“It's a classic rotation away from everything that did well in 1998 and the first quarter of 1999. Everything that did lousy in that time has picked up.”
Christine Benz
“In the first half and early in the third quarter, our defensive rotation was a little slow. Aledo has one of the most potent offenses in the Olympic Conference, but if your rotation is good, then they can be stopped. If your rotation is not good, then they will cause you a lot of problems, and that's what happened to us.”
Chuck Grant
“The rotation went out the window after the first quarter. They started going with whoever they wanted.”
Justin Zwick
“We first started out in a man and for some reason we weren't rotating and they were screening and cutting but we went to a zone and matched out of it. Then we went back to man to man but they didn't run the same thing when we did it so the pattern was easier to cover. We were fortunate that they cooled off a little bit.”
Danny Starkey
“We have 10 or 11 [players] we rotate in and out and we think the last quarter should belong to us because we have the fresher legs.”
Eric Snyder
“Durant played a lot better than the first time. They switched their rotation around a little bit.”
Crystal Ramsey
“I've never coached that way, where we've never had a set rotation, except my first year in San Antonio, we had a lot of injuries. That's really hurt the team. It hurts your progress. All of a sudden, we settled on David at the three and we have the three-guard rotation for the most part. It helps everybody, I think.”
Larry Brown