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East Tennessee State Basketball
ETSU Basketball Players Believe Jason Shay Fired for Supporting Anthem Protest

After East Tennessee State men's basketball coach Jason Shay announced his resignation this week, several players have come forward to support the coach.
According to Michael A. Fletcher of ESPN, the players believe he was forced to leave for supporting them when they kneeled during the national anthem as a protest against racial inequality.
"I personally feel like him resigning is crazy," freshman point guard Truth Harris told ESPN. "It shows a lot of what is going on in this town, and in this country right now."
Senior guard Jordan Coffin further elaborated on the situation in a video on social media:
"All this about us kneeling, and then Coach Shay supporting us through all of that," Coffin said. "People should want a coach that stands behind the players through anything."
The players took a knee during the national anthem ahead of a February 15 game against Chattanooga. About a week later, GOP members of the Tennessee senate signed a letter calling for players to be punished for their actions.
ETSU President Brian Nolan also said he "would have done some things differently."
Shay supported the players but resigned after just one season as the team's head coach with two years left on his contract. The team went 13-12 in his first year on the job.
Athletic director Scott Carter clarified that it was Shay's decision to step down.
"ETSU did not fire Coach Shay nor force Coach Shay to resign," Carter said in a statement to ESPN.
Six players have entered the transfer portal this offseason, including Harris.
ETSU Buccaneers Invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament: Will They RSVP?
East Tennessee State has been extended an invitation to play in the CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament (CIT) according to Riley Wallace, the chairman of the tournament's selection committee.
"We put out the offer to be in the tournament to ETSU. They're supposed to get back to me in the next day or so," said Wallace.
"They're very deserving. They have good wins, a good coach, and a good team."
The CollegeInsider.com Tournament is one of four postseason men's basketball tournaments held following conference tournament play. The field of the CollegeInsider.com Tournament, as well as the College Basketball Invitational, are set in the hours following the release of the NCAA and National Invitation Tournament fields.
Traditionally, the CIT caters to mid-major teams such as ETSU, thanks to a smaller financial commitment from its host teams. The CBI is more geared toward larger schools with an eye on those in BCS conferences.
"We charge $31,500," said Wallace. "The CBI is more expensive and charges $80,000 to $100,000 for its host teams in the semis and finals."
Road teams in the CIT have their expenses for 22 people paid for them, though ETSU head coach Murry Bartow would not commit to saying the Buccaneers would definitely accept to a postseason tournament bid, if offered.
While the NCAA Tournament fell out of the Bucs' reach last Friday, when they fell to North Florida, 59-55, in the second round of the Atlantic Sun Tournament, there is a chance ETSU could receive a bid to the NIT. However, no team has received an at large bid to the NIT from the Atlantic Sun Conference since the adoption of automatic bids to the tournament in 2006.
Other teams that have reportedly received bids to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament, pending acceptance into the NCAA or NIT, include Tennessee Tech, Furman, Marshall, Air Force, and Davidson. A team must have a .500 or better record to be considered for the CollegeInsider.com Tournament, whereas the CBI has no such rule.
ETSU Basketball: Why Is Johnson City, Tennessee Out of Love for the Buccaneers?
Imagine your local mid-major NCAA Division I men’s basketball team was on the cusp of advancing to the NCAA Tournament for the third straight year.
This potential NCAA berth would be the program’s sixth postseason appearance in nine seasons, a notable accomplishment from a proverbial “one-bid” conference.
The expected reaction among the locals would likely be one of great excitement. With recent tournament experience it would seem an improved seeding and a victory or two in the Big Dance would be in order and the hometown would be buzzing.
Attendance figures to be at an all-time high, higher profile players would be making recruiting trips to campus, and the athletic department would be looking for a more prestigious conference to play in.Â
Unless this team is East Tennessee State University. In that case, hardly anyone is noticing.
As alluded to above, the Buccaneers start play in the Atlantic Sun Conference men’s basketball tournament today, Wed. March 2, in quest of their third straight NCAA Tournament appearance. As the second seed in the tournament it would seem ETSU has a legitimate chance to capture this prize.
After all, the Bucs feature the A-Sun’s “Player of the Year” in Mike Smith, sport out-of-conference victories against 15-13 Mississippi State and 19-10 Dayton and rank in the upper half of the conference in all team statistical categories.
But while ETSU hasn’t had this amount of sustained success in 20 years, when the Mister Jennings and Greg Dennis-led ETSU teams were nationally ranked and earned four straight NCAA berths from 1989-92 out of the Southern Conference, enthusiasm for Bucs basketball around Johnson City, Tenn. is practically non-existent.
Consider-
This year the Bucs drew 3,379 fans per home game, their lowest total since 2002, before the Bucs started advancing to the postseason with regularity in this era.
A drive down State of Franklin Parkway alongside the ETSU campus doesn’t reveal any “MAKE IT THREE!” signage from neighboring businesses, and not even ETSU athletics’ own message board by their home arena reveals a message of encouragement to the basketball team.
A recent sampling of local talk shows reveals nobody is calling up and talking about the Bucs. True, the shows on WXSM, the local sports radio station, have always been more “Volcentric,” but not even interviews today with ETSU head coach Murry Bartow or women’s coach Karen Kemp on the morning show hosted by Bobby Rader and Kenny Hawkins elicited calls from Bucs fans.
Clearly this should not be the case. This is an era when the Bucs should be gaining support, not losing it.
Historically fans in the Tri-Cities, Tenn. area have supported NCAA Tournament caliber teams; witness the numerous crowds of more than 10,000 at Memorial Center in the early 1990s.
Why not now?
The thought here is there are many factors in the Bucs’ declining popularity.
First, fans are turned off by the direction ETSU athletics have taken since university President Paul Stanton decided to drop football in 2003. Not only are ETSU sports largely absent from sports pages in the late summer and early fall months now, but the decision effectively got the Bucs kicked out of the Southern Conference and into the less-prestigious Atlantic Sun.
For as much talk from the ETSU media relations department that both the SoCon and A-Sun are merely one-bid leagues and effectively equal, RPI rankings, conference stability and success in the NCAA Tournament tell a different story.
Simply put, when a team finishes 7-19 against Division I competition in its last year in the Southern Conference (2004-2005), then posts a 15-13 record in their first year in the A-Sun (2005-06) and wins the new conference outright in their second (2006-07) with the same coach and key players during these three seasons, there is room for healthy skepticism about the strength of the new league.
Even with the A-Sun’s improvement to the point where, this season for the first time in more than a decade, it has a slightly higher RPI ranking than the Southern Conference, it doesn't really heal old wounds. If ETSU hadn’t broken Southern Conference by-laws by dropping football in 2003 and were still a member, the SoCon would have a higher RPI and could conceivably been a two-bid league in past seasons.
Despite the multiple tournament appearances of late, the Bucs' mens basketball program seems to be stagnant. During the glory days of 20 years ago, the Bucs progressively improved. By Dennis' junior year they were nationally ranked and when he was a senior they beat Arizona, 87-80, in the NCAA Tournament. Â
Today, what does an ETSU fan have to get excited about? Another first-round loss in the NCAA Tournament, now by progressively worse margins? A non-conference home schedule that gets poorer with every season? Whereas once upon a time ETSU drew opponents such as North Carolina State, Michigan State, Wake Forest, and Virginia Tech to campus, this year’s slate featured Tennessee Tech as the Bucs’ only out-of-conference foe at home.
Furthermore, everything that comes from the athletic department seems to be spin. Forget their shunning of reporters who dare question their moves. When the Bucs advanced to the NIT in 2007, athletic director David Mullins referred to the athletic department as having “the greatest season in ETSU history,” the lack of interest from the community and weaker scheduling be damned.
This year the Bucs announced they’d move their baseball team into a new park. Only it would be equipped with temporary stands and the overall project would be, at best, half completed, much like their soccer and softball fields were upon moving into them in 2007 and 2009, respectively.
But once again complications have arrived. The Bucs are still playing baseball at off-campus Cardinal Park, and the new field is nothing but a grated field of mud.
ETSU told us the delays in building their soccer field, which didn't even have lights until its third year of use, was because they hadn’t built new athletic facilities since 1977, save for a new golf training facility built in 2002. Therefore, they should be given a pass on the mistakes they made in constructing Summers-Taylor Stadium as it was all new to them.
Now the athletic department’s excuse in building the baseball park is they came across rock underneath the diamond that would prevent proper draining.
Shouldn’t they have known that before they started the project? And what is the excuse now for continually playing in half-constructed venues rather than completed ones? Hasn’t ETSU learned from their mistakes?
The list of gaffes, both in public relations and otherwise, that the East Tennessee State athletic department has made under Mullins during his eight-year tenure are too vast to mention in this piece.
But suffice to say, his direction for the athletic department is not the one ETSU fans wish to take.
In order to regain the fan base, ETSU must be willing to show they want their athletic program to grow. That isn’t shown with a new golf facility or softball field or an all-sports championship trophy in a substandard conference, but rather is shown with the revival of football, and/or a bigger conference, and/or a men’s basketball team that isn’t merely happy to make the NCAA Tournament, but rather could realistically win games in it.
Until that’s displayed by Stanton, Mullins & Co., the downward spiral of interest in ETSU athletics figures to continue.
ETSU Nearly Defies History With Close Call Against Pitt
East Tennessee State came to play.
A full court press helped generate 18 turnovers. It disoriented the methodical attack of the No.1 seeded Pitt Panthers and had them throwing more balls into the stands, than to their own teammates.
The Buccaneers hounded the boards gathering 20 offensive rebounds. They out-muscled DaJuan Blair, which was previously unthinkable. The Buccaneers outworked Pitt in every aspect of the game.
East Tennessee Stateheld Jermaine Dixon (0), Levance Fields (6) and Tyrell Biggs (3), three of Pitt’s five starters, to nine combined points.
The Buccaneers were lead by Kevin Tiggs (21) and Courtney Pigram (17) who combined for 38 points.
They were not only going up against one of the favorites to win the tournament, but they were going up against history. No. 1 seeds were 98-0 against No. 16 seeds prior to this game.
With 2:49 left to play they were trailing by only three points, 62-59. Momentum, as well as the crowd, was on their side. Every time Pitt went on a run, ETSU went on a similar run to nullify Pitt’s lead.
In the end, however, it was not enough.
All the momentum, cheers and mistakes by Pitt couldn’t make up for the Buccaneers poor performance from the floor. ETSU went 30.3 percent (23-76) from the field. They shot 46.8 percent from the field on the season. The Bucs went 4-22 from beyond the arc. In comparison, they shot 33.6 percent from three-point land on the season.
The biggest reason ETSU fell short was their futility from the free-throw line. East Tennessee State missed several clutch free throws down the wire, and went 12-24 for the game. The Buccaneers were a 71.5 percent free-throw shooting team on the season.
On a night where they were off, everything seemed to be going right.
Pitt was unable to pull away from the ETSU. The Panthers would get up by a few points, but then the Buccaneers would generate a few turnovers, hit a couple shots and go on a run. Pitt turned the ball over 18 times to ETSU’s 9.
In the end, it was not enough.
Pitt was 24-55 (43.6 percent) from the floor. They hit 7-19 three-pointers (36.8 percent) and this traditionally weak free-throwing shooting team hit 17-23 (73.9 percent) from the line; DaJuan Blair was the only Panther to miss a free throw going 7-13.
Pitt was just too good.
Despite giving up 20 offensive boards, the Panthers out-rebounded the Buccaneers, had more assists and blocked more shots.
In the face of adversity, a suddenly hostile crowd, a lack of momentum and a team that seemed to have fate on their side, the Panthers would not be denied.
The Panthers rode the wide shoulders of Blair, much as they have all season, to a hard fought victory. Sam Young got hot, hitting back-to-back three-pointers to keep the Panthers ahead, and Ashton Gibbs scored five points in the final 75 seconds to seal the deal.
In a situation where many teams would have collapsed, the Panthers persevered.
Blair recorded his 18th double-double of the season with 27 points and 16 rebounds. Sam Young kicked in 14 points, and hauled in 13 rebounds, and Ashton Gibbs was the only other Panther with a double-figure point total; he contributed 10 points.
Coach Jamie Dixon’s teams are known for being tough and physical. They are also known for not making deep tournament runs. In a game where Dixon recorded his 161stwin, tying him with N.C. State’s Everett Case (1947-52) for the best six-year start to a career, it seemed as though Pitt would be destined for another early exit.
The Panthers have won a couple Big East titles since 2002, they have a long succession of 20-win seasons and ascended to the No. 1 ranking in the country this season.
It has been their inability to advance past the round of 16 that has prevented them from being grouped with the elite teams in the country. Many thought this would be the season that the Panthers would finally reach their potential.
For that to happen they are going to need to play a lot better than they did today.
No. 1 seeds are now 99-0 against the No. 16 seeds since the tournament went to the 64-team format in 1985. Louisville will try to make it 100-0 this evening, but chances are their game won’t be as exciting as this.
Pitt nearly beat itself, but despite a valiant effort by the little team that thought they could, it was not enough. We will all remember where we were the day ETSU almost scored the upset.
The key word is almost.
You Want a Bold Prediction? How About East Tenn. State Over No. 1 Pitt?
If anyone watched the ESPN NCAA selection Sunday you probably noticed the small segment 2/3 of the way into the broadcast where an ESPN analyst, his name escapes me, (can anyone confirm whether it was Seth Davis?) talked about East Tennessee State University's NCAA tournament history.
He said that in the last 20 years East Tennessee State University (ETSU) has only lost in the first round by less than three points once. That was in 1990 to Georgia Tech 99-83.
If you look at their entire tournament history, which admittedly isn't much, it really is quite impressive. In 1989 as a No. 16 seed, they came very close 72-71 to knocking off No. 1 Oklahoma and as ESPN put it "Only a Mookie Blaylock basket at the end saved them" (from becoming the first No. 1 seed ever to lose to a No. 16).
In sum, their tournament history looks like this beyond their 1968 opening round win under a different format:
1989 as a No. 16 seed lost to Oklahoma 72-71
1990 as a No. 13 seed lost to Ga. Tech 99-83
1991 as a No. 10 seed lost to Iowa 76-73
1992 as a No. 14 defeated Arizona 87-80 but lost to Michigan 102-90 in Round Two
2003: as a No. 15 seed lost to Wake Forest 76-73
2004: as a No. 13 seed lost to Cincinnati 80-77
What can be concluded from all this?
Are the Buccaneers simply a tough-luck loser, or are they primed for a break out?
While a loss is still a loss, they've lost so impressively against a diverse variety of college basketball's traditional powerhouses that you have to think some experience was gained along the way.
In addition these seven appearances in 20 years is also quite impressive for such a small school, one that boasts slightly over 13,000 students, plays in a 6,000 seat arena, yet has been playing collegiate basketball since 1918-1919.Â
I believe if any team can make tournament history it is them, and that is why I picked them in my bracket to do just that. While it may appear misinformed, having people make bold predictions is what make March truly earn the Madness label.
Consider that the Johnson City, Tennessee school will be losing their two leading scorers in Courtney Pigram and Kevin Tiggs to graduation, the Buccaneers are still a young team, with all but five players scheduled to next season meaning the foundation is in place for continued future success.
Don't consider any of this to be blind ETSU optimism on the account of a delusional alum or that of a starry-eyed, energetic student caught up in the moment for I am neither. Its also not an anti-Pittsburgh vendetta by any stretch of the imagination, I just simply don't like their team's history.
Also, I've stopped their so-called magical run the very next game when, due to emotion from their historic win and all its inevitable coverage, they should lose to No. 9 Tennessee so it's not like I'm expecting them to be this year's George Mason, or that I'm a UT booster, I simply like this matchup, plain and simple.
Even though they enter the tournament technically the second highest of the four No. 1 seeds, this fact is misleading. One has to consider that the NCAA committee voters are enamoured with all things Big East (and deservedly so) but they place too much impact on this.
Don't forget that Pitt is in unchartered territory having to defend their first #1 seed in school history which could place unwarranted extra pressure upon them that the traditional powers have aleady experienced.
If I were ranking the No. 1's in terms of strength I'd go with:
1. Louisville-won Big East regular season and conference tournament
2. UCONN-have to be cut slack for losing in 6 OT's
3. North Carolina-I have them going to Champ. game so this isn't an indication of favroitism; its due to the region they play in, which I think is easier than UCONN's.
4. Pitt
While Pitt's 28-4 (15-3) record is certainly impressive in the nation's toughest conference, we must not forget this is the same team that blew two over rated No. 1 rankings this year.
Included in this was the unexplainable loss to unranked Providence ironically two games after they beat heralded UCONN on the first of two occasions this season. Much of their hype was built off this defeat.
Moreover, if the 2009 Big East Conference tournament taught is anything its if ETSU can get big man DeJuan Blair into foul trouble early the team isn't nearly the same as the offense runs through him.
If I'm ETSU that's my strategy to get him on the bench were he is useless as soon as I can. Pittsburgh unceremoniously bowed out early as a result of this, increasing my lack of confidence in them in big games.
Finally, don't take just my word for it. On Monday's edition of First Take on ESPN, Pittsburgh Men's basketball coach Jaime Dixon was interviewed and mentioned that only three teams have made it to the Sweet 16 more than Pittsburgh's three appearances in the last eight years.
While this may seem consistent, I'd argue the opposite, and to a degree so did Dixon, stating that it proves they are good, and that they are close, but they can't seem to get any further.
I take this as an example of some teams simply maxing out early and not taking full advantage of their opportunities like some of the more established, traditional power schools can like Duke, North Carolina, and Michigan State. Some schools got it and some don't, and based on their tournament history to date, especially their recent history, I'm inclined conclude they don't.
Looking to make a gutsy call? Looking to impress your friends? Simply looking to adopt a Cinderella team to rally around?Â
Aside from Stephen F. Austin and North Dakota State University both of whom wouldn't surprise me if they were to win (more on that in a future column even though I do have both losing in my bracket), make a bold prediction and go with ETSU over Pitt on Friday.
You won't be able to say you didn't see it coming nor read of its possibility anywhere...
Pitt-East Tennessee State: 2009 NCAA Tournament Picks ATS, March 20
No. 16 ETSU Buccaneers at No. 1 Pittsburgh Panthers
NCAA Tournament First Round—East Region
Friday, March 20, 2:55 PM EST on CBS
Preview
ETSU defeated the A-Sun regular season champs Jacksonville 85-68 in the tournament finals to secure their automatic bid to the Big Dance. This is their first trip to the NCAA Tournament since winning back-to-back Southern Conference titles in '02-03 and '03-04 (they have since switched to the A-Sun conference).
After reaching the top spot in the national polls earlier this season for the first time in the school's history, Pitt received their first No. 1 seed at the Big Dance. While they were knocked out of the Big East Tournament early by West Virginia, they did manage to take down fellow No. 1 seed Connecticut twice.
The Panthers are led by three key players (though their role players aren't too shabby either)—Levance Fields, Sam Young, and co-Big East Player of the Year DeJuan Blair. In addition to his POY award, Blair was selected to the All-Big East First Team, alongside Young (who was also selected last year). Fields was selected to the All-Big East Third Team.
This game should not be overly difficult for the Panthers to dominate, especially considering the competition they have been up against this season. They finished second in the Big East in a year where many consider the conference to be the deepest conference ever.
In their three other losses this season, the Panthers have bounced back with a strong performance and big win. Only time will tell if the pattern will continue, or if the Bucs will be able to slow down one of the best teams the Big East has to offer.
By The Numbers
 | Record | Conf | ATS | RPI | SOS | PF | PA |
ETSU | 23-10 | 14-6 | 2-2 | 116 | 249 | 78.6 | 70.0 |
Pitt | 28-4 | 15-3 | 16-9-1 | 2 | 8 | 78.0 | 64.0 |
 | FG% | D. FG% | 3P% | D. 3P% | FT% | RPG | SPG | APG | TPG | BPG |
ETSU | 46.8 | 40.6 | 33.6 | 32.6 | 71.5 | 41.0 | 8.5 | 12.6 | 14.2 | 3.9 |
Pitt | 48.4 | 41.1 | 35.4 | 33.6 | 67.4 | 42.7 | 7.1 | 18.0 | 12.0 | 3.9 |
Stats Leaders
 | ETSU | Pitt |
PPG | K. Tiggs - 21.5 | S. Young - 18.7 |
 | C. Pigram - 17.6 | D. Blair - 15.6 |
 | M. Smith - 15.5 | L. Fields - 10.7 |
RPG | M. Smith - 7.7 | D. Blair - 12.2 |
APG | C. Pigram - 4.2 | L. Fields - 7.6 |
SPG | K. Tiggs - 2.2 | J. Dixon - 1.5 |
BPG | G. Hamlin - 1.6 | D. Blair - 1.0 |
Prediction
Please keep reading at CBBPlace.com to see Ryan's final analysis and FREE Pick Against the Spread!