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Without further ado, here are my America East Awards; they are based on who I feel merits each award, and not predictions of how the coaches will actually vote.
Coach of the Year:
· Candidates: Steve Pikiell, Stony Brook; Ted Woodward, Maine.
There was much talk earlier this year about Binghamton interim coach Mark Macon for COY – absolutely not! Once the going got tough for Binghamton, Macon sat on the bench like a statue, and appeared as if he could have cared less about coaching – and leading – a team. Woodward deserves considerable consideration (did I just type that as a sentence?). Woodward has made Maine – a school that has been a perennial play-in game team, and never once seriously competed for a conference title – a contender. Woodward has gotten the Black Bears to win on the defensive end – something they haven’t done before – and perhaps even more impressive has gotten the Black Bears to the top of the conference with only one “All-Conference” player. Pikiell was shafted out of the COY award last year, and has continued to shine on Long Island: Pikiell completed the Seawolves transformation from worst to first, and has the Seawolves playing as a team, hard, for 40 minutes. He has fielded and coached the closest thing the league has to a complete team, and has gotten the job done recruiting, game-planning, and in the community.
· Winner: Steve Pikiell, Stony Brook.
In a very close call, Pikiell should get the nod – no slight or disrespect to Woodward, but the job that Pikiell has done at Stony Brook is second to none; down the stretch the Seawolves never buckled, and showed up every time their backs were against the wall.
Player of the Year:
· Candidates: Marqus Blakely, Forward, Vermont; John Holland, Guard/Forward, Boston Univeristy.
There are only two possible candidates in Blakely and Holland. Binghamton’s Greer Wright looked at one point like he might deserve some consideration, but he floundered down the stretch, and quite simply looked like he didn’t give a… when the going got tough – which removed him from any consideration. Muhammad El-Amin for Stony Brook put points up in bunches for the Seawolves; helping to propel Stony Brook to a regular season title – including a game winning shot against Albany. But El-Amin simply does not get the job done on the defensive end, does not play with the basketball IQ or the sense of urgency needed from a POY, and is surrounded by more overall talent that anyone else in the league. And it’s hard to make a case for El-Amin when many people on the Stony Brook’s staff don’t view him as the team’s best player. Holland was the league’s best offensive player – there is simply no argument. In years past, Holland has struggled mightily with consistency – and often disappeared when the Terriers needed him most – but this season he was a monster, leading the league in scoring (19.9 ppg overall, 19.5 ppg in conference games) while pouring it on down the stretch (including 43 points in the Terriers “Bracket Buster” game). Holland even made am impact on the defensive end – he still makes mistakes, but he gambled much less down the stretch and has become a solid defender. Blakely is simply the league’s best all-around player: he makes an impact every single night in one way or another – offense, defense, rebounding: He not only led the Catamounts in scoring, rebounding, blocked shots, steals, and assists; he ranked among the America East leaders in those categories as well.
· Winner: Marqus Blakely, Vermont.
It’s really not close – and that isn’t in any way disrespectful to Holland, who will most likely win a POY before graduating. Blakely simply impacts the game more than any other player in the league. Some fans still don’t give Blakely the respect he deserves – he’s never turned into the Taylor Coppenrath/Kenny Adeleke/T.J. Sorrentine/JJ Barea offensive juggernaut – and he can be stopped (or at least greatly slowed down) on the offensive end because, frankly, he can’t score from more than 4-feet away from the hoop. But he is a monster on the defensive end – he led the conference in steals and blocks (2.6 spg, 1.9 bpg) and disrupts the game both at the top of the 1-3-1 zone or defending in the paint. And on offense, Blakely is the catalyst for the league’s highest scoring team: far beyond his 17.4 points per game (16.5 ppg in conference games – good for 4th), Blakely draws constant double and triple-teams leaving his teammates WIDE OPEN. No one in the league gets to the line more, draws more fouls from opponents, or is more of a focus of opponent’s game-plans. Blakely will never be Coppenrath – but neither will anyone else in the league. Blakely is, quite simply, the best – overall, all-around – player in the league.
Defensive Player of the Year:
· Candidates: Marqus Blakely, Forward, Vermont; Tommy Brenton, Forward, Stony Brook; Russell Graham, Guard, New Hampshire.
The two-time Defensive Player of the Year, Blakely is a one-man tornado: He disrupts the game at both the top and the bottom of the 1-3-1 zone. He can take over a game defensively on the perimeter, or on the low-post. He was the overall leader in both steals and blocks. There isn’t much more that needs to be said – perhaps the only knock on Blakely is that he gambles a lot, and occasionally hurts his team because of it, and isn’t the best man-to-man defender in the league. The fact that Brenton and Graham even merit consideration speaks volumes about their quality as defenders: Brenton is almost a lesser version of Blakely – he blocks shots, picks pockets, and defends both in the post and on the perimeter – and is actually a better man-to-man defender. He murdered the defensive glass (leading the league in defensive rebounding both overall and in conference games). Graham, a fire-hydrant bull-dog guard, is the best man-to-man perimeter defender in the league.
· Winner: Marqus Blakely, Forward, Vermont.
Blakely is the league’s best overall defender; not much argument necessary.
Rookie of the Year:
· Candidates: Dylan Talley, Guard, Binghamton; Mike Black, Guard, Albany; Ferg Myrick, Forward, New Hampshire.
* This was by far the weakest overall freshman class that I have seen in the 9 years I have followed the America East.
Talley, a 6’5” strong-guard type, lead all league rookies in scoring, both in conference games and overall (13.5 ppg in AE games, 11.8 overall), despite playing out of position at the point guard spot. Talley also did a decent job on the glass. The knock on Talley is that he wasn’t much of a defender, and was not a team player (his offensive strategy at the point guard position was to put his head down and basically try to go 1 on 5 every time down the court). Black looks like Albany’s point guard of the future (although, we’ve said that about two different freshmen during the previous 2 years). After a slow start to the season, he blossomed; playing the most demanding position on the floor, averaging 10.4 points per game and 3.4 assists (7th in the league in conference games), while shooting .467 from behind the arc in league games (third best in the league). Myrick is, hands down, the league’s most talented rookie – as far as physical gifts it’s not even close – he averaged 10 points per game in conference game despite playing limited minutes.
· Winner: Mike Black, Guard, Albany.
Talley’s numbers are certainly impressive – but it’s not that hard to put up numbers if you have some talent and are simply “trying to get yours” every night. Myrick’s talent trumps anyone’s, but he didn’t get the consistent playing time needed to put up numbers equivalent of his talent. Black had a very nice season, and did it all; ran a team, scored, shot from behind the arc, and even defended well on the ball.
1st Team All-Conference:
· Candidates: Marqus Blakely, Forward, Vermont; John Holland, Guard/Forward, Boston University; Greer Wright, Forward, Binghamton; Muhammad El-Amin, Guard, Stony Brook; Joe Zeglinski, Guard, Hartford; Gerald McLemore, Guard, Maine; Tommy Brenton, Forward, Stony Brook.
Blakely and Holland need no explanation: Best player in the league, and best offensive player in the league, respectively. A 6’7” wing who can put the ball on the floor and take opponents of the dribble, Wright sputtered a bit down the stretch, but he finished the season fifth in overall scoring (15 ppg) and fourth in scoring in conference games (16.8ppg)., In conference games, Wright also finished fourth in assists (3.9 apg), fifth in assist-to-turnover ratio, and tenth in steals. El-Amin, McLemore, and Zeglinski are all pure-scorers. El-Amin – a 6’5” guard who is perhaps more adept at taking opponents off of the dribble than any other AE wing in recent history – hit big shot after big shot for the 1st place Seawolves down the stretch, and was second in scoring in conference games (19.1 ppg), and third in overall scoring (16.8 ppg). McLemore ranked sixth in overall scoring, eight in conference scoring – and was the Black Bears offense. McLemore was a monster shooter from behind the three-point line, finished out the season on an unbelievable shooting streak from behind the arc, and his numbers become more impressive when considering that he was the focus of every opponent’s defensive scheme. Zeglinski bounced back from an ankle injury that derailed his previous season to rank fourth in overall scoring (16.7 ppg), and third in scoring in conference games (17.3). Zeglinski hit several big shots this season – including a buzzer beating game-winner at UNH – and made an impact on the glass as well. Brenton has been completely overlooked by most fans, because he has not become a scorer – yet. Brenton only averaged 7.7 points per game (7.9 in conference games), but he was the most important player for the Seawolves, and according to coach Pikiell, was the Seawolves best overall player. Brenton led the league in rebounding (both overall at 9.6 rpg, and in AE games at 9.8 rpg), and led Stony Brook in steals, assists, and field goal percentage. A 6’5” ball of super-athletic energy, Brenton was the heart and soul of Stony Brook, and the league’s toughest player. It was no coincidence that the Seawolves took off and ran the AE gauntlet precicesly when Pikiell turned Brenton into a “point-forward” and had him run the Seawolves offense as soon as Stony Brook crossed half court. Brenton is arguably the best defender in the league not named “Marqus Blakely” and was often put in man-to-man coverage with the opponent’s best offensive player – regardless of whether they were on the perimeter or in the paint.
· Winners:
§ Marqus Blakely, Senior, Forward, Vermont: 17.4 ppg, 9.1 rpg, 3.7 apg, 2.6 spg, 1.9 bpg.
§ John Holland, Junior, Guard/Forward, Boston University: 19.9 ppg, 6.2 rpg, 1.6 spg.
§ Greer Wright, Junior, Forward, Binghamton: 15.0 ppg, 6.0 rpg, 3.2 apg, 1.2 spg.
§ Muhammad El-Amin, Senior, Guard, Stony Brook: 16.8 ppg, 19.1 ppg in conference games.
§ Tommy Brenton, Sophomore, Forward, Stony Brook: 7.7 ppg, 9.6 rpg, 2.8 apg, 1.8 spg.
Blakely and Holland need no explanation – they were the two best players in the league. Despite sputtering down the stretch, Wright was phenomenal in his first season. El-Amin, McLemore, and Zeglinski were all scorers who really didn’t defend at all, and El-Amin gets the edge in the “pure scoring department” as he averaged more points, hit more big shots, and played for the best team. Brenton is probably a shock and head scratcher to most fans, but he was a better overall player than any of the trio of scorers up for consideration – by the Marqus Blakely and Jay Greene factor of overall impact, Brenton made a bigger difference on the floor when considering the impact he had defending, rebounding, and distributing the ball.
2nd Team All-Conference:
§ Joe Zeglinski, R-Junior, Guard, Hartford: 16.7 ppg, 5.1 rpg.
§ Gerald McLemore, Sophomore, Guard, Maine: 14.9 ppg, .402 3pt-fg
§ Alvin Abreu, Junior, Guard, New Hampshire: 14.6 ppg.
§ Jake O’Brien, Sophomore, Forward, Boston University: 13.0 ppg, 6.6 rpg.
§ Maurice Joseph, Senior, Forward, Vermont: 14.3 ppg.
Zeglinski and McLemore were the last two kept off of the first team; both were big-time scorers and carried their respective clubs on offense. Zeglinski, a pint-sized fire-hydrant of a guard managed to dominate some games on the offensive glass, and was the heart and soul of the Hawks. McLemore still isn’t a “stopper,” but he made huge strides on the defensive end and was the Black Bears offense. Abreu was streaky, but was instrumental in the Wildcats 20 point win over 2nd place Vermont and 22 point win over 1st place Stony Brook. When on, Abreu is as good a scoring guard as there is, and also made a big impact on the defensive end. O’Brien was the 2nd best player on the Terriers, and took an absolute beating during the season as the Terriers only option in the low-post. He stretched the floor from behind the arc, gave the Terriers a scorer near the hoop, defended, and blocked some shots. Joseph is a one-dimensional player, but good-god can he shoot it when he gets into a groove, and down the stretch he was huge for the Catamounts.
3rd Team All-Conference:
§ Evan Fjeld, Sophomore, Forward, Vermont: 10.6 ppg, 5.9 rpg, 1.3 bpg.
§ Corey Lowe, Senior, Guard, Boston University: 14.1 ppg, 4.3apg.
§ Carlos Strong, Senior, Guard, Boston University: 10.1 ppg, 4.8 rpg, 1.6 spg.
§ Chris De La Rosa, R-Sophomore, Guard, UMBC: 11.8 ppg, 5.1 apg, 1.1 spg.
§ Brian Dougher, Sophomore, Guard, Stony Brook: 13.6 ppg, .423 3pt-fg.
Fjeld’s conference numbers were far greater than his overall numbers, as he became a real weapon during the conference slate. He also developed as a rebounder, and even shot blocker. What keeps Fjeld from the second team is that a great many of his buckets were completely uncontested, as he certainly benefitted from the double and triple-teams opponents employed on Blakely. Lowe’s numbers are considered a disappointment by many fans, but it wasn’t for lack of effort: Lowe completely bought into first-year head coach Pat Chambers’ scheme, and wore his heart on his sleeve during the season. For perhaps the first time in his career, Lowe truly sacrificed himself on both ends of the floor, played every game like it was his last, and put his team far above himself. Unfortunately, injuries took a heavy toll on Lowe down the stretch and prevented him from a 1st or 2nd team selection. Strong played the best basketball of his career down the stretch, and was instrumental in the Terriers late season surge. It is truly remarkable that De La Rosa lead the league in assists and assist to turnover ratio considering the team he was surrounded by. With any kind of supporting cast he might have been a 1st-teamer. Dougher was the best scorer and shooter on the league’s best team for a stretch, but cooled down the stretch. He was, however, still a terrific scorer.
All-Rookie Team:
· Candidates: Dylan Talley, Guard, Binghamton; Mike Black, Guard, Albany, Ferg Myrick, Forward, New Hampshire; Murphy Burnatowski, Forward, Maine; Marcus Rouse, Guard, Stony Brook; Charles White, Guard, Hartford; Shawn Grant, Forward, UMBC; Adrian Satchell, Forward, UMBC; Logan Aronhalt, Guard, Albany.
· Winners:
§ Dylan Talley, Guard, Binghamton
§ Mike Black, Guard, Albany
§ Ferg Myrick, Forward, New Hampshire
§ Murphy Burnatowski, Forward, Maine
§ Charles White, Guard, Hartford
Talley, Black, and Myrick are no-brainers. The other two spots were very much up in the air, but I give the edge to Burnatowski and White. Burnatowski was the best defender on a Black Bears squad that relied on defense. An incredibly tough, physical forward with athleticism and a mean-streak – the kind of good, Jason Grochowalski-Tommy Brenton mean-streak – Burnatowski made a huge impact on the defensive end, and showed some offensive flashes down the stretch while playing a crucial role in the Black Bears third-place finish. Charles White is a phenomenal perimeter defender – the best rookie defender in the league – and has done a remarkable job on some of the league’s best scorers (the job he did at home on Muhammad El-Amin was one of the more impressive performances by a freshman this season).
All-Defensive Team:
· Candidates: Marqus Blakely, Forward, Vermont; Tommy Brenton, Forward, Stony Brook; Russell Graham, Guard, New Hampshire; Chretien Lukusa, Guard, Binghamton; Mahamoud Jabbi, Forward, Binghamton; Dane DiLiegro, Center, New Hampshire; Murphy Burnatowski, Forward, Maine; Garvey Young, Guard, Vermont; Dallis Joyner, Center, Stony Brook. Charles White, Guard, Hartford.
Blakely – who will, and should, win his third straight defensive player of the year – is a no brainer. Brenton is a defensive tornado who can lock down on both low-post and perimeter players and shut them down, and controls the defensive glass (he led the league in defensive rebounding – overall, and in conference games – by a considerable margin). Graham is the best perimeter defender in the league, with Lukusa and White battling for second. Jabbi – an incredibly bouncy forward – led the league in blocked shots in conference games. DiLiegro draws more charges than anyone in the conference, gets phenomenal low-post positioning, and is a monster on the defensive glass. Burnatowski is a physical forward who defends both the low-post and the perimeter, and was the best defender on a Black Bears squad that won games on the defensive end. Young is another very strong and physical perimeter defender. Joyner came on late as a terrific low-post defender (the job he did on Blakely in the Seawolves regular-season championship clinching win over Vermont may well have been the best single defensive performance the league has seen this year).
· Winners:
§ Marqus Blakely, Senior, Forward, Vermont
§ Tommy Brenton, Sophomore, Forward, Stony Brook
§ Russell Graham, Sophomore, Guard, New Hampshire
§ Mahamoud Jabbi, R-Junior, Forward, Binghamton
§ Charles White, Freshman, Guard, Hartford.
Blakely, Brenton, and Graham were locks. Jabbi’s shot blocking coupled with his rebounding, and White’s perimeter defense give them the slight edge over the rest of the competition.
All-Floor Burn/Blue Collar (The League’s five toughest guys):
§ Tommy Brenton, Sophomore, Forward, Stony Brook
§ Dane DiLiegro, Junior, Center, New Hampshire
§ Radar Ongeutou, Senior, Forward, New Hampshire
§ Joe Zeglinski, R-Junior, Guard, Hartford
§ Tyrone Conley, Junior, Guard, New Hampshire
All-Rim-Wreckers and Backboard-Shakers (Top in-game dunkers)
§ Marqus Blakely, Senior, Forward, Vermont
§ Tyrone Conley, Junior, Guard, New Hampshire
§ Tommy Brenton, Sophomore, Forward, Stony Brook
§ Dane DiLiegro, Junior, Center, New Hampshire
§ Dallis Joyner, Sophomore, Center, Stony Brook
Blakely may be the best all-around in-game dunker the conference has seen. Conley has the highest vertical leap in the conference and is an insane high-flying acrobat – much closer to 6’1” than his listed 6’3” – he has been finishing off alley-oops and dunking on people in a way the conference hasn’t seen (from a small-guard) since Matt Turner. Brenton is another top-end athlete, but unlike Blakely and Conley, his dunks aren’t about acrobatics: he just tries to dunk on people as hard as he physically can. Brenton has become the America East’s version of Charles Barkley when it comes to finishing off fast breaks like a runaway freight train. DiLiegro and Joyner are all about raw-power: they both try to rip the rim off every time. Notables not making the list: John Holland, Chauncey Gilliam, and Carlos Strong – who are all terrific dunkers but just didn’t quite bring it enough this year.
All-Bust (The Biggest Disappointments)
§ Will Harris, Forward, Albany: Harris’s entire career as a Great Dane can be summed up in a line from Jay-Z: “You know the type, loud as a motorbike, but wouldn’t bust a grape in a fruit fight.” No one in the league talks more trash, makes more noise, or pounds their chest more prior to tip-off than Harris. And no one is quieter in big-game situations and big moments in their career. Harris is easily one of the three most physically talented players in the league, yet he couldn’t even rank in the top 20 in either scoring or rebounding during the conference slate. Harris simply doesn’t care, or doesn’t get it, or both. At the end of the day, he will have began his career starting at Virginia, and finished it sitting on the bench at Albany.
§ Tim Ambrose, Guard, Albany: Like Harris, Ambrose has incredible physical gifts, but has never come close to getting much out of the gifts he was blessed with on the court. He still doesn’t defend ANYONE, and doesn’t seem to have much energy or passion for the game.
§ Joel Barkers, Forward, Hartford: Barkers came out of the gate on fire in his first season at Hartford, and looked like the physical presence they desperately needed on the low-blocks. Alas, it wouldn’t last, as Barkers has looked uninspired and disinterested during most of the season.
§ Robbie Jackson, Center, UMBC: A transfer from Marshall, Jackson was billed as a 7-footer who would change the game in the America East. Jackson took the floor out of shape, overweight, and without much passion or fire. At 7 feet (more like 6’10”) he plays the game like he’s 6’1”.
§ Athletic Director Joel Thirer/Head Coach Kevin Broadus/Tiki Mayben/D.J. Rivera/Malik Alvin et all: What more needs to be said about this collective group of clowns that has imploded the Binghamton basketball program? They single handedly turned Vestal, NY, into the setting of a Road Warrior movie. Cocaine and Marijuana Dealing, condom stealing, credit card fraud, paying players, pressuring admissions to let in unqualified students, pressuring teachers to change grades, and in general allowing student athletes at a low-major school to live completely above the law; that sort of thing isn’t acceptable at UConn, let alone Binghamton. To quote Adam Sandler’s Billy Madison, “I award them no points, and may god have mercy on their souls.”
]]>There’s no way to sugar coat it: The America East just isn’t good this year. After spending last season ranked in the mid-teens, the America East looks destined to end the season ranked in the mid-twenties. And to be blunt, in the nine years that I have followed the conference, this is the weakest it has ever been.
The silver lining, however, is that the “down year” could produce a tremendous conference tournament. Last season parity reigned supreme in the America East, and while there was no real “power” like Vermont and Boston University during the first part of the decade, Albany of a few years ago, or even UMBC from two years ago, what resulted was the most competitive conference tournament in recent memory, as every single game seemed to go down to the buzzer. With even more parity this season, the 2010 “AE” Tournament could prove to the most hard-fought, dramatic, and compelling in conference history. The common phrase thrown around every season is “on any night, any team can beat any other,” but nowhere has this phrase ever been more true than the upcoming tournament, as on a neutral court in Hartford, literally any of the nine America East squads has a real chance of beating any of the other eight.
For the conference as a whole, there is light at the end of the tunnel, as the league will be better next season (it couldn’t get any worse, right?) The vast majority of the America East’s talent lies within it’s junior (John Holland, Joe Zeglinski, Dane DiLiegro, Greer Wright, Sean McNally, Tyrone Conley, Alvin Abreu, Tim Ambrose), and sophomore (Tommy Brenton, Gerald McLemore, Jake O’Brien, Brian Dougher, Dallis Joyner) classes.
Having seen all nine teams play live at least three times, here are some quick thoughts on the year:
But what do I know? After all, here’s how I ranked the team in the pre-season:
And with half of the season in the books, here’s how the league standings look as of now:
I’ve got two right, that’s gotta’ count for something… right?
Make sure to check back in to Hoopville for upcoming bi-weekly conference notebooks, game stories, and player features, as well as a multi-part trip down memory lane.
It’s good to be back.
]]>Terrier fans are quick to point out that the Terriers field the most talented trio in the league in Corey Lowe, John Holland, and Jake O’Brien – but talent alone has never won the America East. Perhaps even more concerning has been the Terriers’ lack of direction and effort on defense and on the glass, none of which was rectified against the Bison as the Terriers allowed Bucknell open looks all night. The Terriers’ 32-16 halftime lead vanished minutes into the second half, and had the Bison been playing with any legs under them, they very well could have walked away with the game. Further concerning was the absence of Lowe for the entire game (1-5 from behind the arc, five turnovers), and Holland’s disappearance in the second half. Equally concerning is the Terriers’ lack of depth in the post, and lack of sheer effort on the glass, as BU managed a mere seven offensive rebounds.

But for all of his monster slams and floor-burn plays, Brenton may be most fun for his mental approach. Next time you attend a Stony Brook game, pay attention to the way Brenton sets up opponents minutes ahead to commit offensive fouls, and watch the way he recovers from a late rotation by getting a hand directly in the face of a shooter, instead of flying for an impossible block and committing a late foul.But to make the NCAA tournament, Stony Brook is going to need Brenton to add a new dimension to his game and start scoring more. Brenton has all the tools to do it: he’s as athletic as anyone, is strong as an ox around the hoop, and shot well over 40 percent from behind the arc last year – but he needs to develop a scorer’s mentality and start looking for his shot more.
And I know that BU is dealing with a plethora of injuries to key players, including senior star Corey Lowe (ankle) and projected starting center Scott Brittain (concussion). I know that even at full strength, the Terriers just don’t stack up with 13th-ranked UConn. I know all about the trio of Lowe, John Holland, and Jake O’Brien being the most talented three-headed monster in the conference. I know that first-year head coach Patrick Chambers is a much-needed breath of fresh-air to an emotionally burnt out team. And I know that the Terriers are dealing with a sharp learning curve that comes with trying to learn a completely new offensive, defensive, and cultural scheme and mindset. And I know that this is a down year for the America East. And I know, Holland scored a game-high 23 points against Northeastern and O’Brien had a double-double with 18 and 10 boards.
But – I’m sorry – the Terriers as the America East conference favorite? No. Not the way this team is currently constituted. Not right now. Not the way they’ve played for the past two weeks. And the UConn game was the icing on the cake.
It’s not that BU lost to UConn – the undermanned Terriers weren’t expected to compete against national power UConn – it’s that the very players who are supposed to carry BU to a conference title didn’t bother to show up (and I’m not talking about injured seniors Corey Lowe, Scott Brittain, and Valdas Siruitus, none of whom made the short trip down I-84 to Hartford).
Long before the Huskies’ offense finally sputtered into gear, long before UConn began asserting themselves and playing up to their potential, and long before Stanley Robinson started defying the laws of gravity, BU had beaten themselves.
BU had the opportunity to come in and put up a fight against a team looking past them, as to be blunt, UConn didn’t look like they were taking the game seriously from their opening layup lines.
But the Terriers looked lost and scared on offense. And, frankly, it’s a bad sign when freshman B.J. Bailey and walk-on Tunde Agboola (who up until a game ago had never played a meaningful minute in his career) play with more poise, fire and heart – and do a better job of “getting up” for a big game – than John Holland, Carlos Strong, and Jake O’Brien.
Thus far, Holland has been a player defined by tremendous ability and inconsistent play on the floor – the fact that he could score 15 points against Northeastern, 18 against Harvard, and 23 against UConn, yet still look invisible for large stretches, speaks to both.
And for all the talk about Holland’s 23 points, he was in single digits until the game was a blowout, and scored most of his buckets against UConn’s bench (I don’t put much stock in dunks over Alex Hornat or Kyle Bailey). And on the defensive end, he was completely lost, spending more of his time sprawled on the floor after going for ill-advised steal attempts than he did covering his man on defense.
Chambers has been quick to speak up for Holland, saying, “John is a guy who just needs to stop thinking out there, we just need to calm him down and he’ll be fine.” And in Holland’s defense, he’s a terrific kid with unmatched talent in the America East. But he just doesn’t look like a guy right now who can consistently play at a high-level.
Perhaps more concerning, is the apparent lack of spring in Holland’s step, so to speak, in the early going, as he has appeared tentative on the break, and isn’t elevating as high, or throwing down dunks with as much authority, as he did last year.
Chambers assured reporters after the game that Holland was perfectly healthy, but that only raises concerns as to his mind-set and energy level on the court.
In defense of the team, in his first year Chambers has introduced an up-and-down run-and-gun style of basketball that is something completely foreign to the Terriers’ nucleus that had played under Dennis Wolff’s grind-the-shot clock-down style. And certainly, the Terriers are still learning the system. Privately, behind closed doors the coaching staff was prepared to start the season 0-8 as the Terriers adjusted.
“We’re still not where we need to be, but were going to get there,” said Chambers. “The guys are fighting through it. There’s still a learning curve, but I think come the first week of January we’ll be where we need to be.”
But learning curve or not, it’s hard to explain away the play of BU’s veterans when they’ve played in bigger games than this. And perhaps the most lasting images from the UConn game were Holland sliding around on the floor and out of position on defense, chucking and ducking on offense, and Strong – when he was one of only two guards on the floor – sprinting down court with his back to his teammates on an inbounds play during a UConn press.
And it’s hard to not be a bit concerned when I saw “less talented” squads in Stony Brook and Hartford go into the XL center last season and put up much more fight against a much more talented UConn squad.
Even with a healthy Lowe, and if BU can grasp Chambers’ system by the end of the year, this is a seriously flawed team with a seriously short bench and very shaky low post game. Lowe, Holland, and Strong are all streaky players who have the ability to both light up the scoreboard and vanish in a big game.
In the low post, the Terriers have been without the services of 6′9″ starting center Scott Brittain all season long, and shouldn’t count on getting him back, period: Brittain suffered the sixth concussion of his life during the pre-season, and even if he does return, it’s going to be hard to expect much from him.
Additionally, even if Brittain can come back, Chambers is still only working with a three-man bench, and fouls and the grind of the season could be a problem.
Beyond the bench, BU is going to have a hard time in the low post with only O’Brien – who fights with all his heart but is still much more of a skilled and finesse player than a physical presence on the low blocks – and Siruitis and sophomore Jeff Pelage, both of whom are really suited as role players.
How does BU match up against a team that can throw the ball into the post and punch the Terriers in the mouth? The Terriers will have their hands full with the frontcourts of New Hampshire with Dane DiLiegro, and Maine with Sean McNally, so how the heck do they counter Vermont when they throw the ball into the post to Marqus Blakely? How do they match up to a deep and super physical Stony Brook squad that never gives up, employs a ten man rotation, crashes the boards with authority, and plays all-out physical basketball for forty-minutes?
The answer is, right now – the way this team is currently constituted – they don’t.
Not when skinny step-out four-man Jake O’Brien is the only interior defender and low-post option on offense. Not when Corey Lowe and John Holland drift around the perimeter aimlessly whenever they don’t have the ball in their hands, or jack up ill-advised 26 footers the second they get a touch.
Don’t get me wrong, this BU team is talented, and their “A game” is as good as anyone’s in the America East. When Holland is out in transition, throwing down highlight-reel dunks and slashing to the hoop, when Carlos Strong is bulling his way over and through opposing guards to the hoop, and when Strong, Lowe, and Morris are nailing their threes, and O’Brien is mixing it up inside and out, their going to be tough to beat.
But the problem is, far too often the Terriers show up and play their “C” game, and that starts with the effort and mentality of their go-to-guys. At some point, you can’t blame the lack of focus, effort, and basketball awareness on youth, inexperience, or a previous couching regime: Lowe and Strong are seniors, and Holland and O’Brien have started almost every single game of their respective careers. All of them have played in big games against big-time opponents. They have a coach who supports his players with an unmatched enthusiasm and zeal – one who isn’t going to bench a player for a bad shot, or tear him down verbally for an on the court mistake.
Right now, this is a Terriers team with talent, but one that’s still struggling to find its way in the basketball world. And if the Terriers’ nucleus hasn’t put it together at this point in their careers, do we really believe that they are suddenly going to have an on-court epiphany before the season is over?
And even if they do, BU is going to need their trio of Lowe, Holland, and O’Brien to play at the top of their game every game down the stretch. That’s a lot to ask of three players who are going to have played a heck of a lot of minutes by season’s end.
But I guess it could be worse, 2-6 is a heck of a lot better than 0-8.
Right?
]]>Zeglinski shines with assist from Torres, Newcomers, in Hawks’ route of Marist.
(West Hartford, CT) – It was only a year, but to Joe Zeglinski, it felt like a lifetime.
“It was really hard, sitting out that long and just watching,” said the red-shirt junior in what may have been the understatement of the year, referring to the season he lost to torn ligaments in his left ankle.
Two years ago, the University of Hartford Hawks came within one game of the first NCAA tournament appearance in school history, with Zeglinski playing a starring role, averaging over 16 points per game and knocking down a school record 103 three-pointers en route to becoming only the second sophomore in school history to be named 1st Team All-Conference (the first being former NBA All-Star Vin Baker).
A year later, a dejected Zeglinski would watch helplessly from the sidelines as the Hawks plummeted to last place, struggling through a 7-26 campaign, including 2-14 in conference games.
As painful as it was to watch an outmanned and out-gunned Hawks team struggle through the season, it was even harder to watch Zeglinsk – one of the fiercest competitors in the country – confined to a medical boot, squirming anxiously on sidelines with a dejected and downtrodden look on his face.
“It hurt me to watch it,” he reflected, “We want to forget about last year, put it behind us, not talk about it any more.”
For Zeglinski and the Hawks, Wednesday was an opportunity to turn the page and put their past behind them, as Hartford annihilated the Marist Red Foxes 75-38 in their home opener.
From the opening tip, the Hawks dominated, hitting the Red Foxes with a haymaker in the opening minutes by drilling three-straight 3’s, and never looked back, at one point pushing their lead past 40 points. And it was Zeglinski who was at the center of it, as he poured in a game high 22 points on 8-11 shooting, including 6-8 from behind the arc.
“Having Joe back is huge, he’s a great player, he changes the game,” said point guard Andres Torres.
After struggling in the Haws season opening loss to Quinnipiac, Zeglinski awoke in the Hawks second game, drilling seven three’s and scoring 23 points in the Hawks near upset against Baylor.
And against Marist, he was unconscious: Zeglinski finished the night with 22 points, but he could have scored 40, as no one on the court could stop him. Zeglinski hit three’s from NBA range over a swarm of defenders, and looked to be playing with more confidence than ever. Even more encouraging than his outside shooting, was the step-back jumper off of his left ankle, and a drive to the basket in which he plowed through what looked like the entire Red Foxes roster before muscling his way to the hoop for an acrobatic bucket.
But to head coach Dan Leibovitz, the most encouraging sign from Zeglinski was his effort on the defensive end.
“Joe is playing the best defense of his life, he’s improved his game on the defensive end,” raved Leibovitz.
And what should be scary for the rest of the America East is that Zeglinski still isn’t anywhere close to one-hundred percent: He’s still wearing a cumbersome brace on his left ankle, and still a half step slower, and flying a little bit lower, than he was before the injury.
Which begs the question; if Zeglinski can do this while still hobbled and trying to shake off the cob-webs accumulated from a year of watching from the sidelines, what can he do once he’s regained his running back’s speed and 37 inch vertical leap, and had an entire non-conference schedule to adjusted back into the flow of the game?
But what’s most encouraging for the Hawks is that Zeglinski isn’t doing it alone anymore; junior Andres Torres has emerged as a game changing playmaker, and first year junior college transfers Milton Burton and Joel Barkers have given the Hawks firepower in two area’s that crippled them last season: an athletic wing, and physicality in the post.
Torres keyed the Hawks offense Wednesday, blowing by Marist defenders and leaving them in his dust as he dished out seven assists without a turnover.
After being benched for the first half of the season opener, Torres has played out of his mind dishing out 23 assists on the season while only committing two turnovers. After struggling to find a true point guard during his tenure at Hartford, Leibovitz appears to have a game changer in Torres.
“It’s happening because when he turns one over in practice, we go crazy,” Leibovitz said. “We act like the world is coming to an end.”
The fastest player on the Hawks (and quite possibly fastest in the league), Torres has emerged as a game changing playmaker at the point guard position, as he seems to have finally harnessed his sprinter’s speed, and is excelling at attacking the paint and drawing the defense before kicking off to the open man.
Equally encouraging for the Hawks has been the play of Burton and Barkers. Junior college transfers generally take a while to adjust to the division I game, but the Hawks’ duo has hit the ground running: Last season Hartford was murdered in the paint, as the Hawks were the worst rebounding team in the conference and struggled to score from the low post. Barkers appears to be exactly what the Hawks have lacked; through three games the junior is averaging 17.3 points per game and shooting almost sixty-percent. More importantly, he’s clearing room on the low blocks. Against Marist, Barkers plowed over defenders and barreled his way to 15 points on 7-10 shooting.
Burton has given the Hawk the “X-Factor” that they were lacking last season. A high-flier with top-level athleticism, Burton scored 12 points, dished out four assists, and in general was a tornado of energy on the offensive and defensive ends.
But maybe the most encouraging sign from Wednesday night was the effort and results on the defensive end; after watching his zone defense get picked apart nightly last season, Leibovitz has switched to a man-to-man scheme, and it has provided immediate results, as the Hawks held Marist to under 25 percent from the floor and forced 16 turnovers.
“That’s what University of Hartford basketball is going to be. We’re going to defend, we’re going to take care of the ball. Those are the percentages I’ve been taught all my life, that put you in a position to be successful. … They’ve bought in, and this game validates everything we’ve been teaching.”
And with Zeglinski returning to his 1st Team All-Conference form, and the development of Torres in the point, Barkers in the post, and Burton on the wing, the Hawks – an afterthought at the start of the season – may make some serious noise in the America East Conference.
]]>· Not to look past the regular season, but I’m really excited for this year’s America East tournament: The University of Hartford will host the first ever combined men’s and women’s tourney, and if league Media Day was any precursor, it’s going to be great. Hartford secured a heck of a sponsor in Newman’s Own (the first time the men have had a sponsor in several years), and pulled out all the stops in a top-notch tip-off: Great food, great atmosphere. The league couldn’t have chosen a better school or administration to host, and the centralized location should help attendance.
· For much of their home opening 69-59 loss to George Washington, BU looked like they were still playing for former coach Dennis Wolff, as they looked completely lost on offense. But don’t despair yet Terriers fans; it’s going to take the Terriers a WHILE to grasp coach Pat Chambers’ system, which is a 180 from Wolff’s. What fans should be encouraged about: Chambers’ enthusiasm, as after the George Washington defeat he gushed about his team, the opportunity to continue to build on an already tight-knit group during their trip to Puerto Rico, and he even kidded John Holland about his responses to reporters questions. It was a drastic change from previous seasons when Terriers players seemed nervous in press conferences; hopefully it translates onto the court. Chambers wants the Terriers to play with confidence and not fear, and to play “free.” In previous years BU seemed to collapse down the stretch, and to play either too scared or without any heart, a change in attitude would be nice.
· BU fans should be worried about the absence of Scott Brittain. The senior center is out indefinitely with post concussion syndrome, and he may not be back for a very long time, as word is this is the sixth concussion Brittain has suffered in his life. Without Brittain, BU could struggle mightily against teams with strength in the post, and Stony Brook, Vermont, UNH, and even Maine could provide problems in conference play.
· Binghamton, of course, was the lone school with not represented at Media Day (no coaches, administration, etc), and while it’s understandable that the league, and Binghamton itself, did not want the event to turn into a Binghamton centered sideshow, the general feeling amongst America East coaches was that by not being there, Binghamton only made themselves more of a story.
· For anyone who thinks that Mark Macon (or anyone “in house”) is the answer to right the Bearcats ship: I’ve got a bridge to sell ‘ya.
Malik Alvin’s adventures in Walmart shopping/condom stealing, and Tiki Mayben’s arrest for cocaine were well-published, but trust me, there is a hell of a lot more that has yet to go public. In fact, there are some pretty substantiated rumors of, among other things, credit card fraud, Marijuana dealing, and improprieties an the part of several members of the basketball staff and athletic administration. Broadus allowed a culture at Binghamton in which men’s b-ballers were not held accountable for any of their actions, and were allowed to live above the law, and all the members of his staff were on board with it (without getting into specifics, some of them crossed the line themselves). And what did Macon do shortly after taking over as the Interim head coach? He publicly lead the Bearcats in a sign of solidarity at “Midnight Madness” with the aforementioned Mayben, symbolically reaching out and extending T-shirts to him. Yeah, that’s the kind of leadership that an already reeling program needs. To quote one America East coach, “Yeah, that was classy.”
You stay classy Mark Macon… you stay classy…
· Due to fear of injury, coaches would never sign off on it, but how cool would it be if the America East held a slam-dunk contest to tip-off the conference tournament? I think it would be a huge hit either the night before, or day of, the play-in game, and a great way to further pump up fan interest. I’d choose a field of Marqus Blakely (UVM), Chauncey Gilliam (UMBC), John Holland (BU), Tim Ambrose (Albany), Brian Benson (UNH), Tyrone Conley (UNH), Andrew McAllister (Stony Brook), and Prey Preyboye (Stony Brook). Blakely would likely be favored by the fans, but as of now Gilliam has impressed me the most during various Mid-night madness contests… But I wouldn’t sleep on Preboye pulling off an upset.
· Blakely did a terrific job of shutting me up in Vermont’s season opener: The Catamounts fell to Loyola in their season opener 79-66, but not because of Blakely, who did everything he could to carry the otherwise sluggish Catamounts. Blakely scored 26 points, rejected 5 shots, pulled down 7 rebounds, came away with 3 steals and dished out a pair of assists. More importantly, he nailed 2 jumpers and a 3-ball, and went 11-13 from the charity stripe. Blakely followed that up with 17 points, 12 boards, 7 assists, 3 blocks and 3 steals in a gutsy win over Buffalo. I’m still not convinced that Blakely can consistently create his own shot or take over a game on offense when defenses center their game plans around staying between him and the basket – Loyola focused on trailing him all game, which allowed him to beat his man to the hoop on a number of back-door cuts – but a few more games like that and I will likely change my tune.
· Boston University fans continue to label John Holland as a forward, but as of now the 6’5″ super-athlete and super-talent is a big guard: Holland has length, athleticism, shooting ability, and ball-handling to be one of the greatest players in AE history, and is the only real NBA-prospect in the conference. But what Holland doesn’t do, at least not right now, is utilize his size and get to the hoop. Holland brings the house down when he gets out and running on the fast break, but in the half-court offense he is far too content to sit behind the three-point arc and jack up three-pointers. He is a good shooter, but not good enough to simply chuck up shots, and with his length and athleticism, he should be attacking the rim at will. And in the post Holland has been the tin man when it comes to the heart needed to be a rebounder. Until he is willing to mix it up on the glass, and get to the hoop in traffic, he’s not a forward in my book, and the Terriers need him to start being one. With Chambers’ new style, the Terriers are going to be running and gunning in a lot of four-guard sets, and they need Holland (the biggest of the four) to start making an impact on the glass.
· Fans have short memories, and had already forgotten just how good Hartford’s Joe Zeglinski was. Some have gone so far as to claim that JuCo transfer Milton Burton is the “best talent head coach Dan Leibovitz has ever brought in,” among many other such lunacies. But the fact is, prior to last year’s ankle injury, which cost the redshirt junior his season, Zeglinski was a first-team all-conference player, and well on his way to not only being one of the greatest players in school history, but AE history. Zeglinski is a bulldog of a guard with a fearless mindset and top-notch athleticism (he was a D-I caliber recruit as a running back in high school). After struggling during his rehabilitation and in pre-season, and after a sluggish first game back, Zeglinski showed up in a big way in Hartford’s 71-69 heart breaker at Baylor: Zeglinski scored 23 points, nailing 7 three-pointers, and for long stretches was the best player on the floor, and he followed it up with 22 points on 8-11 shooting in Hartford’s romp over Marist, and he could have scored more – a lot more.
· It’s a tradition of mine whenever I head down to West Hartford, to stop by Rein’s Deli (exit 65 off I-84 – shameless plug) to pick up sandwiches for myself and coach Dan Leibovitz. A funny thought crossed my mind the last time we knoshed on Ham sandwiches on white bread with mayonnaise: somewhere, there must have been an ancestor of one of us rolling in their grave. By the way coach, what’s a guy gotta do to get mentioned in your blog???
· Say what you want about Albany head coach Will Brown – and many fans (and some coaches) do, as many think he is arrogant, pompous, and a sore loser – but I want to go on record as being a “Will Brown guy”. I agree, he could perhaps use a tad bit of humility in defeat, but Brown is the most entertaining quote in the conference, and he has the marbles to go on record and speak his mind, as opposed to the same cliché sayings we usually hear regurgitated by most coaches. And as an aside, big ups to coach Brown for the shout out on his twitter page.
· I am neither a Kevin Broadus, nor Al Walker guy… Binghamton deserves better.
· Boston University first-year head coach Patrick Chambers may be certifiably insane – and I couldn’t be more psyched: At the “Terrier Tip-off” Chambers jumped on tables, tore off his suit jacket, and led the students in chants of “Corey Lowe,” all while pumping up the packed house and imploring fans to sellout the Agganis Arena for the Terriers’ season opener against George Washington.
· Few coaches in recent history have been as polarizing as former BU head coach Dennis Wolff, whom was fired after 14 years at the helm of the Terriers’ ship. Fan’s and alums either loved or hated him, but it’s not that black and white. Wolff was a terrific recruiter: during a three-year stretch from the 2001-2002 season through 2003-2004, Wolff fielded easily the most talented (top-to-bottom) roster the conference has seen in a very long time. BU didn’t just have an “A-10 roster” they had a GOOD A-10 roster as far as talent goes. In fact, their 2002-2003 squad boasted nine (yes you read that right, nine) players whom would be named to an All-Conference team at one point in their careers. Wolff was also a phenomenal defensive coach who guided the Terriers to two NCAA tournament births and 3 NIT’s. But the end of his career was defined by player departures and America East postseason failures.
Aside from the rumors of running players out of the program, perhaps his real downfall was that he simply could not get the most out of the talent he recruited. When I take a step back and really think about it, I can name 3 players whom Wolff maximized their potential: Kevin Gardner, Kevin Fitzgerald, and Stijn Dhondt. On the reverse side, does anyone think he really got the most out of guys like Matt Turner, Jason Grochowalski, Billy Collins, Chaz Carr, Shaun Wynn, Rashad Bell, Ryan Butt, Etienne Brower, and Tony Gaffney to name a few? (The latter two were shown the door from the program, only to relocate to Umass and put up big numbers in the Atlantic-10.) And the Terriers developed a terrible habit of simply failing to play up to their potential come tournament time. With that said, a part of me is sad to see Wolff go: He patrolled the sidelines when I was still in high school sitting courtside with my dad, and there was something comforting about that continuity every time I walked through the doors at Case Gymnasium.
· Glad that BU kept Associate head coach Orlando Vandross: Good guy, good coach.
· Five guys I’d go to war with: Tommy Brenton (Stony Brook), David Bookman (Hartford), Joe Zeglinski (Hartford), Marqus Blakely (Vermont), and Dane DiLiegro (UNH).
· Poised for breakout years: Tyrone Conley (UNH), Chris Martin (Stony Brook), Gerald McLemore (Maine), Carlos Strong (BU), Dallis Joyner (Stony Brook), Dane DiLiegro (UNH),
· If he ever gets healthy, Stony Brook forward Danny Carter is going to be a stud in the America East: A 6’9″ shooter, he has serious athleticism and can finish with authority around the hoop. Carter showed his talent last year with a 20 point outburst against UConn, hitting floaters in the lane above lottery pick Hasheen Thabeet.
· New Hampshire freshman point guard Chandler Rhoades has no business playing in the America East: He could play at a much higher level. A legit 6’4″, he’s a helluva athlete with sprinter speed, and is the biggest, most athletic point the AE has seen in quite some time.
· Former UMBC Retriever Andrew Feeley (05’) has quietly carved out a lucrative career for himself overseas. Feeley spent three season’s dominating the BJ and JBL leagues in Japan, and has gotten his foot in the European door this year, playing terrifically in Slovenia. And while his conference peers have disappeared into 9-5 life (only two other players from his graduating class, Taylor Coppenrath and Rashad Bell, are currently under professional contracts), Feeley, who never even made an All-Conference team, has been climbing the professional ranks every season.
· Teams I’m excited to see: The super-athletic Seawolves who could win the whole conference, New Hampshire, Hartford, Vermont, and Binghamton – that’s right, Binghamton, in the same way you get excited when you see a Nascar crash or a terrible movie in that you just don’t know how ludicrous or bad it’s going to get.
· Quote of the week, from my good friend Matt Bernstein after hearing that Binghamton did not attend the America East Media day: “Do you think they’re seceding from the Union?”
· Until next time America East fans.
]]>What’s important for conference fans is to not forget just how good this year was for the America East as a whole. The conference will finish the season either 16th or 17th in RPI, up from 27th last year. The league was competitive from top to bottom, and on any given night anyone in the conference could beat anyone else.
The America East’s terrific season was capped by one of the most remarkable conference tournaments in league history. From the opening tip-off of Friday night’s “play-in game” between 9th seeded Hartford and 8th seeded Maine, to Sunday’s semi-final between top ranked Binghamton and upstart UNH, the tournament was a war. All eight teams who advanced to Saturday genuinely believed they could win the whole thing, and all eight played like it.
The America East has never seen more collective blood, sweat, and tears left on the floor during one of it’s tournaments, and fans shouldn’t lose sight of this.
So here’s a look at the highlights of what may be the most competitive, and best played America East tournament ever.
Best single game performance: Darryl Proctor, UMBC versus Boston University. There were plenty of terrific games during the tournament: Jay Greene’s 29 point, 6 assist performance in the Retriever’s semi-final win over Albany was certainly impressive. D.J. Rivera was huge with 26 points, 8 rebounds, and a game ending steal and dunk against UNH. Corey Lowe tied a tournament high with 33 points in BU’s loss to UMBC. Malik Alvin was also big with 29 points in Binghamton’s win over Hartford. Tyrece Gibbs was just clutch, scoring 18 in back-to-back games. But it was Proctor who stood head and shoulders above the rest with his 33 point, 11 rebound, one-man demolition of Boston University. Boston University swarmed Proctor every time he touched the ball, but they still couldn’t stop him. Proctor fought off double and triple teams and scored from everywhere on the floor. And on the defensive end he held John Holland to three first half points, before switching over and frustrating Corey Lowe for the second half and overtime period. With 2.5 seconds left Proctor gathered in a loose ball and nailed a 10 foot fade-away jumper over two defenders to send the game into overtime, and proceeded to lead the Retrievers to victory in the extra session.
All-Tournament Team: The America East likes to wait until after the championship game to hand out All-Tournament awards, but here are the five guys who played the best during the best conference tournament in recent memory:
Darryl Proctor, UMBC: 2 games, 24 ppg, 42 mpg, 9.5 rpg, 5 assists, 2 steals, 1 block.
Tyrece Gibbs, UNH: 2 games, 18 ppg, 6.5 rpg, 8 assists, 2 blocks.
Emanuel “Tiki” Mayben, Binghamton: 2 games, 20 ppg, 5rpg, 7 assists, 4 steals.
D.J. Rivera, Binghamton: 2 games, 19 ppg, 9.5 rpg, 2 assists, 4 steals, 1 block.
Corey Lowe, BU: 1 game, 33 points, 7 rebounds, 4 assists.
Tournament MVP: Darryl Proctor, UMBC. Proctor didn’t have a particularly good shooting night in his second game, scoring 15 points while going 6-18 from the floor (perhaps his worst shooting performance of the year considering the number of good looks he missed). But no other player put together two great tournament games, no one had as big a game as Proctor’s quarterfinal game against Boston University, and despite his shooting, Proctor helped UMBC beat Albany: He finished off two huge fast breaks, ripped down big rebounds, and helped to shut down Albany’s will Harris in the second half.
Gutsiest performance: Mike Trimboli, Vermont vs Albany. No one in the league has been as polarizing as Trimboli during his four years at Vermont, and I’ve made no bones about some of my qualms with Mike in the past. But let’s get this out on the table, Trimboli was as sick as anyone I’ve ever seen play in a game, far sicker than what was reported in the press. Trimboli left everything on the court, he just didn’t have enough on Saturday, and no one (certainly not Trimboli) deserves to have their career end the way his did. And Trimboli was a MAN after the game, as with tears in his eyes he answered every single question thrown at him honestly and openly (I for one want to know who the clown was in the press conference who first spelled out every single shortcoming of Vermont during Trimboli’s four years of playing, and then asked him just “how devastated” he was. Who the !#$%!*! does that?).
Best Stat-line: Clint Kuban, Hartford vs Binghamton. Kuban’s stat line will be hard to duplicate: 6 points, 2-2 from 3, 1 steal, 0+ minutes, and it was well earned. A four year walk-on is a terrific student and fine young man whom has maintained a GPA close to 4.0 while juggling the rigors of Division I ball while majoring in Psychology. Kuban has seldom left the bench during his career, but Saturday he single handedly made Binghamton coach Kevin Broadus pull out his own reserves, as Kuban’s corner three, steal, and ensuing three in a six second span cut Binghamton’s lead from 12 to 6 with twelve seconds left.
Biggest tear-jerker: Watching Eric Gilchrese leave the floor for the last time. Gilchrese had to overcome the death of his mother, a woman he calls his hero, in the middle of the season, and missed 12 games dealing with the grief.
Best Dunk: There weren’t many dunks in the tournament, but that wasn’t a reflection of the overall athleticism or dunking ability of the conference as a whole: This was most athletic, and best dunking year the America East has had in a very, very long time. Every team (sans Maine) had at least one BIG TIME dunker on their roster (and teams like Binghamton, UNH, and Stony Brook had several). The lack of dunks in the tournament was a reflection of just how hard every single team defended the ball for forty minutes, especially around the basket. With that said, Hartford’s Anthony Minor had a very nice two-handed caulk-back dunk in traffic against Maine, and New Hampshire’s Dane DiLiegro almost ripped the rim off with a two-handed power slam over half of Binghamton’s roster in Sunday’s semi-final night cap. However, easily the dunk of the tournament was New Hampshire’s Tyrone Conley absolutely posterizing Binghamton’s Reggie Fuller with a two-handed fast break slam. Conley snuck into the passing lane and snatched a Binghamton dish past half-court and took off at full speed towards the hoop with Fuller, one of the best shot blockers in the conference, and an All-Defensive team selection, in hot pursuit. Fuller caught up with him about 30 feet away from the hoop and chased him every step of the way. Most players would have pulled up, or tried to go up and under the hoop for a lay-up, but not Conely, who more than lived up to his nickname “Skyrone” as he launched himself like a missile at the rim. Fuller, who has a good 4 inches in height and much more in length over Conely (who’s 6’2” in shoes) jumped with him. Conely threw down a monster two-handed slam while taking a viscious hit from Fuller, which sent Conley head first on the floor. Fuller came away with a “hard-foul” call, and Conely a concussion, a leg injury, and one fantastic dunk.
Best individual pre-game dunk-show: Chauncey Gilliam. Before UMBC’s Sunday semi-final against Albany, Gilliam put on what was the best pre-game dunk performance that I have seen from an America East player since Matt Turner. Gilliam threw down almost every dunk imaginable: reverses, double-pump reverses, windmills, 360’s, the 360 the off the glass alley-oop, the off the glass reverse, the off the glass through the legs, the off the glass 360… It could only be described as REDONKULOUS.
Best team pre-game dunk show: Stony Brook. Tommy Brenton, Demetrius Young, Muhammad El-Amin, Jermol Paul, Danny Carter, Dallis Joyner, and even walk-on Michal Zylinski put on quite the show of “top-this.”
Best dunker you’ve never seen… and would never expect: David Fine. Binghamton’s junior walk-on can flat out dunk the ball. He might not look like it, but man can the kid get airborne, and he can do some really creative stuff above the rim with the ball.
Best display of sportsmanship: It’s hard to come up with only one, because the class and camaraderie that all of these kids carried themselves with on the court went above and beyond even America East standards. Sure, there was some trash-talking, but there wasn’t any disrespect on the court from one player to another (just fans to players and vice versa). But in the finale of the weekend UNH’s Dane DiLiegro helped both Tiki Mayben and Reggie Fuller of Binghamton up off the floor on separate occasions after bowling them over in the paint, giving each a hug and pat on the back, and both Mayben and Fuller later returned the favor to DiLiegro.
Best display of what being a teammate, and what America East basketball, is all about: Michael Turner. After fouling out of the last game of his college career, it would have been understandable if Turner, who played in last season’s title game and began the year with championship dreams in his head, had covered his eyes with a towel, cried, sulked, or bemoaned the basketball gods. After all, he could see that the game was in hand for Binghamton and his career, and life for the past three years, was over. So what did Turner do? He spent the rest of the game politicking and then pleading with the Hartford coaching staff to put in Kuban, a fellow senior and the only player to have spent four years in a Hawks jersey. And it was Turner who lead the cheers following both of Kuban’s three’s. And when the final buzzer sounded, Turner put aside the devastation he felt and instead wrapped up Kuban in a big bear-hug: No one moment better summed up what America East basketball is all about.
Best performance by a freshman: Many of the conference’s top freshmen during the regular season played like, well, freshman during the conference tournament. And who could blame them: They’ve never played in a pressurized situation like that before. But some other freshman stepped up and performed beautifully. Stony Brook’s Brian Dougher was nails against New Hampshire, hitting several huge three’s and driving the paint with no fear. And Seawolves big man Dallis Joyner showed of a beautiful mid-range jumper rarely seen at the America East level in a 6’8” 250 pound big man. Joyner scored 11 points on 5-7 shooting. Hartford’s Genesis Maciel jump started the Hawks Friday night win over Maine with four huge buckets in a 3 minute span, and was huge on the defensive end down the stretch. UMBC’s Chauncey Gilliam scored 16 points in the Retrievers’ overtime win against Boston University, and figuratively (and literally) quieted the Albany crowd in UMBC’s semi-final win over the host school. And no freshman was asked to do more than New Hampshire freshman Russell Graham, who had to carry most of the point guard load against Binghamton and the league’s best backcourt.
Best way to announce yourself to the league: Colby Santos, UNH. All last season the word was that the Wildcats had themselves a difference maker in Santos, who sat out as a transfer from James Madison. Santos struggled to crack New Hampshire’s lineup for most of the season, but he burst onto the scene in the Wildcats’ last game, going 5-7 from behind the arc and pouring in 17 points to go with 7 rebounds. Santos couldn’t miss, hitting tough, heavily contested three’s from all over, and shot the Wildcats back into their semifinal game against Binghamton. His play should give New Hampshire fans something to look forward to next year.
Best way to say “Goodbye” on the court: Tyrece Gibbs, UNH. Gibbs, a four-year Wildcat guard saved the best basketball of his career for last, taking his game to a new level down the stretch, scoring in double digits in all of the final nine games of his career. Gibbs was huge for the Wildcats, driving the lane fearlessly and hitting big shot after big shot to carry New Hampshire over Stony Brook in a thrilling 3-point quarterfinal win. And against top-seeded Binghamton, Gibbs took on the Bearcats trio of star-guards, taking the ball to the rack and finishing with several circus shots as well as hounding Malik Alvin all night on the defensive end. No player wants their career to end, and certainly no mid-major baller wants their career to end short of making the NCAA tournament, but if such a fate is unavoidable, Gibbs went out in the best possible way: Playing the best ball of his career with his guns a-blazing.
Best way to say “Goodbye” off the court: There we’re so many good moments after the game, from Covington and fellow senior Brian Connelly reflecting on their time at Albany to Hartford’s seniors Jaret von Rosenberg and Michael Turner sharing several laughs before somberly reflecting on how they want to be remembered. But perhaps the press conference that hit closest to the heart was hearing New Hampshire head coach Bill Herrion reflect, while choking back a tear or two, on senior Tyrece Gibbs. Herrion talked about a young man who matured and grew more as a player, and a person, than anyone else he had ever coached. It was even more touching to hear Gibbs, whose road to UNH was marked by pot-holes that few men could imagine (He grew up in rough and tumble Brockton and had three brothers shot), talk about how proud he was to be a Wildcat, and how much it meant to him to know that he was leaving the program in a better place than it was when he first walked into Ludholm gymnasium as a freshman. What a phenomenal press conference. What a phenomenal young man.
Best display of fan sportsmanship: I’ll be honest, I wouldn’t describe a lot of what came out of the student sections of either Albany or Binghamton as particularly classy (“Fat and ugly” chants towards cheerleaders, and booing and taunting seniors who have just lost their final college game are just some of the “class” that was displayed at times). But Albany’s fans couldn’t help but give UMBC baton-twirler Staci a standing ovation after a fantastic, and world class, routine. I thought it was a nice gesture.
Best Mascot: Wolfie the Stony Brook Seawolf. Wolfie already earned a place as the leagues best Mascot (and a place in mascot lore) four years ago during the America East tournament when he clothslined and power-slammed “Official NCAA Mascot” JJ Jumper. This year, Wolfie once again delighted the crowd, leading the Stony Brook dance team through a choreographed dance routine set to Michael Jackson music. He danced to freaking thriller man… thriller! THRILLER!
Best fans: Binghamton certainly travelled the best, as you have to tip your cap to the “BU Zoo” for coming out in such numbers, the league needs that from more teams. And Albany’s fans definitely made a lot of noise in support of their team. But my favorites were the fans of UMBC, Hartford, and UNH. What a bunch of classy, and knowledgeable basketball fans. New Hampshire’s small but loyal bunch earned a special place in my heart, as they trekked down from the great white north to support a team that most people didn’t have winning a game, and cheered their hearts out in the face of top seeded Binghamton, and the most hostile fan base in the conference. It was also very, very encouraging to see Stony Brook’s fans travel in numbers.
Best dance performance by a team: UMBC players Chauncey Gilliam, Jake Wasco, Bakari Smith, Rich Flemming, and Brett Burrier were beyond entertaining during the second game Sunday (UNH vs Binghamton). UMBC’s “fab-five” (as far as rhythm is concerned) put on quite the performance after their semi-final win, dancing up a storm in the bleachers behind the far basket whenever music was played over the arena stereo. Gilliam gets top marks, but believe it or not, Wasco wasn’t that far behind.
Best dance performance by an individual player: Michael Turner’s celebratory shuffle after departing the team bus at the Marriot following Hartford’s Friday night win over Maine. I’m just kidding, that was quite possibly the worst display of rhythm I have ever seen in my entire life… ever. Mike, that was twelve-seconds of my life that I will never get back.
I kid because I love.
Highlight of the Tournament: Getting to spend three days of the most exhilarating basketball I’ve ever seen with my brother.
]]>When UMBC takes the floor tomorrow for their eleven AM tip-off against top-seeded Binghamton University, more than simply an NCAA birth is at stake for the Retrievers. The careers of seniors Darryl Proctor, and Jay Greene, the two best players in school history, hang in the balance. No two players have meant more to UMBC, or any school in the America East over a two-year span, than the Retrievers senior captains.
The Retrievers are heavy underdogs in the eyes of many, but Proctor and Greene won’t be scared, and if anyone can carry a team to an improbable victory it will be the pair of seniors: They’ve been overcoming the odds their whole lives.
“You talk about the heart and soul of the champion you’re looking at two guys right here. When things were getting a little shaky in that game they just refused to lose, refused to let us down, and they just kept battling,” reflected UMBC head coach Randy Monroe after the Retrievers 64-58 conference semi-final win over the University of Albany.
Greene and Proctor first put the Retrievers on their backs last season. It’s been one hell of a ride ever since.
Prior to last season, the Retrievers had never been to an NCAA tournament, never finished higher than fifth in the America East or reached the conference’s championship game. Everything came together last year, as the Retriever’s, behind Greene and Proctor (both 1st team America East All-Conference selections, both firsts for the school) as well as a trio of talented seniors ran the tables from beginning to end, winning the regular season and conference tournament titles, and going dancing for the first time.
After the graduation of three All-Conference players, the Retrievers we’re in a tough spot this season, and for much of the year seemed to be playing two on five. UMBC finished 7-9 in conference play, and tied for 6th place in the conference.
With the Retrievers widely written off by conference pundits, Proctor and Greene carried the Retrievers to two straight wins, and an improbable appearance in the title game against top-seeded Binghamton.
In quarterfinal action, with Greene going 0-8 from the floor and scoring only two points, Proctor put the Retrievers squarely on his massive shoulders, scoring a career high 33 points and ripping down 11 rebounds. Proctor hit a highly contested 10-foot fade-away with 2.5 seconds left to push the game into overtime, and then bulled the Retrievers past Boston University in the extra session for a 79-75 win.
“He can put a team on his back when needed and he did that tonight for this team,” Greene reflected after the game.
In the semi-finals, against tournament host Albany, it was Greene’s turn, as he took on the Great Danes and their large and vocal crowd. Greene dropped 29 points, hitting three’s from different area codes, none bigger than a step back 22 footer that broke Albany’s back, and drove the lane hitting floaters at will over bigger, stronger defenders.
“It was Jay’s turn tonight,” laughed Proctor after the game.
“These two have taken me on one wild ride, and we’re not ready to get off yet,” said Monroe.
Two years ago no one would have expected this from the pint-sized Greene, who has played his whole career at UMBC, or “bull-in-a-china shop” Proctor, who has spent his final two years at UMBC after transferring from Coppin State.
Despite its small size, the America East Conference has seen its fare share of great college players: Proctor and Greene weren’t the first, and they won’t be the last, but they may be the most unique: few players of their limited stature have ever played as large on the court. And few players, anywhere, have ever played with as big hearts, as much passion, or the sheer will to win as the UMBC’s seniors.
If you were to rank the players in the America East strictly on their physical gifts and talent, it’s likely that neither Proctor nor Greene would crack the top ten: As 6’3” power forward, Proctor is dwarfed in the low post every night he takes the floor. Greene is lucky if he’s 5’6” and 160 pounds, and is one of the smallest players at any level of college basketball, let alone Division I.
Both players are drastically undersized, and neither is what one would describe as an “explosive athlete.” But when they step on the court, they play like their seven feet tall, thanks to the desire, heart, and sheer refusal to loose, that each lays in the line every time they take the floor.
“Darryl Proctor is a kid who plays so hard that he gets me exited just to watch him,” said Monroe. “Jay Greene has a motor that is just always running. He’s the smallest player in the league but his heart’s the size of a basketball.”
Physically, Greene doesn’t look like he belongs on a middle-school team, let alone one at the Division I level. But once he gets the ball in his hands and gets into the paint, no guard in the league inspires more sheer terror in his opponents. Greene fearlessly attacks the lane, blowing by bigger, stronger, and more “athletic” guards with ease. And when defenses collapse, he hits open teammates with the sickest dimes the conference has ever seen, or hits running floaters with ease. And behind the arc, Greene is a threat to pull up, and swish, three-pointers anywhere, and anytime, once he crosses half-court.
Quite frankly, Jay Greene will go down as one of the greatest point guards in conference history: Not since NBA-er Speedy Claxton has the league had a point guard who could impact the game like Greene has with his passing.
“Jay Greene is the best pure point guard, the best pass first point guard in the league” remarked Albany head coach Will Brown. “He’s the best pure point guard I’ve ever seen in this league.”
Greene’s 679 assists rank fourth all-time in the America East conference (1st at UMBC), and with three on Saturday he will pass Shawn Teague into third place. Last season Greene was the only player in Division I to rank in the top ten nationally in assists per game (7.2, 4th) and assist-to-turnover ratio (3.47, 2nd). This season Greene once again lead the conference in assists with 6.1 a night.
“Jay Greene is an inspiration for every kid who’s ever been told he’s too small, too slow, too anything to play basketball,” added Brown.
“Jay Greene is my favorite player in the league that’s not one of my guys,” said Vermont head coach Mike Lonergan. “I wish I had a Jay Greene. Every coach in this league wishes they had Jay Greene.”
Proctor has scored 1,126 points in his two years at UMBC. When you combine his numbers from both his Division I stops, Proctor has put up 1,927 points and 982 rebounds, astounding numbers for a power forward shorter than many opposing guards. Proctor was the only America East player to score in double figures in every single game this year, and has scored in double-digits in 62 of his 64 career games at UMBC.
“Darryl Proctor is a beast,” said Brown.
His game may be ugly, but it is a thing of beauty to watch Proctor take the ball right into the chests of opposing big-men, and chop down the tall-tree’s of the America East. It doesn’t matter how many defenders swarm him, Proctor swats them away like mosquitoes.
“When he gets positioning in the low post, good luck to you, because your not moving him off the blocks,” said New Hampshire head coach Bill Herrion. “Good god is he strong,” he added.
“He’s a man among boys,” said former Boston University head coach Dennis Wolff.
Proctor goes through, over, and by defenders at will, scoring on a barrage of leaners, floaters, power moves, and an unstoppable fade-away jumper born out of necessity.
“I had to develop it on the play ground when I was younger” Proctor laughed, “I was tired of getting my shot blocked.”
When you take a step back, it’s hard to argue that anyone in the America East had a better season than Proctor.
“To me, Darryl Proctor was the best player in the league,” said Dan Leibovitz, head coach for America East rival Hartford.
Proctor (after the conference tournament) ranks first overall in scoring (20.2 ppg), third in rebounding (8.7 rpg), first in scoring in conference games (20.9 ppg), and third in rebounding in conference games (8.3 rpg). Proctor’s performance is even more impressive when you consider the lack of depth and other scoring options on UMBC’s Roster: Opponents wrote up their entire defensive schemes around stopping him, and he was double and triple teamed every time down the floor. And for much of the season, Proctor was alone in the low post, as center Justin Fry and Forward Rich Flemming each missed significant playing time because of injuries.
While there continues to be debate on who the best player in the conference is, there is no arguing who the toughest player in the America East is, as no one plays harder, longer, or takes more of a beating every night than Proctor.
“I’ll tell you, after every game Darryl is beat up. He’s icing his knees, his ribs, his head. He’s got cuts, bruises, black eyes, the kid only knows one way to play and that’s all out, one-hundred and fifty percent, and physical,” said Monroe.
Built like a bulldog, and seemingly as broad as he is tall, Proctor certainly isn’t built for marathons, which makes the sheer amount of time he has stayed on the court all the more impressive. Proctor has not missed one of the Retrievers 64 games since transferring from Coppin State. This season Proctor has averaged an insane 39.7 minutes per game, and over forty in America East contests. To put it in better perspective, despite his bulk, and despite the physical beating he takes every night, Proctor has only been on the bench for 28 total minutes this season.
And he doesn’t get to catch a breather on the defensive end either, as Proctor is matched up in man-to-man coverage with the opponents best scorer, no matter whether he’s a bruising center or a blazing guard.
It’s taken a toll on him. After a double overtime loss at Boston University earlier this year, a game in which he scored 27 points while playing all fifty minutes, Proctor collapsed in the locker room and had to be rushed to a nearby hospital to be rehydrated.
Three days later he played 39 minutes versus Albany.
“You’ll have to kill him to get him off the court, if he’s breathing, if he’s got a pulse, he’ll be on the court,” said Monroe
Whether Proctor and Greene are able to put the Retriever’s on their backs one last time against Binghamton or not, their careers will be coming to an end sooner rather than later, and far sooner than either would like.
“Playing here has been the best time of my life,” reflected Greene.
“I’m not ready for it to be over, nowhere near ready,” added Proctor.
Both would like to play basketball overseas, but to get their they will be fighting an uphill battle, as they will once again face the same doubts and questions about their size and athleticism that they have had to overcome every step of their careers.
But if anyone can do it, it’s going to be Monroe’s two seniors.
“I think that there is a place out there where (Greene and Proctor) can find a spot on a roster, these kids can flat out play. They have been proving everyone wrong since the day they stepped on the court, and they flat out win, and they can help someone win out there.” said Monroe.
But when their careers do come to an end, Greene and Proctor will be ready for life after basketball. Both are good students, and both will be graduating in the spring (Proctor with a degree in Political Science, and Greene sociology).
“(Greene and Proctor)are two of the finest…” trailed off Monroe, gathering his emotions before continuing, “the two finest young men, not just basketball players but people, men, that I have ever coached. And I know that they are going to be very, very successful in whatever they choose to do after college.”
I for one would like to take this opportunity to thank Proctor and Greene: No two players have left more of themselves on the court during their careers. No one in the conference has played harder, cared more, or been a better representative for what it is that makes small-conference basketball, and the America East in specific, just so special than UMBC’s duo.
So thank you Jay, for never listening to your doubters, and for proving that no player should ever listen when they are told they’re too small or too slow. And thank you Darryl, for playing with a passion and determination unmatched, for getting it done “ugly,” and for never backing down no matter how much of a beating you take every night. Thank you both for being warriors in the truest sense, and for proving that it isn’t the size of a player that matters most, but the size of his heart.
And win or loose I hope that all fans in Vestal on Saturday, those rooting for and those rooting against the Retrievers, take a moment to show Proctor and Greene a small token of respect, because it will be a very, very long time before the America East ever sees another player like either one of them again.
“Hopefully I’ll be able to coach two more guys like these guys but it’s going to be very hard,” reflected Monroe.
]]>“Obviously it’s in your mind that if you lose you go home, so you don’t want to lose,” reflected Turner.
The grounds crew at Albany’s SEFCU Arena will need to work into the wee hours of the morning to clean all of von Rosenberg’s sweat and blood from the hardwood. Turner drowned out the entire crowd as he bellowed out defensive assignments on every Maine possession. It didn’t matter that Hartford finished the regular season dead last, or that they entered the game riding a fourteen game losing streak coming into the game; there was no way that Hartford’s senior duo was going to go softly into that good night.
“I was very happy for Mike and Jaret, more than anybody else” said Leibovitz, “I’ve said all year that they deserve a very good ending… and for them to have possibly lost out on that (14 game losing) streak would have been a hard thing to live with.”
Hartford entered Friday’s action with a 6-25 record and what seems a lifetime removed from last season’s magical run to the conference title game. Most teams in Hartford’s shoes would have packed it in long ago, but the word “quit” doesn’t exist in the vocabulary of von Rosenberg, Turner, or the rest of the Hawks,
“I’m very proud, we win a game with all that we’ve been through… these eight-nine games that everyone calls play in games, it’s a lot about desire and a lot about character” said Hartford head coach Dan Leibovitz. “We really tried to show from the first play of the game, as best as we could, that we wanted to be around, we wanted to stay, we wanted to survive, we wanted to advance, and that says a lot about a group that has lost fourteen or fifteen in a row.”
The job that Turner and von Rosenberg have done “lacing them up” up every single game this season goes beyond words, as the seniors have not only continued to show up every game, but they have managed to pump up their teammates throughout the season: No matter how many losses piled up, or how dire the straights, Hartford only pulled together tighter and fought harder.
“Our whole team goes out to play hard” said Turner.
But for much of the season, the Hawks simply didn’t have the horses, as it has seemed like they we’re often playing two against five.
Not Friday not, as Leibovitz got contributions across the board from his gutsy band of brothers: There was the Puerto-Rican missile Andres Torres blowing by defenders, getting into the lane and kicking out to open teammates, as well as hitting his biggest (and perhaps luckiest) shot of the year. And there was freshman Drake U’u muscling his way to the hoop for a big bucket, reserve forward David Bookman scored on a nifty move in the paint and added a big block in the fist half. Anthony Minor energized the Hawks, and the crowd, with a monster two-handed slam in traffic just as the Hawks offense seemed to stall halfway through the second half. Morgan Sabia showed flashes of last years All Rookie form, scoring 13 points and pulling down five rebounds, and no one was bigger than freshman Genesis Maciel, who went 4-4 from the floor and scored eight huge first half points.
“You try to push different buttons and motivate different guys, and I felt like in the end, tonight, for the most part everybody that went in was ready to go,” said Leibovitz.
When Maciel checked into the game for the fist time, Hartford trailed 20-15, but the rookie from Compton (CA) scored three quick buckets in a hurry on a jumper and two nice low post moves, and added another minutes later, and Hartford closed out the half on an 18-8 run.
“Coach told us to be aggressive coming in, so when I was coming in my mind was thinking ‘be aggressive, go in and score,’” said Maciel.
Maciel also changed the game on the defensive end, nullifying Maine big-man Sean McNally, who scored seven points in the games opening minutes but managed only two over the rest of the game.
“He’s(Maciel) is a very intelligent young man and a very intelligent basketball player,” said Leibovitz.
But it was once again Hartford’s seniors who came up huge down the stretch, as after Hartford pushed their lead to double digits, the Black Bears went on a 15-6 run to make it a 54-53 game with 2:33 left. That’s when von Rosenberg dug down deep, as he scored on a beautiful reverse layup, and hit six huge free-throws down the stretch.
And with a three point lead and 1:30 left in the game, Turner dug in and made the stop of the season: With Hartford clinging to a 56-53 lead, Maine got the ball into leading scorer Mark Socoby’s hands on the right wing. Socoby had already beaten Turner in an identical situation earlier in the game, but wit the shot clock running down Turner held his ground, refused to bite on a ball fake, and crowded Socoby into and off-balance shot that fell well short of the hoop, and into the hands of Sabia.
“He had used the same move on me, and actually got me the first time, and I take that personally, I don’t like to give up any points,” said Turner. “He got me with the same move on the first time, and just in my head I figured the pump fake and the crossover is coming for the three, and I just kinda stood there with my hands up,” said Turner.
After Turner’s stand on defense, Torres banked in a deep three-pointer with the shot clock winding down, effectively putting the game out of reach.
The Hawks are now faced with the tall task of facing top-seeded Binghamton in the first game of Saturday’s second session, slated for a 6pm tip-off.
]]>Player of the Year Candidates:
To me, the Player of the Year award is exactly what the name indicates: The best player in the conference. There is no “Best player for the best team” debate like there is in Major League Baseball. No favoritism should be given to upper classmen, nor should transfers be punished. The award should go to the player who has the best season, end of story. All four of the candidates had superb seasons, and a compelling case can be made for all four.
However, I believe Holland’s season was notch below the seasons of Rivera, Proctor, and Blakely for two reasons, the first being that while the other three are all stellar defenders, Holland is still only mediocre. This might seem like a crazy statement to many fans of the America East, but if you talk to BU head coach Dennis Wolff, and coaches around the league, Holland still has some glaring weaknesses in his defensive game, as for all of his steals (and subsequent spectacular fast-break dunks), and all the havoc he can wreak at the top of the 1-3-1 zone, he still gets burned often by his man, or simply winds up lost on the defensive end. Holland has had far too many stretches this season when he has actually hurt the Terriers on the defensive end. Furthermore, Holland’s three game stretch against Vermont, Binghamton, and Stony Brook (three games that came directly after BU grabbed hold of and then lost 1st place in the division), can not be overlooked. During the three biggest games of the year for BU, Holland simply did not show up. He might have put up decent numbers (14, 11, and 19 points), but he shot very poorly, was lost on defense, and didn’t play with any direction or urgency.
That leaves Blakely, Rivera, and Proctor, all three of whom had phenomenal seasons in different ways. Blakely was the best defensively out of the three – and flat out best defender in the conference – controlling the defensive glass, and coming up with monster rejections and steals, and also faced double and triple teams every single night on the offensive end. Blakely also played very unselfishly, taking only ten shots a night, while turning into an excellent passer. However, some cracks became apparent in Blakely’s game, namely his inability to score anywhere outside of 5-7 feet from the basket. As dominant as he was, teams we’re able to stop Blakely this season by keeping him away from the basket. Often it took the rest of the Catamounts hitting their shots and occupying the defense to get Blakely going again. Furthermore, Blakely has Mike Trimboli and Colin McIntosh playing alongside of him. And maybe I’m a bit biased, but I feel like the player of the year is the one guy who you want the ball in their hands taking the big shot with the game on the line, and I’m not convinced that Marqus Blakely is that guy. Make no mistake, Blakely puts his team first and plays hard, but it’s also hard to overlook the murmurs that were coming from within the UVM program that Blakely was at times coasting during games this year, and “buying into his own hype” a bit.
Rivera has been tremendous in his first season for Binghamton, the best player for the leagues 1st place team, he has been an unstoppable offensive weapon, and a terrific perimeter defender and bundle of energy. But Rivera is a slasher and likes to hang on the perimeter for periods on offense, and defenses can’t double and triple him, or focus on stopping him as much as they can with Perimeter players like they do with Proctor and Blakely, and Rivera has had hot-shooting Tiki Mayben occupying some of the defenses attention. And it’s impossible to ignore Rivera’s behavior in Binghamton’s big home loss to Boston University, in which he left the bench and the floor, and tried to leave the arena; not the behavior of a player of the year.
Player of the Year: Darryl Proctor
Proctor had the best season an America East player has had since Taylor Coppenrath in 2004-2005. he might have taken 17 shots a night, but no one in the league faced more defensive pressure and focus than Proctor. No one played with more intensity, determination, and pure guts every night, and none of the other three candidates went in to battle with a weaker supporting cast than Proctor, whom at times seemed like he was taking on his opponents on his own. Proctor has faced the same double (and triple) teams as Blakely, and unlike Blakely he doesn’t have a Trimboli, McIntosh, or Maurice Joseph to take some of the pressure off of him, or kick the ball out to when he gets swarmed. Proctor has scored in double figures in every single game that he has played this season, the only player in the conference to accomplish such a feat. And no one in the league leaves as much of themselves on the court as Proctor, whom takes an absolute beating nightly while leading the league in minutes per game (he averaged 40.2 in league contests). Proctor has been rushed to the hospital more than once after games this season. Proctor is also a terrific defender, and arguably second only to Blakely when it comes to low post defense in the conference. Proctor doesn’t put up flashy numbers on the defensive end, but his basketball IQ, strength, and positioning are the best in the America East. Proctor may not block many shots, or come up with a ton of steals, but he cuts off lanes to the hoop, and flusters and bulls his man out of the post and into positions where he can’t score (see his game against Blakely in last years America East Tournament). When you boil it down, there isn’t a single weakness to Proctor’s game, offensively, defensively, effort, leadership, and pure guts; he gets top marks across the board, and that’s why he should be the Player of the Year.
Rookie of the Year: Tommy Brenton, Stony Brook
As “sexy” as Jake O’Brien’s scoring and shooting numbers have been, and as mouth watering as Chauncey Gilliam’s raw athleticism and potential are, Tommy Brenton is the hands-down Rookie of the Year. Brenton has a heart the size of a basketball, fights like Darryl Proctor and jumps like John Holland. Several Rookies have averaged more points than Brenton this season, but no rookie in the conference has played a larger roll for the squad, and no rookie has flat out won more games for his team than Brenton, and Brenton is the only rookie to have dominated games this year. O’Brien is a terrific shooter, but he has been allowed to range around the perimeter because he is playing next to John Holland and Corey Lowe. O’Brien is a distant third priority on opponent’s defensive game-plans. And as flashy as Gilliam is, and granted his mid and long-range game has come on at the end of the year, he has done a lot of his damage mopping up around the hoop while Proctor occupies half of the other team: He’s been able to roam free while defenses focus on Proctor and Jay Greene. Brenton has flat out DOMINATED the glass and the defensive end, and he is the one Rookie whom has shown up for every single game of the year. Brenton has taken hellacious elbows from the likes of Hasheen Thabeet, Jeff Adrien, as well as Brian Connelly and Matt Wolff, and he just keeps on fighting. He is far and away the best rookie defender in the league. And unlike O’Brien and Gilliam, whom can hide behind and “draft off” their star teammates so to speak, Brenton takes the leading role for Stony Brook on the glass and on defense. Brenton doesn’t grab rebounds because his teammates occupy opponents and clear the lane for him; he occupies half the opposing roster AND THEN still comes down with the tough rebounds in traffic, and it’s Brenton who’s assigned one-on-one coverage against the biggest, toughest, most athletic, and most physical player on the other team, being assigned the likes of Darryl Proctor, D.J. Rivera, Marqus Blakely, and Will Harris nightly. And that is why Brenton is the Rookie of the Year: He doesn’t score like O’Brien or Gilliam (yet), but he has a far larger impact night in and night out on the game, as no rookie has put his team on his back and won more games than Brenton.
Defensive Player of the Year: Marqus Blakely, Vermont
No explanation here is necessary. Blakely is leading the conference in Blocks and Steals, and is second (to Brenton) in defensive rebounding. End of story.
Coach of the Year: Steve Pikiell, Stony Brook
Make no mistake, Dennis Wolff deserves a lot of credit for guiding Boston University to a third place finish after the Terriers suffered season ending injuries to key players, and battled “internal-issues” at times during the season, but Wolff has the duo of Corey Lowe and John Holland, as potent a 1-2 punch as there is in the conference. Binghamton’s Kevin Broadus also warrants consideration, as the Bearcats claimed a share of the regular season title, and the top seed in the conference tournament, for the first time in school history. But Broadus had the luxury of being allowed to bring in a compilation of extremely talented transfers with plenty of division I experience. No other administration or athletic department in the league would have allowed the quartet of D.J. Rivera, Malik Alvin, Tiki Mayben, and Theo Davis to transfer in during the same calendar year (that’s a fact whether Binghamton fans like it or not). New Hampshire’s Bill Herrion also deserves some consideration considering how bad the Wildcat’s have been for what seems like and eternity. But Pikiell is the runaway winner.
It is absolutely jaw dropping to consider that before this season the Seawolves not only had never had a winning season at the Division I level, but they never had one at the DII level, nor in their last ten years at Division III. In his first three seasons on Long Island, Pikiell had led Stony Brook to a winning percentage below 30 percent, as he was handicapped by NCAA sanctions stripping Stony Brook of scholarships (sanctions attributed to the previous coaching regime). Pikiell started four first year players this season (3 true freshmen and a 1st year JuCo transfer) alongside a walk-on, and lead Stony Brook to a tie for 4th place, and the greatest season in Stony Brook history. No team exceeded expectations as much as the Seawolves (picked in almost every single preseason prediction and coaches poll to finish either last or 2nd to last). And it wasn’t because the chips fell just right, or he was dealt a great hand: Pikiell had to overcome the loss of center Desmond Adedeji, whom was not only written in as the Seawolves starting center, but also as the focal point and “go to” player on offense. He also had to overcome the loss of Jonathan Moore, penciled in as the starting 2-guard, as well as the personal tragedy of guard Chris Martin. Pikiell pulled together a team with eight new faces and no tradition of winning and turned them into contenders, as the Seawolves took the top three teams in the league into overtime, and look like they could make serious noise in the America East tournament.
First Team All-Conference:
Second Team All-Conference
Third Team All-Conference
All-Rookie Team:
All-Defensive Team:
All-Floorburn Team:
No one in the league plays harder, or sacrifices more of their body, or their safety, than these five do on a nightly basis.
All-High-Risers/Rim-Rattlers:
The Best in-game dunkers in the conference
Sure, they only count as two points, no different than a lay-up, hook, or jumper, but there’s no denying that the dunk is a crowd-pleaser, and the most demoralizing play in basketball.
So without further ado, here are the five (ok, I stretched it to six, and added a few “honorable mentions”) best in-game dunkers in the conference.
Marqus Blakely, 6′5″ Forward, Vermont: Whether it’s leaping off of one foot on a fast break, or taking off from two feet in traffic around the rim, there isn’t much that Blakely can’t do aerially. At a very long 6′5″ with close to a 40-inch vertical leap, Blakely can be found most nights hovering with his head around the rim. Blakely became a Youtube sensation as a freshman two years ago and hasn’t stopped since. When he gets out in transition he’s usually going to posterize someone, but he is also just as capable of throwing down two-handed power dunks in traffic. Blakely already has a bevy of different alley-oop, tomahawk, and windmill dunks that he has displayed on the season. Blakely has the best mix of leaping ability, athleticism, and length out of any dunker in the conference.
D.J. Rivera, 6′4″ Guard/Forward, Binghamton: Rivera doesn’t come anywhere close to his listed 6′4″, but he makes up for it as probably the best leaper in the conference. Rivera is an absolutely unreal dunker for a player his size, and no one is better going up and getting it on an alley-oop, as Rivera is absolutely fearless “going up and getting it”: Watching a player as small as Rivera go elbows above the rim in traffic is a jaw-dropping sight. Rivera might be the most creative dunker the conference has seen since Matt Turner, and his two-handed reverse slam on an alley-oop against Rutgers was beyond “filthy.”
John Holland, 6′5″ Forward, Boston University: As Vermont’s Even Fjeld learned, when John Holland gets a head of steam behind him and gets out and running, just get the heck out of his way if you don’t want to wind up on SportsCenter. Holland is a classic one-foot leaper, and his forte is when he is on the break. A terrific leaper, Holland is an absolutely vicious dunker in transition, and his tomahawk jam against Vermont earned the #1 play on SportsCenter’s top ten plays on the night, and #6 on their plays of the week.
Chauncey Gilliam, 6′4″ Forward, UMBC: At 240 pounds and built like a tank, Gilliam’s leaping ability is scary. He might be a freshman, but no one in the America East has Gilliam’s combination of strength and athleticism. Gilliam is a high-flyer and backboard shaker, and his five-dunk barrage on the road against Nebraska may be the best single game “dunkathon” for the America East this season. Gilliam is an explosive leaper off of two feet, who throws down power dunks in traffic with ease, and can finish off an alley with authority.
Tommy Brenton, 6′5″ Forward, Stony Brook: Brenton’s athleticism simply does not get the proper respect amongst fans, and even players, in the America East. Maybe it’s because of his race, maybe it’s his at times mop-ish hair, or maybe it’s just because he’s such a relentless worker, but the kid can jump out of the gym. Perhaps even more importantly, Brenton is the “ballsiest” dunker in the conference, as he tries to dunk everything around the hoop no matter who is in his way, and is as good a dunker in traffic as there is in the conference. Brenton’s strength and athleticism are up there with Gilliam’s, and he’s made a knack out of throwing down backbreaking dunks at crucial junctures (against Albany to close out the game, an alley-oop against UMBC, a ridiculous reverse against St. Peter’s).
Dane DiLiegro, 6′8″ Center, New Hampshire: DiLiegro isn’t in the same category as a leaper as the other’s on this list, but at close to 6′9″ and 260 pounds, he doesn’t have to be. DiLiegro is a good athlete for his size, and a solid leaper in his own right. More importantly, he just tries to rip the rim off every single time. There are no finesse dunks in DiLiegro’s repertoire, as to quote Biggie Smalls, he’s all about “raw power moves,” and no one in the conference shakes the backboard with as much authority as DiLiegro.
Honorable Mention:
Demetrius Young, 6′5″ Forward, Stony Brook: Young is long and bouncy, a real “glider” around the hoop, and can finish off alleys with a blend of creativity and authority.
Reggie Fuller, 6′6″ Forward, Binghamton: Fuller is long and a big-time leaper, and finishes with authority around the hoop.
Will Harris, 6′6″ Forward, Albany: Harris is a terrific athlete and built like a linebacker, and would very well have cracked the top 6 if he had been healthy and in-shape all year. He can really put a hurting on a backboard when he gets air-born.
Best Dunks of the year
D.J. Rivera tells Rutgers “you don’t gotta’ go home, but you can’t stay here”: Rivera added the ultimate exclamation mark on Binghamton’s road win against Big East’s Rutgers, as he elevated above the rim to catch an alley-oop feed, turned in mid-air, and threw it in behind his head with two hands just before the final buzzer sounded.
John Holland introduces himself to Evan Fjeld and SportsCenter: John Holland got on the break like a runaway freight train and absolutely posterized 6′8″ Evan Fjeld with a monster tomahawk. Holland’s waistline was at Fjeld’s eye level in a true “N.I.Y.F” dunk (you can fill in the words).
Chauncey Gilliam to Nebraska, Dunk you very much: Gilliam’s game itself deserves special mention, as throwing down almost a half-dozen dunks against a big school from a power conference doesn’t exactly happen every day. But none was better than his insane two-handed alley-oop slam in traffic in which he posterized half of the Cornhuskers’ roster (I think he even jumped over the water cooler).
Tommy Brenton is “the balls”: The “Ballsiest” dunk of the season happened when Stony Brook went on the road to face St. Peter’s, as Brenton drove baseline and took off, gliding underneath the hoop, before throwing in a two-handed slam behind his head while hanging in between two defenders. If there had been a single camera or visual recording device on campus, it would have been a shoo-in for SportsCenter’s “top plays.”
The Dunk that wasn’t: It was a miss, but what a miss it was. For two years now America East players have been trying to dunk on Blakely, and not one has been successful. But Dane DiLiegro came as close as anyone in New Hampshire’s home loss to Vermont earlier this year. DiLiegro caught the ball on the left baseline outside of the key and drove to the hoop. As DiLiegro elevated for the dunk, Blakely went up for the block. DiLiegro was able to elevate over Blakely, and came “this close” to throwing down a one-handed slam not only on Blakely, but also on 6′8″ Colin McIntosh. Unfortunately, DiLiegro went for a little extra “umph” at the last second and back rimmed it, which resulted in the ball coming down near half court.
Ah what could have been…
And now, to quote Monty Python, “And now for something completely different”: Here’s a look at the comedic side of America East Hoops.
A rather comedic situation developed in said closet, err media room, prior to the Crimson’s non-conference showdown with Boston University: It began with myself, BU SID Scott Ellis, and Harvard SID Kurt Svoboda discussing previous battles (or beat-downs) between the Terriers and Crimson, over some slices and soda in a closet (sorry Media room) barely big enough to fit the three full grown adults (and I’m not the slimmest of men). America East representatives Matt Bourque and Sean Tainish then joined us. Tainish and Bourque were then followed in by The Daily Free Press writer Nick Cammarota. The room was filled to the brim to say the least, but we were just getting warmed up, as an array of media personnel, a referee, a policeman, and some students working the game as part of their work study all trickled in one by one. It was a scene eerily similar of the famous “stateroom scene” from the Marx Brothers A Night at the Opera, and I couldn’t help but quote Groucho Marx, to no one in particular, as I exclaimed “Is it my imagination, or is it getting crowded in here?” just as none other than Bob Ryan of the Boston Globe squeezed his way in.
Here are the news and notes from around the league:
Vermont
Marqus Blakely is still the most athletic and most talented player in the conference, but his numbers are down greatly from last season (when he averaged 19 points and 11 rebounds). The difference is that while Blakely was beaten up and double-teamed last season, Vermont opponents have cranked it up another notch this year, and Blakely is feeling more pressure than ever. But more than that, opponents have changed their defensive scheme. Where teams last season simply hit Blakely with a straight double team, one which he could fight through off the ball, now they play him man-up, and swarm him when he gets the ball. Blakely has been an excellent passer out of double (or triple, or quadruple) teams, and Colin McIntosh has been terrific taking advantage of opponents keying on Blakely, putting up career numbers (13.2 ppg, .511 from the floor ). Blakely also continues to disrupt on the defensive end, leading the conference in blocks (2.8 per game), and is also crashing the boards (8.8 per game), but offensive deficiencies in his game have become apparent. If Blakely had a jump shot, or a real low-post game, he could average 20+ points despite the double teams.
However, Blakely will not shoot even when left open, and his low-post game is very crude. But the biggest area that Blakely is still lacking in is his instincts. Too often it seems that Blakely will catch a ball on the low blocks, turn, and simply hang onto the ball for a few seconds as if to think out what his next move is going to be. There is a time and place for great players to simply react, and Blakely does not yet have those killer instincts. But he’s working on them every game, and he seemed to have an epiphany of sorts on the court in the second half of Vermont’s come-from-behind win over Maine. After a quiet first half, Blakely exploded in the second, as it seemed that everything just clicked: Blakely seemed react instinctively every time he touched the ball en route to a 23-point, 20-rebound performance.
Two things have become apparent. For one, Blakely does not have the jump shot, or the offensive repertoire of a Darryl Proctor if he did he couldn’t be shut down by double teams. If Blakely had Proctor’s outside jump shot and array of low-post moves, he’d still dominate. But what also is evident is just how unreal an athlete Blakely is when you consider that he can still single-handedly take over a game despite only standing 6′5″ and despite not possessing a reliable jump shot, or go-to low-post move.
Mike Trimboli is possibly the most polarizing player in the conference: You either love him or hate him. I’ve made no bones about my disdain for some of Timboli’s crunch time decision making and shot selection, nor for his at times self-centered attitude in the past, but let’s give the kid his due. He’s doing exactly what every senior should do, yet so few do, and playing the best basketball of his life as his college career comes to an end. Trimboli is hitting shots, but more importantly he’s distributing the ball (over four assists a game) and taking care of it too. Trimboli seems more comfortable just being “one of the guys” and doesn’t seem to need to take 20 shots a night, and his team-first mentality is translating into an increased effort on the defensive end, and a spot atop the standings for Vermont.
Binghamton
While Blakely remains the best talent in the conference, the best offensive player at this point is Binghamton wing D.J. Rivera. Rivera was able to successfully petition the NCAA to waive his transfer year after joining the Bearcats from Saint Joseph’s, was declared eligible immediately and hasn’t looked back. Rivera is currently leading the league in scoring at 20.3 points per game, and has scored 20 or more points 14 times. At a very generously listed 6′4″, Rivera is unreal to watch, as he does most of his scoring from within 10 feet of the basket. A streaky 3-point shooter, Rivera’s bread and butter have been slashes to the hoop, and some unreal alley-oop dunks such as his 2-handed reverse off of a lob to close out Binghamton’s road win at Rutgers. Rivera may be the best leaper in the conference, and literally goes head and shoulders above defenders half a foot taller than him. As tremendous a scorer as Rivera is, he has not faced the kind of defensive focus and double teams that Blakely (and UMBC’s Proctor) have faced. That could, and should, change as teams see Binghamton a second time around, and without a consistent outside shot (which to his credit has been improving lately).
Theo Davis: Bueller? Bueller? Bueller? Davis has been absent all season long, averaging a mere .7 points and 1.8 rebounds in 6 games while racking up 8 DNPs. While Davis has battled some injuries, the fact is that he simply has never gotten into game shape since setting foot on campus after transferring from Gonzaga following the first semester last season. Furthermore, word is that Davis is still lost on both ends of the floor, has not picked up coach Kevin Broadus’ system, and simply hasn’t worked very hard, which is more of the status quo from a player who has underachieved for all of his career. Binghamton fans shouldn’t hold their breaths or expect Davis to ever become the impact player they were hoping for.
Earlier this season Binghamton’s Malik Alvin ran into (and over) and elderly woman while attempting to flee from a local Wal-Mart with a stolen value pack of condoms (Trojan Magnums). Most fans (rightfully so) scoffed at the two-game suspension that Alvin received, and at how Broadus and the University handled it (suffice to say, they did not seem to take it seriously). Alvin has jump-started the Bearcats offense since his return. As a dynamic missile of a scoring guard, he has lived up to his own self-advertising as an excellent penetrator, and when he gets into the paint and defenses collapse, Binghamton has excelled. But all is not well in Vestal, as senior guard Dwayne Jackson was recently suspended for a “violation of team rules.” Word is that Bearcats fans should not hold their breaths for a return, and that Jackson’s offense was far worse than that of Alvin.
UMBC
Blakely remains the league’s best talent, and Rivera the best scorer, as of now the player of the year has been UMBC senior forward/bull Darryl Proctor. At closer to 6′2″ in shoes than his listed 6′4″, Proctor is am amazing testament to sheer tenacity, willpower, and heart, as he is second in the conference in scoring (19.6 per game) and third in rebounding (8.6). Proctor has faced every bit of the double-teaming that Blakely has and more, as UMBC doesn’t have another go-to scorer to take any of the heat off of Proctor like Blakely has in Mike Trimboli, Colin McIntosh, and Maurice Joseph to name a few, or like Rivera has in Tiki Mayben and Malik Alvin. Proctor’s heart and consistency have been amazing, as he has scored 20 points or more 10 times, and has scored in double figures in all 22 of UMBC’s games this year. Proctor plays every single game like it is his last, and simply wills himself to the hoop. Watching Proctor take down and take apart opponents half a foot taller than him is a thing of beauty, and as of right now he is hands down the best player in the conference.
Albany
Albany’s Will Harris was touted by Great Danes head coach Will Brown as “the most talented player in the conference” entering the season, and while he hasn’t quite lived up to that billing, he’s certainly looking like a game changer: Harris is a legit 6′6″ and a muscular 240 pounds, and with big time athleticism and at the wing position he presents a tremendous match-up problem in the America East. Like Rivera, Harris is another drop-down transfer (he played significant minutes as a sophomore at Virginia) who successfully petitioned the NCAA for immediate eligibility. Harris took some time to adjust to Albany’s system and to get back into basketball shape (a bit of a head scratcher considering he had no time off in between last season at Virginia and this year at Albany), but has come on strong since the start of conference play, averaging 17.8 points and 9 rebounds in 8 league games (well above his season average of 13 ppg and 6.3 rpg).
Stony Brook
Rivera and Harris came into the conference with as much hype as any transfers in recent history, and both have done their part in living up to the billing. But there is a third transfer lighting up the conference from the wing position in Stony Brook’s Muhammad El-Amin. The last player signed by Stony Brook coach Steve Pikiell before the season, El-Amin was a complete unknown coming from the junior college ranks, but has proven to be a big-time scorer and ranks seventh in overall scoring (15.2 ppg) and fifth in scoring in conference games (17.6 ppg). El-Amin may look gangly and at times awkward in his movements, but he is a top-notch athlete and terrific outside shooter, and at 6′5″ with a huge wingspan has no problem getting off his shot from behind the arc. He can also beat his man off the dribble, take the ball to the rack, and finish strong around the basket. The general rule of thumb is that it takes “JuCo’s” a year to adjust to the Division I game, which makes El-Amin’s performance all the more impressive this season. The coaches at Stony Brook don’t think that El-Amin has come close to reaching his ceiling, encouraging news for fans of “The Brook,” and a scary thought for the rest of the conference.
If Stony Brook finishes in the top five in the conference standings, head coach Steve Pikiell should run away with the Coach of the Year award. The Seawolves’ turnaround up to this point has been truly remarkable. During his first three seasons, the Seawolves’ winning percentage was below 30 percent under Pikiell, but this year Stony Brook stands at 13-10 and 5-5 in conference play. More importantly, Stony Brook has competed in every game, played as hard as anyone in the conference, and played as a cohesive unit; night and day from the five players playing as individuals auditioning for the And-1 Mix Tape Tour, which was the norm during Pikiell’s first three years.
The job that Pikiell has done this season has been truly remarkable, as he has kept all of his returning players on board emotionally while working in almost an entire new roster. Seven of Pikiell’s top 11 players are suiting up for the Seawolves for the first time this year, yet the team is as tight-knit a unit as there is in the America East. Perhaps the most encouraging sign of the season has been the behavior of returning players Jermol Paul, Michael Tyree, and Demetrius Young, all three of whom started last season, and all three of whom have found themselves buried at the end of the bench (although Young has since seen a return to the court). There may not have been a more positive sign than looking down at the end of the Seawolves’ roster and watching the trio of Tyree, Paul, and Young cheering their hearts off and their lungs soar while they pulled for their teammates, truly putting the good of their club above themselves.
Maine
Maine’s Mark Socoby has settled into a rut as a spot up three-point shooter and somewhat one-dimensional player. It’s too bad because two years ago Socoby looked like he could be a do-it-all wing with solid athleticism and the ability to slash to the rim, but Socoby’s game has regressed, and he seems unwilling or unable to create his own shot, or do much other than drift around the arc and hope that someone gets him the basketball when he’s open. Don’t get me wrong, Socoby is still a gamer and can put up points in bunches, but he has disappeared in far too many games this year and isn’t playing up to his potential or abilities.
The Black Bears have found a very nice player in sophomore Malachi Peay, whom looks to be developing into a legitimate scoring combo forward. Peay spent most of last season on the bench learning the college game as the youngest freshman in the conference, and missed seven games this season after taking a nasty elbow to the face against Quinnipiac. Upon his return, Peay has exploded, scoring in double figures in five straight games. Peay has emerged as the only forward on Maine’s roster who can create his own shot, and has been opening eyes with an impressive ability to get to the basket in a variety of ways, as he can put the ball on the floor, slash to the hoop, or drop a shoulder and bull his way through defenders. At 6′5″ and 210 pounds, Peay is a bit of a “man without a position,” but the America East is a conference where such players excel (Peay’s game is eerily similar to former Albany standout Levi Levine), and with his ability to score, rebound and defend, as well as toughness, he has the makings of a future all conference player and a very nice building block for the Black Bears. Peay’s importance was evident in Maine’s 70-59 loss to Stony Brook: Peay was unable to play due to the flu, and Maine’s offense never got going.
Maine junior guard Junior Bernal has all the tools to be a terrific player in the America East: a point guard’s ball-handling, tremendous length and athleticism at 6′4″ and 200 pounds, and great quickness. Yet he has been, for large stretches, the worst point guard in the conference. The problem is, that despite spending 4 years at the D-I level (he redshirted as a frosh), Bernal still does not understand his own limitations as player. In other words, Bernal is still struggling with the notion that he is not a scorer. If Bernal would develop the mindset of former BU standout and 4-year starter Kevin Fitzgerald, he could really be something special. Fitzgerald was able to have a game-changing impact nightly despite going weeks without taking a shot, as his passing, and ability to run an offense were incalculable. Unfortunately, Bernal still goes stretches when he thinks he’s the 2nd coming of former conference standout (and current NBA player) Jose Juan Barea. Bernal is a terrific defender who can pick pockets and get out in transition with the best of them. But once he gets out in running, he often suffers from one of the worst cases of tunnel vision in recent memory: for a point guard, he does a poor job of looking for open teammates, instead forcing horrible, twisting, playground shots that don’t have a prayer of going in.
Boston University
Boston University has gotten a huge boost from junior center Scott Brittain. Brittain was buried, and his career looked all but over during the non-conference season, as he struggled to overcome post concussion syndrome, and played petrified basketball once he returned to the court, earning him a seat at the end of the bench. But with the Terriers’ season on the brink, and the injuries mounting (Tyler Morris and Carlos Strong are both out for the season), Brittain was pressed into playing time and has responded wonderfully. Brittain won’t ever be a dominant big man, but he’s given BU a viable scoring option in the low post, and commands enough defensive attention to take some of the heat off of BU shooters Corey Lowe, John Holland, and Jake O’Brien. Brittain has shown off a pretty jump hook and spin move as of late, and if he can chip in 10 points per game, it could well be enough of a difference to get BU back to their first championship game since 2003. More importantly, Brittain is changing the game on defense, swatting and altering shots nightly.
Has anyone been better since the start of the conference season than Terriers sophomore John Holland? Holland has flat out taken over, averaging 18.1 points per game, and a league-best 23.5 points in conference play. The scary thing? He’s still not anywhere near his full potential, as he still settles for perimeter shots too much. Holland is a great shooter, and he’s hitting a tremendous amount for a 6′5″ athlete, but with his ball-handling, length, and athleticism, Holland has all the tools to take the ball right to the bucket at will. If Holland becomes comfortable enough in his game to start driving the lane and attacking the basket, he could be as complete a basketball player as there is at the America East level. Holland has now scored 20 or more points nine times, but more impressively in seven of his last nine games.
While Vermont’s Trimboli is the most polarizing, BU senior Matt Wolff is simply the most hated. I’m not going to debate whether or not Wolff should have played as much as he did in previous seasons, and I certainly feel that Wolff is best suited to play 15-20 minutes a game as a defensive stopper/scrapper, and a physical presence on the glass. But Wolff is the best man for the job for this Terriers squad, as he is the only lock-down defender on the roster, and he gives BU toughness that the rest of the roster lacks. He isn’t ever going to be a scorer, and he is a limited player physically, but the kid plays as hard as anyone in the conference, and there were times this season when he was the only player on the floor for the Terriers who looked like he cared. And don’t look now, but Wolff has quietly moved into the top ten in the conference in both rebounds and assists.
New Hampshire
New Hampshire sophomore Ronny Tchatchoua also has the makings of a very nice player. Tchatchoua isn’t ever going to be the wing that some had hoped, but at 6′5″ with big-time hops and an ever improving low-post game, Tchatchoua could provide the Wildcats with the low-post scorer that they have been lacking. Tchatchoua has still struggled greatly with consistency, and still has the annoying habit of getting lost around the perimeter, but considering he picked up the game of basketball late and missed a third of last season because of academics, his development has already been impressive to say the least. And by his senior year Tchatchoua could be a legitimate threat around the basket.
Hartford
The Hartford Hawks took a huge hit with the loss of junior guard Joe Zeglinski, who will redshirt the season after tearing ligaments in his ankle. Without Zeglinski, a top 5 talent in the league and returning first team All-Conference selection, the Hawks’ offense doesn’t have a go-to scorer, or a multi-dimensional scorer. The Hawks need an athletic wing, an impact low post scorer, and someone, anyone, who can grab a rebound. But these guys fight for 40 minutes, and doubt them for a second and they will make you pay.
Hats off to Hartford junior forward David Bookman. Bookman is a great kid and a great story, and no player in the conference puts the needs of his team above himself, or is a better “chemistry guy.” Bookman has busted his butt for three years, never saying a negative word despite occupying a permanent seat on the end of the bench. Whether it’s practice, hitting the weight room, the lay-up lines, or an offseason pick up game, Bookman only knows one speed, and that’s all-out.
]]>Marqus Blakely’s “Ah, to hell with this!” moment: After taking a beating for much of Vermont’s road win against Hartford, Blakely had had enough. After catching a feed on the left baseline, Blakely spun around one defender, only to find two more standing between him and the bucket. After passing out of similar situations all night, Blakely decided enough was enough, and leapt over both Hawks defenders and slammed home a monster two-handed jam over what seemed like the entire Hawks roster.
Corey Lowe dials up John Holland from long distance: Against UMBC Lowe and Holland connected on a half-court lob resulting in a monster Holland jam. It was harder to tell what was more impressive: Holland’s full extension, rim at eye-level dunk, or Lowe’s perfect 50-foot pass.
Matt Wolff beats the Buzzer: Wolff swished a 50-footer against as the buzzer sounded at the end of the first half. At the time it seemed like more of an anomaly than an impact play, as the Terriers entered the half leading the University of Maryland-Baltimore County by 17 points (39-22). Two overtimes later, Wolff’s heave stood out, as BU needed every single point in their 80-77 win.
Brian Benson introduces himself to the Catamounts: Benson showed his jaw-dropping athleticism in one of the few bright moments for the Wildcats during their 44-point loss to Vermont. In one fluid motion he spun around a defender in the post, planted for a second on two feet, and exploded above the crowd of Catamounts for a backboard rattling two-handed slam. Benson then proceeded to nearly clear 6′8″ teammate Dane DiLiegro as he leapt in post-dunk excitement.
Proctor leaves it all on the court: Let’s be clear, Darryl Proctor is a warrior, Darryl Proctor is a monster. When you’re a 6′3″ power forward (in shoes on a very good day), you are going to be on the wrong side of a size mismatch every single night. And when that same undersized player is ranking second in the conference in scoring and rebounding despite facing double and triple teams every night, you’ve got a special player on your hands. Proctor gets the snot beaten out of him every night as UMBC’s only offensive weapon, and with the Retrievers only employing a six-man rotation, Proctor knows no matter how hard it gets, there isn’t anyone on the bench ready to give him a breather, as he is averaging a league-leading 39.5 minutes per game. Proctor’s game isn’t always pretty, but he flat-out gets the job done it by being the toughest, smartest, hardest working player in the conference.
Proctor refused to roll over and die in the Retrievers’ embarrassing 76-42 loss to the Vermont, bulling his way to 22 points and 10 rebounds in 38 minutes of playing despite being triple-teamed while watching the rest of the Retrievers quit on him. Proctor followed up the Vermont game with 27 points while fighting through a Terriers swarm for 50 minutes on the court. Proctor battled so hard that he collapsed after the game, and was rushed to a nearby hospital to be hydrated. But Proctor saved his best performance for the following week, when he carried the Retrievers over then first-place (tied) Binghamton, scoring 26 points and ripping down nine rebounds, perhaps saving UMBC’s season.
Chris Martin fights for his father: There aren’t words to sum up the performance of Martin all season long, as he has left everything he has on the court and on the practice floor while his father has fought a losing battle against throat cancer. Martin drives back and fourth daily from the Stony Brook campus on Long Island to his father’s house in Queens, and still finds the inner strength to leave his heart on the floor every day. No performance was bigger for Martin than when he put Stony Brook on his back and carried them through four overtimes in their two point loss to BU. Martin was fearless and unstoppable as he poured in all 26 of his points after the intermission.
Eric Gilchrese does his mother proud: Like Martin, New Hampshire’s Gilchrese has played much of the season with his heart focused on something much larger than basketball, as his mother fought and ultimately lost her battle with cancer in early December. Gilchrese took a leave of absence from the Wildcats to return home, missing 12 games. In his first game back, Gilchrese exploded, scoring 22 points and shooting 5-7 from downtown in New Hampshire’s come from behind win on the road at Stony Brook. After the game, an emotional Gilchrese couldn’t bring himself to speak much about everything that he has endured, but he made his few words count, saying simply “R.I.P. Mom.”
]]>With the win UNH improved to 3-1 on the season. Eric Gilchrese scored 20 points, while Mike Christensen added 17 and Alvin Abreu came off the bench for 14, as the Wildcats overcame 25 points each from Quinnipiac’s combo of DeMario Anderson and Evann Baker.
The local media might still be ignoring the Wildcats, but it’s apparent to everyone who’s seen them play that this New Hampshire team is for real. The Wildcats opened the season with a near upset of Boston College and haven’t lost since, improving every game. This years team isn’t the pushover that UNH has been in the past, and opponents are taking notice, as Wildcats’ Coach Bill Herrion reflected after the win.
“The more games you play, the more tapes get out, and in the first couple of games you can catch people off guard, maybe people don’t know you that well,” said Herrion. “Well guess what, were 3-1, were not going to be surprising people anymore.”
Quinnipiac’s game plan was to attack the Wildcats in the post, as head Coach Tom Moore stated, “Initially what we wanted to do was try to score inside on those guys.” However, this strategy seemed futile early on, as DiLiegro continued to make his presence felt in the middle for New Hampshire.
After winning the opening tip, the freshman ripped down the rebound of an errant shot over two defenders, flashed a nifty spin move in the post and finished off despite hard contact from Quinnipiac’s Justin Rutty. DiLiegro quickly established himself on the defensive end, as on the ensuing possession he first deflected Rutty’s jumper, and then annihilated Louis Brookins’ lay up, eliciting a road from the crowd.
His early performance won the respect of the opposing coach, as after the game Moore raved about the young freshman, saying, “DiLiegro is an aggressive player, he’s a good defender, he’s a really aggressive rebounder, he has great strength and great energy for a freshman. He’s going to be a terrific player for these guys.”
Unfortunately for the Wildcats, DiLiegro also picked up two offensive fouls within the first three minutes, and was forced to the bench for the rest of the first half.
“He’s still really learning how to play,” said Herrion, “He plays very hard. His fouls were just ticky-tack fouls that he doesn’t need to commit. He’s got to learn how to play without fouling, but he’s a big, strong, physical kid, and he plays hard.”
Without DiLiegro on the floor, what had been advantage in the post for UNH quickly became a disadvantage as they got much smaller and much less physical in a hurry. New Hampshire could normally count on sophomore captain Radar Onguetou to step in and provide physicality and smart, tough-nosed defense, but Onguetou has been dealing with a persistent leg injury early in the season, and his effectiveness has been greatly limited. “Radar is banged up,” said Herrion, “he’s hobbling, but he gives you terrific effort. He’s just struggling offensively.”
The injury to Onguetou, and DiLiegro’s foul trouble affected the Wildcats the most on the defensive end, as Quinnipiac immediately began to have success scoring around the basket. UNH was forced to play freshmen James Valladares and Rony Tchatchoua extensively, and while their efforts were admirable, the absence of DiLiegro was apparent.
“Losing Dane was big,” said junior guard Tyrece Gibbs. “It’s always good to know that your shot blocker is behind you when you get posted up. Without him, it was a lot more stressful.”
Quinnipiac’s guards, whom had struggled to shoot over DiLiegro in the first three minutes, began to score at will once he left the floor. DeMario Anderson and Evann Baker each scored twelve points in the first half, coming almost entirely from posting up on the low block, as the Bobcats scored twenty points in the post during the opening period.
The points in the paint were especially troubling to Herrion, as Quinnipiac didn’t make a single first half three-pointer, yet controlled the game twelve minutes in. “We need to get tougher, collectively, defensively around the basket,” said the third-year coach.
Trailing by six with eight minutes to go, UNH was on the verge of letting the game get out of control, but the Wildcats, in what has been a staple of theirs so far this year, dug their heels in and clawed their way back into the game. What was most impressive during the Wildcats run was that they did it largely without the help of their best players, as captain’s Mike Christensen and Gibbs struggled the entire half. Last season, UNH lacked scoring depth, as their offense revolved around getting departed senior Blogoj Janev the ball and getting out of his way. As Janev went, so went the team, and if Janev, and to a lesser extent Christensen and Gibbs, struggled on offense, UNH didn’t stand a chance.
This year’s Wildcats squad has done a complete one-eighty. While Gibbs and Christensen (and starter Tyrone Conley) struggled to find the hoop in the first half, UNH’s bench took over. The Wildcats’ transition from last season was on full display, as New Hampshire’s speed and athleticism combined with their newfound bench depth turned the tide. Valladares scored on a nifty reverse lay up, Alvin Abreu nailed a jumper in transition, and Tchatchoua threw down an acrobatic two-handed slam in traffic, and suddenly it was a two-point game.
Abreu and fellow guard Eric Gilchrese then took over, as they seemed to feed off each other and excel in transition, with Gilchrese scoring several buckets leading the fast break and setting up Abreu for two huge three-pointers. Mike Christensen then got in on the action, nailing a deep three, and Onguetuo finished off a gutsy drive in traffic, and New Hampshire went into the half with a commanding 40-30 lead.
Abreu, who scored eleven first half points, was especially huge for the Wildcats, as his three’s were not only timely, but momentum changing, as they were each from well beyond NBA range. Abreu was fearless shooting over defenders, and played with a confidence and poise rarely displayed by freshmen. Abreu’s play in the first half earned him praise from both his own coach, as well as his opponent’s.
“Alvin Abreu offensively gave us a big lift,” stated Herrion, while Moore added “Alvin Abreu is terrific, in terms of his offensive confidence and his swagger.”
The influx of new talent has been huge for the Wildcats, as they are much more athletic and much more fearless then they have been in years past. But the youth movement has also given Coach Herrion some heartburn in the early going, as they may lack the experience to go for the knockout punch when their opponent is weak.
“I don’t know if we’re old enough yet, or experienced enough yet, to really know how to put people away and run somebody out of the building” commented Herrion.
The Wildcats once again did not put their opponent away when they had the chance, as Quinnipiac’s combo of Andrerson and Baker once again went to work. Anderson scored in the post and found Baker for easy buckets when New Hampshire doubled down on him. New Hampshire’s inability to switch over to the open man when playing zone defense has been a troubling trend this year, and it was evident Sunday as Quinnipiac’s guard duo each scored 25 points.
“Defensively, I’m not real happy, I mean two guys get fifty out of their seventy,” said Herrion. Added Gibbs: “that’s lay ups all around the basket.”
But UNH’s veteran leadership, something that also seemed to be lacking last season, proved to be the difference, as Gibbs and Christensen came up big when it counted the most. With Quinnipiac surging Gibbs finished off a terrific up and under move to put New Hampshire up 59-53. Another Quinnipiac run cut the lead to one with five minutes left, but New Hampshire once again answered back, as Christensen first nailed a jumper in traffic to put UNH up three with five minutes left. The Cougars fired back, again cutting the lead to one, but Christensen once again stopped the bleeding, nailing a deep three to put the Wildcats up 65-61 with four minutes left.
Quinnipiac had one final run in them, but Eric Gilchrese, the America East player of the game, put on a gutsy performance when it mattered most to help seal the game. Gilchrese’s competitive streak had already been on display earlier, when he and Quinnipiac guard Casey Cosgrove got into a verbal dispute that escalated into a shoving match at halftime, resulting in offsetting technical fouls. Gilchrese downplayed the incident, saying, “He was competing, I was competing, we bumped heads, and that’s what happened. When the game gets close like that, I’m not backing down from anybody, and that’s what happens with good competitors.”
As competitive as Gilchrese was in the first half, it paled in comparison to his gutsy performance in the game’s closing minutes. He has battled bad cramps often during the young season, but here he took a hard foul near the three-minute mark, and was visibly limping on his way to the free throw line before icing both chances from the charity stripe. A minute later, Gilchrese picked Evann Baker’s pocket and took it coast to coast for a lay up, pushing the score to 72-63. After once again converting in traffic, Gilchrese was limping badly as he got back on defense, and after an awkward attempt to block Cosgrove’s three, Gilchrese lay sprawled on the ground clutching his leg in obvious pain.
But with less than two minutes left, and Quinnipiac within six, leaving the game was not an option for Gilchrese, whom hobbled back onto the court to gut the rest of the game out.
“It was really my call,” said Gilchrese, “I looked up the clock and it said a minute fifty-four seconds left, and I just wanted to tough it out… when I got back over to the bench, I told Coach that I was ready and wanted to tough it out.”
Gilchrese’s physical abilities have given New Hampshire something that they have been sorely lacking in recent years, as he is a true point guard who can score in transition as well as set his teammates up by getting them the ball in scoring position. But it’s his toughness and leadership that may be the most beneficial to the young Wildcats. After his refusal to come out, New Hampshire put the game away, as Mike Christensen sank two free throws to put New Hampshire up 74 to 67.
In a true “statement game” for New Hampshire, DiLiegro closed it out with a statement of his own, as he corralled a half court pass from Christensen, and threw down an emphatic two-handed dunk right over Anderson while being fouled. DiLiegro completed the three-point play by icing his free throw and giving New Hampshire a 77-70 win.
The win was huge for New Hampshire, as the Wildcats are now riding a three-game winning streak, and the benefits of getting off to a good start are not lost on their coach.
“At UNH, we’re just trying to win games, we’re going to respect and appreciate every win that we get,” said Herrion. “Winning early in the year helps your confidence and it helps you’re practice.”
Herrion even joked that, “When you win early, you can keep their attention every day in practice, you can keep them motivated, and they will really listen to what you say.”
Just being able to joke after a game was an accomplishment of its own for Herrion, whom came under fire from fans early and often last season, as the Wildcats seemed unmotivated, and disorganized, and by the end of the season some fans were even calling for Herrion’s head. But fans need to understand that its not easy to turn around any program, especially one with the history of ineptitude that New Hampshire has. Turning around this program is one of the hardest jobs in college basketball, as it’s an incredibly tough sell on recruits, and fans need to temper their expectation. It will take time for Herrion to bring in a team full of players whom will play in his system.
“We missed the whole first year, we didn’t recruit anybody the first year when we got the job,” Herrion reflected. “And we only want kids who want to be here. I think we have kids right now that are really competitive, that love to play, and that want to be here and appreciate the opportunity. It’s not going to be a quick fix turning this around… and it’s not going to happen over night.”
The Wildcats still have a long way to go before they are truly contenders for a conference title, and dreams of an NCAA birth are still a long ways away, but it is easy to get excited about this team, as they are easily the best squad that New Hampshire has fielded in the past five years. And while the Wildcats have struggled on the defensive end, the positives far outweigh the negatives at this point, as UNH already can boast several things that have been lacking in the past, the first being a team which doesn’t need to rely on one player to provide most of the scoring.
“The nice thing about our team is that Tyrece Gibbs, who was huge versus BC, wasn’t a huge factor offensively today, and we won the game,” said Herrion. “Last week at Central Connecticut he gets three fouls five minutes into the game, he only plays like twenty minutes and we win the game, that’s positive.”
And while New Hampshire has struggled to put teams away, perhaps even more importantly they haven’t gotten rattled like many most teams have, and they have displayed the ability to recover from their mistakes and still come out on top. Said Herrion: “The nice thing is, in the Central game last Saturday and today, we had control of both games in the second half, then both teams made runs at us and we withstood it. That’s positive.”
But perhaps the biggest gain this season is simply the Wildcats’ ability to give everything they have day in and day out. Last season’s squad seemed to quit on Herrion half-way through the year, but there is absolutely no let up in these Wildcats.
“It’s clearly about us out there this year, we just come together as a team when things get rough and stick it through,” said Gibbs. “Heart is the biggest thing right now, because when it got late in the game, we could either fold or pull through, and we pulled through pretty well.”
]]>When the dust finally settled, it was BU who came away with a 99-97 victory in the greatest regular season game in America East history.
“What a game. It’s a shame somebody had to lose,” remarked Stony Brook head coach Steve Pikiell.
“I’m not really even sure where to start. We knew Stony Brook was a much-improved team. I don’t think they could have played any harder, I don’t think our guys played any harder. We were fortunate we ended up making one more play than they did at the end,” added BU head coach Dennis Wolff.
Four overtimes: It could have gone longer.
If Stony Brook guard Brian Dougher’s runner in the lane had a bit more English on it, if Dougher got just a shade more of a “shooter’s roll,” if Tommy Brenton gets one more finger on his tip-in attempt at Dougher’s miss, or if the rims at Case Gymnasium were just a hair looser, it would have gone five.
The way both teams were playing, they could have gone all night and the game would have only gotten more intense, harder fought, and that much better. As it was, the Terriers-Seawolves marathon was not only the greatest regular season game in conference history, but quite frankly, one of the best college basketball games you will ever see at any level.
“Both teams had real hard games Saturday afternoon, so to come back in less than 48 hours and play a game like this with the minutes, I think both teams deserve a lot of credit. I don’t want to minimize how much credit I think Stony Brook deserves,” said Wolff.
Nine times out of ten, overtime basketball usually comes down to which team can make one big play: players are usually running on fumes, offenses break down, legs cramp up and give out, and buckets become few and far between. But this overtime thriller wasn’t who could make the big play, it was who could make the last big play, as both sides combined to score 84 points in overtime. The Seawolves and Terriers went shot-for-shot during the first three overtimes (10-10, 10-10, 11-11), before the Terriers made on more play in overtime number four, outscoring the Seawolves 12-10.
What a game indeed. What a statement for both teams, what a performance by John Holland and Corey Lowe, what fight by Tommy Brenton, what an exclamation point for the America East conference, and what a testament to the character and heart of Chris Martin.
Stony Brook may have lost the game, but there were no negatives taken away from either side. This wasn’t just a great statement by the Seawolves and the Terriers, this was a great statement for America East Basketball as a whole.
This was last-place Stony Brook, the worst team in the in the conference over the past three years, going shot-for-shot for sixty-minutes with the preseason conference favorites in a BU squad firing on all cylinders and featuring the best 1-2 duo in the conference in Lowe and Holland. This was a Seawolves team starting four first-year players and a walk-on going shot-for-shot with a BU squad featuring two potential first team all-conference players.
“There’s no moral victories,” said Pikiell. “No one cares. And no one cares about the plight of our program. It’s been a long road and there isn’t a ton of tradition. We were Division III 10 years ago, then we were Division II. We went Division I and got behind the eight ball but I think we’re catching up in a hurry. I think Coach Wolff will say that too. We’re graduating kids, we’re moving forward, we’ve got a good foundation here, we’ve got kids accepting their roles. You’ve got to get some wins, too.”
And this was a BU squad which only weeks ago had looked like it was mailing in the season, and whose heart, toughness, and fight had been in doubt for years, matching intensity for 60 minutes with the hardest-fighting team in the conference.
There was no quit on either side, at it seemed like the longer the game went, the harder the teams fought. Every shot was contested, every rebound a war, every loose ball a scrum, as the Terriers and Seawolves traded haymakers for an extra twenty minutes of game time, or the equivalent to an entire extra half of basketball.
“We had plenty of chances to fold on we didn’t, just like they had chances and credit them that they didn’t either,” reflected Wolff.
This was a game of backbreakers and comebacks, momentum shifts and defensive stops, but most of all this was a game of big players elevating their game in the crunch.
“It was an incredible game that I think we’ll all remember for a long time,” said Wolff.
Holland, the Terriers uber-athletic but sometimes enigmatic 6′5″ forward, played all-out for the entire 60 minutes, never once catching a breather. Holland continued to make a case for not only a 1st Team All-Conference nod, but the conference Player of the Year award, as he poured in 29 points and ripped down seven rebounds. Holland hit shots from all over the floor, with defenders draped all over him, including six three’s, two of which came in the first over time to push the Seawolves up against the wall, and two in the third overtime to pull the Terriers back from the brink.
“John played 60 minutes in a game, that’s a lot of minutes,” said Wolff.
There was freshman Jake O’Brien chipping in 13 points, none bigger than the deep three he hit with 47 seconds left in overtime number two, cutting what seemed like an insurmountable 76-71 Stony Brook lead to two points.
And there was Scott Brittain, the Terriers’ center who had looked dead and buried before injuries forced him into action from the end of the bench, and he responded with his most meaningful minutes of the season. Brittain was aggressive and asserted himself in a way Wolff has been pleading for all season, pulling down nine rebounds and chipping in nine points, including a huge bucket off of a spin move at the end of regulation.
Then there was Lowe, who showed why he is the most talented guard in the conference, pouring in 33 points on 11-of-22 shooting. Lowe had been invisible for weeks, and missed the only shot he attempted in the first half, but exploded in the second, and only got stronger with each overtime. For the first time in more than a month, Lowe wanted and demanded the ball when the game was on the line, and delivered, scoring on an array of acrobatic drives into the paint and four long range 3’s. Lowe put the game into a third overtime on a coast-to-coast drive and layup with four seconds left, and forcing a fourth overtime with a game tying free-throw with one second left in the third extra frame.
“I think [Holland and Lowe] played, individually, two of the best games that I can remember played here in a long time. I thought Corey played the best half and overtimes that I can ever remember a kid playing,” said Wolff.
Stony Brook countered every punch the Terriers threw with scoring from across the board, as five Seawolves scored in double figures. Chris Martin led the way with 26, while Brian Dougher dropped 18, Muhammad El-Amin 17, Tommy Brenton 15, and Demetrius Young 12.
It was El-Amin, the Seawolves’ leading scorer, who shrugged off a poor shooting night to send the game into overtime, nailing a three over two defenders from several feet behind the arc as time expired.
It was the play of Brenton and Dougher, two freshmen playing in the most intense game of their young careers, that was the most encouraging for the upstart Seawolves, as both anchor the best freshman class in the conference, and played like seasoned veterans against the likes of Lowe and Holland.
“The young players are confident and I’m confident in them. Bryan Dougher’s going to be a 1,000-point scorer, Dallis Joyner had a tough night, but he had 14 the other night and he rebounds, he’s going to be a 1,000-point scorer and Danny Carter’s going to be a 1,000-point scorer for us and Tommy Brenton had 17 rebounds and 15 points, so the young guys have no problem with confidence. We just need to finish the deal. We’ve been in some tight games like this,” said Pikiell.
Dougher went toe-to-toe with Lowe, whose combination of strength, speed, explosiveness, long range shooting, and experience is unmatched in the conference, as the Seawolves’ rookie hit big shots when they mattered.
Brenton was a beast, plain and simple, routinely out-leaping Holland (one of the conference’s resident high fliers) and the rest of the Terriers, as he skied for a Division I school-record 17 rebounds. Brenton outmuscled, out-positioned, and outworked the Terriers all night, fighting in a way that few rookies have. Brenton also provided the play of the night, throwing down a monster two-handed slam over two Terriers defenders in the third overtime period. Brenton fought all night, and looked like he could have gone another round or two, as he went nose-to-nose with the Terriers trio of Holland, Lowe, and 6′8″, 260-pound Jeff Pelage after the final whistle.
“Tommy Brenton had 17 rebounds as a freshman that breaks the school record in Division I – we’ve never had a guy have 17 rebounds,” reflected Pikiell.
But the story, and star, of the night was Martin. Martin shrugged off a first half in which he was invisible to single-handedly carry the Seawolves through the second half and all four overtimes, scoring all 26 of his points after the intermission. The Seawolves’ 6′1″, 235-pound guard/fullback scored from everywhere on the floor: 25-foot three’s, fade away jumpers, left-handed floaters, and fearless drives into the lane and through the entire Terriers squad.
As Martin heated up the Terriers focused their entire defensive efforts on stopping him. It didn’t matter. The Terriers could have thrown 10 defenders on him, Martin wasn’t going to be denied. Fighting his way to the basket was nothing compared to what Martin was fighting that night and has been fighting all season. Martin’s father Delvado has been fighting terminal lung cancer all season and was given his last rights two months ago, and Martin did not travel during the Seawolves trip west to face Air Force in December because doctors feared his father would not make it through the night.
“(Martin) was terrific today,” said Pikiell, “and made some huge plays for us. His dad is really struggling, it’s a daily thing, he (Delvado) has cancer, he’s been in and out of the hospital. (Chris) comes to practice, then he jumps in his car and goes to see his dad, then he comes back to practice. It’s been a tough stretch, but he’s been able to focus and he gave us good minutes today. He’s a sophomore, so he’s another young guy. I’m real pleased that he’s been able to focus because it’s been a real tough situation on him and his family. As soon as we get back tonight, he’ll be jumping in his car and he’ll go see his dad.
Delvado, who now weighs less than 100 pounds, has kept on fighting, as has Martin every time he sets foot on the court.
In the end, it’s a shame that someone had to lose this game, but both teams had nothing to hang their heads about. For the Terriers, they proved that their season is far from over, and they have the heart, talent, and fight to win this conference. And the young Seawolves proved that they should not be judged by their previous incarnations, these kids are no joke; they have the talent and the heart to play with anyone.
]]>There is significant separation between the top two teams (Vermont, BU) and the rest of the America East, and there is also some separation between teams 3-6 and the bottom of the conference. However, as a whole, the only team in the conference that should really be classified as playing flat-out bad has been Hartford, as the rest of the conference has played up to, or exceeded, preseason expectations.
Vermont’s inside-outside combination of Mike Trimboli and Marqus Blakely has been the best duo in the conference, as both are playing like All-Conference first teamers, but it’s been the Catamounts’ supporting cast that has made them hands down the team to beat in the America East. The Catamounts lead the conference in scoring, field goal percentage, field goal percentage defense and 3-point field goal percentage.
Stony Brook Notes
When I talked to Steve Pikiell one lazy August day last summer, Stony Brook’s head coach radiated with boundless energy and enthusiasm, raved about his incoming freshman class, and glowed when talking about the competition at every position and depth across the board. Pikiell talked himself into a frenzy when describing just how hard his “kids” were going at it every practice, and how they were coming together as a team.
It was impossible not to get caught up in Pikiell’s excitement.
It was also impossible not to think that all the losing on Long Island might have finally gotten to Pikiell, maybe he’d finally cracked: How could the coach of such a bad team for the past three years, a coach whose head has been repeatedly called for over the past two seasons, be so upbeat, so optimistic?
In his three previous years at the helm of the Seawolves, Stony Brook spent three straight years in the basement, three straight appearances in the America East Tournament play-in game, and had amassed winning percentage worse than the batting average of a utility infielder.
The Seawolves had been a walking disaster: they lacked any team identity, along with any semblance of an offensive game plan. On the floor, Stony Brook looked like five individuals with plenty of athleticism, but no basketball training, and no interest in sharing the rock. Last season Stony Brook ranked last in the America East conference in scoring, assists, field goal percentage, three-point field goal percentages, and three-pointers made.
Fans were quick to call for Pikiell’s head. He was signed to the most lucrative contract in the league, yet he had produced the worst winning percentage among all active coaches.
What many didn’t realize was the during Pikiell’s first season as coach, Stony Brook was under NCAA sanctions dating back to the previous coaching staff, and only had six eligible scholarship players on its roster. In fact, the Seawolves did not field a team with a full 13 scholarship players until this season.
Fans are fickle. Once you fall into their doghouse, it’s hard to find your way back into good graces. Fans yawned when Stony Brook opened the season with a win over University of Maryland-Eastern Shore, and later at back-to-back wins over Columbia and New Jersey Institute of Technology. Those games, you’re supposed to win. Three straight losses to Lafayette, Wagner, and American, and it’s the same old Stony Brook, right?
Wrong.
Sure, the Seawolves’ first three wins of the season were against teams at the bottom of the Division I totem pole, but they are games that Stony Brook could, and would, have lost in previous years. In fact, last season Stony Brook lost to UMES and was destroyed by Columbia, losing by 20. Stony Brook showed more collective heart through their first five games than they had in the past three years, fighting down to the wire in valiant comebacks against Wagner and a very good American team, something that was unheard of last season when the Seawolves would roll over and die once they fell behind.
Stony Brook also proved they could win the close game, beating Columbia at the wire 62-60. They were 0-4 last year in games decided by 3 or fewer points.
The Seawolves also have gotten a huge boost from an exciting quartet of freshmen in 6′5″ high-energy, high-flying, do-everything forward Tommy Brenton, point guard Brian Dougher, 6′8″ 260 pound bruiser Dallis Joyner, and 6′9″ sharpshooting Brit-import Danny Carter.
Each of the four freshmen has had at least one game as Stony Brook’s high scorer, with Brenton taking center stage in the early going by ripping down 16 rebounds in his first collegiate game. He ranks 4th in the conference in boards per game.
Fans still dismissed Stony Brook as another bottom feeder and train wreck in waiting. But they can’t ignore the signs anymore. The Seawolves are finally heading in the right direction.
Last Thursday night, when Stony Brook tipped off against Lehigh, it was the kind of opponent that would have ended in the Seawolves getting run out of the gym a year ago: Lehigh was an experienced, veteran-heavy team coming in off of a win over Rutgers of the Big East.
In the early going, it looked like it would be a long night for Stony Brook. Lehigh pushed the lead to eleven, and Stony Brook sputtered badly out of the gate. Yet Pikiell’s young squad never buckled, never backed down, and played with heart and desire never before seen in their neck of Long Island. They came together as a team behind the terrific play of veterans Chris Martin, Marqus Cox, and transfer Desmond Adedeji.
The Seawolves clamped down in the second half on the defensive end, and after going into the intermission down 27-22, blew the Mountain Hawks out of the water, outscoring them 49-23 in the second half. The Seawolves won by working the ball into the post, locking down on defense, running like a finely tuned machine on offense, and most importantly playing with a tremendous collective heart. And they came back from a halftime deficit, something that proved next to impossible last season.
“We won this game with a great defensive effort in the second half, I couldn’t be prouder of the effort and intensity our team played with tonight after falling behind early,” Pikiell reflected after the game.
Throughout the season, Martin has shown glimpses of the potential he oozed when he was signed as part of Pikiell’s 2006 freshman class. But Martin never qualified academically, and sat out getting his grades in order. Unable to practice with the team his first year in school, much of last year was a wash for Martin, who had to re-adjust to the college game.
But this year looks different, as the 6′1″, 230-pound tank of a guard has done everything while coming off the bench for the Seawolves. Martin has stepped up in the place of Eddie Castellanos, who was lost for the season during the first game of the year, to handle the back-up point guard duties. He has served as instant offense, and the best sixth man in the America East.
“Chris has all the potential to be a very special player when all is said and done. He has done a terrific job of handling the point, he can really get to the hoop, and he has just gotten into terrific shape, he went from being over 20 percent body fat to down under 10,” said Pikiell.
Martin showed flashes in the early going, including the game winning tip in against Colgate, and a terrific second half against American in which he almost single-handedly led a comeback. Against Lehigh, Martin was nails, going for a season-high 19 points, and 13 in the second half. Martin scored from inside and out, showing of a refined shooting touch, and proved to be the X-factor that Stony Brook was lacking last season: someone who can create his own shot, and get to the basket and the free-throw line (he went 11 for 11 from the charity stripe). Martin attacked the rim with abandon, finishing with acrobatic lay-ups or hard earned trips to the line.
No player better embodied the new-look Seawolves than Adedeji, a transfer from Dayton who conducted a clinic in his first meaningful minutes of the season. He gave the Seawolves an instant low post presence, something that was non-existent for the past three seasons. The 6′10″, 315-pound center shook the floorboards when he entered the game for the first time, and shook the gym when he almost brought the backboard, and roof, down with a monster two-handed slam with 12:46 left in the second half.
“‘Big Des’ brings a new dimension to our team, and when he gets into game shape, he could be a game-changer,” said Pikiell.
Adedeji only played 17 minutes, but he lived up to Pikiell’s description. He truly changed the lane, scoring 11 points on 5-9 shooting to go with nine rebounds and three blocks, and drew constant double and triple teams, freeing up the rest of Stony Brook’s offense.
He also brought the crowd back into the game.
Before Adedeji’s support-shaking dunk, Stony Brook trailed 38-30, but it energized the crowd of more than a thousand, and began a 41-12 Seawolves run to close out the game.
The unsung hero was Cox, a four-year walk-on whom has gone from practice player to defensive stopper. Cox emerged early in the season as a new player, a lock-down one-on-one defender that the Seawolves have never seen before. Cox has been put in man-to-man coverage against opponents’ best offensive guards and thrived, shutting down American’s Garrison Carr. Carr at the time was averaging over 20 points per game, but had just 10 points on 3-9 shooting. Against Lehigh he continued to shine, holding star guard Marquis Hall to 13 points, frustrating him into 4-12 shooting, and 3-8 behind the arc.
“There just isn’t a better story than Marques. He’s our leader, and he has worked as hard as humanly possible from day one in the program, and he has become a huge weapon for us on the defensive end” said Pikiell.
The Seawolves aren’t ready to contend for a conference title, but they are headed in the right direction. With talent, depth, and a newfound team identity, Stony Brook is going to be able to put a scare into a lot of America East teams.
]]>But I can’t help it. I like this Terriers team.
I know, BU lost a very winnable game last Saturday against Mount Saint Mary’s, and almost blew a big league against a completely overmatched Saint Peter’s squad a few weeks ago. But this year BU has shown the toughness and heart that has been absent from the program for several years.
In previous years BU would have completed the collapse against Saint Peters, instead of hanging on. In previous years BU would never have made a statement like the one they did in their victory of Northeastern, and in previous years the Terriers would never have grabbed the momentum in the second half and put a team away like they did against the Crimson of Harvard in their 75-59 victory Wednesday night. BU is playing with a purpose in a way they haven’t in several years, and their talent on the perimeter is scary good.
One of the greatest weaknesses of Dennis Wolff’s squads of the past several years has been their exasperating tendency to play down to the level of their opponents. They have had a tendency to let lesser teams stick around late in games, and maddening inability to put teams away.
In the first half, it appeared that this game had all the makings of another debacle for BU, as they played at Harvard’s slow, methodical pace, and failed to utilize their big advantage in speed and athleticism.
John Holland, the Terriers’ super-athletic super sophomore, got BU going with a steal that led to a monster one-handed tomahawk jam. But BU let the momentum fizzle, and let Harvard back in the game.
The Terriers seemed to shoot themselves in the foot at every opportunity. Leading 18-16, BU held Harvard without a field goal for over eight minutes, but failed to capitalize, only pushing their lead to 5 points (29-24) thanks to six turnovers during that stretch.
BU committed 11 turnovers in the first half, and allowed what should have been an overmatched Harvard squad to go into the half trailing by only seven points.
It was a game that BU could have easily blown, and in past years would have. The Terriers let a pesky Crimson squad stick around, and build their confidence. BU went into halftime flat, and playing on their home floor in front of their fans, Harvard was in a prime position to grab the momentum, and the game, after the intermission.
In short, it was a game that BU could easily have let slip away, and in previous years would have. But this Terriers team is different.
Halfway into the second half, BU turned on the jets, and put the game away. Defense has always been Wolff’s staple, and after playing lock-down defense all game, the Terriers ratcheted it up another notch. BU turned their defense into offense, and the basketball game into a track meet, and Harvard was left in the dust. Holland and Corey Lowe blew past Crimson defenders, scoring on an array of acrobatic lay-ups, and long bombs from deep, and in the blink of an eye BU had gone on a 22-6 run and put the game away.
“I think that sometimes we say we want to run, but when we get out there we don’t, tonight we were able to do that,” said Wolff.
“Our defense definitely initiated that run, we were able to step up on defense which gave us a lot of momentum on offense,” said freshman Jake O’Brien.
O’Brien continued to sparkle, scoring 18 points on 7-13 shooting, nailing three long treys, while showing off a pretty mid-range game. More impressive, however, may have been the job that O’Brien, along with senior Matt Wolff, did on Crimson freshman center/house Keith Wright. The 6′8″, 260-pound Wright entered the game a one-man wrecking crew, but was held to less than half his season average, scoring only six points while being frustrated into 7 turnovers.
“I thought that throughout the game our defensive intensity, and doubling in the post, really enabled us to really limit Wright’s chances. There were a lot of bodies around him and he had a hard time making moves, so I thought that was the key to the game,” said Dennis Wolff.
“O’Brien has been a good player since the first day he set foot on campus, he plays with poise, and he’s a very good player.”
For a player labeled as soft coming out of high school, O’Brien made a statement by fighting with Wright, one of the most physical players in the northeast, despite being outweighed by 50 pounds.
“He was a strong kid, he definitely got positioning really well,” commented O’Brien.
O’Brien put a body on Wright every time down the court, and had two big rejections. He also added the icing on the cake, shaking the backboard with an emphatic two-handed slam, the first of his college career, in the game’s final minutes.
“It definitely felt good (the dunk), it was kind of a relief, I’ve been looking forward to getting my first one under my belt, so I’m glad I got that one out of the way,” chuckled O’Brien.
Lowe was the story of the game, as he has played some of the best basketball of his career during the Terriers’ three game road trip, beginning with a 27-point outing in the win at Northeastern. Lowe scored a game-high 20 points on 7 of 13 shooting, going 4-6 from behind the arc while committing only one turnover. Lowe showed tremendous discipline and unselfishness, and only took 2 shoots from more than 23 feet out, one a 26 footer that he nailed with the shot clock expiring.
“I thought that Corey Lowe played about as good a floor game tonight as (he) could play,” said Wolff. “Corey Lowe really sets the whole groundwork for everyone, and he is a very unselfish kid. He picked his spots, got good shots.”
The game was billed as a matchup of two of the best guards in the northeast, but it was a one-sided affair. Lowe was matched up against Harvard junior Jeremy Lin, who entered the game averaging 20 points per contest while shooting an eye-popping 58.8 percent from three, but it wasn’t close. Lowe was unstoppable on offense while shutting down Lin on the defensive end, forcing one of the best guards in the Ivy League into 5 turnovers, and holding him scoreless from behind the arc.
“When you’re playing half court defense you usually have rules, with (Lin) we had no rules, Corey’s job was to just stay with him, and Corey did a very good job doing that,” said Wolff.
Lin’s final stat line looked nice on paper, as he finished with 17 points on 8-13 shooting, but he scored most of his points at the end of the game, when the outcome was already decided and Lowe was sitting on the bench.
Holland was also firing on all cylinders, scoring 17 points, shooting 7-12 from the floor and 3-5 from 3, while pulling down 7 rebounds. Holland wreaked havoc at the top of the 1-3-1 zone, coming up with 3 steals and disrupting passing lanes all game.
“John Holland tries off-the-charts hard in games,” said Wolff. “His effort a lot of times gets the whole team going, so like in the first half he’s making great plays, and then he’s running all over the place looking like he’s about to die,” said Wolff.
“For me, going off of the steals, and maybe getting a dunk or two, sometimes that get’s everybody hyped,” added Holland.
Matt Wolff brought hard-nosed defense in the second half after spending the first half on the bench in foul trouble, coming up with three steals, and the Terriers even got some productive minutes out of reserve forward Valdas Sirutis, as the junior scored his first points of the season on a crucial first half three to sap some of Harvard’s momentum.
To be sure, BU can’t rely on shooting 46.4 percent from behind the arc like they did against Harvard (13 of 28 from three), and the Terriers are still searching for some one who can score around the hoop. 6′9″ Scott Brittain is still suffering from post-concussion syndrome, and appeared very tentative in limited minutes against Harvard. Even when he was healthy, Brittain wasn’t the kind of player who could take over a game in the paint if the Terriers weren’t lighting it up from three.
The struggle of point guard Tyler Morris (6 turnovers, 1-5 shooting from 3) is also concerning. Morris still looks worlds away from the kid who set the conference on fire as the Rookie of the Year two seasons ago, as he has struggled to generate his own shot and with running the offense.
But the Terriers have proven that they can find ways to win. They are playing with heart and a sense of urgency and purpose, and most importantly playing as a team. With the Terriers sharing the ball, and when their shots are falling, BU is going to be a handful for anyone in the conference.
“We have so many different weapons, it’s hard for somebody to guard,” said Holland. “On any given night we have a lot of people who can light it up.”
]]>Boston University showed grit and toughness that the program has been lacking for the past four years. BU answered every run that Northeastern made, outhustled, out-toughed, and out-coached the Huskies, making a statement about the direction of their program.
During the 2003-04 season, Boston University was the class of the America East conference. The Terriers enjoyed their third straight 20-win season, going 23-6 including a win on the road against Michigan back when such a victory was still impressive, and stormed through the America East, going 17-1 in conference. The Terriers received top 25 votes weekly (something unheard of in the America East conference), and if the Top 25 voting was extrapolated out, would have ranked in the top 30 in the country at one point. ESPN projected BU as a No. 12 seed heading into the NCAA tournament, and other publications started whispering that the Terriers could play the role of Cinderella in March.
Then it all came crashing down.
BU was knocked out on their home floor in the opening round of the America East tournament by 8th-seeded Stony Brook. The following season, after graduating arguably the best senior class in school history, the Terriers again rattled off twenty wins, but once again lost in the first round of their conference tournament. Beyond that, Boston University crumbled down the stretch, as they were embarrassed on their home floor by Northeastern, and simply didn’t show up down the stretch.
Things only got worse the following season, as the Terriers struggled through a season marred by player suspensions and locker room friction, culminated by the departure of four highly-touted players during the offseason. The next year BU once again suffered through a season marred by player defections and another early exit in the conference tournament, and last year after showing signs of life during parts of the conference season, BU ended on another bad note when they were run off the floor by Hartford in the conference semifinals.
The Terriers’ futility has gone far beyond their drop in the conference standings and record. It has been marked by their lack of physical and mental toughness. Whenever the Terriers were hit hard in the opening minutes of a game, they seemed to wilt. Entering this season it could be argued that the Terriers hadn’t won a big game against a quality opponent since beating the University of Vermont in February of 2005.
Nowhere was the futility of BU basketball more evident than in their annual matchups against Northeastern: From the era of Reggie Lewis to Tunji Awojobi, from Billy Collins to Jose Juan Barea, the two schools have waged epic battles, but recently it has become at one sided affair. Since Northeastern’s final season in the America East (they moved to the CAA after the 2004-05 season), Boston University had gone 0-4 against the Huskies.
And the losses have been ugly.
Two years ago Northeastern came out swinging and flat-out embarrassed BU. Last year the Terriers hung around for a half, until a monster slam by Nkem Ojougboh took the wind out of BU’s sails and the Huskies cruised to victory.
This year Northeastern once again came out swinging, punctuated by another Ojougboh jam that brought an eruption from the crowd of roughly 2,000. But this year was different, as the Terriers didn’t flinch. Northeastern punched BU in the mouth several times in the first half, and every time BU stayed on it’s feet and fought back.
Matt Wolff fought with Manny Adako and Eugene Spates under the glass, Cory Lowe and Northeastern stud Matt Janning went toe to toe, and it was BU who emerged victorious.
Where in previous years BU was pushed around by Northeastern, this year it was the Terriers who did the pushing, as they seemed to beat the Huskies to every loose ball and long rebound.
Billy Collins, Jason Grochowalski, and every member of the great Terrier teams from 2002-04, teams renowned for their toughness, would have been proud of BU’s performance. In fact, in the week leading up to the game, Dennis Wolff’s squad spent many hours watching old game film of past BU squads, looking for inspiration.
“(Coach Wolff) showed us some stuff from past teams and how much it means to BU and Northeastern, the rivalry, so we just kind of wanted to put our piece in,” said junior guard Cory Lowe.
Lowe certainly put his piece in, as he was unconscious in the first half, scoring 23 of the Terriers 39 points in the opening frame. Lowe lit it up from everywhere, hitting threes from NBA range, but perhaps even more impressive was his performance in the second half.
Early this season Lowe struggled with his decision making, as he seemed unwilling to defer to teammates, forcing shots often. But against Northeastern, Lowe was the definition of unselfish, scoring only four points in the second half while finding freshman Jake O’Brien early and often.
O’Brien was unreal, scoring 21 points in the second half while shooting 5 of 6 from behind the arc. O’Brien showed just why Wolff has been raving so much about him, as it has been a long time since a Terrier, let alone a BU forward, has had as pretty a release and as true as shot as the 6′8″, 210-pound rookie.
Every one of O’Brien’s threes found nothing but net, and every one of them was a dagger.
More impressive was that the Terriers were able pull out the W despite an off game from star wing John Holland (17 points, but on 5 of 13 shooting) and with center Scott Brittain still suffering from the affects of post concussion syndrome (no points in 10 limited minutes).
But most impressive was the Terriers’ mental toughness, as they withstood every run that Northeastern made all the way until the final buzzer, something that would have seemed impossible in previous seasons.
It’s still too early to label the Terriers as true America East contenders. They are still prone to bouts of sloppy play, and lost a very winnable game on Saturday to Mount Saint Mary’s. But the program has taken a huge step in the right direction this season: they are showing up for their games, they aren’t backing down and their mental and physical toughness is already several steps up from where it has been during the past few years. And a Terriers team with Lowe, Holland, and O’Brien scoring from outside, and the return of Brittain in the low post is going to be tough to beat when they are playing up to their talent.
]]>Sure, the Seawolves’ only win was over the University of Marlyand-Eastern Shore, a team at the bottom of the Division I ranks, and losses to Lafayette and Wagner are certainly uninspiring on paper, but those are three games that Stony Brook may well have not shown up for last year.
No one is predicting that Stony Brook will compete for a league title this season, but the Seawolves look very improved over last year’s squad. Last year the Seawolves played as five individuals; this year they actually look like a unit on the floor. Last year it seemed that Stony Brook played five athletes with no real position on the floor; this year the Seawolves have gone with a real lineup. Brian Dougher, Jonathan Moore, Chris Martin, and Marques Cox rotate through the guard position, Tommy Brenton and Muhammad El-Amin see time on the wing, and Brenton, Dallis Joyner, Danny Carter, Andrew Goba and Demetrius Young playing in the low post.
The Seawolves have been in every single game they have played, and could have won all three games that they have lost so far. Pikiell has developed a set 9-man rotation, and the Seawolves have begun to work the ball into the low post (a huge step in the right direction from last year).
On the court, the Seawolves look like a completely different team than last year’s squad. Last year Stony Brook ran an offense that resembled five chickens running around with their heads chopped off. Stony Brook lead the conference in three pointers attempted while finishing dead-last in three-point shooting, as the Seawolves played like five individuals auditioning for the And-1 Mix-Tape tour. This season, Stony Brook looks like a team on the floor, have taken more shots from around the hoop than behind the arc, while actually moving the ball around on offense.
Perhaps most indicative of the Seawolves’ new direction has been the lack of playing time for Young, a 6′6″ leaper, as well as super athlete Jermol Paul and pint-sized chucker Michael Tyree, as Pikiell is going for production and performance above raw athleticism this year.
Especially encouraging for Stony Brook was Tuesday night’s performance against American. Stony Brook fell 56-53, but they played as equals with the best team in the Patriot league all night, which is not bad for an America East cellar-dweller. The Seawolves not only played as a team, but they fought all the way to the end in a game that they would have simply rolled over in last year.
“I’m extremely proud of the energy and effort our players showed tonight,” said Pikiell. “We played some excellent basketball against a terrific American team and unfortunately they just made a few more plays than we did down the stretch.”
Stony Brook still isn’t distributing the ball particularly well, but that may well be due to having two first-year players handle the point guard responsibility. That’s a role that freshman Dougher and junior college transfer Moore may grow into as the season progresses.
Brenton, a true freshman, has not only been Stony Brook’s best player, but the best freshman in the conference through the first two weeks. Pikiell raved about Brenton’s desire and work ethic in the low post, calling him the best rebounder on the team before the start of the season, and he has more than lived up to the billing, pulling down a league-leading 11.3 rebounds per game through for games. A natural wing at 6′5″, Brenton has played far bigger than his size, controlling the glass through tenacity and guile rather than size. He’s also shown a nice touch around the hoop.
“Tommy is a coach’s dream, he’s relentless around the hoop, our toughest player, and incredibly smart, and he just gets the job done,” said Pikiell. “He’s going to be a very special player for us before all is said and done.”
Martin has also been one of the best bench players in the conference, averaging 8.8 points in only 13 minutes a game. And he has been coming on stronger as the young season progresses: after only playing four minutes in the season opener, Martin scored 11 points in 14 minutes of action versus Lafayette, 14 points in 16 minutes versus Wagner, and 10 points in 18 minutes versus American. At 6′1″, 230 pounds and less than 10 percent body fat, Martin is a unique player in the conference. Already with the ability to handle the ball and run the point, and a developing outside shot, he can also post up America East guards at will, and has all the makings of an All-Conference player by the time he becomes an upperclassman. Martin is proving to be a weapon off of the bench, and more importantly gives the Seawolves’ offense a new dimension, as he can put the ball on the floor and really get to the hoop.
And the Seawolves have the look of a team that will be playing it’s best basketball at the end of the season, as Joyner, a 6′8″, 250-pound bruiser, and Carter, a 6′9″ sharpshooter, have shown flashes as true freshmen, and will only get better as the year goes on. Ditto for Dougher, who has started all four of the Seawolves’ games at point guard as a true freshman. The learning curve is especially tough at the point guard position for first-year players, but Dougher has a bulldog mentality and some legitimate skill to go with it, and has the tools to be a fine floor general.
The biggest lift for Stony Brook, however, will be the return of Desmond “Big Des” Adedeji, a 6′10″, 315-pound nightmare in the middle and the Seawolves’ best player. Fans are quick to overlook the fact that Stony Brook has been in a position to win every game they have played this season despite playing without their centerpiece, as Pikiell’s offense had been designed to revolve around Adedeji, The impact that Adedeji could have – the ideal word here is “could” – can not be overstated, as there may not be a player in the conference that can stop him if he gets the ball on the low blocks. Adedeji has tremendous hands, a soft touch, is an exciting finisher around the hoop, and can run the floor like a deer, and could average 15 and 10 right away.
Adedeji has served four games of a six game suspension, and the lay-off combined with off-season surgery and the year he spent away from the court last season as a transfer (from Dayton) should temper immediate expectations for Adedeji, but the talent and potential are there, and the Seawolves are only going to get better with his return.
Stony Brook is still a long way from becoming the “Evil Empire” that some boastfully predicted a few years back. But there may finally be light at the end of the tunnel for the Seawolves, and they could certainly play the roll of spoiler at the end of the season.
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