ATB: Meet Lamar’s Mike James, the New Human Microwave
Posted by rtmsf on January 5th, 2011The Lede. There were quite a few good games on the tube tonight, mostly in the Big East and Big Ten, but ultimately all of the better teams won. But the big story on this early January evening came from Beaumont, Texas, as a player with the most common of names pulled off a supremely uncommon occurrence — a 50-point game. And he did it while coming off the bench.
Your Watercooler Moment. The Unlikeliest 50-point Night of All-Time? Tonight someone named Mike James, a reserve guard for Lamar whose season and career high coming into tonight’s game with something called Louisiana College was 16 points, put on a Superman cape, ripped open a can of spinach and ate his Wheaties when he raised up off the bench on this particular evening. Twenty-eight minutes later, the 6’1 junior college transfer from Eastern Arizona had nailed eleven threes en route to a 52-point explosion that seems to have come out of nowhere, as he entered the game averaging a mere 10.7 PPG in about fifteen minutes of action. Perhaps just as impressive as his ability to score was his ability to shoot, as James managed to throw up 35 field goal attempts in those 28 minutes, an average of 1.25 per minute (we assume the four fouls were necessitated to rest his shooting arm). James’ ridiculous performance is the best bench scoring output nationally in fourteen years (UT-San Antonio’s Roderick Hall had 52 off the pine in 1997), but for insiders familiar with his game (not us), such rapid-fire cannoning isn’t all that unusual. The player who calls himself “the real MJ” via his Twitter account certainly has a scorer’s attitude, having led his juco league in scoring with a 25.9 PPG average last year and receiving interest from a number of schools including Santa Clara, Nebraska and Detroit. He surfaced at Lamar because he reportedly liked the warm weather in Texas, perhaps knowing that the milder climate would keep his hand hot for those moments when he had the green light off the bench. Tonight appeared to be that night. Something tells us we’re going to be hearing from this new “MJ” again. (for a glimpse of his athleticism, check out this clip on his YouTube page)
Tonight’s Quick Hits…
- Big Ten Favorites. It wasn’t easy but both Ohio State and Minnesota avoided upsets tonight against Big Ten bottom-dwellers Iowa and Indiana, respectively. OSU’s Thad Matta wasn’t happy with his team’s defense for the second straight game, but having a player like Jared Sullinger inside can make up for many defensive lapses — his 24/12 on the interior was something that Iowa was simply not equipped to handle. OSU has started off the Big Ten slate with two easier opponents, even if on the road, but Minnesota has had no such luck, having to travel to Madison and East Lansing prior to tonight’s game at home against Indiana. Trevor Mbakwe, the next best glass-eater in the league after Sullinger, grabbed a career-high 16 rebounds and blocked five shots to help his Gophers come back from a nine-point second half deficit and effectively save Tubby Smith’s team from an untenable 0-3 start in the conference race.
- Colorado State as Spoiler. It’s no secret that the Mountain West has designs on getting four teams back into the NCAA Tournament for the second straight year — San Diego State, BYU, UNLV and New Mexico. Four other schools are simply not very good — TCU, Utah, Wyoming and Air Force. But Colorado State, with senior forward Andy Ogide (16/7) leading the way, is the mid-pack team none of the top four can afford to lose to if they want to take the MWC crown and earn that high seed in the NCAA Tournament. CSU’s win over Wyoming tonight confirms that the rest of the MWC’s fortunes may ultimately rest on how well the top four handle the Rams in their home-and-home series this year.
- LaceDarius Dunn’s 43. On most other night’s LaceDarius Dunn’s 43-point performance would be the headliner, but Mike James’ 52 off the bench displaced the Baylor guard’s outstanding evening. Dunn nailed ten threes (on 18 attempts) and put the Bears on his back down the stretch of tonight’s game against Morgan State when they really needed him. For Baylor to reach its goals this season, they’re going to need Dunn to occasionally do so, especially on the nights where Perry Jones and some of the others fail to step up. He’s been relatively quiet this year, but his averages of 23/5/2 APG while shooting 42% from deep (two-thirds of his shots are treys) are All-American worthy.
… and Misses.
- The Real Huskies. We’ve known for some time that UConn will only be successful when they’re getting help for Kemba Walker inside, and tonight’s loss at Notre Dame epitomized that weakness. Alex Oriakhi was held scoreless in 23 foul-plagued minutes, and UConn will beat a total of zero good teams the rest of the way if the All-American point guard is expected to carry the load in every game. Walker himself was proven human by a combination of Ben Hansbrough’s defense and an off night, going 8-23 and 0-5 from deep for a 19-point evening (his second-lowest mark of the season), but with UConn now sitting at 1-2 in the Big East, we’re starting to see the regression of the Huskies to the borderline top 25 team their talent dictates.
- Huggins’ Heroes. West Virginia has not looked impressive through three games of the Big East slate so far. The Mountaineers are now 1-2 after beating DePaul 67-65 tonight, but they had to do it by the skin of their teeth after blowing a late 14-point lead. Surprising for a Bob Huggins team, but the problem has been the WVU defense failing to adequately make stops, especially inside. The front line of Deniz Kilicli, Kevin Jones and John Flowers hasn’t shown the grit and toughness defensively that DaSean Butler and Devin Ebanks brought to bear last season. If that doesn’t improve soon, the wheels could quickly come off in Morgantown.
- John Pelphrey. Anybody who believed that 10-2 Arkansas might have been turning some kind of corner under John Pelphrey should look no further than tonight’s pathetic 46-point performance in Austin. Texas is a much better team than the Hawgs, but they’re not 30-40 points better, and yet the same lost look that we’ve seen on many of the Arkansas players’ faces over the last few seasons re-appeared tonight. The good news is that Arkansas plays in the worst division of possibly the worst major conference league, so even this group might figure a way to go 8-8. But don’t believe the hype — the Hawgs’ only two reasonable wins are over sputtering Seton Hall and equally lost Oklahoma.
Tweet of the Night. It was a light night in the twitter-verse with respect to hoops talk, but this tweet from Georgia head coach Mark Fox seemed evenly split between jocularity and honesty.
[…] G: Mike James, Lamar (12.5 PPG, 2.4 RPG): James did not start the season, but in 24 games in 2010-11, the guard averaged 12.5 points per game, including a ridiculous 52-point performance against Louisiana College. […]
Just saw this dude tonight against Kentucky. In person. He is a scorer and definitely has a future playing overseas. If he were four inches taller, he would be NBA material, mark my words.