The Coaching Legacy of Milton Mackay (College Hoops 2K8)

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  • CalBears
    Rookie
    • Feb 2010
    • 429

    #1

    The Coaching Legacy of Milton Mackay (College Hoops 2K8)

    Game: College Hoops 2K8
    Mode: Career Legacy
    Difficulty: All-Conference (rspencer sliders)

    Well, I'm back. If any of you remember me, I posted my Colby Dabel legacy from the now defunct 2k sports forum here. You can find that here: http://www.operationsports.com/forum...hoops-2k8.html. I'm back now, hopefully for good. This should be a fun ride!
    OOTP Dynasty Thread
  • CalBears
    Rookie
    • Feb 2010
    • 429

    #2
    Re: The Coaching Legacy of Milton Mackay (College Hoops 2K8)


    Texas State tabs Mackay for head job
    Following a 15 win season, Texas State lost their head coach Doug Davalos, as he unexpectedly resigned. In his stead, the university announced the hiring of 34 year old Milton Mackay, formerly an assistant at St. Louis.

    Mackay is a disciple of current SLU coach Rick Majerus, whose hard man to man defense and team toughness is renowned. Mackay is expected to bring much the same approach to this Texas State team, whose run a variety of different zones, presses, and other defenses. With a Majerus disciple comes a slower pace as well, new to a team used to getting out and running. Majerus, to his credit, was classy about the decision.

    “I’m happy for Milt. He basically ran our defense a year ago and he’s excellent at getting the most of our guys. I’m obviously not happy he left but he’ll do an excellent job there.”

    Mackay, when asked of the comparison to his old boss, downplayed it in some elements.

    “I curse a lot less,” he laughed, “and I’m not a real in your face guy. But stylistically, we’re going to do a lot of the same things. I do like to extend the man to man full court to slow the tempo, and our offense will probably be a little slower than St. Louis’ was a year ago.”

    Mackay is not known as a great recruiter, and he even admitted as such in his presser, saying he would delegate much of that responsibility to his assistants. He believes he can extract defense of good, smart kids without the need for oodles of talent. His straightforward, honest, and non-cursing approach should play well in conservative Texas, even if his team doesn’t at first.
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    • CalBears
      Rookie
      • Feb 2010
      • 429

      #3
      Re: The Coaching Legacy of Milton Mackay (College Hoops 2K8)


      Meet the Roster
      Milton Mackay in his first move after his opening presser unveiled his 11 man roster for the 2010-2011 season. The roster features 7 seniors, meaning that the pressure on the team will be immense.

      JR PG Eddie Rios (62) (6-0, 190): Rios will run the team at the point guard spot, and he fits the role as he is a calm leader. Rios can hit the three, run the break and is a quality ballhandler on the offensive end. Defensively he is quick enough to pressure the ball and pesky enough to do it for around 20-22 minutes a game.

      SR PG Ryan White (61) (5-11, 175): White is an offensive player first and second, which could lead to a clash with the defensively-oriented Mackay. White is a gifted scorer in a lot of ways, with the ability to get to the bucket but not necessarily finish and hit the 3 ball with confidence. He is the prototypical 'irrational confidence' guy, a shooter who does not care whether he is 0-9 or 7-9. Defensively he is undersized for the 2 spot and will struggle at times to contest taller shooters.

      SR SF Cameron Johnson (71) (6-7, 215): Johnson is the leading scorer returning from a year ago at 14.6 per game. That number will decrease this year as the tempo slows down. Johnson is a player that thrives running the floor and finishing strong to the basket in transition. In the half court, he is limited to posting up and spot up shooting. Defensively, he is long and strong and can get in the passing lanes for steals.

      SO PF Matt Staff (57) (6-10, 220): Matt Staff has a lot of upside, although his offensive game is limited to pick and rolls and dump downs directly under the basket for open lay-ups. Don't expect a whole lot of post ups to him. Defensively he won't block many shots despite his 6-10 frame and he might get bullied by stronger upperclassmen. He can hold his own, however.

      SR C Johnathan Sloan (59) (6-9, 230): Sloan is a slightly more accomplished post-up player, although he will not have the offense run through him. He's a strong defensive player and will guard taller 5s due to his weight. Not a rim protector by any means and not a terrific help defender but can contain his own man.

      JR SG John Bowman (60) (6-4, 220): Bowman is a one way player; his offensive game is kindly described as non-existant. He can dunk a little bit, but his handle is shaky and his jumpshot is very similar to that of most centers. Defensively he is a menace, physically dominating smaller guards and bumping them off the ball. He can get deflections and can even block shots. Mackay after one practice said, "I love this kid."

      SR SG Uriel Segura (57) (6-3, 185): Segura can provide a little bit of shooting off the bench but getting to the hole is not a specialty of his. More of a midrange shooter than a 3 point shooter. Defensively he is not a liability but he doesn't add much either. Mackay would prefer to go for a 3 guard rotation and play Segura as little as possible.

      SR SF Tony Bishop (60) (6-6, 205): Bishop is a dead-eye 3 point shooter and can even penetrate after getting defenders to fall for a myriad of pump fakes. He'll often be the middle man against a 2-3 zone to hit mid-range jumpers. Defensively the jury is out; quicker players can go by him but he's solid.

      SR SF J.B. Conley (60) (6-6, 225): In many ways similar to Bishop, Conley is a good shooter, although his range is better from 15-17 feet out than from 3 point land. Also capable of sliding into the free throw line spot against a zone. Defensively he will be asked to guard 4s; his weight is up to the task, but he will undersized.

      FR SF Basil Brown (54) (6-6, 195): Brown is primarily a player for next year, but he'll fill in at the 4 spot at times with the lack of size. He can shoot a short jumper but other than that isn't an offensive player.

      FR C Nic Hinton (54) (6-9, 225): Another big body without much skill. He'll only play in case of foul trouble, and when he does he'll do little more than rebound and protect the rim. He's Mackay's project and he'll play a bigger role next season.

      Overall: A perimeter oriented team with plenty of experience. They should finish in the upper half of an okay Southland conference and challenge in the conference tournament. With only a few underclassmen, this team needs to challenge for the tournament or Mackay could be on the hot seat.
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      • JJ4
        Rookie
        • Mar 2010
        • 484

        #4
        Re: The Coaching Legacy of Milton Mackay (College Hoops 2K8)

        at least you'll have one go to guy to help you out for year one.


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        • Deuce2223
          Hall Of Fame
          • Dec 2007
          • 12571

          #5
          Re: The Coaching Legacy of Milton Mackay (College Hoops 2K8)

          Good to see you back. I have always like Texas State and Texas Southern. Good luck filling those 7 scholly's in Year 1. Could be fun brining in your kind of guy's early.

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          • CalBears
            Rookie
            • Feb 2010
            • 429

            #6
            Re: The Coaching Legacy of Milton Mackay (College Hoops 2K8)

            Originally posted by JJ4
            at least you'll have one go to guy to help you out for year one.
            Yep I'm hoping Johnson can fill that role. White and Rios are both shooters who really fit into what I like to do offensively though. Thanks for stopping in

            Originally posted by Deuce2223
            Good to see you back. I have always like Texas State and Texas Southern. Good luck filling those 7 scholly's in Year 1. Could be fun brining in your kind of guy's early.
            Thanks, it's good to be back. Those 7 schollys is the main reason I came in. I want to get my players on the floor and implement the system my team runs in a hurry. Could lead to some tough early seasons, but I'm willing to bear it.
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            • CalBears
              Rookie
              • Feb 2010
              • 429

              #7
              Re: The Coaching Legacy of Milton Mackay (College Hoops 2K8)


              Schedule Released
              The Bobcats announced their schedule today, with one of the most difficult non-conference slates in the country. Here’s the match-ups:

              11/9 at Texas Tech
              11/14 at New Mexico
              11/19 at Maryland
              11/21 at Missouri
              11/28 at Baylor
              12/1 Cal Poly
              12/5 at Kansas State
              12/8 at Texas A&M
              12/11 at VCU
              12/16 at Texas
              12/23 at Kansas
              12/29 at Iowa State
              1/10 at Northwestern State
              1/12 at Central Arkansas
              1/17 SE Louisiana
              1/19 Nicholls State
              1/24 TXAM-CC
              1/26 at UTSA
              1/30 at Stephen F. Austin
              2/2 Sam Houston State
              2/9 at UT Arlington
              2/13 at McNeese State
              2/16 Lamar
              2/21 at TXAM CC
              2/23: UTSA
              2/27: Stephen F. Austin
              3/1: at Sam Houston State
              3/4: UT Arlington


              Mackey’s comments: “Well, I asked the AD for a tough schedule and I got one. This is a senior team that needs to become battle tested and hardened in a hurry, and there’s no better way to do that than to get our rear end kicked. If we can get 3 or 4 wins outside of league play we’ll be successful. The conference looks tough this year and we certainly didn’t get any favors with a tough conference schedule, playing most of the bottomfeeders just once.”
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              • CalBears
                Rookie
                • Feb 2010
                • 429

                #8
                Re: The Coaching Legacy of Milton Mackay (College Hoops 2K8)


                Southland Conference Preview
                McNeese State is the favorite, with an experienced crew coming back and the most talent in the league. Junior small forward Patrick Richard (71) is the best player, although center PJ Alawoya will give plenty of team’s problems. Right behind them is co-favorite Stephen F. Austin. It would be shocking if one of those two teams didn’t win the conference. Point guard Eddie Williams and post Jereal Scott lead the way, with BEST SHOOTER Downing (61) coming off the bench.

                Behind the two favorites lie a bunch of similarly talented teams. Nicholls State leads the pack with BEST PLAYER Anatoly Bose (76) being a star and an experienced backcourt with a pair of seniors supporting him. UTSA is next up with BEST FRESHMAN Tyler Wood (67) sliding comfortably into a starting lineup led by star senior point guard Devin Gibson. Sam Houston State is one team that could surprise for a title, with a solid interior unit. Northwestern State is a balanced squad with the BEST DEFENDER Mosley coming off the bench for interior help. Texas State is the most experienced team in the league and has shooting all over the floor. Defense is a question mark. Lamar has the BEST PLAYMAKER in James coming off the bench and a solid scoring shooting guard in Anthony Miles. Southeastern Louisiana has some solid shooting but a fairly nondescript squad.

                Texas A&M Corpus-Christi, UT Arlington, and Central Arkansas bring up the rear, with Corpus Christi's power forward Damond Watt being the top player on the three rosters.
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                • CalBears
                  Rookie
                  • Feb 2010
                  • 429

                  #9
                  Re: The Coaching Legacy of Milton Mackay (College Hoops 2K8)


                  Texas Tech drops Texas State in 5OT thriller
                  The Texas State Bobcats went out and played a great game in their opener, but it was not enough to take down home team and Big-12 contenders Texas Tech. The Red Raiders won in 5 (!) overtimes by the score of 82-80.

                  The slow pace that Coach Mackey implemented seemed to fluster Texas Tech in the first half, as they were not able to get out and run as they would like. Only a combined 36 points were scored as the halftime score was 20-16 in favor of the Red Raiders.

                  The second half seemed to turn in Texas Tech’s favor, as the lead expanded to 11 with center Robert Lewandowski began to assert his will on the inside. However, the Red Raiders would quickly go cold, and especially their star John Roberson. Meanwhile, the Bobcats began to heat up and put the ball in the bucket, even fast breaking on occasion. Eddie Rios evened up the game with 1:36 left in the game, and despite multiple chances for both teams neither could strike a blow. They went into the overtimes tied 37-37.

                  Roberson seemed to set a tone with his 3 to open the overtime, but the teams battled even.

                  Roberson hit another 3 to open the second overtime, but again Texas Tech could not put the Bobcats away. Neither team could get any separation from each other at any time. In the fourth overtime late, Rios had a chance to push the ball on a fast break with seemingly an advantage but opted to pull it out for the last shot.

                  Mike Singletary was the man to finally put a stop to the madness, with his pump fake and drive leading to a lay-up that gave a 2 point advantage with 7 seconds to play. Ryan White would get a decent look on a pull-up, but it hit front rim and Texas Tech had survived 82-80.

                  “We just never had a killer instinct,” said coach Mackey after the game. “We were happy to be tied and never seemed to really want to win. That’s unacceptable. The way we played was exceptional, but I want more.”

                  Roberson led the way with 31 points, but on 35% shooting and 6 turnovers. Mackey would take that any day against a star like Roberson. Singletary provided a secondary effort with 15 points and forward Brad Reese registered a double double. Ryan White led the way with 15 points for the Bobcats who had 4 starters in double figures.

                  Texas Tech 82-Texas State 80

                  Key Red Raiders
                  Roberson 31 points
                  Singletary 15 points, 7 rebounds
                  Reese 12 points, 10 rebounds
                  Key Bobcats
                  White 15 points, 6 rebounds
                  Johnson 12 points,
                  Rios 11 points, 6 assists
                  Staff 10 points, 12 rebounds
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                  • Deuce2223
                    Hall Of Fame
                    • Dec 2007
                    • 12571

                    #10
                    Re: The Coaching Legacy of Milton Mackay (College Hoops 2K8)

                    Wow you played 5 OT's and you still only manage 80 points. I would say calling your coach defensive minded is spot on

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                    • CalBears
                      Rookie
                      • Feb 2010
                      • 429

                      #11
                      Re: The Coaching Legacy of Milton Mackay (College Hoops 2K8)

                      Originally posted by Deuce2223
                      Wow you played 5 OT's and you still only manage 80 points. I would say calling your coach defensive minded is spot on
                      Yes, I practice what I preach haha. But I also slow down the tempo a great deal, either getting a wide open bucket on the break or pulling it out and running 20-35 seconds off the shot clock. And then my man to man press slows down their offense.

                      I'm just winding down school for the year (done next week!) and then I will be updating much more regularly. Should be one tomorrow or Sunday.
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                      • CalBears
                        Rookie
                        • Feb 2010
                        • 429

                        #12
                        Re: The Coaching Legacy of Milton Mackay (College Hoops 2K8)


                        The Pit swallows Texas State
                        It was the second half, and coach Milton Mackey was imploring his team at a TV timeout to pick up their play.

                        “We didn’t work that hard in that first half to just throw it away in the second did we gentlemen? This game isn’t over if we just go back to basics!”

                        Instead of replying to their coach’s call, Texas State fell apart. The loud crowd for New Mexico seemed to intimidate numerous players, including sophomore Matt Staff, and it led to a total second half collapse. After trailing by just 3 at the half, 21-18, New Mexico was able to expand the lead to 20 before eventually closing out a win 54-39.

                        The switch seemed to turn the second the Bobcats left the locker room, as the Lobos opened the half on an 8-2 run and never really stopped going at the throat until the reserves for both teams were in.

                        Kendall Williams led the way with 25 points for New Mexico, the only Lobo in double figures. He hit 6 3 pointers. Ryan White led the way for Texas State with 11 points on 4-6 shooting. The Lobos had 13 steals which helped create a balanced attack and fast breaking opportunities.

                        New Mexico wins their third straight game and start the year off 3-0, while Texas State is 0-2 with a game against the 3-0 #18 Maryland up next.

                        New Mexico 54-Texas State 39

                        Key Lobos
                        Williams 25 points, 6-12 3
                        Hardeman 7 points, 3 steals
                        Gordon 3 blocks
                        Key Bobcats
                        White 11 points
                        Sloan 6 points, 5 rebounds
                        Johnson 1-8 FG
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                        • CalBears
                          Rookie
                          • Feb 2010
                          • 429

                          #13
                          Re: The Coaching Legacy of Milton Mackay (College Hoops 2K8)


                          Maryland sneak by Texas State
                          The Terrapins were almost dropped by a major upset in the Comcast Center, but recovered just in time to sneak by the upset prone Texas State. A strong second half was the only thing stopping Maryland from being on Sportscenter for all the wrong reasons.

                          The Texas State hard defense that Coach Mackey has been preaching surprised Maryland, who committed 11 turnovers in the first half. Texas State didn’t unleash the reins and get out and run with those turnovers, but the added possessions took the pressure off a struggling offense and especially its star Cameron Johnson. Coming off a 1-8 shooting night at New Mexico, Johnson had 10 in the first half and would finish with 16, scoring on interior moves, three pointers, and free throws all night long. This combination of factors put Texas State up 25-19 at the half.

                          The normally animated Gary Williams was even more emotional than normal with his team playing so poorly. The main victims were the talented stars of the team, Jordan Williams and Sean Mosley. Both stepped up their games, with Williams dominating the post and any big man or double team the Bobcats threw at him. Texas State was scoring at an alright rate, but they just could not stop Maryland.

                          The game came down to the wire, with Texas State falling behind and then evening up the game at 50 on a Matt Staff lay-up. They forced a stop, a rarity in the second half, and seemed to be poised to spring an upset. Instead Eddie Rios culminated a terrible night for him with a turnover, and Mosley made an open fast break lay-up to give Maryland a 52-50 lead. Mackey put the ball in the hands of Ryan White as the time ticked down, but White’s 3 pointers for the win was long and Williams' team had escaped 52-50.

                          Mackey opens up his coaching career 0-3 and the road does not grow easier with 3-0 Missouri awaiting. Maryland improves to 4-0 with UCLA awaiting them.

                          Maryland 52-Texas State 50

                          Key Terps
                          Williams 18 points
                          Mosley 15 points, 5 turnovers
                          Gregory 6 rebounds
                          Key Bobcats
                          Johnson 16 points, 7 rebounds
                          White 8 points
                          Staff 8 points
                          Rios 1-7 FG, 7 assists
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                          • Deuce2223
                            Hall Of Fame
                            • Dec 2007
                            • 12571

                            #14
                            Re: The Coaching Legacy of Milton Mackay (College Hoops 2K8)

                            39 points. You really are a defensive coach

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                            • CalBears
                              Rookie
                              • Feb 2010
                              • 429

                              #15
                              Re: The Coaching Legacy of Milton Mackay (College Hoops 2K8)

                              Originally posted by Deuce2223
                              39 points. You really are a defensive coach
                              I am haha. Although that total had a lot more to do with my best player showing up to the floor hung over or totally distracted, he was horrible (as was the rest of the team). Frustrating bunch we got, hopefully with 7 scholarships I can bring in my style of players.
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