Tuesday, December 29, 2009

"The U"

I've been very much enjoying ESPN's "30 For 30" series so far, in which 30 different directors take a shot at documenting a major sports story over the 30 years of ESPN's existence. There was Kirk Fraser's take on the death of Len Bias, which transported me back to 11 years old and having one of my childhood heroes throw his life away. There was Mike Tollin's documentary on the life and death of the USFL, casting an evil eye on Donald Trump. Barry Levinson took a story that I knew quite a bit about and shed a new light on it as he chronicled the Baltimore Colt marching band and the departure of the Colts from Baltimore. Throw in shows on the Wayne Gretzky trade, the Ali/Holmes fight and the life and times of Jimmy the Greek and these are some compelling documentaries on sports.

Which brings me to the most recent film, "The U" by Billy Corben about the University of Miami's football program. Now, without a doubt, this is a great topic for this series: a team rising from irrelevance to become the best college football program in the nation during the 80s and beyond, but not without its share of controversy. Unfortunately, Corben's thesis for this film appeared to be something along the lines of "Miami was a very good football team, so that gives them a complete pass everywhere else." Part of the reason that "The U" was such a great topic for a documentary was the fact that there were two very distinct sides to this story: the amazing success the 'Canes had on the football field and the abysmal way in which they acted while gaining such success. But, while Corben certainly went so far as to admit that there was some controversy surrounding the 'Canes, he went out of his way to avoid voicing some of those concerns in a coherent way, instead focusing on the 'Canes players and coaches and apologists making excuses.

It wasn't the Miami players fault that there was a long litany of legal problems in the program, but it was certainly Sports Illustrated's fault for publishing a sidebar about it. Racists!

It wasn't Jimmy Johnson's fault that they ran up the score on overmatched opponents, it was the fault of the opposing team for failing to stop them. And 'Canes players dancing over fallen opponents? That's just kids having fun.

The Miami-cheap-shot-fueled onfield brawls? Certainly not the 'Canes fault. But the university president being concerned that this painted the university in a bad light? What a stooge that guy was. Didn't he know how much money the football team was generating? Money forgives all sins, right?

According to Steve Walsh, Miami dominated Penn State in every facet of the game in the '87 Fiesta Bowl. (Wait for it, wait for it.) Except for turnovers. Hey, I got one more for you Steve. Um, the score. (Somewhere around this point I briefly considered the idea that Corben was a genius in the field of satire, spending a couple hours making fun of Miami while pretending to fawn over them. I threw that idea away a couple seconds later.)

Who cares that Miami players were being paid in violation of NCAA regulations? Those rules were dumb anyway. Besides, Bennie Blades had a kid at the time! And if they hadn't been getting paid, they would have been forced to go out and steal car stereos and sell drugs in order to survive. Oh. Wait. They did that too.

And, as Randal Hill took pains to point out (albeit with tongue firmly in cheek), it wasn't his fault that he ran up the Cotton Bowl tunnel after scoring a TD and came back with imaginary guns ablazing. It was everybody else's fault but his. (Note that for some reason, the Miami AD called this something like the most egregious offense one of his players ever committed, a truly disgusting act. Maybe it's just me, but I saw like 15 things over the course of the two hours that were far, far worse than this.)

Don't get me wrong, if the entire documentary had been anti-Miami, focusing on all the controversy while just glossing over the successes, it would have been just as bad, but this film could have been so much more. Credit Corben for at least mentioning the dark side, but it would have nice to hear a perspective on the story from someone other than Miami players, coaches, writers and supporters.

One last complaint, perhaps minor compared to the above. At some point in the film, (and it might have been on a bumper coming back in from a commercial break) Corben says something like "Beano Cook once called Miami football the greatest dynasty since Julius Caesar." Which, if you know Beano is just a great line and admittedly overstatement. No problem with that. But then Corben follows it up by saying: "And he was right." Well, no. No, he wasn't right. Miami was the best college football team from the early 80s to the early 90s. In no way do their accomplishments compare with those of Caesar (which is such an obvious thing that I'm not even going to follow that comparison and bring in other world leaders into the conversation), let alone the Lakers or Celtics or Canadiens or Bruins or Yankees or... The Hurricanes were dominant, won four national championships in nine years and were clearly the most successful program in college football for a decade or so. Leave it at that. There is no need to take a great line like Beano's and take it seriously.

All in all, I still enjoyed the film and would still recommend it, but compared to earlier episodes in this series, this was clearly subpar.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

2009 College Football All-American Team

With the season all but over, it is time for the annual meaningless game of putting together All-American teams. I know, we’ve got the Army/Navy game still to go to wrap up the regular season – and I’m certainly interested in the game (go Middies! Get the Bruins in a bowl game!) – but frankly, none of the players in the game are on my radar as far as All-Americans go (nothing against Ricky Dobbs, who is fun to watch), so here goes nothing.

I actually put a lot of time into coming up with this list, and I’m fairly happy with it, with the possible exception of my choices for center (I really wasn’t in love with any of the candidates) and the disturbing realization that I put three Bruins on the squad (well, two and a half - kickers don’t really count) and only one Trojan. Also, I think C.J. Spiller probably deserves one of the RB slots on the second team, but given that I had already put him on the first team as a kick returner, and given that I really wanted to put Ryan Matthews and Dion Lewis on the team, I felt okay leaving him off despite the fact that he is on my (imaginary) Heisman ballot.

Speaking of the Heisman, I gotta say this: if either Tim Tebow or Colt McCoy wins the Heisman this year, that award is dead to me. Both have been great college quarterbacks and have had great careers, but there just ain’t a chance that either has been the most outstanding college football player this year. My picks: 1) Toby Gerhart, 2) Ndamakong Suh, 3) C.J. Spiller. I had a hard time deciding between Gerhart and Suh for the first spot, but I’ll admit I let the Heisman’s overall bias towards players who touch the ball get to me and gave Gerhart the nod. I also had a hard time with picking Spiller over Mark Ingram for the third slot, but gave it to Spiller as a result of Ingram’s weak game against Auburn and Spiller’s monster of a game in the ACC Championship. Nevermind the fact that I ignored Spiller’s much weaker game the same weekend against South Carolina or the fact that Ingram pummeled that same South Carolina defense to the tune of 246 yards; the imaginary ballot has been imaginarily submitted.

On to the All-American’s listed below, some highlights:

Alabama leads the list with four players on the first team (okay, three and a half, kickers don’t count), plus another three on the second team (okay, two, since Javier Arenas makes it as both a corner and a kick returner). And, while I’m mentioning Arenas, I’ll also mention that perhaps the hardest pick I made was choosing Perrish Cox over Arenas for the second corner spot on the first team.

Texas is a deserving opponent in the BCS Championship game, but I could only find room for two Longhorns on my team.

Florida is right there with three on the first team and another one on the second team, and I’ve got four Iowa Hawkeyes on my second team defense to go along with first-teamer Brian Bulaga.

And, again, on the UCLA front: two and a half Bruins on my second team? That can’t be right. Although I try to avoid being biased here, I’m a Bruin fan at heart, so I’ll throw out an honorable mention to, say, Marvin Austin of North Carolina as a guy who might have made it in place of Brian Price, and Chad Jones of LSU as a possible replacement for Rahim Moore. Although I stand by the fact that Price and Moore are deserving of their spots. As to Kai Forbath? Who really cares? He’s just a kicker.

Anyway, without further ado, here’s my 2009 College Football All-American Team:

First Team

QB Kellen Moore, So, Boise State
RB Mark Ingram, So, Alabama
RB Toby Gerhart, Sr, Stanford
WR Mardy Gilyard, Sr, Cincinnati
WR Golden Tate, Jr, Notre Dame
TE Aaron Hernandez, Sr, Florida
C Chris Hall, Sr, Texas
G Mike Johnson, Sr, Alabama
G Sergio Render, Sr, Virginia Tech
T Brian Bulaga, Jr, Iowa
T Russell Okung, Sr, Oklahoma State

DT Ndamakong Suh, Sr, Nebraska
DT Gerald McCoy, Jr, Oklahoma
DE Jerry Hughes, Sr, TCU
DE Greg Romeus, Jr, Pitt
LB Bruce Carter, Jr, North Carolina
LB Rolando McClain, Sr, Alabama
LB Brandon Spikes, Sr, Florida
CB Joe Haden, Jr, Florida
CB Perrish Cox, Sr, Oklahoma State
SS Erik Berry, Jr, Tennessee
FS Earl Thomas, So, Texas

K Leigh Tiffin, Sr, Alabama
P Zoltan Mesko, Sr, Michigan
KR C.J. Spiller, Sr, Clemson

Second Team

QB Case Keenum, Jr, Houston
RB Ryan Matthews, Jr, Fresno State
RB Dion Lewis, Fr, Pitt
WR A.J. Green, So, Georgia
WR Titus Young, Jr, Boise State
TE Anthony McCoy, Sr, USC
C Maurkice Pouncey, Jr, Florida
G Brandon Carter, Sr, Texas Tech
G Cord Howard, Sr, Georgia Tech
T Anthony Davis, Jr, Rutgers
T Ciron Black, Sr, LSU

DT Terrance Cody, Sr, Alabama
DT Brian Price, Jr, UCLA
DE Brandon Graham, Sr, Michigan
DE Adrian Clayborn, Jr Iowa
LB Sean Weatherspoon, Sr, Missouri
LB Pat Angerer, Sr, Iowa
LB Keaton Kristick, Sr, Oregon State
CB Amari Spievey, Jr, Iowa
CB Javier Arenas, Sr, Alabama
SS Tyler Sash, So, Iowa
FS Rahim Moore, So, UCLA

K Kai Forbath, Jr, UCLA
P Drew Butler, So, Georgia
KR Javier Arenas, Sr, Alabama

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

2009 76 Classic Roundup

Year three of the 76 Classic featured the strongest field in the brief history of the tournament, and arguably the strongest field of any of the early season tournaments this season, boasting four ranked teams plus a couple of mid-majors who figure to be right in the thick of things in their conference. The tournament, which was played in front of a somewhat sparse crowd at the Anaheim Convention Center, was captured by West Virginia, who dominated upset-minded Portland in the final Sunday night. While the season has only just begun, and there is a lot to shake out between now and Selection Sunday, we did get to find out a little about what to expect from these teams over the coming months.

Before I get into a breakdown of each team’s weekend, here is my all-tournament team:

Da’Sean Butler, Sr, West Virginia
T.J. Campbell, Sr, Portland
B.J. Holmes, Jr, Texas A&M
Shelvin Mack, Soph, Butler
T.J. Robinson, Soph, Long Beach State

1. West Virginia wrapped blowout wins over Long Beach State and Portland around a tough battle with Texas A&M to capture the 76 Classic title. Behind strong performances by senior Da’Sean Butler, who averaged almost 19 points per game over the tournament, including a spectacular 26 in the final, and sophomore Kevin Jones (13 ppg over the tournament), the Mountaineers looked long, athletic and deep. Sophomore Devin Ebanks made his season debut for Coach Bob Huggins in the second game of the tournament, after sitting out the first three games of the season due to “personal reasons.” Ebanks looked especially strong in the A&M game, tallying 14 points and grabbing nine rebounds to help the Mountaineers advance. If there is a concern for West Virginia at this point, it may be on the glass, as they were outrebounded by Texas A&M, the opponent that was similar in terms of athleticism and size. However, the Mountaineers have to be pretty pleased with their play over the weekend, routinely going ten men deep on their bench and getting good production out of everyone. West Virginia certainly looks to have the makings of a strong contender for the Big East title.

2. Portland was the surprise of the tournament, advancing to the final upon the strength of an opening round demolition of UCLA and a semifinal that they almost let slip away against Minnesota. Senior point guard T.J. Campbell was huge in the semi for the Pilots, scoring 23 (including four three-pointers) en route to the upset. While Portland ran into a buzzsaw in the finals, this weekend has to be considered a huge success for the Pilots, with the win over Minnesota giving them a signature win upon which to hang their hat. They’ll have a chance to add another key win this week when they visit Washington. While Portland didn’t have the athletes to hang with West Virginia in the final, they are a well-coached team who can cause problems for quality opponents with their ability to knock down open threes (Campbell and junior guard Jared Stohl each had nine threes over the tournament) and to get opposing offenses out of sync with their 2-3 zone, which was instrumental in their two victories this weekend. While they may not have the athletes that Gonzaga has, they could cause the Zags problems with their style of play.

3. Texas A&M came into this tournament as a bit of an afterthought. Most of the pre-tourney talk centered around the ranked teams (Butler, Minnesota, West Virginia and Clemson) or struggling UCLA, or even the two upset-minded teams (Long Beach State and Portland. But the Aggies came out of this weekend with wins over two of the ranked teams (despite their best efforts to give Minnesota third place – missing their last nine free throws and 12 of their last 15) and a strong showing against the eventual champion. Senior guards Derrick Roland and Ronald Sloan impressed with their athleticism and all-around games, and senior forward Bryan Davis was impressive defending the post and hitting the glass, but it was diminutive junior B.J. Holmes who was the spark for the Aggies, knocking down threes, playing tough man defense and taking several charges throughout the tournament. While A&M probably doesn’t have the depth or size to challenge Texas or Kansas for Big 12 supremacy, they look to be a solid tournament team and an upper-division finisher in the Big 12.

4. Minnesota got their tournament off to a good start with a win over Butler in a game played at a very high level. The Golden Gophers got strong play from senior forward Damian Johnson (18 points, four assists, four steals, three rebounds, a block and a three, all on seven-of-eight shooting), sophomore center Colton Iverson (13 points, 11 rebounds, two blocks) and sophomore point guard Devoe Joseph (14 points, three rebounds, three assists, two threes) and significant contributions from a deep bench. However, the rest of the tournament had to be disappointing for Tubby Smith’s squad as they dropped two tough games to close the tournament. Against Portland, they never really figured out the Pilot zone, shooting only 33% from the field for the game, and in the third place game, fell behind in the first half (during which neither senior guard Lawrence Westbrook nor junior guard Al Nolen played due to disciplinary reasons), and were never able to get all the way back, despite Texas A&M’s best efforts to let them back in. Nevertheless, the Gophers look to have a deep and talented team that should be improved over last season. Iverson and fellow sophomore center Ralph Sampson III seem to have a better grasp of what is expected of them and Johnson has stepped forward as a team leader. Throw in a tough backcourt trio of Nolen, Westbrook and Joseph and the Gophers look to be a well-rounded squad, even with the future of currently suspended recruits Trevor Mbakwe and Royce White still in doubt.

5. Clemson walks away from Anaheim with a 2-1 record for the weekend, and they have to be feeling better about themselves than they did after a first-round struggle against Texas A&M and perhaps more of a battle than they expected from Long Beach State. Clemson struggled at times over the tournament with their half-court offense and got uneven performances from several players up and down their roster. Head coach Oliver Purnell even left junior forward Jerai Grant (a starter in Clemson’s first-round game) on the bench for the entirety of their second game. But, in the end, the Tigers showed great determination in battling back against Butler and pulling out a tight win in a game where they were down double figures in the second half. While Clemson still lacks a traditional low-post threat (despite senior forward Trevor Booker’s impressive abilities), and is prone to bog down in the half-court offense, their speed and athleticism can still give opponents trouble and they look to be a solid middle-of-the-pack ACC team with legitimate NCAA tournament hopes.

6. Butler has to be licking their wounds a little after a disappointing one-point loss in the Consolation Final, leaving Anaheim with only a tight victory over a bad UCLA team. The Bulldogs relinquished a double-digit second half lead against Clemson, despite strong performances from sophomore guard Shelvin Mack (15 points, eight rebounds, four assists) and sophomore forward Gordon Hayward (20 points and 12 rebounds). And really, it was Butler’s perimeter defense (usually a strength) that let them down, allowing Clemson’s Demontez Stitt and Andre Young to combine for 31 points, 23 of which came in the second half. Junior forward Matt Howard seemed to be in foul trouble the entire tournament, yet still managed to scrape together 13 points per game over the tournament. It was Mack, however, who shone most brightly for the Bulldogs, averaging 19 ppg over the tournament on a combination of perimeter shots and penetration. While Butler will most certainly be the team to beat in the Horizon, Coach Brad Stevens has to be somewhat concerned that his team left a good-looking win over Clemson on the table. However, Butler will have more chances to score quality non-conference wins (games against Georgetown, Ohio State and Xavier remain) before Horizon play begins.

7. Long Beach State winds up leaving the tournament with a 1-2 record, and yet they still have to be feeling pretty good about themselves. Despite getting blown off the court by eventual champion West Virginia on Thanksgiving, the 49ers rebounded to give Clemson all it could handle in their second game, before handling the dominant Southern California program, UCLA, pretty easily on Sunday. The 49ers had some problems with West Virginia’s length (much like everyone in the tournament did), but they have enough size and athleticism to more than matchup to the Big West standards. They’ll need it before they ever reach conference play though, with trips to Texas, Kentucky and Duke all looming. Sophomore forward T.J. Robinson was the big man for the Niners in Anaheim with games of 25 points and 15 rebounds against Clemson and 25 points and 13 rebounds against UCLA, but sophomore point guard Casper Ware, junior guard Greg Plater and senior guard Stephan Gilling also made strong contributions.

8. UCLA came into this tournament having bounced back somewhat from their opening game loss to Cal State Fullerton with wins over Cal State Bakersfield and Pepperdine. But while the Bruins gave a strong effort in their second round loss to Butler, the whole weekend was a shocking disappointment. While it is no secret that UCLA is way down this year, the extent to which they are down was made stunningly apparent with huge and unimpressive losses to Portland and Long Beach State sandwiched around a solid performance against Butler (a game in which they made it interesting in the second half, despite being down as much as 14 early in the game). There is a lack of talent in Westwood, especially in the backcourt, and while Ben Howland will eventually get things going in the right direction, the rest of this season could devolve into a mere exploration of the younger players on this team, to see if guys like freshmen Reeves Nelson, Brendan Lane, Mike Moser and sophomore J’mison Morgan are going to be capable of contributing to future teams. And, again, it cannot be understated just how bad the Bruins looked: lack of coherent offensive structure, no talent able to improvise outside of the offense, and perhaps most disturbing, limited effort defensively. The whole program, from head coach on down to the last player off the bench, had to be embarrassed by their performance.

Friday, November 20, 2009

ESPN's College Hoops Marathon

Now, I’m no long distance runner by any stretch of the imagination, but I know this much: if you’re gonna run a marathon, you gotta work up to it. You don’t just take, say, seven months off and then one day decide to wake up and run a marathon. And, if you do, I’m guessing you’re gonna be hurting pretty bad about halfway through that thing. Yeah, you may get a second wind. Maybe even a third. Either way, you are going to be wrecked the day after.

Well, after taking seven months off from college hoops, I took a bit of a chance to watch some rather uninteresting games last week, and all of a sudden ESPN springs 24 (more like 30 or 32 or something, I dunno, I still haven’t even recovered enough to begin counting by twos coherently) straight hours of some pretty darn good college hoops on me. And, given that I had a day off and all those games and a desire to get acquainted with some of the squads who are going to be renting some space between my ears for the next few months, I dove (apparently this is the point where I am going to leave the marathon metaphor behind) right in.

Now, ESPN’s marathon officially started with the UCLA/CS Fullerton game, but there were three pre-season NIT games prior to that to dig into a bit, so I’ll include those here. I got home from work at about 8pm, had some dinner with the ol’ lady, watched a episode of Mad Men, and by the time I was done, I already had three full games sitting on the TiVo waiting to be watched, so I poured myself a Rum and Coke (I would need some caffeine, and a little liquor never hurt anything) and got down to business. Here’s what I learned from watching these games:

Game 1: Coastal Carolina @ Duke
--Luckily for my hopes of finishing this marathon, these first few games weren’t all that compelling. And, I’ll make no bones about the fact that I never meant to watch every minute of all of these games (and good god, if anyone did, they are insane). Record ‘em, watch enough of the first half to get a feel for the teams (10 min or so), jump ahead a bit, if the game is still close watch some more. Skip ahead until early in the 2nd half and watch the remainder of the game, or at least until the game is no longer competitive.
--That being said, I was interested to get a good first look at Duke, and they looked good. There isn’t a true point on the team, but there is a ton of size and there is plenty of skill. I had looked at this roster over the summer and thought that they would struggle due to their lack of backcourt depth, but one look (even against an overmatched Coastal Carolina squad) at the way Coach K is going to play this made me reconsider those thoughts. Scheyer is capable of playing most of the minutes at the point, certainly Smith (who did not play in this game due to suspension) can cover the remaining minutes, and Singler and Dawkins are capable of aiding in bringing the ball up and initiating the offense. The Devils may still run into trouble against high-pressure defensive teams like Clemson, but Duke will be right in the thick of things in the ACC.

Game 2: Colgate @ Connecticut
--Dyson will have to be the go-to guy offensively for the Huskies, and either Robinson or Walker will have to step up to be the secondary offensive option on this team. And, to this point, neither has shown the ability to be a consistent offensive threat in the half-court, despite their obvious talents. It will be interesting to see if either can develop their game over the course of the season.
--While Dyson will need to be the go-to guy, it remains to be seen if he has the instincts necessary to be that guy.

Game 3: Texas State @ Arizona State
--The obvious question for the Sun Devils is who can replace James Harden. Easy answer: no one can completely replace him. Harder answer: freshman James Lockett certainly showed flashes of the ability to created offense (in many of the same ways Harden did) in the half-court. But. He is still a freshman and still makes you painfully aware of that from time to time throughout the game. It is going to be fun to see him progress over the season and over his career.

Game 4: Cal State Fullerton @ UCLA
--So, by now I’m moving along, passed by Rum and Cokes onto some scotch and finally beer. And I needed plenty of it for this game. Good god. My eyes still haven’t fully recovered from watching this mess of a game. And, let’s be clear here. I mean no disrespect to Fullerton who played well and will likely make some noise in the Big West, but turning to the Bruins for a second, how can a team who repeatedly hauls in top-rated recruiting classes, regardless of the early defections to the NBA be this bad? In the interest of giving a guy who has taken three of his last four teams to the Final Four the well-deserved benefit of the doubt, I will give Ben Howland a bit of a pass here. I’ll also throw in a bit of an excuse for him as well, given that he has had a large amount of injuries in the early part of this season, and that coupled with a very young team means that these guys haven’t had much of a chance to build up a rapport with each other (not that any of that explains the ineptitude of seniors Roll, Dragovic and Keefe in this game). But, that being said, Howland won’t get a pass for long around Westwood, and in order to avoid any uncomfortable questions, he might want to find a way to get some kind of offense going, even if that means stepping outside of his comfort zone on that end of the floor.

Now, after watching UCLA finally succumb after two overtimes (it’s not bad enough they made me watch 40 minutes of that damn thing, I had to watch two extra periods), I decided it was time to get some sleep and in the hopes that by the time I awoke in the morning my eyes would have stopped bleeding. Unfortunately, and in hindsight, that UCLA performance is just something you can’t unsee. My father’s generation had the horrors of war to keep them up at night, I have the UCLA offense.

Game 5: San Diego State @ Saint Mary’s
--After a good night’s sleep, I wake up somewhat refreshed (even those I still get a nervous twitch and feel the urge to hide under the couch any time the images of the previous night come back to me), and at least a couple of hours behind schedule. In this season of Thanksgiving, it only seems right to be very grateful for my TiVo. I started watching this game somewhere around 9:30 am, 10 or so hours behind schedule with a full lineup of enticing games in front of me. It was time to get to work.
--By the time that UCLA game finally ended and ESPN switched over to Moraga, this game was already a blowout with Saint Mary’s up 20 or so behind Mickey McConnell’s multiple threes early in the game. I wound up only watching enough of this to get a feel for both teams, and certainly San Diego State did improve in the second half (not coincidentally matching up pretty well with about the time the Aztecs began to get consistent effort from their entire five), but the game never really got interesting.
--I’m one of those who, while respecting the job Steve Fisher has done in building the program in San Diego, believes the guy is not a very good X’s-and-O’s coach. San Diego State over the past four years or so has been one of the more talented mid-major programs in the country, and all they have to show for it is three NIT appearances and a flame-out in the first round three years back against Indiana, in a game where they were easily the better team for about 37 minutes or so. Once again, this Aztec team has oodles of talent, but it will be interesting to see if Fisher can get the talent to perform.

Game 6: Northern Colorado @ Hawaii
--For my money, this was easily the least promising game on the schedule, two programs that weren’t really on my radar. In the end, however, this turned out to be a fairly interesting game with Northern Colorado building up a big lead only to have Hawaii make a run at the end.
--Hawaii seems to have trouble at point, with their options being Dwain Williams (who wants to pound the ball into the ground for 20 seconds and then hoist a 3) and Jeremy Lay (who is capable of getting into the lane and dishing, but is far too prone to taking abysmally bad shots, even if he can make them). In the end, there’s probably not enough talent on the Rainbow Warrior roster to matter.
--Northern Colorado, on the other hand, could potentially make some noise in the Big West this season. Led by Yohosh Bonner, they’ve got some strong guards and enough serviceable interior players to give themselves a shooting chance come March.

Game 7: Monmouth @ Saint Peter’s
--6AM on the east coast, middle of night my time, but I’m watching it over a late breakfast (bacon and eggs, if you must know).
--Monmouth never seemed to get anybody beyond sophomore post Travis Taylor to wake up in this game and struggled their way to 34 points for the game. Obviously, they’ll need to improve to be able to compete this season, but there are some good parts there. James Hett is a scrappy point. Ed Waite is an athletic freshman frontcourt player. Justin Sofman can knock down some shots. And Whitney Coleman is a talented guard who is still working his way back into playing shape after missing last season with an ACL injury.
--Saint Peter’s plays tough man-to-man defense (strongly displayed here) and has some talent in the frontcourt (Ryan Bacon and Jeron Belin) to pair with solid point Nick Leon.

Game 8: Drexel @ Niagara
--An 8AM game is a little more reasonable, but the first half seemed a little sluggish still. Things definitely picked up in the second in a very entertaining game between two solid mid-majors. Drexel made a couple strong runs in the second half, including a finishing flurry to get back within 3 at the end, but Niagara hung on down the stretch,
--Niagara is a fun team to watch. Not a whole lot of size, but a ton of skilled perimeter players and undersized interior competitors.
--Drexel guards have some excellent potential but need to shore up their decision-making in order for the Dragons to compete in the Colonial. But, if the guards can get there, they are surrounded by enough talent in the frontcourt and some depth of the bench, to make a real run at the postseason.

Game 9: Clemson @ Liberty
--Give credit to Clemson for going to Liberty. Give them even more credit for utterly destroying them. The SMC/SDSU game was previously the most one-sided of the marathon, but this game put that one to shame. Clemson led 17-1 before Liberty scored their first basket, and 42-19 at the half.
--Clemson lost some key players in the offseason, but this freshman class brings a lot to the table. It is going to be interesting to see Clemson in the 76 Classic next week to see what they can do against quality competition, but this looks to be a strong Tiger team that may have the best chance of a deep March run of any of the recent Clemson teams. Or will this just be another Oliver Purnell team that looks great in November and December but falls back when it is time to buy a new calendar.

Game 10: Northeastern @ Siena
--I gotta say, ESPN sure picked some nice mid-major games to show off during this marathon. SMC/SDSU, Monmouth/St. Pete, Drexel/Niagara and this one all were interesting matchups on paper, and a couple of those, including this one, even turned out to be interesting on the court.
--This was a game of runs, with Northeastern off to a strong start in the first half and Siena making their big push at the start of the second. Northeastern made another run at the end to tighten things up, but overall the whole game was very entertaining.
--Neither of these teams has a lot of depth, both with really only six players they can count on at this point. Hopefully both coaches will have some chances to develop their bench a little before conference play.
--Ryan Rossiter is significantly improved. Not too long ago he was thrown out there with little more requested of him than to work hard. Well, clearly he has continued working hard over the offseasons and added a bit of a mid-range jumper (with occasional range out to the 3-point line), something of a face-up game and the strength necessary to be an effective rebounder.

Game 11: Arkansas Little-Rock @ Tulsa
--By this time, the morning had turned into late afternoon/early evening, and what had started as an enjoyable run through the college basketball landscape had turned into a grueling day. And I think that’s only mile-marker 14 we just passed. Eyes starting to burn, back starting to ache, eyelids starting to sag. Time to pump back up with a little jaunt on the exercise bike while I take in Jerome Jordan and Ben Uzoh.
--Little Rock kept this a tight game for about the first 10 minutes, but they really had no answer for Jerome Jordan, who has improved steadily over his career.
--Apparently Doug Wojcik wants to give Ben Uzoh some run at the point, since he suspects that to be the position Uzoh will play if he gets to the next level. My suggestion to Wojcik would worry about what is best for this team, a team that is certainly capable of winning the Conference USA title, instead of worrying about the pro prospects of one of his players. Uzoh is a very nice player, but this team runs most effectively when freshman Donte Medder is running the point and Uzoh is manning the wing. Perhaps Uzoh will have to take over the point when Medder is on the bench, but he should not be the starter at the point. I suspect that as the season goes on, Wojcik will go in this direction, especially as he becomes more comfortable with Medder.

Game 12: Temple @ Georgetown
--Continue pounding away on the exercise bike through the first half here, but I think the exertion combined with the ineptitude of both teams offensively here leads to some pretty severe flashbacks to the UCLA game. I think some calming is needed to quiet the demons, and since I’m clean out of black-tar heroin today, alcohol will have to suffice. 200 cc’s of scotch, stat!
--I still believe Greg Monroe to be one of the most astounding combinations of athletic talent and size in the game of college basketball today. What I’ve got to figure out now is if he either has no instincts for the game or if John Thompson III’s offense stifles his abilities. So far, I’m leaning towards the first option. Until he proves otherwise, I’ll assume Monroe doesn’t have the killer instinct and that guards Austin Freeman and Chris Wright aren’t good enough to provide him with easy opportunities.
--JT3’s situation is similar to Howland’s in a way. Neither is very far removed from some pretty remarkable success, and yet there have got to be some serious questions about the long term feasibility of their offensive choices to maintain their respective programs among the country’s elite. I don’t want to ask those questions too loudly this early in the season out of respect for what both of these coaches have done, but should their respective teams fail to show significant improvement (especially on the offensive side of the ball) before the semester ends, you can expect those whispers to turn into roars.
--Neither team was even remotely impressive in this game, but Temple probably feels a bit better about this game than Georgetown, despite the loss. I don’t think Temple is often going to go 3-23 from 3-point land or 6-13 from the charity stripe, and if they improve those areas, this is the type of game the Owls win by 10.

Game 13: Binghamton @ Pittsburgh
--Binghamton’s program has gone to hell over the last month or so, and there just wasn’t enough talent left in the cupboard to give the Bearcats a chance to keep this close.
--I can’t say enough good things about Jamie Dixon and the direction he has taken this program in since Ben Howland left. Despite losing DeJuan Blair and Sam Young and Lavance Fields to graduation, I fully expect Pittsburgh’s name to be called on CBS somewhere in the 3pm PST hour on Selection Sunday. Further, given the young talent on this squad, the Panthers have an even brighter future ahead of them in the next couple of years.

Game 14: Charlotte @ Duke
--At this point, I’m behind schedule. I took a little break to grab some dinner with the ol’ lady and it’s 9pm and I’ve got at least 4 more games I want to take a look at before bed, so I’m in need of a blowout so I can write off the second half of one of these games and get back near schedule. And, while I suspected that might be the case here, I suspected that Charlotte would be able to keep in touch for 10 or 15 minutes. Not so much. About five minutes in here, I gave up and moved on to greener pastures. Hopefully I can catch the 49ers somewhere else down the line, because I learned absolutely nothing new about them in the few minutes I gave them today.

Game 15: Arkansas @ Louisville
--At first glance, I thought this might be another game where I could duck out a little early, given the number of players missing from the Razorback roster due to suspension, but they impressed me with their fire and hung tough for almost 30 entertaining minutes before the Cardinals put away the overmatched Arkansas squad.
--Arkansas had plenty of talent out on the floor. Rotnei Clarke is a three to shoot from the minute he steps off the bus, Michael Washington is a skilled, athletic post-player, and there are some other pieces lying around, but this team can’t really be a threat to the big boys until and unless Fortson, Welsh and Britt return.
--I’m not sure Louisville has a consistent go-to guy yet, especially in the half court game. Worst case scenario is that the Cardinals devolve into a live-by-the-three/die-by-the-three team.

Game 16: Gonzaga @ Michigan State
--Here it is: the first honest-to-goodness great game of this marathon, and the first great game of the college basketball season.
--And a little note to Tom Izzo and Mark Few: hey, maybe you guys could make this happen every year? You both consistently field great college basketball teams. You make your fans, alumni and boosters proud of the way you run your programs. You may not be obvious natural rivals, but you sure put on a good show. Make this happen.
--I think everybody assumed that this would be a down year for the Zags. Pargo, Daye, Heytvelt, Downs, all gone. Prognosticators started picking St. Mary’s and Portland to finish ahead of the perennial WCC champions. Then Gonzaga had to ruin it all by showing up and playing a game. Robert Sacre and Elias Harris were both revelations, showing not only good athleticism, but good command of basketball fundamentals. Stephen Gray and Matt Bouldin both helped run the offense smoothly, even if the supposed next Zag point, Demetri Goodson, was largely invisible. There are still some potential weaknesses on this team, lack of depth being foremost among them, but until further notice, the Zags need to be the favorite in the WCC.
--All that on the losing team requires that I say something about the victors. About the only real revelation about the Spartans was the play of widebody freshman Derrick Nix, who looks to be an immediate serious contributor on this glass and defensively. Elsewhere, what more needs to be said? There is tons of talent at every position and more where that came from off the bench.

Game 17: Memphis @ Kansas
--After the previous game, and with the clock winding past the 1am hour, and with my state of inebriation increasing by the game, I suppose I didn’t get as good of a look at this game as it maybe deserved, a rematch of one of the classic Finals of all-time, a look at a title-contender and a chance to see what Josh Pastner has planned for the Tigers.
--I like Eliot Williams a lot. I like Eliot Williams as a point guard a lot less. Unfortunately for the Tigers, there don’t seem to be a ton of candidates stepping up to take over that role from him, and I suspect the battle to get good point play will be an ongoing theme in the Memphis season. Ideally, Willie Kemp would be that guy, allowing Williams to slide over and play the attacking wing, but we’ll see how this shakes out over the season.
--Bill Self certainly has a lot of toys to play with, and I suspect that there will be nights throughout the season where Xavier Henry or Tyshawn Taylor or either of the Morrises or other players will step up and have big games, but when all is said and done, KU is going to lean on Collins and Aldrich to provide the majority of the offense, and they will likely have very good success doing so.

At this point, it was bed time, and me still a mile short of the finish line. But no matter, I would finish out the marathon come hell or high water the next night, and that I did.

Game 18: TCU @ Arizona
--The final game of a true marathon of college basketball, taking up three nights and one whole day of my life, was a very tough loss by TCU, who led by 8 with under 4 minutes remaining, and thanks to a couple really bad turnovers, could not hold on and win.
--The story of the game for Arizona State was senior center Eric Boateng who showed a drive and ability that had been decidedly absent in the rest of his college career. He showed excellent rebounding, vastly improved footwork, coherent post moves and a desire to have the ball in his hands when the game counted. It’s only one game, but if that continues, the Sun Devils will be in business.

Of course, that little marathon is only part of a bigger, more satisfying marathon that is the entire college basketball season. After finishing the TCU/Arizona game, I moved on to Butler/Northwestern, Utah/Utah State and UNLV/Nevada, and more from there, and next week alone will be a brutal (yet fun) journey through several different pre-season tournaments that make up, for my money, the 6th best week of college basketball (you know, after the three weeks of the tournament, and the two weeks of conference tournaments – and really, Thanksgiving week may give one or both of those conference tournament weeks a run for their money).

Now, back to the bottle again, as I just had another flash of James Keefe firing a pass off the back of a teammate.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Iowa/Ohio State

I've posted twice already this season on Iowa, so I figure on the heels of their make-or-break game against Ohio State today, I need to weigh in.

To begin, let me be clear with my relationship to Iowa football and this team specifically. If there is one team that I root for above all others in college sports, it is UCLA. But, I was born in Toledo, Ohio and spent a chunk of my life there, and still have some roots there. Generally speaking, if Ohio State is playing anyone but UCLA in any sport, I am rooting for Ohio State. But, for some reason I fell for this year's version of the Iowa Hawkeyes. Some combination of the uphill struggles they faced all season, with key injuries at key times all over the roster, and the way they handled those struggles put me squarely behind the Hawkeyes in the handful of times I watched them this year. And so, today, without every really making a decision that I was going to do so, I found myself rooting against the Buckeyes and for the Hawkeyes. Hard.

With junior quarterback Ricky Stanzi injured in a key play early in last week's loss to Northwestern (a play call that I severely question, even if Stanzi didn't get hurt on the play - how exactly do you call a naked rollout to the side of an All-American-type defensive end while trying to throw out of your own end zone?), the reigns of the Iowa offense fell to redshirt freshman James Vandernberg, who, frankly, looked completely unable to handle the pressure of the situation last week. How would he be able to handle it playing in the Horseshoe instead of in front of a friendly home crowd? How could he handle it playing against a strong Ohio State defense instead of a more forgiving Northwestern defense?

Add to that problem, the fact that freshman running back (about their only quality healthy back in the last two weeks) Brandon Wegher fell ill before this game and would be held out the entire game, leaving the rushing load to fall to redshirt freshman Adam Robinson, just back from an ankle injury that had held him out of the previous two weeks. The Hawkeyes didn't figure to have a chance.

And, yet, they hung in there. Robinson gutted out a strong performance and kept the Ohio State defense from being able to pin their ears back and attack the quarterback. Vandenberg played well beyond his years and experience (despite a couple INTs), and were it not for a few dropped balls, may have led his squad to a win and a Rose Bowl bid. In fact, some time around the 5:03 mark of the 4th quarter, when Vanderberg threw one of his few mistakes of the game, a duck into double coverage that was somehow tipped up and brought down by senior tight end Tony Moeaki, it seemed like Iowa might be destined to win this game.

However, Ohio State's defense was able to regain control in the overtime period, holding Iowa without a score on their possession, and an Ohio State field goal clinched the win and the BCS bowl spot.

And yet, when I look back on this college football season, the Iowa Hawkeyes will be one of my earliest and favorite memories. They overcame key injuries from the start of training camp through November games. They made the most of a somewhat limited roster, getting huge contributions from freshmen like Vandenberg, Robinson, Wegher, and guard Riley Reiff all the way up to seniors like Tony Moeaki, Pat Angerer and Dace Richardson.

While there are a couple of guys who could potentially flirt with leaving early for the NFL draft (Derrell Johnson-Koulianos, Adrian Clayborn and Amari Spievey), there will be enough talent and experience on this team to once again make a run at the Big Ten title next season. And, maybe next season, they won't have to fight the injury bug quite so much.

Hats off to the 2009 Iowa Hawkeyes, quite frankly, a far more enjoyable team to root for than perennial overdog and unimaginative Ohio State.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

College Basketball: November 12, 2009

Just one game tonight, and it was a decent game for a half. Looking forward to Bradley/BYU tomorrow night, which to me is the first matchup of relatively equal teams of the season. Stanford at San Diego is also a decent game tomorrow, but I don't believe that's on TV anywhere. Also, on Saturday, two excellent mid-major matchups, also not on TV (that I've found at least): Creighton at Dayton and Davidson at Butler.

Anyway, brief thoughts on tonight's game:

James Madison @ Ohio State
--I probably already knew this, but the Buckeyes are a well-rounded team: good ballhandling, good rebounding, good defensively, and very exciting offensively. If this team runs into trouble this year, it will be at the expense of their interior players. As much as I like Dallas Lauderdale, beyond him the only real quality depth inside is senior Kyle Madsen, who is just serviceable. Ohio State can hide this some with their commitment to getting out on the break, but once they get into grind-it-out games on wintry nights in Big Ten conference play, their interior could get exposed.
--James Madison has some nice perimeter athletes, especially in freshman Darren White and sophomore Julius Wells. Unfortunately for them, their one real true point guard, sophomore Devon Moore, tore up an ACL and is out for the season. If they can hide that deficiency, they can compete in the CAA.

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

College Basketball: November 11, 2009

The overriding theme of what I learned on night two of the 09/10 College Basketball season is that I am ready for some more evenly matched teams to play. While it was nice to begin to get reacquainted with some of the teams on opening night a few nights back, this second night was more or less drudgery to get through. At least Detroit kept things interesting in Berkeley up until the start of the second half, but all in all, another snoozer of a night in college hoops.

That being said, I did watch all three games tonight and gleaned a bit from each.

1) Robert Morris @ Syracuse
--Syracuse lost Eric Devendorf and Paul Harris early to the NBA draft in the offseason (although I suppose that phrase "to the NBA draft" is overly kind to those players, given that they never got so much as a sniff from NBA teams), and while that leaves the Orange with some uncertainty at the start of the season, it may well turn out to be the classic case of addition by subtraction. While this will not be a deep Syracuse by any stretch, this seems to be a more coherent unit than we have seen in past years.

--Robert Morris got dominated inside. Too small of a sample size to determine if that is due to the strength of the Syracuse big guys or the weakness of the Robert Morris players, but the fact remains. Early guess? Strong Orange frontcourt, and the Colonials should be fine when they match up with teams in their own relative talent range.

2) North Carolina Central @ North Carolina
--I'll admit I couldn't bring myself to be overly interested in this game, beyond the first 6-8 minutes or so while Central kept things tight. I'm very interested to see UNC play OSU next week in order to get a good glimpse at this young Tar Heel team against some quality competition.

--Could the freshman guards on UNC (Strickland and McDonald) be the keys to the season for the Tar Heel? In early looks this week, both look to be capable scorers who could improve drastically over the season. However, both are inconsistent this early in the season.

3) Detroit @ California
--I'll get this out of the way early: do the announcers really need to say Bak Bak every time that guy touches the ball? I thought there were chickens loose in Haas Pavilion. Perhaps you could just use one of the Baks? (And this reminds me: my god there was some bad announcing tonight and even Monday. Perhaps I'm spoiled having grown up listening to Chick Hearn announce basketball games, but please, if the game is going on, tell me about what is happening, even if I am watching it. I'm not particularly familiar with North Carolina Central or Detroit, even if I do have their names and numbers nearby. Don't make me look down at my notes to figure out who just shot that ball or who just made that steal. You're the freaking announcer, you tell me. Now, things will get slightly better as the season goes on, but at the same time, once I have to start listening to Vitale again, things will get worse. Can't wait for that point in the season when I am watching games between two teams who I know well and can just watch the game with the sound off and not feel like I am missing any information that the announcers should, even if they don't, provide).

--Okay, with my first rant of the new season out of the way, onto the game. I'll start with Detroit, since this will be one of a very few (if not the only time) I see them this year. I like that Woody Payne kid. That guy has got to be your starting point guard Coach McCallum. Sure, he doesn't provide an outside threat, but he is a pest defensively and runs the show nicely offensively.

--Cal has athletic wings and if they get into a run and gun game, they will be tough. However, if teams are able to slow things down against the Bears, it looks like they will be a live-by-the-three/die-by-the-three half-court offense. That is not the way championship teams are made. That being said, I may just buy another TiVo and set it up right now to record the two Washington/Cal games this season. Those will be fun.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

College Basketball: Opening Night 09/10

Hi. My name is Andrew. And I'm a college hoops junkie.

I know I'm a junkie, because I know that tonight is the start of the college basketball season and I have actually been looking forward (for weeks even) to such luminous matchups as Florida International at North Carolina, Alcorn State at Ohio State, Albany at Syracuse and Murray State at Cal. Games only a junkie could love.

And yet, I rushed home from work, made myself a quick dinner, poured a beer (okay, three) and took in bits and pieces of those four games. I watched the first three games on that list as long as they were competitive (longer than expected in the UNC, not long at all in the OSU game, and just about as much as expected in the Syracuse game), then thoroughly enjoyed the nightcap as Murray State kept within striking distance throughout against the Golden Bears.

One thing I like to do after watching a game is to figure out what exactly I learned from the game, even if (or maybe especially if) it can be summed up in a sentence or two. And so, without further waste of pixels, my first edition of What I Learned, College Basketball 09/10:

1) FIU @ UNC
--The question for the Tar Heels this season is where they are going to get their scoring from. If there are two minutes left and the game is tied, who is going to be their go-to guy. That question was not answered tonight, and likely will not be answered until the visit Madison Square Garden for the final of the CBE Classic "tournament" they began tonight.
--Larry Drew II is considered a question mark in replacing Ty Lawson. I've counted him as a capable replacement, and he is off to a good start.
--Powerful front line for the Tar Heels, but are there any consistent offensive threats there? Davis looks a little clumsy with the ball, and Thompson lacks explosiveness, but there is a long season ahead for them to improve and show themselves worthy.

2) Alcorn State @ Ohio State
--Having Evan Turner run the point for the Buckeyes seems somewhat risky, but given that the team features several good ballhandlers on the perimeter, the plan could work even if Turner is not a prototypical point. Turner showed tonight that he was able to initiate offense when necessary, without allowing those duties to take away from his aggressiveness and athleticism.

3) Albany @ Syracuse
--LeMoyne was an aberration. This is a good Syracuse team. Good. Not great. Wesley Johnson is able to take up some of the slack for the offensive production that has moved on, Jackson and Onuaku provide a strong inside punch and Kris Joseph looked excellent off the bench.
--The combination of freshman starting point guard Brandon Triche and junior backup point Scoop Jardine will not match the output of departed point Jonny Flynn, but they form a solid duo at the point.
--Andy Rautins turned an ankle at some point tonight. I didn't see if he returned or not. Hope he's okay.

4) Murray State @ Cal
--Far and away, the best game of the night.
--Murray State is going to make some waves in the OVC. Good forwards in strong small forward Danero Thomas and the effective, athletic sophomore Ivan Aska, coupled with some playmakers in the backcourt (junior B.J. Jenkins, freshman Isaiah Canaan).
--Cal is going to need consistent production from senior Jamal Boykin and JuCo transfer Markuri Sanders-Frison. Boykin looked very good tonight.
--Cal’s good, and there are a lot of things I like about them (strength at the wing like Robertson and Christopher, guts in Gutierrez and flash and dash in Randle), but I don’t think they are strong enough inside, nor good enough defensively to be a real contender in March.

Saturday, October 31, 2009

What is with Iowa?

They are 9-0. They are #4 in the BCS. They just beat Indiana by 18. And, somewhat coincidentally, they also just got whooped up and down the field for 3+ quarters against Indiana, generally looking like crap in doing so.

Up to this point, every time I have watched Iowa I have been impressed. Their defensive line has been very strong, if not overpowering, against teams like Michigan State, Penn State, Michigan and Wisconsin. Junior quarterback Ricky Stanzi has been unexceptional, but effective enough to win games. They have played smart football and they have played Iowa football, grinding games out in somewhat unattractive fashion.

How then to explain what happened today? For three quarters, it seemed the referees, the Indiana players and the football gods were all conspiring to keep Iowa in the game no matter how badly they played, and Iowa kept trying to turn down every chance they got. After Iowa fell behind 14-0 early in the game, Stanzi came alive near the end of the second quarter, completing three straight passes to get the Hawkeyes in scoring position inside the 10, from where freshman running back Brandon Wegher finished the drive. Their defense then responded with a strong stand to force Indiana to punt with under a minute left in the half, allowing Iowa to feel incredibly fortunate about the prospects of going into the locker room only down a touchdown after being whooped for 30 minutes. So what happens on that punt? Junior Amari Spievey unwisely fields the ball inside the 10 and then proceeds to dance and spin seemingly unaware that he had the ball in his hands 90 yards away from anywhere productive with the clock running down, and the ball winds up on the ground and eventually in the hands of a Hooiser. Two plays later, Indiana is taking a 21-7 lead into the half instead of a 14-7 lead.

Things get worse for Iowa early in the second half as Stanzi throws his second and third interception of the day (and he's not done yet, folks), with his third INT leaving the Hoosier with a first and goal at the four. However, two plays later on 3rd and goal, Hawkeye sophomore strong safety Tyler Sash grabs ahold of a wildly batted ball and sprints the remaining 86 yards for a Hawkeye touchdown for at least a 10-point swing. Instead of the Hoosiers potentially taking a 24-7 lead with a chip shot field goal, Iowa is back within a TD at 21-14.

But, Indiana doesn't flinch and their junior quarterback Ben Chappell hits a big play to sophomore wide receiver Damario Belcher to put the Hoosiers in scoring position, and then a couple plays later Chappell hits junior wide receiver Terrance Turner for a pretty apparent touchdown in the corner of the end zone. The call was ruled a TD on the field, and replays seemed to confirm that Turner dragged his foot in the end zone with possession of the ball. However, the refs and football gods got together again to give Iowa a boost and overruled the call, and the Indiana team joined in the charity as they then proceeded to miss a chip-shot field goal.

But Iowa and Stanzi were having none of it. "We will not take your charity," they shouted, as Stanzi proceeded to throw his fourth INT of the day, leaving Indiana with the ball at the Iowa 25. The Hoosiers couldn't take full advantage of the field position, but were able to add a FG, putting them up 24-14.

And Stanzi wasn't quite done yet, throwing his fifth INT on the next drive.

And then, the clock ran out on the third quarter, and there must have been a buzzer or a bell or maybe some AM radio was played on the PA system, because Iowa rolled over, turned off the alarm clock and got the hell out of bed.

In the 4th quarter, Indiana amassed 32 yards, and Chappell threw two INTs. Iowa, meanwhile, scored touchdowns on successive offensive plays of 92 yards (Stanzi to sophomore Marvin McNutt) and 66 yards (Stanzi to junior Derrell Johnson-Koulianos), and then added two more touchdowns on long grind-it-out Iowa-type drives to turn the final score into a yawner, 42-24.

Now, give credit to the Hawkeyes for being able to beat a team they should have beaten on a day when they didn't play their best, but this was a really perplexing game to watch. For the better part of three and a half quarters, Iowa was out there throwing the ball around like they were Air Coryell or something, almost ignoring Wegher for most of the game, even while Stanzi flailed in the wind. And, even more perplexing, the Iowa defensive line that has looked so extraordinary against other Big Ten offensive lines (and certainly more highly regarded offensive lines as well) was utterly ineffective for much of the day against the Hoosier offensive line.

Iowa still remains on track for a battle against the Buckeyes in Columbus for the Big Ten title in a couple weeks, but given the way they played today, questions that were previously thought answered about the Hawkeyes are back in play again.

Monday, October 26, 2009

MWC 2009-10 College Basketball Preview

MOUNTAIN WEST CONFERENCE

Predicted Order of Finish:

1. BYU 12-4
2. UNLV 11-5
3. San Diego State 10-6
4. Utah 10-6
5. New Mexico 9-7
6. TCU 7-9
7. Wyoming 6-10
8. Colorado State 5-11
9. Air Force 2-14


All-Conference Team:


G: Jimmer Fredette, Jr, BYU (16.2ppg, 4.0 apg)
G: Carlon Brown, Jr, Utah (9.3 ppg, 5.2 rpg, 3.3 apg)
F: Afam Muojeke, Soph, Wyoming (13.8 ppg, 5.3 rpg)
F: Jonathan Tavernari, Sr, BYU (15.7 ppg, 7.2 rpg)
C: Zvonko Buljan, Sr, TCU (12.3 ppg, 7.8 rpg)

6th Man: Billy White, Sr, San Diego State (8.8 ppg, 3.8 rpg)

Impact Newcomer: Derrick Jasper, Jr, UNLV


What You Need to Know:


The Mountain West Conference is consistently one of the top high mid-major conferences in the country. In just over a decade in existence, the MWC has only failed to finish among the top 10 conferences in terms of RPI just once (2005-06), and only once in the conference’s history has it failed to advance more than one team to the NCAA tournament (2000-01). Six of its nine member schools feature campuses above 4,000 feet in elevation, and that, coupled with some small, raucous arenas, make MWC arenas a tough place for visiting teams to play.

New look league: Only five of last year’s top 20 scorers in the conference, and only one of last year’s top ten in minutes played, return. Last year, the Mountain West Conference was dominated by veterans, but despite their absence, coaches around the league have plenty of incoming talent to get excited about. For every Luke Nevill, Lee Cummard, Wink Adams, Kyle Spain or Brandon Ewing that has moved on, a Derrick Jasper, Malcolm Thomas, Kawhi Leonard, Shawn Glover or JayDee Luster has arrived.

As a result, every team in this league has questions that will need to be answered between now and March. Who can BYU get to step in and take up the slack that the graduation of Lee Cummard leaves? Can gigantic sophomore David Foster fill the hole in the paint for Utah left by Luke Nevill? Can UNLV get enough production from its front court to help their strong backcourt? Can Steve Fisher’s San Diego State squad not underachieve for once? Is New Mexico’s Phillip McDonald ready to become a star in this league?

Stability remains: While there has been a lot of turnover in terms of players in the MWC, the guys patrolling the sidelines will look remarkably similar. In an era of seemingly rampant coaching turnover, the MWC boasts nine returning coaches, three of whom (UNLV’s Lon Krueger, San Diego State’s Fisher and New Mexico’s Steve Alford) have more than 350 career wins.

BYU fans should feel particularly pleased to see their head coach, Dave Rose, return. Rose was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer just after the end of last season, but has been fortunate enough to have received a clean bill of health following treatment and surgery in the offseason.

Non-conference boost: One area where the conference has gone downhill recently has been in the strength of its collective non-conference schedule. In the early 00’s, the MWC was consistently in the top 10 conferences in terms of non-conference schedule strength, but have slid to the point where their non-conference schedule strength the past three years has been out of the top 20. It would appear, however, that the conference has made a concerted effort to improve those numbers this year. In addition to the inaugural MWC/MVC Challenge (which will give MWC teams a chance to compete against a mid-major conference of similar historical strength), you’ll find tough games against both major conferences and respected mid-major programs littering the schedules. From tough roadies against national powers like Arizona, LSU and UCLA to sneaky matchups against other mid-majors like Utah State, St. Mary’s and Oral Roberts, the MWC has gone a long way towards beefing up their early-season schedules.

Predicted Champion: BYU (NCAA Seed: #9)

BYU brings back the most experience to a league that will be sorely lacking in that area this season. Senior forward Jonathan Tavernari and junior guard Jimmer Fredette each finished in the top 10 in scoring in the conference last season, and each can be expected to increase their output a bit this season to make up for the loss of all-MWC forward Lee Cummard. Junior Jackson Emery joins Fredette in the backcourt and provides strong defense and a capable three-point stroke. Up front, the Cougars hope for solid contributions from senior Chris Miles and sophomore James Anderson. Miles is an offensive-minded post player, who can struggle a bit defensively against stronger players, while Anderson is a good defensive complement. Throw in some athletic players off the bench and a couple strong recruits and the Cougars look like the most solid of the teams at the top of the conference. The goal for BYU, however, will be to advance out of the first round of the NCAA Tournament, something they have failed to do in the lifetime of the MWC.


Top Contenders:


UNLV (NCAA Seed: #11)
Like the rest of the conference, the story of 2009-10 begins for the Rebels with what does not return. With Wink Adams, Rene Rougeau and a couple members of the supporting cast moving on, the Rebels will need a bit of a makeover to contend in the MWC. Luckily for Lon Krueger, UNLV returns two starting guards (junior Tre’Von Willis and sophomore Oscar Bellfield) and gets an influx of talent in the way of three talented transfers and a strong incoming class. The most heralded of the newcomers is Kentucky-transfer Derrick Jasper, a spectacular athlete who struggled at times with injuries in Lexington. Krueger envisions Jasper as a do-everything athlete, capable of ball-handling, strong defense, outside shooting and penetration. The question mark for the Runnin’ Rebels will be frontcourt, although help arrives there as well. UCLA transfer Chace Stanback will help some, but won’t provide a lot of muscle up front. Freshman Carlos Lopez could provide some of that muscle, but will take some time to develop. In the meantime, the Rebels will have to count on senior Darris Santee and sophomore Brice Massamba to do the dirty work while the backcourt provides the scoring punch.

San Diego State (NIT)
The Aztecs lost as much (or more) as anybody in the conference this offseason. Gone are such standbys as Kyle Spain, Lorenzo Wade, Richie Williams and more. However, instead of worrying about his empty cup, coach Steve Fisher has filled it up again. Freshman wing Kawhi Leonard, the most anticipated freshman recruit in the conference, and three talented Division I transfers (Malcolm Thomas and Tyrone Shelley from Pepperdine and Brian Carwell from Illinois) will give the Aztecs a much-needed infusion of talent. Couple those newcomers with returnees like junior guard D.J. Gay, junior forward Billy White, sophomore forward Tim Shelton and senior forward Mehdi Cheriet and the Aztecs cup is nearly overflowing with talent. White, in particular, is a guy that the coaching staff is excited about. He is long, athletic and skilled, and will likely be the go-to guy offensively, providing him with the opportunity to go from a talented player to a difference maker. However, given the perception that San Diego State has underachieved the past few seasons, the Aztecs will have to prove themselves capable of playing at a high caliber before being considered a championship contender.

Utah (NIT)
Replacing conference player of the year and defensive player of the year Luke Nevill will be no easy task for the Utes, but at least they’ve got the guy with the size to do it in 7’3” sophomore David Foster. Whether Foster is ready to play at this level after having been out of basketball for a couple of years (he was away on a Mormon mission last year), is another question entirely. Even if Foster is ready, he needn’t be counted on to score a lot, as the Utes return two strong guards in junior Carlon Brown and senior Luke Drca. Both players are big versatile guards, capable of running the offense, scoring and defending. Brown will need to improve his outside shot to take his game to the next level, but he is an explosive talent. Senior forward Kim Tillie provides experience and versatility along the front line, capable of defending a variety of players and rebounding the ball effectively. However, for Jim Boylen’s squad to challenge for a conference title, they will need to get contributions from elsewhere on the roster, with long, bouncy freshman wing Shawn Glover perhaps being the most likely candidate.

New Mexico (NIT)
Last year the Lobos finished in a three-way tie for the regular season title in the MWC, but were still left on the outside looking in when the NCAA tournament pairings were announced. To make matters worse for Steve Alford’s program, the three leading scorers on last year’s squad were all seniors who have moved on. The bright side, however, is that some intriguing talent remains. There are two returning starters in junior point guard Dairese Gary and senior wing Roman Martinez, both of whom expect to play an increased role this season. But the X-factor for the Lobos is sophomore guard Phillip McDonald, last year’s big recruit for Alford. McDonald will need to step up his game and provide a big scoring punch for the offense, a role he is capable of filling. Depth for the Lobos will come from a handful of returnees who got limited playing time last season and a pretty strong four-man recruiting class. If McDonald does rise to the occasion and Alford is able to coax some quality minutes out of his newcomers, the Lobos are more than capable of challenging for an NCAA tournament berth.

Top 10 RPI Boosters:

11/16 San Diego State @ St. Mary’s (11pm PST, ESPN) – an intriguing early season matchup during ESPN’s 24-Hour hoops marathon that can be a good barometer for both teams.
11/28 Louisville @ UNLV (1pm PST, Vs) – rematch of last year’s Rebel upset of Louisville at Freedom Hall.
12/2 Cal @ New Mexico (6pm PST, CBSC) – the Pit hosts Pac-10 favorite Bears.
12/2 UNLV @ Arizona (6pm PST, FSN-Arizona) – one of three big MWC matchups with the Wildcats.
12/9 Michigan @ Utah (6pt PST, CBSC) – the Utes have a brutal non-conference schedule (including hosting Oklahoma and travelling to LSU), but this may be their best chance for an upset.
12/12 New Mexico vs. Texas A&M (in Houston, 3pm PST) – not a home game for the Aggies, but a tough roadie nonetheless for the Lobos.
12/12 Kansas State vs. UNLV (@ Orleans Arena, Las Vegas, 4pm PST) – Lon Krueger hosts his old school in his new home town in an interesting clash between quick backcourts.
12/19 Creighton @ New Mexico (6pm PST, The MTN) – perhaps the best matchup in a strong inaugural edition of the MWC/MVC Challenge.
12/28 BYU @ Arizona (6pm PST, Fox College Sports) – tough holiday trip for the Cougs into McKale.
1/1 Dayton @ New Mexico (6pm PST, The MTN/CBSC)– the Flyers will have their work cut out for them with a New Year’s visit to the Pit.

Key Conference Games:

1/6 UNLV @ BYU (7pm PST, The MTN) – conference opener for both teams
1/27 BYU @ New Mexico (7pm PST, The MTN) – after a Saturday game in San Diego, BYU has to travel to the Pit on a Wednesday night.
2/17 UNLV @ Utah (7pm PST, The MTN) – the second of back-to-back tough roadies for the Rebels, where a slip-up could be easy.
2/24 San Diego State @ BYU (6pm PST, CBSC) – on the verge of March, the Aztec newcomers have had plenty of time to gel. This will be a test of their tournament readiness.
3/3 BYU @ Utah (6pm PST, CBSC) – the Holy War, the second to last conference game for each team

Digging Deeper:

As mentioned earlier, six of nine MWC member schools have campuses above 4,000 feet in elevation, with Wyoming’s campus at 7,220 feet the highest campus in Division I. And, the MWC has ranked in the top seven conferences nationally in terms of attendance in each of its first 10 years. Combine the two and you wind up with a strong homecourt advantage for MWC teams. Last season, the MWC was 108-40 (.729) in all home games and 59-16 (.786) in home games against non-conference opponents.

Final Thoughts:

All things considered, the MWC will be a fun conference to watch this season, giving you everything you watch college basketball for. While many of the stars in the conference are gone, you’ll have the opportunity to watch new stars emerge and to see new combinations gel. While it is unlikely that one of these teams will improve to the point of being a major threat deep in March (not that there aren’t five teams that could, with a little luck and expedited cohesion, get to the second week of the Big Dance), this will be the year that MWC coaches will be laying the groundwork for the future. As with any venture relying on youth and inexperience, there will be growing pains along the way, but given the experience and skill of the head coaches in the league, expect to see quite a few MWC teams playing at a high level throughout the season.

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Iowa/Michigan State

It may not have been everybody's cup of tea, but I just saw the best football game I've seen all season. This Big Ten battle had just about everything I could ask for in a college football game: tough running, clutch quarterback play, phenomenal defensive play on both sides of the ball, big hitting (two players left the field on a stretcher, which is definitely not a good thing, although thankfully both players appear to be okay at this early juncture, but it is indicative of how intense the game was), rabid fans, national championship and conference championship implications and several lead changes down the stretch.

To say that a game in which nothing but field goals were scored for the first 58 minutes ranks as a contender for the best game of the year, would certainly leave most people dumbfounded, but while there were plenty of fireworks in the final two minutes, the first 58 were nothing to laugh off. The Spartan offense struggled at times against a ferocious Iowa defense, but things began to come together late, when with the Spartans down 9-6, Michigan State quarterback hit tight end Brian Lithicum for about nine yards on a 3rd and 18 with the clock running down. However, as Iowa defenders converged on Lithicum, he lateraled the ball to wide receiver Blair White who continued on for 27 more yards. Two plays later Cousins found White in the end zone for a 30 yards touchdown to give Sparty a 13-9 lead, putting Iowa's undefeated season in grave danger.

But Iowa rallied, with quarterback Ricky Stanzi getting big completions to wide receivers Marvin McNutt, Trey Stross and Derrell Johnson-Koulianos to set the Hawkeyes up with a 1st and goal with 15 seconds remaining. Somehow, Iowa was able to get off three plays (all unsuccessful passes into the end zone) and yet still have 2 seconds on the clock for a fourth down play, when Stanzi again found McNutt, this time on an inside slant for the game-winning touchdown.

While this goes down as an excruciating loss for Mark Dantonio and the Spartans, this was certainly an exhilarating victory for Kirk Ferentz's now 8-0 Iowa Hawkeyes, and a completely compelling game for this particular non-partisan viewer.

Iowa now has a remaining schedule in which they have three home games that they should win (Indiana, Northwestern and Minnesota) with a tough road trip to Columbus to face the Buckeyes in the middle. While Iowa still remains a long shot to play in the BCS Championship game, their fireworks tonight kept that dream alive.

Either way, I am not ashamed to admit that I am unabashedly in love with the Iowa defense. Adrian Clayborn is an absolute beast at defensive end, a speedy pass rusher with enough strength to stand up an offensive tackle and play the run as well. Quick, undersized defensive tackle Karl Klug is next to him, often preventing opposing offenses from giving a lot of help to the lineman charged with slowing Clayborn. Throw in Christian Ballard at the other tackle and another athletic freak in sophomore Broderick Binns at the other end (Binns has a special knack for getting his hands up and knocking down passes at the line) and this Hawkeye defensive line (which rarely substitutes) is a handful for opposing offenses, quite capable of getting a pass rush without the need for sending extra blitzers, while effectively playing the run. The dominance of the defensive front, frees up playmakers in the back of the Iowa defense like middle linebacker Pat Angerer, cornerback Amari Spievey and strong safety Tyler Sash to make plays all over the field.

Given Terrelle Pryor and Ohio State's one-game resurgence today, the Iowa/Ohio State matchup in Columbus figures to be a battle for the Big Ten championship.

Monday, October 19, 2009

ACC 2009-10 College Basketball Preview

Predicted Order of Finish

Last year the pick for the top spot was pretty clear cut. And while there are plenty of people who will pick North Carolina to win the conference (with Duke the runner-up), things are definitely a bit murkier this year. To me, the easier part is picking a team to finish last: North Carolina State, no question in my mind. I’m going to go out on a limb and pick Georgia Tech to win the ACC, thanks in large part to newcomer Derrick Favors as a strong addition to an already intriguing roster. There is a strong group of teams in the middle of this conference (probably spots 4 through 10 or so) who all have the capability of making the tournament, but as always, at least a couple of them will be on the outside looking in.

1. Georgia Tech – Favors likely will only be in town for one season, so Paul Hewitt and the Yellow Jackets had better make the most of it. Gani Lawal’s decision to skip the NBA draft and come back for his junior season was a good first step.

2. North Carolina – Hansbrough’s gone. Lawson’s gone. Ellington’s gone. Green’s gone. And yet the Tar Heels remain a consensus top 10 (if not top 5) pick for this season. No doubt, a lot of talent returns and some new talent arrives, but this team will be young and potentially inconsistent throughout the season.

3. Duke – the Blue Devils got very lucky when recruit Andre Dawkins decided to skip his senior year of high school and head out to Durham a year early, giving Coach K a whopping total of three scholarship guards on his roster. At some point (and maybe several points) during the season, that lack of depth in the backcourt will be a problem.

4. Florida State – Leonard Hamilton lost Toney Douglas to graduation, but with sophomore wing Chris Singleton on the verge of stardom and a nice supporting cast, the ‘Noles shouldn’t lose any ground.

5. Clemson – the Tigers will not get off to the same type of start this season as the last couple. They’ll likely lose a game (or a couple) before conference play. The key for this program, however, is not how they start, but how they finish. There is enough potential here to win an NCAA tournament game, but at some point, Oliver Purnell’s squad needs to put it all together.

6. Maryland – Greivis Vasquez is back, choosing College Park over the NBA for now. And while Gary Williams has surrounded his senior star with more talent and experience than in years past, the Terrapins still do not have the talent to compete for an ACC title.

7. Boston College – Al Skinner’s team will be a tough out just about every night, with athletes across the floor and plenty of hard work, but let’s go ahead and put them on the bubble right now, a place they’ll likely still be in March.

8. Wake Forest – the Demon Deacons seemingly lost almost as much as their more decorated rival in Chapel Hill, with Jeff Teague and James Johnson playing at the next level this season, but with soph stud Al-Farouq Aminu leading the way, Dino Gaudio’s club could have just enough to go dancing.

9. Virginia Tech – much like BC, the Hokies are going to be a team that not a lot of coaches look forward to playing: lots of athletes, strong coaching, and tough environment. But, once again, the Seth Greenberg may be disappointed in the middle of March.

10. Miami – with Jack McClinton gone, the Hurricanes have a gaping hole at the head of their offense. If Villanova-transfer Malcon Grant can fill that spot, and if either exciting soph Dequan Jones or senior big man Dwayne Collins can take the next step, it is possible that Frank Haith will have his squad dancing again. This is a strong 10th place team.

11. Virginia – new head coach Tony Bennett comes to Charlottesville and he will bring discipline and toughness, and the Cavs will likely play a lot of close games. If Sylven Landesberg can be the big-play guy at the end of games, perhaps this squad can finish higher in the rankings. But, the lack of talent that Bennett finds on his roster will prevent the Cavs from finishing much higher.

12. North Carolina State – this is not a good team. With last year’s underachieving senior class gone and with JJ Hickson defecting early a couple season’s back, the cupboard is nearly empty in Raleigh. There had better be signs of life from what does remain, however, or else the Sidney Lowe era could end prematurely.

Preseason All-Conference

First Team
G Greivis Vasquez, Sr, Maryland
SF Chris Singleton, So, Florida State
F Trevor Booker, Sr, Clemson
F Ed Davis, So, North Carolina
C Derrick Favors, Fr, Georgia Tech

Second Team
G Jon Scheyer, Sr, Duke
G Sylven Landesburg, So, Virginia
F Al-Farouq Aminu, So, Wake Forest
F Kyle Singler, Jr, Duke
F Gani Lawal, Jr, Georgia Tech

All Freshman Team
G Michael Snaer, Florida State
F Milton Jennings, Clemson
F Mason Plumlee, Duke
F John Henson, North Carolina
C Derrick Favors, Georgia Tech

Preseason Tournament Tie-Ins

Boston College – Paradise Jam
Potential Opponents: St. Joseph’s, Purdue, Tennessee

Clemson – 76 Classic
Potential Opponents: Texas A&M, West Virginia, Butler/Minnesota/UCLA

Duke – NIT Season Tip-Off
Potential Opponents: Charlotte, Arizona State/TCU, LSU/Western Kentucky/UConn

Florida State – Old Spice Classic
Potential Opponents: Iona, Alabama/Baylor, Creighton/Marquette/Michigan/Xavier

Georgia Tech – Puerto Rico Tip-Off
Potential Opponents: Dayton, George Mason/Villanova, Indiana/Kansas State/Ole Miss
Maryland – Maui Invitational
Potential Opponents: Chaminade, Cincinnati/Vanderbilt, Arizona/Colorado/Gonzaga/Wisconsin

Miami – Charleston Classic
Potential Opponents: Tulane, Penn State, Davidson/South Carolina

North Carolina – 2K Sports Classic
Potential Opponents: Ohio State, Cal/Syracuse

Virginia – Cancun Classic
Potential Opponents: Stanford, Cleveland State/Kentucky

Top Ten Non-Conference Games
12/1 Michigan State @ North Carolina - the title game rematch is the jewel of this year’s ACC/Big Ten challenge.
12/2 Boston College @ Michigan- an interesting matchup of quality teams and excellent coaches.
12/2 Illinois @ Clemson – one of a handful of tough games prior to the ACC season for the Tigers.
12/2 Duke @ Wisconsin – the Blue Devils take a tough trip into Big Ten country to face the disciplined Badgers.
12/2 Florida State @ Ohio State – an early season test for a ‘Nole team with high hopes.
12/2 Minnesota @ Miami – this is the type of game that the ‘Canes will need to win to build their tournament resume early.
12/5 North Carolina @ Kentucky – the shine is back on in this rivalry, a matchup between a couple of the best teams in the country.
12/6 Maryland vs. Villanova in Washington DC – a tough neutral site matchup for the Terps.
12/19 North Carolina vs Texas at Cowboy Stadium – another pillar in a tough non-conference schedule for the Tar Heels. I wonder if the giant scoredboard will come into play.
1/30 Duke @ Georgetown – perhaps the best non-conference game of the season to occur after conference play has begun.

Big East 2009-10 College Basketball Preview

Predicted Order of Finish

Last season’s Big East featured an embarrassment of talents, up and down the standings, perhaps the strongest edition of this conference in history. And while a huge number of the star players from last year are playing elsewhere now, the Big East still features some outstanding returning veterans and some intriguing new prospects as well. Both Villanova and Connecticut were among the Final Four teams standing last season, and they will once again have something to say about the champion of this league. However, the middle of this conference is far more wide open this season, and there will be tournament slots available for the taking.

1. Villanova – while Jay Wright loses three major frontcourt contributors to last year’s Wildcat Final Four team, the backcourt not only returns, but adds even more talent for one of the deepest backcourt rotations in history. If they can get some contributions from the frontcourt, the ‘Cats have a strong chance to repeat last year’s March run.

2. West Virginia – Bob Huggins has assembled a fine collection of talent, highlighted by talented sophomore wing Devin Ebanks, but the ‘Neers will need contributions from up and down their roster to make this much noise.

3. Cincinnati – with heralded freshman Lance Stephenson joining last year’s squad that just missed the tournament, Mick Cronin has the pieces in place to make a strong run to the top of the conference.

4. Connecticut – gone are Hasheem Thabeet, A.J. Price and Jeff Adrien, but Kemba Walker, Stanley Robinson and Jerome Dyson return. Coupled with some returning role players and new prospects, the Huskies will continue to be a tough team to beat.

5. Georgetown – the Hoyas will not be a deep team this year, but they boast one of the most talented players in the country in Greg Monroe and a solid backcourt. If Monroe plays up to his potential, JT3’s squad could compete for a conference title.

6. Syracuse – a trio of familiar faces is gone, but the cupboard is far from empty in the Carrier Dome. However, free throw shooting will once again be the Achilles’ Heel for the Orange.

7. Seton Hall – this has got to be the year it all comes together for Bobby Gonzalez in South Orange. Jeremy Hazell is the flash and Eugene Harvey is the motor, and with talented frontcourt man Herb Pope along for the ride, the Pirates look primed to rejoin the dance.

8. Lousville – ever since Terrence Williams and Earl Clark played their last game for the Cardinals (a terrible loss to Michigan State in the Midwest Regional Final last season), things have been a mess in Rick Pitino’s program. While there is still plenty of talent around, all the off-court issues can’t help but be a distraction.

9. Pittsburgh – DeJuan Blair, Sam Young and LeVance Fields, all gone. That is not a threesome that is easily replaced. These Panthers will not be the national power that they have been in recent years, but Jamie Dixon is too good of a coach to let his team fall too far.

10. Notre Dame – while last year was a disappointing season for the Irish, things were looking up in the offseason with a couple exciting transfers coming in to help out Luke Harangody. Unfortunately, Purdue-transfer Scott Martin tore an ACL last month and will miss this season, meaning this is much the same team that underperformed last year. ‘Gody is good enough to carry a team, which is what will have to happen for Mike Brey’s team to dance.

11. St. John’s – this is probably the deepest team in the Norm Roberts era, and if everything breaks right, they have enough talent to make a run at the tournament. Given how things have gone in the previous five years, 11th is probably a good guess.

12. Marquette – the three-headed Warrior backcourt is gone and while Buzz Williams had an impressive debut season, he’ll have his hands full this season. He’ll have to lean heavily on Lazar Hayward and hope for immediate contributions from his class of six newcomers.

13. Rutgers – with Mike Rosario and Greg Echenique leading the way, Fred Hill hopes he has the Scarlet Knights headed in the right direction. He likely does, but progress can be slow up this kind of mountain.

14. South Florida – another Big East program trying to rise from the depths and scraping their way up the hill, the Bulls have a talented backcourt and some potential difference-makers in the frontcourt. This could be the year they make their move.

15. Providence – at least Keno Davis had one good year with some Providence veterans like Greg McDermott, Jon Kale and Weyinmi Efejuku, but now it is time to start over. The Friars will be back at least in the middle of the pack in a year or two, but this is the year they take their lumps.

16. DePaul – give credit to the DePaul administration for sticking with Jerry Wainwright for another year, but the Blue Demons just don’t have the talent to compete for even an upper division finish in the Big East.

Preseason All-Conference

First Team
G Kemba Walker, So, Connecticut
G Scottie Reynolds, Sr, Villanova
F Devin Ebanks, So, West Virginia
C Greg Monroe, So, Georgetown
C Luke Harangody, Sr, Notre Dame

Second Team
G Mike Rosario, So, Rutgers
G Sharaud Curry, Sr, Providence
F Lazar Hayward, Sr, Marquette
F Jeremy Hazell, Jr, Seton Hall
C Arinze Onuaku, Sr, Syracuse

All Freshman Team
G Lance Stephenson, Cincinnati
G Peyton Siva, Louisville
G Maalik Wayns, Villanova
G Brandon Triche, Syracuse
F Dante Taylor, Pittsburgh

Preseason Tournament Tie-Ins

Cincinnati – Maui Invitational
Possible Opponents: Vanderbilt, Maryland, Arizona/Colorado/Gonzaga/Wisconsin

Connecticut – NIT Season Tip-Off
Possible Opponents: Colgate, Hofstra, Western Kentucky/LSU, TCU/Arizona State/Duke/Charlotte

DePaul – Paradise Jam
Possible Opponents: Northern Iowa, East Carolina/Tennessee, Boston College, Purdue, St. Joe’s/South Dakota State

Marquette – Old Spice Classic
Possible Opponents: Xavier, Creighton/Michigan, Alabama/Baylor/Florida State

Notre Dame – Chicago Invitational
Possible Opponents: Northwestern, Iowa State/St. Louis

Pittsburgh – CBE Classic
Possible Opponents : Wichita State, Iowa/Texas

Rutgers – Legends Classic
Possible Opponents: UMass, Florida/Michigan State

South Florida – Charleston Classic
Possible Opponents: Davidson, La Salle/South Carolina, Miami/Penn State/Tulane/NC Wilmington

Syracuse – 2K Sports Classic
Possible Opponents: Cal, North Carolina/Ohio State

Villanova – Puerto Rico Tip-Off
Possible Opponents: George Mason, Dayton/Georgia Tech, Indiana/Kansas State/Ole Miss

West Virginia – 76 Classic
Possible Opponents: Long Beach State, Clemson/Texas A&M, Butler/Minnesota/Portland/UCLA

Top Ten Non-Conference Games

12/6 Villanova vs Maryland (Washington DC) – a semi-road game for the Wildcats in their toughest non-tournament non-conference game.
12/8 Georgetown vs Butler (Jimmy V Classic @ MSG) – this may be one of the most fundamentally sound games of the season
12/9 Kentucky @ Connecticut – Cal’s Cats gets a tough early season roadie up to Storrs in December.
12/12 Georgetown vs. Washington (Wooden Classic, Anaheim) – another Hoya neutral site game in a one-off game honoring a classic college coach.
12/13 Cincinnati @ Xavier – the battle of Cincinnati is always a heated rivalry, and this season’s matchup may feature the most talent in recent years.
12/19 UCLA @ Notre Dame – the Irish host a tough West Coast opponent in a test for both teams.
1/1 West Virginia @ Purdue – both of these squads fancy themselves national title contenders. This New Year’s battle will test both team’s beliefs.
1/2 Louisville @ Kentucky – the battle of Kentucky should be a wild one. Pitino might want to invest in ear plugs.
1/23 Texas @ Connecticut – Once again, UConn doesn’t really test itself on the road out of conference, but at least they host two national powers in Storrs this season.
1/30 Duke @ Georgetown – the Hoyas battle Duke for many of the same players year in and year out. Only fitting they should battle on the court too.

Monday, October 12, 2009

My first Top 25 list of the season

Until this point, I’ve resisted coming up with a top 25 list. Silly me. I figured it would be better to have seen the majority of the candidates for such a list before composing it.

At this point, I think I’m ready to come up with a list, having seen just about everybody with a record to qualify themselves. Now, I still haven’t seen TCU or Tulsa, I’m going to stick to ranking teams I’ve actually seen, and while that shouldn’t be held against TCU or Tulsa, bur rather me, neither of those teams will be ranked by me. Beyond that, I have seen a full game by each of the other teams who in my estimation (an estimate not entirely derived with the benefit of, you know, necessarily seeing those teams play) could claim a spot in my top 5.

I’m going to go on a completely random combination of “how they look” and “who they beat”, and I’ll try to give some marginal comment of why each team is where they are, based more on my sight than on anything statistical or meaningful.

1. Florida – I’ll admit this is more of a lifetime achievement award. I suppose I’m not supposed to consider what has happened in the past or what I expect to happen in the future at this point, but all of this is so subjective, it is hard to completely eliminate this stuff. The Gators didn’t look entirely great in knocking off LSU this weekend, but given their history and potential, I’m going to take these guys over a close #2 team.

2. Alabama – Now, Ole Miss has not shown a whole lot this season, but Alabama completely dominated them this weekend. Beyond that, Alabama has convincingly defeated a strong Virginia Tech squad. I think Alabama has probably done more so far this season to deserve the #1 spot, but I’m going to give it to Tebow and Florida by a nose so far. Can’t wait for the SEC Championship.

3. Cincinnati – I don’t want to put Cincinnati this high, but I think they deserve it over Texas, Boise State and Virginia Tech, if only because the Bearcats have look very good in winning against better teams than the other contenders for this spot have been. I find Cincy’s wins over teams like Rutgers, Oregon State and Fresno State to be more significant than Virginia Tech’s win over Nebraska, Boise State’s win over Oregon and Texas’ win over Texas Tech. Is that sick? That’s gotta be sick. Well, at least I recognize that, and by next week I will perhaps correct that issue. Unless Cincy beats up South Florida on the road next week and proves it to me all over again.

4. Boise State – If I’m gonna go with Cincy #3 on slim reason, I’m gonna go with the Broncs here this week, if only to make some type of internal sense in my ranking. I’m going to put Oregon pretty high in a few spots, so if Boise whooped up on them, the Broncs deserve the nod over some close competition, no? And, besides, as Boise continues to whoop up on the New Mexico States and Idahos of this world, they will seem less impressive and surely drop. I wish they could have scheduled someone more impressive than UC Davis in week five to possibly improve their strength of schedule.

5. Virginia Tech – so this boils down to me finding a win over Nebraska and a semi-decent loss to Alabama as more impressive than a win over Texas Tech, although we will definitely know more next weekend. The win over an overachieving Boston College team this weekend was decent, but expected.

6. Texas – This may be severely underrating this team. We’ll know more next weekend, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see the Longhorns to jump all the way to #2 in my ranking next week. At this point, they receive an “incomplete” for a grade.

7. USC – To me, we’re sorta to tier three here. Florida/Alabama = tier one. Cincy/Boise/ VaTech/Texas = tier two. And tier three is brief but impressive. USC and LSU. After the 8th spot, I think we’ve got a pretty significant fall-off to the next round of teams. The Trojans have a big win over Ohio State coupled with a bad loss to Washington, while LSU has a unimpressive loss to my current #1, Florida, paired with a marginally controversial win over Georgia and a dominating win over those same Huskies that knocked off ‘SC. And yet I’m putting ‘SC over LSU? Doesn’t make a lick of sense, does it? Oh well, it’s done.

8. LSU – See above. I will add that the rest of the LSU schedule will give the Tigers a phenomenal platform to launch themselves up the rankings, with Auburn coming up after a bye week and a phenomenally tough roadie to Alabama coming up in November followed a couple of weeks later to a marginally tough roadie to Ole Miss.

9. Ohio State – The Buckeyes are here, rather than 10th, based more on their win over Wisconsin (a team I had a bit of a crush on the last two weeks) this week than on their close loss to USC in September. This is where the rankings start to get more convoluted.

10. Miami – Do I want to put Georgia here? Maybe. But, if I’m going to start considering two-loss teams, doesn’t Oklahoma perhaps belong in the discussion? What about Oregon, a team that has looked very impressive for three straight weeks to temporarily erase the memory of the season opening debacle in Boise. But, since we’re considering Oklahoma and we’re trying to give the benefit of the doubt to teams that have played tough schedules and we’ve already even given thought to a two-loss team, what about a team that has (until this weekend) gone after nationally respected opponents with excellent success. The Hurricanes deserve this spot based on schedule and success.

11. Oregon – opened terribly, but a strong climb since there.

12. Oklahoma – two losses, to strong opponents, without their Heisman winning QB. We’ll give them the benefit of the doubt for one more week.

13. Iowa – a couple impressive wins in conference, and the nation’s second-longest win streak, but they may still be a bit underrated here.

14. Kansas – the only thing the Jayhawks have done so far is beat the teams that they are supposed to. The back half of their schedule is significantly more difficult.

15. Nebraska – their only loss is a rather impressive loss to my #5 team, and it looks like Bo Pelini has this program started on the path back to relevance.

16. Notre Dame – a heartbreaker of a loss to Michigan and a couple heart-stopping wins get them this high, but the Trojans loom.

17. Georgia Tech – Miami handled the Ramblin’ Wreck pretty easily, but beyond that Tech has performed well.

18. BYU – dominated by Florida State a couple weeks after their win in the opener against Oklahoma, but the Cougars have righted the ship in recent weeks.

19. Auburn – came crashing back down to earth in a tough conference roadie against Arkansas, but Gene Chizik and Gus Malzach have this team headed in the right direction.

20. South Carolina – they don’t often look pretty, but a tough defense and competent play out of quarterback Stephen Garcia and the Ol’ Ballcoach is a tough matchup again.

21. Wisconsin – Ohio State took advantage of some mistakes by quarterback Scott Tolzein this past weekend, but Bret Bielema is getting back to Badger ball of old: tough defense, grind-it-out offense and a load in the backfield in running back John Clay.

22. South Florida – senior quarterback Matt Grothe’s career ended prematurely, but this Bull squad has playmakers all over the field on both sides of the ball. They’ve got a monster game coming up at home against Cincinnati on Thursday, and a win there could vault this squad up near the top 10.

23. Pittsburgh – they’ve done what they’ve had to do so far, but the Panthers will have plenty of chances to prove themselves one way or the other on the back half of their schedule.

24. Penn State – graduation and injuries have hurt the Nittany Lions more than was expected, and Darryl Clark’s offense has yet to get on the same page.

25. Houston – a terrible loss at UTEP, but I’m still gonna give the Cougars a spot in my top 25, if only because I briefly considered both Oklahoma State and Texas Tech for this spot, two teams that Houston has already beaten.