Big East Tournament Daily Diary, Third Round Edition
Posted by Brian Otskey on March 9th, 2012Brian Otskey is the Big East Correspondent for RTC. He is reporting from the Big East Tournament all week, and will sum up his thoughts on the day’s action each evening. You can find him on Twitter @botskey.
Day three of the Big East Tournament was another one to savor. Connecticut and Syracuse played a spirited game filled with drama in an atmosphere at MSG that was one of the best I’ve ever experienced. The second game of the day turned out to be the best though as what was a snooze-fest of a game suddenly got exciting late with Cincinnati rallying to force overtime and beat Georgetown. The Bearcats won in double overtime, advancing to their first ever Big East semifinal game. They’ll take on Syracuse in Friday night’s first game. In the evening session, Louisville decided it wanted to run with Marquette from the start and continued that style of play for all 40 minutes. The Cardinals forced 26 Marquette turnovers, one shy of the Big East Tournament record as they advanced to the semifinals yet again. Louisville will face Notre Dame in the Friday nightcap, a team that plodded its way through an ugly overtime victory over South Florida.
Here are some reflections from Thursday’s games:
- Syracuse struggled with half court offense today. Is that a problem going forward? – Yes, but only against teams that can slow the Orange down and limit their transition attack. Syracuse had issues in slower paced games against Virginia Tech, Pittsburgh, Notre Dame, Cincinnati, West Virginia, Georgetown, Louisville and South Florida this year. SU gets Cincinnati again tomorrow, a team that ranks #258 nationally in tempo. If the Bearcats can limit turnovers and hit the offensive glass (two things they do well), they are going to have a chance. Packing it in defensively and making Syracuse beat them from the outside in the half court might be the best strategy for Mick Cronin’s Bearcats. In the NCAA Tournament, the games are slower and closer. Syracuse could have a problem in situations like that as it moves deeper into March.
- Connecticut is a different team – It seems the Huskies are finding their identity, an observation that was confirmed by Jim Calhoun after the game. Calhoun said, “Little did I know I’d find a new team.” Indeed. Despite struggling offensively, Connecticut looked like the team that was highly ranked in the preseason. Neither team played well offensively but that was mostly due to superb defense on both ends. Huskies point guard Shabazz Napier didn’t play nearly as well as he did yesterday but UConn persevered and was a play or two away from winning this game. Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim said he’d be shocked if Connecticut fails to win at least two games in the NCAA Tournament. After seeing the Huskies this week in New York, I’d be hard pressed to disagree even with what we saw for most of the regular season from this team.