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	<title>Hoopville &#187; Vermont</title>
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		<title>Coach K closes in on D-I record, passing his mentor en route</title>
		<link>http://www.hoopville.com/2011/11/15/coach-k-mike-krzyzewski-to-pass-bob-knight-d1-coaching-record/</link>
		<comments>http://www.hoopville.com/2011/11/15/coach-k-mike-krzyzewski-to-pass-bob-knight-d1-coaching-record/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 15 Nov 2011 05:45:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Michael Protos</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Full Court Sprints]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.hoopville.com/?p=1000026368</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[At Madison Square Garden, a coaching legend can claim win No. 903, overtaking Bob Knight, the coach who has helped shape Mike Krzyzewski into the winner that he is now.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>From the hallowed hardwood in Madison Square Garden, a pupil could surpass the master tonight.</p>
<p>When Duke takes on Michigan State in the Champions Classic in New York City, coach Mike Krzyzewski will have an opportunity to pass his mentor, Bob Knight, for the most Division I wins in NCAA history. The Blue Devils beat Presbyterian Saturday to give Coach K win No. 902. A third consecutive victory to open the season would be the record-setter.</p>
<p>In a press conference Monday, Coach K said that &#8220;somebody asked me this morning about where would this be in a list of things that you feel really good about, and I said, &#8216;It&#8217;s behind every championship. And not just national championships but league championships.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
<p>That doesn&#8217;t mean it&#8217;s not a big deal. Krzyzewski, who turns 65 in February, has been one of the top coaches in the game for several decades after a slow start to his career in Durham. His perseverance and determination are a model of leadership that extends far beyond a basketball arena. In a sport filled with unsavory characters and frequent recruiting violations, Coach K keeps Duke on the up and up. He takes pride in his players&#8217; high graduation rate, and he cares more about the accomplishments of specific Blue Devil teams than his own accolades.</p>
<p>&#8220;You want to win a championship with the team that you coach that year, and those are the things that you remember are championship moments &#8212; whether they be league championship moments, regular season, ACC,&#8221; Krzyzewski said. &#8220;Obviously the biggest thing that you can remember easily is national championships. But championships are things that I look back on because that&#8217;s a real accomplishment.&#8221;</p>
<p>Another coaching legend, Michigan State&#8217;s Tom Izzo, won&#8217;t make it easy for Coach K to celebrate his record-breaking victory. But whenever Krzyzewski gets No. 903, it will be one of the major highlights of the entire 2011-12 season.</p>
<h3><em>We go coast to coast with other news from the college basketball nation.</em></h3>
<ul>
<li>Louisville junior guard <a href="http://espn.go.com/mens-college-basketball/story/_/id/7233420/louisville-cardinals-mike-marra-season-ending-acl-injury" target="_blank">Mike Marra will miss the rest of the season</a> after tearing his ACL against Lamar Sunday, according to an Associated Press report. Marra&#8217;s loss is significant as he was an important member of coach Rick Pitino&#8217;s backcourt rotation, averaging 6.4 points per game last season.</li>
<li>The good news for Louisville is that <a href="http://www.kentucky.com/2011/11/14/1959719/louisville-basketball-freshman.html" target="_blank">freshman guard Kevin Ware</a> has his academics in order now and will be eligible to play for the Cardinals starting in mid-December, after the university&#8217;s fall semesters concludes, according to a Lexington Herald-Leader report.</li>
<li>Arizona had to dig deep to rally past Ball State, which held a nine-point halftime lead against the Wildcats Sunday. With junior swingman <a href="http://sports.espn.go.com/ncb/recap?gameId=313170012" target="_blank">Kevin Parrom back in the lineup</a> just seven weeks after being shot in the leg and hand while visiting family in New York City and four weeks after his mother died, according to the Associated Press, the Wildcats found the will to lock down the Cardinals in the second half for a 73-63 win. Parrom contributed six points and four rebounds in 18 minutes to help get the Wildcats the victory.</li>
<li>Instant replay might slow down the game in the NFL, but at least the officials get the calls right more often than not. Vermont probably wishes more stadiums had replay capabilities after <a href="http://espn.go.com/blog/collegebasketballnation/post/_/id/38725/vermont-victim-of-outdated-technology" target="_blank">falling victim to a lack of technology</a> in a 61-59 loss to South Florida played at Division II University of Tampa. After calling a timeout, the clock ran for an extra second or two, but the referees couldn&#8217;t review the time on the clock because there were no available video feeds, writes ESPN.com&#8217;s Eamonn Brennan. The Catamounts hit a would-be game-tying tip-in on their final possession &#8212; just after the buzzer.</li>
<li>Texas A&amp;M will be without one of the best players in the Big 12, Khris Middleton, while the junior forward recovers from a <a href="http://espn.go.com/blog/collegebasketballnation/post/_/id/38725/vermont-victim-of-outdated-technology" target="_blank">knee injury</a> suffered during the Aggies&#8217; 81-59 win against Liberty, according to an Associated Press report.</li>
<li>According to a CBS Sports.com wire report, Marquette will play its <a href="http://www.cbssports.com/collegebasketball/story/16080711/marquette-freshman-anderson-suspended-3-games/rss" target="_blank">first three games without freshman Juan Anderson</a> for a rules violation. The oftense? Accepting a free ticket to see the Milwaukee Brewers in the Major League Baseball playoffs.</li>
</ul>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Updating the NBA Entry List and Honoring a Maryland Legend</title>
		<link>http://www.hoopville.com/2011/05/09/updating-the-nba-entry-list-and-honoring-a-maryland-legend/</link>
		<comments>http://www.hoopville.com/2011/05/09/updating-the-nba-entry-list-and-honoring-a-maryland-legend/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 09 May 2011 04:57:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Michael Protos</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Full Court Sprints]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ACC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[America East]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Atlantic 10]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Big East]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Big Ten]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Brandon Wood]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Coaching Changes 2011]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Demetri Goodson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Duke]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gary Williams]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[George Washington]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Jeff Capel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Larry Nance Jr]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Louisville]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Maryland]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Michigan State]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mike Lonergan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mountain West]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Oklahoma]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pac-10]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rodney Purvis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tom Izzo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Transfers 2011]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Valparaiso]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Vermont]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[West Coast]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.hoopville.com/?p=1000026083</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The deadline for early entrants to decide whether they're staying in the draft or heading back to school has passed. Meanwhile, in College Park, the Gary Williams era has officially come to a close.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>BASELINE TO BASELINE</h2>
<p><em>Go coast to coast with a roundup of news from across the nation</em>.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s a quick recap of all the major NBA decisions from the past week. The NCAA&#8217;s deadline for early entrants to remain eligible required players to decide by May 8 if they wanted to remain in the NBA Draft or return to school.</p>
<h4>Remaining in the draft:</h4>
<ul>
<li> Boston College&#8217;s Reggie Jackson</li>
<li> Butler&#8217;s Shelvin Mack</li>
<li> Georgia Tech&#8217;s Iman Shumpert</li>
<li> Kentucky&#8217;s Brandon Knight</li>
<li> Kentucky&#8217;s DeAndre Liggins</li>
<li> Louisville&#8217;s Terrence Jennings</li>
<li> Maryland&#8217;s Jordan Williams</li>
<li> Michigan&#8217;s Darius Morris</li>
<li> Stanford&#8217;s Jeremy Green</li>
<li> Tennessee&#8217;s Tobias Harris</li>
<li> Tennessee&#8217;s Scotty Hopson</li>
<li> Texas&#8217; Cory Joseph</li>
<li> Texas&#8217; Tristan Thompson</li>
</ul>
<h4>Returning to school:</h4>
<ul>
<li> Kentucky&#8217;s Terrence Jones</li>
<li> Miami&#8217;s Reggie Johnson</li>
<li> Missouri&#8217;s Laurence Bowers</li>
<li> Missouri&#8217;s Kim English</li>
<li> Northwestern&#8217;s John Shurna</li>
<li> Pittsburgh&#8217;s Ashton Gibbs</li>
<li> West Virginia&#8217;s Kevin Jones</li>
<li> Xavier&#8217;s Tu Holloway</li>
</ul>
<ol>
<li>The biggest news of the past few days is Gary Williams&#8217; retirement at Maryland. The Terrapins&#8217; coach unexpectedly decided to call it a career at age 66 after working at his alma mater since 1989. Maryland moved quickly to court Arizona&#8217;s Sean Miller, who passed on the the offer by <a href="http://rivals.yahoo.com/ncaa/basketball/news?slug=ap-arizona-millerextension" target="_blank">signing an extension with the Wildcats</a>, according to John Marshall of the Associated Press. That makes Notre Dame&#8217;s Mike <a href="http://www.fannation.com/truth_and_rumors/view/282691" target="_blank">Brey one of the top choices</a> right now, according to the Washington Post.</li>
<li>In other Washington, D.C., area coaching news, George Washington picked <a href="http://sports.espn.go.com/ncb/news/story?id=6495105&amp;campaign=rss&amp;source=NCBHeadlines" target="_blank">Mike Lonergan to be the Colonials&#8217; next coach</a>, according to the Associated Press. Lonergan comes back to D.C. after working at Vermont for five seasons, compiling a 126-68 record. Lonergan coached Catholic University to a Division III title in 2001 and worked with Gary Williams as an assistant at Maryland for a few years.</li>
<li>Gonzaga needs to find a new starting point guard after Demetri Goodson announced that he&#8217;s <a href="http://rivals.yahoo.com/ncaa/basketball/news?slug=ap-gonzaga-goodson" target="_blank">leaving the team to play football</a>, according to the Associated Press. Goodson averaged 5.2 points and 2.6 assists per game for the Bulldogs this past season.</li>
<li>Michigan State Tom Izzo returned the favor for Spartan fans last week. To help boost student morale during final exams week, Izzo joined other Spartan coaches in <a href="http://espn.go.com/blog/collegebasketballnation/post/_/id/30500/tom-izzo-serves-up-lunch-during-finals-week" target="_blank">serving food at the university&#8217;s dining hall</a>, according to Diamond Leung of ESPN.com&#8217;s ìCollege Basketball Nation.î That&#8217;s a nice way to thank the Izzone fans who help give Michigan State one of the toughest home court advantages in the nation.</li>
<li>Speaking of Izzo, the Spartans&#8217; coach might be getting some much-needed backcourt help in <a href="http://rivals.yahoo.com/ncaa/basketball/news?slug=ap-michiganstate-transfer" target="_blank">Valparaiso transfer Brandon Wood</a>, according to the Associated Press.. The Horizon League&#8217;s No. 3 scorer is transferring to Michigan State after completing his undergraduate degree. Because of NCAA rules for graduate transfers, Wood might be eligible to play immediately for a team losing Kalin Lucas to graduation.</li>
<li>Jeff Capel has returned to a familiar sideline. The former Oklahoma coach, who was fired after this past season, accepted an offer to <a href="http://sports.espn.go.com/ncb/news/story?id=6507130" target="_blank">become an assistant coach on coach Mike Krzyzewski&#8217;s staff</a> at Duke, according to the Associated Press. Capel played four years in Durham and put up more than 1,600 points.</li>
<li>The Pac-10 can&#8217;t complain about an <a href="http://sports.yahoo.com/top/news?slug=ap-pac-10tvdeal" target="_blank">East Coast bias</a> for much longer. The conference soon to be known as the Pac-12 signed an agreement with ESPN and Fox Sports worth $250 million per season, tops in men&#8217;s basketball, according to Josh Dubow of the Associated Press.</li>
<li>Wyoming coach Larry Shyatt has recruited his first big name as the Cowboys&#8217; new coach. <a href="http://rivals.yahoo.com/ncaa/basketball/news?slug=ap-wyoming-nance" target="_blank">Larry Nance Jr</a>., son of longtime NBA player Larry Nance, will arrive in Laramie this fall after averaging about a double double as a senior in Ohio this past season.</li>
<li>Looking ahead to 2012, Louisville might not have the <a href="http://espn.go.com/blog/collegebasketballnation/post/_/id/30470/louisville-prospect-reopens-recruitment" target="_blank">services of Rodney Purvis</a>, a top-rated shooting guard in the class of rising high school seniors who reopened his recruitment, according to Eamonn Brennan of ESPN.com&#8217;s ìCollege Basketball Nation.î Louisville had received a verbal commitment from Purvis, partially thanks to the hard work of assistant Tom Fuller, who left Pitino&#8217;s staff recently to work for Frank Haith at Missouri.</li>
<li>Former Cyclone John Lamb, a <a href="http://rivals.yahoo.com/ncaa/basketball/news?slug=ap-lamb-drugcharges" target="_blank">walk-on who left Iowa State mid-season</a>, was arrested last week and charged with possession of marijuana with intent to sell and a violation of Drug Tax Stamp Act, according to the Associated Press.</li>
</ol>
<h2>HOME COURT ADVANTAGE</h2>
<p>This section is aptly titled for a Washington, D.C., area writer looking to   write a column honoring the importance of recently retired Maryland coach Gary Williams.</p>
<p>In his 22 years at Maryland, Williams helped craft the Terrapins into a perennial ACC contender. His continued success eased the path to the construction of the Comcast Center, which is one of the largest arenas in the conference and has one of the best home court advantages. The 20,000-plus fans who fill the Comcast Center haven&#8217;t always approved of the quality of the home team, but they consistently fill the arena with rowdy fans, giving Maryland one of the best home court advantages in the country.</p>
<p>After the turmoil of the late 1980s, it&#8217;s amazing that Williams was able to get this program back to the top of the ACC so quickly. Trouble started in 1986 with the death of Terrapin hero Len Bias, who seemed destined to become a national hero as a possible heir apparent to Larry Bird in Boston. However, his cocaine-induced death and the subsequent brouhaha in College Park derailed the program, leading to the ouster of coach Lefty Driesell.</p>
<p>Without Driesell, the team fell into mediocrity — and NCAA violations — during the tenure of Bob Wade. With the program on probation and lackluster performance on the court, Williams returned to his alma mater with a tough task at hand.</p>
<p>It took Williams five seasons, but once he got the Terrapins into the NCAA Tournament, they remained fixtures of March Madness until 2005. That includes a Final Four run in 2001 that ended mercilessly with the team&#8217;s fourth loss of the season to eventual national champion Duke. But Williams and Maryland vanquished those demons the next season when the Terrapins won the 2002 title.</p>
<p>The championship title was a turning point for Williams&#8217; tenure at Maryland. Until then, the critics liked to talk about Williams as one of the greatest coaches to have never won a title — a fraternity no coach enjoys being part of. With that monkey off his back, Williams then had to deal with detractors who bemoaned that Williams failed to use the program&#8217;s success to attract the top recruits to College Park.</p>
<p>Recruiting is a touchy subject for Maryland fans. On the plus side, no one has even sniffed an NCAA violation during Williams&#8217; years. But on the other hand, Williams drew the ire of many fans because he couldn&#8217;t keep a lot of the talented kids in Prince George&#8217;s County, Md., and Baltimore in-state. Highly touted recruits like Kevin Durant, Michael Beasley, Ty Lawson, Rudy Gay, Nolan Smith and seemingly half of Georgetown&#8217;s starting lineup each season are all locals. That would be acceptable if Williams had a slew of talented recruits on a conveyor belt to College Park from across the country.</p>
<p>But after three NIT appearances in four seasons, the natives became restless. Williams had the misfortune of dealing with a few disastrous recruits, including the much-maligned post-championship class of Chris McCray, John Gilchrist, Travis Garrison and Nik Caner-Medley. That core failed to meet lofty expectations, and the fans nearly revolted at the perceived inability of Williams to coach a great class. But the players just didn&#8217;t work out. It happens.</p>
<p>Williams got Maryland back on track with Greivis Vasquez and Eric Hayes. He helped Vasquez mature from a sloppy point guard and nearly out of control hothead to a dominant ACC player who was a threat to post a triple double nearly any night. The Terrapins returned to the NCAA Tournament three out of four seasons but never advanced further than the second round.</p>
<p>Heading into this off-seaosn, Maryland was at a cross-roads as another disappointing recruiting class — Adrian Bowie, Cliff Tucker and Dino Gregory — finished their collegiate careers. Jordan Williams, one of the top recruits in recent years to come to Maryland, figured to be the linchpin of next season&#8217;s team, but he is heading to the NBA instead.</p>
<p>At age 66, Williams was staring at a complete rebuilding project in an era that makes it increasingly difficult to run a clean and successful program. Williams refused to sacrifice one for the other. That makes now a great time for Williams to step down. To rebuild the Terrapins, Williams would need at least a couple of years to get the right guys around solid building blocks like Pe&#8217;Shon Howard and Terrell Stoglin. Williams might be pushing 70 before the Terrapins have another legitimate shot at a deep run.</p>
<p>When I&#8217;m pushing 70, I hope have the energy to work more than 60 hours a week recruiting, strategizing and representing a major college program. After such a remarkable, program-defining coaching career, Williams has earned this respite.</p>
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		<title>Lonergan Makes Vermont a Pleasant Surprise</title>
		<link>http://www.hoopville.com/2011/01/14/lonergan-makes-vermont-a-pleasant-surprise/</link>
		<comments>http://www.hoopville.com/2011/01/14/lonergan-makes-vermont-a-pleasant-surprise/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 15 Jan 2011 05:45:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Phil Kasiecki</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Your Phil of Hoops]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[America East]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Vermont]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.hoopville.com/?p=1000025053</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[One of the pleasant surprises during non-conference play and even at the beginning of conference play has been Vermont. Their personnel isn't great as they don't have a true point guard, but they're 11-4 and 2-1 in America East play.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One of the pleasant surprises during non-conference play and even at the beginning of conference play has been Vermont.  The Catamounts weren&#8217;t thought to be among the conference favorites this season given the personnel losses they sustained, but they went through the first two months with a 9-3 mark and then won the first two America East games.  But the Catamounts came back to earth at Boston University last weekend, and it highlights the job that Mike Lonergan is doing with this group.</p>
<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ve got a lot of weaknesses, I&#8217;ve said it all along, and a lot of them got exposed today,&#8221; Lonergan said.<span id="more-1000025136"></span></p>
<p>The biggest loss from last season is certainly Marqus Blakely, but that&#8217;s not all.  Gone as well are Maurice Joseph, Garvey Young (transferred) and Nick Vier, and the last of those three might be the most important one.  The Catamounts don&#8217;t have a true point guard in the program, and that has been a hindrance at times.  Joey Accaoui is one of the best kids in college basketball and has given a valiant effort playing there this season, but he&#8217;s a natural shooting guard.  Sophomore Simeon Marsalis hasn&#8217;t been productive, and freshman Josh Elbaum is more of a combo guard in addition to being inexperienced.</p>
<p>With that, the Catamounts an struggle to get much going on the offensive end, and it showed at Boston University.  Besides not having a point guard, they don&#8217;t have someone who can break a defender down off the dribble.  As a result, they have run a lot of their offense through wing Brian Voelkel.  That has worked reasonably well, and he has won the conference&#8217;s Rookie of the Week honor four times, but it also means they&#8217;re asking quite a bit of a freshman.</p>
<p>Voelkel leads the conference in rebounding and hands out well over four assists per game, but Lonergan said he hasn&#8217;t been himself lately.  It&#8217;s possible that he may be hitting a wall after playing over 30 minutes per game.</p>
<p>Evan Fjeld is having a terrific senior season and is being discussed as the Player of the Year if the season were to end today.  With him alongside Voelkel, they have no concerns in the frontcourt, especially if Luke Apfeld, finally recovered from multiple ACL injuries, can give them more production and Matt Glass shoots the way he is capable of.  Glass was bloodied in his eye on Sunday late in the first half and didn&#8217;t return, and the Catamounts will be cautious with him as they may suspect he got more than a cut eye.  Voelkel and Fjeld set the tone for this team as their top two players.</p>
<p>&#8220;When they&#8217;re not real good, we&#8217;re just an average team,&#8221; said Lonergan.</p>
<p>Vermont&#8217;s non-conference schedule was very light, and they certainly won&#8217;t be discussed as a possible at-large team.  Their best wins came at Iona and at Northeast Conference contender Quinnipiac, showing they can win on the road.  Their 4-3 mark away from home bodes well for later in the conference season, as they have not lost at home all season and always have a good homecourt advantage.  Their next two games come at home, including a test with Maine visiting next Tuesday.  If they win these next two, they will be 4-1 heading into a stretch with four of six on the road.</p>
<p>America East is wide open this season.  Boston University might have the most talent, but a lot of it is young and they need veterans like John Holland and Jake O&#8217;Brien to be leaders as well as their best players.  Maine has a good mix of talent and experience, while Stony Brook is a wild card with Tommy Brenton out for the season.  New Hampshire had a chance even with Alvin Abreu lost for the season, then Ferg Myrick went down with a season-ending knee injury that is a huge blow to them.  If ever there was a season where a team as flawed as Vermont could win, this is it.</p>
<p>The fact that Vermont has made it this far without a true point guard and the overall lack of scoring power is a testament to Lonergan&#8217;s coaching and what the players have done buying into it.  If they keep it up, contending for a conference title isn&#8217;t out of the realm of possibilities.  But it won&#8217;t be a smooth ride by any stretch, as Sunday&#8217;s game showed and others to come likely will as well.</p>
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		<title>Vermont&#8217;s Journey Within Shapes Title</title>
		<link>http://www.hoopville.com/2010/03/14/vermonts-journey-within-shapes-title/</link>
		<comments>http://www.hoopville.com/2010/03/14/vermonts-journey-within-shapes-title/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 14 Mar 2010 18:32:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Phil Kasiecki</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[America East]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Vermont]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.hoopville.com/?p=1000024257</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Vermont's America East championship this season is the end of a journey, but not your ordinary one.  It's a journey that's had journeys within it, and one of them went a long way in shaping the Catamounts' 83-70 win over Boston University to claim the title.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BURLINGTON, Vt. &#8211; Vermont&#8217;s America East championship this season is the end of a journey, but not your ordinary one.  It&#8217;s a journey that&#8217;s had journeys within it, and one of them went a long way in shaping the Catamounts&#8217; 83-70 win over Boston University to claim the title.</p>
<p>Before the game, a moment of silence was observed for the mother of Catamount junior forward Evan Fjeld.  Susan Fjeld passed away earlier in the week after a long battle with cancer, one that was never made public.  She and her husband purchased a condo in Vermont (Evan grew up in North Carolina) to be closer to Evan and were often at the team&#8217;s games, even on the road.  Her passing naturally shook up Evan, who had a breakthrough season this year, but the team was touched as well, especially since they all knew her.  The head coach?  He couldn&#8217;t take it because it hit close to home.</p>
<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not going to lie, I left town,&#8221; said Mike Lonergan, whose mother passed away from cancer in 1995.  &#8220;I said I was going to recruit, and I went to New York with my wife and I watched a day of Big East games, because my mom died of cancer in six months.  I talked to Evan, gave the team one day off, and I had to just get away.&#8221;</p>
<p>Fjeld didn&#8217;t feel he handled it all as well as he&#8217;s getting credit for.  He deflected the credit to his late mother and the team, a reminder that Vermont basketball is truly a family affair and not just with the team.  As is often the case, numerous alumni were in Patrick Gym on Saturday, but this was one occasion where the family part was highlighted within the team.  Marqus Blakely, the tournament MVP, noted how the Catamounts always break out of huddles saying &#8220;Family&#8221;, and as such it&#8217;s no accident that when Fjeld&#8217;s mother passed away, they all came together in support of their teammate.</p>
<p>&#8220;We wanted to let him know that we were there for him as his brothers, because we see ourselves as a family,&#8221; said the senior forward, who added to an already crowded trophy case.</p>
<p>Fjeld didn&#8217;t play his best game, but the effort was there and he felt like the game wasn&#8217;t the toughest challenge of the week.  He kept some perspective in mind, knowing that there&#8217;s a game and there&#8217;s life.</p>
<p>&#8220;I told them before the game that we had already gone through the trial for the week, and this was just a victory lap,&#8221; Fjeld said.</p>
<p>For Lonergan, this is part of a long journey as a college coach, one he thought about after the game.  When he took over after Tom Brennan&#8217;s retirement, it was truly the beginning of a new era, while also the culmination of moves he made to try to become a Division I coach after his success at Catholic University in Division III.  That included a national championship, which he said felt similarly to the title his team just claimed on Saturday.  He remembered interviewing for about a half dozen jobs before finally getting the offer at Vermont, and having to change his resume at one point to increase his chances.</p>
<p>His tenure almost started off in the best way, as the Catamounts reached the conference title game in his first season as the No. 6 seed, but that team was very inexperienced and had a good deal of luck in getting that far.  A year later, they lost at home to Albany by one in a heart-breaker, aided by a key injury to big man Chris Holm.  The third time was the charm on Saturday as they hosted it again and came out victorious.  They were healthier this year and had some intangibles that helped.</p>
<p>&#8220;We won a lot of close games this year,&#8221; Lonergan reflected.  &#8220;We&#8217;ve made free throws, we&#8217;ve also had more trust in each other and we&#8217;ve executed plays down the stretch.&#8221;</p>
<p>Lonergan is an intense guy and can often be seen grabbing a towel during a game.  He&#8217;s known as a workaholic and has certainly put the work in to keep this program at a high level during his tenure, not an easy accomplishment by any stretch.  That&#8217;s why he loves players like Joey Accaoui, the ultimate gym rat who&#8217;s changed his game to be more of a point guard now after basically no Division I program wanted him out of high school, or injured forwards Ben Crenca and Luke Apfeld, two players whose effort is never in doubt when they&#8217;re on the floor.</p>
<p>Although it&#8217;s inevitable that it will be talked about, Lonergan has never felt like he and his staff have been under the shadow of former head coach Tom Brennan.  Brennan is a legend not just because of the three straight titles, but his personality, and a big part of his personality has shown since he retired.  Lonergan called Brennan his &#8220;biggest supporter&#8221; and said he is still around from time to time.  Brennan was not in the stands on Saturday because he was being honored as one of the SEC Legends at the SEC Tournament, but he was in contact with Lonergan, who added, &#8220;He&#8217;s probably got a message on my voicemail now, if he was here he&#8217;d be in the locker room.&#8221;</p>
<p>Before he got the job, Lonergan and Brennan didn&#8217;t know one another, but they&#8217;ve forged a great relationship ever since.  It&#8217;s certainly helped Lonergan as he was new to the area but quickly found out why so many people talked about it as a special place.  Lonergan said he called Brennan &#8220;Head Coach Emeritus&#8221; and a mentor for him, and now he&#8217;s followed his mentor in getting the team to the NCAA Tournament.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s the end of a journey, and another journey within that &#8211; and the journey within went a long way in shaping the end result.</p>
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		<title>America East Post Season Awards</title>
		<link>http://www.hoopville.com/2010/03/03/america-east-post-season-awards/</link>
		<comments>http://www.hoopville.com/2010/03/03/america-east-post-season-awards/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Mar 2010 20:58:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sam Perkins</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Conference Notes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Albany]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[America East]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Awards]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Binghamton]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Boston University]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hartford]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Maine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[New Hampshire]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Player of the Year]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stony Brook]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[UMBC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Vermont]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The America East regular season wrapped up on Sunday; the seedings are set, the teams are ready, and Binghamton managed to once again cause another “international incident” (the Bearcats withdrew from the America East tournament). Certain circumstances have kept me from contributing as regularly as I had desired this season, ...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The America East regular season wrapped up on Sunday; the seedings are set, the teams are ready, and Binghamton managed to once again cause another “international incident” (the Bearcats withdrew from the America East tournament). Certain circumstances have kept me from contributing as regularly as I had desired this season, but make no mistake; I’m still as involved in ever – still have my finger on the America East pulse so to speak – and the upcoming America East tournament will once again bring me past the 80-games-attended mark for the season.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p><strong>Coach of the Year:</strong><br />
·    <strong>Candidates:</strong> <strong>Steve Pikiell</strong>, Stony Brook; <strong>Ted Woodward</strong>, Maine.</p>
<p>There was much talk earlier this year about Binghamton interim coach <strong>Mark Macon</strong> 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. <strong>Woodward</strong> 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.<strong> Pikiell</strong> 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.</p>
<p>·    <strong>Winner: Steve Pikiell, Stony Brook.</strong></p>
<p>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.</p>
<p><strong>Player of the Year:</strong><br />
·   <strong> Candidates:</strong> <strong>Marqus Blakely</strong>, Forward, Vermont; <strong>John Holland</strong>, Guard/Forward, Boston Univeristy.</p>
<p>There are only two possible candidates in <strong>Blakely</strong> and <strong>Holland</strong>. Binghamton’s <strong>Greer Wright</strong> 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. <strong>Muhammad El-Amin</strong> 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.</p>
<p>·    <strong>Winner: Marqus Blakely, Vermont.</strong></p>
<p>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.</p>
<p><strong>Defensive Player of the Year:</strong><br />
·   <strong> Candidates: Marqus Blakely</strong>, Forward, Vermont; <strong>Tommy Brenton</strong>, Forward, Stony Brook; <strong>Russell Graham</strong>, Guard, New Hampshire.</p>
<p>The two-time Defensive Player of the Year, <strong>Blakely</strong> 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 <strong>Brenton</strong> and <strong>Graham</strong> 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.</p>
<p>·    <strong>Winner: Marqus Blakely</strong>, Forward, Vermont.</p>
<p>Blakely is the league’s best overall defender; not much argument necessary.</p>
<p><strong>Rookie of the Year:</strong><br />
·    <strong>Candidates: Dylan Talley</strong>, Guard, Binghamton; <strong>Mike Black</strong>, Guard, Albany; <strong>Ferg Myrick</strong>, Forward, New Hampshire.<br />
<em>* This was by far the weakest overall freshman class that I have seen in the 9 years I have followed the America East.</em></p>
<p><strong>Talley</strong>, 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). <strong>Black</strong> 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). <strong>Myrick</strong> 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.</p>
<p>·    <strong>Winner: Mike Black</strong>, Guard, Albany.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p><strong>1st Team All-Conference:</strong><br />
·    <strong>Candidates: Marqus Blakely</strong>, Forward, Vermont; <strong>John Holland</strong>, Guard/Forward, Boston University; <strong>Greer Wright</strong>, Forward, Binghamton; <strong>Muhammad El-Amin</strong>, Guard, Stony Brook; <strong>Joe Zeglinski</strong>, Guard, Hartford; <strong>Gerald McLemore</strong>, Guard, Maine; <strong>Tommy Brenton</strong>, Forward, Stony Brook.</p>
<p><strong>Blakely</strong> and <strong>Holland</strong> 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, <strong>Wright </strong>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. <strong>El-Amin</strong>, <strong>McLemore</strong>, and <strong>Zeglinski</strong> 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. <strong>Brenton</strong> 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.</p>
<p>·    <strong>Winners:</strong><br />
§    <strong>Marqus Blakely</strong>, Senior, Forward, Vermont: 17.4 ppg, 9.1 rpg, 3.7 apg, 2.6 spg, 1.9 bpg.</p>
<p>§    <strong>John Holland</strong>, Junior, Guard/Forward, Boston University: 19.9 ppg, 6.2 rpg, 1.6 spg.</p>
<p>§    <strong>Greer Wright</strong>, Junior, Forward, Binghamton: 15.0 ppg, 6.0 rpg, 3.2 apg, 1.2 spg.</p>
<p>§    <strong>Muhammad El-Amin</strong>, Senior, Guard, Stony Brook: 16.8 ppg, 19.1 ppg in conference games.</p>
<p>§    <strong>Tommy Brenton</strong>, Sophomore, Forward, Stony Brook: 7.7 ppg, 9.6 rpg, 2.8 apg, 1.8 spg.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p><strong>2nd Team All-Conference</strong>:<br />
§    <strong>Joe Zeglinski</strong>, R-Junior, Guard, Hartford: 16.7 ppg, 5.1 rpg.</p>
<p>§    <strong>Gerald McLemore</strong>, Sophomore, Guard, Maine: 14.9 ppg, .402 3pt-fg</p>
<p>§    <strong>Alvin Abreu</strong>, Junior, Guard, New Hampshire: 14.6 ppg.</p>
<p>§    <strong>Jake O’Brien</strong>, Sophomore, Forward, Boston University: 13.0 ppg, 6.6 rpg.</p>
<p>§    <strong>Maurice Joseph</strong>, Senior, Forward, Vermont: 14.3 ppg.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p><strong>3rd Team All-Conference:</strong><br />
§    <strong>Evan Fjeld</strong>, Sophomore, Forward, Vermont: 10.6 ppg, 5.9 rpg, 1.3 bpg.</p>
<p>§    <strong>Corey Lowe</strong>, Senior, Guard, Boston University: 14.1 ppg, 4.3apg.</p>
<p>§    <strong>Carlos Strong</strong>, Senior, Guard, Boston University: 10.1 ppg, 4.8 rpg, 1.6 spg.</p>
<p>§    <strong>Chris De La Rosa</strong>, R-Sophomore, Guard, UMBC: 11.8 ppg, 5.1 apg, 1.1 spg.</p>
<p>§    <strong>Brian Dougher</strong>, Sophomore, Guard, Stony Brook: 13.6 ppg, .423 3pt-fg.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p><strong>All-Rookie Team:</strong><br />
·    <strong>Candidates: Dylan Talley</strong>, Guard, Binghamton; <strong>Mike Black</strong>, Guard, Albany, <strong>Ferg Myrick</strong>, Forward, New Hampshire; <strong>Murphy Burnatowski</strong>, Forward, Maine; <strong>Marcus Rouse</strong>, Guard, Stony Brook; <strong>Charles White</strong>, Guard, Hartford; <strong>Shawn Grant</strong>, Forward, UMBC; <strong>Adrian Satchell</strong>, Forward, UMBC; <strong>Logan Aronhalt</strong>, Guard, Albany.</p>
<p>·    Winners:<br />
§   <strong> Dylan Talley</strong>, Guard, Binghamton<br />
§    <strong>Mike Black</strong>, Guard, Albany<br />
§   <strong> Ferg Myrick</strong>, Forward, New Hampshire<br />
§    <strong>Murphy Burnatowski</strong>, Forward, Maine<br />
§    <strong>Charles White</strong>, Guard, Hartford</p>
<p>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).</p>
<p><strong>All-Defensive Team</strong>:<br />
·    <strong>Candidates:</strong> <strong>Marqus Blakely</strong>, Forward, Vermont; <strong>Tommy Brenton</strong>, Forward, Stony Brook; <strong>Russell Graham</strong>, Guard, New Hampshire; C<strong>hretien Lukusa</strong>, Guard, Binghamton; <strong>Mahamoud Jabbi</strong>, Forward, Binghamton; <strong>Dane DiLiegro</strong>, Center, New Hampshire; <strong>Murphy Burnatowski</strong>, Forward, Maine; <strong>Garvey Young</strong>, Guard, Vermont; <strong>Dallis Joyner</strong>, Center, Stony Brook. <strong>Charles White</strong>, Guard, Hartford.</p>
<p><strong>Blakely</strong> – who will, and should, win his third straight defensive player of the year – is a no brainer. <strong>Brenton</strong> 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). <strong>Graham </strong>is the best perimeter defender in the league, with <strong>Lukusa</strong> and <strong>White</strong> battling for second. <strong>Jabbi</strong> – an incredibly bouncy forward – led the league in blocked shots in conference games.<strong> DiLiegro </strong>draws more charges than anyone in the conference, gets phenomenal low-post positioning, and is a monster on the defensive glass. <strong>Burnatowski</strong> 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. <strong>Young </strong>is another very strong and physical perimeter defender.  <strong>Joyner </strong>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).</p>
<p>·    <strong>Winners:</strong><br />
§    <strong>Marqus Blakely</strong>, Senior, Forward, Vermont<br />
§    <strong>Tommy Brenton</strong>, Sophomore, Forward, Stony Brook<br />
§    <strong>Russell Graham</strong>, Sophomore, Guard, New Hampshire<br />
§    <strong>Mahamoud Jabbi</strong>, R-Junior, Forward, Binghamton<br />
§    <strong>Charles White</strong>, Freshman, Guard, Hartford.</p>
<p>Blakely, Brenton, and Graham were locks. Jabbi’s shot blocking coupled with his rebounding, and White&#8217;s perimeter defense give them the slight edge over the rest of the competition.</p>
<p><strong>All-Floor Burn/Blue Collar (The League’s five toughest guys):</strong><br />
§    <strong>Tommy Brenton</strong>, Sophomore, Forward, Stony Brook<br />
§    <strong>Dane DiLiegro</strong>, Junior, Center, New Hampshire<br />
§    <strong>Radar Ongeutou</strong>, Senior, Forward, New Hampshire<br />
§    <strong>Joe Zeglinski</strong>, R-Junior, Guard, Hartford<br />
§    <strong>Tyrone Conley</strong>, Junior, Guard, New Hampshire</p>
<p><strong>All-Rim-Wreckers and Backboard-Shakers (Top in-game dunkers)</strong><br />
§    <strong>Marqus Blakely</strong>, Senior, Forward, Vermont<br />
§    <strong>Tyrone Conley</strong>, Junior, Guard, New Hampshire<br />
§    <strong>Tommy Brenton</strong>, Sophomore, Forward, Stony Brook<br />
§    <strong>Dane DiLiegro</strong>, Junior, Center, New Hampshire<br />
§    <strong>Dallis Joyner</strong>, Sophomore, Center, Stony Brook</p>
<p>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” &#8211; 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.</p>
<p><strong>All-Bust (The Biggest Disappointments)</strong><br />
§    <strong>Will Harris</strong>, 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&#8217;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.</p>
<p>§   <strong> Tim Ambrose</strong>, 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.</p>
<p>§    <strong>Joel Barkers</strong>, 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.</p>
<p>§    <strong>Robbie Jackson</strong>, 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”.</p>
<p>§    <strong>Athletic Director Joel Thirer/Head Coach Kevin Broadus/Tiki Mayben/D.J. Rivera/Malik Alvin</strong> 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.”</p>
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		<title>Catching Up on America East &#8211; January 26, 2010</title>
		<link>http://www.hoopville.com/2010/01/26/catching-up-on-america-east-january-26-2010/</link>
		<comments>http://www.hoopville.com/2010/01/26/catching-up-on-america-east-january-26-2010/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 26 Jan 2010 17:36:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sam Perkins</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Conference Notes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Albany]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[America East]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Binghamton]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Boston University]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hartford]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Maine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[New Hampshire]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stony Brook]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[UMBC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Vermont]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.hoopville.com/?p=1000023958</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A look at the early going in America East, which might not get high marks in terms of strength but will in terms of competitiveness.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>(Author&#8217;s note: I would like to take a second to apologize to my readers, as well as the loyal fans of the America East conference, for my prolonged absence. I had several things that I was juggling on my plate that prevented me from writing more during the past few months, however I have still been able to keep my finger on the pulse of the America East conference &#8211; by my current count I have still managed to attend far too many America East games thus far. I hope that my readership will return to Hoopville, as I dive back into the action of covering the America East for the stretch run). </em></p>
<p>There&#8217;s no way to sugar coat it: The America East just isn&#8217;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.</p>
<p>The silver lining, however, is that the &#8220;down year&#8221; could produce a tremendous conference tournament. Last season parity reigned supreme in the America East, and while there was no real &#8220;power&#8221; 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 &#8220;AE&#8221; Tournament could prove to the most hard-fought, dramatic, and compelling in conference history. The common phrase thrown around every season is &#8220;on any night, any team can beat any other,&#8221; 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.</p>
<p>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&#8217;t get any worse, right?)  The vast majority of the America East&#8217;s talent lies within it&#8217;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&#8217;Brien, Brian Dougher, Dallis Joyner) classes.</p>
<p>Having seen all nine teams play live at least three times, here are some quick thoughts on the year:</p>
<ul>
<li>While parity reigns supreme, the foursome of <strong>Stony Brook</strong>, <strong>Vermont</strong>, <strong>Boston University</strong>, and <strong>Maine</strong> have separated themselves from the rest of the league (yes, that&#8217;s right, Maine!)  Amazingly, <strong>Binghamton</strong> (yes, the same Binghamton that lost its top 3 talents, head coach, Athletic Director and 3 other players, and struggled against division II schools early on) has already knocked off two of the top four teams in the standings, and looks to be straddling the middle ground between the top-four and bottom-four in the league.</li>
<li>As always, winning on the road is going to play a large roll in determining the final standings, which is why I like <strong>Stony Brook</strong> as my top-team right now. Granted the Seawolves have had close calls at home against lesser conference foes (six-point wins over New Hampshire and Albany), and have lost to both Binghamton and Maine (perhaps the least &#8220;talented&#8221; of the top 5 teams in the conference). But Stony Brook has played the toughest conference schedule to start the league slate, playing all of the top teams in the league (Vermont, BU, Maine, Binghamton) on the road. The Seawolves went into Boston and punched BU in the mouth, thoroughly beating the Terriers in a game that wasn&#8217;t nearly as close as the final score (84-75), and trekked up to Vermont and out-toughed the Catamounts for a five-point win in a gritty, physical game. The Seawolves have depth (they use a ten-man rotation), play super-physical (toughest team in the league), and crash the boards and defend the heck out of the ball as a team, no matter who is on the floor. They also have the league&#8217;s most diverse offense, with Brian Dougher (and to a lesser degree Marcus Rouse) providing big-time shooting from downtown, Muhammad El-Amin, Chris Martin, and Tommy Brenton attacking the basket on drives, and Brenton and Dallis Joyner giving the Seawolves a threat in the low post. With that said, Stony Brook is still very short on experience, and has a tendency to rely on three-point shooting too much while ignoring their low-post scorers, and while I see the Seawolves as the favorites as of now, it is by the slimmest of margins.</li>
<li>The two surprises of the conference have been <strong>Maine</strong><strong> </strong>and <strong>Binghamton</strong>, and both deserve a tremendous amount of credit.</li>
<li>Coming off of a season in which they won eight games, played completely uninspired ball, and &#8220;phoned it in&#8221; during their play-in game loss in the conference tournament, no one (myself included) expected much out of <strong>Maine</strong>, a team that seemingly hasn&#8217;t found a way to string two wins together since head coach Ted Woodward took over five years ago. The Black Bears shocked Boston College on the road for the America East&#8217;s &#8220;biggest&#8221; non-conference win (the Black Bears should expect that BC head coach Al Skinner will be removing them from his schedule from here on out), and currently sit atop the league standings at 5-1.  That includes a home win over Stony Brook and a win on the road at Binghamton.  Sophomore Gerald McLemore continues to impress, ranking 7<sup>th</sup> in the conference in scoring (14.8 ppg), and junior center Sean McNally continues to play the role of school yard bully in the paint (11 ppg, 7.6 rpg). But the difference for the Black Bears has been their play on the defensive end, and the emergence of several very solid role players. Maine has controlled the tempo of the game &#8211; playing physical, clogging passing lanes, contesting shots, and generally slowing it down to a snail&#8217;s pace &#8211; and is holding America East opponents to a league-best 58.5 points per game.  For all his scoring, McLemore, who is a prolific three-point shooter who also gets tough buckets on drives to the basket, has made an equally big impact on the defensive end.Newcomers Murphy Burnatowski and Mike Allison, as well as the return of junior Malachi Peay and emergence of Troy Barnies, has given Maine a legitimate cast of complementary players to McNally and McLemore. Burnatowski, a freshman from Canada, is the Black Bears&#8217; best athlete, and while still rough and without a position offensively, the 6&#8217;7&#8243;, 230-pound (more like 6&#8217;5&#8243;, 245) has a mean streak and toughness on the court that Maine has been missing for years, and makes things tough on the defensive end. Fellow Canadian Allison has given the Black Bears a nice touch and an offensive boost off of the bench, and at 6&#8217;9&#8243; he should only get better when he puts some weight on his skinny frame. Peay returned after missing the first half to concentrate on academics, and is a defensive tornado who seems to always have his hands in the passing lane, and also gives the Black Bears a new dimension on the offensive end as he has a knack for getting to the hoop. Barnies may never develop into the player that Black Bears fans had hoped, but since being moved to the bench halfway through the non-conference season, he seems to finally be understanding that he&#8217;s 6&#8217;7&#8243; and a decent athlete playing in a conference of 6&#8217;5&#8243; post players, and is finally beginning to defend and rebound.</li>
<li>As surprising as Maine has been, the biggest jaw-dropper of the season has been the play of the <strong>Binghamton</strong> Bearcats, who witnessed the implosion of last season&#8217;s conference championship squad, yet have found a way to not only be competitive, but frankly, be a very solid team. To be fair, the Bearcats do benefit from playing in front of the conference&#8217;s largest fan base, and the Events Center in Binghamton is the one true home court advantage in the America East.  The Bearcats are also a much more pedestrian team on the road than they are at home. But still, this is a team suiting up seven scholarship players.  This is a team which didn&#8217;t return one of its top four scorers from last season, and one which has ridden through more controversy and bad press than any team in the history of the America East. What is going on at Binghamton is a credit to the collective hearts of their remaining players. Binghamton has also benefitted greatly from the play of Greer Wright, a JuCo transfer who has played himself onto the 1<sup>st</sup> team All-Conference. A springly 6&#8217;7&#8243;, Wright can score from all over and is proving to be a huge match-up problem in the America East. In Binghamton&#8217;s home victory over Vermont, Wright outplayed two-time Player of the Year Marcus Blakely, and poured in 30 points on 10-15 shooting. The Bearcats have also benefitted from the play of freshman Dylan Talley, who looks like the conference Rookie of the Year, and is also a tough match-up as a very strong 6&#8217;5&#8243; guard. Binghamton doesn&#8217;t have enough bullets to win any shoot-outs, but they defend the hell out of the ball, play with tremendous heart for 40 minutes, and at home in front of their vocal fan base are going to be a very tough out for anyone.</li>
<li>For all the talk of parity, the America East champion is going to be one of three teams: <strong>Boston University</strong>, <strong>Vermont</strong>, or <strong>Stony Brook</strong>. Binghamton just doesn&#8217;t have it to win on the road, and as excited as I am to see Maine competing, I still don&#8217;t have a ton of faith in Woodward, and they just don&#8217;t have the athletes or experience. Vermont is a &#8220;one trick pony&#8221; with Marqus Blakely carrying their team on both ends, but the America East might just be bad enough for that one trick to win. Boston University has absolutely no depth, but when John Holland, Corey Lowe, and Jake O&#8217;Brien are all playing to their potential  and they finally have been clicking at the same time as of late &#8211; they are going to be very tough to beat. Stony Brook is the most balanced team, as they are tough and athletic, they defend, and have a mean streak.</li>
</ul>
<p>But what do I know? After all, here&#8217;s how I ranked the team in the pre-season:</p>
<ol>
<li>BU</li>
<li>Stony      Brook</li>
<li>Vermont</li>
<li>New Hampshire</li>
<li>Albany</li>
<li>Hartford</li>
<li>UMBC</li>
<li>Maine</li>
<li>Binghamton</li>
</ol>
<p>And with half of the season in the books, here&#8217;s how the league standings look as of now:</p>
<ol>
<li>Maine 5-1: (13-6      overall)</li>
<li>Stony      Brook 6-2: (14-7)</li>
<li>Boston University: 6-2 (11-9)</li>
<li>Vermont: 5-2 (14-7)</li>
<li>Binghamton: 3-3      (8-13)</li>
<li>Hartford: 3-4 (5-15)</li>
<li>New Hampshire: 2-4      (7-10)</li>
<li>Albany: 1-6 (6-16)</li>
<li>UMBC:      0-7 (1-19)</li>
</ol>
<p>I&#8217;ve got two right, that&#8217;s gotta&#8217; count for something… right?</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s good to be back.</p>
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		<title>America East Notebook &#8211; Separation at the Top</title>
		<link>http://www.hoopville.com/2009/01/15/america-east-notebook-separation-at-the-top/</link>
		<comments>http://www.hoopville.com/2009/01/15/america-east-notebook-separation-at-the-top/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Jan 2009 21:52:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sam Perkins</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Conference Notes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[America East]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Boston University]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stony Brook]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Vermont]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.madman2.hoopville.com/?p=1000019927</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[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.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Here&#8217;s how I would break down the conference as of right now:</p>
<ol>
<li>Vermont</li>
<li>Boston University</li>
<li>Albany/UMBC</li>
<li>UMBC/Albany</li>
<li> Stony Brook</li>
<li>Binghamton</li>
<li>Maine/UNH</li>
<li>UNH/Maine</li>
<li>Hartford</li>
</ol>
<p>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.</p>
<p>Vermont&#8217;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&#8217;s been the Catamounts&#8217; 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.</p>
<p><strong>Stony Brook Notes</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>Speaking of pre-game acrobatics, no team in the America East is as fun to watch go through their lay-up lines as Stony Brook. I would recommend fans show up before Seawolves games as early as possible, as they put on one heck of a pre-game dunk-a-thon. Last year Demetrius Young and Jermol Paul were the Seawolves&#8217; resident high-flyers, but this year they have some stiff competition in freshmen Danny Carter, Tommy Brenton, Dallis Joyner, junior college transfer Muhammad El-Amin, and even walk-on Michal Zylinski.</li>
<li>El-Amin is in his own world in some of the tomahawk, windmill, and reverse jams he throws down, as his hang time is up there with anyone in the conference.</li>
<li>And for sheer back-board shaking power, the conference hasn&#8217;t seen someone like Desmond Adedeji in a long time.</li>
<li>While Dougher came to Stony Brook with a lot of hype, and Brenton exploded out of the gates, Carter may be the Stony Brook freshman with the highest ceiling. At 6&#8217;9&#8243; he has been hyped as a pure shooter, and he certainly looks it, but what has been overlooked is his athleticism. Brian Benson of UNH may be the most athletic player 6&#8217;9&#8243; or taller that the conference has seen in some time, but Carter isn&#8217;t far behind. The only thing holding Carter back right now is his weight, as he will need to bulk-up to become an impact player, but with a good strength training program, the sky is the limit.</li>
<li>Putting on weight isn&#8217;t a problem for Adedeji, who is a monster at 6&#8217;10&#8243; and reportedly upwards of 325 pounds. Adedeji has the skills to do serious damage in the America East, with an incredibly soft shooting touch to go with his brute strength, and can even hit the college 3. While Adedeji will need to get down to around 300 to be a true impact player, he is hardly fat, with a build that looks strikingly similar to actor Michael Clarke Duncan of The Green Mile fame &#8211; if Duncan were a half a foot taller. Big players in the America East have been hamstrung by referees in the past, but Adedeji may not fall into that trap, as he is already an incredibly smart player who knows how to use his size. He also knows how to lower the boom, as evident when he leveled UConn&#8217;s Stanley Robinson with a pick, which left Robinson on the ground dazed, and later forced him from the game.</li>
</ul>
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