Pre-Tournament DEEPDIVE Roster Analysis

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37620VOL

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#1
I asked ChatGPT to analyze our roster based on advanced statistics from HerHoops. The output is kind of long, so grab some popcorn, but interesting and objective, I can't really disagree with any of it - especially the minutes distribution if we move to more traditional substitution patterns.

ChatGPT: I’m going to answer this like a roster fit study: who should handle the ball, who should finish plays, who should space the floor, and who should defend/rebound.


1. What the roster says overall

This team has a pretty clear shape.

Main offensive engines
  • Talaysia Cooper
  • Janiah Barker
  • Mia Pauldo
These are the players using the most offense.

Most efficient finishers
  • Alyssa Latham
  • Lauren Hurst in limited volume
  • Janiah Barker is strong here too
Best overall value players
  • Talaysia Cooper
  • Janiah Barker
  • Alyssa Latham
Main spacing pieces
  • Talaysia Cooper
  • Mia Pauldo
  • Nya Robertson
  • Lauren Hurst in small sample
Best rebound/physical impact players
  • Janiah Barker
  • Zee Spearman
  • Alyssa Latham
  • Jaida Civil is solid for a guard


2. Player-by-player analysis

Talaysia Cooper

What the advanced stats say

  • USG 32.2%: she carries a huge share of the offense
  • PPP 0.88: decent, but not elite for that much usage
  • eFG 48.8%: okay, not dominant
  • AST% 26.6%: strong creator
  • TOV% 13.5%: not bad at all for such high usage
  • PER 24.8 / WS 1.3: star-level overall value
What the shooting stats add

  • 108/258 from the field
  • 36/105 from three (34.3%)
  • 72/153 on twos (47.1%)
That says she is not just a driver. She is taking a lot of threes too, and making enough to keep defenses honest.

Strengths

  • Best offensive engine on the team
  • Creates for herself and others
  • Strong all-around value
  • Big steal numbers show defensive playmaking
  • Can score at all three levels enough to lead an offense
Weaknesses

  • Efficiency is good, but not unstoppable
  • Heavy burden means she can drift into tough shots
  • Volume scorer more than pure shot-maker
Coaching takeaway

She should still be the lead guard and offensive organizer. But the key is this:

Do not ask Cooper to do everything alone.
Her usage is already massive. The goal should be to keep her usage high, but improve the quality of her touches by pairing her with efficient finishers.

Minutes

Maximum starter minutes. No reduction.


Zee Spearman

What the advanced stats say

  • USG 22.6%: fairly high
  • PPP 0.77: low for that usage
  • eFG 43.0%: not efficient
  • AST% 8.0 / TOV% 17.5: not a creator, loose with the ball
  • ORB% 10.8 / TRB% 10.5: strong rebounder
  • PER 14.0 / WS 0.5: useful, but not star value
What the shooting stats add

  • 59/151 overall (39.1%)
  • 47/103 on twos (45.6%)
  • 12/48 on threes (25.0%)
  • 33/53 FT (62.3%)
This is the important part: her shot profile says she is using a lot of possessions without converting them efficiently, and the three-point line is not helping her.

Strengths

  • Good rebounder
  • Brings size and physicality
  • Good shot blocking
  • Can help on the glass and defense
Weaknesses

  • Too many possessions for her efficiency level
  • Outside shooting is not strong
  • Turnovers are too high for a non-primary creator
Coaching takeaway

She can help you win, but not as a high-usage scorer. Her best role is:

  • rim running
  • offensive rebounding
  • short finishes
  • screening
  • defense
If she is taking tough shots or spacing as a jumper threat too often, that is probably bad offense.

Minutes

Keep solid rotation minutes, but reduce offensive freedom.
Not necessarily fewer minutes overall, but fewer possessions used.


Janiah Barker

What the advanced stats say

  • USG 27.8%: major offensive role
  • PPP 0.93: good
  • eFG 53.5%: strong
  • AST% 13.7 / TOV% 18.3: some playmaking, but turnovers are a concern
  • ORB% 9.5 / DRB% 24.1 / TRB% 16.4: elite rebound impact
  • PER 24.6 / WS 1.2: star-level value
What the shooting stats add

  • 75/159 overall (47.2%)
  • 55/107 on twos (51.4%)
  • 20/52 from three (38.5%)
  • 38/50 FT (76.0%)
That shooting line matters a lot. She is not just productive. She is a real offensive weapon because she can score inside, rebound, and also hit threes at a strong rate.

Strengths

  • Best frontcourt all-around player
  • Efficient scorer at high usage
  • Great rebounder
  • Good floor-spacing for a bigger player
  • Strong overall value
Weaknesses

  • Turnovers are a little high
  • Can be overextended if asked to create too much off the dribble
Coaching takeaway

She should be one of the top two or three focal points every game. She is the kind of player who makes lineups easier to build because she gives you:

  • scoring
  • rebounding
  • spacing
  • defensive value
Minutes

Heavy starter minutes. Should not be reduced.


Mia Pauldo

What the advanced stats say

  • USG 24.7%: high-usage guard
  • PPP 0.87: okay, but not great
  • eFG 43.2%: below ideal
  • AST% 18.2 / TOV% 13.0: solid secondary creator
  • PER 16.7 / WS 0.7: positive player
What the shooting stats add

  • 49/139 overall (35.3%)
  • 27/56 on twos (48.2%)
  • 22/83 on threes (26.5%)
  • 41/48 FT (85.4%)
This is where the correction matters. Her advanced stats alone might suggest useful guard value, but the shooting profile says something important:

She is taking a lot of threes and not making enough of them. The free throws are great, which suggests real guard skill, but the shot results from the floor are not efficient enough for a 24.7 usage player.

Strengths

  • Can handle and pass
  • Gets to the line
  • Strong free throw shooter
  • Better decision-maker than some of the other high-usage guards
Weaknesses

  • Three-point accuracy is not strong enough right now
  • Overall efficiency is too low for such a big role
  • More of a complementary ball-handler than a featured scorer
Coaching takeaway

She still has value, but her best role is probably as a secondary guard, not a primary volume scorer.
She helps more when she attacks gaps, moves the ball, and picks spots instead of forcing a lot of jumpers.

Minutes

Keep in the rotation, but trim her shot diet.
Not a benching issue. A role issue.


Nya Robertson

What the advanced stats say

  • USG 17.9%: moderate usage
  • PPP 0.76: low
  • eFG 46.0%: okay-ish because of threes
  • AST% 8.1 / TOV% 19.6: low creation, high mistakes
  • PER 7.7 / WS 0.1: limited overall value
What the shooting stats add

  • 39/113 overall (34.5%)
  • 13/34 on twos (38.2%)
  • 26/79 from three (32.9%)
  • 12/21 FT (57.1%)
She is basically a perimeter scorer without strong efficiency. The three-point number is not awful, but not high enough to offset the weak finishing and limited overall impact.

Strengths

  • Can take and make perimeter shots
  • Helps stretch the defense more than some others
Weaknesses

  • Low PPP
  • Limited rebounding
  • Not much playmaking
  • Turnovers too high for her role
  • Low overall value stats
Coaching takeaway

She is playable as a spacing option, but only if the staff believes the shooting will rise. Right now the numbers say she is more of a specialist than a major-minute player.

Minutes

Slight reduction unless the shooting jumps.


Alyssa Latham

What the advanced stats say

  • USG 10.2%: very low usage
  • PPP 1.09: best on the team among major contributors
  • eFG 67.0%: elite
  • AST% 4.0 / TOV% 19.0: not a creator, some turnover risk
  • ORB% 5.7 / TRB% 8.1
  • PER 13.6 / WS 0.7
  • Player offensive rating 121.2: excellent
What the shooting stats add

  • 34/53 overall (64.2%)
  • 31/45 on twos (68.9%)
  • 3/8 from three (37.5%)
This is the clearest “play her more” profile on the team.

She is not using many possessions, but when she does, they are highly productive.

Strengths

  • Elite finisher
  • Outstanding shot efficiency
  • Very good offensive value in a low-usage role
  • Can finish inside and maybe hit the occasional three
Weaknesses

  • Not a primary ball-handler or creator
  • Turnovers are not super low
  • Rebounding impact is good, but not dominant for a frontcourt player
Coaching takeaway

She should get more minutes and more designed touches.
Not because she should become a ball-dominant star, but because efficient finishers make stars easier to guard around.

She is the kind of player who benefits from:

  • cuts
  • duck-ins
  • pick-and-roll finishes
  • transition rim runs
  • weak-side scoring actions
Minutes

Increase minutes. Clearly.


Jaida Civil

What the advanced stats say

  • USG 18.7%
  • PPP 0.86
  • eFG 46.6%
  • AST% 10.6 / TOV% 16.6
  • ORB% 5.5 / DRB% 17.0 / TRB% 11.0
  • PER 15.1 / WS 0.7
What the shooting stats add

  • 42/102 overall (41.2%)
  • 31/63 on twos (49.2%)
  • 11/39 from three (28.2%)
  • 30/42 FT (71.4%)
She looks like a useful all-around rotation player, but not an offensive centerpiece.

Strengths

  • Balanced guard/wing value
  • Rebounds well for her size
  • Can help in multiple areas
  • Positive rotation piece
Weaknesses

  • Doesn’t shoot it well enough from three to be pure spacing
  • Efficiency is just okay
  • Not enough creation to be a main ball-handler
Coaching takeaway

Very useful glue player. She fits lineups because she can do several things without needing the offense built around her.

Minutes

Keep healthy rotation minutes.


Deniya Prawl

What the advanced stats say

  • USG 13.9%
  • PPP 0.80
  • eFG 44.2%
  • AST% 3.6 / TOV% 12.2
  • PER 12.3 / WS 0.3
What the shooting stats add

  • 22/52 overall (42.3%)
  • 20/38 on twos (52.6%)
  • 2/14 from three (14.3%)
  • 13/26 FT (50.0%)
Her two-point percentage is respectable, but her jumper and free throws are a problem. She does not project as a spacing piece.

Strengths

  • Some defensive utility
  • Can finish some twos
  • Lower-usage role fits her
Weaknesses

  • Weak shooting range
  • Low overall offensive ceiling
  • Very limited creation
Coaching takeaway

She is more of a defense/energy/role piece than someone you feature.

Minutes

Situational rotation minutes.


Mya Pauldo

What the advanced stats say

  • USG 10.8%
  • PPP 0.59
  • eFG 36.4%
  • AST% 11.8 / TOV% 17.1
  • PER 6.1 / WS 0.0
What the shooting stats add

  • 9/33 overall (27.3%)
  • 3/11 on twos (27.3%)
  • 6/22 from three (27.3%)
That is a clear red flag. There is not much case in the numbers for a bigger role.

Strengths

  • Some guard skill
  • Limited turnover total
Weaknesses

  • Very poor efficiency
  • Low value metrics
  • Not enough shot-making
Minutes

Reduce minutes.


Lauren Hurst

What the advanced stats say

  • USG 10.2%
  • PPP 1.02
  • eFG 72.4%
  • AST% 9.3 / TOV% 26.8
  • PER 11.9 / WS 0.3
  • Offensive rating 114.3
What the shooting stats add

  • 16/29 overall (55.2%)
  • 6/11 on twos (54.5%)
  • 10/18 from three (55.6%)
This is the classic small-sample puzzle. The efficiency is excellent, but the turnovers are ugly and the volume is limited.

Still, those shooting numbers are too good to ignore.

Strengths

  • Real shot-making so far
  • Great efficiency
  • Useful spacing option
Weaknesses

  • Turnover rate is very high
  • Sample is still small
  • Need to see if it holds against better defenses
Coaching takeaway

She deserves a bigger look. Not a guaranteed huge role, but definitely enough minutes to test whether the shooting is real.

Minutes

Increase some minutes and evaluate further.


Kaniya Boyd

What the advanced stats say

  • USG 8.3%
  • PPP 0.52
  • eFG 36.4%
  • AST% 13.3 / TOV% 38.1
  • PER 5.1 / WS 0.0
What the shooting stats add

  • 4/11 overall (36.4%)
  • 4/8 on twos (50.0%)
  • 0/3 from three
The turnover rate is the big issue. That is simply too high.

Strengths

  • Some basic guard handling
  • Can finish a few twos
Weaknesses

  • Very low efficiency
  • Extreme turnover problem
  • Low overall value
Minutes

Reduce minutes.


3. Who should get more minutes?

Clear increase

Alyssa Latham

Because she gives you the best mix of:

  • elite PPP
  • elite eFG%
  • strong offensive rating
  • efficient finishing without needing the ball a lot
She helps your best players because she does not hijack possessions.

Lauren Hurst

Because her shooting efficiency is too good to ignore.
You do not hand her a major role blindly, but she deserves more chances.

Strong, secure high-minute players

Talaysia Cooper

Janiah Barker

These two should be the heart of the team.


4. Who should get fewer minutes or fewer possessions?

Fewer possessions

Zee Spearman

Useful player, but her usage is too high for her efficiency.
The answer is not “bench her.” The answer is “simplify her job.”

Mia Pauldo

Still useful, but the current shot volume is too much compared to the efficiency.

Fewer minutes

Mya Pauldo

Kaniya Boyd

Nya Robertson, unless the shooting improves


5. Best lineup logic

Based on the numbers, Tennessee’s best lineups should probably center around:

  • Cooper as lead creator
  • Barker as frontcourt star
  • Latham as elite finisher
  • one or two guards/wings who keep the floor spaced enough
  • one physical rebounder/defender
A strong starting structure would be:

  • PG: Talaysia Cooper
  • SG: Mia Pauldo or Lauren Hurst
  • Wing: Jaida Civil
  • Forward: Janiah Barker
  • Forward/Center: Alyssa Latham or Zee Spearman depending on matchup
Why

Because this gets you:

  • primary creation from Cooper
  • efficient scoring from Barker and Latham
  • more balance
  • enough rebounding
  • less dependence on low-efficiency volume shots
If you need more size and glass, play Spearman.
If you need more efficiency and cleaner offense, play Latham more.


6. Best offensive system

Best answer: spread motion with heavy ball-screen action and inside-out play

Not a pure 5-out system.
Not a slow post-up system.
Not a constant set-play offense.

The best fit is:

A. Cooper-led ball screens

Use Cooper as the main engine.

Why:

  • high AST%
  • manageable turnover rate for her load
  • strong all-around value
B. Barker as the second focal point

Use Barker in:

  • pick-and-pop
  • elbow touches
  • duck-ins
  • short-roll actions
  • trail threes
Why:

  • strong usage + good PPP
  • strong eFG
  • real three-point ability
  • elite rebounding
C. Latham as a low-usage efficient finisher

Use her for:

  • cuts
  • rim runs
  • dump-offs
  • screening and slipping
  • offensive rebound finishes
Why:

  • elite PPP
  • elite eFG
  • does not need isolations
D. Reduce low-efficiency jump volume

That means:

  • fewer empty threes from shaky shooters
  • fewer forced touches for inefficient high-usage role players
Offensive identity in simple terms

Attack the paint, play through Cooper and Barker, let Latham finish, and use shooters as support instead of forcing them into star roles.


7. Best defensive system

Best answer: aggressive man-to-man with rebounding emphasis, plus some matchup zone

Why man-to-man fits:

  • Barker rebounds at a very high level
  • Spearman rebounds and blocks shots
  • Cooper creates steals
  • team has enough athletes to pressure the ball
This defense should aim to:

  • pressure handlers
  • force turnovers
  • finish the possession with rebounds
  • run in transition
Secondary defense: 2-3 or matchup zone in stretches

Use it when:

  • foul trouble hits
  • opponents have one dominant driver
  • you want to protect weaker perimeter defenders
  • you need to keep Barker and Spearman near the rim
Why not make zone the main defense?

Because your best path to easy offense is defense creating chaos.
Man-to-man helps you get steals and runouts. Zone can help, but it should be a tool, not the base identity.


8. Best strategy to win games

If I were building the whole plan from these numbers, it would be this:

On offense

  1. Cooper initiates
  2. Barker gets star touches
  3. Latham gets more minutes and more finish chances
  4. Spearman plays simpler offense
  5. Mia Pauldo becomes more selective
  6. Use Hurst more to test her shooting
  7. Do not overplay low-efficiency guards
On defense

  1. Pressure the ball
  2. Rebound hard with Barker, Spearman, Latham
  3. Turn steals and boards into transition

 
#2
#2
Let’s turn the analysis into a real rotation plan like a coaching staff would build for a 40-minute college game.

The goal of the rotation is to:

  1. Maximize efficient players (PPP + eFG%)
  2. Keep creators on the floor (AST%)
  3. Maintain rebounding (REB%)
  4. Reduce inefficient usage
I’ll build a 9-player rotation, which is typical for competitive college teams.


Optimal Minute Distribution (40 minute game)

PlayerMinutesWhy
Talaysia Cooper34Primary engine (USG 32%, PER 24.8)
Janiah Barker32Star frontcourt player (PER 24.6, strong REB%)
Alyssa Latham28Elite efficiency (PPP 1.09, eFG 67%)
Zee Spearman24Rebounding + defense
Mia Pauldo24Secondary guard + spacing
Jaida Civil22Glue player, rebounding guard
Lauren Hurst16Elite shooting efficiency in limited sample
Nya Robertson14Situational shooting
Deniya Prawl6Defensive depth
Minimal minutes:

  • Mya Pauldo
  • Kaniya Boyd
  • Wolfenbarger
These players currently have low efficiency and low value metrics.


Starting Lineup

PG — Talaysia Cooper
SG — Mia Pauldo
SF — Janiah Barker
PF — Alyssa Latham
C — Zee Spearman

Why this lineup works

Ball handling

  • Cooper + Mia Pauldo provide two creators
Rebounding

  • Barker + Spearman strong on glass
Efficiency

  • Latham finishes possessions
Spacing

  • Cooper + Pauldo + Barker can all shoot

Primary Bench Rotation

First subs should be:

Jaida Civil → guard/wing stability

Lauren Hurst → shooting

Nya Robertson → spacing option

These players maintain balance while stars rest.


Lineup Combinations That Should Play Together

Lineup 1 (Best offensive group)

Cooper
Pauldo
Barker
Latham
Spearman

Why:

  • best mix of usage and efficiency
  • strong rebounding
  • multiple scoring options

Lineup 2 (Efficient scoring lineup)

Cooper
Hurst
Civil
Barker
Latham

Why:

  • two high efficiency scorers
  • better spacing
  • keeps playmaking

Lineup 3 (Defensive/rebounding lineup)

Cooper
Civil
Prawl
Barker
Spearman

Why:

  • strong rebounding
  • length
  • defensive activity
Use when protecting a lead.


Offensive Strategy

This roster is not built for slow half-court isolation basketball.

The numbers suggest three key principles.


1. Cooper-centered pick-and-roll offense

Cooper has:

  • USG 32%
  • AST% 26.6
That means she should initiate most actions.

Typical play:

Cooper + Latham pick and roll

Options:

  1. Cooper drive
  2. Latham roll
  3. Kick to shooter
Why it works:

  • Latham is extremely efficient finishing
  • Cooper draws defensive attention

2. Barker as secondary scoring hub

Barker’s numbers show:

  • strong usage
  • strong efficiency
  • elite rebounding
Use her in:

  • pick and pop
  • post mismatches
  • transition
She should be the second offensive option.


3. Offensive rebounding emphasis

Three players have strong rebounding impact:

  • Barker
  • Spearman
  • Latham
Strategy:

Crash the glass aggressively.

Extra possessions help compensate for inconsistent shooting.


Defensive Strategy

Based on:

  • strong rebounders
  • good steal numbers
  • decent rim protection

Primary defense: aggressive man-to-man

Why it fits:

  • Cooper creates steals
  • Barker rebounds
  • Spearman protects rim
Goals:

  1. Force turnovers
  2. Create transition points
  3. Control rebounds

Biggest Team Improvements That Would Help Winning

1. Reduce inefficient possessions

Some players have high usage but low PPP.

The offense should flow through:

  • Cooper
  • Barker
  • Latham

2. Increase Latham's touches



3. Use Hurst more:

Her shooting numbers are excellent so far. If they continue, she becomes one of the best spacing players on the team.


Final Coaching Summary

If Tennessee wants to maximize this roster:

Offense
  1. Run offense through Cooper
  2. Feature Barker as secondary scorer
  3. Increase role for Latham
  4. Use shooters as spacing pieces
  5. Crash offensive boards
Defense
  1. Play aggressive man-to-man
  2. Force turnovers
  3. Dominate rebounding
  4. Run in transition


If they control the glass and score in the paint, they can win games even when the outside shooting is inconsistent.
 
#7
#7
Is there a Cliff Notes version?

No. There will be a test on Friday.

Actually, fine, here you go. But can you say lazy


Final Coaching Summary

If Tennessee wants to maximize this roster:

Offense
Run offense through Cooper
Feature Barker as secondary scorer
Increase role for Latham and Hurst, decrease Zee and Nya
Use shooters as spacing pieces
Crash offensive boards

Defense
Play aggressive man-to-man
Force turnovers
Dominate rebounding
Run in transition


If they control the glass and score in the paint, they can win games even when the outside shooting is inconsistent.
 
#9
#9
Let’s turn the analysis into a real rotation plan like a coaching staff would build for a 40-minute college game.

The goal of the rotation is to:

  1. Maximize efficient players (PPP + eFG%)
  2. Keep creators on the floor (AST%)
  3. Maintain rebounding (REB%)
  4. Reduce inefficient usage
I’ll build a 9-player rotation, which is typical for competitive college teams.



Optimal Minute Distribution (40 minute game)

PlayerMinutesWhy
Talaysia Cooper34Primary engine (USG 32%, PER 24.8)
Janiah Barker32Star frontcourt player (PER 24.6, strong REB%)
Alyssa Latham28Elite efficiency (PPP 1.09, eFG 67%)
Zee Spearman24Rebounding + defense
Mia Pauldo24Secondary guard + spacing
Jaida Civil22Glue player, rebounding guard
Lauren Hurst16Elite shooting efficiency in limited sample
Nya Robertson14Situational shooting
Deniya Prawl6Defensive depth
Minimal minutes:

  • Mya Pauldo
  • Kaniya Boyd
  • Wolfenbarger
These players currently have low efficiency and low value metrics.



Starting Lineup

PG — Talaysia Cooper
SG — Mia Pauldo
SF — Janiah Barker
PF — Alyssa Latham
C — Zee Spearman

Why this lineup works

Ball handling

  • Cooper + Mia Pauldo provide two creators
Rebounding

  • Barker + Spearman strong on glass
Efficiency

  • Latham finishes possessions
Spacing

  • Cooper + Pauldo + Barker can all shoot


Primary Bench Rotation

First subs should be:

Jaida Civil → guard/wing stability

Lauren Hurst → shooting

Nya Robertson → spacing option

These players maintain balance while stars rest.



Lineup Combinations That Should Play Together

Lineup 1 (Best offensive group)

Cooper
Pauldo
Barker
Latham
Spearman

Why:

  • best mix of usage and efficiency
  • strong rebounding
  • multiple scoring options


Lineup 2 (Efficient scoring lineup)

Cooper
Hurst
Civil
Barker
Latham

Why:

  • two high efficiency scorers
  • better spacing
  • keeps playmaking


Lineup 3 (Defensive/rebounding lineup)

Cooper
Civil
Prawl
Barker
Spearman

Why:

  • strong rebounding
  • length
  • defensive activity
Use when protecting a lead.



Offensive Strategy

This roster is not built for slow half-court isolation basketball.

The numbers suggest three key principles.



1. Cooper-centered pick-and-roll offense

Cooper has:

  • USG 32%
  • AST% 26.6
That means she should initiate most actions.

Typical play:

Cooper + Latham pick and roll

Options:

  1. Cooper drive
  2. Latham roll
  3. Kick to shooter
Why it works:

  • Latham is extremely efficient finishing
  • Cooper draws defensive attention


2. Barker as secondary scoring hub

Barker’s numbers show:

  • strong usage
  • strong efficiency
  • elite rebounding
Use her in:

  • pick and pop
  • post mismatches
  • transition
She should be the second offensive option.



3. Offensive rebounding emphasis

Three players have strong rebounding impact:

  • Barker
  • Spearman
  • Latham
Strategy:

Crash the glass aggressively.

Extra possessions help compensate for inconsistent shooting.



Defensive Strategy

Based on:

  • strong rebounders
  • good steal numbers
  • decent rim protection


Primary defense: aggressive man-to-man

Why it fits:

  • Cooper creates steals
  • Barker rebounds
  • Spearman protects rim
Goals:

  1. Force turnovers
  2. Create transition points
  3. Control rebounds


Biggest Team Improvements That Would Help Winning

1. Reduce inefficient possessions

Some players have high usage but low PPP.

The offense should flow through:

  • Cooper
  • Barker
  • Latham


2. Increase Latham's touches




3. Use Hurst more:

Her shooting numbers are excellent so far. If they continue, she becomes one of the best spacing players on the team.



Final Coaching Summary

If Tennessee wants to maximize this roster:

Offense
  1. Run offense through Cooper
  2. Feature Barker as secondary scorer
  3. Increase role for Latham
  4. Use shooters as spacing pieces
  5. Crash offensive boards
Defense
  1. Play aggressive man-to-man
  2. Force turnovers
  3. Dominate rebounding
  4. Run in transition



If they control the glass and score in the paint, they can win games even when the outside shooting is inconsistent.
Great stuff! Thank you for sharing! 🤌🏽
 

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