Month: March 2006 (Page 6 of 18)

Free agency winners & losers

Free agency started off at a frenetic pace. With the extra salary cap created by the new Collective Bargaining Agreement, several teams snatched up valuable players while others are waiting for the market to come down. Jeremy Green of Scouts Inc. breaks down a few of the early winners and losers [Insider subscription required].

Winners – Cleveland, Minnesota, Arizona, Miami, Tennessee

The Tennessee Titans got things started by restructuring the contract of quarterback Steve McNair. From that point on, the Titans have been on a roll. In acquiring wide receiver David Givens, free safety Chris Hope and outside linebacker David Thornton, Tennessee has added three players in the top 36 on the Scouts Inc. free agency board.

All three players will add a lot of veteran leadership and athleticism to a team that showed a lot of youth in too many key areas last season.

Losers – Colts, Patriots (for sitting on their hands while the Dolphins have been active)

For a team that was on the verge of greatness last season, the Indianapolis Colts have left me scratching my head in bewilderment this offseason.

Sure they have re-signed wide receiver Reggie Wayne, defensive end Raheem Brock and often-injured running back Dominic Rhodes, but they have received nothing from outside the organization. The Wayne deal appears to have hamstrung this organization. Don’t get me wrong, Wayne is an excellent No. 2 receiver, but was he worth losing James, Thornton (now with the Titans) and defensive tackle Larry Tripplett? I would say no. Now Colts fans are left to wonder what will come of this season.

Green also thinks that Edgerrin James will have a positive economic and on the field impact for the Cardinals. Arizona has been looking for a good running back for years now and James gives them that. Green warns about Drew Brees’ potential in New Orleans, questioning why the quarterback chose “money” over “winning.” The Dolphins seemed like the perfect fit for Brees, but we’ll never know.

Sweet Sixteen Preview

It was an exciting first weekend of the tournament, with 28 of the 48 games being decided by 10 points or less. All of the #1 seeds advanced to the Sweet 16, but we lost #2-seeds Tennessee and Ohio State, along with #3-seeds North Carolina and Iowa. There are two double-digit seeds, #13 Bradley and #11 George Mason, in the Sweet 16, and you can bet neither squad wants to go home. Several of the match-ups on Thursday and Friday are promising, so let’s get right to it.

ATLANTA

#1 Duke vs. #4 LSU – Thursday, 7:10 pm

This side of the region played to form, with the #1-seed Duke making its ninth-straight Sweet 16. Yes, you read that right. In a time of unprecedented parity in the college ranks, the Blue Devils have managed to win at least two tournament games every year since 1997. While J.J. Redick deserves a lot of credit for getting his team to the Sweet 16 (49 points, 50% shooting), Shelden Williams is the team’s tourney MVP thus far. The All-American scored 46 points and gathered 32 rebounds in Duke’s two wins.

Williams will have his hands full with LSU’s Glen Davis, who at 6’9” and 310 lbs, is somehow listed as a forward. Davis scored 43 points and cleared 21 rebounds in the two wins against Iona and Texas A&M. While Davis holds down the inside, Darrel Mitchell makes the team go on the perimeter. He scored 35 points in the first two rounds, including the game winning three-pointer, which put away the Aggies.

The Tigers have the size to give Duke problems, but they aren’t very deep. The game will likely come down to Redick’s shooting and the Davis/Williams match-up inside. Keep an eye out for freshman phenom Josh McRoberts, who scored 14 points and grabbed 13 rebounds in the game against George Washington. Save for the UNC tilt on Senior Night, he seems to play better in the big games. Duke should win, but if they play well, the Tigers are certainly capable of pulling the upset.

#2 Texas vs. #6 West Virginia – Thursday, 9:40 pm

Texas forwards P.J. Tucker and LaMarcus Aldridge were great in the first two games, combining for 63 points and 41 rebounds. They also get good guard play from Daniel Gibson and Kenton Paulino, though Paulino was only able to play 20 minutes in the N.C. State blowout due to a knee injury.

West Virginia was a bit lucky when #3-seed Iowa lost in the first round to Northwestern State. In the second round, the Mountaineers dispatched the Demons, 67-54, behind a balanced attack that had four players in double figures. Mike Gansey (21 points, 16 rebounds over the first game) and Kevin Pittsnogle (32 points, 7 boards) led the Mountaineers through the first two rounds.

West Virginia has a “different” style of play with a lot of players on the perimeter shooting threes and making quick back cuts to the basket, and it can be difficult for an opponent to adjust on the fly. The Mountaineers can beat anyone if they shoot the ball well, but they have trouble rebounding, and Texas is big enough to expose this weakness. If this were the second game of the weekend, I’d really like West Virginia’s chances, but the Longhorns have three days to prepare for West Virginia’s quirky offense and I think they’ll get the win.

Read the rest of the preview at Bullz-Eye.

Indiana basketball continues to embarrass themselves

The University of Indiana continues to show how managing the sports program is too much of challenge for their school. First, they fire one of the greatest coaches of all time, due to the continuing “situations” that he put the University in during his tenure.

Bobby Knight, who this group claimed was bad apple, has such a bad name in college hoops that ESPN has employed him to do a show while coaching at Texas Tech. I think that would have been great publicity for the Indiana basketball program.

Indiana recently chased a fairly successful coach in Mike Davis out of his job. This has upset some players and they’re considering a transfer to whatever school Davis lands his next opportunity.

Finally, I read today that the Hoosier search committee is not even considering Steve Alford for the open position. Alford is not only a successful Big Ten coach; he is a class act which this University could use right now. This is another decision that makes people scratch their head in disbelief.

The positive, being an Ohio State fan, is that until Indiana cleans up the “inside” issues, the Buckeyes will gladly accept all the nations’ top recruits from that state.

Tagliabue to retire

In July, Paul Tagliabue will end his 16-year tenure as commissioner of the NFL.

The 65-year-old Tagliabue will leave the NFL in July with labor peace, unprecedented revenue through television deals and a place in the American consciousness where Sundays mean football.

His term will be remembered most for labor peace following strikes in 1982 and 1987. His close relationship with Upshaw finally led to a long-term agreement after five years without a contract.

But the bargaining was hard this time, with three straight deadline extensions needed. The agreement avoided the prospect of entering free agency this year with the possibility of an uncapped year in 2007.

It came at the expense of revenue sharing among the owners, an issue that had divided high-revenue and small-revenue teams and contributed to the deadlock. He did it with what has been considered his greatest skill as commissioner, patching together a coalition of nine teams with differing viewpoints to reach a compromise considered satisfactory by all but two teams.

He also oversaw a massive stadium building program. More than two-thirds of the NFL’s 32 teams are either playing in or building stadiums that didn’t exist when he took over as commissioner in 1989.

Tagliabue had a large hand in making the NFL the best run professional league in the country. With all due respect to MLB, the NFL is America’s game, and no other sport can match its popularity or widespread appeal. The salary cap has brought parity to the league, and this allows franchises to perform quick turnarounds from losers to Super Bowl contenders. While some argue it has lessened the quality of play in the playoffs, the parity does generate interest in every NFL city every September.

Tourney Recap – First Weekend

The Selection Committee took a lot of heat nine days ago, especially from the self-aggrandizing Billy Packer, for including four teams from the Missouri Valley Conference and only selecting four teams from the ACC, a perennial power conference. So what did the MVC teams do? #11-seed Southern Illinois didn’t put up much of a fight against #6-seed West Virginia, but the Mountaineers odd style of play gives a lot of teams problems. #10 Northern Iowa played #7 Georgetown to a five-point loss, which proved they belonged after the Hoyas went on to dismantle Big Ten champion Ohio State. The other two teams? They’re in the Sweet Sixteen.

#7-seed Wichita State (the MVC champ) blew out Seton Hall before upsetting #2-seed Tennessee. I actually predicted the Shockers to make the Sweet Sixteen because I knew they were good and that the Volunteers were vulnerable. But the most surprising MVC team has to be #13-seed Bradley, who dispatched the #4-seed Kansas (who had just beat Texas in the Big 12 final) and went on to upset the #5-seeded Pittsburgh Panthers. Given those matchups, I’m guessing that no one but Bradley alumni had the Braves in the Sweet Sixteen.

How did the ACC do? Duke won two games to keep their consecutive Sweet Sixteen streak alive at nine. When you think about it, this is a phenomenal record considering how many top seeds go down in the first two rounds of the tournament every year. Boston College survived a huge scare in the first round, taking two overtimes to beat Pacific. In the second round, they looked better, dispatching a feisty Montana team in Salt Lake City. North Carolina looked young and inexperienced, losing to George Mason in one of the bigger upsets of the second round after almost dropping their first round game to Murray State. North Carolina State shrugged off a four-game losing streak, upsetting a hot California team in the first round before getting drilled by Texas in the second.

What does this all mean? Three things: (1) the Selection Committee got it mostly right, (2) the mid-majors are for real and (3) there is tremendous parity in college basketball. The power conferences get so much attention that their best young players often leave early for the NBA while the mid-major players tend to get more four-year players. This results in a lot of matchups in the NCAA tourney between experienced small or mid-major schools and inexperienced power schools. Need proof? Just ask the coaches of Kansas, Pittsburgh, Seton Hall, Tennessee, Michigan State and North Carolina what they think.

This parity also resulted in some great basketball this weekend. Here are a few BIG rewards that I’d like to give out:

BIGGEST INDIVIDUAL CLUTCH PERFORMANCE

With all due respect to Jermaine Wallace’s shot to lift Northwestern St. over Iowa, Chris Lofton’s shot to avoid an upset against Winthrop, Darrel Mitchell’s 24-footer to lead LSU past Texas A&M, the biggest clutch performance was Craig Smith’s in the first round. Boston College trailed, 74-72, with 4.2 seconds left in the first overtime. Smith, a 66% free throw shooter, went to the line to shoot two free throws. With the season on the line, Smith calmly drained both attempts and forced a second overtime, in which the Eagles dominated. It’s one thing to heave a desperation shot to win a game, but it’s a tremendous feat to succeed under the pressure of going to the free throw line in the waning seconds of a game. Throw in the fact that Smith is just average from the stripe and you have your biggest clutch performance thus far.

BIGGEST SURPRISE TEAM IN THE SWEET SIXTEEN

George Mason deserves a lot of praise for defeating both Michigan State and North Carolina this weekend, but the biggest surprise has to be the Bradley Braves, who upset both Kansas and Pittsburgh to advance to the Sweet Sixteen. The key has been Marcellus Sommerville who scored 39 points and collected 13 rebounds over the first two games. Braves’ center Patrick O’Bryant had a huge game against Pitt, having his way against a Panther front line that was in foul trouble the entire game en route to a 28-point, seven rebound performance.

BIGGEST DISAPPOINTMENT

One could make an argument for Kansas, Iowa, Ohio State or Tennessee. But this award goes to North Carolina, who was one of the hottest teams in the nation over the second half of the season. Since January 28th, Roy Williams’ young team was 12-2, with wins over Arizona at home and a huge road win at Duke. In my tournament countdown, I said that Williams’ had one of the most difficult coaching jobs ahead of him as he tried to keep his young team focused and playing well. Unfortunately, he made a rare coaching mistake late in the game against George Mason that may have cost his team a win.

“If I’d coached better, that would have helped us out a heck of a lot,” Williams said. “The score was 54-51 [with 3:02 to play] and David [Noel] made a 3 to tie it up. We called a timeout, and I looked up at the clock and it still said 54-51. In my mind, I knew something was wrong. I called a press, and we didn’t do a very good job. It was a bad call on my part.”

North Carolina put George Mason to the line and was never able to tie or take the lead again. The Tar Heels are young and talented and if the group stays together over the next couple of years, they’ve got a great shot at cutting down the nets.

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