Category: 2018 Blog

  • Is One and Done really bad for college basketball

    There are so many stories – including conference commissioners coming out and saying that the NCAA needs to put in ridiculous requirements saying that players can’t go to the NBA Draft for multiple years if they come to play college ball.  But how bad are one and done players ruining the game.

    So, I went to ESPN’s NBA Draft site to see who are the top 25 college freshman – if they declare for the draft (some will obviously come back).

    You will notice a really interesting thing from the list.  None of the top 25 college freshman go to school at Villanova, Kansas, Michigan or Loyola-Chicago.  That’s right – none!

    If Duke had beat Kansas, 4 of them would have been playing since the Blue Devils have Marvin Bagley III (2nd), Wendell Carter Jr (10th), Trevon Duval (14th), and Gary Trent (24th).  But none of those talented freshman could seem to stop Malik Newman from scoring 32 points.

    Kentucky had 6 of the top 25 freshmen, and the best they could do was losing in the Sweet 16 to a Kansas State team seeded worse than them.   Not that making the Sweet 16 is bad, but you would think that a team that has two of the top 15 players in the country (and two others who would be drafted according to the rankings) would be able to beat a team that has no one in the top 60.

    All in all, 15 teams had a top 25 freshman (well 24, one player Mitchell Robinson apparently agreed to play at Western Kentucky and then never went to WKU – but I don’t know much about this story….)

    • 2 had no postseason (Dayton and UNLV)
    • 1 lost in the NIT (Oregon)
    • 7 lost in the first round of the NCAAs (Arizona, Arkansas, Miami, Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas, and Virginia Tech)
    • 2 lost in the second round (Michigan St and Alabama)
    • 2 lost in the Sweet 16 (Kentucky and Syracuse)
    • 1 lost in the Elite 8 (Duke)

    So, 20% of the teams with potential one and dones didn’t even make the tournament, and 67% of the teams with potential one and dones couldn’t get past their first round opponent.  And none of the teams with this amazing NBA talent on their team made the Final Four.

    So, if the teams that have talent that sticks around in college for a few years are the ones playing for the championship, how is it again that the one and dones are ruining the game.

    The real problem for college basketball is if these kids are likely one and done, their chances of taking money and ruining the reputation of their coaches is more likely.  The only thing that one and done players appear to be ruining is the naive reputation of amateurism in college basketball.  I normally side with the NCAA on how players shouldn’t be paid – they are already getting paid with a free education.  But this request from the NCAA that forces student-athletes to stay at the university for multiple years ends that.  If an athlete is good enough to make it to the professional level, the NCAA has no right to restrict that.

     

  • Stephen A Smith is wrong on Cinderella

    There is a video out there on ESPN where Stephen A Smith says that he doesn’t want to see Cinderella in the Championship game.  To be fair, he was not disrespectful in any way against Loyola – he said they had a great season and their Cinderella run is a nice story.  But he did say that while Cinderella is nice in the early rounds he wants to see the top 2 teams in the Championship game, and between Loyola-Chicago and Michigan, he wants to see the Wolverines because Michigan is clearly the better team.

    But here is a thing to think about.  Loyola-Chicago started off the season 9-1, with their only loss being a road game to Boise State (the runner-up in the Mountain West).  Their ninth win was an important one – this was the one that they went on the road and beat Florida.  It was also important because they lost Clayton Custer in that game to an ankle injury.

    In the next five games, the Ramblers would lose three of them.   Since Custer returned to action in their road game against Northern Iowa, Loyola-Chicago has won 21 of their next 22 games, with their only loss being a 2 point loss on the road to Bradley.  Of course, in those wins includes one against Miami FL from the ACC, Tennessee (the SEC regular season co-champion), Nevada (the Mountain West regular season champion), and Kansas State from the Big 12.

    This team has gone 30-2 in games where their star guard has played.  I totally understand that they are in a smaller conference.   I totally understand that Michigan is also a very hot basketball team at the moment.  Being from the Big 10, I even think that Michigan probably wins this game.  But there is a reason they play the games.  If basketball was played on paper, we wouldn’t have needed to have a tournament – we could do what the BCS used to do for college football and have Virginia play Villanova for the championship (and we would be listening to experts complaining about why Kansas, Xavier, North Carolina or Duke deserved to play in the game instead of Villanova).

    People anchor to rankings and seedings.   Loyola is an 11 seed – the Selection Committee had them ranked as the 46th team in the tournament.  But this is because the mid-majors don’t get the chance to play anyone.  We give the argument all the time that if the Big 10 or ACC team played in the Missouri Valley Conference, they would probably be better than 15-3, so lets turn the argument.  If Oklahoma (ranked 40th) had to play a 5 game schedule, with a road game against Florida followed by neutral court games against Miami, Tennessee, Nevada and Kansas State, how many of us believe they would go 5-0 (by the way, in case this influences your decision, the Sooners were 3-11 away from their home court this year).

    Florida beat Gonzaga (15) and Cincinnati (8) on neutral courts and Kentucky (17) and Auburn (13) at home.  Tennessee beat Purdue (7) on a neutral court in November (not to mention Kentucky on the road).   So, there are 5 teams the committee ranked in the top 17 that didn’t go undefeated against that schedule (and they didn’t even play all 5 games).  This Loyola team is more comparable to those top teams than they are to ones that were 10 and 11 seeds like Oklahoma or Arizona State.   But because only one of those games happened before the tournament, the committee doesn’t give the small conference team the benefit of the doubt – they must have simply ran up a bunch of victories against poor teams.

    If Loyola beats Michigan on Saturday, they will still be Cinderella – because they are an 11 seed from the Missouri Valley Conference.   But to say that they aren’t one of the top two teams is unfair.   If a team wins 31 of 33 games, including games against the SEC co-champion and Big 10 tournament champion, there is no one who should say that team isn’t one of the best.   If Loyola-Chicago beats Michigan and gets to the championship game, we should all be excited about having the chance to watch history as a mid-major champion demonstrates that they are truly one of the best teams in basketball – not feel cheated because we are not watching the best teams play.  Cinderella might have started off in rags, but she ends up being a princess because she was the best of all who came to the dance.

  • The Unofficial Scenarios are Here!!!!

    As always, these links produce unofficial outcomes.  But it is always fun to look ahead – assuming I didn’t make any mistakes, here are the people with the most riding on the Final Four!

    First of all, lets congratulate Christy Lindvall.  She appears to be the winner of the Upset Pool.  It is rare to have completely wrapped up one of the pools before the Final Four is even played – but Christy looks like she has done it.  Great job, Christy!!!!!!

    Now, for the Standard Pool and Second Chance Pool.

    Kansas beats Loyola-Chicago – William England (Standard) / David Ogle (Second)

    Kansas beats Michigan – Christy Lindvall (Standard) / David Ogle (Second)

    Loyola-Chicago beats Kansas – Tanmay Gautam (Standard) / David Ogle (Second)

    Loyola-Chicago beats Villanova – Haden Hopkins (Standard) / Matt Richter and Dan Fischer (Second)

    Michigan beats Kansas – Tanmay Guatam (Standard) / Matt Richter (Second)

    Michigan beats Villanova – Matt Richter (Standard) / Matt Richter (Second)

    Villanova beats Loyola-Chicago – Haden Hopkins (Standard) / Dan Fischer (Second)

    Villanova beats Michigan – Haden Hopkins (Standard) / Dan Fischer (Second)

     

    Check the links out to see what teams you should be rooting for if you still have a chance to make it on the leaderboard.   Good luck to everyone!!!!

  • Congratulations to our Leaders!

    At this very critical time of the Stomp the Lunatic Pool, our leader is Tanmay Gautam.  In this crazy tournament, he managed to get 3 of the 4 Final Four teams correct, only missing on Cinderella (like every single one of us did).  That gives Tanmay 830 points and the lead with only 3 games remaining.  Of course, those 3 games are worth so many points that the lead could change hands quickly, but Tanmay is in the wonderful position that if Michigan beats Kansas as he predicted, he will be the 2018 Stomp the Lunatic Champion.

    Following Tanmay is Haden, just 30 points behind in 2nd place.  Then, William England is in third at 780, Andrew Braslow is in fourth at 760, Stephen Harrell and Matt Richter are tied for fifth at 750, Jen Miller and Christy Lindvall are tied for 7th at 720, and Sam Luy and William England’s second picks round out the top 10 at 710 points.

    In the Upset Pool, I don’t think anyone can catch Christy Lindvall.   Christy correctly got both Loyola and Syracuse to the Sweet 16, and then correctly picked Michigan to the Final 4 (along with Kansas) – so she has 276 points.  Triona Weeks is in second place with 259 points, Alex Simon is in third at 236 points, Edward Zhang is at 222 in fourth, and Andrew Braslow rounds out the top 5 at 221 points.  The max points someone can get for Villanova or Kansas winning is 11 points, and so the only real movement is going to be due to Michigan – who can get 15 points for getting to the championship and an additional 18 points for the winning.

    We have a three way tie for the lead in the Second Chance Pool, as Matt Richter, Dan Fischer and David Ogle are all at 480 points.  But there are 7 people just 40 points behind, and 10 people just 80 points behind, so still lots of chances there.

    The Lunatic looks like he will be well stomped.  At 112th place and with only Villanova left to survive the horrible Lunatic Curse, he is unlikely to threaten the leaders (although I guess a Villanova win could at least move him up a little bit in the standings and make it a respectable showing..)     But knowing the Lunatic Curse, it would be more likely that Kansas takes them out the way they did to Duke this afternoon.

    I also have to give Sam Luy a lot of credit in potentially one of the oddest moments in Lunatic Pool history.  Sam’s first bracket is in 9th place, but in the awkward place that he can not get any more points since he had the two teams he got correct (Michigan and Villanova) losing to the two teams he got wrong with Virginia and Duke.   Still, Sam is guaranteed a prize.  While he is likely going to get passed at the top of the leaderboard, his second picks have already been passed by everyone (well, except for Liying Gong and Hailey Peterson who entered for fun).  Sam’s upset picks of Virginia beating Michigan State with Gonzaga and Butler joining them at the Final Four got eliminated quickly and only scored 270 points.    I might have to go back and see, but I don’t remember a time when one of our leaders had their other picks in last place – but in a tournament of firsts, it seems only fitting.  The normal line is Sam – you should not have challenged the Lunatic.   But to be fair, the Lunatic is getting crushed so badly, it is really that you shouldn’t have challenged Tanmay and Christy (our Standard and Upset leaders).

    If you are still hanging in reach of the leaders, good luck to all of you next weekend!!!!  Otherwise, find a favorite team to root for, or simply get behind Cinderella (because if you were knocked out and not a Michigan, Villanova or Kansas fan, you have to love the idea that the Missouri Valley Champion could be the NCAA Champion).  This tournament has given us a historic 16 seed beating a 1 seed and a 11 seed making the Final Four – so you have to believe that anything can happen in San Antonio.  Should be lots of fun to watch!!!!

  • Villanova breaks through for the #1 seeds

    After yesterday’s regional finals of surprise teams, the first semifinal today showed off how dangerous the #1 seed Villanova Wildcats are.  Villanova jumped out to a 13 point lead at half-time holding Texas Tech to only 23 points.   While Villanova is known for their offense, it was their defense that led them to victory today.  They struggled from the field, but they would force the Red Raiders into long stretches where the 3 seed didn’t score.

    Texas Tech did get the game to as close as 5 as they made a slight run in the second half.  But Villanova showed another reason why they are dangerous.  They are incredibly good from the free throw line.   When your best option as a team trying to extend the game to catch up is to send a 70% free throw shooter to the line, it is tough to come back.  Villanova hit their free throws, and Texas Tech couldn’t hit any three pointers to counter, and the Wildcats are heading to San Antonio with a 71-59 victory.

    We only have one more spot left in San Antonio, and it will go to one of two of the most successful programs in college basketball history.   You have the Big 12 Conference Champion #1 seed Kansas Jayhawks against the ACC’s #2 seed Duke Blue Devils and their hall of fame coach who has won more games than any other coach in history.  Should be a fun game!

  • Congratulations to our Sweet 16 leaders

    William England has moved ahead of yesterday’s leaders to get to 620 points and take over the lead in the pool.  It is still crazy close as Andrew Braslow is only 20 points behind, Stephen Harrell and Tanmay Gautam are only 30 points behind, and Heath Lindvall is only 40 points behind.  Ben Lawton, Chris Lacks and Kevin Flippen are tied for 6th only 50 points behind.   And then there is the crazy fact that we have 13 people tied for 9th place – only 60 points behind.

    Christy Lindvall is still leading the Upset Pool – now with 260 points, giving her a 13 point lead over Triona Weeks.  Alex Simon is 28 points behind in 3rd, Edward Zhang is 42 points behind in 4th and Andrew Braslow is 55 points behind in 5th.

    Will Caldwell and Mark Schumaker are currently doing the best job with their second chance – as they have correctly picked 7 of 8 Sweet 16 games.  They are closely followed by 17 people.

    Its kind of crazy – I have never seen such large groups of ties at this point in the contest.  But there is still plenty of time for some separation to happen.   Good luck to everyone in the Elite 8!!!!

  • Texas Tech advances to first ever Elite 8

    Of course, there had to be just one top seed that lost today, and that one would be my Boilers.   Texas Tech just played great defense and took Purdue out of their offense, where a team that does a great job of scoring and taking care of the ball continuously turned the ball over.  There was a stretch in the first half where the Boilers didn’t score for over 7 minutes.

    It was clear Purdue missed their big man – as Texas Tech hurt the Boilers on the offensive side by driving to the basket and the help defense simply wasn’t there.  But not sure even Haas would have made a difference with the way that the Red Raiders played today.   It was an impressive effort to make it to the Elite 8 for the first time ever in their school history.

  • The Favorites are back

    After a night of insanity, where two 9 seeds and an 11 seed won, Kansas and Villanova decided to bring the NCAA Tournament back to a little bit of normalcy.

    First, the #1 seed Jayhawks led by double digits for a good amount of the game.  Clemson did make a nice comeback at the end, but it was too late – the Jayhawks had built a large enough lead that they could withstand that run.

    Then, after West Virginia was slightly leading and threatening to pull the upset, #1 seed Villanova went on a large run to finish off the Mountaineers.

    In the evening games, #2 Duke is going to try to hold off #11 Syracuse – and #2 Purdue is going to try to hold off #3 Texas Tech.  The Lunatic is obviously going to be watching the latter of those games – hoping desparately that his Boilers can win!!!!   Boiler Up!!!!

  • FIve way tie for first

    After all the upsets tonight, we are left with a five way tie for first.  Christy Lindvall, Edward Zhang, Alex Simon, Andrew Braslow, and Bob Degenhardt are tied at 480, 10 points ahead of Scott Grimes, 20 points ahead of William England, and 30 points ahead of Ethan Busby, Joseph Laucious, Triona Weeks, and David Chamowitz.

    Christy still holds a 4 point lead over Triona in the Upset pool – followed by Alex (25 behind), Edward (37 behind) and Andrew (51 behind).

    In the second chance pool, only 1 of us was brave enough to correctly pick all 4 games – that was David Zimmerman.   He leads against Sara Murphy, Shirli Zelcer, Eric Zeidler, Will Caldwell, Mark Schumaker, John Howarth, Bernard Benson, and my wonderful wife Elizabeth by 40 points – as they all got 3 of the 4 games right.

    Good luck to everyone!!!!!

  • Watch out for the 9 seeds

    Kansas State jumped out to a 13-1 lead to start the game against the team now favored to win the South regional.  But Kentucky came back quickly and created a game that stayed close throughout.

    Kentucky kept dumping the ball into PJ Washington down low, and he kept drawing fouls.  He managed to foul out three of Kansas State’s players, including their leading scorer for the night, Xavier Sneed.  But while he was fouling out the Kansas State team, he was missing his free throws, going only 8 for 20.  So, with 1 minute and 14 seconds left, Kansas State gets the ball tied at 58 and decides to go with a 5 guard lineup.

    The largest player on the court is 6’4″.  Barry Brown drives to the basket late in the shot clock and gets the ball blocked out of bounds by Washington.  He gets another chance and throws up a desparation shot in the lane to just beat the shot clock, and misses again.  But KSU’s Cartier Diarra somehow amongst the bigger Kentucky players gets the rebound and called timeout.  This time, Brown would get a third chance, and it was the charm as he drove hard to the basket and hit the layup just barely over Washington’s attempt to block it.

    Quade Green quickly tried to take the ball up the court and missed a wild three point attempt, and KSU’s Amaad Wainwright grabbed the board and was quickly fouled.  Wainwright only made one free throw giving Kentucky one last chance – but Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s three pointer at the buzzer missed.  Kansas State had pulled the upset.

    Kentucky’s John Calapari had complained about being sent to Boise and having to play in a region of conference champions (there were 10 conference tournament champs and 2 regular season champs).  So, there has to be a lot of irony that Kentucky did great in Boise, and then when they were in Atlanta, Georgia – where their fans were in abundance, they lost to one of the 4 non-champions, Kansas State.  Make it even more ironic – it was the first time Kansas State had beaten Kentucky in school history.

    After that exciting game, I flipped over to notice that #9 seed Florida State was up big against Gonzaga.  They managed to make sure that Gonzaga never made a late run and took out #4 Gonzaga 75-60.

    Since the tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985, only two 9 seeds had ever made the Elite 8 (Boston College in 1993 and Wichita State in 2013).  Tonight, two more 9 seeds have made their way to the Elite 8.   Congratulations to Florida State and Kansas State on their major upsets.    So, we have #9 Kansas State vs #11 Loyola – Chicago and #3 Michigan vs #9 Florida State for one half of our Elite 8 – I imagine most of us didn’t pick that.  Have to love March – anyone has a chance to win the National Championship, and these 4 teams are seizing that opportunity, even if no one else thought they could do it.