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2010 Patriot League Post-Mortem

by - Published May 28, 2010 in Conference Notes

The Patriot League continued to have a little different look this year, notably in the standings. For a while, it was dominated by Holy Cross and Bucknell, but for the third year in a row a program other than those two won the title. Two years ago, they shockingly finished at the bottom of the league; last year, Holy Cross finished second while Bucknell tied for last; and this season, they switched places as Bucknell finished second and Holy Cross suffered through a disastrous 9-22 season.

Last year, Lehigh showed signs of contending when they made a great non-league run, but they didn’t get it done in league play. This year, the Mountain Hawks were the best team for much of the season, and they carried that into the league tournament with three wins for the title. A big reason for that was, oddly enough, a freshman. C.J. McCollum wasted no time becoming a star, as he won Player of the Year and Rookie of the Year honors, the first player in league history to do so. He was second in the league in scoring overall, but it was in league play where he shined the most as he led in scoring, was sixth in rebounding and field goal percentage, third in three-point percentage and seventh in assists and assist/turnover ratio.

McCollum is symbolic of something else that is different about the league, which is the young talent. Oftentimes, young players in a league like this take a back seat to the veterans, but the Patriot League had a lot of young talent this year. Five of the top ten scorers, four of the top nine rebounders and five of the top seven three-point marksmen were underclassmen. McCollum wasn’t the only freshman on his team to be a key player, as Gabe Knutson was also a starter and key player for the Mountain Hawks. Bucknell placed three players on the All-Rookie team, the first team in league history to do that, and all played significant roles for the Bison this season along with sophomore Bryan Cohen, an All-Rookie selection a year ago. Lafayette got to the final in no small part due to the work of sophomores Jim Mower and Ryan Willen. Holy Cross was at times carried by sophomores R.J. Evans and Devin Brown. Jordan Sugars was the main complement to senior Chris Harris at Navy. Stephen Lumpkins teamed with George Mason transfer Vlad Moldoveanu for a solid 1-2 punch inside for American.

While the league is looking different, the young talent is evidence that there is good basketball ahead for the league in the immediate future. The difference in the standings shows that teams have done their best to rise to the level that Holy Cross and Bucknell were at just a few years ago, and some have succeeded.

Final Standings

Overall Patriot League
Lehigh 22-11 10-4
Bucknell 14-17 9-5
Lafayette 19-13 8-6
American 11-20 7-7
Navy 13-17 7-7
Colgate 10-19 6-8
Holy Cross 9-22 5-9
Army 14-15 4-10

League Tournament

The story of the Patriot League Tournament was the dominance of eventual champion Lehigh, as the Mountain Hawks won all three games by at least 15 points. They took care of Army in the quarterfinals by pulling away late, while Lafayette and American won at home and Holy Cross was the lone road team to pull out a win as they knocked off Bucknell 67-64 in Lewisburg. The Mountain Hawks weren’t seriously challenged by American in a 79-57 semifinal win, while Lafayette won a back-and-forth battle with Holy Cross 66-63. That set up a championship game between two arch-rivals.

Lehigh led from start to finish, but was challenged in the second half by Lafayette. The Leopards made several runs at the lead, but could never tie the game. The final ten minutes were dominated by Lehigh senior Zahir Carrington, who took home the tournament MVP honors as he helped the Mountain Hawks pull away for a 74-59 win. Lehigh finished the game on a 12-1 run.

Postseason Awards

Player of the Year: C.J. McCollum, Lehigh

Rookie of the Year: C.J. McCollum, Lehigh

Defensive Player of the Year: Bryan Cohen, Bucknell

Coach of the Year: Fran O’Hanlon, Lafayette

All-Conference Team

Chris Harris, Sr. G, Navy

C.J. McCollum, Fr. G, Lehigh

Jared Mintz, Jr. F, Lafayette

Vlad Moldoveanu, Jr. F, American

Kyle Roemer, Sr. F, Colgate

Season Highlights

  • Marquis Hall, who had a fine freshman season of his own three years ago, finished his career most importantly with a Patriot League title, but also with a great accomplishment. The two-time Patriot League Scholar Athlete of the Year graduates as the only player in league history to surpass 1,500 points and 500 assists.
  • Army got a lot of buzz in non-league play, as new head coach Zach Spiker was getting results right away. The Black Knights haven’t lacked talent in recent years, so their record before league play wasn’t a big surprise. They rode winning streaks of five and four games to a 10-4 mark.
  • Vlad Moldoveanu made an instant impact for American once he was eligible in December after transferring from George Mason. He was third in scoring and rebounding in league games, as he didn’t play in enough games to qualify for the overall lead in any categories.
  • Lehigh was eighth in the nation in three-point field goal percentage at just under 40 percent from behind the arc.

What we expected, and it happened: Bucknell was more like the Bucknell of a few years ago. The Bison were hit hard by injuries in 2008-09 and also had a coaching change to adjust to. With a year under Dave Paulson and a good freshman class, the Bison had some growing pains in non-league play but finished second in the league behind Lehigh.

What we expected, and it didn’t happen: Holy Cross was the pick of many as the favorite before the season, but they didn’t come close to that, finishing 9-22 and seventh in the standings, a game out of last place. The Crusaders struggled at the defensive end for much of the season, and it showed in the win-loss column. Sean Kearney lasted just one season as the head coach, replaced by former Mount St. Mary’s head coach Milan Brown.

What we didn’t expect, and it happened: Lafayette was in contention for the top spot and made it to the championship game. The Leopards won eight games a year ago and didn’t look the part of a contender coming in, but they were right in the mix for the top spot and gave Lehigh a good game in the final of the tournament before a late run put the game away.

Team(s) on the rise: Bucknell. The Bison are back and the likely preseason favorite next year after a good showing in league play. Four of their top five were freshmen or sophomores this past season.

Team(s) on the decline: Colgate. A couple of years ago, the Raiders were in the title game. Now Kyle Roemer and Ben Jonson are gone from a team that finished sixth in the league.

2010-11 Patriot League Outlook

With the younger talent in the league, the future is bright. Just about every team projects to be better next season, so the league should improve on its non-league mark in addition to having a hotly contested race for the top starting in January. Six of the ten all-league players return, and all of the All-Rookie selections should contend for spots on that team before long.

Lehigh will have a chance to repeat, but the early favorite has to be Bucknell as the Bison bring back a lot of young talent that will only get better. Lafayette should be in the mix as they also bring back a lot, while American had growing pains with a less experienced roster this year. Holy Cross and Army each have the personnel to potentially make a jump into the top half as well.

If the league has the kind of year it could next year, ultimately it would be safe to say that the rest of the league succeeded in getting better to catch up to Holy Cross and Bucknell. They had little choice but to do so, and having done so the Crusaders and Bison are certainly not dominating the league any longer and not because they have fallen apart.

Seniors Lead Lehigh to Patriot League Title

by - Published March 13, 2010 in Columns

BETHLEHEM, Penn. – The first thing one may be tempted to do with Lehigh is look at the best player, a freshman.  Without question, C.J. McCollum has already done quite a bit in winning the Patriot League Player of the Year, the first freshman to do so.  But he has some pretty good teammates at the opposite end of their college careers, and that was certainly clear in Lehigh’s 74-59 win over arch-rival Lafayette in the Patriot League championship game.

McCollum was the story early, as he was active and aggressive and set the tone.  Then he went quiet in the middle of the first half and a lot of the second half after a couple of strong early minutes.  In the meantime, the senior trio of Marquis Hall, Zahir Carrington and Dave Buchberger did plenty of work to lift the Mountain Hawks to the win for their second Patriot League title.

“I thought our senior leadership throughout the course of the season was tremendous,” said head coach Brett Reed, who also cited reserve Matt Shamis.  “The four of those individuals spent so much of their own personal energy to make this team what it was: a team that was pulled together, a team that could face adversity, and a team that would not crumble and would not back down.”

Down the stretch, no one wanted it more than tournament MVP Carrington, who posted his second double-double of the tournament with 18 points and 10 rebounds to go with four blocks.  All four blocks came in the second half, along with 12 points and seven rebounds.  It seemed like he made every big play, whether it was to keep Lehigh out in front or for a momentum swing back in their favor.

Carrington, who mentors middle to high school-aged boys in Allentown’s “Boys to Manhood” program, remembered how his first three years went and had an idea how that could change.

“We’ve been eliminated the first three years in this league, and had been a sub-par, mediocre kind of team,” said Carrington.  “The only way to make up for that was to go out like this.”

He gave the Mountain Hawks their biggest lead at the time when a dunk put them up 42-33 early in the second half.  But that was just the beginning.  When the Leopards pulled within two with less than ten minutes to play, he hit a jumper to put the Mountain Hawks back up by four.  It would be the last time the Leopards were within a possession, as Carrington blocked two shots on the next possession and another one a minute later.  During a decisive 8-0 run that put Lehigh up by 12 to put the game out of reach, Carrington had three rebounds, an assist and two dunks.

“Zahir really carried us in the second half, he willed us to victory late down the stretch,” said Hall.

Speaking of Hall, he is closing a college career that has had plenty of accomplishments, but no NCAA Tournament trip until now.  He was the league’s Rookie of the Year three seasons ago, is the first player in Patriot League history with over 1,500 points and 500 assists, and was the Patriot League Scholar Athlete of the Year in 2009.  Given the chance, he would have gladly traded it all in for a chance to play in the NCAA Tournament.  Now he will get to play later in March, and he had no small part in it as he was named to the all-tournament team.

“It’s indescribable, really,” said Hall.  “Just to be out there and share a moment with my teammates, my group of seniors, it was the cap that I thought it would be.”

Playing the second half with a heavily-bandaged left leg, Hall scored just three points but had seven assists and ran the offense like he has for four years.  His numbers don’t convey his value, as he transitioned from a scorer to a floor leader as more scoring talent developed around him.  In the Patriot League Tournament, he had 17 assists against six turnovers, continuing a season-long trend as he is 15th in the nation in assist/turnover ratio.

There’s one senior starter who doesn’t get much acclaim, and in keeping with the theme, he came up big on Friday.  Dave Buchberger had 13 points, going 3-5 from long range, and handed out three assists.  More importantly, he hit a couple at key junctures of the game, and perhaps none bigger than the one he hit near the halfway point of the second half to put Lehigh up 54-50 after the Leopards had come within one.  That came after he put them up 51-42 a couple of minutes earlier, and later he leaked out for a breakaway dunk during the decisive 8-0 run.

This followed a semifinal outing where he shot 6-8 from the field, including 4-5 from long range, en route to a season-high 16 points to help the Mountain Hawks knock off American.  As that came after a game where he went scoreless, he clearly bounced back well.

McCollum wound up with a game-high 20 points and grabbed seven rebounds, averaging over 20 points per game for the tournament.  A case could be made for him as the tournament MVP.  But make no mistake about it, as often happens Lehigh won the game and the championship led by the seniors.  They came through during the tournament the way coaches and teammates would expect, and the desired result followed from it.

Lehigh Gets Better Through a Solid January

by - Published February 1, 2010 in Columns

WORCESTER, Mass. – There’s still more than a month to go in the season, but Lehigh has already matched or eclipsed last season’s output in a couple of areas.  And while they’re at it, the Mountain Hawks are playing at a much higher level than they were at this time last year, suggesting there’s more where that came from.

The Mountain Hawks’ 78-60 win at Holy Cross accomplished several things.  It snapped a 13-game losing streak to the Crusaders at the Hart Center going back to 1998.  It gave them a 5-2 mark in the Patriot League, which matched their league win total of last season.  They also close the month with a 7-2 record, their most successful month since they went 8-1 four years earlier.  Most of all, they close the month on a high note and playing well.

In contrast, last season the Mountain Hawks started fast before fading.  They had the best non-league record in school history, but a 5-9 mark in league play wasn’t what anyone could have expected when league play began.  Head coach Brett Reed felt they peaked in non-league play and basically ran out of gas, and watching this season’s team can see a positive difference.

“I think it’s really important that we’re playing better basketball at this time of the year,” said Reed, now in his third year as head coach.  “This year, we were starting to play better basketball as we headed into January.  Now, hopefully in February that continues and we continue to have some momentum, which is important for our program, and it’s nice to get the balance that we have with senior leadership and the energy of young guys to boost us forward.”

As Reed mentioned, Lehigh has a good balance of personnel leading them to this point.  Marquis Hall has seemingly been there forever, as the four-year starting point guard has been among the league’s best players since he entered the league.  Along with classmates Zahir Carrington and Dave Buchberger, the three senior starters for the Mountain Hawks have played like senior leaders in league play, combining to average over 32 points and 14 rebounds per game after averaging 24.3 points and 12.1 rebounds in non-league play.

“We came here with the intentions of winning a Patriot League championship, and we know every game is important,” said Hall, who has continued to put his name all over the school’s and league’s record books.  “We come out here trying to give our best every night so we can get homecourt.”

Hall ran away with the league’s Rookie of the Year award three seasons ago and has continued his ascent since then.  Recently, he surpassed 1,300 career points and 500 career assists, making him the first player in Patriot League history to do that.  The current league leader in assists this season, he is fourth all-time in the Patriot League in that category, and while topping all-time leader Jave Meade will be almost impossible, it wouldn’t be a surprise if he comes in second.

Helping him in that quest, as well as the larger quest for a league title, are two players at the opposite stage of their careers.  The Mountain Hawks balance out the three senior starters with freshmen C.J. McCollum and Gabe Knutson, and both have wasted little time making an impact.  McCollum looks to be well on his way to doing what Hall did three years ago, while Knutson has been a solid inside player even before he busted out on Sunday with a career-high 31 points on 11-15 shooting from the field.

“They’ve helped a lot,” Hall said of the freshman duo.  “They take pressure off myself and (Zahir), because they can score on any given night.  It adds a whole new dynamic to our team because everybody needs to be accounted for offensively.”

McCollum is third in the league in scoring and has the kind of length and athleticism rarely seen in the Patriot League.  He’s not only scoring, but shooting over 41 percent from long range as well.  Reed saw his potential in recruiting him, but even he has been a little pleasantly surprised at how quickly he has adapted to the college game.  It didn’t take long for Hall to see his potential, either.

“As soon as he came in, he shot it right away offensively,” Hall said of McCollum.  “He gets his shot at will.  He’s long and athletic, and some people underestimate him, but he can get his shot off and it goes in.”

This year’s non-league slate had a marked contrast to last season.  The Mountain Hawks started with two straight losses and had to endure a three-game losing streak later on.  Only one of the losses came at home, a 71-52 setback to America East contender Stony Brook.  By late December, things seemed to be coming together, as a 66-55 win over Marist started a six-game winning streak.  Included were two wins on the road, and they have undoubtedly helped lead to the Mountain Hawks being .500 on the road in the first half of Patriot League play.

Around that time, the players were on campus during the break with a chance to focus on basketball.  Hall added that the team bonded a lot during that time, and once they got a couple of wins things took on a life of their own.  Clearly, this team benefited from having a stretch where they could just focus on basketball.

While a good month is now behind the Mountain Hawks, they are ready to keep this going.  The veterans learned from peaking too early last season, and with the senior starters it shows as they have picked up their play in the last month.  The young players have apparently already caught on and are only getting better.  The momentum Reed spoke of is evident as the Mountain Hawks head into February looking like their best is still yet to come.

These Seawolves Have Teeth, More Importantly, Heart

by - Published December 12, 2008 in Conference Notes

STONY BROOK, N.Y. – Stony Brook has long been dismissed as the dregs of the America East conference: a perennial bottom-feeder with no hope in sight. But after a 71-50 come from behind win against Lehigh, the Seawolves showed that this year’s squad is everything that last year’s was not, as they played as a team, and more importantly, with heart.

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.

Phil Kasiecki on Twitter

  • Another two games are in store tomorrow: Temple at Rhode Island (2 p.m.) followed by Penn at Brown (6 p.m.).
  • Final score: Harvard 71, Cornell 58. Cornell remains winless on the road this season.
  • At the last media timeout, Harvard leads 62-47 with 3:34 left.
  • At the under-8 media timeout, Harvard's lead is up to 57-38 with 7:42 left.
  • When Cornell doesn't foul, they're a very good defensive team. They're already in the two-shot penalty just past the halfway point.
  • At the under-12 media timeout, Harvard leads Cornell 47-33 with 11:02 left.

Michael Protos on Twitter

Your Phil of Hoops

Northeastern is not yet a contender in the CAA

February 3, 2012 by

northeastern

After losing to Drexel on Wednesday night, where Northeastern stands is clear in the CAA. They are not contenders yet, and until they knock off a team ahead of them in the standings, that’s where they will be.

Harvard asserts itself in the opening weekend of Ivy League play

January 29, 2012 by

harvard

The first full weekend of Ivy League play is in the books, and one thing that wasn’t too surprising happened: the league favorites asserted themselves as just that. Harvard looked like a team on a mission, and coming away with two convincing road wins is what was desired.

Quick Hitters – January 27, 2012

January 27, 2012 by

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Some quick hitters about Boston University’s rebounding, a transfer helping Marquette, an improving Husky guard and a couple of key road wins among others as we head into another weekend.

Quinnipiac finally pulls one out to close road swing

January 22, 2012 by

quinnipiac

Quinnipiac can now head home with the hope that their last game in the current road stretch does more for them than add one into the left-hand column. The Bobcats had a few tough games recently, and had another one in which they managed to pull out a 78-71 win in overtime at Bryant on Saturday.

Quick Hitters – January 21, 2012

January 21, 2012 by

author_kasiecki

We have a few quick hitters on a streaking America East team, another whose star had his first rough night, two inconsistent Patriot League teams and a couple of teams who have lost a player for the season but for different reasons.

Ron Hunter is already changing the culture at Georgia State

January 19, 2012 by

georgiastate

Ron Hunter knew he had a culture to change at Georgia State, and he knew he was in a different place. Now he has a different issue on his hands with his team, which stands 5-2 in CAA play after a loss at Northeastern on Wednesday night.

Boston College off to a surprising start in ACC play

January 15, 2012 by

bostoncollege

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Boston University hopes to regain confidence with losing streak over

January 9, 2012 by

bostonuniversity

Just over a month ago, Boston University looked ready go on a good run. But a six-game losing streak resulted instead, and the Terriers hope to regain confidence after ending it on Sunday.

Harvard continues to live dangerously in Ivy League opener

January 8, 2012 by

harvard

Harvard improved to 13-2 on Saturday by winning the first Ivy League game of the season. While the bottom line is all positive, the Crimson also lived dangerously for a while, more so than the 16-point final margin of victory might lead one to believe.

UMBC’s non-conference struggles don’t matter with conference-opening road win

January 3, 2012 by

umbc

With conference play, a bad non-conference run with one loss after another doesn’t matter on the bottom line. One example of that is UMBC, a team that won one game in non-conference play but is tied atop America East after an 82-76 win at New Hampshire on Monday night.

Full Court Sprints

Percolating hoops intrigue makes February a fantastic month for sports

It’s February — one of the most underrated sports months of the year. With the Super Bowl coming up this weekend, the biggest event in U.S. sports will command the attention of tens of millions of viewers, generating tens of millions of dollars for everyone associated with the event. A …

Conference Coverage

Big Sky Conference update – Jan 26, 2012

January 26, 2012 by

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

Cleveland State Vikings Overwhelm Milwaukee Panthers 83-57

January 22, 2012 by

horizon

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

Big Sky Conference update – January 18, 2012

January 18, 2012 by

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

Cleveland State Use Barrages from Outside to Defeat Loyola

January 7, 2012 by

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

Big Sky roundup, week 1

January 5, 2012 by

bigsky

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

Your Big Sky Conference primer

December 28, 2011 by

bigsky

The Big Sky is about to dive in to conference play, and so far, the season has unfolded pretty much as expected, with Sacramento State looking like the one surprise.

Around the Horizon League: Week 7

December 28, 2011 by

horizon

Like the rest of the country, the Horizon League teams have been enjoying the holiday season and taking it easy on the hardwood. Here’s a roundup of the action that did go down during the past week.

Cleveland State messes with Texas, defeats Sam Houston State Bearkats

December 22, 2011 by

clevelandstate

Cleveland State had plenty of Christmas cheer to share in the Vikings’ easy win against Sam Houston State, though they didn’t exactly give the Bearkats a festive feeling.

Around The Horizon League: Week 6

December 22, 2011 by

horizon

Butler Bulldogs (5-7): Butler began the week with a matchup against the Purdue Boilermakers at Conseco Fieldhouse. Having struggled in the early part of the season, the Bulldogs probably weren’t given much of a chance by most observers against the Boilermakers. Summing up some of the magic that has helped …

Around The Horizon League: Weeks 4-5

December 14, 2011 by

horizon

Butler Bulldogs (4-6): Butler has continued to struggle in the early stages of the 2011-12 college basketball season. However, don’t start writing Butler’s obituary just yet. Horizon League fans shouldn’t forget that Butler began last season slowly and bottomed out with a loss to Youngstown State before turning their season …

A busy and exciting week in the Big Sky

December 13, 2011 by

bigsky

We take a quick run through the results from the past week in the Big Sky Conference, giving a little love to each team in the conference.

Oklahoma has the best Big 12 player you don’t know

December 12, 2011 by

oklahoma

Missouri and Baylor are looking great, but we love the improvement of one of Lon Kruger’s guards.

Vikings pull out dramatic victory over Akron

December 10, 2011 by

clevelandstate

Longtime Cleveland sports fans are familiar with the “Kardiac Kids,” which was the nickname bestowed on the 1980 Cleveland Browns team that won multiple games in the waning seconds of the game. Although the 2011-12 college basketball season is still somewhat young, the Cleveland State Vikings have already given that …

Cleveland State Vikings Defeat Detroit Titans 66-61

December 4, 2011 by

clevelandstate

The Vikings keep rolling as they take out Detroit in an early battle for positioning at the top of the Horizon League.

No cause for alarm in the Big East

November 29, 2011 by

bigeast

Yes, a few Big East teams have faltered early in the season. No, that’s not a reason to panic, as it is still November.