I'm a little surprised that no one has mentioned the fatigue factor. Doyle (33.0), Thomas (33.6) and White (32.0) are each averaging 32+ minutes per game, and they're really HARD minutes, where they're being asked to do a lot of things that are particularly draining. Those three players rank 2nd, tied for 3rd, and tied for 6th in the MVC. WSU, UNI, ISUr, MSU, and Drake don't have a single player playing more minutes than our third place guy. Thomas is routinely battling against guys in the 4 and 5 spot, typically 3-5 inches taller and 10-20 pounds heavier. Doyle did not play at all, Thomas averaged 27 minutes, and White averaged 22 minutes last year. Chrisman is averaging almost 29 minutes a game, and O'Leary is averaging almost 26 minutes per game-- mostly as our only guy on the floor over 6'5"-- after averaging only 15 minutes per game last year. We had only one player (Avercamp) average more than 29 minutes last year. Remember, a complete regulation HS game is 32 minutes, with breaks at the quarters and no shot clock.
So what happened in last night's game? White and Thomas combine for 24 points in heavy minutes in the first half, but score only six combined after halftime. Doyle, who sat most of the first half with two fouls, scored eight points in the second half. White played 37 minutes, Thomas played 33 (would have been 35 if he hadn't fouled out with 1:59 left), and Chrisman played 30. O'Leary, who didn't actually start, played 31 minutes. Osborne, who made the actual start, played only 15 minutes. Johnson and King combined for only 1+ minute on the floor, every second of which was in the first half. The only bench player to play substantial minutes in the second half was Turk. And the second half was filled with turnovers, missed layups, missed rebounds, missed loose balls, errant passes, and weak-kneed jump shots--- all signs of fatigue. You talk about hung heads and slumped shoulders? Could just as easily be exhaustion as much as demoralization or dread.
Meanwhile, NIU's top guys in minutes clocked in at 34 and 30, respectively. Threloff, their big interior guy, played 28. The three NIU starters at 6'6" or above combined for 23 rebounds compared to Loyola's 22 individual (non-team) rebounds for all our players. If you count O'Leary as a starter and Osborne as coming off the bench, we got a total of 45 bench minutes, 4 points, 4 rebounds, 2 assists, 4 turnovers, and 6 fouls on 1 of 9 field goal shooting.
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