Sunday, December 26, 2010
Top 25
1. Duke 11-0
quality wins: Marquette, Kansas State, Michigan State, Butler
previous rank: 1
2. Kansas 11-0
quality wins: Arizona, UCLA, Memphis
previous rank: 2
3. Ohio State 12-0
quality wins: Florida, Florida State
previous rank: 3
4. Syracuse 13-0
quality wins: North Carolina State, Michigan State
previous rank: 4
5. Georgetown 11-1
quality wins: Old Dominion, North Carolina State, Missouri, Utah State, Memphis
loss: Temple
previous rank: 6
6. Pittsburgh 12-1
quality wins: Maryland, Texas
loss: Tennessee
previous rank: 5
7. Missouri 11-1
quality win: Vanderbilt, Illinois
loss: Georgetown
previous rank: 7
8. Villanova 10-1
quality win: UCLA
loss: Tennessee
previous rank: 8
9. Connecticut 10-0
quality wins: Wichita State, Michigan State, Kentucky
previous rank: 9
10. San Diego State 14-0
quality wins: Gonzaga, St. Mary's, Wichita State
previous rank: 10
11. Purdue 11-1
quality win: Virginia Tech
loss: Richmond
previous rank: 11
12. Kentucky 9-2
quality wins: Washington, Notre Dame
losses: Connecticut, North Carolina
previous rank: 13
13. Minnesota 11-1
quality wins: North Carolina, West Virginia
loss: Virginia
previous rank: 15
14. Brigham Young 12-1
quality wins: Utah State, St. Mary's, Arizona
loss: UCLA
previous rank: 16
15. Notre Dame 11-1
quality wins: Georgia, Wisconsin, Gonzaga
loss: Kentucky
previous rank: 17
16. Texas 10-2
quality wins: Illinois, North Carolina, Michigan State
losses: Pittsburgh, USC
previous rank: 19
17. Wisconsin 10-2
quality wins: Boston College, North Carolina State, Marquette
losses: UNLV, Notre Dame
previous rank: 20
18. Vanderbilt 9-2
quality win: North Carolina
losses: West Virginia, Missouri
previous rank: 25
19. Texas A&M 11-1
quality wins: Temple, Washington
loss: Boston College
previous rank: NR
20. UNLV 11-2
quality wins: Wisconsin, Murray State, Virginia Tech, Kansas State
losses: Louisville, UCSB
previous rank: NR
21. Kansas State 10-3
quality wins: Virginia Tech, Gonzaga. Washington State
losses: Duke, Florida, UNLV
previous rank: 14
22. Illinois 10-3
quality wins: Maryland, North Carolina, Gonzaga
losses: Texas, UIC, Missouri
previous rank: 21
23. Michigan State 8-4
quality win: Washington
losses: Connecticut, Duke, Syracuse, Texas
previous rank: 12
24. Tennessee 8-3
quality wins: VCU, Villanova, Pittsburgh
losses: Oakland, Charlotte, USC
previous rank: 18
25. Central Florida 11-0
quality win: Florida
previous rank: NR
Thursday, December 23, 2010
You disappoint me.
With non-conference play coming to a close, RBP takes a look at the 8 most disappointing teams in the country.
Butler (7-4): It was a tad silly to think Butler would be a Top 25 team without Gordon Hayward. That being said, the Bulldogs' decline since last year's national championship game is surprising. Butler has looked like a two-man show, and Shelvin Mack and Matt Howard are not getting enough help. Brad Stevens' squad has exactly zero quality wins, missing out on a chances to pick up signature victories against Louisville, Duke, and Xavier. The low-point in Butler's young season came in the form of a 71-68 overtime loss at home to Evansville (Go Aces!). Butler will need to clean up in conference if they want an invite to March Madness, but Horizon League dominance may prove a challenging task with the way 13-1 Cleveland State is playing.
Prediction: Butler puts together a nice Horizon League record, finishing second in the conference. The Bulldogs are upset in the conference tourney and miss the dance (while Cleveland State picks up the auto-bid).
Gonzaga (7-5): It's not for lack of talent that the Zags have failed to live up to expectations. Mark Few's team picked up a decent win against Marquette but lost to San Diego State, Kansas State, Illinois, Washington State, and Notre Dame. Wins this past week against Baylor and Xavier help tremendously. The Bulldogs have a New Year's Eve matchup against Oklahoma State and a date with Memphis on February 5, meaning there are opportunities to improve their tourney resume. Additionally, given Elias Harris' Achilles injury, the selection committee may be willing to cut Zaga some slack. While Harris' health has played a role in the Zags' poor start, the real culprits have been atrocious defense and shoddy point guard play from Demetri Goodson.
Prediction: The Zags finally figure out how to play without Matt Bouldin and dominate the West Coast Conference. Even if St. Mary's wins the WCC tourney, Gonzaga dances in March. Steven Gray, Elias Harris, and Robert Sacre have too much talent to be denied.
Michigan State (8-4): Three of the Spartans' losses have come against Top 10 teams (Connecticut, Duke, and Syracuse), and the other loss was to a talented Texas squad. Still, much more was expected from a team that was supposed to challenge Duke for national supremacy. Perhaps more disconcerting than the losses - lackluster performances against Chaminade and Oakland. So, what's happened to Sparty? Well, Kalin Lucas clearly isn't himself, as he has struggled to come back from a ruptured Achilles tendon. Draymond Green is a great passer, but he needs to park it in the post more often. Delvon Roe continues to move around like an old man, and highly touted freshman Adreian Payne has yet to contribute. And, per the usual, Tom Izzo has lined up a murderers' row non-conference schedule which will lead into play in the toughest Big Ten conference in recent memory.
Prediction: This is a Tom Izzo squad that's going to get better as the season moves forward. They are battle-tested, experienced, talented, and extremely deep. Because of the schedule, the Spartans may end up outside the Top 10 entering the tournament, but I still wouldn't be surprised by yet another Final Four run.
Murray State (8-4): The Racers won 30 games last year, beat Vanderbilt in the first round, and lost by just 2 points to eventual national runner-up Butler in the Round of 32. Returning 8 of their top 10 scorers, Murray State became a sexy preseason pick to make noise with the big boys. (I had them at 19 in my preseason rankings.) Things have not gone as planned. The Racers managed a win against Stanford but have been beaten by Ole Miss, UNLV, Oklahoma State, and conference rival Morehead State.
Prediction: Their opportunity to pick up a signature non-conference win gone, the OVC favorites will need to win their conference tourney to pick up a bid. While Morehead State (led by Kenneth Faried, averaging 18 and 14) poses a real challenge, the Isaiah Canaan-led Racers will regroup and win the conference regular season title and conference tourney.
North Carolina (8-4): Roy Williams is a great coach, but he's been pretty terrible since the start of last season, as he has refused to adapt to changes in personnel. I was a Larry Drew apologist last year, but the time has come for Roy to turn the keys over to Kendall Marshall. Perhaps more importantly, Roy may want to think about developing a consistent rotation. He shuffles his perimeter players in and out as if chemistry and rhythm have no place in the game of college basketball. Whereas last year's Heels had an advantage in the paint with Deon Thompson, Ed Davis, and Tyler Zeller, this year's team lacks bulk and is getting pushed around. Despite these shortcomings, there is simply too much talent on the UNC roster to excuse such poor play.
Prediction: The Tar Heels sneak into the NCAA Tournament thanks to a weak ACC but fail to make it to the Sweet 16. The bright side - the media realizes that it is a mistake to name a freshman Preseason First Team All-America.
Seton Hall (6-5): Okay, so no one thought the Pirates were going to win the Big East Championship, but more was expected of a team that returned a number of key pieces and won 10 conference games a season ago. While it's true that flirting with turning pro early isn't necessarily an indicator of next level talent, Seton Hall returns 3 players (Jeremy Hazell, Herb Pope, and Jeff Robinson) that seriously considered foregoing college eligibility before returning for a run at an NCAA invite. Sure, an injury to Hazell, the Pirates' leading scorer, just three games into the season hasn't helped (although maybe it did given Hazell's shot selection), but Seton Hall's play has been so uninspired, so disjointed that adding Terry Dehere and Sam Dalembert to the mix might not help things. Just to recap - the Pirates have suffered defeat at the hands of Temple, Xavier, Clemson, Arkansas, and Dayton. In other words, they've been beaten by every competent team they've played (and Arkansas). They beat Alabama, but everyone beats Alabama (just ask Iowa).
Prediction: With the personalities on the Seton Hall roster, this season has trainwreck written all over it. At this rate, the Pirates will be lucky to win 6 conference games in Kevin Willard's first season at the helm. That being said, Hazell may drop 40 in a couple games when he returns from wrist surgery.
Texas Tech (6-6): I never had high expectations for the Red Raiders, but I did pick them to finish seventh in a pretty strong Big 12 conference. Tech returned 5 of its top 6 scorers, including all-conference caliber players in point guard John Roberson and forward Mike Singletary. It seemed that not even Pat Knight's inept coaching could keep the Red Raiders from being competitive. Well, I was wrong. 12 games into the season and Tech is sitting at .500. Knight even benched Roberson and Singletary for their play in advance of a double-digit loss to UTEP. Tech has nothing even remotely resembling a quality win, and things are going to get ugly in conference play.
Prediction: Terrible season in which Tech finishes below .500 ends in the overdue firing of Pat Knight, which brings about a rant by Dick Vitale during an ESPN telecast of an unrelated Big Ten matchup between Purdue and Wisconsin about how big of a mistake the folks in Lubbock just made. Vitale then spends five minutes extolling the virtues of Bob Knight, neglecting to acknowledge the player abuse scandals that occurred at Indiana, and lamenting Pat Knight not getting a fair shake, neglecting to acknowledge that Pat Knight never would have been considered for a Division I head coaching opportunity if not for being his father's son.
Virginia Tech (6-4): The most disappointing team in the land bar none. Seth Greenberg's senior-laden squad is coming off 3 straight NCAA Tourney snubs, including last season's 23-8 regular season (which ended in a trip to the NIT). Returning 5 of their top 6 scorers, the Hokies seemed to have plenty of motivation to put together the strongest resume possible for the selection committee. Ten games into the season, however, Virginia Tech has decent wins against Oklahoma State and Mississippi State but has losses at the hands of Kansas State, UNLV, Purdue, and Virginia. As K-State guard Jacob Pullen said of the Hokies, Seth Greenberg's squad is made up of "grown men." Unfortunately, the Hokies have not been playing with the sense of urgency one would think a group of talented seniors would have knowing this is their last chance to be invited to the dance.
Prediction: A weak ACC gives the Hokies hope, but, in the end, they come up just short for the fourth year in a row. With the Hokies' bubble burst, we miss the chance to see a mature, physical team beat teams up in March.
Sunday, December 19, 2010
Top 25
1. Duke 10-0
quality wins: Marquette, Kansas State, Michigan State, Butler
previous rank: 1
2. Kansas 10-0
quality wins: Arizona, UCLA, Memphis
previous rank: 2
3. Ohio State 10-0
quality wins: Florida, Florida State
previous rank: 4
4. Syracuse 11-0
quality wins: North Carolina State, Michigan State
previous rank: 3
5. Pittsburgh 11-1
quality wins: Maryland, Texas
loss: Tennessee
previous rank: 7
6. Georgetown 10-1
quality wins: Old Dominion, North Carolina State, Missouri, Utah State
loss: Temple
previous rank: 11
7. Missouri 10-1
quality win: Vanderbilt
loss: Georgetown
previous rank: 12
8. Villanova 9-1
quality win: UCLA
loss: Tennessee
previous rank: 9
9. Connecticut 8-0
quality wins: Wichita State, Michigan State, Kentucky
previous rank: 13
10. San Diego State 12-0
quality wins: Gonzaga, St. Mary's, Wichita State
previous rank: 16
11. Purdue 10-1
quality win: Virginia Tech
loss: Richmond
previous rank: 15
12. Michigan State 8-3
quality win: Washington
losses: Connecticut, Duke, Syracuse
previous rank: 17
13. Kentucky 8-2
quality wins: Washington, Notre Dame
losses: Connecticut, North Carolina
previous rank: 18
14. Kansas State 9-2
quality wins: Virginia Tech, Gonzaga. Washington State
loss: Duke, Florida
previous rank: 5
15. Minnesota 10-1
quality wins: North Carolina, West Virginia
loss: Virginia
previous rank: 20
16. Brigham Young 10-1
quality wins: Utah State, St. Mary's, Arizona
loss: UCLA
previous rank: 8
17. Notre Dame 10-1
quality wins: Georgia, Wisconsin, Gonzaga
loss: Kentucky
previous rank: 19
18. Tennessee 7-2
quality wins: VCU, Villanova, Pittsburgh
losses: Oakland, Charlotte
previous rank: 6
19. Texas 9-2
quality wins: Illinois, North Carolina
losses: Pittsburgh, USC
previous rank: 24
20. Wisconsin 9-2
quality wins: Boston College, North Carolina State, Marquette
losses: UNLV, Notre Dame
previous rank: 21
21. Illinois 10-2
quality wins: Maryland, North Carolina, Gonzaga
losses: Texas, UIC
previous rank: 14
22. Baylor 7-1
loss: Gonzaga
previous rank: 10
23. Florida 8-2
quality wins: Florida State, Kansas State
losses: Ohio State, Central Florida
previous rank: NR
24. Memphis 8-1
loss: Kansas
previous rank: 23
25. Vanderbilt 8-2
quality win: North Carolina
losses: West Virginia, Missouri
previous rank: NR
Labels:
Billy White,
D.J. Gay,
Malcolm Thomas,
San Diego State,
Tim Shelton,
Top 25
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Top 25
1. Duke 10-0
quality wins: Marquette, Kansas State, Michigan State, Butler
previous rank: 1
2. Kansas 9-0
quality wins: Arizona, UCLA, Memphis
previous rank: 2
3. Syracuse 10-0
quality wins: North Carolina State, Michigan State
previous rank: 5
4. Ohio State 8-0
quality wins: Florida, Florida State
previous rank: 4
5. Kansas State 9-1
quality wins: Virginia Tech, Gonzaga. Washington State
loss: Duke
previous rank: 7
6. Tennessee 7-0
quality wins: VCU, Villanova, Pittsburgh
previous rank: 16
7. Pittsburgh 10-1
quality wins: Maryland, Texas
loss: Tennessee
previous rank: 3
8. Brigham Young 10-0
quality wins: Utah State, St. Mary's, Arizona
previous rank: 10
9. Villanova 8-1
quality win: UCLA
loss: Tennessee
previous rank: 8
10. Baylor 6-0
previous rank: 11
11. Georgetown 9-1
quality wins: Old Dominion, North Carolina State, Missouri, Utah State
loss: Temple
previous rank: 9
12. Missouri 8-1
quality win: Vanderbilt
loss: Georgetown
previous rank: 12
13. Connecticut 8-0
quality wins: Wichita State, Michigan State, Kentucky
previous rank: 13
14. Illinois 10-1
quality wins: Maryland, North Carolina, Gonzaga
loss: Texas
previous rank: 14
15. Purdue 9-1
quality win: Virginia Tech
loss: Richmond
previous rank: 18
16. San Diego State 10-0
quality wins: Gonzaga, St. Mary's, Wichita State
previous rank: 19
17. Michigan State 7-3
quality win: Washington
losses: Connecticut, Duke, Syracuse
previous rank: 6
18. Kentucky 7-2
quality wins: Washington, Notre Dame
losses: Connecticut, North Carolina
previous rank: 21
19. Notre Dame 9-1
quality wins: Georgia, Wisconsin, Gonzaga
loss: Kentucky
previous rank: 17
20. Minnesota 9-1
quality wins: North Carolina, West Virginia
loss: Virginia
previous rank: 22
21. Wisconsin 8-2
quality wins: Boston College, North Carolina State, Marquette
losses: UNLV, Notre Dame
previous rank: 25
22. Louisville 8-0
quality wins: Butler, UNLV
previous rank: NR
23. Memphis 7-1
loss: Kansas
previous rank: 20
24. Texas 7-2
quality win: Illinois
losses: Pittsburgh, USC
previous rank: 24
25. UNLV 9-1
quality wins: Wisconsin, Murray State, Virginia Tech
loss: Louisville
previous rank: 15
Saturday, December 11, 2010
Freshman Power Rankings 2.0
1. Jared Sullinger, Ohio State, 6-8 260
Would have retained the top spot even if he hadn't exploded for 40 points against IUPUI.
previous rank: 1
2. Kyrie Irving, Duke, 6-2 175
If reports that Irving will miss the rest of the season with a toe injury are true, we've been robbed of the chance to watch a very special point guard play at the college level.
previous rank: 9
3. Terrence Jones, Kentucky, 6-8 245
Jones, averaging 20 and 10 for the Wildcats, is tougher and plays with more heart than I expected.
previous rank: NR
4. Tobias Harris, Tennessee, 6-8 220
Harris has replaced Tyler Smith and J.P. Prince as the Vols' point-forward.
previous rank: 5
5. Brandon Knight, Kentucky, 6-3 185
Knight has had some early struggles running the Wildcat offense but has no problem scoring.
previous rank: 3
6. Perry Jones, Baylor, 6-10 220
Versatile big man has talent scouts salivating.
previous rank: NR
7. Tristan Thompson, Texas, 6-9 240
Longhorn frosh is second on team in scoring, tied for lead in rebounding, averages 2.4 blocks per contest, and has a ton of upside.
previous rank: 6
8. J.T. Terrell, Wake Forest, 6-4 175
Fearless two-guard leads Demon Deacons in scoring and is doing his best to keep a program teetering on the brink of decline respectable.
previous rank: NR
9. Harrison Barnes, North Carolina, 6-7 210
Most hyped freshman in the land disappears for stretches and has been altogether underwhelming.
previous rank: 2
10. Deshaun Thomas, Ohio State, 6-6 230
Fort Wayne-product is super-efficient on offensive end and would be ranked even higher if not for lackluster outings against Florida State and IUPUI.
previous rank: NR
Exits: Joe Jackson (Memphis), Josh Selby (Kansas), Adreian Payne (Michigan State), Reggie Bullock (North Carolina)
Sunday, December 5, 2010
Top 25
1. Duke 8-0
quality wins: Marquette, Kansas State, Michigan State, Butler
previous rank: 1
2. Kansas 7-0
quality wins: Arizona, UCLA
previous rank: 2
3. Pittsburgh 9-0
quality wins: Maryland, Texas
previous rank: 3
4. Ohio State 6-0
quality wins: Florida, Florida State
previous rank: 4
5. Syracuse 8-0
quality win: North Carolina State
previous rank: 6
6. Michigan State 6-2
quality win: Washington
losses: Connecticut, Duke
previous rank: 5
7. Kansas State 7-1
quality wins: Virginia Tech, Gonzaga
loss: Duke
previous rank: 7
8. Villanova 6-1
quality win: UCLA
loss: Tennessee
previous rank: 11
9. Georgetown 8-0
quality wins: Old Dominion, North Carolina State, Missouri, Utah State
previous rank: 25
10. Brigham Young 8-0
quality wins: Utah State, St. Mary's
previous rank: 10
11. Baylor 6-0
previous rank: 15
12. Missouri 6-1
loss: Georgetown
previous rank: 8
13. Connecticut 7-0
quality wins: Wichita State, Michigan State, Kentucky
previous rank: 12
14. Illinois 8-1
quality wins: Maryland, North Carolina, Gonzaga
loss: Texas
previous rank: 19
15. UNLV 8-0
quality wins: Wisconsin, Murray State, Virginia Tech
previous rank: 14
16. Tennessee 6-0
quality wins: VCU, Villanova
previous rank: 18
17. Notre Dame 8-0
quality wins: Georgia, Wisconsin
previous rank: 16
18. Purdue 7-1
quality win: Virginia Tech
loss: Richmond
previous rank: 24
19. San Diego State 8-0
quality wins: Gonzaga, St. Mary's, Wichita State
previous rank: 22
20. Memphis 7-0
previous rank: 23
21. Kentucky 5-2
quality win: Washington
losses: Connecticut, North Carolina
previous rank: 17
22. Minnesota 7-1
quality wins: North Carolina, West Virginia
loss: Virginia
previous rank: 13
23. Vanderbilt 7-1
quality win: North Carolina
loss: West Virginia
previous rank: 21
24. Texas 6-2
quality win: Illinois
losses: Pittsburgh, USC
previous rank: 9
25. Wisconsin 6-2
quality wins: Boston College, North Carolina State
losses: UNLV, Notre Dame
previous rank: NR
Labels:
Austin Freeman,
Chris Wright,
Georgetown,
Jason Clark,
Top 25
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Shoe Game
HoopsHype has updated its NBA sneaker database, which provides info concerning the shoe selections of every NBA player - make and model (with pics of the kicks). Wondering who is rocking the Air Jordan II's? Or who is the only player in the Association sporting New Balance? Or the names of the strange Chinese brands being worn by Jason Kidd, Shaq, and KG? Yeah, me, too.
Here's the link: HOOPSHYPE NBA SNEAKER DATABASE
Despite my love for Adidas and my nostalgia for old school Nike models, if I was in the NBA, there would be 23 players in the league wearing the ultra-light Zoom Kobe V.
Sunday, November 28, 2010
Top 25
1. Duke 6-0
quality wins: Marquette, Kansas State
previous rank: 1
2. Kansas 6-0
quality win: Arizona
previous rank: 3
3. Pittsburgh 7-0
quality wins: Maryland, Texas
previous rank: 5
4. Ohio State 5-0
quality win: Florida
previous rank: 4
5. Michigan State 5-1
quality win: Washington
loss: Connecticut
previous rank: 2
6. Syracuse 6-0
previous rank: 7
7. Kansas State 5-1
quality wins: Virginia Tech, Gonzaga
loss: Duke
previous rank: 6
8. Missouri 5-0
previous rank: 9
9. Texas 5-1
quality win: Illinois
loss: Pittsburgh
previous rank: 16
10. Brigham Young 6-0
quality win: St. Mary's
previous rank: 14
11. Villanova 5-1
quality win: UCLA
loss: Tennessee
previous rank: 10
12. Connecticut 5-0
quality wins: Wichita State, Michigan State, Kentucky
previous rank: NR
13. Minnesota 6-0
quality wins: North Carolina, West Virginia
previous rank: NR
14. UNLV 6-0
quality wins: Wisconsin, Murray State, Virginia Tech
previous rank: NR
15. Baylor 4-0
previous rank: 24
16. Notre Dame 7-0
quality wins: Georgia, Wisconsin
previous rank: NR
17. Kentucky 4-1
quality win: Washington
loss: Connecticut
previous rank: 12
18. Tennessee 5-0
quality wins: VCU, Villanova
previous rank: NR
19. Illinois 6-1
quality win: Maryland
loss: Texas
previous rank: 20
20. West Virginia 4-1
quality win: Vanderbilt
loss: Minnesota
previous rank: NR
21. Vanderbilt 5-1
quality win: North Carolina
loss: West Virginia
previous rank: NR
22. San Diego State 6-0
quality win: Gonzaga
previous rank: 22
23. Memphis 5-0
previous rank: 17
24. Purdue 5-1
loss: Richmond
previous rank: 18
25. Georgetown 6-0
quality wins: Old Dominion, North Carolina State
previous rank: NR
Saturday, November 27, 2010
2010-11 Outlook: Mid-Majors
Top 10 Non-BCS Conference Teams
1. Gonzaga - David Stockton, son of Gonzaga and NBA great John Stockton, is a walk-on point guard for the Zags.
2. Brigham Young - Jimmer Fredette may get the press, but backcourt mate Jackson Emery is perhaps just as important to the Cougars' success.
3. Temple - Fran Dunphy continues to work wonders for a program that only recently appeared to be in sharp decline.
4. Memphis - Josh Pastner has no problem recruiting, but can he coach?
5. Murray State - Reigning OVC champs return 8 of top 10 scorers.
6. San Diego State - Most talent that Steve Fisher has had since his days with the Fab 5.
7. Richmond - 38-year old head coach Chris Mooney is going to have offers from some big-time programs very soon.
8. Butler - Shelvin Mack is a beast, but the Bulldogs are going to miss Gordon Hayward even more than the pundits seem to think.
9. UNLV - The perennially competitive Runnin' Rebels will take third in an extremely talented Mountain West Conference.
10. Old Dominion - Experienced Monarchs play physical, suffocating defense.
All Mid-Major Team
Kevin Anderson, Richmond, sr, guard
Jimmer Fredette, Brigham Young, sr, guard
Shelvin Mack, Butler, jr, guard
Kawhi Leonard, San Diego State, soph, forward
Lavoy Allen, Temple, sr, forward
Player of the Year
Kawhi Leonard, San Diego State - Long athlete who hits the glass, has an excellent motor, and finds ways to score.
Top Freshman
Joe Jackson, Memphis - Self-proclaimed "King of Memphis" is not lacking for confidence and is key to Tigers playing Top 25 basketball.
Top Defender
Jay Threatt, Delaware State - Ballhawk averaged an NCAA-leading 2.8 steals per contest last season as a sophomore.
Thursday, November 25, 2010
2010-11 Outlook: SEC
Projected Order of Finish
1. Kentucky - Coach Cal reloaded with another bumper crop of blue chips, but extreme lack of depth means young Cats will have to stay out of foul trouble and injury-free.
2. Florida - 6-9 225-pound freshman Patric Young provides the perennially soft Gators with much-needed toughness.
3. Tennessee - Bruce Pearl has done a great job in Knoxville, but it is pretty incredible that he still has his job at this point.
4. Vanderbilt - Commodores will miss point guard Jermaine Beal more than overrated big man A.J. Ogilvy.
5. Mississippi State - When Dee Bost and Renardo Sidney become eligible, watch out for a nice Bulldogs squad that will feast on the SEC West competition.
6. Georgia - Everyone's favorite dark horse is on the verge of becoming overrated.
7. Alabama - JaMychal Green, Senario Hillman, and Mikhail Torrance give the Tide a formidable threesome.
8. Mississippi - Senior guard Chris Warren leads Andy Kennedy's attack in Oxford.
9. South Carolina - Darrin Horn thinks he has something special in freshman guard Bruce Ellington.
10. Arkansas - John Pelphrey is on the hot seat after his Razorbacks missed the tournament for a second straight season.
11. LSU - I like Trent Johnson, but he has had trouble bringing talent to Baton Rouge.
12. Auburn - It was a mistake to fire Jeff Lebo one year removed from a 20-win season.
All-Conference
Dee Bost, Mississippi State, jr, guard
Travis Leslie, Georgia, jr. guard
Jeffery Taylor, Vanderbilt, jr, forward
Chandler Parsons, Florida, sr, forward
Trey Thompkins, Georgia, jr, forward
Player of the Year
Jeffery Taylor, Vanderbilt - Reminds me of a young Grant Hill.
Top Freshman
Brandon Knight, Kentucky - There will be less of a drop off from John Wall to Knight than people think.
Top Defender
Jeffery Taylor, Vanderbilt - Locks down opposition's best player on nightly basis.
Labels:
Bernard King,
Brandon Knight,
Ernie Grunfeld,
Jeffery Taylor,
Kentucky,
SEC,
Tennessee,
Vanderbilt
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
2010-11 Outlook: Pac-10
Projected Order of Finish
1. Washington - Lorenzo Romar needs improved play from highly touted sophomore Abdul Gaddy if the Huskies are going to be more than merely top dog in an extremely weak Pac-10.
2. Arizona - Sean Miller has the program headed in the right direction, but the Wildcats would finish no better than fifth in any other BCS conference.
3. Arizona State - As senior guard Ty Abbott goes, so go Herb Sendek's Sun Devils.
4. UCLA - Alex Schrempf, son of Detlef, suits up as a walk-on for the Bruins.
5. Stanford - Landry Fields is a Knickerbocker, so junior guard Jeremy Green will have to shoulder even more of the scoring load for the Cardinal.
6. Washington State - The decision of four reserve guards, including Xavier Thames, to transfer out of Pullman cripples the program's efforts to stay relevant post-Tony Bennett.
7. California - Mike Montgomery is perhaps the nation's most underrated coach, and he will have his work cut out for him after losing his top four scorers.
8. USC - Seniors Marcus Simmons and Alex Stepheson provide the Trojans with defense, rebounding, and toughness, but who will provide the offense?
9. Oregon - Feels like Phil Knight U settled with the Dana Altman hire.
10. Oregon State - Senior guard Calvin Haynes is a bright spot for the lowly Beavers.
All-Conference
Isaiah Thomas, Washington, jr, guard
Ty Abbott, Arizona State, sr, guard
Jeremy Green, Stanford, jr, guard
Klay Thompson, Washington State, jr, guard
Derrick Williams, Arizona, soph, forward
Player of the Year
Isaiah Thomas, Washington - Standing 5-8, the fearless Thomas is an excellent penetrator with a top-notch handle.
Top Freshman
Dwight Powell, Stanford - Pretty weak group of incoming freshmen in the Pac-10, but the 6-9 Powell will give Johnny Dawkins much needed help in the paint.
Top Defender
Venoy Overton, Washington - One of nation's peskiest defenders edges out USC's Marcus Simmons.
Labels:
Brandon Roy,
Dwight Powell,
Isaiah Thomas,
Pac-10,
Stanford,
Venoy Overton,
Washington
2010-11 Outlook: Big 12
Projected Order of Finish
1. Kansas - Cole Aldrich, Sherron Collins, and Xavier Henry are now lacing them up in the Association, but the Big 12 championship still goes through Lawrence.
2. Kansas State - Jacob Pullen's beard and a deep frontcourt return, but will Crazy Frank Martin's squad recapture the magic of last year's 29-win season?
3. Missouri - Top recruit Tony Mitchell is ineligible (questions remain as to whether he will ever suit up for the Tigers), and defensive aficionados everywhere mourn having lost the chance to see Mitchell in Mike Anderson's 40 Minutes of Hell defense.
4. Texas - After a year of underachieving and disappointment, the question is whether the Longhorns have found a semblance of chemistry.
5. Baylor - Lots of length and athleticism, but I'm not sure the Bears have a point guard to run the show.
6. Texas A&M - Expect a breakout season from junior forward David Loubeau.
7. Texas Tech - Seniors John Roberson and Mike Singletary will make the Red Raiders competitive, but Pat Knight will most likely find a way to mess things up in Lubbock.
8. Oklahoma State - As usual, depth will be a problem for the seemingly always undermanned Cowboys.
9. Colorado - Senior Cory Higgins and sophomore Alec Burks are two of the country's best kept secrets, but they don't have much help.
10. Oklahoma - The rebuilding begins now for the Sooners, as Willie Warren turned pro after an unimpressive sophomore campaign, and former McDonald's All-Americans Tiny Gallon and Tommy Mason-Griffin lasted all of one season in Norman.
11. Iowa State - Cyclones have no way of replacing Craig Brackins and Marquis Gilstrap.
12. Nebraska - Do they still play basketball at Tyronn Lue University?
All-Conference
John Roberson, Texas Tech, sr, guard
Jacob Pullen, Kansas State, sr, guard
J'Covan Brown, Texas, soph, guard
LaceDarius Dunn, Baylor, sr, guard
Marcus Morris, Kansas, jr, forward
Player of the Year
Jacob Pullen, Kansas State - It will be interesting to see if Pullen can pile up the points with the opposition no longer having to worry about backcourt mate Denis Clemente.
Top Freshman
Tristan Thompson, Texas - Nice body and smooth moves around the rim.
Top Defender
Dogus Balbay, Texas - Hailing from Istanbul, Balbay is relentless on the defensive end and an excellent on-ball defender.
Labels:
Big 12,
Dogus Balbay,
Jacob Pullen,
Kansas State,
Texas,
Tristan Thompson
Monday, November 22, 2010
2010-11 Outlook: Big Ten
Projected Order of Finish
1. Michigan State - Izzo's roster is overflowing with talent, and yet another trip to the Final Four is well within reach.
2. Ohio State - Extremely talented freshman class is more than just Jared Sullinger.
3. Wisconsin - Badger big men Jon Leuer and Keaton Nankivil team up to form one of the country's most formidable post tandems.
4. Purdue - Losing Robbie Hummel for the season removes the Boilermakers from national title contention, but the return of seniors JaJuan Johnson and E'Twaun Moore means Matt Painter's squad could still make noise in March.
5. Illinois - Bruce Weber has plenty of talent and excellent depth, but can the Illini play with intensity and focus for 40 minutes?
6. Minnesota - In just his fourth season at the helm, Tubby Smith has assembled a deep roster with a nice combination of skill, size, and athleticism.
7. Northwestern - Junior forward John Shurna is one of the most underrated players in the country.
8. Indiana - Expect the product Tom Crean puts on the floor to be improved, but whether that translates into an improvement in the win column in a tough Big Ten remains to be seen.
9. Penn State - Senior scorer Talor Battle will once again lead an underwhelming Nittany Lions' attack.
10. Iowa - It's going to be another long year for the Hawkeyes.
11. Michigan - Wolverines could be epically bad.
All-Conference
Kalin Lucas, Michigan State, sr, guard
Demetri McCamey, Illinois, sr, guard
E'Twaun Moore, Purdue, sr, guard
Jon Leuer, Wisconsin, sr, forward
JaJuan Johnson, Purdue, sr, center
Player of the Year
Demetri McCamey, Illinois - If this big-bodied point guard in the mold of Deron Williams can get along with Bruce Weber, the Illini could have a special season.
Top Freshman
Jared Sullinger, Ohio State - Only question is whether he will be as dominant on the defensive end as he will be scoring the ball.
Top Defender
David Lighty, Ohio State - Versatile fifth-year senior can defend multiple positions and doesn't make mistakes.
Saturday, November 20, 2010
2010-11 Outlook: Big East
Projected Order of Finish
1. Pittsburgh - Gritty, veteran squad needs contribution from 6-9 sophomore and former McDonald's All-American Dante Taylor if the Panthers hope to contend for a national title.
2. Syracuse - Jim Boeheim's squad has a ton of potential but also has to replace a lot of production.
3. Villanova - As usual Jay Wright's squad is extremely talented on the perimeter with questions in the paint.
4. West Virginia - Da'Sean Butler and Devin Ebanks are gone from last year's Final Four team, but count on Bob Huggins to put a hard-nosed team on the floor that will defend and hit the boards.
5. Georgetown - It's time for seniors Austin Freeman and Chris Wright to live up to their advance billing.
6. Louisville - The Cards will apply pressure on defense and get up and down the floor, but who will generate offense in the halfcourt?
7. Connecticut - Kemba Walker is the headliner for a program that appears to be slipping.
8. Notre Dame - The Fighting Irish will miss point guard Tory Jackson as much as they will miss Luke Harangody.
9. Seton Hall - Plenty of talent and experience, but that's hasn't translated to tourney appearances for the Pirates in recent years.
10. Marquette - A return trip to the NCAA Tourney will be a tall order for the Golden Eagles, as Buzz Williams struggles to find a way to replace Lazar Hayward.
11. Saint John's - The cupboard isn't bare, but Steve Lavin has his work cut out for him as he returns to the college coaching ranks under the bright lights of Madison Square Garden.
12. Cincinnati - While the departures of Lance Stephenson and Deonta Vaughn will hurt the Bearcats on the offensive end, Yancy Gates leads a talented, though unproven, squad with the potential to make waves in the Big East.
13. Providence - Marshon Brooks returns on the perimeter, but who will replace double-double machine Jamine Peterson?
14. South Florida - Here's guessing the going will be tough for the Bulls in the post-Dominique Jones era.
15. Rutgers - Things were looking up for the Scarlet Knights not so long ago, but that was before Hamady Ndiaye graduated and Mike Rosario and Gregory Echenique decided to transfer.
16. DePaul - What was Oliver Purnell thinking?
All-Conference
Corey Fisher, Villanova, sr, guard
Ashton Gibbs, Pittsburgh, jr, guard
Jeremy Hazell, Seton Hall, sr, guard
Kris Joseph, Syracuse, jr, forward
Kevin Jones, West Virginia, jr, forward
Player of the Year
Corey Fisher, Villanova - Fisher allegedly scored 105 points in a summer league game at Watson Gleason Playground in the Bronx during the offseason.
Top Freshman
Vander Blue, Marquette - Syracuse's Fab Melo is going to take time to adjust to the college game, and this big point guard will have plenty of opportunities to get involved on a Marquette squad in need of scoring.
Top Defender
Gilbert Brown, Pittsburgh - Super-athletic wing began to embrace his role as a defensive stopper last season.
Freshman Power Rankings 1.0
1. Jared Sullinger, Ohio State, 6-8 260
Burly big man reminds me of Elton Brand and may end up the most dominant player in all of college basketball.
2. Harrison Barnes, North Carolina, 6-7 210
Has all the tools, but can he help the Heels rebound from an embarrassing 2009-10 season?
3. Brandon Knight, Kentucky, 6-3 185
Cerebral point follows in footsteps of Rose, Evans, and Wall.
4. Joe Jackson, Memphis, 5-11 160
There's some Iverson in this waterbug's game.
5. Tobias Harris, Tennessee, 6-8 220
Do-it-all big will be the best player on Bruce Pearl's roster from day one.
6. Tristan Thompson, Texas, 6-9 240
Think LaMarcus Aldridge with some Ed Davis sprinkled in.
7. Josh Selby, Kansas, 6-2 185
Explosive combo guard with ability to take over needs to be a team player on ultra-talented Jayhawks squad.
8. Adreian Payne, Michigan State, 6-10 215
Izzo's most talented post player since Zach Randolph.
9. Kyrie Irving, Duke, 6-2 175
In unique position of starting at point guard for defending champion expecting to repeat.
10. Reggie Bullock, North Carolina, 6-5 190
Big, athletic two-guard with tons of upside.
2010-11 Outlook: ACC
Projected Order of Finish
1. Duke - Blue Devils are head and shoulders above the ACC competition.
2. North Carolina - Loaded with individual talent, but no indication that will translate into team success.
3. Virginia Tech - After being snubbed by the NCAA Tournament selection committee for the past three seasons, veteran squad finally dances in March.
4. Florida State - Can perhaps the hardest team to score on in the country last year continue its success on the defensive end with 7-1 shot-blocker Solomon Alabi now plying his trade in the D League?
5. Maryland - Terps are solid but not spectacular at anything (and will need to find a way to fill the hole left by General Greivis).
6. Boston College - This is the year the country finds out how special junior guard Reggie Jackson is.
7. Clemson - A talented roster remains, but will the program regress without Oliver Purnell?
8. North Carolina State - Wolf Pack will go as far as talented frountcourt duo of Tracy Smith and C.J. Leslie take them.
9. Miami - Hurricanes have a nice mix of bangers and perimeter players to bounce back from a really poor 2009-10 campaign, but will anyone be able to help Durand Scott put points on the board?
10. Virginia - I'm a big Tony Bennett fan, but there's not much talent in Charlottesville.
11. Wake Forest - After firing Dino Guadio after two straight 20-win seasons and trips to the NCAA Tourney, Demon Deacons will be lucky to remain relevant.
12. Georgia Tech - Why is Paul Hewitt still coaching the Yellowjackets, and is this the worst frontcourt in the history of the ACC?
All-Conference
Malcolm Delaney, Virginia Tech, sr, guard
Nolan Smith, Duke, sr, guard
Reggie Jackson, Boston College, jr, guard
Kyle Singler, Duke, sr, forward
Chris Singleton, Florida State, jr, forward
Player of the Year
Kyle Singler, Duke - Best player in the country returns to defend the Blue Devils' title.
Top Freshman
Harrison Barnes, North Carolina - Barnes looks like a star in the making, but I'm possibly more intrigued by fellow Tar Heel frosh Reggie Bullock.
Top Defender
Chris Singleton, Florida State - Long, versatile defender is nation's best.
Friday, November 19, 2010
Velvet Hoop
I know this came out more than a year ago, but why didn't this get more play? Why is Rashard Lewis so awkward? How bad did Andre Iguodala's verse have to be to get cut from the commmercial? And how long do we have to wait for a Jheri Curl in the NBA? I'm thinking A.C. Green was the Last of the Mohicans.
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Preseason All-Americans and Award Predictions
First Team
Jacob Pullen, Kansas State
Jimmer Fredette, Brigham Young
Demetri McCamey, Illinois
Kyle Singler, Duke
Kawhi Leonard, San Diego State
Second Team
Kalin Lucas, Michigan State
Nolan Smith, Duke
Jon Leuer, Wisconsin
JaJuan Johnson, Purdue
Lavoy Allen, Temple
Third Team
Kevin Anderson, Richmond
Corey Fisher, Villanova
Shelvin Mack, Butler
Jeffery Taylor, Vanderbilt
Marcus Morris, Kansas
All-Freshman Team
Brandon Knight, Kentucky
Joe Jackson, Memphis
Harrison Barnes, North Carolina
Tobias Harris, Tennessee
Jared Sullinger, Ohio State
All-Defensive Team
Jay Threatt, Delaware State
Venoy Overton, Washington
Chris Singleton, Florida State
Jeff Allen, Virginia Tech
David Foster, Utah
Player of the Year: Singler
Freshman of the Year: Sullinger
Defensive Player of the Year: Singleton
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
2010-11 Preseason Top 25 (Late Edition)
1. Duke
2. Michigan State
3. Kansas
4. Ohio State
5. Pittsburgh
6. Kansas State
7. Syracuse
8. Gonzaga
9. Missouri
10. Villanova
11. Wisconsin
12. Kentucky
13. North Carolina
14. Brigham Young
15. Temple
16. Texas
17. Memphis
18. Purdue
19. Murray State
20. Illinois
21. Florida
22. San Diego State
23. Washington
24. Baylor
25. Virginia Tech
Wednesday, May 5, 2010
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Big Ten Review (09-10)
All-Big Ten
Kalin Lucas, Michigan State
Junior 6-1 190 14.8p 1.9r 4.0a 0.1b 1.2s
Evan Turner, Ohio State
Junior 6-7 210 20.4p 9.2r 6.0a 0.9b 1.7s
Robbie Hummel, Purdue
Junior 6-8 210 15.7p 6.9r 2.1a 1.0b 1.1s
John Shurna, Northwestern
Sophomore 6-8 210 18.2p 6.4r 2.6a 0.9b 0.8s
JaJuan Johnson, Purdue
Junior 6-10 215 15.5p 7.1r 0.7a 2.1b 0.9s
Player of the Year: Evan Turner, Ohio State
The best player in college basketball (and one of the nerdiest) did it all for the Buckeyes this year. The 6-7 junior ran the point (dishing out an impressive 6 dimes per contest), hit the boards (averaging over 9 per game), filled it up on the offensive end (over 20 a game), and played lockdown defense. Forget about leading his team in multiple statistical categories, The Villain led the conference in scoring, finished second in rebounds and assists, and third in steals. Oh, and Turner broke his back on December 5th, missed six games, and returned to lead the Buckeyes - who, while talented, featured a 7-man rotation for much of the season - to a 2 seed and a share of the Big Ten title. Three of Ohio State's 7 losses on the season came during the six-game period Turner was out the injury.
Coach of the Year: Bo Ryan, Wisconsin
It seems that Ryan is finally starting to get the attention he deserves. Every time I see the Badgers in action, the announcers are singing his praises - and rightfully so. His teams execute on offense, play hard-nosed defense, and don't make mistakes. The meat grinder that is the Badgers' halfcourt offense is just as much Ryan's trademark as the Princeton offense is for JT3 or the secondary break is for Roy Williams. His players develop during their time in Madison (witness Trevon Hughes, Jon Leuer, and Jason Bohannon from this year's team), and, seemingly regardless of who is actually suiting up for the Badgers in a given year, they are going to be one of the top 25 teams in the country and compete for a Big Ten championship.
Freshman of the Year: Drew Crawford, Northwestern
Crawford "headlines" an incredibly weak crop of freshmen in the Big Ten. The 6-5 swingman averaged a solid 10 points and 4 rebounds per contest. Crawford's numbers may be underwhelming, but his play was a key factor in Northwestern regrouping after the loss of Kevin Coble. With Crawford, Coble, Shurna, and rising senior Michael Thompson returning, the Wildcats may be dancing next March for the first time in school history.
Defensive Player of the Year: Chris Kramer, Purdue
His stats (3.0 rebounds, 1.7 steals, and 0.4 blocks) do not begin to tell the story of the Purdue senior's impact on the defensive end of the floor. Kramer has twice been honored as Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year (as a sophomore and senior) and was named to the conference's all-defensive team each of his four years in West Lafayette. His on-ball defense is a thing of beauty, and the havoc he creates on the defensive end will be sorely missed by Matt Painter. One of the best perimeter defenders to come through the college ranks in the last decade.
Biggest Surprise: Wisconsin
Not a lot of surprises in the Big Ten this year, but the Badgers get the nod here for continuing to outperform expectations. I tend to give Wisconsin the benefit of the doubt, but even I didn't see Bo Ryan's squad as a Top 25-type team this year - let alone a team that would finish one game out of a share of the Big Ten title. It's about time we learned not to doubt this strange team from the North with their blonde buzzcuts and Scandinavian bloodlines.
Biggest Disappointment: Michigan
John Beilein's third season in Ann Arbor was pretty much a fiasco. For some reason, Michigan was ranked 15th in the preseason AP poll. (I'm really not sure I've ever seen a weaker preseason top 25 team.) Manny Harris and DeShawn Sims are talented, but I'm not sure the roster features another quality basketball player. While I thought Michigan would miss the tourney, I didn't expect the Wolverines to finish with a losing record (15-17). With Harris leaving early (presumably to play overseas because he's not an NBA player) and Sims graduating, things will be even worse for Beilein next year - who left a pretty good situation in West Virginia for what has pretty much become a college basketball wasteland.
Kalin Lucas, Michigan State
Junior 6-1 190 14.8p 1.9r 4.0a 0.1b 1.2s
Evan Turner, Ohio State
Junior 6-7 210 20.4p 9.2r 6.0a 0.9b 1.7s
Robbie Hummel, Purdue
Junior 6-8 210 15.7p 6.9r 2.1a 1.0b 1.1s
John Shurna, Northwestern
Sophomore 6-8 210 18.2p 6.4r 2.6a 0.9b 0.8s
JaJuan Johnson, Purdue
Junior 6-10 215 15.5p 7.1r 0.7a 2.1b 0.9s
Player of the Year: Evan Turner, Ohio State
The best player in college basketball (and one of the nerdiest) did it all for the Buckeyes this year. The 6-7 junior ran the point (dishing out an impressive 6 dimes per contest), hit the boards (averaging over 9 per game), filled it up on the offensive end (over 20 a game), and played lockdown defense. Forget about leading his team in multiple statistical categories, The Villain led the conference in scoring, finished second in rebounds and assists, and third in steals. Oh, and Turner broke his back on December 5th, missed six games, and returned to lead the Buckeyes - who, while talented, featured a 7-man rotation for much of the season - to a 2 seed and a share of the Big Ten title. Three of Ohio State's 7 losses on the season came during the six-game period Turner was out the injury.
Coach of the Year: Bo Ryan, Wisconsin
It seems that Ryan is finally starting to get the attention he deserves. Every time I see the Badgers in action, the announcers are singing his praises - and rightfully so. His teams execute on offense, play hard-nosed defense, and don't make mistakes. The meat grinder that is the Badgers' halfcourt offense is just as much Ryan's trademark as the Princeton offense is for JT3 or the secondary break is for Roy Williams. His players develop during their time in Madison (witness Trevon Hughes, Jon Leuer, and Jason Bohannon from this year's team), and, seemingly regardless of who is actually suiting up for the Badgers in a given year, they are going to be one of the top 25 teams in the country and compete for a Big Ten championship.
Freshman of the Year: Drew Crawford, Northwestern
Crawford "headlines" an incredibly weak crop of freshmen in the Big Ten. The 6-5 swingman averaged a solid 10 points and 4 rebounds per contest. Crawford's numbers may be underwhelming, but his play was a key factor in Northwestern regrouping after the loss of Kevin Coble. With Crawford, Coble, Shurna, and rising senior Michael Thompson returning, the Wildcats may be dancing next March for the first time in school history.
Defensive Player of the Year: Chris Kramer, Purdue
His stats (3.0 rebounds, 1.7 steals, and 0.4 blocks) do not begin to tell the story of the Purdue senior's impact on the defensive end of the floor. Kramer has twice been honored as Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year (as a sophomore and senior) and was named to the conference's all-defensive team each of his four years in West Lafayette. His on-ball defense is a thing of beauty, and the havoc he creates on the defensive end will be sorely missed by Matt Painter. One of the best perimeter defenders to come through the college ranks in the last decade.
Biggest Surprise: Wisconsin
Not a lot of surprises in the Big Ten this year, but the Badgers get the nod here for continuing to outperform expectations. I tend to give Wisconsin the benefit of the doubt, but even I didn't see Bo Ryan's squad as a Top 25-type team this year - let alone a team that would finish one game out of a share of the Big Ten title. It's about time we learned not to doubt this strange team from the North with their blonde buzzcuts and Scandinavian bloodlines.
Biggest Disappointment: Michigan
John Beilein's third season in Ann Arbor was pretty much a fiasco. For some reason, Michigan was ranked 15th in the preseason AP poll. (I'm really not sure I've ever seen a weaker preseason top 25 team.) Manny Harris and DeShawn Sims are talented, but I'm not sure the roster features another quality basketball player. While I thought Michigan would miss the tourney, I didn't expect the Wolverines to finish with a losing record (15-17). With Harris leaving early (presumably to play overseas because he's not an NBA player) and Sims graduating, things will be even worse for Beilein next year - who left a pretty good situation in West Virginia for what has pretty much become a college basketball wasteland.
Sunday, April 18, 2010
Thoughts on the Jordan Brand All-Star Game
We can only glean so much from high school all-star games, but I'm sure as hell not going to waste my time watching no-hitters and historic pitching duels when I can see a bunch of giant minors refuse to play defense. My reaction to the Jordan Classic:
More of the Same…..
Jared Sullinger continues to look impressive. If you want to be critical of him, he does seem to have a lot Samardo Samuels in him, in that he tends to play below the rim. That’s really more of an NBA concern, though, and Sullinger should do just fine in the barbaric Big Ten.
I wish Terrence Jones was my son. He seems able to do everything…like a great big Swiss Army knife.
Harrison Barnes is a whole bunch of awesome, and he doesn’t care if you’re already sick of hearing about it. He had 20 points and 15 rebounds and shared co-MVP honors with Kyrie Irving.
Josh Selby announced that he’s going to Kansas. I really don’t know enough about the off-the-court allegations to judge him or make predictions about how he’ll work out based on that sort of thing. What I do think is that Selby is the most dynamic scorer in the entire class. He’s explosive, confident, and creative with the rock. He also picked a great school because Kansas has used shoot-first point guards with great success in the past. That said, there is a whole lot of mustard in his game, and he’s going to have to reign it in to help Kansas be successful.
Jay Williams seemed very impressed with Duke signee Kyrie Irving. The Admiral has pontificated on this point in the past, and I’ll steal his intellectual property for the purpose of this post. Coach K was embraced and lauded by Kobe, LeBron, et. al, following the Team USA Olympic experience. That seems to have given Coach K some sort of “street cred” that he had been lacking for a few years. Irving is the sort of player that Duke had been unable to corral since the likes of Jay Williams left Durham. He has shown that he is athletic, sharp-shooting, competitive, and from all indications, very coachable. Duke will miss a lot about Scheyer, but Irving will be a nice replacement, and one that should not take three years to develop.
Minor Revelations…..
C.J. Leslie’s motor is almost as impressive as his athleticism. He’s also got a much a better handle than I would have expected. If he play All-Star games exclusively, I think he might be one of the top three players in the class. I think his biggest issue is mental lapses. If his college coach can get him focused on playing through every possession, Leslie could be a potential one and done.
Will Barton was rated as one of the top prospects in the country going into the 2010-11 season, but curiously did not get selected for the McDonald’s Game. I figured his stock dropped a little for whatever reason. Whoever dropped his stock has his head up his ass. Barton can score in a variety of ways. Last night he showed that he has no problem scoring in traffic. Maybe his slight frame makes him a defensive liability? I didn’t see it last night, because nobody played any defense, but Barton has long arms and appears bigger than his listed height. Plus he wears an arm sleeve, and I’m pretty sure you have to be pretty damn good to pull off one of those things.
More of the Same…..
Jared Sullinger continues to look impressive. If you want to be critical of him, he does seem to have a lot Samardo Samuels in him, in that he tends to play below the rim. That’s really more of an NBA concern, though, and Sullinger should do just fine in the barbaric Big Ten.
I wish Terrence Jones was my son. He seems able to do everything…like a great big Swiss Army knife.
Harrison Barnes is a whole bunch of awesome, and he doesn’t care if you’re already sick of hearing about it. He had 20 points and 15 rebounds and shared co-MVP honors with Kyrie Irving.
Josh Selby announced that he’s going to Kansas. I really don’t know enough about the off-the-court allegations to judge him or make predictions about how he’ll work out based on that sort of thing. What I do think is that Selby is the most dynamic scorer in the entire class. He’s explosive, confident, and creative with the rock. He also picked a great school because Kansas has used shoot-first point guards with great success in the past. That said, there is a whole lot of mustard in his game, and he’s going to have to reign it in to help Kansas be successful.
Jay Williams seemed very impressed with Duke signee Kyrie Irving. The Admiral has pontificated on this point in the past, and I’ll steal his intellectual property for the purpose of this post. Coach K was embraced and lauded by Kobe, LeBron, et. al, following the Team USA Olympic experience. That seems to have given Coach K some sort of “street cred” that he had been lacking for a few years. Irving is the sort of player that Duke had been unable to corral since the likes of Jay Williams left Durham. He has shown that he is athletic, sharp-shooting, competitive, and from all indications, very coachable. Duke will miss a lot about Scheyer, but Irving will be a nice replacement, and one that should not take three years to develop.
Minor Revelations…..
C.J. Leslie’s motor is almost as impressive as his athleticism. He’s also got a much a better handle than I would have expected. If he play All-Star games exclusively, I think he might be one of the top three players in the class. I think his biggest issue is mental lapses. If his college coach can get him focused on playing through every possession, Leslie could be a potential one and done.
Will Barton was rated as one of the top prospects in the country going into the 2010-11 season, but curiously did not get selected for the McDonald’s Game. I figured his stock dropped a little for whatever reason. Whoever dropped his stock has his head up his ass. Barton can score in a variety of ways. Last night he showed that he has no problem scoring in traffic. Maybe his slight frame makes him a defensive liability? I didn’t see it last night, because nobody played any defense, but Barton has long arms and appears bigger than his listed height. Plus he wears an arm sleeve, and I’m pretty sure you have to be pretty damn good to pull off one of those things.
Friday, April 16, 2010
Big East Review (09-10)
All-Big East
Dominique Jones, South Florida
Junior 6-4 205 21.4p 6.1r 3.6a 0.6b 1.7s
Da'Sean Butler, West Virginia
Senior 6-7 230 17.2p 6.2r 3.1a 0.4b 1.0s
Wesley Johnson, Syracuse
Junior 6-7 205 16.5p 8.5r 2.2a 1.8b 1.7s
Luke Harangody, Notre Dame
Senior 6-8 245 21.8p 9.1r 1.6a 0.7b 0.5s
Greg Monroe, Georgetown
Sophomore 6-11 245 16.1p 9.6r 3.8a 1.5b 1.2s
Player of the Year: Wesley Johnson, Syracuse
An absolute revelation for Coach Boeheim's Orange, Johnson takes player of the Year honors in a conference with six legitimate All-American candidates (the five noted above plus Villanova's Scottie Reynolds who is by far the hardest player to leave off any all-conference team). Lofty expectations surrounded the arrival of the former Iowa State Cyclone, but it's hard to imagine anyone thought he would have such a large impact in just a single year. Syracuse went from being projected to finish in the middle of the pack in the Big East to a number one seed and, for a brief period of time, the nation's number one ranking.
Coach of the Year: Jim Boeheim, Syracuse
With a 7-man rotation and quite possibly just a single future NBA player on his roster, Boeheim rode his 2-3 zone to 30 wins and one of the three best regular seasons in the country. And while the addition of Wesley Johnson played a huge role in Syracuse's success, the transfer's supporting cast was pitch-perfect thanks in no small part to Coach Boeheim. Seniors Arinze Onuaku and Andy Rautins and junior Rick Jackson have improved by leaps and bounds during their careers. (I'm still trying to figure out how Rautins became not just a productive player in the Big East but borderline all-conference with a knack for defense.) In his earlier days, Boeheim was considered a strong recruiter and prodigious collector of next level talent. Considering his latest Syracuse squad, it would be difficult to deny Boeheim's ability to develop that talent. And with his quirky commitment to the 2-3 zone and his balanced offensive attack, Boeheim has never been a slouch in the Xs and Os department. That being said, this was quite possibly Boeheim's most impressive coaching performance in his long, illustrious career. Is it time to start forgiving Boeheim for the Devendorf years? Bob Huggins also deserves some praise, as he probably would have taken this honor in any conference in which Boeheim wasn't in the running.
Freshman of the Year: Lance Stephenson, Cincinnati
Like so many conferences this year, the Big East was thin in terms of rookie talent. For what it's worth, I'm still not convinced Born Ready helped the Bearcats more than he hurt them. In Stephenson's defense, I'm not talking about personality or maturity issues. Rather, I'm referring to his tendency to dominate the ball on the offensive end. While the jury on Stephenson as a team player is still out, I believe his individual talent is apparent. The Bearcat frosh is a bull on the offensive end and gets where he wants to be on the floor. Think of him as a more selfish and not quite as talented Tyreke Evans. That being said, I'm not sure his notorious reputation is entirely deserved.
Defensive Player of the Year: Hamady Ndiaye, Rutgers
This honor could have easily gone to Wesley Johnson for the impact he had on 'Cuse's 2-3 zone. However, Ndiaye's numbers are difficult to ignore, as the 6-11 Rutgers senior averaged 4.5 blocks per contest. He also averaged a solid 7.1 boards per game to go along with 0.4 steals. While Ndiaye's defensive prowess went largely unnoticed by the national media due to the Scarlet Knights' poor showing, RBP salutes one of the nation's most dominant shot-blockers who continued to grind in the post even as his team piled up losses.
Biggest Surprise: Syracuse
Not much was expected from Syracuse heading into the season. An exhibition loss to Division II LeMoyne back in November didn't do much to change this perception. In fact, a tourney appearance probably would have been a respectable showing after the Orange lost Jonny Flynn, Eric Devendorf, and Paul Harris from their successful 2008-09 campaign. While Syracuse couldn't make it past Butler in the Sweet 16 (due, in part, to senior center Arinze Onuaku's untimely leg injury), that does not erase the Orange's Big East regular season title nor its having exceeded all preseason expectations.
Biggest Disappointment: Connecticut
In what was by most accounts a down year in college basketball, UConn may have been, outside of UNC, the biggest disappointment in the country. Yes, Jim Calhoun spent part of the season dealing with health problems. But it's simply incredible that a team featuring Big East stalwarts Jerome Dyson and Stanley Robinson, talented sophomore Kemba Walker, the highly touted Ater Majok, McDonald's All-American Alex Oriakhi, and steady senior Gavin Edwards could not only miss the NCAA tournament but finish no better than 7-11 in conference (good for 11th place). Dyson, Robinson, and Edwards are seniors, and their production will be hard to replace. Some theoretically talented pieces remain in Storrs, but I'm not convinced. Majok's long-awaited debut was nothing less than a disappointment. He has a long way to go. Oriakhi wasn't much better. Walker is a nice player, but Calhoun curiously failed to develop any semblance of perimeter depth during the Huskies' failed 09-10 campaign.
Dominique Jones, South Florida
Junior 6-4 205 21.4p 6.1r 3.6a 0.6b 1.7s
Da'Sean Butler, West Virginia
Senior 6-7 230 17.2p 6.2r 3.1a 0.4b 1.0s
Wesley Johnson, Syracuse
Junior 6-7 205 16.5p 8.5r 2.2a 1.8b 1.7s
Luke Harangody, Notre Dame
Senior 6-8 245 21.8p 9.1r 1.6a 0.7b 0.5s
Greg Monroe, Georgetown
Sophomore 6-11 245 16.1p 9.6r 3.8a 1.5b 1.2s
Player of the Year: Wesley Johnson, Syracuse
An absolute revelation for Coach Boeheim's Orange, Johnson takes player of the Year honors in a conference with six legitimate All-American candidates (the five noted above plus Villanova's Scottie Reynolds who is by far the hardest player to leave off any all-conference team). Lofty expectations surrounded the arrival of the former Iowa State Cyclone, but it's hard to imagine anyone thought he would have such a large impact in just a single year. Syracuse went from being projected to finish in the middle of the pack in the Big East to a number one seed and, for a brief period of time, the nation's number one ranking.
Coach of the Year: Jim Boeheim, Syracuse
With a 7-man rotation and quite possibly just a single future NBA player on his roster, Boeheim rode his 2-3 zone to 30 wins and one of the three best regular seasons in the country. And while the addition of Wesley Johnson played a huge role in Syracuse's success, the transfer's supporting cast was pitch-perfect thanks in no small part to Coach Boeheim. Seniors Arinze Onuaku and Andy Rautins and junior Rick Jackson have improved by leaps and bounds during their careers. (I'm still trying to figure out how Rautins became not just a productive player in the Big East but borderline all-conference with a knack for defense.) In his earlier days, Boeheim was considered a strong recruiter and prodigious collector of next level talent. Considering his latest Syracuse squad, it would be difficult to deny Boeheim's ability to develop that talent. And with his quirky commitment to the 2-3 zone and his balanced offensive attack, Boeheim has never been a slouch in the Xs and Os department. That being said, this was quite possibly Boeheim's most impressive coaching performance in his long, illustrious career. Is it time to start forgiving Boeheim for the Devendorf years? Bob Huggins also deserves some praise, as he probably would have taken this honor in any conference in which Boeheim wasn't in the running.
Freshman of the Year: Lance Stephenson, Cincinnati
Like so many conferences this year, the Big East was thin in terms of rookie talent. For what it's worth, I'm still not convinced Born Ready helped the Bearcats more than he hurt them. In Stephenson's defense, I'm not talking about personality or maturity issues. Rather, I'm referring to his tendency to dominate the ball on the offensive end. While the jury on Stephenson as a team player is still out, I believe his individual talent is apparent. The Bearcat frosh is a bull on the offensive end and gets where he wants to be on the floor. Think of him as a more selfish and not quite as talented Tyreke Evans. That being said, I'm not sure his notorious reputation is entirely deserved.
Defensive Player of the Year: Hamady Ndiaye, Rutgers
This honor could have easily gone to Wesley Johnson for the impact he had on 'Cuse's 2-3 zone. However, Ndiaye's numbers are difficult to ignore, as the 6-11 Rutgers senior averaged 4.5 blocks per contest. He also averaged a solid 7.1 boards per game to go along with 0.4 steals. While Ndiaye's defensive prowess went largely unnoticed by the national media due to the Scarlet Knights' poor showing, RBP salutes one of the nation's most dominant shot-blockers who continued to grind in the post even as his team piled up losses.
Biggest Surprise: Syracuse
Not much was expected from Syracuse heading into the season. An exhibition loss to Division II LeMoyne back in November didn't do much to change this perception. In fact, a tourney appearance probably would have been a respectable showing after the Orange lost Jonny Flynn, Eric Devendorf, and Paul Harris from their successful 2008-09 campaign. While Syracuse couldn't make it past Butler in the Sweet 16 (due, in part, to senior center Arinze Onuaku's untimely leg injury), that does not erase the Orange's Big East regular season title nor its having exceeded all preseason expectations.
Biggest Disappointment: Connecticut
In what was by most accounts a down year in college basketball, UConn may have been, outside of UNC, the biggest disappointment in the country. Yes, Jim Calhoun spent part of the season dealing with health problems. But it's simply incredible that a team featuring Big East stalwarts Jerome Dyson and Stanley Robinson, talented sophomore Kemba Walker, the highly touted Ater Majok, McDonald's All-American Alex Oriakhi, and steady senior Gavin Edwards could not only miss the NCAA tournament but finish no better than 7-11 in conference (good for 11th place). Dyson, Robinson, and Edwards are seniors, and their production will be hard to replace. Some theoretically talented pieces remain in Storrs, but I'm not convinced. Majok's long-awaited debut was nothing less than a disappointment. He has a long way to go. Oriakhi wasn't much better. Walker is a nice player, but Calhoun curiously failed to develop any semblance of perimeter depth during the Huskies' failed 09-10 campaign.
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Grading the Performances from the High School All-Star Games
The high school all-star games are typically the first chance we get to see the highly-anticipated crop of incoming freshmen showcase their skills amongst equals. It's important not to get too carried away with showings in these games considering the national rankings are based on four plus years of organized high school competition and the gauntlet of AAU debauchery. Nonetheless, these games are the best fodder we have for the upcoming season of college bball, so we must acknowledge them. I listed a few of my winners and losers based on performances at the McDonald's game:
WINNERS
Harrison Barnes: This guy could not play anywhere but UNC. His game will be described as smooth so many times next year that it will make everyone sick (Brett Favre is a gunslinger and Jerome Bettis is from Detroit). The best part about Barnes is that his game is EXACTLY what UNC lacked last year. As the Admiral aptly noted, Larry Drew has been the whipping boy of Raleigh, but that is not completely fair. Drew obviously isn't as good as Ray Felton or Ty Lawson, but Ole Roy found a way to win a lot of games without those guys over the last twenty years. Barnes showed range, high basketball IQ, and an NBA-ready physique. I kind of felt the same about Xavier Henry last year, but hopefully Barnes doesn't prove to be as off-putting as Xavier.
Jared Sullinger: Sully was right at home at the McDonald's game, and put on quite a show for his strong contingency of fans. I was impressed until I got a little deja vu recalling Felipe Lopez's McDonald's performance in NYC before four disappointing years at St. John's. Dare I speculate that Sullinger is the type of man the Admiral would love to build his team around. Big, physical, and skilled. He's going to be a force in the Big Ten, and the knock on him coming out of college will probably be whether he is athletic enough to bang with NBA bigs. For the time being though, he looks impressive.
Tobias Harris: Harris got hurt in the McDonald's game, and will probably be out of commission for several weeks, so the fact that I included him as a "winner" is a testament to how impressed I was with him. Harris was bigger, more athletic, and more skilled than I anticipated. I think that after Barnes, he projects as the best NBA prospect in the class right now. Bruce Pearl has yet to actually develop an NBA prospect, so hopefully for Harris's sake, he hasn't already peaked.
Terrence Jones: I loved the efficiency and versatility of his game. Jones can shoot, put the ball on the floor, rebound, and pass. He seemed to have a high basketball IQ, and although he only grabbed three rebounds, his reputation as a solid rebounder gets him a pass for that game. Besides, who rebounds in all-star games? That's bush league.
LOSERS
Brandan Knight: Knight made the same mistake that many top flight players do at the McDonald's game. He tried to use it as a forum to show that criticisms of his game are unfounded. Therefore, he took way too many threes to try to prove that he's a shooter. He should have just played his game and found open teammates, and he would have been fine. The game-winning shot was a nice touch, though. If it's any consolation, I predicted that Mike Conley, Jr. and Jordan Farmar would be complete busts in college after underwhelming McDonald's performances. Unless I'm mistaken, neither of those guys finished a season in which his team failed to make the Final Four. If you're still reading this after that revelation, then you're probably just an old friend of mine. Thanks, I appreciate your loyalty.
While on the subject of Knight, I will get an obligatory dig in on the Worldwide Leader, if I may. ESPN re-ranked the top prospects and dropped Knight behind Kyrie Irving after the McDonald's game. That's kind of like when they dropped John Wall behind Avery Bradley and Favors after the McDonald's game last year. Sidebar: ESPN owns rights to the McDonald's game but not the Hoop Summit Game. Ergo, (in my humble opinion) in ESPN's eyes, great performances in the Hoop Summit game pale in comparison to putting on a show for the ESPN audience at the Hamburger Classic. It was fun watching ESPN repeatedly referring to John Wall as the third ranked player in the ESPN top 100 last winter when Wall became a national sensation. Hopefully Knight, who seems like a great kid, enjoys similar success.
Keith Appling: Apparently Appling has a scorer's mentality. He took fifteen shots in seventeen minutes in the McDonald's game, and may have actually played so selfishly, that remaining recruits would go out of their way to avoid standing around and watching Appling next season in East Lansing. Izzo hasn't had too much trouble with people playing for themselves instead of his team, but he's going to have a tall task in getting Appling to learn a thing or two about shot selection.J
WINNERS
Harrison Barnes: This guy could not play anywhere but UNC. His game will be described as smooth so many times next year that it will make everyone sick (Brett Favre is a gunslinger and Jerome Bettis is from Detroit). The best part about Barnes is that his game is EXACTLY what UNC lacked last year. As the Admiral aptly noted, Larry Drew has been the whipping boy of Raleigh, but that is not completely fair. Drew obviously isn't as good as Ray Felton or Ty Lawson, but Ole Roy found a way to win a lot of games without those guys over the last twenty years. Barnes showed range, high basketball IQ, and an NBA-ready physique. I kind of felt the same about Xavier Henry last year, but hopefully Barnes doesn't prove to be as off-putting as Xavier.
Jared Sullinger: Sully was right at home at the McDonald's game, and put on quite a show for his strong contingency of fans. I was impressed until I got a little deja vu recalling Felipe Lopez's McDonald's performance in NYC before four disappointing years at St. John's. Dare I speculate that Sullinger is the type of man the Admiral would love to build his team around. Big, physical, and skilled. He's going to be a force in the Big Ten, and the knock on him coming out of college will probably be whether he is athletic enough to bang with NBA bigs. For the time being though, he looks impressive.
Tobias Harris: Harris got hurt in the McDonald's game, and will probably be out of commission for several weeks, so the fact that I included him as a "winner" is a testament to how impressed I was with him. Harris was bigger, more athletic, and more skilled than I anticipated. I think that after Barnes, he projects as the best NBA prospect in the class right now. Bruce Pearl has yet to actually develop an NBA prospect, so hopefully for Harris's sake, he hasn't already peaked.
Terrence Jones: I loved the efficiency and versatility of his game. Jones can shoot, put the ball on the floor, rebound, and pass. He seemed to have a high basketball IQ, and although he only grabbed three rebounds, his reputation as a solid rebounder gets him a pass for that game. Besides, who rebounds in all-star games? That's bush league.
LOSERS
Brandan Knight: Knight made the same mistake that many top flight players do at the McDonald's game. He tried to use it as a forum to show that criticisms of his game are unfounded. Therefore, he took way too many threes to try to prove that he's a shooter. He should have just played his game and found open teammates, and he would have been fine. The game-winning shot was a nice touch, though. If it's any consolation, I predicted that Mike Conley, Jr. and Jordan Farmar would be complete busts in college after underwhelming McDonald's performances. Unless I'm mistaken, neither of those guys finished a season in which his team failed to make the Final Four. If you're still reading this after that revelation, then you're probably just an old friend of mine. Thanks, I appreciate your loyalty.
While on the subject of Knight, I will get an obligatory dig in on the Worldwide Leader, if I may. ESPN re-ranked the top prospects and dropped Knight behind Kyrie Irving after the McDonald's game. That's kind of like when they dropped John Wall behind Avery Bradley and Favors after the McDonald's game last year. Sidebar: ESPN owns rights to the McDonald's game but not the Hoop Summit Game. Ergo, (in my humble opinion) in ESPN's eyes, great performances in the Hoop Summit game pale in comparison to putting on a show for the ESPN audience at the Hamburger Classic. It was fun watching ESPN repeatedly referring to John Wall as the third ranked player in the ESPN top 100 last winter when Wall became a national sensation. Hopefully Knight, who seems like a great kid, enjoys similar success.
Keith Appling: Apparently Appling has a scorer's mentality. He took fifteen shots in seventeen minutes in the McDonald's game, and may have actually played so selfishly, that remaining recruits would go out of their way to avoid standing around and watching Appling next season in East Lansing. Izzo hasn't had too much trouble with people playing for themselves instead of his team, but he's going to have a tall task in getting Appling to learn a thing or two about shot selection.J
Friday, April 9, 2010
ACC Review (09-10)
All-ACC
Malcom Delaney, Virginia Tech
Junior 6-3 190 20.2p 3.7r 4.5a 0.1b 1.2s
Jon Scheyer, Duke
Senior 6-5 190 18.2p 3.6r 4.9a 0.3b 1.6s
Greivis Vasquez, Maryland
Senior 6-6 200 19.6p 4.6r 6.3a 0.4b 1.7s
Al-Farouq Aminu, Wake Forest
Sophomore 6-9 215 15.8p 10.7r 1.3a 1.4b 1.4s
Kyle Singler, Duke
Junior 6-8 230 17.7p 7.0r 2.4a 0.8b 1.0s
Player of the Year: Greivis Vasquez, Maryland
General Greivis joins Joakim Noah, Greg Paulus, J.J. Redick, and Eric Devendorf in the starting five on the most annoying team of the last decade and maybe ever. Still, it's quite possible that no one in all of college basketball meant more to their team than the Venezuelan Sensation. (That rhymes, right?)
Coach of the Year: Mike Krzyzewski, Duke
Not a lot of competition in the ACC for Coach K this year. Gary Williams' return from the brink can be attributed to his senior conference player of the year point guard as much as anything else. Regardless, it's difficult to put someone ahead of Killer Mike with his conference regular season, conference tourney, and national titles this season. Plus, is there a more charismatic coach in the land? Anyone you'd rather share a good ol' belly laugh with?
Freshman of the Year: Derrick Favors, Georgia Tech
Pretty underwhelming crop of freshman. Favors had a nice season, but it did not live up to what many expected out of arguably the nation's most highly touted newcomer. Averaged a solid 12 and 8, showed occasional flash of brilliance, but only reached 20 points twice on the season. Some of his shortcomings can likely be traced to having to share the frontcourt with the black hole that is Gani Lawal. Or we can just chalk it up to Paul Hewitt not being a very good coach. Your call.
Defensive Player of the Year: Chris Singleton, Florida State
A joy to watch, Singleton would be a favorite of any defensive aficionado. Only a sophomore, Singleton averaged 7 boards, 1.5 blocks, and over 2 swipes per contest. When he wasn't leading one of the country's stingiest defenses, he was chipping in over 10 points per game. Sidenote: if Chris Singleton isn't going pro (and I'm not saying he should), there are a lot of early entrants who should be rethinking their decisions. I'm looking at you, Talor Battle, Derrick Caracter, Manny Harris, Adnan Hodzic, Sylvan Landesberg (you broke my heart), Tommy Mason-Griffin, A.J. Ogilvy, Jeff Robinson, Alex Tyus, Willie Warren, and Jahmar Young. And these are only the most absurd.
Biggest Surprise: Maryland
No, we didn't think Duke would take home the crown this year, but the Blue Devils entered the season with high expectations. Maryland, on the other hand, seemed a strong bet for the NIT. Outside of our conference player of the year, can you even name a second Terrapin? The Terps weren't pretty, but they played as a team, supported their Venezuelan superstar, finished atop the ACC regular season standings with the eventual national champs (splitting their head-to-head matchups), entered the tourney as a 4 seed, and were a Korie Lucious 3-point buzzer beater away from the Sweet 16. Gary Williams may have bought himself a little more time with this one - though things won't be easy without his star senior. Then again, perhaps Coach Williams will enjoy not having to listen to Daddy Yankee in the locker room ever again. (And, in case you think I'm engaging in racial stereotyping, here's a link in which King Terp speaks to his affinity for El Cangri, the movie "American Gangster", and what it was like playing high school ball with Kid Nut Raven.)
Biggest Disappointment: North Carolina
Entering the season, I thought UNC had a chance to repeat as national champions. Clearly, I was wrong. The young, unseasoned Tar Heels finished one game out of the ACC cellar and missed the NCAA tourney. At this point, it is pretty much common practice to blame, in large part, Larry Drew II's point guard play for the Heels' decline. While there is no doubt there is a drop off when you go from Ty Lawson to LD2, Drew's numbers weren't all that bad - almost 6 assists per game and a respectable 1.84 assist-to-turnover ratio. Others pointed to freshman John Henson's struggles to adapt to the college game. For the record, I still like Henson - still believe he has a ton of potential. Yes, I was a little surprised he didn't do more this year, but, with his body, he's going to have to be given time to develop. His play at the end of the season was more than encouraging. UNC apologists point to the injury bug that a handful of Heels succumbed to over the course of the season. Sure, the injuries to Tyler Zeller and Ed Davis were especially difficult to deal with, but the real problem was the lack of offense from the 2 and 3 spots. Marcus Ginyard and Will Graves never showed an ability to create their own shots or score in bunches to make teams pay for doubling down on the Tar Heel bigs. And freshman Leslie McDonald was a non-factor. All in all, a bad season for the Chapel Hill faithful and a poor performance by one of the best coaches in the country. But no worries Tar Heel nation, it's nothing a little Harrison Barnes won't fix - he of the oh so feathery jumper and aerial acrobatics.
Malcom Delaney, Virginia Tech
Junior 6-3 190 20.2p 3.7r 4.5a 0.1b 1.2s
Jon Scheyer, Duke
Senior 6-5 190 18.2p 3.6r 4.9a 0.3b 1.6s
Greivis Vasquez, Maryland
Senior 6-6 200 19.6p 4.6r 6.3a 0.4b 1.7s
Al-Farouq Aminu, Wake Forest
Sophomore 6-9 215 15.8p 10.7r 1.3a 1.4b 1.4s
Kyle Singler, Duke
Junior 6-8 230 17.7p 7.0r 2.4a 0.8b 1.0s
Player of the Year: Greivis Vasquez, Maryland
General Greivis joins Joakim Noah, Greg Paulus, J.J. Redick, and Eric Devendorf in the starting five on the most annoying team of the last decade and maybe ever. Still, it's quite possible that no one in all of college basketball meant more to their team than the Venezuelan Sensation. (That rhymes, right?)
Coach of the Year: Mike Krzyzewski, Duke
Not a lot of competition in the ACC for Coach K this year. Gary Williams' return from the brink can be attributed to his senior conference player of the year point guard as much as anything else. Regardless, it's difficult to put someone ahead of Killer Mike with his conference regular season, conference tourney, and national titles this season. Plus, is there a more charismatic coach in the land? Anyone you'd rather share a good ol' belly laugh with?
Freshman of the Year: Derrick Favors, Georgia Tech
Pretty underwhelming crop of freshman. Favors had a nice season, but it did not live up to what many expected out of arguably the nation's most highly touted newcomer. Averaged a solid 12 and 8, showed occasional flash of brilliance, but only reached 20 points twice on the season. Some of his shortcomings can likely be traced to having to share the frontcourt with the black hole that is Gani Lawal. Or we can just chalk it up to Paul Hewitt not being a very good coach. Your call.
Defensive Player of the Year: Chris Singleton, Florida State
A joy to watch, Singleton would be a favorite of any defensive aficionado. Only a sophomore, Singleton averaged 7 boards, 1.5 blocks, and over 2 swipes per contest. When he wasn't leading one of the country's stingiest defenses, he was chipping in over 10 points per game. Sidenote: if Chris Singleton isn't going pro (and I'm not saying he should), there are a lot of early entrants who should be rethinking their decisions. I'm looking at you, Talor Battle, Derrick Caracter, Manny Harris, Adnan Hodzic, Sylvan Landesberg (you broke my heart), Tommy Mason-Griffin, A.J. Ogilvy, Jeff Robinson, Alex Tyus, Willie Warren, and Jahmar Young. And these are only the most absurd.
Biggest Surprise: Maryland
No, we didn't think Duke would take home the crown this year, but the Blue Devils entered the season with high expectations. Maryland, on the other hand, seemed a strong bet for the NIT. Outside of our conference player of the year, can you even name a second Terrapin? The Terps weren't pretty, but they played as a team, supported their Venezuelan superstar, finished atop the ACC regular season standings with the eventual national champs (splitting their head-to-head matchups), entered the tourney as a 4 seed, and were a Korie Lucious 3-point buzzer beater away from the Sweet 16. Gary Williams may have bought himself a little more time with this one - though things won't be easy without his star senior. Then again, perhaps Coach Williams will enjoy not having to listen to Daddy Yankee in the locker room ever again. (And, in case you think I'm engaging in racial stereotyping, here's a link in which King Terp speaks to his affinity for El Cangri, the movie "American Gangster", and what it was like playing high school ball with Kid Nut Raven.)
Biggest Disappointment: North Carolina
Entering the season, I thought UNC had a chance to repeat as national champions. Clearly, I was wrong. The young, unseasoned Tar Heels finished one game out of the ACC cellar and missed the NCAA tourney. At this point, it is pretty much common practice to blame, in large part, Larry Drew II's point guard play for the Heels' decline. While there is no doubt there is a drop off when you go from Ty Lawson to LD2, Drew's numbers weren't all that bad - almost 6 assists per game and a respectable 1.84 assist-to-turnover ratio. Others pointed to freshman John Henson's struggles to adapt to the college game. For the record, I still like Henson - still believe he has a ton of potential. Yes, I was a little surprised he didn't do more this year, but, with his body, he's going to have to be given time to develop. His play at the end of the season was more than encouraging. UNC apologists point to the injury bug that a handful of Heels succumbed to over the course of the season. Sure, the injuries to Tyler Zeller and Ed Davis were especially difficult to deal with, but the real problem was the lack of offense from the 2 and 3 spots. Marcus Ginyard and Will Graves never showed an ability to create their own shots or score in bunches to make teams pay for doubling down on the Tar Heel bigs. And freshman Leslie McDonald was a non-factor. All in all, a bad season for the Chapel Hill faithful and a poor performance by one of the best coaches in the country. But no worries Tar Heel nation, it's nothing a little Harrison Barnes won't fix - he of the oh so feathery jumper and aerial acrobatics.
Tuesday, April 6, 2010
And we're back...
Another college basketball season has come to a close. Duke has been crowned national champion for the fourth time since 1990. Not too shabby, Blue Devils. Here, at Roundball Portfolio, we would be remiss if we failed to acknowledge the glaring absence of posts over the course of the past year. And what we did give you - and by you I mean Pat McGuire the Sig, random Sacramento Kings fan, and Attorney Kyle (Kyle, after this post, you will be glad I kept your identity hidden) - wasn't all that good. Take, for example, an early season post in which I ranked North Carolina as the second best team in the country or a midseason post in which HAL 9000 listed John Wall as a freshman on the decline. Despite these failings, I, for one, am feeling energized. It's my hope that I will get a couple of posts up per week in the offseason. I'm hoping my former compatriots will jump on board as well. We'll see how it goes, but please don't be surprised if this lasts for all of, well, this post.
As I was saying, Duke took top honors again - just when I thought Coach K was slipping into irrelevance (or at least irrelevance relevant to his stature in the 90s and 00s). Obviously, there are a ton of questions to answer heading into next season for a number of programs - will the Tar Heels bounce back?; will Kentucky reload after losing 8-9 players from their already youthful roster?; who will take the helm in Eugene?; what was Oliver Purnell thinking?; and the list goes on. But, for the moment, let's examine what Duke's triumph means for Coach K and for Duke going forward.
1) Coach K is back. Unless you're a Duke fan, chances are you're none too pleased with the Blue Devils' latest championship. Regardless, you would be hard-pressed to deny that Coach K is back. In fact, the real argument may be whether Coach K ever left. I'm not arguing Coach K had lost it, but, if you look at his team's performances over the past few years, his teams exhibited some glaring flaws. Lacking in athleticism, weak in the paint, and an overall lack of toughness just to name a few. This team was different. While not overly athletic (that will start to change with Duke's 2010-11 recruiting class), these Blue Devils, as annoying as they may have been, had plenty of big bodies in the paint (Zoubek, Lance Thomas, and the brothers Plumlee) and a grit lacking in previous Duke squads. I think the thing that shocked me more than anything is the timing of Duke's return to the summit. You see, I've had a sneaking suspicion that things were going to turn around for Duke. The problem has never been Coach K's Xs and Os. Rather, it's been getting the players you need to compete at the highest level. Duke's image as Laettner Redick University didn't help matters. The 1999 Elton Brand/Corey Maggette/William Avery team was beginning to look like an aberration. (And, yes, on some level this was becoming a race thing.) But then the Olympics happened, and Kobe and Lebron caught Coach K fever, singing his praises at seemingly every turn. These are the guys high school phenoms look up to, and I do believe the relationship Coach K fostered with the game's finest will do nothing but help lure recruits to Durham. Just so we're clear, I don't mean to say Duke is on the verge of a dynasty or even that they're my favorite to repeat next year, but I do believe the demise of Coach K predicted by some (myself included before his turn as Dream Team skipper) was premature. Oh, and I should also mention that I think it pretty much goes without saying that he's one of the best coaches in the history of college basketball.
2) With the additions of transfer Seth Curry, JUCO Carrick Felix, and a talented recruiting class led by McDonalds All-American Kyrie Irving, Duke will be formidable next year and will have a chance to repeat if Kyle Singler returns. Jon Scheyer got the press, and Nolan Smith showed marked improvement, but Singler is the Blue Devils' best and most important player. He's a matchup nightmare - able to post up smaller forwards but too talented a shooter and ballhandler for true post players to defend. On top of this, he's as heady a player as there is in the nation. He makes everyone around him better, is an excellent passer, and lets the game come to him. I'm not sure if Singler is going to be successful at the next level, but I do know he's a fantastic college basketball player. One has to wonder, though, if Singler will return for his senior season. His turn as Final Four MOP means his draft stock won't be getting any higher. While he may not be a lock for the first round, one doubts there's anything I guy as polished and limited athletically as Singler (I do believe he's athletic enough to play in the Association) can really do anything in his fourth year to change the minds of Chad Ford and those of his ilk.
3) On a more sinister note, I think RBP has a duty to illuminate a set of circumstances that may have played a part in Duke's return to prominence but has received scant attention in the mainstream press. As I noted in part 1 of this post, Coach K's return to greatness dovetails quite nicely with his position as head coach of Team USA basketball. Additionally, I noted that Coach K forged a special bond with the game's finest - Kobe Bryant and Lebron James. Everyone knows the Olympics are the ultimate propaganda tool for the New World Order, a stripping off nationalistic sentiment for the sake of international unity. You may not know this, but Lebron and Kobe are freemasons. In fact, as is revealed here, Lebron is actually a member of the inner sanctum of freemasonry. Of course, Dick Vitale and the other ESPN talking heads will have you believe that Duke won its fourth national championship as a result of hardwork, precise execution, hustle, and heady play. The national media will no doubt point to Duke's admittedly impressive 35-5 record, ACC regular season championship, ACC tournament championship, and run to the title game as evidence that these Blue Devils earned their rings. I, for one, am not convinced.
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