A couple things I noticed... Bradley has been successful much of this year by coming out strong at the start of games, taking big early leads, and holding the lead throughout the game. That was the pattern of nearly all of their games during the 9 game win streak (and 11 out of 12 games). But now in the last 2 games, losses at Evansville and the loss to Drake, the opposite has occurred. Bradley fell behind Evansville by 17 points in the first half, and they fell behind Drake by 17 early in the 2nd half. It's difficult to win games when you have to make up big deficits like that. Hopefully, the coaches can rectify this trend the last 2 games.
And the other thing that has worked against Bradley this season is that their opponents have shot far more free throws than Bradley.
Bradley has attempted 392 free throws this season, which ranks 11th in the MVC. Meanwhile, the other three MVC teams with winning records, Indiana State (507), SIU (504), and Drake (480) are the top three in the MVC in FT attempts.
Usually winning teams get fouled more than losing teams. But, Bradley's opponents have attempted 479 FTs, a whopping 22% more free throws by the opponents, than by Bradley. That's a huge disparity for a team that has won 70% of their games, and a much bigger disparity than in past seasons.
A little of that may be related to the change the NCAA made this past off-season regarding how officials call the block-charge fouls. -
https://www.cbssports.com/college-b...other-rule-modifications-for-upcoming-season/
The rule requires officials to make a quick determination of how long the defender was in position before the contact happened. With everything else the officials have to be watching, this is nearly impossible for them, so they seem to just call everything a block now, and award foul shots to the offensive player. We rarely see offensive fouls called any more in that situation. Bradley may not have adjusted to this rule change as many other teams have.
Also, this rule change benefits teams with the big, strong, bulky inside players, which Bradley doesn't have. Bradley's three "big men" Leons, Hannah, and Atlason shoot surprisingly few free throws, Those three were just 2-4 combined from the FT line against Drake. That is fewer FTs than Darnell Brodie got by himself. Against Indiana State, those three attempted only 2 FTs combined for the entire game, less than half the number of FTs Robbie Avila had by himself. And it's not just those two games, Bradley has shot fewer free throws than most opponents this year, despite winning 17 of their 25 games.
Whatever the reason, maybe it would benefit Bradley to try to get to the FT line more, or stop giving their opponents so many free throws.