Month: March 2010 (Page 8 of 59)

Michigan State advances to Final Four

Don’t bet against Tom Izzo in March. Even without his best player, Kalin Lucas, Izzo has directed his Spartans to their second-straight Final Four with a 70-69 win over Tennessee.

The game was nip-and-tuck the entire way with neither team leading by more than eight points. Raymar Morgan made a free throw with 1.8 seconds to play to give the Spartans the lead for good.

Personally, I’m a little bummed. I was hoping Tennessee and West Virginia would square off in the title game so we could see the matchup between Steven Pearl and Cam Thoroughman.

What happened to St. Mary’s?

Jake’s Take On Sports (which focuses on the Bay Area) has a piece about what happened to the Gaels on Thursday:

So what the heck happened?

– Is Baylor that much better than St. Mary’s?
– Did St. Mary’s play its worst game of the season?
– Did Baylor play its best game of the year?
– Was this the worst possible matchup for St. Mary’s, since the Bears had the size in the frontcourt to control Omar Samhan and the speed and length on the perimeter to stop the Gaels’ three-point shooting?
– Were the Gaels overwhelmed by the magnitude of the moment?
– Was all the attention St. Mary’s received over the past week so new to them that they could not handle it?
– Did the game’s proximity to the Baylor campus give the Bears a virtual homecourt advantage?
– Are the Gaels much more effective when they get ahead early and can control the pace, but in trouble if they start slowly because they don’t have the athletes to play from behind?
– Did the Gaels play over their heads in the first two tournament games, giving us a skewed impression of their capabilities?
– Are the Gaels sunk if they are not making their three-pointers early on?
– Does St. Mary’s need Omar Samhan to be great if they are to win?
– Did we fall in love with Samhan’s performance on and off the court in the first two games, making us believe he is better than he is?
– Is Baylor better than everyone suspected?

The answer, of course, is “Yes.”

It’s one of those SAT multiple-choice questions: Is the answer A or B or C or D or all of the above? This one is all of the above.

These are all good points, but the two biggest things that struck me about the game was how Baylor came out of the gates on fire (hitting seven of its first 12 shots, including four three-pointers) and how St. Mary’s struggled to figure out Baylor’s zone. There was a stretch after Micky McConnell’s made three with 17:17 remaining in the first half where the Gaels came up empty on six straight possessions. Just like that, Baylor had a 19-7 lead.

The Bears’ zone clearly had the Gaels perplexed. Omar Samhan is used to catching the ball on the block and going to work. Either he takes his guy one-on-one or he sees the double team coming and finds the open man. But against the zone, he’d sometimes catch the ball with two defenders already on him, or even with nobody guarding him. Both situations gave him pause and it basically threw him off his game. Hence, the 1-for-9 start from the field. I also suspect that the enormity of Reliant Park may have had an effect on the St. Mary’s shooters, who are used to playing in smaller gyms in the WCC. Baylor typically plays in arenas and seemed better prepared to play in a football stadium.

So, on the other end of the court, Baylor was able to hit some tough shots early on. It’s demoralizing for a team like St. Mary’s (whose style of play isn’t built for a comeback) to play good, solid defense and see the opponent nail seven relatively tough shots in six-and-a-half minutes. This, combined with the Gaels’ ineptitude on the offensive end led to panic and tightness, which helps to explain the Baylor’s 27-10 run before halftime.

Since CBS bailed on the game midway through the first half, I can only speak to what happened in the first 10 minutes of the game. But it’s tough for a team — any team, really — to overcome such a terrible start.

Photo from fOTOGLIF

Joey Porter arrested on suspicion of DUI, assault

Joey Porter is off to a fine start with his new team.

From CBS Sports.com:

Authorities say Arizona Cardinals linebacker Joey Porter has been arrested in Bakersfield on suspicion of drunken driving and accused of assaulting an officer and resisting arrest.

The California Highway Patrol says the 33-year-old player was confronted by officers early Saturday in a fast-food parking lot.
Porter refused to provide his driver’s license and began to roll up his window when asked to leave the car. Police say that when an officer reached to unlock the door Porter slapped the officer’s hand.

Porter eventually got out and complied with orders, placing his hands behind his back. He and a passenger were arrested.

Anyone else get the feeling that it’s going to be a bad year in Arizona? The ultra-classy Kurt Warner retires, then Anquan Boldin is finally traded and now their “prize” free agent is arrested for being a moron.

I wonder if the Cardinals wrote a clause in Porter’s three-year, $17.5 million contract in which he forfeits $2 million for every incident he gets into outside a fast food restaurant.


Photo from fOTOGLIF

West Virginia upends Kentucky

Kentucky started out strong, but once West Virginia started hitting its threes and settling into its 1-3-1 zone, the game shifted. WVU made 10 of 23 of its shots from deep. Conversely, the Wildcats hit just 4 of 32 from long range. They also killed themselves at the free throw line, making just 15 of 28 attempts (53%).

Joe Mazzulla played admirably, posting 17 points and playing scrappy defense on DeMarcus Cousins at the base of the Mountaineers’ 1-3-1 zone. He fouled out with two minutes to play, and WVU was pretty shaky handling the ball against Kentucky’s press, but the Mountaineers made enough free throws to seal the win.

On a side note, my bracket is starting to look pretty good. With WVU already in, and Duke still alive, I could get two Final Four teams in a year when very few brackets will have three or more. (Virtually no one picked Butler or the MSU/Tennessee winner.)

2010 MLB Preview: NL West

In order to help get you ready for the MLB season, we’re doing division-by-division rankings with quick overviews on how each club could fair in 2010. Next to each team, you’ll also find a corresponding number written in parenthesis, which indicates where we believe that club falls in a league-wide power ranking. Be sure to check back throughout the next two weeks leading up to the season, as we will be updating our content daily. Enjoy.

All 2010 MLB Preview Content | AL East Preview | AL Central Preview | AL West Preview | NL East | NL Central | NL West

Last up is the NL West.

1. Colorado Rockies (7)
Before I wax poetically about the youthful Rockies, I have an axe to grind about the television broadcasting crew of Drew Goodman, Jeff Huson and George Frazier. Those three form one of the most biased, nonobjective broadcasting teams in baseball history. I’m not kidding. The Rockies never get the same calls as their opponents do. The Rockies never get the national recognition like everyone else does. The Rockies are the greatest team to ever walk the planet and if they played a roster compiled of Jesus, Moses, God and the 12 apostles, Colorado should win 5-4 in extras nine times out of 10. If not, the Rockies beat themselves, because there’s no way Jesus and the gang were better. Don’t believe me? Just ask Goodman, Huson and Frazier. All right, now that that’s out of the way – the Rockies are a damn fine club and should leapfrog the Dodgers in the division this year. Their core – Troy Tulowitzki, Ian Stewart, Chris Iannetta, Dexter Fowler and Carlos Gonzalez – are all 27 years old or younger and that doesn’t include 26-year-old stud Ubaldo Jimenez, who is absolutely filthy when he’s on. Throw in key veterans like Todd Helton (a perennial .300 hitter) and Jeff Francis (who could win 15-plus games filling in for the departed Jason Marquis), and Colorado has the tools to make a deep run. The question is whether or not starters Francis and Jorge De La Rosa will keep their ERAs below 5.00 and the young offensive players can move forward in their development and not backwards. But outside of the ultra-annoying broadcast team, I love the Rockies from top to bottom this year and believe they can do some damage in 2010.

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