Tag: 2009-10 College Basketball (Page 6 of 19)

Five players that have made a name for themselves during March Madness

Most of the players on this list were stars during the regular season, but for one reason or another, they didn’t capture national attention until making serious noise in the NCAA Tournament.

1. Omar Samhan, St. Mary’s
Hands down the most quotable player in this year’s tourney, Samhan has led the Gaels on an unlikely Sweet 16 run. But St. Mary’s deserved to get there — the Gaels are better than Richmond and they proved on Saturday that they were better than a slumping Villanova team. The 6’11” Samhan was the key in both games. He posted 29-12 against Richmond and followed that up with 32-7 against Villanova. Moreover, he has been extremely efficient, hitting 75% from the field. St. Mary’s has the tools to beat Baylor, but the Bears have size and athleticism inside to give Samhan trouble.

2. Ali Farokhmanesh, Northern Iowa
Farokhmanesh is the one player on this list that didn’t average double-digits in scoring during the regular season. But he hit THE biggest shot of the tournament thus far when he drilled a three to give the Panthers a four-point lead in their upset of #1-seed Kansas. The shot was big, but his balls were even bigger. Before nailing the game-sealer, Farokhmanesh had missed seven straight shots in the second half and he launched the three early in the shot clock when UNI was nursing a one-point lead. After averaging just 5.6 points in his previous five games (on 6-29 shooting from deep, no less), the senior guard now has 33 points in two tournament games and has nailed 9-19 shots from long range. Here’s another look at his bracket-busting shot:

Even a certain despicable historical figure has felt the impact of that shot.

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Maybe CBS should give up March Madness

It seems that March Madness has passed CBS by. Its contract runs out in 2013, and it’s time for another network to get a crack at the event.

While the coverage of the actual games has been up to par, the network’s indecision and lethargy in terms of switching from game to game has been very prominent this year. It has happened throughout the tournament, but the most recent dereliction in duty centered around the Duke/Cal game. Living in Southern California, I knew we were going to get most of the Cal game — and as a Duke fan, I had no problem with it — but the Blue Devils were up double digits for most of the second half and CBS stuck with the game for far too long.

Pitt/Xavier and Purdue/A&M were both tighter contests and were coming down to the wire. Finally, with under a minute to play, the network switched to the Pitt/Xavier game, but then inexplicably switched back once Xavier went up by six — with 0:25 on the clock — so we missed Gilbert Brown’s three that cut the lead in half. Duke was up 17 points at the time, and I’d wager that even the most die-hard Cal fan had already seen enough. We would have missed most of the Purdue/A&M finish as well, but luckily that game went into overtime so we were able to see an extra five minutes of the great knock-down, drag-out brawl that it was.

This wouldn’t matter as much if CBS’ online programming — March Madness On Demand — worked as advertised. I have a pretty up to date computer, and the MMOD feeds hang with regularity. When I restart the window, I end up getting video that’s 15 or 20 minutes old. At one point, I just gave up and watched whatever the network decided to broadcast — which is how I ended up in the middle of that Duke/Cal debacle. And it’s not like the technology doesn’t exist. NBA League Pass Broadband isn’t perfect, but I can watch three games at once without anything hanging, plus the picture is better, so its engine would be a vast improvement over whatever system CBS is using.

Then there’s CBS’ sister network, CBS-College Sports, which was inexplicably covering women’s college bowling at one point when there were other March Madness games to broadcast. Instead, CBS-CS should be used to show four games at once (via split-screen, like DirecTV’s NFL Game Mix Channel), so that those of us with bigger televisions could enjoy all the tournament action at once. Instead, we have three or four guys whom I’ve never seen before, sitting around what looks like sports desk at a small college A/V department previewing upcoming games, or worse, discussing ongoing games that can’t be watched, or even worse, women’s college bowling.

Wouldn’t March Madness be a perfect fit for ABC/ESPN? The Worldwide Leader already has an established foothold in college basketball, and they do far more to cover the sport throughout the week than CBS can do on the weekends (once football season is over, of course). The marquee game (i.e. national feed) could be broadcast on ABC, with ESPN, ESPN2 and ESPNU (which are all available in my market in HD) could broadcast the other 2-3 games that are being played at the same time. Local markets could still get their local game, though it may mean that one of the other games would be unavailable on the ESPN channels. (I don’t think ESPN has the ability to broadcast different games in different parts of the country.) Anyway, who cares? Viewers would have their choice of watching 3-4 games, presumably in HD. ESPN could even use ESPNews to broadcast the aforementioned Game Mix Channel. Everyone wins.

Like most of the programming on CBS, the network is simply skewing older. The days when viewers would quietly swallow whatever the networks decided to broadcast are long gone. Younger audiences want it all — better quality picture and more choice — and CBS isn’t keeping up with the times.

It’s time to pass the ball.


Photo from fOTOGLIF

Omar Samhan discusses St. Mary’s run

St. Mary’s star center is very quotable. Here’s a sample:

On how he ended up at Saint Mary’s …

“I was a McDonald’s All-American coming out … I was waiting for you to laugh, and you didn’t.”

On being matched against Baylor’s Ekpe Udoh …

“He can jump, and I can’t. He’s fast, and I’m not. He’s strong, and I’m not. Although I’ll have trouble guarding him, he’ll have trouble guarding me.”

And the quotes just keep on coming

Teams that could take Evan Turner over John Wall

For most of the collegiate season, it looked like John Wall was the only player deserving of the #1 pick — like a franchise would be crazy not to take him if it won the lottery. But as Evan Turner has come on — 20-9-6 with 52% shooting — and is pushing Wall for the Naismith award, it has become a reasonable possibility that a team that already has a good point guard might pass on Wall and take Turner (who projects to play off guard or small forward in the NBA) instead.

David Thorpe lists the Timberwolves (Jonny Flynn, Ricky Rubio), Warriors (Monta Elllis, Stephen Curry), Kings (Tyreke Evans), Sixers (Jrue Holiday), Jazz (Deron Williams) and the Bulls (Derrick Rose) as teams with lottery picks that could potentially go with Turner over Wall.

Wall is two years younger and doesn’t have Turner’s injury history. (Turner broke his back earlier in the season. Yeah. Broke his back.) The two shoot about the same from three-point range and are both good playmakers. To me, they both resemble Dwyane Wade, though Turner is longer and Wall is more athletic (of the two).

This is no indictment of Wall. Turner has played himself into this position with a brilliant season. Wall is two years younger so he has more upside, but they both project to be great NBA players, so if a franchise is already sitting on a very good point guard, it makes some sense to go with Turner.

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