Posted by jstevrtc on December 6th, 2010
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Twelve is evidently enough for the Big Ten, for now. The conference’s higher-ups announced at their winter meeting that as a result of a lengthy study, after the addition of
Nebraska next season,
they do not “expect to be proactively seeking new members.” That’s fine, but we propose that if a conference’s membership changes through expansion/contraction so that its name subsequently becomes inaccurate by +/-2, they
must change the name of the conference. In a few months,
none of the four “numbered” conferences — Pac-10, Big 12, Big Ten, Atlantic 10 — will actually contain the number of teams their name indicates. The Big Ten and the A-10 have gotten away with this weirdness for a while, and now they’re all doing it. Get creative!
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Because
Purdue doesn’t have enough injury problems, news arrived late on Sunday that sophomore guard
John Hart will miss a month with a stress fracture in his foot. Hart was averaging 17 minutes a game over the Boilermakers’ eight games this season, contributing 8.4 PPG. So that’s Hart with a bad foot,
D.J. Byrd with a questionable shoulder, and some kid named Hummel out with a knee. Are we just lipsticking the pig by wondering if the minutes logged by Purdue’s reserves right now will translate to valuable experience later on in the season when (almost) everyone’s healthy?
Matt Painter has
nine players on his roster who play at least ten minutes a game right now, and you never know who could rise up and give you a boost come tournament time.
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We’re on the lookout today for a statement from the NCAA as to whether or not they will consider the “new information”
Kentucky has asked to submit in
the ongoing eligibility saga of Enes Kanter. The case currently stands in appeal, and that appeal was heard last week. But after the Cam Newton decision came down, UK requested the chance to submit previously unconsidered information to the NCAA. If the NCAA agrees to consider it, the case goes back to square one, almost as if it were a new hearing. If they refuse, the case remains in appeal, and the appeals committee could render a final decision at any time. Got it? Whether it’s today or later in the week, we’ll have something up as events warrant, so just keep checking back here, or our Twitter feed.
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Just seven games in, a specific problem for
Bob Huggins‘
West Virginia squad is already evident, according to Jack Bogaczyk of the
Charleston Daily Mail. Huggins has remarked on how his team “hasn’t finished games” and that he takes full responsibility for this as coach, but
Bogaczyk writes that what the ‘Eers really lack in this early stage of these post-
Da’Sean Butler days is a vocal floor leader.
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It doesn’t take more than a few seconds of watching
Jimmer Fredette play basketball to get a sense of how competitive this young man is. Ahead of
BYU’s game against
Vermont on Wednesday (which serves as a homecoming for Fredette), the
Albany Times Union’s Pete Iorizzo pens an excellent article about how
Fredette’s competitive drive was evident as early as age five, and how those fires were born — as they so often are — from that classic recipe of a basketball, a family member (in this case, an older brother), and a patch of asphalt in the back yard. We never played major college hoops, Jimmer, but your story is ours.
| morning 5, Regular Features
| Tagged: atlantic 10, big 12, big ten, bub huggins, byu, d.j. byrd, dasean butler, enes kanter, jimmer fredette, john hart, kentucky, matt painter, nebraska, pac-10, purdue, robbie hummel, vermont, west virginia
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