Malik Ellison has failed to get a single offensive rebound 10 times in the last 12 games. That is the the greatest hustle stat out there. Case closed.
I'm not aware of all the philosophies of team but more times than not the 3 isn't crashing offensive glass in most schemes. They are getting their asses back on transition defense but hey you are right in the #'s you pointed out.
Josh Hart has never had less than 62 offensive boards playing the three for Nova--even as a backup. He also averages 6.7 boards per game the last last two years. Lavor Postell averaged 6.9 boards as a senior and half of those were offensive. There is no scheme in basketball where the SF abandons the offensive glass for a majority of possessions. Rather, Ellison, with his lack of awareness, fails to anticipate where the missed shot will go and, due to his extreme lack of hustle, fails to put himself in position to even be able to make a play on them. Hoslacl of effort is apparent when he goes under every screeen. Nobody wants to fight ober screens, yet Mussini, Ponds, Lovett, and Bash still do a high % of the time. Anyone can stand straight up and jump a
passing lane...that is not taxing on anyone's body.
Well Hart is leading rebounder of his team. Not to mention Jenkins, Paschall, and Bridges rebounding are pretty dreadful on the boards. Not exactly a true comparison here.
I've been fortunate enough to listen to about a hundred coaches lectures from Self to Van Gundy to Calipari to Izzo to Pitino. All of them have differing thoughts on transition defense. Some guys crash all in, some guys crash 4/5, some guys crash 3/4/5.
Could Ellison rebound at a higher rate? I'm with you, he can. I think there needs to be more hunger there but offensively I'm not pressing on it. Ellison needs to eliminate 1-2 bonehead plays a game. The turnover followed by foul and pick 6 int passes (turnover for easy fast break layup). The occasional whoops my foot was out of bounds is another irk'er too.
I see Ellison go strong with left into paint, shield the ball with his body, and go up for an easy short J or layup. That's hard to stop. I'd like to see him actually get post up touches. I think he can shoot over most guards and is a good enough passer where that is a matchup problem.
Either way Ellison is tremendous depth. He can carry the ball handling duties in spot minutes, he can play 1-3, he can be a tough look defensively with length, and he can catch hot and be a spark. If he is your 3,4,5th guard next year as a junior that's a hell of a lot better than what any team in conference has.