Showing posts with label Colorado St. Rams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colorado St. Rams. Show all posts

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Bubble Teams Were A Big Winner From Murray State's Victory Over Tennessee St.

For bubble teams throughout college basketball, the two weeks of championship week are long and very strenuous.

Not only do bubbles teams have to worry about winning the difficult and pressure filled games in front of them, but they also have to hope that the teams who are locks to make the NCAA tournament win their conference tournaments. If the locks secure the automatic bid from their conference, other teams who wouldn't have made the NCAA tournament without winning their conference title aren't stealing automatic selections and shrinking the size of the bubbles by stealing bids.

For example, in 2010 Utah St. was a lock to make the tourney, but New Mexico St. won the WAC conference tournament. Therefore, the conference got two bids to the NCAA tournament and stole a bid from another bubble team.

That same year, UTEP was going to the big dance no matter how far they advanced in the Conference USA tournament. Therefore, when Houston beat the Miners in the conference title game, the Cougars stole a bid from another bubble team, as the conference received two bids to the dance.

Thus, teams like Illinois and Virginia Tech, who might have made the tournament if Utah St. and UTEP had won their conference tournaments, were left on the outside looking in because their were two less spots available in the big dance because of the bid stealers.

Aside from their own games of course, all the eyes of the bubbles teams and especially their fans, were on the Ohio Valley Conference Finals in Nashville, Tennessee at the Nashville Municipal Auditorium.

The Murray St. Racers have been one of the darlings of college basketball all season long. The Ohio Valley regular season champs began the season 23-0 with victories over non-conference tournament bound teams like Southern Miss and Memphis on the road. Although the Racers fell at home to Tennessee St. 72-68, all doubt of them not receiving an at-large selection were squashed when they manhandled a very quality Saint Mary's team, who is likely going to be a 6 or 7 seed in the tournament, in BrackBusters 65-51 at home.

Therefore, with Murray St. 29-1 coming into the Ohio Valley Conference finals against Tennessee St., they were a lock for the NCAA tournament. The Racers were still playing for a lot however. They were looking to finish the regular season in the top 10 of both polls, win their 15th Ohio Valley conference tournament and 3rd consecutive, and get a 5 or 6 seed in the big dance.

Despite this, if the Racers lost, they were still secured that they were going to the tournament, but if Tennessee St. got the victory, they would be stealing a bid from a bubble team. The Tigers were 20-11 coming into the OVC title game and were not going to receive a bid unless they won the conference tourney championship game.

Bubble teams, coaches, and fans had to sweat out a tight OVC final and pray that the Racers would come out victorious.

In the first half, neither team was able to create any sort of separation, as the biggest lead of the half was 3 points. The teams exchanged buckets for most of the half and there were 8 lead changes. The Racers led by just two points at half but a concern was that they weren't getting any scoring from players other than guards Donte Poole and Isaiah Canaan. Aside from Poole and Canaan, the rest of the Murray St. team had just 11 points in the first half.

While most fans would have expected the Racers to make some runs in the second half, the Tigers were the team that almost pulled away. They came out of halftime in the first 5 minutes on a 11-4 run and went ahead 38-31. After Murray St. pulled the game back, Tennessee St. went on another run. After trailing 43-42 with 8:06 remaining, the Tigers went on another impressive 8-0 run to take the lead 50-43 with just 5:38 remaining.

Although things looked gleam for bubbles teams around the country, Murray St. would give them a sigh of relief. The Racers didn't allow Tennessee St. to score in the final 3:48 of the game and were able to escape with a 54-52 victory.

With 40 seconds left, Patrick Miller had a costly turnover for the Tigers. He picked up his dribble and got trapped in the corner and when he tried to force a pass to Robert Covington who was coming off of a screen, he threw an errant pass and the ball went into the backcourt and out of bounds. With 12 seconds left, Tennessee St. double teamed Isaiah Canaan and wouldn't let the Ohio Valley Conference Player of the Year and 19 point per game scorer take the final shot. He dished the ball off to Jewuan Long, who drove into the lane and banked in a floater for his second field goal of the entire game. The Tigers had one last chance, but to the pleasure of bubble teams throughout the country, Robert Covington missed a desperation three as time expired.

Although bubble teams escaped with a "victory" with Murray State's win over Tennessee St., the work for them has only begun. Not only do they have to focus and win critical games down the stretch but they also have to hope that some other conference tournaments go their way.

Bubble teams are now going to be very intrigued with the outcome of the Missouri Conference finals at the Scottrade Center in St. Louis, Missouri. If Wichita St. had beaten Illinois St. in the semifinals, the MVC championship game would only have been for seeding in the NCAA tournament. However, the Red Birds pulled off the major upset and knocked off the Shockers and dealt them their first loss since January.

Now, they will take on Creighton, who like Wichita St., is going to be in the NCAA tournament, as they are 27-5 with wins over UAB on the road, San Diego St. on the road, Northwestern, Wichita St, on the road, and Long Beach St. Illinois St. is not going to make the tournament unless they pull off another major upset and stun the Bluejays to win their first conference tourney crown since 1998. With a Red Birds win, the bubble field would shrink and cause a lot of stress teams like South Florida, Texas, Colorado St., Northwestern, Xavier, and VCU.

Since South Florida finished 6th in the Big East, they will receive a first round bye in the Big East tournament. They also avoided having to play tournament bound teams like UConn and Seton Hall in the second round unlike the 7th seeded Louisville Cardinals, who could play Seton Hall, and the 8th seeded West Virginia Mountaineers, who could played UConn. South Florida will play the winner of the #14 Villanova and #11 Rutgers game. If the Bulls advance to the quarterfinals, they would take on #3 Notre Dame. South Florida beat Villanova twice during the regular season and also knocked off Rutgers at home. However, they lost to Notre Dame by 11 on the road in South Bend.

Since the Big 12 now only has 10 teams, 6 teams receive a bye to the quarterfinals and the 6th seeded team is the Texas Longhorns. They will take on the 3rd seeded Iowa St. Cyclones in the quarters with the winner likely playing #2 Missouri in one semifinal. Texas played Iowa St. tough on the road and lost by just 6 points and then beat the Cyclones at home in Austin by 7. In order to beat Iowa St., the Longhorns front-court will have to contain Royce White, who averaged 14.5 points, 10.5 rebounds, and shot 45 percent from the field in the two games against Texas.

The Colorado St. Rams are the 4th seed in the Mountain West tournament and will take on 5th seeded TCU in the quarterfinals. The Horn Frogs caused the Rams a lot of trouble in the regular season, as TCU took Colorado St. to double overtime on the road, and then beat them by 4 at home. In both games, TCU killed Colorado St. from three point range. They made 12 threes in the two matchups and hit on more than 41 percent of their attempts. The Rams will have to get out on TCU's shooters, especially Hank Thorns, who made 7 threes in the two games combined. If Colorado St. can get past the tricky Horn Frogs, they will likely play a rubber game with #1 seeded San Diego St. Aztecs, who they beat by 17 at home in the regular season.

With a 10-6 record in conference play and a victory over St. Bonaventure, Xavier is the 3rd seed in the Atlantic 10 Conference tournament. The Musketeers will play the #6 Dayton and #11 George Washington winner in the quarterfinals. If the Flyers win, they will be a difficult matchup for Xavier as they beat them by 15 at home and then lost to them in a tight overtime game in Cincinnati. If Xavier is able to get by that test in the quarters, they would likely play 2nd seeded St. Louis, who is a lock to be in the NCAA tournament and has a 24-6 record.

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Don't Overlook The West Coast Of College Basketball

The struggles of the Pac-12 have been very well documented this year and the conference has been historically bad. Currently, no Pac-12 team is ranked and no Pac-12 team has even received a vote in the AP poll since week 11 when Stanford was 15-3 before the Cardinals lost 5 of their next 6 conference games. In fact, California was the last ranked team inside the top 25 for the Pac-12 all the way back in week 4 of the polls and no Pac-12 team has been ranked inside the top 15 all season. Even when it appeared that the Washington Huskies, the most talented team in the Pac-12, had turned the corner after their disappointing 5-5 start to the season, they went to Eugene and lost to the Oregon Ducks by 25 points and were 2 of 16 from three point land.

The Pac-12 is in serious danger of just receiving two bids to the NCAA tournament, which they also did in 2010 when just California and Washington made it into the big dance.

With the Pac-12 way down this year, the perception around the country is that the entire west coast is struggling. However, just because the major conference out west is not playing high level basketball, doesn't mean that the west is struggling as a whole and the west coast shouldn't be overlooked, as numerous teams are having very impressive seasons from the Mountain West and the West Coast Conference.

The Mountain West, just like it has been for the past few years, is incredibly strong this season, as the conference will definitely get at least 3 teams into the tournament and could very possibly receive 5 invitations to the big dance. The conference has received multiple bids to the tourney every year since 2001 and they are looking for their most teams in the big dance since they got 4 teams into the NCAA's in 2010. UNLV and San Diego St. are also representing the Mountain West in the AP top 25 poll and the MWC has two teams in the top 14 of the polls, which is just as many as the ACC, Big East, Big Ten, and SEC. Only the Big 12 has more teams in the top 14 of the AP poll than the MWC.

While UCLA is having a horribly disappointing season, as the Bruins are 14-10 including just 7-5 in the weak Pac-12 after being ranked inside the top 20 of both preseason polls, two UCLA transfers, Mike Moser and Chace Stanback, have led UNLV to an incredibly impressive 21-4 start. Under first year head coach, Dave Rice, after Lon Kruger left the Rebels to take the job at Oklahoma during the summer, UNLV has returned to the days of Jerry Tarkanian with a high flying offense. The Rebels are averaging 80 points a game, which is 9th in the country, and they are 3rd in the nation at 18.3 assists per game. 

Mike Moser is a double-double machine down in the blocks for the Rebels, as he has 13 in 25 games. The forward is averaging 14.5 points and 11.5 rebounds per game, as the big man is dominate on the glass, despite being undersized at just 6-8. Chace Stanback is also so difficult to defend for the Rebels because of the threat that he poses from beyond the arc. The senior compliments Moser very nicely from the perimeter, as he is averaging slightly less than 14 points per game and is able to knock down the three ball, as he is shooting it at a 45 percent clip from deep. 

The Rebels are sitting in line for a 3 or 4 seed, as they have built a very impressive resume with victories over North Carolina at the Las Vegas Classic, Illinois on the road by 16, Pac-12 leader Cal at home by 17, WAC leader Nevada, as well as home conference wins over New Mexico and Colorado St. UNLV is looking for their highest seed since they were a 1 seed back in 1991 when they made it all the way to the Final Four for the second straight year before losing their undefeated season in the National Semifinals to eventual champion Duke by 2 points.

San Diego St. is keeping the Mountain West extremely interesting, as they have been way better than expected and are challenging the Rebels for the regular season conference crown. Steve Fischer should get some serious National Coach of the Year consideration for the job he has done with the Aztecs. After San Diego St. went 34-3 last season and made it to their first sweet 16 in school history, little was expected from the team this year. The Aztecs were losing a majority of their core including star forward and second-team All-American Kawhi Leonard, first-team All-Mountain West guard D.J. Gay, second-team All-Mountain West forward Malcolm Thomas, and honorable mention All-Mountain West forward Billy White. Those four guys were the team's leading scorers and combined for 67 percent of the team's points.

However, Jamaal Franklin and Chase Tapley have stepped up big time for the Aztecs and have carried the team to a very surprising 20-3 start. Franklin, who is also averaging 7.2 rebounds per game, is a big 6-5 guard-forward, who causes a lot of matchup problems because of his size and is averaging 18 points in the team's 7 conference games. He leads the conference in scoring. Tapley is a lethal three-point shooter and is hitting 43 percent of his jumpers from behind the arc. Tapley was 8 for 10 from three in a very close loss to the Baylor Bears on the road earlier in the season.

Like the Rebels, San Diego St. is in line to receive a 3 or 4 seed for the tournament. The Aztecs beat Arizona on the road, New Mexico on the road in the pit, Cal at home, as well as UNLV at home after Jamaal Franklin beat the buzzer with a game winning layup. The Aztecs square up with the Rebels once again on Saturday at the Thomas and Mack Center in Las Vegas in a rematch of two of the best teams not just on the west coast, but in the entire country.

The Mountain West should also gain a lot of respect because they are much more than a two team league.

New Mexico is one of the most overlooked teams in college basketball and, as of now, they are firmly in the tournament as anywhere from an 8 seed to a 10 seed. The Lobos are 19-4 and have solid wins over Arizona St., Washington St., Boston College, USC, Oklahoma St., St. Louis, Wyoming, and Colorado St.

Also, Wyoming and Colorado St. are both on the bubble and they are each at 4-3 in the conference.

The Wyoming Cowboys are 18-5 and have victories over Colorado, Colorado St., and got the signature win they so desperately needed when they shocked the UNLV Rebels by 2 points at home last week.

The Colorado St. Rams are 15-7 and need to notch some more victories in conference play to get one of those last four spots in the tourney. The Rams do have some quality wins under their belt however, as they have victories over Colorado, Denver, and like Wyoming, got a signature win, when they beat San Diego St. by 17 points at home. 

The West Coat Conference is also having an incredibly strong year. The WCC has been dominated by Gonzaga since Mark Few took over the program in 1999. The Zags have been the regular season conference champion 11 straight years dating back to 2001 and have won the conference tournament 10 times in 13 tries since 1999.

However, the WCC is much more than a one conference league this season, as Saint Mary's and BYU are two very solid teams, especially the Gaels, who have more than enough talent to make a run into the second week of the tourney. The WCC is looking to get 3 teams into the NCAA's for the first time since 2008 when the Zags, Saint Mary's, and San Diego all made the big dance from the conference.

Despite losing their leading scorer, Mickey McConnell, the Gaels are currently ranked inside the top 15 and have just three losses all season with an overall record of 22-3 including an 11-1 mark in conference play. Saint Mary's will likely receive a 4 or 5 seed, as they swept their season series with BYU, beat Gonzaga at home, and still have an opportunity to get a quality victory over 23-1 Murray St. on the road in Kentucky in BracketBusters later this month. The Gaels are going to get their best seed since they were an 8 seed in the 1989 NCAA tournament.

The Gaels are led by the two-headed monster of point guard Matthew Dellavedoa as well as forward Rob Jones. Dellavedoa is averaging just under 16 points per game and more than 6 assists per game, while shooting 46 percent from the field, 84 percent from the free-throw line, and nearly 40 percent from three. Dellavedoa is an all-around star and can do it all for the Gaels. He dished out the dimes in the Gaels' 98-82 victory over BYU, as he had 12 assists, but he can also score the basketball when he needs to, like he did against Gonzaga, when he was 5 of 10 from three and had 26 points in the team's 83-62 victory at the McKeon Pavilion.

Jones, much like Mike Moser, is an undersized forward, as he is just 6-6, but he is relentless on the boards and is an absolute beast on the glass. Jones is averaging 14.6 points to go along with his 10.6 rebounds per game. Jones has had at least 10 rebounds in 18 of the Gaels 25 games and has had 14 double-doubles including a 24 point, 15 rebound performance against BYU earlier in the season.

The Zags, for once, and the Cougars are both chasing the Gaels for the regular season conference title but they are both solidly into the NCAA tournament. Gonzaga will likely be a 5 or 6 seed, while BYU could be anywhere from a 9 seed to a 11 seed.

The Bulldogs played an incredibly tough non-conference schedule but it benefited them because they got quality victories over tournament teams such as Notre Dame, Arizona, and Xavier. The Zags also got a big conference win at home over Saint Mary's this week in a highly contested and very well played game.

The Cougars have been a very nice surprise. They have victories over WAC leader Nevada, Pac-12 teams such as Oregon and Utah and played Baylor very tough, despite eventually falling by 3 points at home. The Cougars are going to receive a nice seed because they have beaten all the teams that they should have beaten. However, they don't have any eye-popping victories as of yet, as they lost to Saint Mary's twice and Wisconsin as well. However, they still play Gonzaga once more and have the WCC conference tournament coming up in March.

Gonzaga could be the perfect model of consistency in all of college basketball. They have made the tournament every year since 1999 and have won at least one game in the big dance in 10 of their 13 trips to the tourney since then. This year is no different from the typical Gonzaga squad, as they are a hard-working team that plays very well together. Forwards Elias Harris and 7 foot Robert Sacre control the paint and both average over 6.5 rebounds per game and 11.5 points per game.

BYU is also a very intriguing team. Following the loss of National Player of the Year, Jimmer Fredette, who averaged nearly 29 points per game for the Cougars last year, very little was expected of the team. However, they have far exceeded expectations under Dave Rose, and are 20-6 including 8-3 in conference. Forward Noah Hartsock has taken a much larger role on the team this season and has increased his point total from 8.6 to 17.6. The senior is shooting just under 57 percent from the field. Hartsock and Brandon Davies, who was suspended last season for breaking the school's honor code policy, form a formidable duo down in the blocks. Davies is averaging 14.4 points and 8 rebounds per game.

Although the Pac-12 is having a horrible year, the Mountain West and the West Coast Conference have a number of teams that are going to get into the NCAA tournament and a group of teams, such as UNLV, San Diego St., Saint Mary's, and Gonzaga, who could make a deep run in the tournament. West coast basketball is not down as much as it might seem at first glance.