After the Buzzer: Opening Weekend Wrap

Posted by rtmsf on November 16th, 2008

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News & Notes.  First, a few notable pieces of news from the weekend.

  • As many as six of Arizona’s players could be ineligible for their opener Monday against Florida Atlantic in the Preseason NIT.  This relates to the ‘big mistake’ that Lute Olson made by allowing a letter with his name affixed to it go out to boosters seeking financial support for a local AAU Tournament (an NCAA violation).  The named players may have received impermissable expenses during this AAU event.
  • We’re shocked, shocked we tell you, in finding Ole Miss and West Virginia (of all places) received Fs in a minority hiring report.  Not sure what’s up with Dayton, though.
  • South Carolina starting guard Brandis Raley-Ross will miss 3-4 weeks with a sprained left knee.  Similarly, Villanova guard Dwayne Anderson will join teammate Shane Clark on the injury roll with a stress fracture in his left foot – he’ll be out indefinitely.
  • This Quinnapiac racial threat thing is just getting more and more bizarre – now the victim is harassing one of the other victims?  Get a grip, folks.
  • And here’s another example of Nebraska pushing into the gray area with the rules relating to their supposedly non-public scrimmage with Marquette last week.

Game of the Weekend. Duke 82, Rhode Island 79. Maybe it was the light blue uniforms.  Mere days after barely surviving Brown, URI nearly pulled off a major upset by going into Cameron Indoor Stadium and leading the Blue Devils most of the way before losing at the end in a hard-fought 82-79 battle.  Jimmy Baron’s 24 (8 threes, several of which were ridiculous) led the way for the Rams, but the Devils scored on their last seven possessions to erase a 7-pt deficit with four minutes to go.  Duke was led by Kyle Singler’s 21/5/5 assts and Jon Scheyer’s 23, but it was Duke’s defense that put the Devils in danger of breaking their 62-game home court non-conference winning streak (dating back to 2000).  They gave up 10-14 from three and allowed URI to shoot 55% from the field.  This game was on the U, so of course we couldn’t actually watch it – if anyone did get to see it, feel free to leave comments below.

Upset of the Weekend. Mercer 72, Alabama 69. The middle of the SEC looks pathetic so far this season.  Already there were the Friday night debacle at Kentucky (VMI) and the near-miss at Arkansas (SE Louisiana); well, tonight Mark Gottfried was back to his old underachieving tricks.  The Crimson Tide are projected to be in the SEC West mix for a division title and NCAA bid, but tonight’s game exposed some serious issues with this team.  First, other than Ronald Steele (the good news for Bama fans is that he finally appears healthy), who put up 25 pts tonight, and JaMychal Green (17/12/3 blks), where will points come from?  Alonzo Gee contributed a mere four points, and only one other player reached double figures (Mikhail Torrance).  Perhaps even more importantly, the Tide were outrebounded by the smaller Bears, 49-32, which is simply inexcusable for an SEC team with vastly superior size.  (like anyone in Alabama cares about hoops right now…)  As for Mercer, this is becoming old hat for them.  You may recall last year that Mercer went into USC and dropped the Trojans in their home opener, 96-81.  They then promptly lost their next five games en route to an 11-19 campaign – will this year be any different?  James Florence led the way for Mercer with 23/6/5 assts.

More Upsets.

  • Northeastern 70, Providence 66. New Friar head man Keno Davis didn’t want to start like this.  Providence is facing a tough enough conference season in the Big East; they didn’t need to put themselves behind the RPI eight-ball with an opening home loss to a mid-major.  Northeastern has a good team, but what happened to Sharaud Curry (1-8 for 2 pts)?  Matt Janning killed PC with 24/6 on 10-14 shooting.
  • Portland 80, Washington 74. Ditto for Lorenzo Romar.  Washington is a trendy pick to make some noise in the Pac-10 this year, but if the Huskies find themselves on the bubble next March, they will lament losing this game.  Jon Brockman had 30/14, but he got absolutely no help on the inside (Quincy Pondexter in particular laid an egg with zero points).  An old bugaboo killed Washington – the free-throw line (19-32, .594).  Nik Raivio (Derek’s little bro) led a balanced Portland attack with 19/7 rebs.

How’d #1 Look? UNC 86, Penn 71. The nation’s #1 team had a solid, if spotty, performance without reigning POY Tyler Hansbrough and their best defender Marcus Ginyard on the court Saturday.  Six players reached double figures, including two freshman bigs, Tyler Zeller (18 pts) and Eric Davis (10/14).  Bobby Frasor played 21 minutes, despite reports late last week to the contrary.  Penn managed to get the game down to a ten-point deficit with four minutes remaining behind 11 threes and a big game from guard Tyler Bernardini (26 pts), but they never seriously threatened.  All in all, considering what UNC didn’t have on the court in this game, we’d have to believe Roy feels pretty good about his team’s performance.

Mid-Major Corner. These games matter on resumes in March.

  • George Mason 80, Vermont 79 (OT). This looked like a tremendous battle of mids in Burlington, VT, on Saturday.  GMU’s Darryl Monroe was awesome, tallying 19/17 including a beastly nine offensive rebounds and the game-winning FTs with 0.7 showing on the clock.  Marquis Blakely, his counterpart on Vermont, was equally effective, going for 24/8/4 stls/4 blks in a game that was back-and-forth until the last possession.
  • Butler 58, Drake 48. Butler held Drake to 31% shooting and 14 first-half points in a methodical road win between two prominent mid-majors.  Is Drake finished now that Keno Davis is gone?
  • UNLV 65, San Diego 60. An undermanned USD team with three players serving suspensions still nearly pulled the upset at UNLV Saturday night.  This game was close throughout until UNLV, led by Wink Adams’ 19/4, made six key FTs down the stretch.  Rob Jones led San Diego with 19/10/4 assts.
  • Creighton 82, New Mexico 75. Incredibly named P’Allen Stinnett (30 pts) and Booker Woodfox (26 pts) led a huge second-half surge for Creighton (19-3 in the final three minutes) to start its season off with a nice win.

    FIrst Looks. Some coaches had their first games at new schools this weekend.

    • LSU 79, Jackson St. 65. Trent Johnson started his LSU career with a victory fueled by a late 17-6 run.  Tasmin Mitchell had 17/7.
    • Indiana 83, Northwestern St. 65. Devan Dumes scored 21 pts in Tom Crean’s Hoosier debut.  This was a good win for this program no matter what happens the rest of the way.
    • California 68, Pacific 56. Monty returned to coaching on the other side of the Bay by winning his first home game, a hard-fought victory led by Jerome Randle’s 24 pts and Patrick Christopher’s 18 pts.

    Statistical Oddities. More like, offensive offensiveness.

    • Manhattan 56, NJIT 32.  The abomination continues.  NJIT shot a blistering 23% in tying the NCAA record for consecutive losses (34).  Up next: @ Penn St. Monday night for the win, er, loss.
    • Washington St. 76, Mississippi Valley St. 25. Memo to MVSU: stop scheduling Wazzu.  In the last two years, Washington St. has outscored MVSU 147-51 (or, the score of one of Wazzu’s Pac-10 football games).

    Saturday Games of Interest.

    • Gonzaga 83, MSU-Billings 52. If Josh Heytvelt is once again healthy, this team is legit, and it appears that he is (15/8/3 blks).  Austin Daye added 15/12/4 blks for as talented a front line as there is in the country.
    • Tennessee 114, UT-Chattanooga 75. UT set a new record for assists (32) as it won its 33d straight home game in a rout.  Six Vols reached double figures, led by Tyler Smith’s 21/4/5 assts.
    • Memphis 90, Fairfield 63. Tyreke Evans came off the bench to lead the Tigers with 19/5/3 in his debut for Memphis.  Despite the blowout, Calipari was upset with his defense – the Tigers allowed Fairfield to shoot 50% from the field and 44% from three.
    • USC 78, UC Irvine 55. USC struggled for a half before blowing out UC Irvine behind freshman sensation Demar DeRozan’s 14/3.  Dwight Lewis added 18/7 and Taj Gibson 17/6.

      Sunday Games of Interest.

      • Florida 81, Bradley 58.  The Gators rode fourteen threes to an easy win over a decent Bradley squad.  Nick Calathes dropped 13/7/6 asst/4 stls, and Dan Werner had Walter Hodge each contributed 17 pts.
      • Clemson 76, Temple 72. Clemson held on after blowing a 14-pt second half lead by hitting some big FTs down the stretch in the Charleston Classic.  CU’s Trever Booker had 15/16, while Temple’s Dionte Christmas was relatively quiet with 14/5 and six turnovers.
      • Virginia 107, VMI 97.  No upset magic today for VMI, coming off of its miraculous upset at Kentucky.  UVa was led by Sylven Landesberg’s 28/8/8 assts, who set a freshman debut scoring record for the school.
      • Wisconsin 68, Long Beach St. 61. Marcus Landry’s (23/4/3 blks) huge three with 22 seconds remaining gave UW just enough cushion to avoid the home upset.  Of some concern for Bo Ryan will be the Badgers allowing 48% shooting from their Big West foes.
      • Michigan St. 100, Idaho 62. MSU cruised behind Chris Allen and Raymar Morgan’s twin 21-pt performances.
      • Holy Cross 73, St. Joseph’s 69 (OT). This is a really good early win for the Patriot League against an A10 stalwart.
      • Notre Dame 94, USC-Upstate 54. Luke Harongody blew up for 30/14, including his fourth career three-pointer, in a blowout at home.  Luke Zeller added 18/5 off the bench.
      • Kansas 71, Missouri-Kansas City 56. KU shook off a 1-13 shooting night from three to pull away from UMKC in the second half on the strength of their defense, which held their opponent to 29% shooting.

      On Tap Monday (all times EST).

      • Davidson (-17.5) v. James Madison – 6pm (NIT)
      • Connecticut v. Hartford (ESPN FC & 360) – 7pm
      • Boston College (-13.5) v. Loyola (MD)  (ESPNU) – 7pm (NIT)
      • Pittsburgh (-14) v. Miami (OH) (ESPN FC & 360) – 7pm
      • Purdue (-20.5) v. E. Michigan (ESPN2 & 360) – 7pm (NIT)
      • UAB (-10) v. Santa Clara – 8pm (NIT)
      • Missouri (-14) v. UT-Chattanooga  (ESPN FC & 360) – 8pm
      • Oklahoma St. (-11) v. N. Texas (ESPN FC & 360) – 8pm
      • Marquette v. Chicago St.  (ESPN FC & 360) – 8pm
      • Belmont v. Austin Peay – 8pm
      • Texas Tech v. Sam Houston St. (ESPN FC & 360) – 8pm
      • Oklahoma (-30) v. Miss. Valley St.  (ESPNU) – 9pm
      • Arizona (-18.5) v. Florida Atlantic (ESPNU) – 11pm (NIT)
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      After the Buzzer: Another Nightmare in Rupp

      Posted by rtmsf on November 14th, 2008

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      Upset of the Night.  VMI 111, Kentucky 103.  Well, for the second consecutive year we’ve not even made it to Thanksgiving before we have a nominee for biggest upset of the year because a small college from the South went into Rupp Arena and beat the Kentucky Wildcats on their home court.  Last year it was Gardner-Webb; this year it was VMI, who was picked seventh in the Big South and last defeated a BCS team four seasons ago.  The Cats aren’t ranked this season, but they arguably have more raw talent than they had a year ago.  Most pundits have UK finishing second or third in the SEC East and making its 17th straight NCAA Tournament in 2009.  They still might, but watching tonight’s game showed some serious issues with turnovers (too many players leaving their feet to pass the ball), defensive rotation (or a complete lack thereof), shot selection (how does all-american Patrick Patterson only get four shots in essentially a Y-ball game?), and myriad mental lapses.  Does Billy Gillispie really understand where he’s coaching these days?  These kinds of losses are barely tolerable at Texas A&M; at Kentucky, people start putting moving signs in your yard after close wins.  He somewhat redeemed himself last season after the G-W debacle by going 12-4 in the SEC and making the NCAA Tournament (1st round loss to Marquette), but big losses to rivals UNC, Louisville and Indiana weren’t forgotten.  A VMI loss to start this season followed by a trip to Chapel Hill next week and some other Ls to follow will not help his cause.  UK fans care about every game – not just the SEC and March Madness.  As Truzenzuzex over at A Sea of Blue put it, Billy Clyde tonight represented an “epic failure of coaching.”  As for the game itself, what can you say other than it was a classic run & gun shootout.  UK shot 54% from the field, mostly from dunk range, but other than Jodie Meeks, couldn’t hit a three regardless of whether anyone was defending it or not (3-16, 19%).  Meeks led the Cats with 39 pts, and Perry Stevenson had 20/14, but VMI’s attack was more balanced, with all five starters plus one bench player reaching double figures.  Travis Holmes led with 30/7 on 10-13 shooting, but the key difference in the statistical battle were the fourteen threes that VMI knocked down.  Frankly, UK’s defense simply wasn’t closing out on many of these wide-open shots.  All that said, when UK went on a 17-0 run in the late second half to cut the lead to 90-89 after having been down 23 earlier in the half, we figured that VMI was finished.  Several more bad possessions by the UK offense and lackluster defense on the other side ensured that VMI still had life, and the Keydets were able to hang on and pull off the monumental upset.  This Gillispie situation will remain interesting throughout the season. 

      Other Games of Reasonable Interest. 

      • Pittsburgh 86, Fairleigh Dickinson 63.  The return of Levance Fields is worth a special mention.  Pitt is 52-12 when their oft-injured point guard starts, and a mere slightly-better-than-.500 team when he’s on the bench.  Tonight he showed no ill effects from his twice-broken left foot, contributing 15/8 assts in the blowout victory.  Dejuan Blair had his typical beastly 17/13 inside.  Pitt will have an interesting next game against Miami (OH) on Monday.     
      • UConn 81, W. Carolina 55.  Hasheem Thabeet needs to do more of this (23/17/3 blks).  AJ Price was ejected for a sucker punch flagrant foul – nice to see thing haven’t changed much in Storrs.  He made his triumphant return with a 0 pt, 5 turnover night.  Jerome Dyson had 23, and newcomer Kemba Walker contributed 8/5 in his first collegiate game. 

      Small Piece of News.  The injury bug continues at Carolina, as it now appears Bobby Frasor will not play in UNC’s opener against Penn tomorrow because he’s been nursing a sprained left ankle.  You don’t think Frasor’s and Hansbrough’s injuries may karmically have anything to do with this, do ya?  Nah.  Didn’t think so. 

      Rundown. 

      • UT-Martin 121, Maryville 56.  Lester Hudson’s line: 27/7/7 asst/8 stls.  Sick.
      • Temple 79, ETSU 65.  Dionte Christmas with 26/11 in first round of Charleston Classic.  Next up is host Charleston.
      • Florida 80, Toledo 58Unrepentent gambler Nick Calathes with 16/4/7 assts.
      • Stanford 75, Yale 67.  Johnny Dawkins gets his coaching career off to a solid start with a road win.  Lawrence Hill’s 22/11 helped. 
      • Howard 47, Oregon St. 45.  The same cannot be said for Craig Robinson at OSU. 
      • Wake Forest 94, NC Central 48.  Al Farouq Aminu had 21/10 in his debut with the Deacs; James Johnson with 19/10/5 asst.  This Deacon team could be very interesting this year.
      • Maryland 81, Bucknell 52.  Gary Williams needed a strong opening win to silence his critics some.
      • Oklahoma St. 76, UT-San Antonio 57.  James Anderson with only 10/7 as the Cowboys rolled anyway.  Byron Eaton led with 27 pts.
      • Oklahoma 83, American 54.  Forgive us, Blake Griffin.  Despite going 5-14 from the line, he was otherwise brilliant (24/18) in a game we thought American had a chance to win.  His reverse dropstep jam was NASTY. 
      • Villanova 78, Albany 60.  Nova put six players in double figures with none of them having over 13 pts. 
      • Texas 68, Stetson 38.  AJ Abrams hit five threes as the Longhorns held Stetson to a miserable 26% shooting night.
      • Arkansas 91, SE Louisiana 87 (OT).  Very close to a dreadful opening night for the SEC, as Arkansas rallied from a late 9-pt deficit to send the game to OT, which the Hawgs won behind Michael Washington’s 30 pts in the extra period.
      • Marquette 95, Houston Baptist 64.  Wesley Matthews had a huge night (28/5/8 asst/5 stls) as Marquette rolled. 
      • Purdue 82, Detroit 50.  Hummell and Moore combined for 31/15 in a balanced effort.
      • St. Mary’s 86, Seattle Pacific 55.  Patty Mills with 15/3/8 asst/4 stls. 
      • Arizona St. 80, Mississippi Valley St. 54.  James Harden dropped 24/10 assts in Sendek’s first opening win at ASU.
      • Davidson 107, Guilford 83.  Steph Curry with 29/3/10 asst/9 stls.  Nine steals???  Ridiculous. 

      On Tap Saturday (all times EST):

      • Florida vs. Bradley (ESPNU) – 2pm (CBE Classic)
      • St. Joseph’s @ Holy Cross – 4pm
      • Wisconsin v. Long Beach St. – 4pm
      • North Carolina (-30.5) v. Penn (FSN South) – 4pm
      • South Carolina v. Winthrop (ESPN FC & 360) – 4:30pm
      • Duke v. Rhode Island (ESPNU) – 4:30pm
      • UNLV (-11) v. San Diego (The Mtn.) – 5:30pm
      • Michigan St. v. Idaho – 6pm
      • Cincinnati v. South Dakota (ESPN FC & 360) – 6pm
      • Charlotte v. Old Dominion – 6pm
      • Syracuse v. Le Moyne (ESPNU) – 6:30pm
      • Tennessee (-18) v. Chattanooga (SportSouth) – 7pm
      • Notre Dame v. USC-Upstate – 7:30pm
      • Drake (-6.5) v. Butler – 8pm
      • Memphis (-19.5) v. Fairfield – 8pm
      • Kansas v. UMKC (ESPNU) – 8:30pm (CBE Classic)
      • USC (-19) v. UC Irvine – 10pm
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      After the Buzzer: UCLA’s Fab Five Debut

      Posted by rtmsf on November 12th, 2008

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      Story of the Night.  UCLA’s freshman class.  Last year’s freshman class arguably boasted the best player in the country in Kevin Love, but this year’s version, while lacking in equivalent star power, may more than compensate for Love’s loss with its depth and diversity of skills.  Jrue Holiday was the only rookie starter tonight in UCLA’s win against Prairie View A&M, but his four classmates (Drew Gordon, Malcolm Lee, Jerime Anderson and J’Mison Morgan) each came off the bench and contributed aplenty.  The quintet accounted for 41% of the minutes, 44% of the points, 44% of the rebounds and 43% of the assists tonight in the 82-58 win.  Ok, and 54% of the turnovers, but still, not a bad start for this freshman class of Bruins.  As for the game itself, it appears that UCLA still knows how to rebound (41-18) and the defense is still stingy – Prairie View was held to a mere 23% shooting in the first half; the fact that they shot 42% for the game indicates that either UCLA lost focus in the second half or Prairie View settled down – we’re leaning toward the former as an explanation.  Darren Collison led the way as he hit five threes en route to a 19/3/4 asst night.  The Bruins will play Miami (OH) tomorrow night in the second round of the CvC in a game that should combine for about 50 total pts.  Once again, ESPN isn’t allowing embedded videos so we’ll have to settle for linked highlights

      Other Games.  S. Illinois 80, UMass 73.  We thought this would be the best game of the night, and it looks like we were right, as S. Illinois got themselves down nine at halftime to UMass before storming back behind nine threes in the second half to pull away in the last few minutes to win another home game.  Bryan Mullins had a huge night for SIU, going for 16/13/4 stls for the home team, but Kevin Dillard’s four threes in the second half didn’t hurt.  UMass was led by Ricky Harris with 24/5, but the stat that jumped off the Minutemen’s page was starting PG Chris Lowe’s TEN turnovers (with zero assists).  Michigan 76, Northeastern 56.  Gotta admit that we thought this game had upset potential, and we couldn’t have been more wrong.  Michigan’s Manny Harris followed up his impressive season debut with nearly a trip-dub (26/10/8 assts), as UM held Northeastern to 29% shooting (17% from three) for the game.  UM Hoops points out that, if Michigan is going to threaten this year, they’ll need to shore up their work on the boards.  Northeastern grabbed twenty offensive rebounds tonight (amazingly, they only had 29 total boards), and with UCLA looming on the horizon next week in MSG (probably), the Wolverines will need to repair that deficiency.  Miami (OH) 70, Weber St. 66.  So in the other half of the Westwood bracket, Miami (OH) won a game on a three by Kenny Hayes (24 pts) with 1.7 seconds left on the clock, despite losing nearly every major statistical category in the game.  The Redhawks were outshot (by 10% FG), outrebounded (by 7), outassisted (by 3), and yet they still prevailed.  How?  Turnovers, kids.  Seven additional TOs by Weber St. gave Miami just enough extra possessions to sneak by.  Miami will play UCLA tomorrow night for the right to play at MSG, and we expect Charlie Coles to have something up his sleeve to make this game interesting for a while. 

      On Tap Thursday (all times EST). 

      • UCLA (-15) v. Miami (OH) on ESPNU- 11pm
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      After the Buzzer: Knight Returning to ESPN

      Posted by rtmsf on November 12th, 2008

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      Story of the Night.   Normally this would require its own post, but today was a travel day for us, so we’re going to throw it in tonight’s ATB.  Great news!  Bob Knight will return as an analyst and commentator for ESPN college hoops games this year (h/t TBL).  The analyst part we’re absolutely sure is a great idea (although his title game picks could use some help).  Everyone remembers how entertaining Knight was in the studio during the last few weeks of the regular season last year (he also showed up for the football Gameday at Texas Tech a couple of weeks ago).  Adding him to the Gameday crew for the entire season is a natural fit.  We’re less sure about Knight as an in-game commentator (with Dan Shulman or Brent Musberger on Thursday night games), but the possibility of a profane Knight tirade about a boneheaded player or ref makes us positively giddy at the prospect.

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      Game of the Night.  Tonight we had more CvC action, with the second night of the Durham, NC, regional and the opening nights at both the Carbondale, IL, and Ann Arbor, MI, regionals.  The only televised games were Duke v. Georgia Southern and the Michigan v. Michigan Tech games on ESPNU, so if you saw either feel free to provide some comments below.  N-Bug sent along a quote from Coach K relating Duke’s offensive output to a pinball game (he’s from a different era, ok), but in looking at the stat sheet of the 97-54 win, it appears that he should have been talking about his defense.  Duke held GSU to 28% from the field and outrebounded the Eagles by 25 boards, which must have made his happier with his team’s overall effort.  Singler again led the way with 19/8.  It’s difficult to nitpick a 43-point win, but Coach K might want to have his team work on FTs during the next week, as his team could have won by 60 had they shot it from the line a little better (25-49).  Duke will play the winner of S. Illinois/UMass in the semis next Thursday at MSG. 

      Other Games

      • Carbondale Regional.  SIU and UMass both played D2 opponents, so we’re not sure how valuable analyzing their wins vs. California (PA) and Arkansas-Monticello are, respectively.  SIU’s Carlton Fay had 16/11 as the Salukis pulled away in the second half to win 66-52.  UMass won its first contest in new coach Derek Kellogg’s debut, as Chris Lowe paced the Minutemen with 18/11 assts.  SIU v. UMass tomorrow night should be a good game, and either team would make for an interesting semifinal matchup with Duke.
      • Ann Arbor Regional.  Michigan’s Manny Harris dropped 30/7 on Michigan Tech in the opener for John Beilein’s second team in Ann Arbor.  If anyone else saw this game, we’d be interested in knowing how the Beilein system in Y2 looked.  In the other game, Northeastern handled IUPUI 73-60 in a game that was not as close as the final score indicates.  Michigan should take this Northeastern team seriously – they’ll be fired up and are a substantial upgrade of talent than what the Wolverines faced tonight.  It would not shock us if Northeastern wins tomorrow night’s game. 

      On Tap Wednesday (all times EST).  Several more CvC games…  it figures that the best game (SIU v. UMass) will be broadcast, um, nowhere…

      • Miami (OH) (-12.5) v. Weber St. – 7:15pm
      • S. Illinois (-4.5) v UMass – 8pm
      • Michigan (-5) v. Northeastern (ESPNU) – 8pm
      • UCLA (-35) v. Prairie View A&M  (ESPNU) – 10pm
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      After the Buzzer: Opening Night Doldrums

      Posted by rtmsf on November 11th, 2008

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      Hello again, everyone.  For those of you who might be new to the site this season, we want to introduce you to a feature that we try to run most nights during the season.  We like to call this feature After the Buzzer (ATB) because it’ll be posted well after the witching hour in the East for your first perusal the next morning (make RTC your home page!  you won’t be disappointed…).  The format will change depending on what happened that night, but we’ll typically try to give some brief wrapups of the night’s biggest games and stories of interest with some commentary thrown in.  If we’re feeling particularly frisky, we may also take a look ahead to the next night’s games.  Note that we said most nights; there will inevitably be nights where the games that night were simply unwatchable, or we’re down at the Savoy because some Duke scrub hit a late three to cover the spread, or our better half threw the tv and/or computer out the window.  In any case, like Olbermann and O’Reilly, we’ll be there as many nights as we can muster, annoying the hell out of you with our smug banter. 

      Game of the Night.  There was no Game of the Night because there really is no “Opening Night,” and this really irritates us.  Seriously, how stupid is the NCAA when it comes to how it starts the season?  MLB, the NFL, the NBA and even NCAA football have an opening day/night with significant fanfare – it’s something that fans and the media alike can get excited about.  Instead of a showcase night of several good ‘opening’ games, we get Duke vs. Presbyterian on ESPNU (was Methodist unavailable?  how about Baptist?).  Instead of Vitale/Bilas/Digger, we get the painfully monotonous Beth Mowins.  Instead of college basketball nation all at once reaching an orgasmic climax because hoops is finally back in action, we get a game that is hidden away on the least-watched channel in the ESPN suite of programming.  It’s ridiculous.  We’ll say that ESPN is at least thinking the right way with its 24 hour bonanza of coverage next week (Nov. 18), but the NCAA and ESPN need to work a deal out next year so that this happens on a true “opening night.” 

      Other Games.  The only games tonight were in the Coaches vs. Cancer Tournament in the Durham, NC, regional.  The first game wasn’t televised, but Georgia Southern pulled off a mild upset (6-pt dog) in defeating CUSA’s Houston Cougars 65-63Sleeper schmeeperTrumaine Pearson led GSU with 19/11, as the Eagles withstood a late three attempt that was off the mark.  Georgia Southern will now play host Duke, as the Devils got out to a large halftime lead against Presbyterian (24 pts) before mostly coasting in the second stanza to win 80-49.  We actually saw most of this game – here are some quick thoughts.

      • Presbyterian is nicknamed the Blue Hose – someone needs to explain this to us.
      • Coach K wasn’t very happy with his team’s performance, and with good reason.  The Devils committed 21 turnovers and only shot 3-11 (27%) from long range. 
      • Kyle Singler (19/10) and Nolan Smith (15/3 stls) looked solid, if not spectacular, but what was alarmingly apparent was how Coach K’s recruiting in recent years has led to lineups in the Duke lineup that look way too much like the SEC and ACC in the mid-50s.  A Duke ‘whiteout’ will not be an uncommon occurrence again this year.
      • Time and time again the Presbyterian offense was able dribble penetrate into the paint for decent looks at the rim.  They rarely finished these forays because they were often too small and intimidated by the Duke ‘bigs,’ but this is going to be a serious problem again for the Devils this year.  Incumbent center Brian Zoubek fouled out in seven minutes of play.  Against.  Presbyterian.  The other option, freshman 6’10 F/C Miles Plumlee had 0/2 in thirteen minutes.  Why can’t Coach K get big man studs anymore?
      • ESPN isn’t allowing embedded video on this game yet, so here is the link to the highlights.

      On Tap Tuesday (all times EST).  Several more CvC games, but only a few of interest.

      • Northeastern (-6) v. IUPUI – 4pm
      • Michigan v. Michigan Tech (ESPNU) – 7pm
      • Duke (-25) v. Georgia Southern (ESPNU) – 9pm
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      ATB: Weekend Wrap

      Posted by rtmsf on February 11th, 2008

      ATB v.4

      We were out of town all weekend, so we saw very little in the way of games, so let us know if we missed something…

      Weekend Wrapup:

      • #24 Notre Dame 86, #20 Marquette 83. ND just does not lose at home anymore (34 in a row).
      • Kentucky 62, Alabama 52. Is UK going to make a serious run at the NCAAs?
      • #2 Duke 90, Boston College 80. We still have trouble believing Duke is the class of the ACC this year, but the D’Antoni infuence is working pretty well for Coach K.
      • #19 Texas A&M 77, Missouri 69. Isn’t half of Mizzou in jail right now?
      • Florida 77, Georgia 67. We bet Billy D. wishes every game this year was in Gainesville.
      • #6 Tennessee 47, LSU 45. Games like this are why we can never completely trust UT.
      • #12 Texas 71, Iowa St. 65 (OT). UT got a scare in Ames.
      • #16 Washington St. 74, USC 50. Anyone care to explain what happened here?
      • #17 UConn 80, Georgia Tech 68. UConn is playing like they’re a F4 contender right now.
      • #1 Memphis 84, C. Florida 65. We really can’t wait for the UT game in two weeks.
      • Old Dominion 72, George Mason 64. Mason really needed to win this game, and they didn’t.
      • Vanderbilt 66, South Carolina 65. Vandy is going to be very happy they won this game on March 16.
      • Arkansas 75, Ole Miss 69. Arkansas appears to be the class of the SEC West.
      • #18 Kansas St. 82, Oklahoma St. 61. K-State is a team nobody will want to see in March.
      • Oregon 92, California 70. If anyone can figure either of these teams out, please tell us how.
      • #14 Michigan St. 70, Northwestern 55. NW is now 0-10 in the Big Ten.
      • #9 Stanford 71, Oregon St. 56. Speaking of sucky teams, OSU is now 0-11 in the Pac-10.
      • #3 Kansas 100, Baylor 90. How do you score 100 pts w/o hitting a single three?
      • #11 Drake 73, Evansville 65 . Who can believe that the Drake is now 13-0 in the Valley?
      • #13 Butler 62, Wisc-Green Bay 57. Butler dodged not one, but two, bullets last week.
      • #23 Louisville 59, #7 Georgetown 51. Remember when Pitino teams pushed the ball – great win for UL, though.
      • Purdue 72, #7 Wisconsin 67. Purdue is for our money the best money in the B10.
      • #10 Xavier 76, St. Joseph’s 72. Is Xavier a darkhorse F4 candidate (as Wahl suggested in his M8)?
      • #15 Indiana 59, Ohio St. 53. IU had a very successful week (albeit ugly).
      • Arizona St. 59, Arizona 54. Man, there are so many good teams in this league this year.
      • Washington 71, #4 UCLA 61. How does UCLA win in Pullman but lose in Seattle two yrs in a row?
      • #5 UNC 103, Clemson 93. Is there a bigger choker situation than Clemson in Chapel Hill?

      NCAA Tournament Field if we were choosing today – added teams in bold (removed teams in italics):

      • America EastUMBC (Vermont)
      • Atlantic 10 – Xavier, Rhode Island, St. Joseph’s
      • ACC – Duke, UNC, Clemson, Maryland
      • Atlantic SunBelmont (Jacksonville)
      • Big 12 – Kansas, Kansas St., Texas, Texas A&M, Baylor (Oklahoma)
      • Big East – Georgetown, Louisville, Syracuse, Notre Dame, Marquette, UConn, West Virginia, Pittsburgh
      • Big SkyPortland St. (N. Arizona)
      • Big South – UNC-Asheville
      • Big 10 – Wisconsin, Indiana, Purdue, Ohio St., Michigan St.
      • Big West – Cal St. Northridge
      • CAA – VCU, George Mason
      • CUSA – Memphis, Houston
      • Horizon – Butler
      • Ivy – Cornell
      • MAAC – Rider
      • MAC – Kent St.
      • MEAC – Morgan St.
      • MVC – Drake
      • Mountain West – UNLV, BYU
      • NEC – Sacred Heart
      • OVC – Austin Peay
      • Pac-10 – UCLA, USC, Stanford, Washington St., Arizona, Arizona St. (California)
      • Patriot – Lafayette
      • SEC – Tennessee, Florida, Mississippi St., Vanderbilt, Ole Miss, Arkansas
      • Southern – Davidson
      • Southland – Stephen F. Austin
      • SWAC – Alabama St.
      • Summit – Oral Roberts
      • Sun Belt – W. Kentucky
      • WCC – Gonzaga, St. Mary’s
      • WAC – Utah St.
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      ATB: Super Weekend

      Posted by rtmsf on February 4th, 2008

      ATB v.4

      Was there a football game this weekend? Maybe that’s why we couldn’t find a hoops game on anywhere after 5pm today.

      Weekend Wrapup:

      • #7 Georgetown 73, Seton Hall 61. The Hoyas continue to look like the class of the Big East.
      • Maryland 88, Georgia Tech 86. Osby with 18/11. Would a third-place team in the ACC please stand up?
      • Syracuse 87, Villanova 73. Nova is in free fall mode (3-6 in the Big East), while Cuse is quietly regrouping.
      • #17 Marquette 75, Cincinnati 60. God, the middle of the Big East is murky.
      • Connecticut 60, #21 Pittsburgh 53. Watch out for the Huskies – they’re starting to get it together (5 Ws in a row).
      • Kentucky 63, Georgia 58. The Cats are finally back above .500 (10-9).
      • #1 Memphis 70, UTEP 64. UTEP led this game with just over a minute remaining – the Tigers are getting bored and unfocused.
      • Virginia Tech 72, Virginia 65 (OT). Good night, Virginia?
      • Missouri 77, #22 Kansas St. 74. Hmmm… guess K-State is a young team, huh?
      • #10 Texas 80, Baylor 72. Baylor is still quietly playing well just under the Big 12 radar.
      • Rhode Island 82, Dayton 70. Two weeks ago Dayton looked like the best mid-major in America. They’ve now lost 4 of 5.
      • Louisville 87, Rutgers 50. Complete and utter destruction.
      • #16 Stanford 67, #8 Washington St. 65 (OT). Tremendous game that neither team wanted to win down the stretch.
      • Arkansas 80, #21 Florida 61. Perhaps Arkansas is the new “it” team in the SEC this week (after MSU and Florida the last two).
      • #2 Kansas 72, Colorado 59. KU still looked hung over for most of this one.
      • #3 Duke 88, Miami (FL) 73. Can we go ahead and get to the Duke-Carolina game on Wednesday?
      • Purdue 83, Illinois 75. Illinois really sucks.
      • Texas A&M 60, Oklahoma 52. Can you believe OU’s Blake Griffin (6/8) is #1 on the Big Board (2009)? We neither.
      • South Carolina 80, #19 Ole Miss 77. Ole Miss shouldn’t be ranked.
      • California 79, Washington 75. Really tough weekend for the Washington schools (both swept at home).
      • Iowa 53, Ohio St 48. Another confounding performance from the Buckeyes. We can’t figure them out.
      • #6 Tennessee 76, Mississippi St. 71. UT is really starting to impress us.
      • #14 Drake 83, Indiana St. 77. Is The Drake going to run the table (11-0 in the MVC)?
      • Penn St. 85, #8 Michigan St. 76. It’s games like this and Iowa that mean we cannot pick MSU to go very far in March.
      • #5 UCLA 82, Arizona 60. UCLA’s looked like the best team in America its last two games.
      • USC 67, Arizona St. 53. USC’s win over UCLA may have turned around their season.
      • #11 Indiana 75, Northwestern 63. E-Giddy with 29 as IU went to 7-1 in the B10.
      • NC State 67, Wake Forest 65. NCSU won this one on a putback dunk at the buzzer.
      • #4 UNC 84, Florida St. 73 (OT). Hansbrough with 22/21 as Lawson sprained his ankle and is questionable for the Duke game.
      • #13 Wisconsin 63, Minnesota 47. You really have to marvel at the consistency of Bo Ryan’s program.

      NCAA Tournament Field (if we were choosing today):

      • America East – Vermont
      • Atlantic 10 – Xavier, Rhode Island
      • ACC – Duke, UNC, Clemson, Maryland
      • Atlantic Sun – Jacksonville
      • Big 12 – Kansas, Kansas St., Texas, Texas A&M, Baylor, Oklahoma
      • Big East – Georgetown, Louisville, Syracuse, Notre Dame, Marquette, UConn, West Virginia, Pittsburgh
      • Big Sky – N. Arizona
      • Big South – UNC-Asheville
      • Big 10 – Wisconsin, Indiana, Purdue, Ohio St., Michigan St.
      • Big West – Cal St. Northridge
      • CAA – VCU, George Mason
      • CUSA – Memphis, Houston
      • Horizon – Butler
      • Ivy – Cornell
      • MAAC – Rider
      • MAC – Kent St.
      • MEAC – Morgan St.
      • MVC – Drake
      • Mountain West – UNLV, BYU
      • NEC – Sacred Heart
      • OVC – Austin Peay
      • Pac-10 – UCLA, USC, Stanford, Washington St., Arizona, California
      • Patriot – Lafayette
      • SEC – Tennessee, Florida, Mississippi St., Vanderbilt, Ole Miss, Arkansas
      • Southern – Davidson
      • Southland – Stephen F. Austin
      • SWAC – Alabama St.
      • Summit – Oral Roberts
      • Sun Belt – W. Kentucky
      • WCC – Gonzaga, St. Mary’s
      • WAC – Utah St.

      Where’d we mess up? Trust us, there are some arguable picks in there, we know.

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      ATB: Games of Interest

      Posted by rtmsf on February 1st, 2008

      ATB v.4

      Let’s do a quick rundown of some of the key games that occurred this week.

      Monday Night:

      • Connecticut 69, Louisville 67. Both of these Big East teams appear to be coming on strong of late. Is either poised for a big run?
      • Oklahoma 64, Oklahoma St. 61. OSU is in freefall (5 Ls in a row) after losing the Bedlam game – is Sean Sutton on the hot seat?
      • Santa Clara 66, San Francisco 48. How funny would it be if Eddie didn’t get his 800th win at USF (he’s only won once in a month; he needs one more win).

      Tuesday Night:

      • Wake Forest 70, Miami (FL) 68. Wake with Dino Gaudio is the feel-good story of the season so far.
      • George Mason 63, VCU 51. The battle to get likely one spot from the CAA this year is going to be brutal.
      • #6 Tennessee 93, Alabama 86. Solid win for a Vols team that almost always loses in Tuscaloosa.

      Wednesday Night:

      • Maryland 85, Virginia 75. UVa is now officially in freefall mode themselves, having lost six of seven in 2008.
      • #21 Pittsburgh 69, Villanova 57. There’s a school of thought that says Villanova is completely and totally overrated.
      • Cincinnati 62, West Virginia 39. How’d Huggs take that one? Is there a more schizo team than Cincy?
      • #19 Ole Miss 74, #22 Vanderbilt 58. Vandy better get back together or they’re starting to look like an NIT team.
      • #1 Memphis 89, Houston 77. The lone unbeaten passes one of its toughest remaining tests easily.
      • Arkansas 78, Mississippi St. 58. MSU isn’t quite ready for prime time yet, are they?
      • Texas A&M 80, #10 Texas 63. We really didn’t see this whipping coming.

      Thursday Night:

      • #3 Duke 92, NC State 72. It was the green shirts!!! Duke outscored the Pack by 30 in the second half.
      • #13 Wisconsin 62, #11 Indiana 49. If you didn’t have the under (127) on this game, then you know nothing about basketball.
      • #16 Stanford 65, Washington 51. Gotta admit, we didn’t see the Cardinal being quite this good.
      • California 69, #8 Washington St. 64. This was a must-win for Cal to keep hope alive for the NCAAs.
      • #5 UCLA 84, Arizona St. 51. Wow.
      • Arizona 80, USC 69. The Wildcats are showing some signs that they’re going to be tough come March.
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      ATB: Weekend Wrap

      Posted by rtmsf on January 28th, 2008

      ATB v.4

      Still Unbeaten. #1 Memphis and #2 Kansas remained unbeaten through the weekend, and until both lose a game, this will be the top storyline for the last six weeks of the regular season. This is the latest point in a season that two teams have been undefeated since 2005 (Illinois and Boston College), and there are no signs that either team is slowing down soon. Kansas, the top defensive efficiency team in America, knocked the stuffing out of Nebraska 84-49, but we figure the Big 12 (#2 conf in both KenPom and Sagarin) is too tough as a conference for the Jayhawks to go 16-0 this year (est. KenPom chances of running the table = 38.5%). The real intrigue is whether Memphis (#2 defensive efficiency) will run the table until March, and given that they handled Gonzaga 81-73 in a workmanlike manner on Saturday, we’re feeling like Calipari’s team has a great shot at getting into the postseason unblemished (est. KenPom = 58.3%). He’s no stranger to this kind of pressure, either; remember, in 1996, UMass was 26-0 and #1 deep into February before finally losing a late A10 game to GW. That year also happens to represent Calipari’s sole trip to the F4, before Marcus Camby’s “homemade” bling ultimately led to its vacation by the NCAA. Both teams face somewhat tough opponents on the road Wednesday, however (Memphis @ Houston; Kansas @ Kansas St.), but if they survive those tests we might have a situation similar to 2004 when both Stanford and St. Joseph’s made it to the first week of March unbeaten. It must be noted, though, that neither of those teams made it to the F4.

      The Truth About Duke. We were absolutely sure that Duke was going to lose at Maryland yesterday. After watching the first half, where James Gist and Bambale Osby seemingly scored inside at will, we were beyond absolutely convinced that the Terps were on track to beat their second top five opponent in eight days. So what happened? Duke 93, Maryland 84. We’re not going to pile on Gary Williams and his squad for their typical carelessness with the ball, etc., here – that’s what they do, and they were still able to beat UNC in Chapel Hill last weekend. No, we’re going to give all the credit to Duke for their hustle, resilience and clutch play down the stretch last night. It was funny, once Duke got the lead with 12 minutes remaining, we knew in our gut that the game was over. Sure enough, Duke methodically pulled away by getting after the loose balls, battling on the boards despite being undersized, and forcing some of those poor Maryland turnovers. We generally try to avoid the stereotypical “Duke is smarter” BS that you hear the Dick Vitale and Mike Patricks of the world prattle on about, but this year we have to give it to them. Duke plays with a very high basketball IQ, they absolutely get after you defensively, and they simply don’t beat themselves. They just don’t have enough of an inside attack to win another national championship this year, but Duke haters everywhere should prepare themselves for another depressing February and a #1 seed for the Devils in March.

      Conference Muddling. The middle of the six BCS conferences are about as wide open as we can remember. In the ACC, after Duke (5-0) and Carolina (4-1), who is the third best team? There are nine other teams with either three or two wins. The Big East is even worse – after Georgetown (6-1) and Louisville (5-2), there are eleven teams with four or three wins, including an absurd six teams with identical 4-3 records. The Big 12, Pac-10 and SEC are a little better, but it’s the Big 10 that is the only league exhibiting true have/have-not behavior. Five teams have five-plus wins, five teams have two or fewer wins, and poor Iowa sits in the middle at 3-5.

      Saturday Games. Here are the games that caught our attention on Saturday.

      • Notre Dame 90, #23 Villanova 80. As soon as we think we’ve got ND figured out, they do something like this.
      • Connecticut 68, #8 Indiana 63. We watched this game and still can’t figure this one out.
      • Texas-Pan American 54, NJIT 42. 0-21 now… Circle the home date v. 4-19 Longwood on 2/4 as the breakthrough win.
      • NC State 69, Florida St. 66. This was pretty much a must-win for the Pack.
      • #19 Texas A&M 59, Oklahoma St. 56. OSU continues to struggle in the Big 12 (1-4).
      • Arizona 84, Washington 69. Arizona is starting to look like the third best team in the Pac-10.
      • Louisville 67, St. John’s 57. Terrence Williams with triple 8s (8/8/8 assts).
      • UNLV 72, San Diego St. 69. A key road win in the Mtn West for Vegas.
      • Virginia Tech 81, Boston College 73 (OT). Would the real BC please stand up?
      • Oklahoma 77, Baylor 71. BU’s first B12 loss is at the hands of the surging Sooners (Blake Griffin with 17/15).
      • Purdue 60, #11 Wisconsin 56. Very nice home win for the young Boilers (6-1 in the B10).
      • Mississippi St. 88, #15 Ole Miss 68. MSU is starting to look a little like that team SEC:TGTBTD predicted back in September.
      • Rutgers 77, #17 Pittsburgh 64. Nice egg-laying by Pitt in this one.
      • Kansas St. 82, Iowa St. 57. KSU continues to surge (Beastley 33/15).
      • #18 Drake 58, Northern Iowa 54. The class of the MVC continues to roll…
      • #6 Washington St. 56, #25 Arizona St. Heartbreaking home loss for the Sun Devils.
      • #22 Stanford 82, California 77. Once again, it appears as if Cal is the odd man out in the Pac-10.
      • Richmond 80, #14 Dayton 63. Two straight blowout losses for the Flyers – what happened?
      • #10 Georgetown 58, West Virginia 57. GTown just keeps sneaking by…
      • #3 Tennessee 85, Georgia 69. Lofton came out of his shooting slump with 7 threes.
      • #12 Texas 73, Texas Tech 47. DJ Augustin with 19 as Bob Knight continues to teach mediocrity.
      • #21 Marquette 79, Depaul 71. MU’s backcourt combined for 44 pts.
      • Arkansas 68, LSU 52. The John Brady firing watch continues…
      • USC 95, Oregon 86 (OT). Forget what we said last week about Oregon always winning at home – tough weekend for the Ducks.
      • #7 UCLA 85, Oregon St. 62. What’s laughable is that OSU thought they were in this game at halftime (43-39).

      Sunday Games. A few more…

      • #20 Xavier (OH) 77, Massachusetts 65. UMass has really fallen off, but Xavier continues to look fantastic.
      • Florida 86, #16 Vanderbilt 64. Let’s remove Vandy and Ole Miss in favor of Florida and Miss St. in this week’s blogpoll, shall we?
      • #9 Michigan St. 77, Michigan 62. We just can’t get a sense as to how good this MSU team really is (6-1 in the B10, but that one loss was so hideous!).
      • Miami (FL) 75, Clemson 72. Miami really needed this win to avoid a freefall in the conference race.
      • Syracuse 71, Providence 64. Both teams needed this one, Cuse got it.
      • Georgia Tech 92, Virginia 82 (OT). Tremendous ending in regulation in this one, but Virginia has now earned itself last place in the ACC.
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      ATB: Thursday Wrap

      Posted by rtmsf on January 24th, 2008

      ATB v.4

      Tonight’s Games. Kinda lame night, but here are the quick hits:

      • #6 Duke 81, Virginia Tech 64.  We couldn’t get into watching this game this year.
      • #11 Butler 63, Loyola (IL) 50.  Butler continues to pace the Horizon (1/2 game behind Cleveland St.).
      • Davidson 87, Citadel 70.  Davidson is halfway to undefeated in the SoCon this year (10-0).
      • #18 Xavier 69, #14 Dayton 43.  Wow, XU absolutely slaughtered the Flyers in Cincy tonight.
      • Arizona 76, #7 Washington St. 64.  We know one blogger who’s feeling rather smug right now.
      • USC 68, Oregon St. 44.  Maybe OSU should just go ahead and join the WCC.
      • Washington 72, #22 Arizona St. 61.  How quickly a week can change things for Herb Sendek.
      • #10 Michigan St. 78, Northwestern 62.  Let’s send Northwestern to the WCC while we’re at it.
      • Pacific 71, UCSB 58.  Big road win in the Big West for Pacific (5-1).
      • #4 UCLA 80, Oregon 75.  Kevin Love gave some love back to his home state in the form of 26/18 and the Ducks’ first home loss of the year.
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