RTC Region by Region Analysis: 03.27.10

Posted by rtmsf on March 28th, 2010

Each day this week during the regional rounds of the NCAA Tournament we’re asking some of our top correspondents to put together a collection of notes and interesting tidbits about each region.  If you know of something that we should include in tomorrow’s submission, hit us up at rushthecourt@yahoo.com.

West Region (Andrew Murawa)

  • Usually in college basketball, when you say a team is going home, you mean they just lost and their season is over. For Butler, there are no such problems; they just upset Kansas State in Salt Lake City and are headed back to Indianapolis, the site of this year’s Final Four, to compete in their first National Semifinal just a few miles from their campus.
  • How did they do it? The easy answer is defense, mostly controlling KSU’s explosive backdoor pair of Denis Clemente and Jacob Pullen and, rather surprisingly, getting the best of the Wildcats on the glass, winning the rebounding battle 41-29, an astounding number for the smaller, less athletic team.
  • The Bulldog win was a complete team effort, with stars like Shelvin Mack and Gordon Hayward having their usual strong performances, role-players like Ronald Nored and Willie Veasley adding their gritty play, but also players like little-used freshman center Andrew Smith giving head coach Brad Stevens quite a few strong minutes in the wake of Matt Howard’s foul trouble.

East Region

  • Andy Katz writes that despite Kentucky’s presumed coronation coming up a few games short in Syracuse tonight, the Cats are back, and the health of the UK program is an overall good thing for college basketball in general.
  • Mike Freeman skewers Kentucky for whining and complaining to the refs in most of this game and refusing to give West Virginia responsibility for winning the game.  Interesting stat that Bob Huggins is now 8-1 against John Calipari in head-to-head matchups.
  • West Virginia’s Wellington Smith stated after the Mountaineers defeated Kentucky that they were looking at that as the ‘national championship game’ and had no trouble claiming that WVU should be the resounding favorite in next week’s Final Four.
  • The great game that WVU’s Joe Mazzulla put forth in the regional finals today may have bought enough time for his teammate Truck Bryant to get healthy.  He says that he’s 90% sure that he’ll be able to play in the Final Four next weekend.

Midwest Region (Tom Hager)

  • Although Michigan State’s players spent their time at the hotel watching film and going through their game plan at the banquet hall, the Tennessee players went out for barbeque and watched the tournament on the big screen televisions.  Last week, the Volunteers went to Dave & Busters and won their games, so perhaps UT coach Bruce Pearl is on to something.
  • According to MSU coach Tom Izzo, the Achilles injury to Kalin Lucas was a “wakeup call” for his team.  The emotion that the Spartans are playing with now is a quality that Izzo says all championship teams need.
  • With Lucas injured, Izzo drew up five plays for Draymond Green to run point guard, and has apparently hinted that he will not hesitate to use them.
  • Although Michigan State has a higher seed and a history for making Final Fours, Tennessee is favored by one point in this game.
  • Magic Johnson visited the Michigan State locker room after the victory over Northern Iowa, and made a pretty big impact on the players.  Korie Lucious said the experience was comparable to having God visit the locker room.

South Region

  • Duke and Baylor’s men’s and women’s basketball teams will play within about 24 hours of each other, both with Final Four trips on the line.  This is the first time in NCAA Tournament history that the same teams have played in both regional finals.
  • Duke basketball: loved, hated, but never ignored.  No matter where they play, people turn out to both support and pull against the Devils.
  • Mike Krzyzewski is not happy with the stool he has at courtside due to the elevated court at Reliant Stadium.
  • It’s easy to lose sight of this fact considering Duke has such a great program and Baylor hasn’t been to the Final Four in sixty years, but none of the current Duke players have played in an Elite Eight either, much less a Final Four.  As LaceDarius Dunn put it, “we’re not intimidated by Duke, they are players just like we are.”
rtmsf (3998 Posts)


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2 responses to “RTC Region by Region Analysis: 03.27.10”

  1. bummedukfan says:

    Second time I’ve seen y’all refer to Kalin Lucas’ ACL injury. It’s not an ACL, but an Achilles.

  2. jstevrtc says:

    We’ll fix it. We assume you saw the story written specifically about Lucas’ Achilles injury, yes?

    John Stevens
    RTC

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