Season in Review: The Best of RTC
Posted by rtmsf on April 13th, 2011It’s been a great season here at RTC, our Year the Fourth covering this great sport, and before we pack up the boxes and head to our summer hideaways in the Hamptons, Aspen and Santa Barbara, respectively, we wanted to share a little bit of our “best of” for the 2010-11 season.
Some RTC Season Highlights
- Vegas Odds: Remember This? Prior to the season, you could have gotten Connecticut at 60:1 odds. Schools like Seton Hall (50:1), Mississsippi State (50:1), even Baylor (18:1) were considered better bets. By the Christmas season, the Huskies had risen to 25:1 to win it all, and by the Sweet Sixteen of the NCAA Tournament, they were at 18:1. If any UConn fan kept putting money down on Jim Calhoun’s team from start of the season to its finish, he would have had an excellent return on his investment two Monday nights ago.
- Keion Bell at Midnight Madness. The highlight of October’s preseason was quite clearly this dunk from Pepperdine’s Keion Bell.
- Our Hoops BCS Ratings. Around the New Year, we did a mid-season BCS analysis of college basketball, finding that Duke and Kansas would play for the national title at that point. Would that have been better than UConn-Butler? Not for us to decide.
- Jacob Pullen’s Mouth. As K-State suffered a huge mid-season swoon, Jacob Pullen found time to call out the fans on Twitter and announce that he would not play in the NIT if K-State was invited to that tourney. He had the last laugh, though, as K-State found its mojo and managed to push back into the NCAAs and play two games before bowing out to Wisconsin.
- Best/Worst Coaching Jobs. Also at around the start of conference season, Zach Hayes took a look at the best and worst coaching jobs of the season thus far. It’s interesting now to see how some rose (Roy Williams, Frank Martin) while others fell (Seth Greenberg, Randy Bennett) the rest of the way.
- Groundhog Day Rankings. This was an interesting analysis we did on February 2 taking a look at how the rankings then were at predicting March success. The results: 75% percent of the top 16 received top four seeds, but only seven of the 16 got to the Sweets, and UConn (#6) and Kentucky (#11) were the Final Four representatives.
- That Jimmer Kid Caused Quite a Stir. When he wasn’t causing too much havoc to attend class, he was apparently leading a cult or inspiring headline comparisons to players setting records for hitting halfcourt shots (meet Eric Valentin).
- Perfect College Basketball Player. Zach Hayes also wrote a column where he constructed the so-called “perfect” player out of this year’s existing crop. Pretty awesome read.
- The Evolution of Our Circle of March. From 320+ teams down to two last Monday night.
RTC Live
Through our network of correspondents from coast to coast, we were able to cover a grand total of 295 games at 82 different venues this year. We saw every single NCAA Tournament team at least once, and 78 other schools just for kicks. We witnessed the Final Four quartet of Connecticut, Butler, Kentucky and VCU a total of 56 times, and we sat courtside at every one of UConn’s unprecedented 14-0 neutral site victories this season — from Maui to New York, then Washington to Anaheim, ultimately culminating in Houston. Perhaps most proudly, we managed to send someone to each of the fourteen NCAA Tournament sites this year, an accomplishment we hope is merely the first in a long line of such successes.
We put together a short video encompassing some of the photos we took along the way. See you on the road next season!