Home US SportsNCAAB Why a healthy Fordham should concern the rest of the A10

Why a healthy Fordham should concern the rest of the A10

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In Mike Magpayo’s first year as head coach of Fordham’s men’s basketball program, the Rams have had their struggles.

Sitting just 11-10 overall and 2-6 in the Atlantic 10, Magpayo has been the first to admit it at times.

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“I just think a lack of shot making turns into a lack of energy on a disappointing day not to fight and make it a game,” he said after a Jan. 21 loss to Duquesne. “We’re more than capable of doing that, but today, we didn’t rise to the level of competition.”

Fordham certainly wasn’t projected highly this preseason with the Rams picked to finish 14th in the A10 back in September, and it’s been an uphill climb even just to win 11 games.

A lot of the early issues, like losses to NJIT, Iona and Holy Cross, can be attributed to a new head coach transitioning and an entirely new roster learning his play style and scheme. However, Fordham really hasn’t been 100% healthy the entire season, plagued by a plethora of injuries since the summer.

Jack Whitbourn, Roor Akhuar, Abass Bodija, Louis Lesmond, Christian Henry, Marcus Greene and Dejour “Dae Dae” Reaves are all averaging more than 17.0 MPG but have each missed time with injury.

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Still, while having to mix lineups and rotations on a consistent basis, Fordham has proven to be one of the A10’s top defensive units this season. Given, this isn’t a team that swipes a ton of steals or blocks a lot of shots, the Rams rank bottom five in conference for both those categories, but are holding opponents to a league low 65 points per game.

By the KenPom metrics, Fordham is 55th in 2-point percentage defense, 83rd in effective field goal percentage defense, 78th in raw defensive efficiency and 19th in defensive rebounding percentage. Featuring a lineup with four contributors listed at 6-foot-9 or taller, the Rams smother opponents with suffocating defense, and it makes every night in Rose Hill Gymnasium a grind.

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“When we go through those brass stretches of offensive basketball whenever we’re missing shots, I’m like ‘what else can we do?’” Magpayo said. “[The defense] has become something we can lean into as coaches, [telling players to] stay calm and focus on a big defensive play or a big rebounding play.”

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Now, as Fordham starts to get healthy, there’s cause for concern when visiting the Bronx, with a Wednesday night win over La Salle providing a look into the challenges that a full Rams rotation brings.

It wasn’t a high scoring affair, the final just 64-58, but it was a back-and-forth chess match in which Fordham’s defense ultimately prevailed by holding La Salle scoreless for the last 5:52 of regulation.

First-year Explorers head coach Darris Nichols summed up what makes the Rams physicality and defense such an issue post-game.

“I think the length is the biggest thing,” Nichols said. “When you have three guys at 6-foot-10 and you play the 2-3 zone, we’re rushing it more because you’ve got all this size and length on you. We’re getting rim shots, good quality shots, and we just missed them. I think when you play against the size, it forces you to rush and shoot it differently than a lot of teams we’ve seen.”

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Coaches have said similar things all season long. Teams like Saint Louis, Duquense, George Mason, Davidson and Dayton were all held to 78 points or fewer by Fordham this season.

Of course, that means it’s on the offensive end where Fordham has had its biggest struggles  with the Rams 12th in PPG in the A10 and just 258th in offensive efficiency nationally. It’s led to an overeliance on Reaves, who is tied for 99th in usage rate, top-60 in minutes percentage, 102nd in percentage of shots taken and 110th in percentage of possession used.

Even so, he’s scored double-digits in all 20 games he’s played in. With being forced to carry more of the offensive load, he has seen a dip in his 3-point shooting and efficiency metrics.

But in some of the Rams biggest games this season, even amidst streaky shooting, Reaves has been clutch when it mattered most. So much so that Fordham’s student broadcast, WFVU Sports, dubbed him “Dae Dae Dagger” after a game-winner against Wagner earlier this season.

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