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Spring Travel Tournament Preview

by - Published March 31, 2005 in Columns



Spring travel tournaments are on deck

by Phil Kasiecki

Nowadays, there is no off-season as regards the sport of college basketball. Not only is there plenty of news even once the games have ended, but traveling team basketball at the high school level becomes a focus as well as kids work their way towards playing at the college level. It peaks in the hectic month of July, but it gets going before that. Most weekends have multiple tournaments in various locations.

The traveling team tournaments have already started, and they continue this weekend before they get going in full force. The Playaz Spring Fling often marks the unofficial start of it, as many of the top traveling teams in the northeast corridor head to northern New Jersey for one of the few tournaments where shoe company allegiances don’t rule. Teams sponsored by all three major shoe companies are present, and that’s one reason why the competition is always excellent. It is always held the weekend of the Final Four and provides a good break in the action from the exciting college game.

A weekend later, the Boo Williams Camp takes place in the Hampton Roads area of Virginia, while Providence is home to one of the Hoop Group’s Jam Fest tournaments. Boo Williams annually has many solid teams from all over the country, making it one of the best early spring tournaments, while the Providence Jam Fest features teams mostly from New England.

The following weekend, April 15-17, features tournaments that are certified for college coaches, and they’re sure to be in full force since there won’t be many of them until July. The Las Vegas Spring Showcase is one of Hal Pastner’s many events that are always top-notch, while across the country, the nation’s capital is home to Charlie Weber’s Capitol Invitational. Both promise to be excellent tournaments with no shortage of future Division I players. In addition, on April 16, some current seniors play their final game as high school players in the Jordan Classic, which moves to Madison Square Garden in New York this year.

The weekend of April 22-24, the same two are at it again. This time, it’s Pastner’s Houston Kingwood Classic that takes center stage, fresh off an amazing turnout last year. We may never see a tournament field quite like it again, as it featured numerous national power traveling teams and came down to the Georgia Stars and Spiece Indy Heat for the championship. Another very strong field is expected this year, with many of the same teams. Meanwhile, Charlie Weber is running another tournament in the nation’s capital, the D.C. Hoop Fest. Both are certified for college coaches to attend, so that will be a busy weekend for many staffs.

Two good Midwest tournaments close out the month of April, the Howard Pulley/Sabes Invitational in Minneapolis and the Spiece Run ‘N Slam in Ft. Wayne, Indiana. They lead us into a quieter month of May that is dead to college coaches, but still has good tournaments.

Notable tournaments in May include the Five Star Invitational, held in New London, Conn., on May 15 & 16, the St. Louis Eagles Invitational the following weekend, and three Memorial Day weekend tournaments. The Bob Gibbons Tournament of Champions headlines that weekend, held from May 27-29 in the Triangle area of North Carolina and with games at all three big schools and other sites. New Orleans is once again home to the Nike Memorial Day Classic, held May 28-30, and Charlie Weber debuts his adidas Memorial Day Tournament in College Park, Maryland from May 27-29.

The month of June is also quiet, but it still features major events such as Rumble in the Bronx, held June 10-12 at Fordham University; USA Basketball Youth Development Festival, which not only takes place earlier this year (June 8-11) but also moves from Colorado Springs to Seattle; Nike Hoop Jamboree, held from June 15-18 in St. Louis; and the NBPA Top 100 Camp, held June 20-26 in Richmond. For a little break in the action, the month of June also features schools participating in the AND1 High School Basketball Championship, with eight regional tournaments and a final weekend tournament with regional winners in Philadelphia.

Hoopville will provide coverage of some of the aforementioned major events. Stay tuned as we tell you more about some players that will be in Division I gyms near you in the future.

     

Morning Dish

by - Published March 27, 2005 in Conference Notes




The Morning Dish – Sunday, March 27th

Cardinals Outlast Mountaineers, First In: For most of a half, it looked like West Virginia would keep rolling. The Mountaineers made 10-of-14 three-pointers in the first half, including some deep shots, and led 38-18 at one point before Louisville cut into the lead with a late 9-2 run to go to the locker room down 40-27. The Cardinals (33-4) made a number of little charges in the second half, but the hot-shooting Mountaineers (24-11) often had answers, as they shot 18-of-26 from behind the three-point line. Louisville finally tied it on a layup by Larry O’Bannon, the Albuquerque region’s most valuable player, with 34 seconds left. In the extra session, the Cardinals put it away with an 8-0 run that turned a one-point game into a 92-83 lead with 40 seconds left. O’Bannon led the way with 24 points and Taquan Dean added 23 for the Cardinals. Kevin Pittsnogle led West Virginia with 25 points, making 6-of-9 three-pointers, and Patrick Beilein added 13 points.

Illini Come Back: As if Louisville’s rally wasn’t enough, Illinois decided to arguably one-up them. Trailing by 15 with 4:02 left in the game, the Illini went on a 20-5 run that ended with the last eight points of regulation to send the game into overtime. Then in the extra session, they scored seven unanswered points and held off Arizona for a 90-89 win to advance to the Final Four for the first time since 1989. An 18-6 spurt by the Wildcats (30-7) opened the lead up to 75-60, and had them looking poised to head to St. Louis, but they never made a field goal in regulation after the 6:03 mark. Channing Frye ended his college career with a stellar 24-point, 12-rebound effort on 11-14 shooting, and Hassan Adams added 21 points and eight rebounds. Deron Williams led the Illini (36-1) with 22 points and 10 rebounds, and Luther Head added 20 as both spearheaded the comeback.

Terrapins Off to New York: Nik Caner-Medley scored eight of his 20 points in the final minutes to lead Maryland to an 85-73 win over TCU in College Park. With the win, the Terrapins (19-12) are in the NIT semifinals for the first time since 1972, earning a date with South Carolina Tuesday night. Chris McCray helped in a 16-5 surge to end the game by making a key basket and six free throws in the final minute, finishing with 18 points. Corey Santee had a game-high 21 points to lead TCU (21-14), while Nile Murry added 20.

Theus Next in Line at New Mexico State: New Mexico State has hired Louisville assistant coach Reggie Theus and has scheduled a news conference on Monday to announce it, according to the Associated Press. Theus, who spent 13 years in the NBA, has been an assistant at Louisville during the past two seasons and has agreed in principle to take the job. The Aggies went 6-24 this season under interim coach Tony Stubblefield.

Sutton Will Return: Oklahoma State head coach Eddie Sutton said after Thursday night’s game that he will return next season, despite talk on the telecast that he was in his farewell run. The Cowboys, whose season ended Thrusday night with a 79-78 loss to Arizona in Chicago, lose six seniors and will be very inexperienced next season, a prime reason Sutton will stick around while his son, Sean, remains the head coach-designate.

Pearl a Possibility at Tennessee: Wisconsin-Milwaukee head coach Bruce Pearl could be a candidate for the opening at Tennessee, as ESPN.com reported that he was expected to talk with an official from the school either Friday or Saturday while in Chicago. He doesn’t have a meeting scheduled with the school, which has talked to three other head coachs, including Charlotte’s Bobby Lutz, UAB’s Mike Anderson and Creighton’s Dana Altman. The Volunteers are hoping to name a new head coach early next week.

Who Takes Over at Virginia?: There is new speculation that Virginia may eye Boston College head coach Al Skinner in their search for the next head coach. They have not called Skinner, and athletic director Gene DeFilippo isn’t worried because the move would be lateral (the Eagles join the ACC next season) and he just signed a six-year deal last year. Notre Dame head coach Mike Brey is apparently not a candidate at this point.

Grier a Candidate for Loyola Marymount: A newspaper reported Friday that Gonzaga assistant coach Bill Grier will interview for the head coaching position at Loyola Marymount Monday. Grier has an agreement to become Gonzaga’s next head coach if Mark Few were to leave and has said that he is very interested in looking at the Loyola Marymount job. The school has already interviewed four candidates and plans to interview three others, hoping to have a new coach named before the Final Four next weekend.

Lafayette May Add Scholarships: Lafayette’s athletic support group will send a recommendation to the Board of Trustees that may lead to the school becoming the sixth in the Patriot League to offer athletic scholarships. The recommendation will be accompanied by results of a survey conducted during the past few months where more than two-thirds of those who responded were in favor of awarding scholarships. There is a feeling that the school needs them to keep pace with the other five schools that offer them in the league, as the men’s team is below .500 since winning consecutive league tournament titles in 1999 and 2000.

Tonight’s Menu

• No. 1 North Carolina takes on No. 6 Wisconsin in the Syracuse regional final.

• The Austin regional final pits No. 2 Kentucky against No. 5 Michigan State.

Michigan State’s Incentive

by - Published March 25, 2005 in Columns




Spartans Have Plenty to Play For

by Phil Kasiecki

When your team has to play one of the Cinderella stories of the tournament, things aren’t easy. Any fans who are neutral will swing to the underdog’s side, and it’s easy for people to forget that your team has some incentive to win. Tom Izzo already knew what it was like, and was reminded of it this weekend.

Michigan State’s 72-61 win over Vermont on Sunday was not the first time Izzo has coached a team to a win over a team poised for a surprise run. In 2001, they beat Gonzaga in the second round en route to their third straight Final Four, and they beat Princeton in the second round in 1998. While Izzo’s reputation as a big-game coach came mostly from the team’s three straight Final Four appearances from 1999-2001, peaking with the national championship in 2000, that reputation should only grow with Sunday’s win.

One might figure that the Spartans didn’t have as much to play for as Vermont. After all, this school has a national title just a few years ago, while Vermont never won an NCAA Tournament game until Friday night. Izzo said that he would have been pulling for Vermont if he wasn’t playing them. But these Spartans aren’t the ones who won that title; no players on this team were part of the championship team, and only Tim Bograkos was part of the Final Four team in 2001.

So we’ve established that this current group of players has something to play for besides the natural desire to win. All came in after the national championship, and the current seniors came in after the last of the three straight Final Four teams, so they would want to establish that legacy of their own. Besides that, this team has been a little non-descript during the season and has flown under the radar; they haven’t been world-beaters and they haven’t been a clear top ten team in the polls week in and week out. They’ve just quietly gone about their business and had a nice season, but Izzo always wants more. Izzo said that before Sunday’s game, he would remind his players of that.

“I’m going to make sure they keep in mind what we’re playing for, and that’s to get some pride back, to get the standards of the program back to a level that these seniors will remember for a long, long time,” he said.

This group of seniors came with high expectations, especially Kelvin Torbert. He was a McDonald’s All-American and ranked by most as perhaps the top shooting guard in his class. Torbert can’t be called a bust just because he hasn’t been an All-American, but certainly he hasn’t played to the potential many figured he had. Still, he’s closing out a solid career, having been the team’s top defender for four years and steadily improving all the time.

The seniors came in after the three consecutive Final Four appearances, so they certainly had a goal to shoot for. Two years ago, they appeared on the verge of becoming a consistent Final Four contender again when they reached the Elite Eight with a relatively young group. Personnel defections hit them hard, and playing arguably the toughest non-conference schedule also contributed to the team barely making the NCAA Tournament last year and losing in the first round. Now, as Izzo said, they’re trying to get back to a higher level.

Said senior Alan Anderson: “We’re just playing for memories. We don’t want our season to end.”

During the three consecutive Final Four runs, the team’s identity had a lot to do with toughness inside. Those teams had a lot of bodies up front, and the Spartans would just pound opponents into submission and own the glass. The last two years, theirs has been a guard-heavy team, one that can get out and run with just about anyone, but with questions at the point guard spot. Izzo isn’t sure about this team’s identity, though he did say last weekend that he feels that this “may be the best fast break team I’ve had, especially after made baskets.”

At the center of the point guard struggles has been Chris Hill. The senior looked primed to take on that role last season after a solid summer showing in the Pan Am Games, but had his struggles and they missed his shooting when he had the ball in his hands often. He’s putting the cap on an excellent career, shooting the ball as well as anyone, making the right passes, and also continuing to be a success in the classroom as an Academic All-American. Of late, freshman Drew Neitzel appears to have solved that problem, but he is still a freshman playing deep in the NCAA Tournament.

The Spartans have a tough matchup with Duke on Friday night. Their depth could be an asset, especially if they can also get Duke’s frontcourt players in foul trouble. They played Duke respectfully during the regular season, losing 81-74 in Durham, so there’s no question they won’t be overmatched. It will be time for Izzo’s big-game coaching ability to show up again.

“I just think this team is capable of big things,” Izzo said. “I think we have the athletes, I think if we get Paul (Davis) going – the rebounding he did today was good, he still kicked the ball out too much for me, I wish he’d take it at them a little more – I think this team is hungry enough.

“My job now is to make sure they realize there’s more around the corner, and see if we can get there.”

The Spartans will try to get there on Friday, and we’ll see if Izzo gets his players to realize what’s there.

     

Connecticut’s Season of Adversity

by - Published March 24, 2005 in Columns




A trying season ends

by Phil Kasiecki

WORCESTER, Mass. – Defending champions are never supposed to have it easy the next season. It’s tough to repeat for a lot of reasons, but for the Connecticut Huskies, the 2004-05 season was perhaps an extreme case of this.

With Sunday’s 65-62 loss, a season that was trying at times on the young Huskies came to an end. No one can say that this team didn’t accomplish anything, especially in light of what they had to go through.

The Huskies still had plenty of talent and some experience, though they lost a lot of the latter with Emeka Okafor and Ben Gordon going to the NBA with a season of eligibility left. Add in the graduation of four-year starting point guard Taliek Brown – easily a forgotten man since two first team All-Americans left as well – and this team took a real hit. Sure, the cupboard was hardly bare – plenty of coaches would love to have players like Marcus Williams, Rashad Anderson, Rudy Gay, Charlie Villanueva and Josh Boone – but any way you look at it, the Huskies took a big hit.

The talent and experience base wouldn’t be the only places where this team would take hits. The Huskies went through quite a season of adversity off the court, and for a couple of players, basketball became very secondary concerns. It started before the season, when assistant coach Clyde Vaughan resigned in late August after being arrested for soliciting a prostitute. Vaughan had recruited many of the current players, so they were losing someone they had a rapport with.

Things didn’t end there. In October, freshman A.J. Price nearly died from a brain hemorrhage. He spent two weeks in Hartford Hospital, with players and coaches frequently visiting him. Head coach Jim Calhoun recalls the impact this had on a few of his players when they saw the condition Price was in.

“We took the older kids in to see A.J. with a tube down his throat – three of the kids walked out of the room,” Calhoun recalls.

In early January, a cerebral angiogram revealed that Price has a vascular abnormality known as Arteriovenous Malformation (AVM) – a mass of abnormal blood vessels which grow in the brain. Price is expected to make a full recovery and live a normal life, a recovery which can take several months. That remains his top priority.

From a basketball standpoint, it’s debatable how much Price’s absence hurt the team. Antonio Kellogg, not a natural point guard, filled in at the position and was often ineffective before being suspended for the NCAA Tournament. It meant that they were going to live and die by the play of sophomore Marcus Williams, and he responded with a tremendous season. Williams not only led the nation in assists, but he showed terrific leadership ability. He certainly wasn’t the reason they lost to North Carolina State on Sunday to end their season.

As if that wasn’t enough, Anderson was struggling to shoot the ball for a while. Prior to their loss against Pittsburgh on January 22, Anderson was shooting just 29 percent on three-pointers. That game started a hot streak for the junior guard, as he shot nearly 53 percent from the field and over 47 percent on three-pointers in the next six games. Just when he was starting to come alive, he suffered a skin abscess in the inner thigh of his right leg.

The injury seemed innocent enough, but complications would arise before long. At one point, Anderson was having breathing difficulties, saying later that he was probably about 20 minutes away from tubing because his lungs filled with fluid. The doctors still don’t know what caused the complications. One thing is for sure: the junior guard is happy to be alive, let alone playing basketball.

“You just have to put things in perspective,” said Anderson. “It could have been any one of my teammates. There was a point where they didn’t think I’d make it. My parents were in and out of the room; my mom had stepped out of the room, my father had to leave the room temporarily sometimes because he couldn’t stand to see me like that.”

If what happened to Price and Anderson hasn’t taught the young men – and they are young, as the team has just two seniors – about life, nothing will. Calhoun said the staff tried everything to help them along. The players were there to support their teammates, and to a man they say that this helped them get closer.

“It’s brought us close together. Anytime you go through life-changing events, it really makes you closer as a team,” said Anderson, who added that he and Price have talked a lot about what they went through.

The team chemistry will certainly help next season if everyone is back. Villanueva is expected to declare for the NBA Draft, which has long thought to be a foregone conclusion since he declared out of high school. But everyone else is expected back, and with only little-used Sami Ameziane and Jason Baisch graduating and at least three good recruits coming in, expectations will be very high in Storrs next fall. There will also be the knowledge that these players battled through everything that was thrown at them, already making them a battle-tested crew.

     

Austin Second Round Recap

by - Published March 21, 2005 in Conference Notes




Second Round Recap – Austin Region

by Phil Kasiecki

WORCESTER, Mass. – Michigan State scored the last eight points of the first half to take the lead for good en route to a 72-61 win over Vermont, advancing to the Sweet 16 for the sixth time in the last eight years.

The Spartans took full advantage of their depth and athleticism, constantly changing matchups on Vermont stars Taylor Coppenrath and T.J. Sorrentine and getting fast break points on several occasions. The two combined for 42 points, but shot a combined 14-for-26 from the field. Michigan State (24-6) had a 16-2 edge in fast break points.

Sorrentine led Vermont (25-7) with a game-high 26 points, surpassing 2,000 points for his career in his final game.

The first half of the game was close throughout, as neither team led by more than seven points and the lead changed hands eight times. Sorrentine had 16 points in the opening frame, but the 8-0 run to the end the half by the Spartans gave them a 35-28 halftime lead.

In the second half, the Catamounts stayed within striking distance for the first few minutes before the Spartans used a 9-2 run to extend the lead to 50-36. After Vermont got within seven near the ten-minute mark, they got no closer as the Spartans eventually built the lead back up to 14.

Maurice Ager led four Spartans in double figures with 19 points. Kelvin Torbert added 14 points, Alan Anderson had 11 and Paul Davis had 11 points and a career-high 14 rebounds.

UCF Moves Forward

by - Published March 21, 2005 in Columns




It’s a good time to move ahead

by Phil Kasiecki

WORCESTER, Mass. – Teams seeded 15th in a particular region aren’t necessarily expected to have close games against the No. 2 seeds. Upsets in that matchup have only happened four times, so the casual observer isn’t figuring to even see a close game most of the time.

Against that backdrop, UCF definitely acquitted themselves well and served notice that the program is very much on the rise. The Knights will enter Conference USA next season on the heels of back-to-back Atlantic Sun championships and the second-highest win total in consecutive years with 49 (one off the record of 50 from 1976-78). They have the right leader to get them there, as Kirk Speraw has led them to the only four NCAA Tournament appearances in the program’s history and has the second-longest tenure of their five head coaches.

Speraw just completed his 12th season as the head coach and has won 195 games. The program has clearly become one of the perennial powers of the Atlantic Sun, which means that the move up to Conference USA next season will not be entirely painful, though it is certainly a step up and there are always growing pains when stepping up in conferences. Each of the last two seasons, they lost by single digits to a team from the Big East, with Friday’s 77-71 loss to Connecticut showing what this team was capable of. It was certainly enough to draw praise from the opposing coach.

“I think Kirk does a terrific job with them to find his good players,” said Jim Calhoun. “They’re a well-coached basketball team that wouldn’t quit. They had all the reasons, score-wise, to quit, but there was no quit in Central Florida.”

Early on, Connecticut’s big front line abused the Knights. In the first half, both Charlie Villanueva and Rudy Gay torched them for 14 points on 6-7 shooting. It looked at times like the Huskies would run away with it, especially in the second half when they boosted their lead in the early minutes. When the more talented team gets a lead at a point in the game like that, talent often takes over and they pull away.

But the Knights mounted a furious comeback, sparked by the play of guys like Gary Johnson, who simply wouldn’t quit. Johnson is used to winning; in junior college, his team went 65-3 in two seasons. He finishes his college career with his teams winning 114 games and losing just 18, and he was the Atlantic Sun Tournament MVP this year. Johnson signed with the school two years ago because backcourt mate Kingsley Edwards, whom he knew in junior college.

“We both came from winning programs and we both know how to win, and we felt like we could share that with the rest of the guys,” said Johnson, who had a career-high 29 points in the loss. “I feel like we’ve been successful here.”

Losing their two starting guards will be tough, but Speraw has consistently replaced his top players, so there’s no reason to expect that trend won’t continue. He also has good building blocks like Josh Peppers, who made a big jump as a sophomore. The 6’6″ guard struggled with foul trouble against the Huskies and had a season-low three points, but is primed to become the cornerstone of this team the next two seasons. Peppers jumped from averaging under 12 minutes and four points per game as a freshman to a first team All-Atlantic Sun player this season. He led the team in scoring at 13.5 points per game and made 37 percent of his three-pointers.

Peppers got started right after the season, as he spent a lot of time working on his game. He went home to Memphis and played over the summer. Speraw likes that he’s a more consistent shooter, and certainly, the numbers reflect his consistency as his scoring numbers are similar in conference play and non-conference play. His percentages actually dropped off in conference play, but Speraw doesn’t see that trend continuing, and that’s the primary reason Peppers should continue to be one of their top players.

“He’s been a great listener, and he’s very easy to coach,” said Speraw. “Anything that we’ve told him that he needed to do, he’s tried his best to improve on. He didn’t care whether he was starting, not starting – he just wanted to be the best player, the best contributor to his team that he could be to help his team in any way. Because of that approach, he’s going to get better next year just as much as I think he improved over this last year.”

Other key building blocks are junior forwards Anthony Williams, who struggled in Friday’s loss, and Will Bakanowsky, who played well. While Williams simply couldn’t get a shot to drop – he had good looks but was just 1-11 from the field – Bakanowsky scored 15 points and grabbed seven rebounds, and finishes the season second on the team in three-point field goal percentage. Williams was the team’s leading rebounder and top frontcourt scorer. They will be two of five seniors on next season’s team, so they won’t be lacking for senior leadership.

The Knights have three players sitting out as transfers this season, all of whom will be sophomores. North Carolina State transfer Mike O’Donnell should inherit the point guard position, as he started seven games for the Wolfpack as a freshman. Carlton Christian (Marquette) and Dave Noel (UNC-Wilmington) will join Justin Rose in the backcourt, giving Speraw plenty of options. They are also very high on junior forward Marcus Johnson, who had his right arm in a sling after falling hard on it during Friday’s game.

The school also has a new arena under construction that will help as they move into Conference USA. In the fall of 2007, construction should be complete on a facility directly in front of UCF Arena, where they currently play. It will be a 10,000-seat arena, nearly doubling the capacity of UCF Arena.

Teams come to the NCAA Tournament to win, whether seeded first, eighth, 16th, or in UCF’s case, 15th. The Knights didn’t get a win on Friday, but they showed that the program is well on its way to even better times in the future.

     

Questions for Syracuse

by - Published March 21, 2005 in Columns




What does next year hold for Syracuse?

by Phil Kasiecki

WORCESTER, Mass. – This wasn’t how things were supposed to go for Syracuse.

The Orange had a veteran team that included key holdovers from their 2003 national championship team. To go with that, they have a very promising sophomore class, and despite some periods where the Orange were either non-descript or just plain struggling, they came into the NCAA Tournament poised to make another run. They had won the Big East Tournament and were improving in the rebounding department, a source of concern at times this season because the Orange had not lost a game when they outrebounded an opponent (until Friday night).

So now the Orange are out in the first round. The careers of starters Hakim Warrick, Josh Pace and Craig Forth are over. The talent will be there, as will experience, but what can we expect next season?

As long as head coach Jim Boeheim has some talent, the Orange will be contenders in the Big East and a force to be reckoned with nationally. The 2-3 zone will continue to stifle teams, and Boeheim knows how to recruit players who can fit in that scheme. But next season, they will enter with a few more questions than in some seasons, even with all that they will still have going for them.

What can we make of the sophomore class? Demetris Nichols, Terrence Roberts, Darryl Watkins and Louie McCroskey are plenty talented. All came to the school as highly-touted recruits, and they haven’t lost any of their talent. Each has certainly shown flashes of their potential in two years; Nichols showed some of it Friday night in the first half, when he came in and hit two three-pointers to bring life to a struggling offense in the early going. Together, they can comprise a solid core capable of winning a lot of games, but they need to develop consistency once more is needed from them next season.

What to make of Billy Edelin? His story is one of the real mysteries of college basketball. His career has been marked by controversy and personal issues, which Boeheim won’t discuss; Edelin did not travel to Worcester with the team. When he has been on the court, Edelin has been a good player; he was a key ingredient of the 2003 championship run.

The freshman class has some talent, but on this veteran team, they didn’t get many minutes and will still be somewhat unproven next year. Even more mysteriously, Dayshawn Wright did not travel with the team to Worcester and Josh Wright did not play in Friday’s game.

The first round exit was unexpected, but it doesn’t diminish another fine season for the Orange and Boeheim. They won a Big East championship along the way and were a force to be reckoned with. Next year should be more of the same, at the very least, as the talent is certainly there and a few key players have another year of experience. Whether or not it will develop to reach its full potential will be the open question.

     

Tom Brennan’s Retirement

by - Published March 21, 2005 in Columns




Brennan will be missed by college basketball

by Phil Kasiecki

WORCESTER, Mass. – He sure knew how to make an entrance, whether it was in Burlington at a regular season home game, or on the day before the NCAA Tournament got started. Famous for entering the floor before games at Patrick Gym with Van Morrison’s Jackie Wilson Said playing, he walked into the DCU Center on Thursday in the media section and was talking up a storm with many who were there, more than two hours before his team’s news conference was scheduled.

Now, he’s making an exit.

Call it what you want – the end of an era is one cliché that’s been used, and it certainly applies – but things will never be the same at the University of Vermont. In fact, the outgoing coach said as much over a year ago when reflecting on the team’s success in recent years, and he reiterated it more than once this weekend.

Tom Brennan’s days as head coach of Vermont have come to an end after Sunday’s 72-61 loss to Michigan State in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. Although he knew after last year’s America East Tournament championship that this was the time – he even hinted as much in the press conference – he announced his retirement in early November.

The story of Brennan’s tenure at Vermont may be one of the last of its kind. Brennan’s first four years were hardly the unqualified successes that his last four were, as his record was 27-85 – a record that would have many likely headed for the exit nowadays. While the Catamounts improved after that, they were still not contenders in the America East Conference in most years, something which would sooner or later mean the coach would be shown the door, especially in an era where winning games has become of paramount importance.

But Brennan never felt like he was on the hot seat. He always believed that the most important thing was to bring in quality young men and graduate them, and he clearly understood that a school at the mid-major level isn’t going to be a place where NBA prospects would come year in and year out. Against that backdrop, he has had a near-perfect graduation rate of his players, who have consistently been high achievers in the classroom.

He steadily won more games during the ’90s, where the team got more and more competitive. Still, they could never finish higher than third in the conference during that decade. Despite the lack of winning conference championships, Brennan enjoyed life as much as anyone, even saying that all of those years were enjoyable.

“That’s why I had the best job in America, because I never felt for one minute that there was any pressure for me to make a number, win a championship, whatever it might be,” Brennan reflects. “The charge was: bring good kids to us, who understand the values of this university, your values, and what we’re trying to achieve here, and that’s all we’re going to ask you to do. Obviously, if you can win it, all the better. As long as your kids keep graduating and are productive members of this community, then we’re fine with that.”

That set up the recent run, where the Catamounts went 89-36 the last four years. The kids are still of the same quality, but now they’re winning. Brennan was already a celebrity in the state – besides the state’s long-time love affair with this program, he is the popular co-host of the morning drive-time radio show “Corm and the Coach” – but this just elevated his status that much more. Players all knew he was a celebrity there, but to a man they admit that they didn’t realize the extent of it before they came to Vermont.

“I knew he had a radio show, knew he had been here for so long, but now it’s at another level,” said senior guard T.J. Sorrentine. “He’s so involved in the community, always trying to give back and always telling us, these people care about you so much, so you’ve got to give back to them, and that’s one thing he’s taught me.”

“I knew he was big around Vermont, but I didn’t know it was like this,” said freshman forward Josh Duell. “Everywhere he goes, everybody knows him, calls him ‘TB’, everywhere you go, somebody will say ‘hi’ to him, and it means so much to our program.”

He almost wasn’t around for part of this run of three straight conference championships. Three years ago, Matt Sheftic quit the team because his sister had a life-threatening illness. Brennan was almost ready to do the same thing, but felt he couldn’t leave at that point as it was in September. He remembers his conversation with Sheftic, who would later return and lead them to their first conference tournament title two years ago.

“When he left, he said to me, ‘I know you can’t understand this’, and I was looking him right in the eye and I’m thinking, ‘Son I understand it better than anybody, because I want to walk right out with you, that’s how I feel’,” Brennan recalls.

“Once I got back into that, I was really recharged, re-focused, and then it was like starting over again.”

Brennan has really defined Vermont basketball. His tenure is the second-longest in the school’s history, but the longest in the history of America East. He has recruited and coached many of the program’s all-time greats, like Eddie Benton, Kevin Roberson, Tony Orciari, Taylor Coppenrath and Sorrentine. Benton and Roberson are the only two Catamounts currently with their numbers retired; the former is the school’s all-time leading scorer, while the latter now has the conference Player of the Year award named after him.

Roberson was tragically killed in May of 1993, which brought back sad memories for Brennan. He had lost both of his parents in traffic accidents, and now he had lost a player and volunteer assistant he loved dearly – he called Roberson “the color of love, because he made such an impact in this community.” The funeral in Roberson’s hometown of Buffalo, as well as the memorial service held later at the university, moved him deeply.

“The same tears, the same heartfelt emotion, the same longing, saying we were going to miss this guy so much – it just jumped out at me how special he was and how lucky we were to coach him,” Brennan recalls.

His feelings toward Roberson are hardly an isolated case. He’s cared greatly for all of the young men he has coached, and one player after another reflects very positively on their time with him. Time and time again, he speaks fondly of what the young men mean to him as well, still showing the same self-deprecating humor he’s always been known for.

Growing up, the native of Philipsburg, N.J. didn’t envision having this for a career, or that Vermont would be the place. He always knew he would be happy in whatever he did, and not long after he got to Vermont, he knew this was the right place.

“After about the first 3 or 4 years, when we turned the corner a bit, like our 5th year when we had our first winning season, then I really did,” he reflected. “Then I thought, this is a wonderful place – they do it right, you get good kids here all the time, kids really care about going to school and what they become after basketball. So it really was the right fit for me.

“There’s no sense of entitlement here – nobody believes that you’ve got to win, you don’t lose your job if you don’t win enough – and I’ve been so blessed for all these years. And then to have the end, where you’re able to give it all back, to say, ‘this is for you, this is for all the people that hung in there and loved the school and loved the program’, it’s just a wonderful program.”

Only twice during his tenure did Brennan, whose first head coaching experience in Division I was at Yale, ever consider going elsewhere. In 1992, he considered the job at Canisius, and two years ago he very briefly considered the head coaching job at Georgia, his alma mater. He fit the profile for that school, which had off-court troubles and needed someone to clean it up. But he didn’t consider it long, saying that “cooler heads prevailed” in the end.

Brennan, who feels the college game is “amazingly healthy” nowadays, is well-respected by his peers for what he’s done, not only on the court but off the court as well. The fact that the winning of the last four years never went to his head is certainly part of it. He consistently spoke of where the program was in his early years during this time, clearly a man who understood that this doesn’t happen by magic.

“He’s the way I think college basketball, college athletics should be,” said Boston University head coach Dennis Wolff, whose tenure is longer than every coach in the conference except Brennan. “He’s a colorful guy, he’s a guy that tries to graduate his players, his kids play hard and they play right.”

“He is a guy who knows where he came from, is very appreciative of the opportunity and growth of the program with Jesse and also with the staff that’s been with him and the kids,” said New Hampshire head coach Phil Rowe. “It’s a special treat that the rest of us have ridden because he’s the kind of guy that, when we’re down, will take care of us.”

Through all of this, there’s one thing about Tom Brennan that has always been very clear: he’s a human being. He wears his heart on his sleeve and tells you what he feels. He was never one to be isolated from people – he would gladly talk with people courtside before the game, from the media to fans to other players and coaches. On the bench, he not only called the shots, but he was a cheerleader. In short, on game day, the Tom Brennan we all saw was the uncut version. While he won’t go down as one of college basketball’s coaching legends because of wins and losses, those who know the game won’t forget him. He’s a colorful man, honest and caring, and a guy the college game will miss – all of that being true even before he was everyone’s favorite interview in Worcester this weekend and his team became America’s Team with its upset of Syracuse on Friday night. We must be thankful that he had the chance to last 19 years, because it won’t be the same without him.

Classic Brennan Quotes

Tom Brennan has had plenty of great quotes in his time to keep us in stitches, but we’ve managed to collect a few of his better ones to give a little taste of what the man is like.

(February 8, 2004) “I was 3-24, I was 5-21; there was never any thought of winning 20 games or going to the NCAA Tournament – that was never in the equation. And then these guys came here, and I’m the bad guy, because they’ve never lost; the only loser in the group is me, I’m the only guy that’s lost. They’ve never lost. So they look at me like I’m nuts when I say they can beat us.”

(after the America East title game in 2004) “I’ve been here for 18 years, and these guys have just put me on the magic carpet ride and said, ‘TB, hold on, don’t get in the way, and we’ll make it a lot of fun for you’, and that’s exactly what they’ve done.”

(January 16, 2005) “I wanted to leave before I fell in love with these guys, but it’s too late. I fell in love with them already, so now I’m just going to have to leave with a broken heart, I guess.”

(on what Martin Klimes had for breakfast before the 2005 America East title game) “I think he had some Guinness, because he was brilliant!”

(on what he’ll miss) “I won’t miss the recruiting, I won’t miss walking into somebody’s house and having his old man say, ‘are you lucky we’re talking to you’, and I want to say, ‘we got the single-greatest hidden treasure in the world up at Vermont, if your kid is lucky enough to be part of that, you should throw rose petals at my feet’.”

(March 17, 2005) “Ben & Jerry? I’ve never seen them at a game. I wouldn’t know Ben from Jerry, to tell you the truth. It ain’t like we’re boys and we hang out in the green room after the game’s over.”

“We’re a little state, we don’t have stars. Our Governor doesn’t have a mansion, he doesn’t have a limo; he can’t steal, it’s too small.”

“I don’t know if I can be 10-15 again, I don’t know what it would do to me. And you know what? I never have to find out!”

“The first year really didn’t matter, because we got way more publicity not getting there than we would have had we gotten there. We weren’t going to beat Arizona if we played them ten times, so the idea was that we got famous without having to do anything. This year, it was a beautiful day, we got on the bus, and we drove down the prettiest stretch of highway in the country down route 89.”

“Everybody says, this guy doesn’t have an enemy in coaching. That’s nonsense, once you get good, you’ve got enemies. I didn’t have an enemy when we stunk. I was just funny when we stunk; now that we’re good, I’m a jerk.”

(after beating Syracuse on March 18, 2005) “I just hope I don’t stay up so long that I get back here on Sunday.”

“This will never, ever be duplicated, which is why I know that I have to (retire). Once they chant, ‘Thank you, Brennan’, that means you’re supposed to go, that means they don’t want you to come back.”

(March 19, 2005) “I’m proud to coach in a state that ain’t got billboards, that’s a good thing to me.”

(on coming home on a private plane from the 2003 NCAA Tournament) “I remember this big round chair, and Germain (Mopa Njila) was sitting in it, studying. I just couldn’t believe it. I said, ‘you’re supposed to have a cocktail waitress on your lap there, not a chemistry book, for God’s sake!’ He’s just so intent and so thankful for what he’s got, and he appreciates it every day.”

“By the way, has anybody told you that you like just like Billy Bob Thornton? (reporter asks if that’s a compliment) That’s absolutely a compliment. Did you see the movie with Halle Berry?”

     

Austin First Round Recap

by - Published March 20, 2005 in Conference Notes




First Round Recap – Austin Region

by Phil Kasiecki

WORCESTER, Mass. – Alan Anderson and Paul Davis combined to make four free throws in the final 43 seconds to help Michigan State to an 89-81 win over Old Dominion in first round action.

The final game of the day in Worcester was much like the other three in being a close game, as the largest lead either team had was eight points. Old Dominion led for most of the first 35 minutes of the game, and they temporarily regained it on a layup by Brandon Johnson with 9:48 left and again on a jumper by Isaiah Hunter with 9:04 to play.

The Spartans (23-6) took the lead for good on a layup by Kelvin Torbert with 8:21 left. The Monarchs got the lead down to one on two occasions, but the Spartans had answers every time.

Michigan State shot just under 57 percent from the field and held the Monarchs (28-6) below 43 percent. The Spartans’ big edge was on the fast break, where they had a 20-4 edge.

Anderson led five Spartans in double figures with 15 points, while Davis added 14 and Shannon Brown, Maurice Ager and Torbert each had 13. Alex Loughton led Old Dominion with 22 points, 11 rebounds and six assists.

Morning Dish

by - Published March 20, 2005 in Conference Notes




The Morning Dish – Sunday, March 20th

Texas Tech Advances: In the first game of the day, Ronald Ross scored 24 points, including the go-ahead three-pointer with 1:06 to play and two clinching free throws with 7.5 seconds left to lead Texas Tech to a 71-69 win over Gonzaga. Jarrius Jackson added 18 points to support Ross as the Red Raiders (22-10) advanced to the Sweet 16 for the first time since they became a member of the Big 12. Adam Morrison led Gonzaga (26-5) with 25 points and nine rebounds. For complete tournament coverage, including more detailed game recaps, visit Hoopville 2005 Tournament Central .

Huskies Coast to Sweet 16: Washington made it look easy in the second half, shooting 61 percent to break the game open en route to a 97-79 win over Pacific. Nate Robinson scored 18 of his 23 points in the second half to lead the Huskies (29-5), leading their up-tempo game as they never trailed. Pacific (27-4) was led by Guillaume Yango’s 17 points and 10 rebounds.

Panthers Keep Rolling: Wisconsin-Milwaukee forced 22 turnovers and took full advantage of them in an 83-75 win over Boston College, advancing to the Sweet 16 for the first time in school history. In the first couple of minutes, it looked like it would be all Eagles as they scored the game’s first 11 points. But the Panthers (26-5) went on a 19-3 run to take the lead, which they held until an 8-0 run by the Eagles gave them a 31-30 lead with under five minutes left in the first half. The second half was back-and-forth, with the Panthers scoring the game’s last nine points for the win. Joah Tucker led the Panthers with 23 points. Boston College (25-5) was led by Craig Smith’s 25 points, and Jared Dudley added 22.

Illini Big Men Can Play, Too: Illinois got a career-high 23 points from James Augustine and 12 more from Jack Ingram en route to a 71-59 win over Nevada. As if the offensive boost from the frontcourt wasn’t enough, they also shut down Wolfpack star center Nick Fazekas, who scored just 11 points on 5-20 shooting. The Illini (34-1) have reached the Sweet 16 for fourth time in the last five seasons. Kevinn Pinkney led Nevada (25-7) with 21 points.

Utes End Sooners’ Run: Andrew Bogut did it all for Utah, scoring 10 points, grabbing 11 rebounds and handing out seven assists as the Utes advanced to the Sweet 16 with a 67-58 win over Oklahoma. Bogut’s support was solid as Justin Hawkins had 20 points and 14 rebounds, Marc Jackson had 17 points and Bryant Markson 16 for the Utes (29-5). Oklahoma (25-8) shot 32 percent from the field, getting 19 points and 15 rebounds from Taj Gray.

Wildcats Coast Into Sweet 16: Despite some struggles in the first half, Arizona managed to lead most of the way, then pulled away in the second half in their 85-63 win over UAB. In the second half, the Wildcats (29-6) committed just four turnovers, and they continued to shut down UAB as the Blazers shot just 32 percent for the game. Salim Stoudamire led Arizona with 28 points. UAB (22-11) was led by Donell Taylor’s 13 points and Demario Eddins added 12.

These Wildcats Are Also In: Kentucky rode its strong inside play to a 69-60 win over Cincinnati in just the sixth time the two nearby schools have played each other since 1948. A 34-12 advantage in points in the paint was the big difference for the Wildcats (27-5), who shot 48.1 percent from the field and had all five starters score in double figures, led by Kelenna Azubuike’s 19 points. Nick Williams led Cincinnati (25-8) with 16 points as the Bearcats shot below 33 percent from the field. The game was played in front of 40,331 fans, a one-session record for an NCAA subregional site.

Mountaineers Stun Demon Deacons: Mike Gansey scored 19 of his career-high 29 points in two overtime sessions to lead West Virginia to a 111-105 upset of Wake Forest. The game was certainly a war of attrition, as each team had three players foul out and three other players had four fouls when the game ended. Taron Downey, who led the Demon Deacons with a career-high 27 points, hit two clutch three-pointers that kept the Demon Deacons (27-6) in contention, including one that sent the game into the first overtime. Eric Williams had 23 points and 12 rebounds and Chris Paul added 22 points and nine assists before fouling out in overtime. Tyrone Sally helped Gansey with 21 points before fouling out, as five players scored in double figures for the Mountaineers (23-10).

Tigers Win Easily in NIT: Rodney Carney led five players in double figures with 17 points coming off the bench, leading Memphis to an easy 83-62 win over visiting Virginia Tech. Anthony Rice added 16 points for the Tigers (21-15), who made 10-of-22 three-pointers. Virginia Tech (16-14) was led by James Gordon’s 16 points.

Other NIT Winners: Also advancing in the NIT were Texas A&M (21-9), 75-72 winners at DePaul (20-11) behind 23 points from reserve Bobby Leach; St. Joseph’s (21-11), 55-50 winners over visiting Buffalo (23-10) behind 26 points from Pat Carroll; Davidson (23-8), which got 22 points from Brendan Winters to knock off host Southwest Missouri State (19-13) 82-71; and Wichita State (22-9), 84-81 winners over Western Kentucky (22-9) thanks to shooting over 57 percent from the field and making six free throws in the final 91 seconds.

Injured Huskies Should Play Sunday: Connecticut junior guard Denham Brown did not practice with the team on Saturday, but should be ready to play in Sunday’s second round game against North Carolina State. Brown has been bothered by a nagging knee injury, and head coach Jim Calhoun said in his news conference that not having Brown practice is strictly a precautionary move. Calhoun also said that sophomore point guard Marcus Williams, whose knee was injured Friday’s win over Central Florida, would go for about 50 percent of practice and will start tomorrow.

Knight Doesn’t Like Practice and Game Times: Even with his team continuing to surpass many expectations, Bob Knight still found something to gripe about in Friday’s news conference in Tucson. He was not happy with the practice schedules, which included some teams on Wednesday practicing after 8 PM, as well as the game schedule, which included his Red Raiders playing at 11 A.M. local time against Gonzaga on Saturday.

Lebo Signs New Contract: Jeff Lebo signed a seven-year contract with Auburn, keeping him in town through the 2011-12 season. The Tigers posted a 14-17 record in his first season as their head coach, but Lebo feels good about what was put in place for the future. His base salary will be $175,000, according to athletic director Jay Jacobs, while endorsements, radio and television agreements will bring his overall compensation to $750,000 per year.

Tonight’s Menu

• In Worcester, No. 2 Connecticut takes on No. 10 North Carolina State (Syracuse region), then No. 5 Michigan State takes on No. 13 Vermont (Austin).

• In Charlotte, No. 1 North Carolina takes on No. 9 Iowa State (Syracuse), then No. 1 Duke takes on No. 9 Mississippi State.

• In Nashville, No. 4 Louisville plays against No. 5 Georgia Tech and No. 4 Florida plays No. 5 Villanova.

• In Oklahoma City, No. 2 Oklahoma State takes on No. 7 Southern Illinois, then No. 6 Wisconsin and No. 14 Bucknell battle.

Syracuse Play-in Recap

by - Published March 19, 2005 in Conference Notes




Play-in Recap – Syracuse Region

by Phil Kasiecki

Oakland became just the fifth team with a losing record to win a game in the NCAA Tournament, breaking open a close game in the second half en route to a 79-69 win over Alabama A&M in the play-in game.

The Golden Grizzlies (13-18) have now won six games in a row and will play North Carolina in Charlotte in the first round. Their victory marks the fourth year in a row that a team with a losing record has won the play-in game.

Rawle Marshall scored 29 points and Cortney Scott added 21 to lead the way. Back-to-back layups by Scott started a run of 13 unanswered points early in the second half that turned a 41-37 lead into a 54-37 edge. Later, Marshall scored four points in a 9-0 run that built the lead to 70-47 with 5:34 left.

The Bulldogs (18-14) made several mini-runs to try to cut into the lead, but it wasn’t enough. They wound up scoring the last eight points of the game to account for the final margin. Obie Trotter had 24 points and five assists in the losing effort.

Vermont’s First Round Win

by - Published March 19, 2005 in Columns




Can it Get Any Better in Vermont?

by Phil Kasiecki

WORCESTER, Mass. – The Bay State is fast becoming the place of great sports stories these days. There also seems to be a common theme, one that should be refreshing to sports fans all over.

The Boston area had the Patriots win two Super Bowls in three years, winning with a team of great character – the kind that makes you want to naturally root for a team. Still, they longed for a World Series title with the Red Sox, and finally, they got it in October. Once again, it was a team of some character, although a little different – this group was a very loose group of characters. For good measure, the Patriots added a third Super Bowl championship just last month, and earlier in the year, Boston College won their first 20 games of the season in basketball.

Friday night, the state became home to another sports story, although it ultimately belongs to a neighboring state to the north. With Vermont’s 60-57 overtime win over Syracuse at the DCU Center in Worcester, the story of the school in the tight-knit town of Burlington, Vermont just grows a little more.

“We’re good, I’ve been saying that all the time, and now, it’s just out there, it’s out there that we are good,” head coach Tom Brennan said.

Much of the story of the Catamounts is available to those outside of the immediate geographic area. In recent years, they have received their fair share of national attention, from winning three straight America East championships to the play of star senior Taylor Coppenrath to their retiring head coach. Anyone who has been to the campus has been able to realize that Burlington is home to one of the real hidden treasures of college basketball, and that isn’t just true on the hardwood.

“Everybody has come up to us,” said Brennan of the national attention they have received. “Everybody says the same thing – what’s wrong here, what aren’t we seeing, what’s going on? I told people the same thing: you came looking for me, we didn’t come looking for you! I didn’t call anybody and say, ‘come up and see what a good deal we have here.’ We’ve done it this way for 19 years – we’ve done it always this way, we graduate our kids.”

On Friday, much of it played out in their first round upset, which continued the assault on the school record books that has taken place over the last four years. They never won 20 or more games until the past four years, in which they have won at least 21 games each season and are peaking with 25 this season. In that time, their record is 89-35. Only two other teams have won three consecutive America East championships, so they join elite company there. Friday’s win is their first ever in the NCAA Tournament, their first ever over a Big East team, and also their first over a ranked team in 13 tries.

This is a team, much like all of the other teams Tom Brennan has had in 19 seasons, composed of players who are not elite talents. None were mistaken for McDonald’s All-Americans in high school; instead, they were good players, solid citizens, and good students. This is life as a mid-major; every so often, you might get a player talented enough to play at a higher level, or one who was still early in his development and flew under the radar, or one who simply gets more out of his talent than anyone. Sometimes, it’s the right mix of players – as the Red Sox and Patriots have shown, the importance of chemistry cannot be understated.

Vermont has a combination of some of the above. They have players like Sorrentine, a solid mid-major prospect coming out of St. Raphael’s High School in Pawtucket, Rhode Island. Coppenrath never scored 1,000 points at the varsity level in Vermont, and redshirted his freshman year to develop further. Germain Mopa Njila was a role player on a good AAU team, but was not a star. Casual fans in the United States surely had no idea who senior David Hehn (who is from Ontario) or sophomore Martin Kilmes (from the Czech Republic) were, or even Mopa Njila, a native of Cameroon who came to the U.S. just two years before coming to Vermont.

After Friday night’s game, more people from outside Vermont know who they are now.

“Now, we’re validated, we are really validated as a program,” Brennan said.

Further validating them was a call from Vermont Senator Patrick Leahy. Brennan said Leahy and New York Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton put a friendly wager on the game. He didn’t know what was on the line, but didn’t care; the locker room erupted into laughter as he said that.

The win over Syracuse was vintage Vermont basketball in many respects. The crowd was decidedly pro-Vermont; part of it was how well they travel, especially to sites in Massachusetts, but part of it was surely sentimental and part of it was surely casual fans rooting for the underdog. The atmosphere was simply amazing, and it was close throughout as neither team ever led by more than six. The Catamounts were simply the tougher team, winning a game that was certainly not pretty, and they made the plays when it counted. They used their patient offense to make Syracuse work in their 2-3 zone defense, working the shot clock down and making shots when they needed to.

The star players didn’t carry the Catamounts like they did in the America East Tournament, but they certainly played key roles. The senior-laden team played like one, with Mopa Njila playing the game of a lifetime. His 20 points on 9-of-10 shooting, along with nine rebounds, five assists and four steals, was certainly the stat line of the night, but he did it playing just like he always has. He plays the game in flow, always seeming to make the right decision with the ball, whether it’s taking a shot or even passing up a shot where no defender is within several feet of him. Always a guy who plays bigger than his size, he was larger than life on Friday night.

“Today it was on national TV against one of the best programs in history,” he said after the game. “It’s even better, it’s by far the best game of my life.”

Another regularity was the clutch shot by Sorrentine, who has done this his entire career. On Friday, the stakes were much higher and the shot deeper – several feet behind the NBA three-point line. There was never a doubt as the shot clock ran down where the ball was headed.

“I knew it was down when I let it go. I had one more in me,” Sorrentine said.

Like the success of the pro sports teams, the success of the Catamounts is really something a fan of the game should appreciate. This is a team you can really get behind – they’re solid young men, excellent students, very down-to-earth, and they play the game the right way. In an age where the world of sports has things like performance-enhancing drugs, athletes and coaches who are hardly model citizens, as well as players who are showmen instead of winning players, Vermont is a breath of fresh air. This is the kind of team you want to see succeed if you want to see the good guys come out on top.

Vermont has been on quite a ride the last four seasons with its unprecedented success. They will face Michigan State on Sunday in the second round, hoping to continue it just a little longer. Friday night’s win is a great cap on the current run, but winning Sunday would just be a little extra-special, and it would be part of one more great sports story happening in Massachusetts of late.

     

Herb Sendek’s Job

by - Published March 18, 2005 in Columns




Sendek Isn’t Going Anywhere

by Phil Kasiecki

WORCESTER, Mass. – How many coaches who have brought their teams to four straight NCAA Tournaments wind up on the hot seat? One would think that a coach with that record, as well as a recent conference Coach of the Year award and postseason play in all but one year of his tenure would be very much appreciated by fans.

Herb Sendek isn’t your average coach or at your average school.

Sendek has quietly put together an excellent tenure at North Carolina State. Now finishing his ninth season, he has compiled a 167-121 record and has now brought them to four straight NCAA Tournaments after starting his tenure with four straight NIT bids and a 13-16 season. He’s fourth all-time in coaching wins at the school and has clearly revived a program that despite its history has become somewhat of the red-headed stepchild in the hotbed of college basketball that is the Triangle area of North Carolina.

Prior to his arrival in Raleigh, the Wolfpack had five consecutive losing seasons. Those five seasons also saw just one ACC Tournament win and five double-digit losses. That was certainly not what the program was in the previous decade under the late Jim Valvano, where they won less than 20 games just three times and were never below .500.

The pressure seemed to be on Sendek in recent years, as the NIT bids weren’t quite enough for the Wolfpack faithful and the 13-16 showing in 2000-01 just fanned the flames. With Duke becoming a national power in the late ’80s and up through today, the Wolfpack had fallen very much under the radar in the Triangle area. It was clearly time for them to turn the corner.

They did just that the following season, getting to the NCAA Tournament and nearly getting to the Sweet 16. A freshman guard from the Bronx who has been a big key to the resurgence had already made an impact, as Julius Hodge was arguably the top freshman in the ACC and had played his best ball later in the season. The Wolfpack fell just short against Connecticut in the second round, losing 77-74 in a well-played game.

The next season didn’t quite match it, as they made the NCAA Tournament but went 18-13 after starting 5-0. They lost in the first round, but were ready to make a jump and did just that last year. They went 21-10 and finished second in the ACC with an 11-5 mark, and spent some time ranked in the polls. They would rise as high as No. 12 in one poll, buoyed by an upset of then-No. 1 Duke in February. Not only did Sendek earn ACC Coach of the Year honors, but Hodge was the ACC Player of the Year as well.

With both returning, hopes were high for this season, but the Wolfpack flew under the radar early on. Part of it was because they didn’t play the toughest schedule, as only one of the eight teams they beat to start the season is in the NCAA Tournament (Louisiana-Lafayette), and then they lost to the first ranked team they played, Washington. A 63-45 loss to St. John’s was the start of a four-game skid that included their first two ACC games, and many felt that the Wolfpack was paying for its poor early non-conference schedule. A three-game losing streak later added to it, and they entered the ACC Tournament squarely on the bubble with a 7-9 ACC record despite winning four of their last six games.

With their backs to the wall, the Wolfpack first beat Florida State 70-54 in the first round. That gave them 18 wins, but their ACC record and lack of signature wins in non-conference play were still hurting them. So when they pulled away from Wake Forest with an 81-65 win in the quarterfinals, they appeared to have done what they needed to, especially with other ACC bubble teams losing in that round. They had a signature win (even though the Demon Deacons didn’t have super sophomore floor leader Chris Paul) in the tournament, and it’s clear that conference tournaments were of much importance this year with the selection committee.

“I think the home stretch for us was the product of our guys having great perseverance and resiliency,” Sendek said Thursday. “There wasn’t any one single moment, or any special event that took place; it just was the product of guys rolling up their sleeves and coming in one day at a time to continue to work hard to get better. Our team has endured more than their fair share of adversity this year, and I think that that has enable them to persevere nonetheless.”

Certainly, Sendek has persevered. With fans constantly calling for his head during the times of struggle, he righted the ship late in the season. That should quiet the critics, who need to look at his record, including the four straight NCAA Tournament appearances (Valvano is the only other coach in the school’s history to make four straight NCAA Tournament appearances), and realize that he has done an excellent job. He’s not going anywhere anytime soon.

Now Sendek’s team is in the NCAA Tournament as the No. 10 seed in the Syracuse region. They await cross-state rival Charlotte in the first round, which Sendek knows will not be an easy game.

“They have clearly established themselves as one of the perennial powers in Conference USA,” he said of the 49ers. “I think along with Louisville and Cincinnati, people would associated them with the great teams in Conference USA.”

Perhaps a win over such a team will finally quiet the critics – for now. In Raleigh, they never seem to be very far away.

     

Charlotte’s Next Step

by - Published March 18, 2005 in Columns




Charlotte Tries to Take the Next Step

by Phil Kasiecki

WORCESTER, Mass. – Charlotte traveled up here ready to take the next steps in building its program, a program whose recent success has been a bit muted outside of its home.

In case no one has noticed, the 49ers have quietly become one of Conference USA’s best teams in recent years. They have become consistent contenders in the conference and have made the NCAA Tournament five times in Bobby Lutz’s seven years at the helm. They have also had just one losing season in the conference while being co-champions last season and finishing tied for second this season, and twice have won the conference tournament.

Clearly, the 49ers are a program on the rise, but they’re still a relative unknown nationally. They are somewhat of a red-headed stepchild in the basketball country known as North Carolina. That state is, after all, home to numerous ACC schools, including the Triangle region with Duke, North Carolina and North Carolina State. As if that’s not enough, Conference USA’s traditional powers have been schools like Louisville, Cincinnati and Memphis, with Marquette making a Final Four run a few years ago.

With that established, the 49ers came to Worcester ready to take the next step, which is making a run in the NCAA Tournament. In their previous appearances, they did not get past the second round. It won’t be easy to better that this time around, but they aren’t lacking in motivation aside from simply wanting to win.

“We’ve been the underdogs in a lot of people’s eyes through out the years,” said senior swingman Eddie Basden, who won the conference’s Player of the Year and Defensive Player of the Year honors. “We’ve just got to prove them wrong, and that’s what we plan on doing in this tournament.”

When Lutz took over the program in 1998, it wasn’t struggling for success, although it had not achieved the success it has under him. The two seasons before that, the team won at least 20 games and went to the NCAA Tournament with stars like DeMarco Johnson and Sean Colson. Lutz, who has four degrees, has continued the winning and brought it to a new level. This year’s NCAA Tournament appearance is the program’s tenth, with half coming under Lutz.

Asked if he feels like his program plays a second fiddle to the ACC schools in his state, Lutz says he’s not concerned.

“The ACC has earned everything that they’ve get. It’s an unbelievable league,” he said on Thursday. “That’s reality, so I don’t worry about that. They earn what they get. I’m proud of what we’ve done, and if people take notice of that, great, if not, I don’t lose sleep over it.”

The program is getting some recognition, and Lutz cites Basden’s two awards as one example. Only two other players have ever won the two awards in the same season, with those two being current NBA players Kenyon Martin and Dwyane Wade. That’s some pretty good company, and even Bob Huggins has talked about how good a defender Basden is. Besides the do-everything swingman, junior forward Curtis Withers is a two-time first-team All-Conference USA selection.

It wouldn’t be a surprise if the 49ers made a run. With Withers doing damage inside and Basden doing a little of everything, senior sharpshooter Brendan Plavich helps keep defenses honest with his unlimited range and junior Mitchell Baldwin capably runs the point. Sophomore Martin Iti has plenty of potential inside, but is mainly a role player on this team right now. Lutz knows that getting some wins is the next step for the program to take.

“We need to win some, we need to get to a Sweet 16 sometime – we need to do that if we’re going to continue to elevate our program, and that’s what we’re trying to do,” Lutz said on Thursday.

They get their chance in the opening game in Worcester against North Carolina State. A win against them just might start to bring them a little outside the shadows of the ACC in their home state.

     

Vermont’s Taylor Coppenrath

by - Published March 16, 2005 in Columns



Vermont’s Unassuming Star

by Phil Kasiecki

BURLINGTON, Vt. – Your team has just won its third straight America East championship, making history as just the third team to accomplish that. For the second time in a row, you’re the tournament’s Most Outstanding Player. What do you do to celebrate?

You go to the nearby Outback Steakhouse for a post-game meal, of course!

At least that’s what Taylor Coppenrath and his family did on Saturday after Vermont’s 80-57 thrashing of Northeastern in the America East title game, in which Coppenrath had 37 points. He was there with family members – all, like the young man, some of the nicest people you could meet and big fans of the phenomenon there known as Vermont basketball.

It fits the personality of Coppenrath, a very down-to-earth, no-frills young man from the tiny town of West Barnet, Vermont. It was similar to what we saw after last year’s championship game, where he sat out nearly four weeks with a broken left wrist, saying along the way that he was shutting it down for the season, then came back for the conference tournament championship game. In that game, all he did was score a tournament record and career-high 43 points on 14-19 shooting and grab 13 rebounds. Just another day at the office, right?

Coppenrath viewed it that way, and he might be the only one who did.

“I never know what kind of game I’m going to have until the end of the game,” he said with the straightest face, which got a few chuckles. “I thought I was going to play limited minutes.”

The latter comment got a good look from head coach Tom Brennan, who quipped, “We’ve got to communicate better, son!”

Then-Maine head coach John Giannini, now the head coach at LaSalle, looked like a man who had just been ambushed after that game, but managed to sum it up best.

“I expect I’ll take my kids to see this as a Disney movie someday,” he quipped.

Considering some of his efforts over the last two seasons, Coppenrath’s record-breaking performance in last year’s title game might not seem too extraordinary. After all, he scored 41 points against Northeastern earlier in the year, topping the 38 he scored at Pauley Pavilion as the Catamounts nearly beat UCLA early in the season. The UCLA game, which was one of the highest point totals ever by an opponent in the storied arena, woke up NBA scouts to the 6’9″, 250-pound senior, and was a game he won’t soon forget.

“It was pretty incredible, playing at that place was just amazing,” he reflected. “I loved it out there.”

Coppenrath hasn’t taken the path many have to college stardom. He wasn’t a star in high school that was highly recruited; Albany was the only other Division I team besides Vermont to offer him a scholarship. He did not score 1,000 points in high school in Vermont, a state that’s not exactly brimming with big-time basketball talent. His father said that his two years playing on the freshman and junior varsity teams were blessings in disguise because he had a better coach that helped develop him more than the varsity coach would have, and they helped him become the player he was on the varsity team his final two years of high school.

He redshirted his first year at Vermont and not because of an injury, which normally happens to a player who is low on the depth chart or who needs a lot of development. He worked hard on gaining weight because he was thin when he came in, but it didn’t stop there. He did a lot of observing of his teammates, and his father remembers how the long-time student of the game had the math major in him when it came to basketball – he studied not only every other player in the conference, but also the floor at each conference arena. Even though he was redshirted, Brennan had a pretty good idea of what he had back then.

“We had that 11-game losing streak during the year he was sitting out, and Jesse (Agel) had to just rip my arm out from putting his name in the book and saying, ‘listen, enough is enough, we need to win some games’,” Brennan recalls. “But we knew then, when he was redshirting, that he was something very special, and he has never been anything but that from the time he started playing.”

Coppenrath’s best friend and polar opposite personality, T.J. Sorrentine, was on the floor that season, winning the conference Rookie of the Year award. Last season, Sorrentine was someone he turned to quickly when he broke his wrist, which was said to be a season-ending injury. The big man was the biggest cheerleader while his best friend was determined to get the Catamounts another title.

“He knew what it felt like to be out with that wrist injury, because he had two – and I couldn’t imagine having two, it was hard enough with one – but the way he came back and worked so hard… I’m just glad, this is for him,” Coppenrath said. “He couldn’t play last year during the tournament, but this is for him now.”

The two met on their first day on campus, and they haven’t looked back, whether on or off the court. Since they arrived on campus, the Catamounts have had more success than ever, including the consecutive America East championships and four consecutive seasons of 21 or more wins, including the school-record 24 this season. They have won four Player of the Year awards between them, and both won it as sophomores, and they’re good for a few laughs, like on Saturday when they were asked a question in the post-game interview and looked at each other silently before Sorrentine offered some thoughts.

Coppenrath joined elite company when he was named the America East Player of the Year for the third straight year, a feat accomplished only by the late Reggie Lewis. But true to form, he is actually fascinated by it all, as well as the attention given to the program and his play. Although he and his family are looking at potential agents as the NBA beckons, he just keeps playing and forging ahead with his plans to be a high school math teacher in Vermont. He knew a long time ago that he wanted to do it, and admits that his aim isn’t just to make other kids proficient, saying with a chuckle, “Math’s always had a bad name, nobody likes it, so I’m trying to change that.”

Unlike Brennan, Coppenrath isn’t known for his sense of humor, but he’s been known to drop a good line in from time to time like that. Not remotely star-struck from his myriad accomplishments, he’s one of the quietest people you could meet, and also very consistent, as he never gets very high after a big play or win and never gets very low after a bad play or a loss. There haven’t been very many of the latter in his time at Vermont, and his consistency is big reason why.

“What makes him so impressive is that there is so much pressure on him to carry this state – he is the face,” Brennan said after Saturday’s win. “And he never lets anybody down – he never lets them down in the classroom, he never lets them down on the court, he doesn’t let them down socially. You’ve got to thank God you get to coach guys like this.”

Vermont has drawn Syracuse in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. The Orange are playing very well right now, so this matchup isn’t an upset waiting to happen. The Catamounts matchup reasonably well with Syracuse save for one potential key – they aren’t nearly as quick or athletic. They know they have their work cut out for them, but it also would not be a complete shock if they pulled off an upset. If that happens, Coppenrath might have a chance to become the school’s all-time leading scorer (he needs 64 points to tie Eddie Benton for that honor), but perhaps more than that, it will just add to the legend of his career in a state that has never been known for basketball.

     

Distraught Darius Washington

by - Published March 15, 2005 in Columns




The Agony of Defeat in Memphis

by Phil Kasiecki

MEMPHIS, Tenn. – Darius Washington had to be the sickest man in America on Saturday.

The scene at the FedEx Forum said it all. Washington was just laying on the floor motionless, his head buried in his jersey, and no one able to get him up. The same player who helped carry his team to the brink of the Conference USA championship and the NCAA Tournament had to be carried off the floor. Like any athlete who has just lost an important game, the fact that he scored eight points in the final five minutes and 18 in the second half (23 points and six assists in the game) and was the reason they even got that far, mattered not.

It’s easy to look at some of his previous plays and not feel an ounce of sympathy, but this isn’t the time to take the hard stand. Earlier, Washington was nodding his head when he scored key baskets, even though his team was still coming from behind. He had similar reactions upon being fouled with no time left and his team down two, nodding his head and pounding his chest multiple times as if he had just won the game – even though that wasn’t the case. On the first free throw, he followed through with his right hand still in the air as it went through.

But the next two free throws are just part of why we can’t take this hard stand, along with the fact that he’s still a young kid and just playing with emotion. When he missed the second one, giving Louisville a 75-74 win and the Conference USA title, he collapsed to the floor like a ton of bricks. That was all that was needed.

“Obviously Darius made every play down the stretch to keep us in the game, and the kid is just distraught over the three free throws,” head coach John Calipari said after the game. Washington did not speak with reporters, for obvious reasons.

The NIT beckons for the Tigers, and the season thus far has certainly been a trial-by-fire for the Winter Park, Florida native. He didn’t exactly set the college basketball world on fire at first, although he certainly showed promise. In his first college game, he had eight assists and two turnovers in a win over Savannah State. Perhaps his first bad game was in the Tip-Off Classic, where Maryland blew out the Tigers. Washington was just 4-12 from the field, with one assist and six turnovers, a game that Calipari said was “a little bit of a wakeup call for Darius.”

Washington didn’t instantly mature, as he had similar games against Pittsburgh (2-10 shooting, one assist and four turnovers) and Ole Miss (two assists, eight turnovers despite scoring 20 points, a career-high at the time). He had his worst shooting game against Providence, going just 2-for-13 from the field. But that game, a loss, may have been the point where he really turned the corner. It was his last game scoring in single digits, as he averaged over 17 points per game the rest of the way, and he had a 1.1 assist/turnover ratio.

Calipari has said that he gets on Washington as hard as anyone in practice. He’s as talented as anyone they have, and as their floor leader, much is expected of him. As the season went along, he started to fulfill what was expected of him. The Tigers went as he went this season to a good degree, which often happens with a team and its floor leader. And on Saturday, it’s only fitting that as he missed two of three free throws at the end of the game, the Tigers ended up losing – though Washington did all he could to put them in the position to win. They didn’t lose because of him by a long shot; allowing Louisville to make 15-of-23 three-pointers contributed to the loss a lot more than anything the freshman point guard did.

Washington has clearly grown during the season, and with all his talent, he has some great times ahead. If the past is any indicator, he will grow from Saturday’s experience as well, starting with their first NIT game on Wednesday night. He will remember the feeling, and it will be one more thing that motivates him to keep growing as a basketball player.

     

Big West Tournament Recap

by - Published March 14, 2005 in Conference Notes




Big West Conference Tournament Recaps

by Phil Kasiecki

For the fifth consecutive year, the Big West Tournament was held at the Anaheim Convention Center right near Disneyland. With the location right near Disneyland, the conference holds a Fan Fest over the duration of the tournament, featuring events at the ESPN Zone in Downtown Disney and the nearby House of Blues.

In the first round, No. 5 UC-Irvine outrebounded No. 8 Idaho (8-22) 47-21 and got a career-high 30 points from Aaron Fitzgerald en route to an 80-67 win. In the other game, No. 7 UC Santa Barbara used a big second half to knock off No. 6 Long Beach State (10-20) by a scored of 55-49. They got 19 points from Joe See and ended the game on a 12-4 run.

With that, it’s on to the quarterfinals, where the No. 3 and No. 4 seeds each received a bye.

Quarterfinal Recaps

No. 3 Cal State Fullerton 66, No. 7 UC Santa Barbara 55

Cal State Fullerton rode strong play from its starters to a 66-55 win over UC Santa Barbara. Ralphy Holmes had his ninth double-double of the season with 20 points and 11 rebounds to lead the way, and he combined with Bobby Brown (16 points), Yaphett King and Jamaal Brown (11 points each) to produce 58 of the team’s points. The Gauchos (11-18) shot below 35 percent from the field and were led by Josh Davis’ 15 points and Chrismen Oliver’s 14.

No. 4 Cal State Northridge 72, No. 5 UC Irvine 56

Cal State Northridge used a strong second half to pull away from UC Irvine for a 72-56 quarterfinal victory. The Matadors shot 54 percent in the second half and held the Anteaters (16-13) to 29 percent on the defensive end, never trailing during the contest. Joseph Frazier led the Matadors with 18 points and Ian Boylan added 16. Jeff Gloger led the Anteaters with 14 points, while Aaron Fitzgerald was held to just five points after scoring a career-high 30 in the first round.

Semifinal Recaps

No. 1 Pacific 63, No. 4 Cal State Northridge 61

Pacific kept the nation’s longest winning streak alive with a close one, as they needed three free throws in the final 22 seconds to hang on for a 63-61 win over Cal State Northridge. The Tigers had a 38-24 edge on the boards, but gave the Matadors plenty of opportunities by committing a season-high 23 turnovers.

Guillaume Yango led the Tigers with 15 points and eight rebounds, as they overcame a terrific 32-point effort from Ian Boylan to lead the Matadors (18-13). The Tigers have now won 22 straight games and will carry that streak into the championship game.

No. 2 Utah State 84, No. 3 Cal State Fullerton 77

Cass Matheus and Nate Harris each scored 21 points, and Utah State held off a late rally by Cal State Fullerton in their 84-77 win to advance to their fifth Big West title game in six seasons.

The Titans ran out to an early 10-2 lead and later led by 10, but a late 12-2 first half run evened the score at 29 and the Aggies took a 34-33 lead at the half. Utah State never trailed in the second half, but the Titans (19-10) had runs of 12-5 and 11-4 that weren’t quite enough to complete the comeback.

Spencer Nelson added 14 points and 10 rebounds for his 10th double-double of the season for the Aggies. Yaphett King led the Titans with 26 points and eight rebounds, and Jermaine Harper added 21, all coming on three-pointers as he made 7-of-11 shots from behind the arc.

Championship Game

Utah State 65, Pacific 52

A year after losing in the title game and being a controversial exclusion from the NCAA Tournament, Utah State took over the game with a 19-2 run in the second half that broke open a close game, as the Aggies beat Pacific by a score of 65-52 to win the Big West championship.

During the run, which lasted over ten minutes, the Tigers (26-3) did not have a field goal, and their 52 point total was their lowest of the season. No Tiger scored in double figures, and they committed several unforced turnovers that aided the big second half run.

Freshman Jaycee Carroll was the tournament MVP and led Utah State (24-7) with 22 points and seven rebounds, and Spencer Nelson added 16. The Aggies have now won four conference tournament titles in the last six seasons.

Joining Carroll and Nelson on the All-Tournament team were teammate Nate Harris, Pacific’s Guillaume Yango, Ian Boylan of Cal State Northridge and Yaphett King of Cal State Fullerton.

     

Southland Championship Recap

by - Published March 14, 2005 in Conference Notes




Southland Conference Championship Recap

by Phil Kasiecki

No. 2 SE Louisiana 49, No. 1 Northwestern State 42

Southeastern Louisiana held host Northwestern State below 30 percent shooting and got 16 points and eight rebounds from Ricky Woods en route to a 49-42 win in the Southland Conference championship game.

A run of ten unanswered points by the Lions (24-8) gave them a 41-32 lead, which they would never relinquish. The Demons would score the next eight points, but they could never tie the game or take the lead. The Demons posted their lowest point total of the season and had their 10-game winning streak stopped.

The Lions’ 24 wins are a school record as they now prepare for their first NCAA Tournament appearance.

Jonathan Patton added 13 points for the Lions and Nate Lofton had nine points and 10 rebounds. Jermaine Wallace led Northwestern State (21-12) with 12 points.

     

Vermont’s Great Story

by - Published March 14, 2005 in Columns




The Feel-Good Story of College Basketball

by Phil Kasiecki

BURLINGTON, Vt. – Tom Brennan couldn’t have said it any more concisely to his players before the game.

“You were born to win this championship. You were born to do it. That’s all there is to it.”

Brennan’s Vermont Catamounts blew out Northeastern 80-57 to win their third straight America East tournament championship on Saturday. Based on his team’s performance, the coach certainly knew what he was talking about. The Catamounts were the clearly better team from start to finish in the game, much like they were over the entire season.

But Saturday’s game, as well as the season and the current run of three straight championships, go beyond the final score. This is, after all, the University of Vermont – a school known more for hockey than basketball, a school where the first 101 years of basketball never saw a 20-win season prior to four straight years with at least 21. It’s in a state that has never been known as basketball country by a long shot. But spend some time around this campus and community, and it becomes clear that the current times are just one example of the love affair between the state and this team.

Saturday’s game was also the last game at Patrick Gym for Brennan, who is retiring at the end of the season. He is as much a part of this team’s story as anyone, as his story is a fine example of a late bloomer. For many of his early years, the team struggled and was hardly relevant outside of Burlington. The best thing about Vermont, save for stars like Kevin Roberson and Eddie Benton, was that Brennan was a character and a good guy.

He’s still very much a character and a nice guy, but now he’s more decorated with the sudden success of his team. Success has only made him appreciate what he has, and Saturday brought it all to light.

“People have always taken care of me,” Brennan reflected. “Like I said, when I was broke, when I had nothing, people took me in, and they took care of me, and now that I’m rich, and I’ve won the lottery three times in a row, I’m just able to give it back, give it back, give it back. And I think that’s what makes this place so special and what makes this program so special, and what allows me to take such pride in having been the coach here for 19 years. I just can’t tell you how much it’s meant to me, and I will tell you until the day I die that I will never forget today.”

If there was any doubt that he hasn’t lost his touch with self-deprecating humor, another reflection took that away.

“What people don’t understand is, I’m the all-time leader in wins by one; I’m the all-time leader in losses by a gang,” he quipped.

The Catamounts have been carried by two best friends, seniors Taylor Coppenrath and T.J. Sorrentine, but that’s just where it begins. Classmates David Hehn and Germain Mopa Njila have had a large hand in the three titles, with Hehn getting the winning basket two years ago in the championship game and Mopa Njila making the last two All-Tournament teams. Sophomore forward Martin Klimes, always a solid role player amidst the more heralded players, was the star of the first half on Saturday as he had a career-high 15 points on 7-of-7 shooting in the first half. For good measure, he had five assists.

To watch the Catamounts play is to see enjoyable basketball. Coppenrath has an amazing sense of where he is relative to the basket and is almost automatic finishing close to the hoop. Sorrentine hits three-point shots you wouldn’t advise your kids to take, especially in the clutch. Mopa Njila is always around the ball at either end, and always seems to know when to shoot even though he’s often given space. Hehn makes solid decisions with the ball and will defend anyone he has to.

Off the court, it only gets better. The program has consistently had solid students, and like many who have been at the school, many current players have reflected fondly on the ties the school has to the greater community and the state. Alumni have continued to support the program; one notable example on Saturday was the attendance of Matt Sheftic, who was the Most Outstanding Player in the 2003 America East Tournament. Sheftic’s story has been documented here before, and for those who are wondering, he’s in great spirits and doing well as he has begun his career as an officer in the U.S. Army. His work goes right along with how Brennan has taught his players about giving back to the community, and in Sheftic’s case, serving the country.

The fans and supporters certainly enjoy this team, and they enjoyed and supported this team when they weren’t winning. Patrick Gym was never an easy place for visiting teams to play, but now it’s nearly impossible to win there. Every game this season sold out, and the place always had plenty of energy well before the game started. Indeed, it is college basketball at its finest – an amazing atmosphere with a team worthy of all the love the fans give them. Some might say that Patrick Gym, like a lot of mid-major arenas across the country, is just a glorified high school gym – but so what? The relative size of it, as well as the packed house and the noise the fans generate, make the atmosphere what it is. It wouldn’t be the same otherwise.

The fans didn’t stop showing their love for this team on Saturday. In the final minutes, chants thanking the seniors, Brennan and long-time associate coach Jesse Agel could be heard. They know what this program came from, and like fans of any team that didn’t win for a long time, they appreciate what this team has done perhaps more than if they had been perennial winners.

“It’s neat, it’s really neat,” Brennan said of the chants. “I don’t think there’s any doubt that this is a very special place. What’s happened here is never going to happen again, and it doesn’t happen many places.

“It was very moving, and it’s something that doesn’t happen to a lot of people.”

The Catamounts are the No. 13 seed in the Austin region and will play Syracuse in the first round in Worcester, Mass. It’s not out of the realm of possibilities that they could knock off the Orange, as they match up well with them and run a patient offense that will make them work in their 2-3 zone defense. Such a win would prolong what Brennan calls a “magic carpet ride” and just further write him and the current players into the program’s record books.

     

Patriot League Tournament Notes

by - Published March 13, 2005 in Columns





Bison Finally Win Their First Title

by Phil Kasiecki

WORCESTER, Mass. – It wasn’t quite how Pat Flannery drew it up, but the end result was what he wanted. His team went on the road and took care of business.

“We thought we had a great year, and we were getting accolades we deserved, but we had bigger things we wanted to do,” the 11th-year head coach of Bucknell said after his team won the Patriot League with a 61-57 win at Holy Cross on Friday. “We left here two weeks ago and said this is probably where we’re going to have to come back.”

Flannery alluded to the Bison’s recent trip to Worcester prior to Friday, when the Crusaders clinched the Patriot League regular season title with a 69-54 win on Feb. 26. In that game, five Holy Cross players scored in double figures and the Crusaders went 20-22 from the free throw line.

Friday’s game was a little different. The Bison scored nine unanswered points as part of a 14-2 run to break open a close game early, and they never trailed despite being seriously challenged in the final minutes, when Holy Cross eventually got within two points before two free throws by Kevin Bettencourt sealed their first trip to the NCAA Tournament since 1989.

“I thought it was a war,” Flannery said. “I didn’t think it was going to go the way it did, with us getting up on them early and figuring out a way to hang on, but that’s a tribute to Holy Cross and coach and everybody. We knew they were going to come – we kept telling the kids, hang in there, keep your poise.”

The Bison looked much like they did when these two teams first met on Jan. 8, when they handed the Crusaders their last loss prior to Friday night. At that time, it looked like they might run roughshod through the Patriot League, as the win was fresh off their upset of Pittsburgh and their seventh straight win en route to an 11-game winning streak, which equaled the team’s longest since 1919.

Shortly thereafter, Flannery, an animated coach on the bench, had to take a brief leave of absence due to stress. He missed three games, including two road losses that broke the streak, but returned and guided them to second place in the regular season. It was not the first time he had to miss time recently, as he did not travel with the team to Holy Cross and Army last year for similar reasons. He continues to be animated on the bench, but it’s all part of how he coaches a game, and one can’t argue with what has worked.

Flannery has a history of winning in his state. Prior to his 11 seasons at his alma mater, where he is now second all-time in coaching wins with 171, he won a Division 3 national championship at Lebanon Valley College. The Bison have been consistent contenders since the Patriot League was formed in 1990, as this was their fifth trip to the championship game and their first victory. This season is the first 20-win season under Flannery, who has been there for all but the first four seasons of their Patriot League existence. His success there extends off the court, as five of the last eight Patriot League Scholar Athletes have been Bucknell basketball players.

It’s a good time for the school, and Flannery knows it. The school opened its new arena, Sojka Pavilion, last season, and has done very well there, going 22-3 in two seasons. He feels good about the Patriot League as well, saying it “has evolved tremendously in the last eleven years since I’ve been here.” Additionally, this year’s success may not be fleeting, as the roster contains only one senior, reserve forward Chris Niesz.

The Bison have certainly proven that they can beat good teams, and though they may draw a No. 13 or 14 seed, it would not be a shock if they pulled off a first round upset.

Holy Cross waits it out

Holy Cross is now likely bound for the NIT. They have an excellent RPI, but no signature wins, so the NCAA Tournament is not likely to come calling. The Patriot League has never received an at-large bid, and this does not look to be the year that breaks that. The Crusaders nearly swept the league’s awards, winning all but Defensive Player of the Year (Bucknell’s Abe Badmus took that honor), but they would surely trade them in for an NCAA Tournament bid.

While head coach Ralph Willard wasn’t about to campaign for an at-large bid, Flannery didn’t mince words upon being asked.

“Absolutely. I certainly think Holy Cross deserves to go to the tournament,” Flannery said.

Willard chose to reflect on what this team did most of the season.

“We just had a spectacular year,” he said. “It’s unfortunate that we couldn’t finish it the way we would have wanted, but I just can’t say enough about them. They were picked to finish fourth this year, 16-game winning streak, regular season championship. It’s tough being a mid-major and trying to protect great seasons.”

Success for the league

This year’s tournament format was a new one for the league, with the top two seeds hosting the quarterfinal and semifinal rounds. The top remaining seed hosts the championship game, which they have done previously. The only upset in the entire tournament came in the championship game.

Patriot League Executive Director Carolyn Schlie Femovich said the league is happy with the format and how it worked out this year, and they look forward to continuing with it in future years. She also said that having it at campus sites worked out better than one neutral site not only from the vantage point of rewarding those who had better regular seasons, but also from the standpoint of fan travel, noting that fans tend to travel more to campuses than other neutral sites.

     

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Not a season to remember for Wake Forest

March 8, 2012 by

wakeforest

Although it wasn’t quite as bad as last season, this was hardly one for the books for Wake Forest. After an 82-60 blowout loss against Maryland on Thursday, the Demon Deacons finished 13-18 overall. That doesn’t seem so bad, and a few teams had worse records, but look deeper and you see a team that, quite simply, was not good.

Ron Hunter a wonderful addition to the CAA coaching ranks

March 7, 2012 by

georgiastate

Ron Hunter is a terrific addition to the Colonial Athletic Association coaching ranks. That could have been said before the season given his track record and the impression he made on Media Day in October, but after the CAA Tournament it bears repeating because it was so obvious.

Bruiser Flint won’t be stressing out the next few days

March 6, 2012 by

drexel

In theory, the next six days should be quite stressful for Drexel and head coach Bruiser Flint. As the regular season champions of the CAA, they are guaranteed a bid to the NIT, but naturally hope the NCAA Tournament comes calling. Flint doesn’t seem stressed at all about it, however, and his experience is a key factor in that.

Northeastern has promise next season, but clear room for improvement

March 4, 2012 by

northeastern

Northeastern fought turnovers often this season, and had relatively mixed results with some streaks along the way. The Huskies should be better next season, but there is clear room for improvement and that was evident on Saturday night in the season-ending loss.

Despite the quarterfinal loss, the tournament is a positive ending for UNCW

March 3, 2012 by

uncwilmington

With UNCW’s season over, there’s a look toward a brighter future that was helped by this weekend in Richmond. The young Seahawks had some bright spots during the season in trying to rebuild, and capped it off with something else they can take with them.

James Madison fights the injury bug together and to the end

March 3, 2012 by

jamesmadison

James Madison came into the season as an interesting team to project. There was not a lack of talent, and it wasn’t a young team, but there were intangibles questions. In the end, injuries were the biggest problem, but the Dukes kept fighting right to the end no matter how demoralizing the injuries were.

2012 CAA Tournament – First Round Notes

March 3, 2012 by

colonial

Notes on the first round of the CAA Tournament, where the seeds held to form, the first 20-20 game in tournament history occurred and a team that went bowling to help get ready for the opening game of the day came out on top.

Quick Hitters – March 2, 2012

March 2, 2012 by

author_kasiecki

We check in with some quick hitters on a couple of America East teams, a contrast of freshmen from an earlier game, Georgia Tech’s defense against Boston College and the Missouri Valley.

Kyle Casey deserves a better ending

February 27, 2012 by

harvard

The last decisive play in Harvard’s 55-54 loss to Penn on Saturday night will stay in many people’s minds. For the Crimson player who was involved in it, one hopes the college basketball gods have a better ending in store later on.

Ivy League showdown looms between old rivals

February 18, 2012 by

ivy

The stage is set. Saturday night at Lavietes Pavilion will be a potentially epic battle with first place on the line after Friday night’s results. Old rivals Yale and Harvard will battle for the top, with Harvard hoping for a repeat of the result the last time these two teams met.

Conference Coverage

2011-12 ACC Post-Mortem

May 19, 2012 by

acc

A look back at the 2011-12 season in the ACC, one with good but not great results and a few teams that had unexpected finishes in the NCAA Tournament.

Idaho State makes a decision

March 15, 2012 by

Last Thursday, Idaho State finally made it’s choice, hiring Montana assistant Bill Evans as it’s head coach. So far, reaction has been mixed by at least one of the couple of forum posts dedicated to the decision as well as the local scribe’s feelings. Here’s the traditional “welcome to town” …

The Big Sky Championships: who’s gonna win

March 6, 2012 by

This is what the head honchos wrote on Monday: Big Sky (March 3) Top seed: Montana. The Big Sky regular-season championship came down to the final game, in which the Grizzlies avenged their only loss in Big Sky play by beating Weber State in Missoula. Tournament stakes: Although Weber State …

Playing catch-up: the Big Sky all-conference team & “first-round” analysis

March 5, 2012 by

bigsky

We take a look at the award winners, from the two-time conference Player of the Year to the Newcomer of the Year, as well as a couple of early tournament games.

What Was The Reason Behind Cleveland State’s Five Game Losing Streak?

February 26, 2012 by

clevelandstate

Why did the Cleveland State Vikings recently have a five game losing streak? It’s simple–whenever a team loses their most valuable player, they’re going to suffer. The Cleveland State Vikings have had their fair share of above-average talent on the roster over the past few years. Cedric Jackson played briefly …

Cleveland State Vikings Use Solid Contributions By Freshmen To Defeat Detroit Titans, 77-64

February 24, 2012 by

horizon

The Cleveland State Vikings and Detroit Titans squared off on Thursday evening at the Wolstein Center in a matchup with major ramifications for seeding in the Horizon League Tournament. Both the Vikings and the Titans headed into Thursday’s matchup riding drastically different five-game streaks. Picked by many preseason analysts to …

Much Is At Stake In The Final Week Of Horizon League Play

February 21, 2012 by

horizon

The last week of conference play has arrived in the Horizon League. Over the past few years, the battle for the top seeds in the Horizon League has not been decided until the final game of conference play. This year is no exception, with multiple teams having a legitimate chance …

Cleveland State Loses To Drexel Dragons 69-49 In ESPN BracketBusters Matchup

February 18, 2012 by

horizon

The Cleveland State Vikings and Drexel Dragons squared off on Saturday morning at the Wolstein Center as part of ESPN’s BracketBusters series. Saturday’s contest marks the second straight year in which the Vikings have participated in the BracketBusters series. Last season, the Vikings dropped a hard-fought contest to Old Dominion …

Butler Bulldogs Hang On To Defeat Cleveland State Vikings, 52-49

February 11, 2012 by

horizon

Although the rivalry between the Cleveland State Vikings and Butler Bulldogs may not be as nationally known as the rivalry between Duke and North Carolina, the intensity that is in the air whenever these two Horizon League rivals square off is just as strong. In fact, the animosity between these …

Valparaiso Crusaders Dominate Cleveland State Vikings 59-41

February 9, 2012 by

horizon

The Cleveland State Vikings and Valparaiso Crusaders squared off on Thursday night at the Wolstein Center in one of the most important games of the season for both teams. While the Vikings’ season-opening victory over the Vanderbilt Commodores may have been extremely important with regards to quality wins that are …

Big Sky Conference update – Jan 26, 2012

January 26, 2012 by

bigsky

JUST IN TIME FOR TONIGHT’S GAMES… All the news you ever wanted to know about the Big Sky, the weekly edition. YOUR WEEKLY DAMIAN LILLARD IS A STUD LINK-FEST: A Salt Lake Tribune story on his success. USA Today also jumped in sometime in the last week to talk about …

Cleveland State Vikings Overwhelm Milwaukee Panthers 83-57

January 22, 2012 by

horizon

In a game with major implications for the regular season Horizon League championship and seeding for the Horizon League Tournament, the Cleveland State Vikings dominated the Milwaukee Panthers by a score of 83-57 in a game in which the Panthers never led. The Vikings and Panthers began the day in …

Big Sky Conference update – January 18, 2012

January 18, 2012 by

bigsky

One team stands alone atop the standings for now, with another a little behind them and a logjam near the middle of the pack.

Cleveland State Use Barrages from Outside to Defeat Loyola

January 7, 2012 by

horizon

The Cleveland State Vikings started 2012 off on a winning note with a 69-48 victory at home on Saturday afternoon over the visiting Loyola Ramblers. In his pregame radio comments, Vikings coach Gary Waters stated that the Ramblers’ 5-10 record heading into Saturday’s matchup was deceiving and that the Ramblers were …

Big Sky roundup, week 1

January 5, 2012 by

bigsky

Opening weekend in the Big Sky Eastern Washington Record: 7-7, 1-1 Weekend: 1-1 Major superlatives: Won by 16, lost by 8; 76.5 ppg for, 72.5 against; plus-4 scoring margin; 52-112 FG; 20-53 3pt; 29-43 FT. Summary: One night, the lead stuck. The other, it didn’t. The Eagles made an early …