I wanted to let your post sink in for a few days before I commented on it, because I loved the fast paced 98-90 games that Tom Davis frequently coached. But he won his share because when the rubber met the road he would get just enough key defensive stops (perfect example, the 1992 NCAA round one game and subsequent 98-92 win over Tom Penders and Texas)
As entertaining as scoring 90 can be it doesn't matter if, like you said, you give up 98. About a month or so ago I mentioned our local high school legend Evan Richard. Evan should have played at Wisconsin or Iowa or maybe Minnesota. He played with Josh Gasser on one of Wisconsin's top AAU teams. But Bo Ryan saw the lack of defensive commitment and passed. Evan, who ended up with back troubles anyway, had a very pedestrian career at UW Milwaukee after never having advanced past sectional semifinal in high school (his older brother, who had less than half the talent, did play defense and made it to state his senior year). A small school Division One athlete should be able to do what Sam Okey once did-carry an entire team and community on his or her back and go to state without even breaking a sweat . Like Nebraska's Hannah Whitish did in high school.
There is just no substitute for hard nosed defense. I think the biggest reason for this is that if you are totally committed to intense defense it is very difficult for the upcoming opponent to simulate it in practice. Then when they face your live pressure for real it's deer meet headlights. I've seen a local high school girls team win six state championships since 2005. And perhaps three of them even played as high as division three in college. But they sure as hell played defense.
So let's see how much our guys commit to it when they return next year. I'll settle for more 68-60 games if it means getting a few more in the win column. I've had it with the machocist act.