what is being described here with the low lp/per players is one of the reasons i switched to fb, too. i have mentioned this player a hundred times but if anyone doesn't know the story yet, ill tell it again. after a horrible first experience with FB at my first school ever, i didn't play it for years. after i won most of my titles and was all burnt out, i picked up a mid major to run fb/zone, as they were the two sets i knew so little about. we had some decent success, made some NT tournaments, etc. they weren't the priority but i really enjoyed it. eventually i recruited this player - he had like 60 ath, 99 spd, 70 def, 1 lp, 48 per, 99 bh, and a+ ft shooting. he ended up being TOTALLY dominant, on team where the next best guy was your std quality mid major big (75 ath, 90 reb/def or something like that). he scored like 22ppg and was more efficient than any guard i ever had in my life - which was really saying something (all my titles came from guard-first teams). he could have scored more but usually i had very balanced teams, especially at d1, so it was the highest scorer i ever had. sure, his ft shooting helped a lot - but based on his spd/per, even with that 48 per, he was one of the more efficient 2 point shooters i'd ever had at d1. with that per, i was floored - and with high quality fg%, the lack of 3s were made up for by the a+ ft shooting and large # of FTA. he lead an otherwise mediocre team to an elite 8, where we lost a toss up game by 3 to an easy top 5 team coached by a hall of fame coach. this wasn't a priority team of mine, just for fun, and this team with a lesser guard, based on previous seasons, was just a low end NT team.
anyway, this guy was so surprising to me, i'd had the best of the best guards lead teams to championships, and i felt none were as effective as this guy was. he was arguably the best guard i ever had - which was just insane! FB is definitely the offense that stands out from the rest. lp and per definitely help, but low lp/per guys can be WAY more effective as team leaders than they can in any other set - and more importantly - they can be more effective as mid range scorers, too.
it gives a really interesting dynamic - when you get guards who are strong defensively and guard skills wise, and to a lesser but significant extent, bigs who are strong defense and rebounding guys, those players tend to have teh ratings necessary to contribute meaningfully in FB. basically, you get more and more efficient offense out of your non-offensive players in FB than any other set. this lets you really focus on building a defensively strong team, getting strong rebounding bigs, and a strong guard skills PG. then you want a couple really strong offensive players - as you can push these guys harder than any other system, too. my south carolina team that had a crushing 1 point last second loss in the title team and then a title, in the first 2 seasons i ever had full FB iq in high level d1 play, those teams weren't the most talented - our conf had way less money than the powerhouse ACC, i was thick in ACC territory, and we only were recruiting on a- prestige. but our offense was the best in the country. it was because my top players were super effective for me. i had a sg with like 95 ath, 75 spd, 50 lp, 90 per, and good bh, with like b- ft shooting. plenty of teams had guards like this, actually i felt the 4 teams i played at the end of the NT all had more talented starting lineups. i also had a sf who was about as good as the guard. each put of 20ppg VERY efficiently, and because the rest of the team was great defensively (good ath/spd in guards and ath in big), they were able to chip in everything else i needed. because i needed less raw offensive talent than other teams (by raw talent, i was not a top 5 offensive team - despite having the #1 offense in the country), i was able to put most of my talent in defense, a good passing pg, and good rebounding bigs. while we were not quite the best in those areas, we were very, very strong, and basically competitive with anyone.
to me, the FB played right is the only thing that made it possible for that team to win. they weren't a fluke team, they weren't a big favorite but i did consider them the front runner to win it all. down 15K a season to your high level neighbors, with only an a-, its nearly impossible to be the most talented - and i was not (i really do think the s16 teams on all had more talented starting lineups) - but the unique nature of the FB let me get more mileage out of the talent i had, than anyone else was getting from theirs. i honestly do not think i could have been as competitive in that situation with motion, flex, or triangle - and the only reason i mention my newness with FB there, is to demonstrate there is still more i don't know, and to suggest i didn't get it 100% right. i guess nobody ever truly does, but i have vastly more experience with motion and triangle, and already my level of play with FB made it the superior system. thats all im saying.
i think people vastly under-estimate the FB offense, really i think there is a good chance that FB/man is the preeminent set in all of d1, just a hair ahead of motion/man, for most high end teams. some teams get the luxury of incredibly strong control over healthy recruiting areas, those teams may prefer motion or even press. but for the average high end BCS team, i really think FB/man deserves to be played *vastly* more than it is played today.
3/8/2014 5:48 PM (edited)