Skip navigation
Favorites
Sign up to follow your favorites on all your devices.
Sign up

Is it time to hit the panic button for Syracuse?

syracuse notre dame

Syracuse lost its second consecutive ACC game on Tuesday night as the Orange fell at home to Georgia Tech, 67-62, in a shocking home loss on Senior Night.

The Orange have now lost four of their last five games. The last two losses in particular, Syracuse was clearly outplayed by Virginia and Georgia Tech and the main problem lies with Syracuse’s lack of depth and lack of scoring balance.

Since the Orange lost DaJuan Coleman for the season, and with Jerami Grant battling a back injury, Syracuse is only playing seven players on a consistent basis and the drop-off between Grant and Michael Gbinije and Tyler Roberson -- Grant’s backups -- is significant on both ends of the floor.

Without Grant’s length, athleticism and ability to make plays above the rim, Syracuse is struggling on both ends of the floor. Gbinije isn’t nearly as active -- or long and athletic -- in the 2-3 zone and he isn’t nearly as good of an offensive player as Grant.

Georgia Tech was able to work the ball inside on numerous occasions against the Syracuse 2-3 zone and the Yellow Jackets used a high-low passing game that wouldn’t be nearly as easy with Grant’s length in the lineup.

Gbinije is shooting a woeful 36 percent from the field on the season and he doesn’t provide energy around the rim like Grant does. Roberson is a true freshman that has only appeared in 18 games this season and is shooting 30 percent from the field. If Syracuse opts to go bigger and put Baye-Moussa Keita in along with Rakeem Christmas, their offense still struggles because Keita isn’t much of a threat besides bunnies at the rim and putbacks.

This puts an enormous amount of pressure on Syracuse’s main three shooting options: C.J. Fair, Tyler Ennis and Trevor Cooney.

If just one of those guys has an off-night then Syracuse usually struggles to crack 60 points. Fair and Ennis have delivered on the offensive end fairly consistently this season, but Cooney has been all over the map in ACC play.

Cooney has the ability to stretch the floor and carry Syracuse to victory like the 9-for-12 performance from the three-point line he had against Notre Dame, but he’s also susceptible to 2-for-12 games like he’s had against Miami and North Carolina.

Over the last five games, Cooney is 7-for-37 from the three-point line as he’s logged 35.6 minutes per game.

It could just be that all three of Syracuse’s primary options are wearing down by playing so many minutes. Fair averages 37.7 minutes a game, Ennis 35.1 and Cooney 32.4.

Syracuse just doesn’t have the same pep in its step as it did to start the season and they aren’t as crisp on rotations or movements away from the ball these last few games. The Orange look tired and the scoring burden placed on Fair, Ennis and Cooney without Grant in the lineup seems to be taking a toll on them.

If Syracuse is to contend for a title, they need Grant to get healthy or they need a fourth scorer to step up and take the pressure off of Fair, Ennis and Cooney. Since back injuries can be a fickle thing to deal with, the Orange had better hope that a fourth player steps up quickly or the Orange could be in serious trouble.

Follow @phillipshoops