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- UNLV will be down to seven scholarship players for its season opener against Division II Grand Canyon after it suspended Anthony Marshall for the game for violating a NCAA rule that only allows a player to play in one summer league each summer. Marshall, who apparently did not know the rule, played one game in a second summer league, which the school reported as a secondary violation. Normally, we would go into our “a rule is a rule” spiel now, but when you consider that senior Chace Stanback has a similar one game suspension for a DUI we would shift our focus to the relative weight of the penalties. Like we said over the weekend, it isn’t the NCAA’s job to enforce criminal laws, but when the school is making the decision about who plays and who sits they should exercise more discretion in levying out punishments.
- For years, the general consensus among basketball fans was that Michigan State started slow and tended to round into shape at just the right time, but there had been very little formal analysis of it. Like our link yesterday, the people at The Basketball Prospectus have tried to put some statistics behind the commonly held belief and this time they looked at Michigan State and its progression throughout the season using Ken Pomeroy’s famed four factor analysis. The analysis breaks the seasons into parts (non-conference play, conference play, and NCAA Tournament) and compares how the Spartans do on various metrics. Some of the results are what you would expect while others are surprising.
- It didn’t take Bruce Pearl long to find another job in basketball after leaving Tennessee. Just a few months after taking a job as Vice President of Marketing at H.T. Hackney, a wholesale grocer, Pearl has signed a contract with Sirius XM to host a college basketball show with Jeff Goodman of CBSSports.com. Pearl claims that he will continue to work at H.T. Hackney while doing the show, which is expected to start on November 14 and then run twice weekly for three hours each starting in January. It will be interesting to see how guests interact with Pearl, who is currently under a three-year show-cause penalty from the NCAA. Our guess is that Pearl will be treated like Michael Milken, a man who should be a pariah in the financial community, but is still discussed with a strange reverence by those in the field and called upon for advice.
- If you are like us you probably already know quite a bit about Harrison Barnes, but it is mostly about his game and not about what makes him tick. For answers to the latter question we suggest you check out a fairly interesting feature from ESPN The Magazine on the North Carolina sophomore. It features some interesting pieces about his mother’s obsession with some former Tar Heel named Jordan as well as an amusing quote from John Calipari about how one-and-dones are “bad for basketball”.
- Finally, today is the first day that high school basketball players can sign their National Letter of Intent so schools can officially begin to count up the number of sealed commitments for next year’s teams. The issue has been discussed ad nauseum over the past few years and we don’t feel that it is as much of a plantation issue as some others do, but we do feel that the entire signing process is a bad idea for recruits because it is a contractual commitment to the school, which the school and coach can get out of, but the player cannot even if the coach leaves or the school’s situation changes significantly (like a school in Happy Valley, PA). The intelligent thing for a top recruit to do would be to commit, but not sign a Letter of Intent and just enroll at the school without sacrificing the high ground. Unfortunately, current tradition dictates that most players will end up signing a Letter of Intent no matter how dumb it is.