X's and Joe's

X's and Joe's

[53] What Is Darian DeVries Running? (with Tony Adragna & Brian Tonsoni)

1 h 3 min · 20 de feb de 2026
Portada del episodio [53] What Is Darian DeVries Running? (with Tony Adragna & Brian Tonsoni)

Descripción

Indiana basketball fans have spent the season trying to figure out exactly what Darian DeVries’ offense looks like — and this episode dives deep into the answer. Bob Moats and Mike Wiemuth welcome Brian Tonsoni and Tony Adragna for a coach-level breakdown of IU’s evolving offensive concepts, player development trends, and why the program’s foundation may already be stronger than the record suggests. The Evolution of Modern College Offense The conversation begins with a wide-angle look at how college basketball offenses have changed in recent years. From continuity ball screens to five-out spacing and hybrid systems blending Princeton, Euro, and modern spread concepts, the group explores how today’s best teams mix old ideas with new spacing principles — and why versatility and skill across positions now matter more than size alone. So… What Is DeVries Actually Running? Rather than a rigid playbook, Indiana’s offense appears built around concepts and reads. The hosts explain how DeVries organizes families of actions that allow players to react to defensive coverage instead of executing robotic sets. Through film examples, they highlight screen-to-screener actions, flare concepts, and counters that evolve throughout games — evidence of intentional design even when possessions don’t end in points. Optionality vs. Robotic Basketball One recurring theme: IU’s offense feels different because every action contains multiple outcomes. Screeners slip, shooters relocate during drives, and reads develop in real time, making the system harder to scout. The panel contrasts this flexibility with previous IU offenses, noting how modern spacing and simultaneous movement create advantages even without elite downhill creators. Player Development Showing Up in Real Time Lamar Wilkerson becomes a central case study in development within the system. The coaches discuss his progression from cutter to driver to multi-level scorer, emphasizing improved strength, balance, and playing off two feet. The conversation expands to broader roster growth, suggesting several players have improved throughout the season despite structural limitations. The Foundation vs. the Roster Ceiling While praising scheme and adaptability, the group agrees IU still lacks certain roster pieces — particularly a consistent downhill creator and rim protection. Still, the coaching staff’s adjustments, scouting preparation, and conceptual clarity signal a program building toward sustainability rather than short-term fixes. Modern Shot Selection and the Three-Point Debate The episode closes with discussion of Indiana’s three-point volume relative to elite offenses nationally. Rather than criticizing shot totals, the hosts frame success around shot quality, spacing, and roster versatility — arguing that improved personnel could unlock the full efficiency of DeVries’ system. This episode brought to you by the Back Home Network and Homefield Apparel. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

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58 episodios

Portada del episodio [61] Where Have All the Character Coaches Gone?

[61] Where Have All the Character Coaches Gone?

Bob Moats and Mike Wiemuth are joined by Scott Caulfield for a fun and thought-provoking discussion about the evolution of college basketball coaching. Looking back at some of the sport's most memorable personalities, the guys explore why coaching icons once loomed so large over the game—and why today's coaches often feel very different. The Golden Age of Coaching Personalities The conversation begins with a trip down memory lane as Bob, Mike, and Scott revisit some of the unforgettable characters who once dominated college basketball. * Why coaches like Bob Knight, Jim Valvano, John Thompson, Jerry Tarkanian, Lou Carnesecca, and Rollie Massimino became household names * The quirks, stories, and larger-than-life personalities that made coaches stars in their own right * How many of these coaches became synonymous with their programs and even their conferences * Which legendary coaches would make the best dinner companions Along the way, the guys share plenty of stories, laughs, and memories from college basketball's colorful past. Why Today's Coaches Feel Different The discussion then turns to the modern game and why today's coaches often seem more corporate, measured, and interchangeable. Topics include: * The "nerdification" and professionalization of coaching * How media scrutiny, social media, and 24/7 coverage have changed coaching behavior * Why modern coaches often look more like executives than old-school basketball lifers * The impact of shorter coaching tenures and increased job movement The group also debates whether the sport has simply changed—or whether we've lost something valuable along the way. NIL, Realignment, and the New Coaching Reality As the conversation evolves, Bob, Mike, and Scott examine how NIL, the transfer portal, and the changing economics of college sports have fundamentally altered the coaching profession. * Why college coaching may now be more difficult than NBA coaching * How roster management and fundraising have reshaped the head coach's job * Whether today's coaches are being hired primarily to win games rather than build programs and young men * Why the modern environment may discourage the kind of eccentric personalities that once thrived in the sport The guys also discuss Dusty May's departure for the NBA and what it says about the future of college basketball coaching. Is There Room for Characters to Return? The episode closes with a fascinating discussion about whether coaching personalities could eventually make a comeback. Could larger support staffs and general managers eventually free coaches to simply coach again? Or has college basketball permanently moved into a more corporate era? It's a thoughtful conversation about leadership, culture, nostalgia, and where the sport may be headed next. Bottom line: This episode is equal parts basketball history, cultural analysis, and old-school storytelling as Bob, Mike, and Scott explore why college basketball once felt full of unforgettable characters—and whether those days are truly gone for good. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

Ayer1 h 25 min
Portada del episodio [60] Indy 500 Weekend, Curt Cignetti, and the State of College Sports

[60] Indy 500 Weekend, Curt Cignetti, and the State of College Sports

The show opens with a look back at an unforgettable Indy 500 and some thoughts on why events like that become part of Indiana's identity. • Why this year's race was one of the most memorable in recent years • Curt Cignetti's comments on the future of college athletics • The growing pressure on college sports to figure out NIL and governance Is Indiana's Roster Actually Better? This is where the basketball discussion really gets rolling. • Why the guys think IU largely accomplished what it needed to in the portal • The additions that could have the biggest impact next season • How Marcus Burton changes the equation offensively • What makes this roster feel different from recent IU teams There's also a deeper conversation about spacing, shot creation, offensive rebounding, and why this team may have more answers when games get tight. How Much Should Fans Trust the Hype? Preseason rankings are starting to appear, and Indiana is showing up in some interesting places. • What the early projections are saying about IU • Why portal rankings are harder to evaluate than recruiting rankings • The gap between talent on paper and actual results • What a successful first full season under Darian DeVries would really look like Bottom line: The roster looks better. The projections are encouraging. But as the guys discuss throughout the episode, the real question isn't whether Indiana won the offseason—it's whether all of these pieces can come together once the games start. This episode brought to you by the Back Home Network and Homefield Apparel. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

2 de jun de 20261 h 19 min
Portada del episodio [58] Why Are IU Fans So Angry?

[58] Why Are IU Fans So Angry?

In this episode of Xs and Joes, Bob Moats and Mike Wiemuth dig into a topic many Indiana fans can feel but struggle to explain: why so much frustration around IU basketball now feels deeper than just wins and losses. Using recent reactions, historical context, and a few memorable pop-culture references, they explore how decades of unmet expectations have shaped the current mood around the program. Why IU Fans Are So Angry The conversation starts with the obvious question—and goes well beyond the surface. * Why this frustration feels more like exhaustion than outrage * How years of near-misses, resets, and false starts compound over time * The difference between a disappointed fan base and a burned-out one * Why anger often shows up when expectations still exist The Weight of Three Decades Indiana’s history matters—but so does everything since. The guys look at how few truly memorable seasons IU has had in the modern era, and why long stretches of mediocrity hit differently at a program with this much tradition. * How optimism slowly erodes * Why “just be patient” lands differently now than it once did Dusty May, Braden Smith, and the Ones That Got Away Recent tournament storylines reopened old wounds. The episode explores why certain names trigger such strong reactions from IU fans—and why those reactions are often about more than one player or one coach. Can Darian DeVries Change the Mood? There’s real momentum from the portal haul, but skepticism remains. * Why this offseason has created genuine intrigue * What still has to happen before fans fully buy in * How year two could shift the entire tone around the program This Isn’t Just an Indiana Problem IU may be unique in some ways—but not in this one. The discussion branches into Kentucky, North Carolina, Kansas, Nebraska, and other fan bases dealing with the same collision of history, money, and modern expectations. Bottom line: This episode is about more than fan anger. It’s about what happens when a proud program goes too long without giving people a reason to believe—and what it will take to earn that belief back. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

24 de abr de 20261 h 44 min
Portada del episodio [56] 2026 NCAA Bracket with Andy Bottoms

[56] 2026 NCAA Bracket with Andy Bottoms

In this episode of Xs and Joes, Bob Moats and Mike Wiemuth are joined by Andy Bottoms to unpack the 2026 NCAA Tournament bracket, the selection process, and what it all reveals about where college basketball is headed next. Bracketology Reality Check The guys open with Andy reflecting on another Selection Sunday—and why even strong bracket projections can still “grade out” poorly. * Why bracketology success doesn’t always match leaderboard results * The surprising disconnect between predictive accuracy and final rankings * A tongue-in-cheek case for “re-scoring” brackets based on tournament outcomes * Early hints that this year’s committee may have valued things differently than expected Committee Philosophy & Process A deeper dive into how the selection committee actually operates—and where subjectivity still sneaks in. * Whether the committee truly follows a strict process or has hidden preferences * Where bias might show up (and where it likely doesn’t) * Why controversial matchups are usually dictated by rules—not conspiracy * The one area of the bracket where human judgment still matters most What the Committee Really Values Now This is where things get interesting—and where Andy outlines a subtle but important shift. * The growing importance of “wins above bubble” in getting selected * Why seeding may now lean more on predictive metrics like KenPom * Case studies that highlight the tension between results and efficiency * A key question: Are quality wins losing influence in favor of efficiency metrics? Mid-Majors, Scheduling, and the System Problem A fascinating conversation about the structural challenges facing non–power conference teams. * The scheduling paradox: no one wants to play you… but you’re punished if you don’t * Why some programs embrace tough non-conference games—and others avoid them * How newer metrics may actually help mid-majors get a fair shot * The hidden tradeoffs every program faces when building a schedule Tournament Takeaways (So Far) After the first weekend, the bracket has been relatively calm—but that might be a feature, not a bug. * Why there were fewer shocking upsets than usual * The one result that did stand out—and why it happened * How style-of-play mismatches can still flip games * A bigger-picture insight about how the tournament may be evolving The Future of Bracketology The episode closes with a thought-provoking look ahead. * Could bracketology eventually become fully algorithm-driven? * What we’d gain in accuracy—and lose in drama * The tension between data-driven decisions and human nuance * Why the future might shift the drama from Selection Sunday to the games themselves Bottom line: This episode isn’t just about this bracket—it’s about how the entire system is evolving. And whether we’re ready for a world where the madness is a little less mysterious… and a lot more calculated. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

27 de mar de 20261 h 1 min
Portada del episodio [53] What Is Darian DeVries Running? (with Tony Adragna & Brian Tonsoni)

[53] What Is Darian DeVries Running? (with Tony Adragna & Brian Tonsoni)

Indiana basketball fans have spent the season trying to figure out exactly what Darian DeVries’ offense looks like — and this episode dives deep into the answer. Bob Moats and Mike Wiemuth welcome Brian Tonsoni and Tony Adragna for a coach-level breakdown of IU’s evolving offensive concepts, player development trends, and why the program’s foundation may already be stronger than the record suggests. The Evolution of Modern College Offense The conversation begins with a wide-angle look at how college basketball offenses have changed in recent years. From continuity ball screens to five-out spacing and hybrid systems blending Princeton, Euro, and modern spread concepts, the group explores how today’s best teams mix old ideas with new spacing principles — and why versatility and skill across positions now matter more than size alone. So… What Is DeVries Actually Running? Rather than a rigid playbook, Indiana’s offense appears built around concepts and reads. The hosts explain how DeVries organizes families of actions that allow players to react to defensive coverage instead of executing robotic sets. Through film examples, they highlight screen-to-screener actions, flare concepts, and counters that evolve throughout games — evidence of intentional design even when possessions don’t end in points. Optionality vs. Robotic Basketball One recurring theme: IU’s offense feels different because every action contains multiple outcomes. Screeners slip, shooters relocate during drives, and reads develop in real time, making the system harder to scout. The panel contrasts this flexibility with previous IU offenses, noting how modern spacing and simultaneous movement create advantages even without elite downhill creators. Player Development Showing Up in Real Time Lamar Wilkerson becomes a central case study in development within the system. The coaches discuss his progression from cutter to driver to multi-level scorer, emphasizing improved strength, balance, and playing off two feet. The conversation expands to broader roster growth, suggesting several players have improved throughout the season despite structural limitations. The Foundation vs. the Roster Ceiling While praising scheme and adaptability, the group agrees IU still lacks certain roster pieces — particularly a consistent downhill creator and rim protection. Still, the coaching staff’s adjustments, scouting preparation, and conceptual clarity signal a program building toward sustainability rather than short-term fixes. Modern Shot Selection and the Three-Point Debate The episode closes with discussion of Indiana’s three-point volume relative to elite offenses nationally. Rather than criticizing shot totals, the hosts frame success around shot quality, spacing, and roster versatility — arguing that improved personnel could unlock the full efficiency of DeVries’ system. This episode brought to you by the Back Home Network and Homefield Apparel. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

20 de feb de 20261 h 3 min