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Big 12 Morning Five: 01.02.12 Edition

  1. With conference play beginning tonight, countless publications in Big 12 country will publish articles just like this in an attempt to size up the race this winter. This particular article sums the league up pretty well, and the consensus seems to be that the Big 12 is as wide-open as ever. The phrase “wide-open” can mean a few things, though. The league is wide-open in that any number of teams could win the regular season title, but it’s also wide-open in that nobody has established itself as an elite squad. Yes, Missouri and Baylor are undefeated, but Missouri still has to win a major road game and Baylor hardly looked impressive even in a victory over a top-15 Mississippi State squad. Kansas and Texas A&M have questionable losses, and as for the rest of the league, who knows how the other six teams will fare?
  2. One of those six teams is Oklahoma State, which has seen two point guards transfer out of the program during the past two weeks. The Cowboys are 7-6 and have struggled to score all season, and naturally, that led to early attendance issues. But in a New Year’s Eve loss to Virginia Tech, a special promotion of free admission drew more than 12,000 fans to Gallagher-Iba Arena. It did not result in a victory, but the game outdrew all but one Big 12 game a year ago. When it’s really rocking, Gallagher-Iba is quite possibly the most intense atmosphere in the league (at least on par with Allen Fieldhouse), so perhaps Oklahoma State should consider free admission again sometime. That is, if the school can afford it.
  3. There’s not much analysis to give regarding the Kansas/North Dakota game this weekend. Kansas had better players; Kansas won by 26 points. No surprise there, but it’s worth noting that forward Thomas Robinson put up some spectacular numbers, scoring 30 points and tallying 21 rebounds. He’s just the fifth player in Big 12 history to pull off the 30-point/20-rebound feat, and three of the others to do that (Michael Beasley, Kevin Durant and Blake Griffin) were top-two NBA Draft picks. Robinson manhandled the Fighting Sioux by shooting 10-14 from the field and making nine free throws. And hey, he even made the first three of his career. It was just his day.
  4. Oklahoma blew a late double-digit lead to Cincinnati last week, meaning it missed a chance for its first quality victory of the season. Could that come back to bite the Sooners once March rolls around? Lon Kruger‘s improved program is 10-2, but let’s not talk NCAAs just yet. In that Cincinnati game, Oklahoma looked like a post-season team for several minutes in the second half before the collapse, at which point it looked confused on both ends of the floor. Even though the Sooners did not take care of the ball down the stretch and had an obvious defensive error on the final possession of the game, it was evident during that contest that this team is having a heck of a lot more fun than last year. You can see the improvement on the floor, and the players seem to be enjoying Kruger’s coaching style. An NCAA bid might be too much to ask for, but with Kruger, you never know.
  5. Missouri certainly will be playing in the Big Dance this March, and entering Big 12 play, the only question for the Tigers is whether they can avoid a collapse like last season. Mike Anderson’s Tigers reached the top-10 in the polls during non-conference play but finished just .500 in the conference, including a 1-7 mark on the road. However, as this article points out, Frank Haith‘s team doesn’t look headed for a similar fate at this point. First of all, Missouri is simply winning in much more impressive fashion this year as opposed to 2010-11, when it struggled with lesser opponents and narrowly escaped a season-opening tilt with lowly Western Illinois. The statistics support this theory too: the Tigers are holding opponents to less points, and their individual and team shooting percentages have skyrocketed.
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