Month: November 2007 (Page 6 of 29)

BUTLER ROLLS OVER TEXAS TECH

The head coach has changed, but Butler keep rolling along. New Head Coach Brad Stevens was elvated from assistant when Todd Lichlighter left for Iowa and the Bulldog tradition just keeps getting stronger. Many programs seem to falter when a new head coach comes in, however, at some schools the program just gets stronger. It is a testament to two things. First a commitment by the schools athletic administration and also the ability to promote from within.

Butler is fresh off winning the Great Alaskan Shootout. Not only did they beat Bob Knight and Texas Tech, but they dismantled them with superior team play and accurate marksmanship. Knight said it best “they play extremely smart basketball, they take advantage of what they can do and they do it very wel.” Butler made 16 three pointers in the championship game and shattered the tournament record with 47 (an average of over 15 makes per game). Butler is now 6-0 under their new head coach.

The tradition has grown through the years at Butler. However, it was Barry Collier who took it to another level (before leaving for Nebraska). He was followed for one year by Thad Matta (left for Xavier) and then Lichlighter. Now that Barry Collier is back as the athletic director there is no doubt that Butler will be a team that could wrest the title of “best mid major” team from Gonzaga.

Another team that would argue that is right down the road in Carbondale, Illinois. Coach Chris Lowery had an impressive weekend, albeit losing in the finals to USC in the Anaheim Classic. Even though graduation hit the Salukis hard they still like a team to be reckoned with. Preceding Lowery at the helm was Matt Painter (left for Purdue). However, it all started with Bruce Webber. He set the stage for the success that has followed prior to his departure for Illinois. Also, credit the administration for supplying resources and the intelligence to promote from within.

Tulsa is a program that seems to be back on the right footing under third year coach Doug Wojcik. The former Michigan State assistant has them pointed in the positive direction. But for you basketball historians you will recall that Tulsa basketball was put on the map by Nolan Richardson and then kept on the upper level by Tubby Smith, Bill Self, Steve Robinson and Buzz Peterson. Five great coaches who benefited from an administration that knew what it was doing.

Please don’t think I am disrespecting the achievments of George Mason, Gonzaga or Creighton. But for the most part it was the same coach who has built and maintained those programs.

Coaching carousel spinning fast

The season for firing head coaches is apparently here in college football:

– Sources tell ESPN.com that head coach Huston Nutt will not be back at Arkansas next year. Don’t feel too bad for Nutt though – apparently he’ll still get a buyout settlement for around $3.5 million.

– Georgia Tech fired head coach Chan Gailey after six years of service. Interesting that Gailey was fired just one season after he was mentioned as a possible candidate for an NFL head-coaching job in Pittsburgh and Miami.

– Texas A&M has decided to replace Dennis Franchione with former Green Bay Packers head coach Mike Sherman. As long as Sherman doesn’t sell a secret newsletter to boosters with information about his football program, I think he’ll do all right.

– LSU defensive coordinator Bo Pelini is getting a strong look at Nebraska’s head coaching job. Hiring the defensive coordinator of the third ranked defense in the country might be a good idea considering the Cornhuskers gave up nearly 40 points a game this season.

Redskins’ Taylor shot

Washington Redskins safety Sean Taylor is in critical condition after being shot in his Miami home early Monday morning. Apparently Taylor was shot in the leg, but details are still sketchy at this point.

Richard Sharpstein, an attorney who represented Taylor in a criminal case, said the player’s father told him his son had been shot in the leg and was bleeding heavily because his femoral artery was severed.

Investigators were still interviewing the girlfriend and other relatives who were in the home to try to determine what happened, Perez said.

“It could have been a possible burglary; it could have been a possible robbery,” Perez said. “It has not been confirmed as yet.”

I’ll update this blog as more information is released.

Monday Morning Morgue

Here’s what some of the local columnists are saying in the wake of their teams losing on Sunday:

– Was it all Eli Manning’s fault that the Vikings smoked the Giants? Mike Vaccaro of the New York Post doesn’t think so.

– Bernie Miklasz of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch says that it was Scott Linehan’s fault the Rams lost to the Seahawks on Sunday, not Gus Frerotte’s fumble on the goal line in the closing seconds of the game.

– Woody Page of the Denver Post hammers the Broncos for committing the seven deadly sins of football, none bigger than kicking the ball to Devin Hester not once, but twice.

– Jerry Sullivan of the Buffalo News states the obvious: J.P. Losman is out of chances. It’s now the Trent Edwards show in Buffalo.

– Tom Sorensen of the Charlotte Observer notes that the Panthers don’t have the worst record in the NFC, but they certainly are the worst team.

– Jason Whitlock of the Kansas City Star says that the Chiefs are making a strong case to join the Dolphins, Rams and Falcons in the race for the No. 1 overall draft pick.

– Titans to finish 8-8? David Climer of the Tennessean thinks so.

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