Conference USA Basketball

East Carolina Wins a Knee-Knocker over Charlotte, 62-61

Dec 10, 2010

Junior Darrius Morrow (11 points, eight rebounds, 3-of-4 free throws) connected on a three-point play with four seconds remaining.  Helping ECU rebuttal their previous loss to Charlotte 74-63 at the Charleston Classic on November 19.

East Carolina (6-2) held their largest lead 59-50 with 4:53 to go in the game when Charlotte (3-5) sharp shooter Gokhan Sirin hit a big three for the 49ers, sparking an 11-to-0 run. Sirin's three with 15 seconds left gave the 49ers their first lead since the 10:53 mark.

Charlotte space eater, Phil Jones (14 points, 10 rebounds, 4-5 free throws), led the team in points, ironically fouled Morrow with four seconds remaining, followed by "D-Mo" hitting the game-winning free throw.

Morrow was asked after the game if he felt any nerves being put on the line to end the game. “Honestly, not really," he said. "I didn’t want to go into overtime and put all my focus into that one free throw.

“It was a good situation to be in, it added some toughness to my game.”

Senior Jontae Sherrod went off for the second straight game coming off the bench, playing 31 minutes. Sherrod led the way for the Pirates, finishing with 19 points, five rebounds, and was on fire knocking down five trifectas tonight.

"I'm just doing my job," Sherrod said. "Coach told me to be aggressive and shoot. So I came in shooting." 

"I told Jontae before the game we were going to bring him off the bench," Coach Lebo said. "I don't know how he felt, [but] he acted ok."

Sherrod also came off the bench last game scoring 17 points and six rebounds, all in just 22 minutes of play. I am getting the vibe these guys are really starting to "buy" in to the unselfish system, something that Coach Lebo and the players have been preaching since Day 1.

Senior floor general Brock Young added 14 points and five rebounds while sharing the rock well, dishing out six assists.

Young talked after the game about the Pirates current four game winning streak. "It's a good winning streak. Since this summer we've been preaching that we want to have a winning season.

"We haven't had a winning season in 14 years and they say that every day and that's just a motivation in practice. We just go hard at it everyday in practice, try to get better as a team, as whole, and come play as a team. Not just one person trying to carry this team on their back."

These words from the Captain are an early holiday present for you Pirate fans, as it is easy to see this team wants to be a team. Everyone understands they have a certain role and that everyone can feed off each others bread and butter, rather than someone trying to do it all themselves.  

East Carolina stepped it up on defense in the second half, holding Charlotte to 32 percent shooting, forcing Charlotte into long possessions which resulted into bad shot selections for the 49ers.

Coach Lebo acknowledged defense being the beneficial factor to keeping the Pirates in the game.

“Defense in a game were you’re not shooting the ball well, [we] didn’t shoot it very well in the first half, kept us in it in the second half until we could get that little bit of a run and that is going to be our emphasis for the whole year.”

Only guard Derrio Green joined fellow Niner Jones in double figures, finishing with 11 points, but forced three critical turnovers.

The Pirates started off streaky but finished strong on offense going 14-of-27 (51.9 percent) in the second half, finishing with a respectable 42 percent from the floor (24-of-57).

East Carolina will face with division II Fayetteville State on Saturday evening at 5 p.m. inside Williams Arena at Minge’s Coliseum.

Memphis Tigers: Young Team Bristles at Idea of Being Soft or Underdogs

Dec 7, 2010

"Soft."

It's a word that's a prerequisite for toilet paper and bath towels, the kiss of death for athletes. Sure, you want to be described as having "soft hands" if you're a wide receiver in football or even a post player in basketball, but other than that, it's anathema to sportsmen everywhere.

It's a word that the 2010-'11 Memphis Tigers have heard swirling around them, and they don't like it one bit.

"We've heard all the comments about us being soft and all that stuff, so we figured we'd get out there and touch (LSU) up a little bit, let 'em know we're here," freshman guard Chris Crawford said in the locker room following the Tigers' 70-61 victory over LSU in Tupelo, Miss.

Even Josh Pastner himself bristles at the idea that he "has a soft team." When faced with a question on the subject during his press conference immediately following the Memphis 72-68 home win over Miami, the coach's countenance changed and his tone became one of irritation.

"We're two-and-oh, so that's the bottom line," was his terse reply. "People can say what they want, but we still got a 'W'. And the other thing is, people talk about 'tough,' 'soft,' this and that, but the bottom line is production. Miami is a tough team. We came away with the win and it wasn't because of softness, it was because we were able to get the 'W'. A lot of the rebounds we missed were a credit to Miami."

Perhaps one of the key reasons the talk of being "soft" is so prevalent around the Memphis basketball program is because the person using the word the most is a prominent member of the Memphis media. But is this an honest observation, or is there some personal agenda involved?

It's easy to Tweet about this Memphis team being "soft" when Western Kentucky is plus-15 in the rebounding battle during the first half of the game, yet when the contest ends and Memphis is only minus-two in the category, shouldn't credit be given to the Tigers for dramatically cutting the gap and owning the boards in the second half versus a very strong, athletic Western Kentucky team?

Even more disturbing, though, are comments made by this same member of the Memphis media while standing outside the Tiger locker room after games.

Saying last year's Tiger team "is just terrible; Michael Jordan couldn't save this bunch" was one thing. But saying blithely a couple of weeks ago "this team is a bunch of pussies," that they're "too soft to compete with Kansas," and that Wesley Witherspoon "will get [screwed] in the [behind] by Marcus Morris again" (profanities redacted) seems to me to cross the line.

Especially considering the person in question looks like he's in better shape to battle with a dozen doughnuts than a 6'7", 225-pound power forward himself. But I digress...

In fact, Witherspoon played against WKU with one of the nastiest gashes on his chin I've seen in a long time, suffered versus Arkansas State, as well as needing ice on his right knee following the WKU contest; freshman Tarik Black competed against ASU and WKU with stitches in his shin; freshman Will Barton added to his collection of bumps and bruises (including a nasty floor burn on his left shoulder) by sporting about a nine-inch scratch in the locker room after WKU that was still bleeding; and Angel Garcia, who probably has the "s" word hurled at him more than anyone else, miraculously returned to the floor last year just seven months after ACL surgery, an unprecedented figure for such a high-level athlete, according to my research.

The young Tigers all responded to questions about the perception of their toughness (or lack thereof) in a variety of ways.

"We're not soft at all," Will Barton says defiantly. "Some people have got their own opinion; I don't care what nobody say. We know who we are. We're gonna come out their Tuesday, play hard, rebound, defend, go out there and give it all, and get this win. That's all I care about: winning."

Will Barton further rejects the idea that his team will be underdogs when they take the court at the iconic Madison Square Garden arena, the Mecca of Basketball.

"I didn't know we were underdogs; who said that?" he quizzed with an arched eyebrow.

When the idea of Kansas being higher-ranked and the logical betting favorites was proffered, Will Barton dismissed the idea.

"I don't look at betting lines; I just go by my team," he said with a shake of his head. "We'll see what it is Tuesday."

"You know, everybody's going to form their own opinions," sophomore walk-on Charles Holt, one of the few Tigers who were active for last year's Kansas tilt, began, "but we know our toughness level. We know how tough we can be, and how we can grind out every game, night-in and night-out. So for folks to say that, that's fine, but it's up to us to go out there and play hard regardless."

When confronted with the idea that 'some people feel Kansas is too tough for this Tiger team to beat,' senior post threat Will Coleman let out an irritated sigh and shook his head before speaking and taking the high road.

"You know, we've never been the kind of team to give the media bulletin board kind of stuff," he said carefully, "not that I know of. We're just gonna go up there on Tuesday and just play as hard as we can. Handle our business and get the 'W.' Nothing harsh or anything, but someone's gotta win and someone's gotta lose; we'll just go play Tiger basketball and I think we'll be fine.

"Me, Wesley, Charles, Preston, Drew, D.J. We all want some get back. Last year was a bitter, bitter taste in our mouths, losing by two. We were so close, and I think we all see this as an opportunity."

"I definitely feel that we are not a soft team, we're just a young team," sophomore D.J. Stephens said firmly. "And with that, we have some growing to do. But as the year goes on, we'll be able to make a statement, because that's what we stress everyday in practice: defensive rebounding. As the year goes on, we'll get better and better at it."

"People will talk; we just let 'em talk," junior team leader Wesley Witherspoon said directly. "That has nothing to do with how we play."

And one last comment from scrappy freshman guard Joe Jackson from White Station High School here in Memphis, who paused and clearly gave the subject some thought before speaking:

"The way our team is, we step up when it's time. A team like Kansas, they've got bigs, but I know our bigs are gonna be prepared. They need to match up. I know with the Morris twins, Will (Coleman) and Tarik (Black) are gonna take the challenge. All people seem to want to talk about is the Morris twins and how we're gonna guard them. At the end of the day, they (the Morrises) ain't gonna beat us alone, it's gonna take a team to beat us."

One thing is certain: win or lose against Kansas, the Tigers probably won't silence the talk of being soft. But then again, as long as they keep on winning, I don't get the feeling that they really care. Sure, they'd love to be known as some group of unbeatable beasts—who wouldn't?—but this bunch seems to be comfortable in their own skin. That's a good sign as the 2010-'11 campaign continues and picks up momentum heading into January.

Leroy Watson, Jr. is a Bleacher Report Senior Writer and the Managing Editor of TigerSportsReport.com and may be reached via e-mail: Leroy@tigersportsreport.com or follow him on Twitter: @leroywatsonjr

UCF Knights Pull Off the Big Upset in Beating No. 18 Florida Gators, 57-54

Dec 1, 2010

For those of you who did not watch the UCF vs. Florida game from the brand new Amway Center on Wednesday night, let me assure you, this was no flukey win. UCF punched the Gators in the mouth. They led most of the way and never did it feel like Florida was going to get control of this game.

Led by the new MJ, Michael's son Marcus Jordan, the Knights stood toe-to-toe with the heavily favored Gators from the outset. Gators seniors Alex Tyus and Chandler Parsons did nothing all night as the Knights defense shut them down.

Jordan and Keith Clanton led the way for UCF. Jordan finished with 18 points and Clanton scored 12 including huge free throws at the end of the game, something Florida seemed unable to do at any point in the game. UF was a paltry 10-of-18 from the free throw line and an abysmal two-of-13 from three point land.

UCF was able to hit five three pointers which was the difference in the ball game.

The Knights led most of the night, and at one time was up as much as nine points. But as Jordan got a break with the Knights up 44-36, the Gators came back to take a 46-44 lead. But as soon as MJ Jr. came in he promptly hit a Jordan-esque runner with his off hand to tie the game. The rest of the game no doubt made ol' No. 23 proud as his son made big play after big play.

UCF now has a 6-0 record and is 2-0 against BCS conference schools (USF and Florida). They have two more games left with schools that will look good on a resume in Miami and UMass before Conference USA starts.

UCF looks like a pretty good bet to enter conference play undefeated which will make their Jan 26th show down at Memphis a huge game. The Tigers will face the Knights in Orlando on Feb 9th.

A huge night to be a Knight in a huge week. The football team will be trying to win the conference championship on Saturday against SMU. If successful, many have the Knights playing against the Georgia Bulldogs on New Year's Eve in the Liberty Bowl.

A win over the Gators in basketball and a conference championship in football would indeed be the biggest week in UCF sports history. Hopefully the Big East Conference is watching this.

Miami vs. Memphis: Hurricanes and Tigers Tip Off College Basketball Craziness

Nov 15, 2010

Who’s ready for some college basketball?

Well, for all you die-hard fans out there willing to sacrifice some shuteye for a little early season action, the Miami-Memphis matchup looks to be the game for you.

The Canes and the Tigers will tip off at 11:59 tonight at Memphis’ FedEx Forum. The game will serve as the kickoff to ESPN’s 24-hour  marathon of college basketball coverage.

A few of Tuesday’s games that should be of interest to college basketball fans include No. 24 Virginia Tech visiting No. 3 Kansas State (4:00 PM ET, ESPN), Thad Matta’s No. 5-ranked Ohio State Buckeyes traveling to Gainesville to take on the No. 10-ranked Florida Gators (6:00 PM ET, ESPN) and the capper will be last year's national championship runner-up Butler heading down to Kentucky to take on Rick Pitino’s new look Louisville team (8:00 PM ET, ESPN).

Let’s not get ahead of ourselves though.

The Miami-Memphis battle looks interesting on a few different fronts, and not just because any college basketball action after midnight is awesome (this coming from an East Coast guy who has stayed up late on countless occasions hoping his WCC bets pan out).

This Memphis team is an interesting bunch, especially now that fresh-faced head coach Josh Pastner has had a year to get his feet under him.

With the type of talent the Tigers have this season, they should undoubtedly be the favorites to win Conference USA.

The loss of freshman Jelan Kendrick, a former McDonald’s All American, is a blow, but remember he was an unproven commodity. He simply became an example that Pastner wanted to send to his team—we don’t tolerate BS around these parts anymore, Calipari is in Kentucky now.

Kendrick isn’t even old news, he’s news that never was. It’s time to focus in on some of the great talent Memphis has out there on the court.

Veterans like Will Coleman and Wesley Witherspoon are some of the best players in the conference, and the infusion of new stars like hot-shot recruits Will Barton, Joe Jackson, Chris Crawford and Antonio Barton can only help.

Tonight will be a great test for Pastner’s bunch.

This Miami team isn’t the same one that won 20 games last season, but there’s enough talent and athleticism there to give Memphis a quality run.

The two Miami players to watch are guards Durand Scott and Malcolm Grant, who combined for 43 points in the team's opening season win over Jacksonville.

The pair could offer up a tough matchup nightmare for Memphis, but if the Canes really want to hang in during this one, it’s the frontcourt play that will make the difference.

While no one is going to mistake this Miami team for Duke or North Carolina, hopefully they should at least provide us with an entertaining early season showcase.

This Memphis team is one of the more intriguing squads we have in college basketball this season and finding out what they’re capable of doing to Miami should be enough to keep you hardcore college fans up past your bedtime.

Jeff and Marcus Jordan reportedly painted Las Vegas green in a spending spree of epic proportions over the weekend, according to multiple reports.The Jordan brothers and fellow Central Florida teammate A...

The Non-BCS Conferences Need To Work Together For a Better Tourney Deal

Apr 20, 2010

Since Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany proclaimed the NCAA tournament would likely expand to 96 teams a load of information has come out as to what it might look like and why it may be coming into affect.

At the core of the movement to 96 teams is a desire by the elite conferences to keep the NCAA tournament continuing to producing revenue for those elite schools.

To that end, the elite NEED the tournament to expand.  Now is the time for the non-elite conferences to work together to get a much better position in the new 96 team tourney than they have in today's 64 team tourney.  Otherwise it is entirely likely they will see their position erode even further.

There are a number of goals they should consider pursuing.  Some of those goals may actually be achievable if they work together now.

Expansion may be more of a have to than a want to

News of the expansion has outraged most NCAA Tourney purists who don't understand why the NCAA would "water down" their tourney.

The assumption those fans are making is that this is a "want to" move and not a "have to" move.

They ask, "With CBS on the hook for $2.1B over the next 3 years, why is the NCAA considering using their opt out ahead of the August 31st deadline?"   The public answers appear to be because ESPN slapped the NCAA with silly money for the BCS football bowl games last year - $495M over 4 years - and seems interested in the NCAA tourney as well and that the athletic and university leadership at the NCAA's individual members are pushing the NCAA down that path.  

The first motivation suggests that the NCAA feels a bidding war might emerge with ESPN and Fox challenging CBS for the rights to March Madness, making the NCAA's next deal worth as much or more than the value in the last 3 years of their existing contract, but over a much longer period.  (The rumours are the NCAA wants a 14 year deal with the option of opting out at any time. Talk about having your cake and eating it too...)

The second is based off a mixture of self-interest as BCS conference coaches hope to improve their job security, fair play advocates who want to get the non-BCS schools less of a bad deal, and people who understand college basketball who want to see a much improved field of 64 teams - even if they have to expand to 96 to get it.

It does seem like the real underlying factor however may be the economy.  CBS is probably OK with the NCAA opting out as it allows them to renegotiate what appears on the surface to be a very toxic deal.  Like everything else in sports these days there is an element of financial whiplash from a soft economy.

The current CBS TV deal was heavily back loaded.  CBS was paying a much lesser  amount for the NCAA Tourney up to this year, but even at that rate the report they have to give to the NCAA each year showed the network lost money last year

Now they are scheduled to pay a much larger amount (reportedly an average of $710M per year) for the last 3 years of the contract.  This is in a very soft economy that is still built off smoke and mirrors and due to inaction by congress still has the same troubles it had when George Bush was in office.  In other words, an economy that could get a lot worse pretty quickly.

CBS probably needs a number of concessions including the deal being sweetened with more broadcastable content on new days, the tourney having deep national interest longer, and the payments divided out over a longer term in a more manageable fashion to not lose money.  They need a pathway to getting back into the black.

It seems very unlikely that the NCAA gets their money without expansion of the tourney field...unless they are willing to potentially damage their relationship with CBS and force the network to honor a deal that would have the network losing a lot of money for the next 3 years.

The existing structure doesn't likely help anyone.  It doesn't help the NCAA's future negotiations if their last network suffers a long awkward financial bleed.  That could make the next round of bids on the tourney much lower with one less bidder and as bidders could be much more weary about potentially getting stuck in a similar toxic deal with the NCAA.

Athletic programs do not like the idea of a drop in incoming revenue...ever.  It is far better for universities to see a more consistent uphill slope where they can count on annual increases.  Additionally it is reasonable to expect some decisions at BCS schools might have been already been made expecting a fairly substantial increase in basketball revenue next year.

The goal on CBS's side appears to be to have the NCAA add another round of 32 games and then to partner with another network (TBS) allowing their partner to split the costs.

The end result?  CBS potentially gets a couple more days of high ratings to use to generate revenue, probably get to push the years of $700M payouts down the road a number of years, and can use the added games to get a partner to take half of the costs.  The NCAA gets more money and get that higher rate over a longer term and theoretically the big conferences are able to continue to game the system to take home as good of a percentage of the total revenue as they do today, if not more.

It should be noted that the proposal that seems to be being pushed by the NCAA adds the games on Tuesday and Wednesday rather than on another weekend.  That could have more value to cable channels that don't generally develop weekday content.

The Haves

There are six conferences that receive automatic bids to participate in the BCS bowl games.  They are the Pac-10, the Big Ten, The ACC, The Big 12, The Big East, and the SEC.

(Technically the argument put forth by the BCS elite is that all conferences at the FBS level of competition have bought into the BCS status quo and as such are all "BCS conferences", but public perception has doggedly affixed the label "BCS conference" to those six conferences that automatically qualify for BCS bowls.  For this article I will go with this publicly accepted convention of "BCS conferences" and "non-BCS conferences" as it both clarifies the basketball argument better and will also make the discussion much easier for the average fan to follow.)

These six "BCS conferences" not only dominate the revenue in football, but also in basketball.  There are 73 member institutions in those conferences who work together to hoard as much of the collegiate sports broadcasting revenue as possible.

This alliance may be somewhat dysfunctional in football, but in basketball all 73 members are on the same page.  The current tournament is heavily stacked in their favor and there seems little momentum to change that status quo.

The BCS conferences accounted for 32 of the 65 teams in this year's field, 36 in last year's field, and 34 the year before.  Over the last 5 years, the BCS conferences have averaged just under 34 teams in the field or 52% of the field on opening day.

The Have nots

There are 32 conferences at the Division I level in basketball. The other 26 non-BCS conferences and the small number of unaffiliated independent schools at the DI level amount to the have nots.

In spite of having 275 of the NCAA's 348 basketball playing members (79%), these conferences have on average only landed 31 teams into the 65 team field over the last 5 years.

Haves vs. Have nots

Based on the last five years, the odds of making the NCAA tourney each year as a member of the BCS conferences is about 46.5%.  Yes, you read that right.  BCS schools have almost a 50% chance they will end the season in the NCAA tourney!

Non-BCS schools have about an 11.2% chance of making the tournament or a little over a 1 in 10 shot.

And it just gets more stilted from there.

I wrote an article a month ago that dealt with the NCAA Tourney money grab among other things.  A couple of sections dovetail in nicely so I have pulled them into this article.

How the money grab works

To understand the money grab, you need to understand how the revenue is dispersed. This is a bit of an oversimplification of the revenue division system (as it glosses over the fact that the money is paid out over a multi-year period to ease the amount of fluctuation of revenue) , but it does provide a basic understanding of the process.

Although there is some money pulled off the top, a big chunk of the NCAA tournament revenue is dispersed to conferences based on a "merit" system. 

Every team that makes the tourney receives one share for their conference good for 1/127th of that main chunk of the NCAA Tourney basketball revenue.  Each March Madness win gives their conference one more share of the tournament TV money. 

Most non-BCS conferences' representatives end up seeded at 12th to 16th seeds, behind the scrub bubble teams of the BCS conferences.  This low seeding immediately puts those champions up against one of the top 20 teams in the country.

The BCS scrub schools who are seated higher may be totally incapable of winning three games in a row (and if they can't do that why are they really in the field?), but they are usually more physically talented than the small conference champions and with four days can often win a first round game, eliminating some of the small conference teams that get a reasonable seed.

This combination of factors allows the BCS conferences usually take home twice as many shares in the first round and sometimes the second as maybe they should.

While in the grand scheme of things a non-BCS champion UNT and BCS also ran who made the tourney like Florida from last season may actually be similar caliber teams.  UNT was more experienced and Florida was taller and more skilled last year. 

The BCS schools want their bubble teams having the chance to win those five vs. 12, six vs. 11, seven vs. 10, and eight vs. nine match-ups rather than seeing the CAA, MVC, MAC, CUSA, or Big Sky Conference runner up matched against another non-BCS conference member.

Why? Because in a match-up between two non-BCS conference member schools, there is a 100% chance that a non-BCS conference is going to take home another of the NCAA tourney shares.  That is why the BCS conferences spend so much time insisting the mediocre teams from their conference are more deserving of a slot in the tourney than the good teams from non-BCS conferences.

The BCS conferences have gamed the system to get their 4th to 7th place schools  schools into the tourney instead of potentially more deserving candidates from non-BCS conferences.

They have gamed the system to get that BCS riff-raff seeded above top level non-BCS conference champions. 

Non-BCS conference champions and runner ups get pushed down to lower seeds, if they make the tourney at all.

This status quo has schools like UNT getting 15th seeds and served up to the elites (Kansas State this year) in round one.  This has conferences like the Sun Belt, Big Sky, MAC, CAA given a single slot and often forced out with a single share, when there is a legitimate argument that the level of play in their conference merited a better share of the basketball goldmine. 

Here is how the divisible TV  revenue from last year's tourney will be dispersed.

BCS conferences 
   
Conference shares % of money 
Big East 1612.6%
Big 1612.6%
ACC 1411.0%
Big Ten 1411.0%
SEC 107.9%
Pac-53.9%
   
total7559.1%
   
Non-BCS conferences
   
Conference shares % of money 
Mountain West 64.7%
Horizon 64.7%
Atlantic 53.9%
WCC 53.9%
Ivy 32.4%
MVC 32.4%
CUSA 21.6%
WAC 21.6%
Colonial 21.6%
MAC 21.6%
Ohio Valley 21.6%
SWAC 10.8%
America East 10.8%
Atlantic Sun 10.8%
Big Sky 10.8%
Big South 10.8%
Big West 10.8%
MAAC 10.8%
MEAC 10.8%
Northeast 10.8%
Patriot 10.8%
Southern 10.8%
Southland 10.8%
Summit 10.8%
Sun Belt10.8%
   
Total5240.9%

The only way conferences like those that have gotten a lot better at basketball will see an appropriate opportunity to earn multiple shares is if they band together today to leverage their numbers to steer the tournament towards reform.

The TV networks and the BCS schools need an expanded tourney to keep the flow of golden eggs coming. They need the non-BCS schools to go along with the idea.  The non-BCS schools have not had this kind of leverage to bring about this potential kind of change in the last few decades.

(You can read more about Tournament revenue dispersal here.)

The current proposal

Currently it appears that the NCAA is looking at a proposal that would add 32 more teams but would squeeze that added round in to the current time span, completing the tourney in 3 weeks.   They appear ready to do this by adding a 3rd set of games to be played on Tuesday and Wednesday in the second week.  This is leading to a lot of academic backlash as players would potentially miss a week of school, but it still appears to be the plan.

Rivals theorized what the field would look like.  That analysis should give the non-BCS conferences a real reason to rally together. It had 45 of the 96 bids going to BCS conferences (ie. 62% of their membership getting in) and 51 bids going to the non-BCS schools (just under 19%). 

On the surface, that looks like a much better shake, but what Rivals suggests would happen is that former basketball power conferences CUSA and the Atlantic 10 would essentially join the haves consuming 13 of those 51 non-BCS slots, leaving the remaining 24 conferences and the independents (249 schools) to share those remaining 38 slots (odds of making the tourney = 15%).

Plus keep in mind that is a projection that had the Pac-10 only getting 3 teams into the field.  The more likely numbers would have the BCS with at least 3 more teams in  (66% of their membership) and probably 35 teams from the lower 24 conferences and the independents (14% odds of making the tourney).

Those 24 conferences and the independents landed 28 teams in the field this year (11%) with a 64 team field, so the net gain for them of 7 additional teams is a pretty crappy deal for them.

"Ideal" scenarios for the Non-BCS conferences

A popular idea with most of the non-BCS conferences is to allow the conference champion and the tournament champions of each conference into the tournament

Even though some influential BCS Conference people like Duke Coach Mike Kryzewski favor this proposal, it seems unlikely to be accepted.

The idea would fill many of the slots with non-BCS schools.  The 26 non-BCS conferences would have guaranteed slots that could land as many as 52 teams into the 96 team field.  With the large handful of at large bids in a 96 team field that number could legitimately hit the high 50's, leaving the BCS schools with 36-40 bids.

That idea will probably never fly because the BCS schools (and the fans and TV networks) see no reason to make allowances to potentially expand the number of losing teams from less competitive conferences that earn an opportunity to play in the NCAA Tourney.  

The BCS schools have a winning argument against this setup and that will allow them to protect the 45-50+ bid neighborhood they probably hope to end up with.

The BCS schools rightly feel that they have already made allowances that give bad conferences the right to prop up ill conceived and poorly supported conference tournaments by allowing non-BCS conferences to send a dog school that scores an upset or two to their conference tourney instead of those non-BCS conferences' more deserving regular season champion.

I cannot conceive of a scenario that would have the principals previously mentioned pushing to change that from an either/or option for a conference.

Non-BCS conferences need to put their best foot forward... like the Ivy League.

It is not enough to complain about a lack of opportunity to get into the NCAA tourney and potentially earn additional shares.

The non-BCS conferences arguments along those lines are largely compromised when they aren't sending their strongest teams with the automatic bids they already possess.

It is entirely self-defeating for most of the non-BCS conferences to waste their bid on a tourney winner instead of their conference champion on a semi-regular basis.  That policy needs to end.  They need to start sending their best team.

The Ivy league sends their regular season champion every year.  This year Cornell earned the Ivy league three shares. 

The entire concept of post season conferences has debatable merit at the low end of Division I. 

The Ivy League has opted not even to play a post-season tourney.

Non-BCS conference tournaments pale in comparison to BCS conferences' tournaments.  Many any barely turn profits. 

The BCS conferences regularly draw over 11,000 fans per game to their post season tourneys. Only 12 of the 26 non-BCS conferences averaged over 4000 fans in attendance per game at their post season tourneys.

Conferences like the NEC, the SWAC, the Southland, the Patroit, the Big South, the Big West, the Atlantic Sun, the America East, the Big Sky, the So-Con, the Ohio Valley, the Sun Belt, the Summit, and the Horizon should seriously weigh the merits of continuing to play conference tournaments.  

There are several options that non-BCS conferences could investigate to put themselves in a better situation.

If conferences want to keep their tournaments to attempt to grow fan enthusiasm, maybe they should eliminate the conference champion from the field.  Eliminating a single team from the field would not devastate attendance, and if there is no automatic tourney bid for the conference tournament winner, it seems unlikely that such an action could be blocked, or if it was that such a move would stand up to legal scrutiny.

A move like this would increase the odds of the runner up winning the conference tournament. That could increase their odds of making the NCAA tournament as an at large.

If conferences decide to stop having tournaments they could expand on the "bracket busters" games idea.

So what should the non-BCS schools be seeking after they solve this issues that puts them on the wrong side of public sentiment?  What changes should they demand for going along with the opt out, sparing CBS, and agreeing to an expanded field?

Acceptable setups and principles the non-BCS schools should pursue

There are five issues that the non-BCS schools should try to address.

1) They don't get enough bids. 

This seems a difficult issue on which to gain much traction as the BCS Conferences are going to be pretty firm about wanting a system in place that yields 45-50+ bids for BCS schools with almost all of the slots in the top 32 being filled by BCS schools.

Many if not most non-BCS conferences can usually scrape up two teams that have 20+ wins and could legitimately put up a good fight against most teams in the NCAA tourney.  Some of them can put together 3-7 each year.  The non-BCS Conferences can put together 65-75 arguably deserving candidates for a 96 team field.

I think the best the non-Conference schools could hope for is capping the BCS schools at a guarantee of at least 48 schools, but no more than 50, in the tourney each year in exchange for other concessions.  I might open with trying to trade a high number guaranteed each year for other concessions.

But even that may be too difficult because the non-BCS schools would be taking the BCS schools on head on with little public support.  The public thinks the BCS schools are better after all.  A less direct approach with more public support might be the way to attack this problem.

2) No schools should make the tourney unless they fit a certain minimum standards.

This would be the way to achieve goal one without having to "give something back" to the BCS schools.  The biggest problem purists have with expansion amounts to an expectation that teams with losing records will be admitted to the tourney right and left.

Taking a stance as protectors of the integrity of the tournament would likely be a winning position for the non-BCS schools.

Losing non-BCS schools aren't going to be invited in as at-large teams.  Any losing schools will be from BCS conferences.

So really the fans would back the non-BCS schools against BCS schools if they pushed for minimum standards for admission to the tourney that would cap losing BCS schools from getting in.

I think insisting that any at-large school win 2/3 of their games and finish over .500 in conference would have wide fan support and could be rammed into the rules powered by strong public sentiment... if non-BCS schools were willing to stop sending crappy tournament winners.

If non-BCS schools are not willing to do that, the best they might  achieve is that schools must have winning records overall.  Obviously it is in non-BCS schools best interest to concede the admission for tournament winners issue and push for higher standards as it frees more spots for non-BCS schools who can actually win a tourney game.

Laying out sensible bottom line guidelines for team selection is a battle non-BCS schools should be fighting.

3) Non-BCS schools should continue to earn the same NCAA Tourney shares as BCS schools for making the tournament.

The system is set up now with 127 shares (126+1 for team 65).  If you expand the field to 96 instead of 65, you add another 31 teams ( presumably all with a share for making the tournament). 

If the games to get to a 64 team field are all treated as "play in games" using the existing convention with no share awarded to those winners, that would be  (127+ 31 = ) 158 shares.

That potentially would reduce the share for non-BCS conferences who only get one school in from 0.79% to 0.63% of the total revenue. 

If the BCS revenue does not increase that much, it could work out to be a cut in the money received by the single representative non-BCS conferences.

Now with 32 winners in the first round, there could be movement to give those 32 winners a share, increasing the share total to 190 shares, further reducing the payout to the one and done conferences to 1/190th or 0.53% of total divided revenue.

With the top 32 teams in America earning first round byes, that begs the question will those teams earning a bye continue to only get 1 share automatically for making the tourney?  In that scenario, a non-BCS team like Tulsa who might be seeded between 33-96 could earn 5 shares in a run to the Final Four- one more than a top 32 BCS conference team like Michigan State that did the same.

It is difficult to see the BCS conferences (who had 24 of the top 32 teams last year) agreeing to that kind of arrangement that would at least partially punish the BCS schools for doing well.

Will The BCS conferences insist seeds 33-96 only earn "half shares" for making the tournament? 

Another possibility is that the BCS conferences could insist the pool be divided into 222 shares with teams with byes getting two shares for being in the top 32 - one for making the tournament and one "moving on" to the second round, cutting the one and done conferences's shares to 0.45% of total revenue.

The BCS Conferences will argue the better teams should pick up added bonus shares or schools 33-96 should get half shares, but both scenarios clearly stilt the payouts even farther in the BCS Conferences' favor. 

If the non-BCS conferences aren't organized, the bottom tier non-BCS conferences like the Sun Belt, Southland, and SWAC could find that rather than taking home 1/127th of the pool after a rigged bad match-up like they are today, they may be taking home 1/222th of the money for their one and done.

I would argue that the best revenue division scheme to chose would be setting the first round as a play in round with no reward for winning.  That keeps the share total at 158 and gives the best possible payout to 1 and done conferences. 

4) The Great West should be grandfathered in to get an automatic tourney bid today.

This may seem like a waste of leverage, but really it isn't. This entire movement should be about equal opportunity for non-BCS members.  How can you have that when one conference doesn't have an automatic bid to the tourney?

If you are going to push for fair treatment, it makes a lot of sense to not look hypocritical. 

Plus there are more practical reasons. The growth of Division I  increases the leverage of the non-BCS block.

If the Great West agreed to admit any school in Division I that needed a home for basketball membership (as well as any school they want to invite) it would ease stress at a lot of universities and open the door to needed membership increases, especially in the West where it could be a financial benefit to regionally dispersed western members.

The Great West basketball could be the conference equivalent of a catchall mailbox ensuring that everyone in DI gets a fair shake and new members have a home from which to try to grow into a strong DI member.

5) Non-BCS champions should be seeded higher than run of the mill BCS bubble teams.

Finally, and most perhaps most importantly, the non-BCS schools should push for a change in the seeding methodology that would yield better seedings for non-BCS conference champions.  Last season only 8 of the non-BCS schools were seeded 8th or higher and that was a 5 year high. (Six is the average over the last five years.)

This amounts to theft.

It is pretty clear that schools like Cornell, Murray State, and Saint Mary's that went on runs were seated too low and I'd argue that a lot of conference champions like UNT, Robert Morris, Sam Houston State, and others that had to play 2 or 3 seeds in the tournament's first day were also seeded too low.  And that happens every year.

I would push for the 8 top rated non-BCS conference champions to be guaranteed an 8th seed or higher and a first round bye.

Most years that would be the champions of the MWC, A-10, CUSA, WAC, WCC, CAA, MAC, & Horizon.  Those schools are often the architects of the nine eight, 10 7, 11 six, and 12 five upsets.

No college basketball fan disputes that year in and year out the best team from those conferences can beat the 4th or 5th seed from a BCS conference in the tournament, so why not formalize it and finally seed these teams correctly?

Even the small conference champions should be given a lot more respect.  The idea that even in 96 team tourney the Sun Belt's regular season AND tournament champion might be seeded as the 91st team in the tourney as they were in the Rival mock-up should infuriate the small conferences. 

There is no reason a sub 20 win 6th place BCS dog should be seeded over a twice proven conference champion.  None.

Non-BCS conferences need to fight for this.

There are very compelling arguments there to curry public and peer support.

Making it happen.  Forming alliances

One of the key groups pushing this thing are the coaches at BCS conferences at the middle to the bottom of the conference.  These guys want to see a reward for playing in a tough conference.  Their thought is that if the Tourney expands to 96, at least 18 of those 32 new slots will go to BCS conference schools allowing a coach who wins as few as 5-6 games in a BCS conference the ability to still make the tourney as an at- large team and leverage that bid to keep his job.

The argument by guys like Minnesota's Tubby Smith is that it will keep more coaches in general employed, but the reality is that non-BCS schools don't generally fire their coaches after they win 20 games and get passed over by the NCAA tournament selection committee. 

The NIT could potentially be put out of business by this expansion.  The NIT may be a shell of it's former self, but it still has a lot of influential advocates who are greatly disturbed by the idea that the NCAA may put the NIT out of business.  The NIT could be a good partner. 

The NIT has a number of advocates in the non-BCS ranks like Vermont Coach Mike Lonergan who said, "The worst thing for our level would be if they expand it, don't help us at all and then they take the NIT away... That would really hurt us."

The question with the NIT, is how much juice do they have?

TV networks could be the best ally for the non-BCS schools.  The non-BCS schools would do a lot better if TV had a larger say in the selection process.  TV is not going to be thrilled with a tournament that just looks like part 2 of the Pac-10 or Big 12 tournament.

TV will advocate for the non-BCS giant killer with their unflappable clutch star. It would be better for the non-BCS schools if TV had a big influence on team selection.

Likewise the non-BCS schools could be a powerful alliance pushing from within the NCAA to put the TV networks in a better situation.

Debunking the Watered down tourney argument

AM New York did a nice story covering the percentage of teams in the playoffs.  Simply put, even with 96 teams making the playoffs, the NCAA would still see a lower percentage of it's membership making the playoff field (27.7%) than the NFL, NBA, or NHL and would only be slightly higher than MLB. 

Their field is still going to almost exclusively be made of teams that won over 20 games (the likely exception being the BCS dog schools who find their way in based on strength of schedule overcorrection).

Winning 20 games in college equates to winning about 2/3's of your games.  Would we consider that insufficient in any other sport?

The addition of at least 10-15 non-BCS schools greatly increases the odds that more teams built to go on tournament runs will make the tournament.  Today, many of those schools are squeezed out by BCS conference also-rans.  

There is an element of the argument that frankly borders on the asinine.  The idea being that by letting the selection committee arbitrarily chose 64 teams you will end up with a better field of 64 than if 64 bubble schools played each other for the last 32 slots.

Conventional wisdom about BCS teams being inherently better is out of date

In the past, the argument that fans have put forth for BCS conferences to continue to receive the majority of the tournament bids has been based on the fact that those schools have better talents and therefore better teams.

That simply isn't true anymore.

The NBA has crippled the high end of college basketball. 

It was long understood that big men developed slowly. NBA scouts expected to draft a big guy after 4-5 years of college and they might get a player after 2-3 years in the pros.

Big men aren't developed in college anymore. Athletic big men taller than 6'10" still sign with BCS schools but rarely stay around long enough to develop.

While a school like UNT may have real difficulties landing good players taller than 6'8", the BCS schools can't keep players who are any taller than that.

Non-BCS schools don't have to worry about truly dominant big men who they cannot match up against.  Now the difference is more talent differentials at guard.

This allows an experienced and very solidly built non-BCS school that plays strong defense to make a deep run into the NCAA tourney.

What's more, a non-BCS school that does all those things and has one great talent - like 2008's Davidson team lead by Stephon Curry - has a real shot to make a deep run because often their star is a better closer than most BCS school's stars.

The "Tournament Purists" don't understand that as the non-BCS schools have less star talent they are more reliant on a star player to carry the team every night.  The non-BCS star and his team are far most used to relying on the star to win.

If you expand to 96 you will have at least 3 more non-BCS teams with the right mix of confidence, good defense, good chemistry, a go to star player, and lots of experience who can win 3-4 games in the tourney.  Purists either don't understand the point or refuse to acknowledge it.

Conferences like the WCC, the MWC, the Horizon, and the MAC, are just as capable as the longtime mid-major Atlantic 10 of putting multiple schools into the tourney that have a real shot at deep runs.

Look at Ohio this year.  They beat Georgetown soundly.  Ohio was a run of the mill MAC team.  They went 7-9 in the MAC.  The powers of the MAC this year, 24-10 Kent State and 24-11 Akron didn't even make the tourney!

Look at 2009.  Was there any reason Curry's Davidson team or Patty Mills' St. Mary's team would not have had deep runs in the NCAA tourney?  Both were thrilling, deserving non-BCS teams that were passed over for ho-hum BCS bubble teams.  In a 96 team field both are in.

There are a lot of teams in the non-BCS Conferences who were more than capable of beating a good portion of this year's field.  A 96 team field fixes a lot of that.

Don't buy it?  Check out some of the non-BCS teams that were passed over last year that might have made the field in a 96 team bracket.

The non-BCS bubble schools

There were 43 non-BCS schools who won over 20 games last year and didn't make the NCAA Tournament.  It is ridiculous to me that a team can go 15-3 in conference and not make the post-season tourney.  (To be fair, much of that is due to less respected conferences giving their slots to tourney winners, but still.)

Team Conference record Overall Conference finish
Stony Brook (13-3) 22-10 (AEC #1 seed)
Boston University (11-5) 21-14 (AEC #3t seed)
Saint Louis (11-5) 23-13 (A10 #4 seed)
Rhode Island (9-7) 26-10 (A10 #5t seed)
Dayton (8-8) 25-12 (A10 #7 seed)
Weber State (13-3) 20-11 (Big Sky #1 seed)
Northern Colorado (12-4) 25-8 (Big Sky #2 seed)
Coastal Carolina (15-3) 28-7 (Big South #1 seed)
Pacific (12-4) 23-12 (Big West #2 seed)
Northeastern (14-4) 20-13 (CAA #2 seed)
William & Mary (12-6) 22-11 (CAA #3 seed)
Virginia Commonwealth (11-7) 27-9 (CAA #5 seed)
Memphis (13-3) 24-10 (CUSA #2 seed)
UAB (11-5) 25-9 (CUSA #3 seed)
Marshall (11-5) 24-10 (CUSA #4 seed)
Tulsa (10-6) 23-12 (CUSA #5 seed)
Southern Miss (8-8) 20-14 (CUSA #6 seed)
South Dakota (11-1) 22-10 (GW #1 seed)
Wright State (12-6) 20-12 (Hor #2 seed)
Green Bay (11-7) 22-13 (Hor #3 seed)
Milwaukee (10-8) 20-14 (Hor #4 seed)
Princeton (11-3) 22-9 (Ivy #2 seed)
Harvard (10-4) 21-8 (Ivy #3 seed)
Fairfield (13-5) 23-11 (MAAC #2 seed)
Iona (12-6) 21-10 (MAAC #3 seed)
Kent State (13-3) 24-10 (MAC #1 Seed)
Akron (12-4) 24-11  (MAC #2 Seed)
Wichita State (12-6) 25-10 (MVC #2 Seed)
Illinois State (11-7) 22-11 (MVC #3 Seed)
Quinnipiac (15-3) 23-10 (NEC #1t seed)
Morehead State (15-3) 24-11 (OVC #2 seed)
Eastern Kentucky (11-7) 20-13 (OVC #3t seed)
Stephen F. Austin (11-5) 23-9 (Southland #2 team)
Charleston (14-4) 22-12 (Socon #2 team)
Appalachian State (13-5) 24-13 (Socon #3 team)
Western Carolina (11-7) 22-12 (Socon #4 team)
IUPUI (15-3) 25-11 (summit #2 seed)
Oral Roberts (13-5) 20-13 (summit #3 seed)
Troy (13-5) 20-13 (Sun Belt #1t seed)
Western Kentucky (12-6) 21-13 (Sun Belt #4 seed)
Portland (10-4) 21-11 (WCC #3 Seed)
Nevada (11-5) 21-13 (WAC #2t Seed)
Louisiana Tech (9-7) 24-11 (WAC #4 Seed)

This number of schools is excluded 20 win non-BCS schools is fairly typical.  The idea that we would have lesser tournament by including more of these schools is just totally wrong.

For years BCS advocates have hid behind the strength of schedule argument. How can anyone credit schools for just being there over schools who consistently excelled against their competition?  It is mind boggling.

After watching Butler cruise to the championship game is anyone really willing to stake their reputation on the fact that no other Horizon teams deserved to make the field?  After years of Butler making runs, why are more Horizon schools still not invited?  It seems pretty clear that someone is hardening Butler for Tournament play.

After watching Northern Iowa knock off overall #1 Kansas how can anyone defend the fact that no other Missouri Valley schools made the field?

Hell, the Ivy League sucks, but after watching Cornell play, is anyone even 100% sure that that no other Ivy league schools could have won a first round game?!?

The list goes on and on.

Contrary to public opinion, a lot of these non-BCS conferences play a very competitive in-conference basketball schedule.

Purists are willingly disconnecting themselves from reality to argue that an expanded field would be a weaker one.  The better non-BCS schools that don't get in today would knock off more of the scrub BCS schools early, making later rounds uniformly more dangerous and leading to an NCAA tourney with an extension of top quality play.

The best argument against 96

The best argument I have heard against 96 is that it would make filling out a bracket way too complex for most basketball fans.  The fans who refused to fill it out would have no stake in watching the tournament hurting TV numbers.

I think there is a lot to this argument.

While I am an advocate of the expansion to 96, I think the NCAA's plan looks like it may stink.

If it was my call, the NCAA would work a deal with the NIT and the NIT would become the Tournament's "losers' bracket".

The NCAA would award their 96 bids.  32 teams would have a week 1 bye.  The next 64 teams would be the NIT field.

The first round would be played from Thursday through Sunday.  The losers would be the NIT field which would play their next games on Monday and Tuesday moving right into the NIT format.

The winners would be immediately seeded into the NCAA Tourney's 64 team bracket right after the final game on Sunday and the bracket would be released at that point.

The first round of the NIT would become a "play-in" round for the NCAA Tournament.

This would enhance the odds of people doing the bracket by giving them a 64 team field with no early games, a full 3 days to fill it out, and a lot greater insight into teams 33-64.

The NIT would survive and actually prosper in this arrangement as they'd be propped up by each team receiving a tourney share.  The dialogue about their champion would not longer be, " Did the tournament selection committee screw them with an awful first round match-up?"

It isn't ideal, but it is very workable.

But none of this is likely

The non-BCS schools rarely work together to achieve major change.

I have touched on the worst case scenarios for the non-BCS schools - losing the NIT,  having the lion's share of their teams seeded in the 65-96 range and being forced to eliminate themselves before the big schools start playing, getting half-shares for making the tourney, having to play 5 games in 11 days while the elite teams of the BCS only have to play 4.

I think all of these things are possible if not likely.

But I do think a much brighter future could be ahead for the non-BCS schools if they move together quickly with purpose now.  They can't get everything they want, but maybe they could get some of it if they took action now.

Say What? Could Memphis Win The National Championship Next Season?

Mar 30, 2010

The Memphis Tigers finished 24-10 overall this year. That may seem to some like a successful season, but the Tigers missed the NCAA tournament, went to the N.I.T, but got eliminated by Ole Miss. Now the focus for the Tigers is on next season. The Tigers are most likely to go into the next season with the #1 recruiting class, which comes as a surprise to some since John Calapari departed for Kentucky.

But young coach Josh Pastner has done an excellent job in recruiting and has gotten some young players that could turn Memphis into a NCAA powerhouse once again. But could Memphis win the National title? It's definitely not impossible, with the recruiting class that they are bringing in, they could easily be the most talented team in the country next season.

If the Tigers are to be a legitimate title contenders, Elliot Williams there leading scorer must come back. He will bring the experience that Memphis would need. Experience would certainly be a key in the tournament, just ask Kentucky. If the Kentucky Wildcats brought back Jodie Meeks they would be in the Final Four right now.

Elliot Williams would also benefit from coming back. The sophomore led the Tigers in scoring this season. Despite averaging 18 points per game he still needs to improve more on the offensive end of the ball. He did improve his 3 point shooting  from last season but I still was not impressed with the 36% shooting from downtown. He really needs to improve his free throw shooting  he shot 75% from the free throw line which in my opinion is not good at all for a guard, if you want to be a starting shooting guard in the NBA you must be a good free throw shooter.

Williams is a good, but not great lock down defender. In some games I saw he struggled a little defensively. But I think he can improve if he comes back for another year.

It would be hard not to pick the Tigers as favorites for national championship. But they are not a guarantee. You have to play the games first. You can have a bunch of talent on your squad but you have coach them up as well. They have to stay out of trouble, they have to get along. If those things don't happen you can forget about the tournament much less a national championship.

If you wanna see more of my articles on the NBA & College Hoops and more you can click on this link http://bleacherreport.com/users/217027-jonathan-maurer  that will send you straight to my profile or you can look me up at hoops4life.com/en

Virginia High School Basketball: Cougars Clipped By Spartans in Semis

Mar 29, 2010

Pulaski plays Blacksburg for third place on Thursday

By CODY DALTON
cody@southwesttimes.com



SALEM – The Lady Cougar basketball team’s quest to repeat as River Ridge District Tournament Champions came up short on Tuesday, when they lost to top-seeded Salem, 49-29, on the road. The Cougars now meet Blacksburg on Thursday for third place.

“Salem is great team and they played well tonight,” said Cougars coach Jason Grubb. “Our kids played hard, but we just couldn’t find the bucket enough. Shooting percentage was way down. We were 22 percent overall, 38 percent from the free throw line, and 14 percent from the three-point line. We were rusty. So tomorrow, we are going to get out, practice, and do some shooting to get ready for our next game.”

In the first half, it was a lack of shooting accuracy by both teams that made it extremely low scoring. Pulaski’s Elizabeth Thacker would score the opening basket of the game, but Salem would answer with seven consecutive points to take an early lead.

The Spartans would lead 10-6 after the low scoring first quarter.
The pace of the game was being dictated by the Cougars, who deviated from a high octane offense and went to a set offensive attack. That created many fouls and allowed free throw opportunities for Pulaski.

Those free chances would evade the Cougars though in the first half, as they were just 3-for-11 from the charity stripe. However, the Salem margin was just a manageable six points, 18-12, at halftime.

“We came out and played well in the first half,” Grubb said. “It was a little bit of a sloppy game both ways as far as scoring goes. We didn’t have a whole lot of success scoring around the rim and neither did they. At halftime, we were down by six. We felt good about that in the locker room. We weren’t celebrating, but we felt like we were in position to make a run at them."

However, the Spartans would quickly take charge of the game offensively. Bre Kawa connected on a three-pointer to open the quarter and Alexius Patterson converted on a three-point play after being fouled on a lay up attempt.

Pulaski would continue to push throughout the third quarter and pulled to within nine points after sophomore Daisy Ball created her own three point play opportunity. The Spartans still extended their advantage in the quarter though and led 34-23.

Salem would start out the fourth quarter with five out of the first six scores. All five of those scores were from different Salem players as well. While their offense was scoring, the Spartan defense was doing their job as well, as they forced 25 Cougar turnovers in the game, many of which led to scores. Pulaski also shot just 22.7 percent from the field in the game. That helped Salem advance to the Friday’s championship game with the victory.

“In the second half, we played hard, but didn’t make our shots and they had some success behind the arc, which extended our defense out a little bit,” Grubb said. “It was a very physical game. I think the physicality kept us from finishing our shots a little bit.”

Daisy Ball led the Cougars with nine points and 10 rebounds, with eight of those rebounds being offensive. Raiven Patterson and Kasey Holcomb both added five points each for Pulaski.

The Cougars now face Blacksburg High School in the third place game before opening up action in the Region IV playoffs. The Bruins were edged by Hidden Valley, 45-39, in the other district semi-final.

“All we can do is put it behind us and look forward to Blacksburg,” Grubb said. “We have a consolation game against Blacksburg on Thursday. I think we are pretty confident we can go out and get a victory against Blacksburg and get ready for a run at regionals.”

Virginia High School Basketball: Lady Cougars Win Tourney Opener, Face Salem

Mar 29, 2010

Win over Knights gives Pulaski a Region IV berth

By CODY DALTON
cody@southwesttimes.com

DUBLIN – The Lady Cougar basketball team opened defense of their River Ridge District Tournament Championship on Monday with a convincing 45-28 victory over Cave Spring. The win clinches a berth in the Region IV playoffs for Pulaski.

“Our kids were a little more relaxed than they should have been,” said Cougars coach Jason Grubb. “Cave Spring played some inspired basketball. Our kids stepped up to the challenge and were aggressive. They were aggressive offensively and defensively. We pulled out the victory.”

Pulaski (10-13, 4-6) jumped out quickly to a 13-1 lead in the first quarter. Kasey Holcomb scored five points and Raiven Patterson added four points in the run. That allowed the Cougars to garner a 16-4 lead after the first.

Cave Spring (2-20, 0-10) would climb back in the second quarter and pulled to within nine points of the Cougar lead, but Pulaski would keep their 12 point lead in tact. It was 25-13 in favor of the Cougars at halftime.

Once again, the Cougars maintained momentum in the third quarter and stretched their lead all the way to 18 points at the early part of the quarter thanks to three combined baskets by Patterson and Sydney Anderson combined. Once again, Pulaski would hold on to a 12-point lead for the third consecutive quarter.

Cave Spring would attempt to pull back in the game, but shot just 23 percent from the field in the game. That cold shooting combined with 36 points in the paint by Pulaski doomed them in the game.

Raiven Patterson led the Cougars with 10 points. Kasey Holcomb added nine points and five assists. The Cougars also had key post play from Brittany Lawson and Daisy Ball. Lawson scored seven points and grabbed five rebounds, while Ball scored seven points and grabbed five rebounds.

The Cougars now travel tonight to take on River Ridge top seed Salem at 6 p.m. with a trip to the tournament championship game at Roanoke College on Wednesday on the line. The Spartans were off last night and had a first round bye. Grubb sees their break from action as a potential disadvantage for them and a positive for his team.

“Hopefully, this is one of those games that will get the rust out,” Grubb said. “I think it did. As crazy as the weather has been, we’ve had some many games rescheduled, and postponed and some many practices cancelled, it is easy for kids to lose their sharpness.

“I would like to think this was kind of a warm up game for the game tomorrow night. Salem didn’t play tonight. Hopefully we’ll come out crisp against them and be able to get a big victory on our way to the district championship game.”