Vs: NCAA 2007-08
Juttua Chicagon paikallislehdessä:
VALPARAISO -- He looked left, and had nowhere to pass. He looked right, and saw nothing but clutter. He looked straight ahead, and saw a pair of arms waving wildly in his face, mere inches from his nose.
It was nearly 17 minutes into Tuesday night's game against Evansville, and Samuel Haanpaa -- the gunslinger, the sharpshooter, the rainmaker -- hadn't yet attempted a single shot.
You could almost see the cartoon thought bubble appearing above his head.
"Aw, the heck with it."
So the Valparaiso sophomore cocked and fired -- from beyond NBA range, with two hands in his face, with Purple Aces converging on him from both sides.
Nothing but net. This is Samuel Haanpaa, after all.
"Sam has the green light once he steps over halfcourt," VU coach Homer Drew said -- not really in jest. "He just can't shoot from the backcourt."
He probably could, frankly.
The problem is, the sweetest shot in the Mid-Continent Conference is already well known in the Horizon League, and throughout the teams on Valparaiso's schedule. So Haanpaa, despite being on a team loaded with perimeter weapons, has been a marked man through the first third of the season. Everywhere he goes, an opposing player follows, so closely the two might as well be sharing a jersey.
"We 100 percent did not want to give him any open 3s," Evansville coach Marty Simmons says. "It's not a secret."
The open looks that helped Haanpaa knock down 45.7 percent of his 3-pointers as a freshman are all but gone. The shots are coming a lot harder now -- they're deeper, contested and rushed -- and his shooting reflects it. Even after a breakout 20-point night in the Evansville game, he's hitting just 37 percent of his 3-pointers -- a nice clip for mere mortals, but not for Haanpaa.
He's had a couple of big games -- Evansville, Austin Peay (21 points) and Grace (15 points). And thanks to those high shot totals, he's averaging about the same eight shots per game that he did last year, and he's still mustering 9.4 points per game (down a bit from 12.0 last year).
But he's been virtually invisible offensively in some games because of the suffocating, shadowing defense opponents offer -- he had one shot against Wright State, two shots against Western Michigan and five shots against IPFW and Detroit.
And in the worst two-game stretch of his young career, he was 1-of-19 against Vanderbilt and Maryland Eastern Shore, including an 0-of-11 effort against the Commodores, VU's lone loss of the season.
"Sometimes it's like that," Haanpaa says. "In the Vanderbilt game, I even missed a shot right under the basket. Sometimes it just happens like that. The other times, I just couldn't get any open shots, it seemed."
It's been a little aggravating, but Haanpaa says the standings outweigh the scoresheet.
"It's not frustrating because we're playing well and winning games," he says. "That's the key. It doesn't really matter if they take one guy out if we have other players that can step in and make their shots."
If anything, the attention paid to Haanpaa has opened things up for his teammates. Jarryd Loyd, Shawn Huff and Jake Diebler are shooting as well as they ever have in a Valparaiso uniform, and Haanpaa's mere presence has something to do with all the open looks they're receiving.
And their ability to capitalize on the extra breathing room has lessened the effects of Haanpaa's scoring slump -- after all, Valparaiso leads the Horizon League in scoring at 74.3 points per game.
"It's tough to tell which person's going to step up each game," junior forward Urule Igbavboa says. "We have so many threats everywhere."
And if everyone else keeps it up, Haanpaa thinks his open looks will increase again.
"If they keep guarding me tight, it creates more opportunities for the other guys," Haanpaa says. "And eventually teams are going to pay more attention to the guys who are making shots right now."
In the meantime, Haanpaa has tried to be helpful in other ways when opponents take away his open looks. He's been penetrating more and looking for layups -- he made three non-3-pointers against Evansville -- and he's been helping more on rebounds (2.7 per game) and assists (1.3 per game) while cutting down on his turnovers (1.3 per game).
"I think it's a good thing, really," Haanpaa says. "It challenges me to be more than just a shooter."
Not that he'll stop shooting, of course. This is Samuel Haanpaa we're talking about.
And at 6-8, no matter how closely he's being defended by a guard, he can always look up and think: "Aw, what the heck."
"It's not forcing, really," he says. "Many times the shot looks more difficult than it really is. If the guy's real close and his hands are down for a moment, from my perspective it's still an easy shot. And there's a good chance the shot's going in."