Category: College Basketball (Page 109 of 153)

Small Packages– Big Players

Two players to watch in the NCAA Tournament are Adam Emnecker of Drake and Jeremiah Dominguez of Portland State. Both point guards led their teams into the Big Dance and were named MVP of their respective conferences. After watching Emnecker all year and Dominguez last night I fell in love with both players ability to win games without scoring points.

They are prototypical point guards who set up their teammates for easy baskets. While the major media people only watch BCS level leagues and pump up those players, I will give you a heads up. Find out when Drake and Portland State play in the NCAA tournament and tune them in. You will be treated to FUNdamental basketball at it’s best.

How about the job that Scott Sutton has done at Oral Roberts. After bowing out to UMKC in the first round of the conference tournament 2 straight years he has went on a run that has seen the Golden Eagles win 3 straight Summit League Championships and finish runner-up in the other year (lost at the buzzer). A great run this year considering he lost his two best players (and two of the best to ever play at ORU– Caleb Green and Ken Tutt).

Predictions!!

The following is my prediction for the conference tourney winners: (If you get more right than me–see me in San Antonio for an adult beverage on me)

Pac-10: Washington State
Big 10: Purdue
Big 12: Kansas
SEC: Florida
Big East: Georgetown
MAC: Ohio U.
Atlantic 10: Temple
ACC: Duke

Conference Tourneys and My Thoughts

This week is championship week. For some leagues like the Summit, you need to win three in a row to make the dance (Congratulations to Oral Roberts!!). It doesn’t matter what you did during the regular season. Other leagues like the Big 12 and Pac 10 and ACC are playing for seeds.

I have a suggestion to make it more interesting. Let’s take the regular season winner from each conference and they are automatically in and then let’s have the conference tournament winner from each of the top 17 conferences (minus the regular season winner who doesn’t play in the conference tourney) get bids. That will give you 48 teams and it will put more emphasis on the top conference tournaments. Also, it will make the regular season important from top to bottom for each team in each league.

Congratulations to North Carolina for winning the regular season ACC. However, they are not the ACC Champions unless they win the tournament. That is a fact. Look it up.

Beasley Gets Robbed

Tyler Hansborough was named the Player of the Year by Sporting News (no wonder they are going out of business.). Are you kidding me? Michael Beasley had better numbers (rebounding, scoring, shooting percentage) and they give it to Hansborough. Why? Because his team won the ACC. Please!! Take him off North Carolina and they are still in the tourney and have a great year. Take Beasley off Kansas State and they are lucky to be above .500. Come on, you can’t give him the award when he has better players around him and comes from a name school.. This is a total disservice to the future number one pick in this years NBA Draft.

UNC gets revenge, wins ACC title

Who says that the college basketball regular season doesn’t matter? (BCS apologist Kirk Herbstreit, that’s who.)

It sure mattered yesterday when the #1 Tar Heels went into Durham and upended the #5 Blue Devils, 76-68. Duke led, 68-66, with three minutes to play, but North Carolina went on a 10-0 run to close the game and seal the win.

It’s always interesting to see how each team deals with the emotion of these matchups. Earlier this season, in Chapel Hill, the Tar Heels seemed anxious and overexcited while Duke, playing on the road, was calm, cool and collected. Last night, the roles were reversed. Duke got off to a bad start and didn’t get settled until the second half.

It was senior night for DeMarcus Nelson, and it felt like he was forcing things all game. He shot just 3-12 from the field. Gerald Henderson also went 3-12 and came up small in the final minutes, blowing a layup that would have put Duke up by four. He had another missed shot and a turnover during UNC’s run. Lastly, freshman Kyle Singler rounded out the bad shooting with a 3-10 effort. The only Duke players to really play well were Jon Scheyer and Greg Paulus.

Danny Green led North Carolina with 18 points, while Tyler Hansbrough and Wayne Ellington each chipped in with 16. Hansbrough also had 15 rebounds.

In recent years, North Carolina’s problem has been mental toughness down the stretch, but they showed it last night in a difficult environment. Getting Ty Lawson back certainly helps, but he isn’t practicing much so that might come back to bite them in the tournament.

UNC has a virtual lock on a #1 seed, and will probably get to play in Charlotte and Raleigh, making them a big favorite to reach the Final Four. Duke needs to win the ACC tournament and hope some of the other top teams lose in order to have a shot at a #1 seed in another region.

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