New Year's Conference Resolutions: Big Twelve

Here's the second of ten conference installments of some New Year's Resolutions and Prognostications. As always, your dissension is welcomed...

BIG Twelve:

The Big Twelve came into the year as our Playboy Award candidate (conference heaviest up top with a lot of airbrushing below), with Kansas and Texas clearly being a notch above everyone else and quite possibly above the rest of the country.

Having two dominant superpowers rule the roost isn't necessarily a bad thing; see Duke and UNC in the ACC. However, the question loomed, is there any depth beyond the Big Two in this year's Big 12? So far this season, it has looked like there certainly is, and there might possibly be a few Sweet 16 caliber teams lurking around.

Kansas State has to be one of the most pleasant surprises in 2009, racing out to an impressive 12-1 start with wins over Xavier, UNLV, Dayton and Washington State. Baylor has also looked better than expected and should contend for a bid.

Oklahoma State and Texas Tech have amassed some early wins as well and should contend for a bid...though we're not quite ready to label them tourney bound just yet. The only glaring dissapointment thus far has been Oklahoma. We knew there would be an adjustment perios without Blake and Taylor Griffin, but felt confident Willie Warren would be able to hold the rope (particularly with "Tiny" Gallon anchoring it...) So far? Not so good. Not good at all.

Here's a quick look at the outlook for March for each team:

The Good:

Texas looks fantastic, and we have felt solid having them at the top spot in Bracketeering from the season's outset. The 76-70 sleep-walk today against TX-Corpus Christi is understandable; their two games prior were wins over UNC and Michigan State. A letdown was inevitable. Rick Barnes has a few weeks to get them geared up for back-to-backers at Kansas State and at UConn.

Kansas is good. OK, Kansas is real good. After watching them dismantle Temple on the road toady I'm ready to concede this is probably the best team in the country. They have no holes. Sherron Collins is distributing the ball and running the team flawlessly. Xavier Henry is truly playing the "Grant Hill 1991" role on this team. Watching his poise, intelligence fused with blinding athleticism and a feathery touch on the mid range jumper... to me the comparison is accurate and uncanny. Throw in the best back-to-the-basket center in the nation in Alderich and it isn't unreasonable to think they will be unbeaten when the Feb. 8th date with Texas comes rolling around.

Win that one? Yeah...it does get intriguing...

Kansas State is not just good. They are Sweet Sixteen caliber legit. It is tough to put them in a category with the two above, but they seem like tourney locks barring a complete collapse and deserve the separation from the pack..

The Unknown:
Here is where things get a little dicey in the Big 12. Early season performance would seem to merit five to seven (high side) bids come March. The above three are locks. Here's how The Maniac sees it playing out for the remaining bids.

I like the talent and chemistry Scott Drew has working down in Baylor. In 2007 they were the conference's darlings, making an improbable return to respectability and the NCAA tourney. Last year they disappointed under heightened expectations and we were forced to wonder just where this program truly stood. An 11-1 start with wins over Xavier, South Carolina and Arizona State is a good indication the ceiling is high. They have solid guard play with Tweety Carter and LaceDarius Dunn and Udoh gives them a nice presence in the paint. I think Baylor returns to the dance, but it will be an interesting ride.

My conference sleeper is Missouri. Little was expected of the Tigers after losing DeMarre Carroll and three other starters from last year's Elite Eight squad. However, the Tigers are entering league play at 11-3 with some impressive wins under their belt: Old Dominion. Illinois by 13. Georgia by 28. Oregon by 37. Not just the wins, but the margins tell me that the Tigers frenetic style can still be effective, even with personal changes. They are a surprising threat to get back to the NCAA Tournament.

Okahoma State and Texas Tech are the toughest reads. Both have very good records that would likely get them tourney consideration with .500 conference seasons. However, I just don't think either is quite good enough to get on the other side of the bubble. Texas Tech's best win is Washington. Their only other decent win is Stanford. They've lost to Wichita State by 2 and failed their big litmus test last week losing to New Mexico by 15. More troubling is the struggles they've had with team's they are supposed to beat; Oregon State by 4, Stephen F. Austin by 2, McNeese State by one... they just don't seem ready for Big 12 rigors to me.

Ditto for Oklahoma State. Their best win is a 1-pointer over Stanford and a win over a down Utah team. They've lost to the two best teams they've faced; Rhode Island and Tulsa. Exactly the teams they'll be on the Big Board against when the committee has to decide whether to invite a fifth or sixth Big 12 team or reward one of the "have-nots." Those losses tip the scales undeniably in the opposite direction for the 'Pokes.

If a sixth team does get in, I like Texas A&M. The Aggies have slipped off the radar the past few weeks after losses at Washington and New Mexico (by 3- no shame in that loss). They do already own wins over Clemson and Minnesota, two teams that could very likely find themselves in a similar spot come March; 18-19 wins, fifth or sixth place in a power league. Those are good chips in the Ag's favor. They get Texas only once this year and get to host that game in late February. A win over the Horns could punch their dance card.

Oklahoma stays in the "unknown" category, simply because it is still too early to completely write them off. Willie Warren has struggled and it appears as though Jeff Capel is struggling with what to do with the talented Soph. They got hammered on New Year's by Gonzaga in yet another no-show against a quality opponent. They got waxed by VCU, and have losses to UTEP, Houston and San Diego - each more difficult to explain in ascending order. The 1-point win over Northern Colorado and the squeaker with Utah don't inspire much confidence either.

So why are they still above the Maniac's cut line? They still have NBA-level talent; particularly in Warren. And because other than trips to Lawrence and Austin there isn't a game they can't win on that schedule. 10-6 in the Big 12 gets you dancing. It's possible for the Sooners. But they better get it together. And Soon...

Iowa State - Of all the teams near the bottom group, this one is the most disappointing. With Craig Brackens surprising draft experts and deciding to come back to school, some optimism that the Cyclones could return to the tourney for the first time since Tim Floyd had Marcus Fizer and Jamaal Tinsley (and one of the Maniac's faves, Paul Shirley) in uniform began to arise. Three losses in a row dampened things a bid, but when the smoke clears losing to Northwestern (by 2), Northern Iowa (by 3) and at Cal aren't terrible losses. The schedule gives them an opportunity for redemption with a trip to Cameron Indoor and the Dukies...but it is just as likely a stern national showing of how NIT-at-best the 'Clones are in 2010. For the same reason as above with the Sooners, they stay above the cut-line, but they are a distant 10th in my estimation - a true long shot.


The BAD:

Colorado has always seemed a sleeping giant to me. Unfortunately no one woke them up again this year. Perhaps Chauncey Billups has a year of eligibility hiding somewhere... They showed a little fight early, hanging real tough with Gonzaga and Arizona over in Maui. Since then they have been blasted by 15 by Colorado State and by 25 at Tulsa. There is a good chance they are no better than the third or fourth best team in a basketball-light state (Northen Colorado and Denver).

Nebraska seems to pile 10 or 11 non-conference wins up every year. Just enough to keep them in that "if they win 4 of their last 5 they have a bubble shot" discussion every year. We;re not falling for it. They have two solid wins; USC and Tulsa. As a matter of fact, glancing over their resume, I get the feeling if they could just squeeze eight wins out in conference play....

Ah, forget it.

Final Score:
Texas and Kansas are #1 seeds in March. I just can't see anyone closing the gap enough to push either of them out. Kansas State feels like a Top 4 seed as well, and definitely no worse than a solid tourney team. This is the only conference in the country with two legit national champion contenders (Yes, the Big Ten and Big East could. But No one in the stratosphere of KU and UT though.)

It will be a rocky ride on the bubble all year in the middle of the pack. Like many conferences of this high caliber, parity will smack around the pack. That said, I like Baylor, Missouri and A&M to dance. Oklahoma is still a quality sleeper to watch and Oklahoma State and Texas Tech should get in if the can stay north of .500. In doing that, they'd knock off one of the other's above.

The Big 12 should factor no worse than the 4th best RPI conference overall, and most likely Texas and Kansas should push them to #2 or #3. That should be good enough for 6 bids in March, though seven isn't out of the question.


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"Damn You Maine!!"

Those might be the words echoed tonight by Rhode Island and Harvard after Maine's 52-51 upset (yes, we can really use the word "upset" this time) over Boston College.

It is a loss that certainly devalues the "good win" they thought they had earned earlier in the year.

The good news for Rhode Island, they earned yet another resume builder today beating Oklahoma State. The good news for Harvard? The atlarge chances were really non-existant anyhow. If they want to dance Jeremy Lin and company will have to take down Cornell in conference play (no small task)

I googled "Maine basketball" and this was the first photo I came up with. I related news the kid on the left got shot with a BB gun again this Chirstmas...

BTW - It has been brought to my attention that our email subscribers do not always have pictures imbedded in the articles - if so CLICK HERE for full site

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The Will to Win

Great game today in the CAA. The Tribe of William & Mary reeled off their tenth straight win today in thrilling fashion. They took their first lead of the ballgame 48-47 on a three point play with 13 seconds left. Hofstra came down and got off a contested three point attempt with three seconds remaining that missed. The Pride grabbed the offensive rebound and appeared to have drawn contact on the put back attempt, but the referees ruled it came after the final buzzer sounded.

The refs pronounced the game over and retreated to the locker room, all the while pursuited by Hofstra coach Tom Pecora. Alas, the game was over and the Tribe move to 2-0 in the CAA, while Hofstra falls to 1-1.

It might not be as glamorous as their win three nights ago at Maryland, but it is a big road conference win for a team not accustomed to the spotlight. The probably won't be ranked on Monday, but should get enough votes to be within shouting distance.

Elsewhere in the conference, George Mason showed a pulse, thrashing red-hot Old Dominion 71-55. This is one of five potential multi-bid conferences outside the BCS worth watching this season.


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A Tough 0-2 Marq

The Marquette Warriors might look back on this week and cringe on Selection Sunday. Because, unfortunately, close doesn't count much with pollsters. Three days after losing in Morgantown on DeShaun Butler's buzzer beater, the Warriors dropped another game in heartbreaking fashion, this time at home to Villanova.

Scottie Reynolds penetrated, drew contact and hit a leaner in the lane with 16 seconds to go to finally give Villanova the lead late. Marquette missed from point-blank range with three seconds to go and dropped to 0-2 in the Big East. Not only are they winless in conference, they missed out on two valuable chances to add a marquee win (both are currently ranked in the Top 10) on their resume. In a conference as fiesty and deep as the Big East, these two games could likely be the difference between the Big Dance and the NIT.

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Welcome to 2010 Baby

New Year. New Decade. And an incredible slate of college hoops to start it off right. This weekend will give hoops fans an opportunity to most of the nation's best teams (except Texas, who did it last week) get tested.

The game of the day features more than just great hoops. It features the greatest intensifier of all; good old fashioned hate. Rick Pitino visits his old stompin' grounds of hallowed Rupp Arena tomorrow in a position his Cards haven't been in for several years; trying to spring the upset on the heavily favored 'Cats. To add even a little more spice to the day, Calipari was recently the target of some rather pointed criticism by Bobby Knight, while Rick Pitino's offseason read like a John Grisham novel. In fact, it prompted one of the best shirts I've ever seen; sported by a Card fan it read simply "at least our coach only cheats OFF the court." Twisted, but inspired to say the least...

Yes Rick, all eyes on you indeed...

Gotta love the passion down in the Bluegrass. Kentucky is favored by 8, and despite the margin it will be the best test of tournament-style intensity the Cats have faced this year. Carolina and UCONN were great wins, but the volume and magnitude of this game is a great introduction to the passion of March for freshman Bledsoe, Cousins and Wall. Should the Cats survive the Cards and a Jan 12th trip to Gainesville, expect the "undefeated" talk to really ratchet up a notch...

Kansas plays their first real game of the year and gets a chance to finally shut The Maniac up about their soft road thus far. The Jayhawks travel to Philly to face red-hot Temple (5:30 EST) and their tempo-controlling style. The 'Hawks have more talent, but how will they handle their first true test outside of the Phogg? If the Owls can pull one of the first legit "upsets" of this young season (sidenote: Saw a headline on a major sports site, claiming "Bearcats STUN #10 UConn at the buzzer" Holy hyperbole Batman!) they can start looking at a Top 10 ranking and begin thinking Top 4 seed in March...

UConn and Syracuse have quality ballgames, though it might constitute an "off game" by brutal Big East standards. Both play at home, hosting Notre Dame and Pitt respectivly. Meanwhile Villanova takes a tricky trip to Marquette, who will be trying to regroup after gagging one up in West Virginia earler this week. Every day is a good day in the Big East. Don't be surprised if one, or all, of these games is closer than expected.

UAB has an interesting trip to Arkansas Saturday. Should the Hogs beat them, the Blazers will have dropped back-to-backers to UVA and Arkansas; two of the bottom teams in the BCS conferences. That wouldn't bode particularly well for Conference USA, especially after Houston lost to Texas-San Antonio tonight at home.

Big Ten play continues as well after an already-eventful start when Michigan State heads to Northwestern. Should Northwestern fall, they can kiss their brief time in the Top 25 goodbye...and also might begin to worry about their tourney prospects with their schedule not relenting anytime soon (and an 0-2 Big Ten start).

Tomorrow also features a real bevy of late, quality, non-conference tilts. Baylor at South Carolina is a nice matchup of bubble-caliber teams from good, multi-bid leagues. Gonzaga at Illinois is yet another stiff test for the Zags. They looked great last night hammering Oklahoma, but will they have enough gas in the tank against an Illini squad that can ill-afford another setback?

Oklahoma State takes a daring trip to Rhode Island tomorrow evening. Kudos to the Cowboys for playing a game like this against a smaller-name, very solid A-10 team. The A-10 has quite a day lined up with some Big Six foes. Charlotte will be hosting ACC Georgia Tech to round out the trifecta. It will be interesting to see how all three handle the opportunity.

I,m not sure if any cable outlet in America will be providing the 4pm game between William & Mary and Hofstra, but at this point I feel obligated to keep you updated on the Tribe. They are seeking to follow up their Maryland road win with another tough, albeit less glamorous, road win. This is a classic trap game, with Hofstra not expected to be among the CAA elite, but the kind of game you need to win if you want to be a serious at-large contender. By the way, not sure it means much right now (and of course it will drop as conference play lowers their strength of schedule) but W&M is 6th in the RPI as the calendar flips to 2010. Just thought you'd like to know.

Home of the nation's #6 team?? It's pretty early to look at RPI's...but still worth taking notice


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New Year's Conference Resolutions: Big Ten

Here's the first of ten conference installments of some New Year's Resolutions and Prognostications. As always, your dissension is welcomed...

BIG TEN:

The Big Ten had all the makings of the best conference in the country heading into the season. Legit Final Four contenders? Purdue & Michigan State. National Player of the Year candidate? Evan Turner of Ohio State more than fit the bill. Tons of tourney caliber teams? Illinois, Michigan, Ohio State & Minnesota all were ranked preseason, with Wisconsin entering shortly after beating Duke early. Penn State was fresh off their NIT championship and Northwestern was entertaining dreams of their first ever NCAA tourney appearance. Heck, optimism was even high down in Bloomington with the rebuilding Hoosiers.

So what happened?

Michigan State got routed by North Carolina, Texas and lost to middling Florida. Ohio State lost Evan Turner to a broken back (amazing as it sounds, he will likely be back this season), Minnesota has struggled on the court and off, Michigan has been a disaster and Illinois has been disappointing. Penn State may not even be good enough to get back to the NIT to defend their crown and Indiana will need another year of rebuilding before being relevant.

In short, the Big Ten's shortfalls continue to glare compared to the bright lights of the Big East, ACC and Big 12 for yet another year.

Here's a quick look at the outlook for March for each team:

The Good:

Purdue looks fantastic, and a legit contender to get to Indy. I can't see them any lower than a #2 or #3 seed come March, and I wouldn't bet against a #1 (the win over WVU in the hip pocket). They have good veteran leadership and much like Florida 2006-07, a fantastic understanding of their individuals roles within the team construct.

I'd never bet against Tom Izzo and Michigan State in March. They do it every year, and have more than enough talent to get back to yet another Final Four.

If Ohio State gets back a healthy Even Turner they can be a real sleeper. I thought they were a legit third contender to win the Big Ten before the injury, and are of course a completely different team without him. Unfortunately Turner might return a little too late to salvage a decent seed.

I like Wisconsin's chances getting back to the dance as well. Every year Wisconsin is supposed to be down. Every year Bo Ryan's Badgers defend on the court, defend their home court, and defend their NCAA consecutive appearance streak. It's going to happen again this year.

The Unknown:
Tubby has had a tumultuous off season with his Minnesota Gophers and a rough November. Consecutive losses to Portland, Texas A&M and Miami dropped them off the national radar and left them with only a quality win over Butler for the resume. They are 10-3 and healthy and poised to make a run. I think Tubby's Gophers get it going and finish a solid 5th.

I'm not sure what to make of Illinois. My gut feeling is they are on the outside looking in come March. They've lost to Bradley, a bad Georgia team and a terrible Utah club. Those are going to be tough losses to overcome without ten wins in conference. The opening win over Northwestern helps, but I think they come up short.

Speaking of Northwestern, the Wildcats made their first appearance in the Top 25...and promptly followed it up with a loss to the Illini. Sentiment has me pulling for the Wildcats. Logic tells me they come up just a bit short...again. Check out the upcoming schedule: @ Mighigan, Wisconsin, Purdue, @Ohio State, Illinois, @Minnesota, @Michigan State. Wow. Win even three of these and we'll talk tourney. Find me three games they will be favored in on that slate...

Penn State is a major disappointment to me. The Nittany Lions and Talor Battle just haven't conjured up the magic this year. Early losses to Tulane and NC Wilmington put a ton of pressure on them to go over .500 in conference. It ain't happenin'

Michigan remains the biggest enigma. They are easily tourney-talented. Then the lose their opener to Indiana. Not a way to statr if you have serious aspirations in March. They are 6-6 with a bad loss to Utah and questionable losses to Alabama and Indiana. That leaves a lot of work to do in Ann Arbor. And fast.

The BAD:
Indiana is at least worth watching this year. They play well at home and will likely pick up a handful of conference wins this year. The loss of Maurice Creek hurts, and it is tough to see this young Hoosier team winning many on the road. After all, surprising wins over Pitt and Michigan aside, this is a team that lost to Boston U, George Mason and Loyola (Md). No postseason this year, but the future is bright in Bloomington.

Um, not so much in Iowa. The Hawkeyes are terrible. They've lost to Texas-San Antonio, Iowa State, Northern Iowa, Duquesne...and they are going to lose to every single team in the Big Ten at least once.

Final Score:
Purdue, Michigan State are Top 4 seeds. Ohio State gets Turner back in time to get in, Wisconsin and Minnesota earn bids.

Michigan and Illinois spend a rocky few weeks on each side of the bubble. I think the Wolverines get it together just in time to slip in as the 6th Big Ten team while Illinois joins Northwestern in NIT.

Penn State, Indiana and Iowa - make early March tee times.

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More Fun in the Valley

While most of college basketball is waiting a few days to get rolling in 2010, the Missouri Valley continues steaming ahead. The conference is not quite at the level of the glory year 0f 2006, but does have a great chance to improve on the 1-bid performance of last season.

Here's a quick rundown of tonight's games, and the first week of games past.

What's going on in Omaha? Creighton fell to 0-2 today in conference after losing to lightly-regarded Indiana State. All the big conference guys who got a "quality win" early over the Jays might be disappointed to find that it no longer qualifies as "quality." The Jays have played themselves into auto-bid only territory after their terrible start.

Southern Illinois squares off tonight with Bradley. The Salukis rose to national prominence several years ago reaching the Sweet 16 and being ranked most of the season, but they have fallen off a bit in past years. This season the Salukis are 8-2 and looking to rise into contention in the Valley. Meanwhile Bradley sits at 6-5, but does own a win over Illinois and several "good losses" to BYU and Oklahoma State. The Braves are not legit contenders in the Valley, but tonight might give a nice glimpse as to whether or not the Salukis might be.

Northern Iowa and Wichita State both figure to be factors in the MVC race all season; both have should-win home games tonight against Evansville and Drake respectively. Both teams have good records (11-1, 10-2) but neither has gaudy enough non-conference resumes to think they are dancing without 12-13 MVC wins. In short, every game counts for them both.

The game of the night is at 8:05 EST when 10-2 Illinois State travels to 11-1 Missouri State. Illinois State is fresh of a 15 point win over Wichita, while MoSU easily handled Evansville on the road. Illinois State raced off to an undefeated start last year, only to cool off quickly in conference play, just as national attention began to find them. The Redbirds finished with a disappointing first round NIT loss. This season, the Redbirds and MVC P.O.Y. candidate Osiris Eldridge know they have to win games like tonight if they want to get to the real dance this March.

Missouri State, with wins over Auburn and Tulsa was flirting with Top 25 status before a 66-62 loss to Arkansas cooled that notion. Still the Bears have a solid ballclub and have to be considered a Top 3 team in the underrated Valley. Tonight's game will give a nice look at two potentially tourney-bound teams.


SEASON OUTLOOK: Look for Wichita, No. Iowa and Mo State to battle for the league crown with some pressure from Illinois State and Southern Illinois, and I am always reluctant to bury Creighton, no matter how much it looks like we need to. Ultimately, it might once again be parity that costs the Valley multiple tourney bids, but I like the league to snag two spots in the NCAA and another two in the NIT.

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Boil Up - Purdue Shows Final Four Ability in Win Over WVU

Each year, the core of Hummel, Moore, Kramer and Johnson have advanced a round further in March than they did in the year past. This no-so-subtle evolution has had the folks in West Lafayette dreaming of a Final Four right down the road in Indy this April.

Today's beat down of #6 West Virginia will throw a few more logs on that fire. Forget the rankings and ratings. Forget that West Virginia was undefeated (by the skin of their teeth). What mattered today was how the Boilers would be able to score and defend against an elite team, a team from a power conference loaded with NBA talent. Last year, Purdue was humiliated at home by a Duke team that aptly fit that description (particularly with Gerald Henderson Jr.). It was a harbinger of struggles to come (and their Sweet 16 dismissal by UConn).

This year? The Boilers appeared to be the team with the unrelenting ball pressure and the loads of NBA talent. Is there a better big in the country than JaJuan Johnson? You can have Luke Harangody, I'll take the explosiveness and lean quick leaping ability of Johnson, and his feathery turn-around touch any day of the week. Is there a smarter and more solid big wing than Robbie Hummel? Kyle Singler is fantastic, and obviously swingmen like Evan Turner and Manny Harris and Xavier Henry are in a different athletic category (not really "big wings" in my classification, more "threes"). That said, I'll take Hummel on my squad in March and every game leading up to then.

It is very easy to overrate a team based on one good game; particularly when they play at home. However, Purdue showed me three qualities that differentiate talented teams from great ones. One, an uncanny unselfishness I have only seen one other team play with this year (Syracuse). It is impossible to take away one aspect of the Purdue offense and stifle them completely. They can score inside with Johnson. E'Twan Moore is an excellent creater from the perimeter. Hummel can create, step-back, spot up and even get you junk baskets. There isn't a single point of attack upon which to focus the defensive gameplan.

Secondly, they place enormous pressure on the ballhandler, making it nearly impossible to initiate offense early in the shot clock. The result is tough, forced shots late in the clock and mounting frustration. The obvious answer is to try and run on them, but the discipline of Chris Kramer makes that tactic tough as well. Watch how far away from the hoop West Virginia was getting into their sets. This eliminates back cuts and skip pass opportunities and forces teams to create individual shots. It works in the NBA, but rarely is it an effective offensive tactic in college. Today's game illustrated that perfectly, watching WVU struggle despite NBA-level talent in Ebanks and Butler.

Lastly, they have tremendous veteran leadership and amazing understanding of their roles. Johnson and Moore are great at what they are supposed to bring, namely an inside scoring and defensive presence and ability to create offensively. A finally healthy Hummel scoring, scraping and defending makes this team complete. But, in my estimation, it is Chris Kramer that makes them compete. He rarely looks to score but you'll be hard pressed to find a better on, or off the ball defender from the point guard position in the entire country. Throw in an improved bench (particularly freshman Kelsey Barlow) and you have one of the most complete and solid teams in the country.

The "Baby Boilers" have grown into legit national title contenders in 2010

They still have yet to be severely tested in a road game, and their first 35 minutes at Alabama might be cause for slight pause. But not to worry, they will get plenty of opportunities for road tests real soon (next weekend at Wisconsin in the seldom-won-at Kohl Center; Feb 9th at Mich. St, and late Feb @ Ohio State with Evan Turner possibly back).

But for now, this afternoon in West Lafayette, Purdue answered many of the nagging question surrounding their potential to contend for a national championship with a resounding YES.


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Hoosiers start 1-0

Before the season The Maniac guaranteed that IU would not finish last in the Big Ten. Then maurice Creek got hurt and we got nervous.

Both us and Hoosier Nation got to exhale deeply today. Jeremiah Rivers provided a steadying influence all day (and an impressive rebounding performance) as the Hoosiers used a stifling defense to frustrate and already frustrating Michigan team.

The Big Ten has suffered sone of the worst losses to injury of any league, but Michigan remains healthy. That is probably the most puzzling part for Wolverine fans as the team started the year #15 in the nation and now sits at 6-6.




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Good Wins and Bad L's

Another installment of what is to become a regular feature here at MarchManiacs.com, here's a quick look at the highs and lows from Tuesday.

I'm a bit biased here, but UCF losing at home in their own holiday classic to Jacksonville is one of the worst losses of the night. Many of our readers would beg to differ, but must surely now concede the Knights are not a top five team in the improved C-USA.

Cincinnati snatched a huge win in their BEast opener, beating Connecticut on two late Lance Stevenson free throws. After the close calls everywhere in week one, it is going to be a joy to cover this conference this year.

Louisville did what they were supposed to do; dispatch USF with relative ease. Perhaps the Bulls are not quite ready to leap out of the cellar, or maybe this is simply the start of the annual Card surge...

Just when we showered UAB with some mid-major love...they go out and lose to ACC cellar dwellar Virginia 72-63. However, not all mid majors dissapointed Wednesday. If you are already sick of hearing me glam on William & Mary, skip this paragraph. After beating Maryland 83-77 in College Park it is time to accept the Tribe as a legit tourney team. Legitimatly the CAA has three of them...

From mid-majors to low-majors, how about Harvard? Having already completed their now annual beating of Boston College they followed it up tonight with a 66-53 thumping of A-10 foe George Washington.

Northern Colorado continued their very unnoticed, yet impressive start. In the last two nights they have beaten Denver and TCU by double digits. Not saying UNC (the other one) is a team to lose sleep over, but I like to introduce you to your 14 and 15 seeds early.

Also tonight featured a pair of "come to Earth" losses for a few teams we can't help but love to love. Northwestern lost their Big 10 opener to Illinois, not a "bad" loss but certainly a dissapointing one.

One last news bulletin: George Mason is definitely NOT "this year's George Mason.". After watching the Patriots get pounded 80-53 by Radford; then glancing at W&M, VCU, and Old Dominion...it's hard to imagine this season getting much better for America's Cinderella.




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Step Three

Step One: Convince your team that despite losing your best player for the entire year, you can still compete for the first tourney bid in school history.

Step Two: Amass 11-1 non-conference record with several quality wins.

Check. And check.

Tonight the Northwestern Wildcats set their sights on step three - win Big Ten games on the road en route to finishing above .500 in conference. They travel to Illinois tonight in a game the could really use if they are going to peek into the Top 25 for any length of time, and ulimately if they are going to sniff the rarified air of March.




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Two Worth Watching

Conference play has commenced with a thundersand The Maniac is pretty pumped over the promise of a fantastic season on the horizon. The Missouri Valley pitted some of their top teams last night(Illinois State, Northern Iowa) against traditional powers Wichita State and Creighton; and both won. Throw in Missouri State and you have the makings of one heck of a conference battle.

If you like your conferences with a little more NCAA at-large bids at stake, might I suggest the Big East. West Virginia is undefeated and sixth in the NATION, yet needed OT to beat Seton Hall and a miracle finish to beat Marquette at home to move to 2-0 in the BEast. Neither opponent figured in the top 8 of the conference preseason. Now that's a tough road to sled.

That brings me to my first game of the night. While most people will pay attention to Cincy - UConn (good game) I'll be more interested in South Florida's trip to Lousiville. The Cards dissapointed early but have shown some signs of promise the past few weeks. The Bulls have been impressive early but have never been a factor in conference play since joining the Big East. Losing at the 'Ville would be no shame, but it is the type of game USF needs to win if they want to be in the at-large conversation. Vegas has the Bulls as 13 point dogs; I suspect it will be a decent ballgame. Either way it is a great early litmus test in the BEast.

My other game to watch tonight is one very few people will be able to. William & Mary is 9-2 with quality wins over Wake and VCU. Tonight they get a huge opportunity when they visit College Park and the Terps. A win here makes the Tribe a legit at-large front runner should they play well in the CAA yet get nosed out by VCU or Old Dominion (or even George Mason). I imagine the whole Colonial Conference will have an eye toward College Park tonight.

It feels like we've been writing about Maryland and Grevies Vasquez for about six seasons now. The article always talks about "potential" and how good both could be...and isn't that kind of the problem? If pressed for a real read on the Terps I'd put them sixth in the ACC. Truth is anywhere between third and tenth is a fair guess. The league is that balanced and the Terps are that much of an enigma.

There are some other great games across the nation tonight as the Big Ten and ACC, amongst others, get rolling. The two above are defintly worth the watch.

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

More Tuesday Picks

Marquette +12 @ West Virginia: The Mountaineers are fresh off a hard-fought OT win at Seton Hall and get to return home for more Big East fun. I like the Mountaineers, but just don't think they are 13 points better than a solid Marquette team at this point in the year. Gimme the Eagles and the points.

St Joseph's +13.5 @ Siena: The Saints clearly miss Kenny Hasbrouk from last year's magical team. They are still solid, but have had some offensive struggles. St. Joe's record is terrible; 4-6, but their losses to Villanova, Minnesota, Cornell, and Purdue are certinaly excusable. That's the recipe for a battle-tested team. I don't see them getting blown out tonight, and wouldn't be stunned if they won outright.

Wichita State (pick) @ Illinois St: Missouri Valley play gets under way tonight, and true to form of the last few years there is nary a bad matchup in sight. Wichita State has been one of the pleasant surprises so far this season and Illinois State has been good as well. THe difference to me? Illinois State did this last year as well before looking painfully pedestrian once conference play rolled around. The Shockers have taken down Texas Tech and pummeled Iowa and Cleveland State. Illinois State has lost to Niagara and Ohio, and their only decent win is over Utah. Gimme the Shockers on the road in a pick 'em that should be fun to watch.

Texas Tech +8 @ New Mexico: This is a tough one to pick, as both teams have inflated records with only a single loss; both losses recent and both to teams (Wichita St. amd Oral Roberts) that make you pause in rating the Red Raiders and Lobos. The Pit is a tough place to play, but the line seems a little too big considering that Texas Tech is likely no worse than an equal team. I'm gonna take Knight Jr. and the Red Raiders plus the eight.

Syracuse -3 @ Seton Hall: The poor Pirates, their early season excitement over 9-0 was followed up with Temple (L), West Virginia (L), and now they get Syracuse. Unfortunatly the road never gets much easier in the Big East, but three consecutive Top 20 (and Bracketeering Top 11) teams in a row is tough for even the best of squads. The 'Cuse should be amped up to play after three non-challenging weeks. I like the 'Cuse tonight, like all seven other picks, on the road.

Maniac's Record: 26-19-1 ATS
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Quick Picks - Dec 29th

It has been a bountiful holiday season of picks for The Maniac, and with today being one of the last full spreads of 2009 and we are set to feast on some winners. The slate is full of good, if not great, games, both in conference and out. Here's a quick rundown of the day in hoops.

4PM: Cornell +2 @ Lasalle - The Explorers are one of the teams quietly looking to challenge in the A-10 from the middle of the pack. Cornell has played a brutal slate early and have proven to be up for the challenge. The Red have already played Alabama, Seton Hall, St John's, Syracuse, UMass and St. Joe's. They went 4-2 in those games. Suffice it to say they will not be overwhelmed by Lasalle. Give me the Red in another resume builder.

7PM: Rhode Island -3 @ Drexel - I'll take another road team, this time the Rams of R.I. They have quietly built a 9-1 record, losing only @ VCU by 2. Granted, they have no marquee wins yet, but I wouldn't put Drexel on a marquee either. Gimme the Rams laying the three.

8PM: Northern Iowa @ Creighton -1 - The Jays have struggled mightily this season, while the Panthers of UNI are off to a 9-1 start that includes wins over Iowa State, Denver, Boston College, Siena and Iowa. Not a terrible slate. Creighton meanwhile is in unfamiliar territory, entering conference play with a sub-.500 record. However all 6 losses were to RPI Top 100 (5 in the Top 50) and all were on the road or a neutral court. I like Creighton to get home and use the opportunity to remind the MVC that the road to glory still passes through Nebraska.

Season Record: 26-19-1 ATS


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Christmas Bracketeering - Dec 27th, 2009

It has been about three weeks since our last poll, and many things have started to sort themselves out. From the outset we have had Texas in the top slot and have taken plenty of heat for it. Even during these times of Christmas cheer, there is still nothing I enjoy more than saying "I told you so." After consecutive wins over North Carolina and Michigan State, both by double digits, in a three day span, it is hard to dispute the Longhorns are deserving of their slot.

Meanwhile out West, just when we were ready to bury the Pac 10 pre-season co-favorite Washington seems to have woken up. With dominating wins over Portland and Texas A&M the Huskies showed it may have been to early to write them off. Even more impressive? They may not be the best team in the beleaguered Pac-10. We'll save our answer for #16 in this week's Bracketeering.

And alas, the Maniac has long been championing the case of the mid-major but admits the usual suspects are making it tough this year. Gonzaga took one of the most severe beatings I've witnessed to Duke, losing by 35 in game Duke could have easily won by 50. Memphis looks pedestrian at best and has lost to lowly UMass, Xavier continues to struggle offensively and Butler is flirting with the title of most overrated team in the country in the preseason polls (relax Bulldogs, there's still Cal...). Isn't it ironinc when the most overrated teams in the AP polls are #21 Butler and #25 Gonzaga?!? Not all is lost for the mid-majors though, check out spots #11 & #15 for our favorites so far.

I hope everyone got what they wanted under the tree this year. And for anyone who needs a little more hoops in their stocking, we appreciate you forwarding us their way!

Enjoy the special Maniac Christmas edition of Bracketeering.

FINAL FOUR:

1. Texas - Avery Bradley is the best freshman not named John Wall or Xavier Henry. Funny more people haven't heard of him yet, but rest assured, everyone will soon. Texas has been flawless in December and has us anticipating the Feb 8th matchup versus Kansas with bated breath. It is a shame that unbalanced scheduling will only give us these two once in 2010 (until the conference tourney final and possibly the Final Four...)

2. Kentucky - A little high? One could argue Syracuse has done more and that Kansas HAS more. What is indisputable though is that the most breathtaking collection of freshman talent since Michigan 1992 is starting to gel and settle into their roles. The results have been impressive of late. While broadcasters slobber over John Wall like he's Brett Farve, watch the play of fellow freshman backcourt mate Eric Bledsoe. Were it not for Farve... er, Wall, he might be touted as the best freshman PG in the country.

3. Syracuse - They've done absolutely nothing to merit dropping a spot in Bracketeering. The only reason? We do it a little different then the polls, rather than moving up or down a prescribed number of slots predicated solely on who wins and losses above and below you, we try to rank the teams on how well they are actually playing basketball. Syracuse has essentially not played in three weeks (St Bonnie, Oakland and St Francis). I'm curious to see how the layoff affects the Orange tomorrow night against a scrappy Jeremy Hazell and Seton Hall.

4. Kansas - The Jayhawks looked good playing a dissapointing, but athletic Michigan team and dispatched a better-than-their-record Cal club to move to 11-0. However they have yet to face a single Top 25 team and have played only one game out of the friendly confines of the Phogg. Call me a hater (and many of you already have) but I still am perplpexed how KU is a unanimous #1 in the AP Poll when the three teams listed above have done so much more in the early going.

ELITE EIGHT:

5. Duke - Yes, they lost to Wisconsin earlier, but anyone who watched them eviscerate Gonzaga with pressure defense, tremendous ballhandling and the best (yes, we said best) backcourt in the country has to walk away impressed with the Devils. Singler, Scheyer and Smith have done it against Gonzaga, handled the athleticism of UConn and beat a now-ranked Charlotte team by 50 earlier this season. I know it is fashionable to beat on Duke these days, but Coach K finally has a team with Final Four talent again.

6
. Purdue - No reason to doubt them, but no real reason to believe they are definitivley better than last year's version (which is essentially the same exact team a year older). Other than the one-point win over Tennessee the schedule has been pretty pedestiran. They showed some scrap coming back at Alabama, but the Tide are by no means a tourney team in 2010. It will be interesting to see if the Boilers can dominate in Big Ten play. I suspect they drop 4-6 games in conference. That isn't to say they are not a very good team, but there is a talent disparity between them and the five listed above them (and possibly a few below).

7. West Virginia - The showed some guts winning in OT at Seton Hall in the first of the never-ending slew of road tests the BEast will provide, BUT the late collapse that necessitated OT is cause for some concern. We'll keep the 'Eers 7th for now, but obviously the Jan 1st game at Purdue looms large.

8.UConn
- A three point loss to Kentucky at Rupp should not be cause for alarm. What is cause for concern is the lack of development by "savior" Ater Majok in his long awaited joining of the team. They desperately need to find another scorer to help out Kemba Walker, Dyson and Robinson, and hope Majok can be it; still defensively the Huskies are as good as anyone.

Sweet and lurking: The next tier

9. Kansas State -
Overlooked in the preseason perhaps, but the Wildcats should have everyone's attention by now. In their last four games they have beaten Xavier, UNLV, Alabama and Washington State all by AT LEAST 13 points. They are a clear notch below Texas and Kansas, but not many other teams in the country. Frank Martin has done a heck of a job getting the Wildcats to legitimate respectability in 2010.

10. North Carolina -
I'm still not in love with the early results, but continue to contend UNC has a higher ceiling than any other team in the ACC and is a legit Final Four challenger. Tonight's sleepwalker against Rutgers would have gotten them beat by 9 of the 11 other teams in the ACC. Let's hope for their sake Roy wakes them up before conference play kicks off.

11. Temple -
One thing I have always loved about the Owls was their unabashed approach to scheduling big. It has led to plenty of 19-12 seasons...and subsequent 11 or 12th seeded "upset" wins in the tourney. Christmas has passed (both the player and the season) but these Owls have wins over Penn State, Villanova and at Seton Hall in their last four games.

12. Georgetown -
Wins over Temple, Washington and Butler make up for the home loss against Old Dominion. The 16 point bounce back win over Harvard is a better win that it would appear on paper as well. The Hoyas will be a Top 5 team in the Big East all year...and that is good enough to be a Top 16 team in Bracketeering any day.

13. Villanova -
Not in love with this team, but they have stacked up a few quality wins and haven't lost any glaring games (Temple was unranked, but shouldn't have been). Their early conference schedule is soft enough that they should continue to climb in the polls, with next real test (aside from @ Marquette) is Jan 17th hosting the above Hoyas.

14. Michigan State -
Something hasn't quite clicked yet this year for Sparty, but something tells me Izzo will have that straightened out by March. Their losses; @ Florida, @ Texas, and @ UNC are all really valuable learning experiences. I'd trade Michigan State's 8-3 with anyone elses in the country. However their best wins are Gonzaga by 4 and... and... um.... Valpo? UMass? Wofford??

15. UAB -
While everyone was glamming Tulsa as the new challenger to Memphis's C-USA throne, Mike Davis's Blazers have stormed into national consciousness. In the past three weeks they have taken down Cincinnati, South Alamaba and Butler; all by double digits in controlling fashoin. Their only loss is Kent State was back in the second game of the year. The Blazers have put themselves in rare non-Memphis territory - at-large participants even if they lose the C-USA tourney.

16. USC -
I know, the Pac-10 sucks. I know, the Trojans have 4 losses, more than a lot of ranked teams I left out (like Washington (my #17 for the record), Wisconsin, Ohio State, Northwestern, New Mexico, Tennessee, Texas Tech...etc). However, in three of the last four games USC has posted the following wins:
Tennessee 77-57
St Mary's 60-49
UNLV 67-56
Hard to find a much better run anywhere outside the top 15, so we're giving SC the nod, with apologies to those listed above.


Yup, that's three BIG wins...

Bracket Busts: Some early season disappointments
Cal, Notre Dame, UCLA, Davidson (they miss Steph, but they have been really really bad with a brutal schedule), Memphis, Xavier, Butler, Oklahoma, DePaul (lost to Floida Gulf Coast this week - unacceptable for a Big East team), Creighton, Auburn, Tulsa, The Pac-10!

Half Court Heaves: Teams outside the common radar worth keeping an eye on
Dayton, Rhode Island, UTEP, South Florida, Coastal Carolina, Western Carolina, Murray State, Harvard, Cornell, Northwestern, Minnesota, William & Mary, VCU and ODU (The CAA conference really), Oral Roberts, Northern Colorado, St. Mary's, Lousiana Tech, Niagara, Miami (OH) - the best 3-9 team EVER, Wichita State & Missouri State, Long Beach State

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A Crime of Passion

Imagine this: North Carolina last year, with a number 1 seed assured, decides to sit Tyler Hansbrough, Wayne Ellington, Ty Lawson, Danny Green; essentially throwing the ACC Championship.

Let's go four years back. St Joseph's, with a number one seed long-since sewn up decides to "lose on purpose" before the NCAA tourney in order to prevent an unlikely injury to Jameer Nelson or Delonte West.

Never happen you say? Of course not, not in college basketball. At least not yet.

Yesterday in Indianapolis, the Colts did precisely that. Leading 15-10 late in the third quarter over the Jets (coincidentally fighting for their playoff lives) decided to pull Peyton Manning and their starters. Never mind that Peyton has not missed a single game in his dozen plus years in the NFL. Apparently the risk of injury was more important that the integrity of the game; more important than a chance at becoming a legend; a chance to become Sports Gods immortal.

Most of you know what happened next. The second and third stringers looked hopeless, and the hope of the perfect season was quickly dashed, 29-15.

Not that the Colts apparently cared.

"Lay Down", I got 'cha Coach... can I stay in the game now??

Every year someone will take home the "ultimate" prize. This year someone will. Next year someone will. The year after that. And, yep, barring a 2012-like cataclysm, someone will again. And again. And again.

Folks, there's a reason Mercury Morris was given 3+ minutes to "rap" on Sportscenter last year. It wasn't because he won a Superbowl. It wasn't because of his hip-hop proclivity (in fact, Biz Markee said "Oh - SNAP - this guy su-ucks."). It was because in 1972 he and his Dolphins did something no other football team has ever done. The perfect season, the thing all football athletes strive for...except of course if you own, manage, or coach the Colts.

It is unlikely that Kentucky, Syracuse or the winner of Texas/Kansas can even approach such a historic feat on the court this season. No one since Indiana in 1975 has. Very, very few have even come close.

But you can bet each one of them, if the opportunity avails, will be trying like hell to be more than champions. They will strive to be what every athlete's coaches implore them passionately to be, what every athlete strives for from the first day he or she puts on his or her uniform...

Their very best.

I have to wonder today, if when the '72 Dolphins pop their traditional bottle of champagne if it; like the Colts since of history, drive and passion; will too taste a little flat.


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