 1990.

The Cardinals are coached by Kenny Payne, who is in his second season at Louisville. The Cardinals are 8-31 under Payne. They have already matched their season win total for last year. Louisville is his first head coaching job with assistant stops at Oregon, Kentucky and the New York Knicks. The Cardinals opened their season with a win over UMBC, then a loss to Chattanooga. They beat Coppin State before losing the first two games in their holiday tournament to Texas and Indiana. They escaped New Mexico State in Overtime and needed to come from behind to beat 2-7 Bellarmine.

Louisville signed the #6 recruiting class last season but lost the most impactful player, Trentyn Flowers, who opted to go pro in Australia. The remaining class led by center Dennis Evans added five new faces to the program. The Cardinals also added three transfers as Payne continued to overhaul the program. Amongst the newcomers, Skyy Clark from Illinois has had the most immediate impact but is joined by Tre White from USC in the starting five. Evans has started five of seven games but has had very little impact averaging about 9 mpg and less than two points per contest.

The Cardinals have five players averaging more than 20 mpg but only six average at least 10 mpg. Louisville does not appear to have any injuries coming into this game. The starting five are Clark, White, Michael James, Brandon Huntley-Hatfield and either Evans or JJ Traynor as the fifth starter. Payne relies heavily on his starting five, who account for 72% of the teams minutes.

Louisville under Payne runs a variation of the Havoc defense, so expect to see a variety of press and trap situations from a man-to-man defensive base. Louisville so far this season though seems slow on getting in front of opposing teams, with opponents taking advantage of the Cardinals in the paint, shooting over 50%. Defensively they do contest the perimeter fairly well after a few lapses in their first couple games. Since the third game, they have held opponents under 30% in all five contests and under 18% in three games.

Offensively, the Cardinals rely on positionless motion basketball and Payne specifically said he does not want opponents to be able to predict what they will see which requires him to trust his players to make adjustments as needed with little input from the coaches. The starting guard duo drive the offense combining for over 30 points and ten rebounds. The team averages about 20 perimeter shots per game with four shooters shooting 30% or better but as a team they are averaging 28%.

They reach the free throw line at an incredible rate with three games over 30 attempts, topped by an insane 49 attempts in their overtime win over NMSU. 36 of their 90 points in that game came at the line. Opponents are getting to the line over 20 times though so that negates a possible huge advantage. Four of the six main contributors average over 2.6 fouls per contest.

Cardinals Backcourt

Skyy Clark
55 SO G 6-3 200
17.4 Pts, 2.9 Reb, 2.7 Ast

Tre White
22 SO G 6-7 210
14.9 Pts, 7.0 Reb, 1.3 Ast

Michael James
0 SO G 6-6 195
11.3 Pts, 5.7 Reb, 1.0 Ast

Ty-Laur Johnson
4 FR G 6-0 160
8.9 Pts, 1.1 Reb, 3.7 Ast

Curtis Williams
1 FR G 6-5 205
3.1 Pts, 1.0 Reb, 0.3 Ast

Cardinals Frontcourt
JJ Traynor
12 SR F 6-8 200
10.4 Pts, 4.6 Reb, 0.1 Ast

Brandon Huntley-Hatfield
5 JR F 6-10 235
6.1 Pts, 9.0 Reb, 1.1 Ast

Dennis Evans
11 FR C 7-1 215
1.6 Pts, 0.9 Reb, 0.0 Ast

What to expect from Louisville?
The Cardinals will look to Clark first, second and third and then move the ball primarily to White if Clark cant get the shot. In the games they have lost, the duo have still gotten their numbers but opponents limited the rest of the lineup from scoring.

Clark is also averaging 6.4 free throw attempts per game. Scarier yet he is second on the team in attempts behind White's 7.6 attempts. Four the five starters are averaging at least 4.6 FTA per game. There was one significant outlier against NMSU but they take the ball to the rim hard and create opportunities for themselves. The Hokies need to be prepared for the constant cuts to the rim.

Louisville just seems a step slow in their defense which leaves slashing off ball players open consistently under the basket. Opponents may struggle from the perimeter but so far Chattanooga and Texas are the only opponents that have shot better than 30% from outside on the season. Its difficult to judge if they are really stout or just have not faced a team that can shoot outside.

Rebounding is not a significant plus or minus. White and Huntley-Hatfield are the most consistent rebounders.
Expect to see a four-guard set for the majority of the contest. As stated earlier, starters average 72% of all minutes so foul trouble could have a significant impact on the Cardinals game plan.

Louisville struggled all game to put a smaller, less talented Bellarmine away. Foul trouble forced Louisville to go to its bench more than in any other game and they were extremely unproductive with the bench on the floor. Kenny Payne was also forced to deal with his reserve point guard not wanting to play because they didn't have the right tights he likes to wear.

The Hokies

The Hokies come home following two bad losses. Regardless of poor officiating, it is unlikely the Hokies would have won at Auburn. The biggest concern is that for the third time in three losses the Hokies allowed the opponents post player to dominate inside. Broome had 30 points and 15 rebounds to lead Auburn, Goldin played the biggest role in the blowout loss to FAU and even Mack for South Carolina had a big game. Can Mike Young find a lineup or rotation to counter this weakness going forward?

The Hokies again struggled to execute offensively and turned the ball over an alarming 21 times or about one in three possessions. Pedulla was especially careless with seven turnovers. Auburn turned the turnovers into 25 points. Starters are continuing to play too many minutes and they were visibly worn down against Auburn.

MJ Collins is tentatively expected to return against Louisville but other than being able to spread the workload, continues to be an overall loss on offense. His defense and turnovers created are important but essentially wiped out by his shooting.

Cattoor was the only Hokie to finish in double digits and even though the Hokies won the rebounding battle they only shot 27% on the night. The score could have been much worse but Auburn shot 13% from outside on 16 attempts.

The Hokies are back home against one of the weakest ACC teams so hopefully it's a recipe to get right.

In Closing
The Hokies face a press defense for the third game in a row which does not help the Hokies. Fortunately this will be the weakest version of the press they will go up against. Can the Hokies protect the ball and work it inside to open players underneath?

Has Coach Young and staff been able to assess the last couple games and schemed up ways to prevent that type of performance against athletic rosters?

Can the Hokies get Kidd back in the swing of things scoring wise? He struggled mightily in the last two games and needs a bounce back as the Hokies start ACC play. Is Mike Young able to rest the starters more throughout in this contest without putting the victory at risk.

Hokies should have the edge in this contest and fans have to hope they shook off the last couple games and come in focused on building an early lead and are able to force Louisville into risking open looks to pressure the ball. A win gives the Hokies some breathing space but an early conference loss to what might be the worst team in the ACC could be a strong sign of what to expect.

DISCLAIMER: Forum topics may not have been written or edited by The Key Play staff.

Comments

LET'S GO

I'd love for Young to try out a lineup of Kidd, Long, Young, Cattoor, and Pedulla; utilizing Poteat as Kidd's backup, Beran as Long's backup, Camden as Young's backup, Nickel as Cattoor's backup, and Rechsteiner as Pedulla's. (All assuming Collins is still out with injury, otherwise, move Nickel to Young, and Collins to Cattoor)

Never Forget #1 Overall Seed UVA 54, #64 UMBC 74

Long term I prefer Nickel in the starting five over Young. Young is a good perimeter punch but his defense is not where it needs to be yet to get starters minutes.

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

Game about to tip on the ACCN

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

Play by play guy just tried to say in serious comments that the Hokies could turn to Robbie Beran for inside scoring. Has he watched any film or even read a stats sheet?

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

Hokies again marking broad side of barn safe ...open looks but hitting zippy

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

Missing open shots.

Doesn't matter if it's cake or pie as long as it's chocolate.

Who drinks on a tie?

Doesn't matter if it's cake or pie as long as it's chocolate.

BOTH!!!

and me! cheers!

I seldom speak to loluva grads, but when I do, I tell them I want large fries.

These guys are driving me to it. Their offense has been so bad. If they hadn't gotten to the rim so far they would be getting blown out.

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

We must have pissed of the BBall gods. They have smote our shooting in the past couple games.

Pedulla has become such a liability on both sides. He us unable to stay level-headed.

Fire Whit.

Cattoor with the fakeout to the 3pter then the spin cycle dunk by Kidd....beautiful

Never Forget #1 Overall Seed UVA 54, #64 UMBC 74

So many turnovers

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

I would love to see a Stat with teams season 3Pt% vs. when they play VT.

It's uncanny

Opponents have shot over 38% against Hokies in four of eight. Of those four, three were at least 6% better than their season average.

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

Thx..seems to consistent to simply be a coincidence

Why is Beran playing still?

That big from Florida gonna walk into a starting role as a true freshman next year if he can score 2ppg

Louisville shooting over 44% inside and out.

Hokies shooting 35% overall and 15% from outside

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

Still can't beat a press, Pedulla turnover, drink, cattor missed 3 drink

Collins missed shot, drink

How many shots within five feet have we missed?

Fire Whit.

Too many

Nine

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

Cattoor and Pedulla both may have to sit rest of half

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

Just start all the young guys the rest of the game

Nickel, Beran and Long 1 for 9. Can't win that way.

Doesn't matter if it's cake or pie as long as it's chocolate.

You can see how the Hokies are getting free under the hoop how that's a huge weakness but Young still isn't running plays to create it...it's just happening because Louisville is that bad on defense.

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

Nickel all time leading VHSL scorer is becoming the Boykin wears XXL gloves of VT Basketball

How can we not get a shot at the end of the half. CMY teams do not score with the ball when the shot clock is expiring. Do they not practice that?

Doesn't matter if it's cake or pie as long as it's chocolate.

They play hold the ball too long and regularly screws them up. Until they can show they can score at will they need to run the offense as normal rather than get cute.

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

Yeah. They seem to have two plays: dribble out the time and throw up a wild shot or dribble around and lose the ball without a shot.

Doesn't matter if it's cake or pie as long as it's chocolate.

Teams combined for 18 turnovers in the first half. Really sloppy on both sides.

Hokies came in 13 point favorites but still look lost on offense when the outside shots don't fall.

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

Cattoor and Kidd lead with 8 points each, followed by Collins 6. Nobody else with more than a bucket.

7:7 ATO margin for the Hokies vs 7:11 for Louisville. Need to exploit the turnovers.

Outrebounded 20-13.

Glenn is the only Cardinal in relative foul trouble. Pedulla is the only Hokie.

Never Forget #1 Overall Seed UVA 54, #64 UMBC 74

Need Kidd though to finish inside. Was 4-8 inside three feet.

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

good call
kidd 2 for 2 to start the 2nd half

I seldom speak to loluva grads, but when I do, I tell them I want large fries.

Yeah Louisville allowed Bellarmine like 50 points in the lane or the free throw line. They just lost guys over and over and were late to defend.

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

Just like that...Kidd dunk

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

The problem must be the basket Lille shoots at this half. When we had it, we couldn't make an open shot. Now they can't.

Doesn't matter if it's cake or pie as long as it's chocolate.

Not a fan of the Kidd hook shot only because he should be able to back that guy down so it's a layup

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

I don't know if Beren could hit a shot standing on a ladder over top of the basket

Beran may actually be more of an offensive black hole than Collins

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

Aged poorly. Point still stands.

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

Collins is actually looking competent today. Hopefully it's not a one time thing.

Poteat with the slam

Never Forget #1 Overall Seed UVA 54, #64 UMBC 74

Pedulla with another unforced mistake

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

I do not recognize this Collins

Never Forget #1 Overall Seed UVA 54, #64 UMBC 74

Maybe they injected shooting abilities in his knee recovery

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

Nickel Long and Beran 3-15 from the floor

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

Insert Collins into this list and on a rotational basis game x game, this is the biggest problem outside of the overall athletic ability within this System based program.

At this point, replace Beran with Poteat. It's been said before, but why not give this a try? Could cause some mismatch problems to our favor.

The only reason I can grab onto about tonight's Collins is he got humbled by not starting and it put a fire under his ass.

Just need like three stops in a row to break this back and forth

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

I am loving collins play today

Danny is always open

going to be a game of free throws here at the end

I seldom speak to loluva grads, but when I do, I tell them I want large fries.

Hokies got lucky there that wasn't shooting

Rob Peterson
VTCC
Charlie/Hotel Company
Class of 1999

20 for Collins

Never Forget #1 Overall Seed UVA 54, #64 UMBC 74

Yay!

"That kid you're talking to right there, I think he played his nuts off! And you can quote me on that shit!" -Bud Foster

1 - 0 in the ACC.
Collins found the basket.
FAM!!!

I seldom speak to loluva grads, but when I do, I tell them I want large fries.