Happy Anniversary! HoopsHD interviews Omaha legend Dean Thompson Jr.

There is more to “Omaha” than a Peyton Manning audible. Back in the day it was Dean Thompson Jr. who was synonymous with the school’s basketball success: he set a school record for career PTS, was top-5 in AST/STL, and was even named All-American/conference POY. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Dean about all of his amazing accomplishments. Today marks the 40th anniversary of the final game of Dean’s college career, a 3-PT win over Northern Michigan in the D-2 tourney on : March 10, 1984, so we take this time to look back at a legend.

You played in 3 Nebraska Class A tourney finals with Omaha Westside and won it all in 1980: what did it mean to you to win a title? It was a lot of fun, as I have always loved the game: it is 1 of the highlights of my career.

Your dad Dean Sr. played basketball at Omaha: how big of an influence was he on your own college decision?
He is a huge influence in general: I got to watch him play and read his clippings, and he still plays in his late-70s! I made my own decision on what was the best fit, but he was certainly a factor.

What are your memories of the 1982 D-2 tourney (9-PT win over Lewis)? They had an All-American player who was very good. In those days the regional was always very competitive…and it was very cold in North Dakota.

What are your memories of the 1983 D-2 tourney (1-PT loss to Morningside)? My wife always tells me that I remember too many details about my career. We had a great rivalry with them, and they went to the Final 4 that year. There was a block/charge call late in the game, and the ref actually called a block before changing his mind and calling a charge.

What are your memories of the 1984 D-2 tourney (3-PT win over Northern Michigan)? We had a top-10 team for a good chunk of the year and set a school record for wins. I set the school scoring record a few months into the season and thought we were going to go a long way in the tourney. We actually lost to Wayne State in the 1st round, which was very disappointing, but we were able to win the consolation game.

In 1984 you were named All-American/conference POY: what did it mean to you to win such outstanding honors?
Any time you get such notoriety like that it is a reflection of your team. It does not happen on your own: you need to have success as a team and an SID that lets people know what you have done. It was a nice cap on that era of Omaha basketball.

You remain the all-time leading scorer in school history: did you realize at the time how prolific a player you were, and do you think that anyone will ever break your record? Records are made to be broken, and my own hope is that it gets broken someday. That would mean that someone came in and was successful for a 4-year stretch, and the team is doing great at the moment. I never thought it would last this long: the record holders before me were also Omaha guys whose records were broken after 7-10 years.

After graduation you played in the CBA for the Omaha Racers: how exciting was it to play for your hometown team, and what is the biggest difference between college basketball and pro basketball? I aspired to keep playing basketball as long as I could, and I played in an AAU tourney in Montana after our early elimination from the D-2 tourney. My backcourt mate was a short guy named John Stockton, and we both played pretty well up there. I felt comfortable with my basketball career so I felt okay going into the business world before later joining the Racers. I have represented my city for most of my life, which not a lot of players get to do.

In 1992 you won your 2nd straight Hoop-It-Up world championship: what is the key to winning a 3-on-3 tourney? A hard head! We did not always have officials back then so we would have to call our own fouls, and occasionally you would get thrown into the backboard support. We ran a lot of pick-and-roll plays: you are always looking for numbers, and I really enjoyed the strategic elements.

You run a basketball clinic in the Midwest with your brother Tom, who is the all-time leading 3-PT shooter in conference history and all-time leading FG shooter in school history: what makes your clinic different from other clinics, and who is the best player in the family? I do not think I am going to answer that last part! Our family is large on faith and mentoring kids in a loving fashion while teaching them to enjoy what they are doing. Sports is designed as a microcosm of life with highs and lows and obstacles, and I see our clinic as a “basketball party”: at the end of the week we are all depressed that it has come to a close. Kids still want to enjoy the game, so we just enjoy helping them become better.

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Bracketology 2024: March Madness Predictions (Version 10.0)

For today’s HOOPS HD DAILY RUNDOWN – CLICK HERE

We are only 7 days away from Selection Sunday as we continue to make our NCAA tourney predictions. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel correctly picked 67 of the 68 teams that made the 2023 tourney with 65 of his 67 within 1 spot of their actual seed, including 53 right on the money. He will spend the upcoming week predicting which 68 teams will hear their names called on March 17th. See below for his list of who would make the cut if they picked the field today and if you agree or disagree then feel free to tweet us. To see how he stacks up with other websites (ranked 11th out of 174 entries over the past 5 years), check out: www.bracketmatrix.com

SEED: TEAM (CONFERENCE)
1: Purdue (Big 10)
1: Connecticut (Big East)
1: Houston (Big 12)
1: Tennessee (SEC)

2: North Carolina (ACC)
2: Arizona (Pac-12)
2: Marquette (Big East)
2: Iowa State (Big 12)

3: Baylor (Big 12)
3: Kansas (Big 12)
3: Creighton (Big East)
3: Duke (ACC)

4: Kentucky (SEC)
4: Alabama (SEC)
4: Illinois (Big 10)
4: Auburn (SEC)

5: BYU (Big 12)
5: San Diego State (MWC)
5: South Carolina (SEC)
5: Clemson (ACC)

6: Wisconsin (Big 10)
6: Washington State (Pac-12)
6: Dayton (A-10)
6: Florida (SEC)

7: Utah State (MWC)
7: St. Mary’s (WCC)
7: Gonzaga (WCC)
7: Nevada (MWC)

8: Texas Tech (Big 12)
8: Texas (Big 12)
8: Boise State (MWC)
8: Colorado State (MWC)

9: Northwestern (Big 10)
9: Oklahoma (Big 12)
9: Michigan State (Big 10)
9: TCU (Big 12)

10: Nebraska (Big 10)
10: FAU (AAC)
10: Mississippi State (SEC)
10: Seton Hall (Big East)

11: Virginia (ACC)
11: Villanova (Big East)
11: St. John’s (Big East)
11: Colorado (Pac-12)
11: Indiana State (MVC)
11: Richmond (A-10)

12: South Florida (AAC)
12: Princeton (Ivy)
12: Grand Canyon (WAC)
12: McNeese (Southland)

13: Appalachian State (Sun Belt)
13: Samford (SoCon)
13: UC-Irvine (Big West)
13: Vermont (America East)

14: Sam Houston State (C-USA)
14: Toledo (MAC)
14: Charleston (CAA)
14: Oakland (Horizon)

15: UNC-Asheville (Big South)
15: Morehead State (OVC): AUTO-BID
15: Colgate (Patriot)
15: Eastern Washington (Big Sky)

16: Quinnipiac (MAAC)
16: South Dakota State (Summit)
16: Stetson (Atlantic Sun)
16: Norfolk State (MEAC)
16: Grambling (SWAC)
16: Merrimack (NEC)

1ST 4 OUT
Iowa (Big 10)
New Mexico (MWC)
Providence (Big East)
Utah (Pac-12)

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Hoops HD Daily Rundown – Sunday, March 10th

LINKS:

Click HERE for last night’s Championship Week Notebook

Click HERE for Conference Championship Central

Click HERE for the updated Hoops HD Survival Board and current Selection Board. As you can see, this is a visual reminder that a team like Morehead State MUST be included in the field.

And most importantly, click HERE for your annual Hoops HD+ Subscription!

NEWS AND NOTES:

– Yesterday was the end of the regular season for most conferences – today the Big 10 and the American also wrap up their regular seasons.

– Houston and UConn continue their fight for the #1 overall seed; UConn fell behind at Providence early before turning on the afterburners and ended up winning on the road fairly comfortably. Houston waxed Kansas on their home floor and held the Jayhawks under 50 points for the first time in the Big 12 era.

– North Carolina led wire-to-wire at Duke to complete their outright ACC regular-season championship. The Tar Heels might have the inside track to the last #1 seed after Tennessee lost their home finale to Kentucky (who may be on the inside track for a protected seed themselves now).

– Arizona is also contending for the last #1 spot, but they lost at USC in the final Pac-12 regular season game ever played. The Wildcats really need to win the Pac-12 Tournament to have a shot at the final #1 seed now.

– Marquette, Creighton and South Carolina were the only Top 25 teams to win on the road yesterday. Iowa State and Baylor both lost on the road yesterday.

– South Florida buzzed the tower yesterday and ended up losing at Tulsa; that may have mortally wounded their at-large chances and now necessitates that they win the American conference tournament taking place in Fort Worth next weekend. Their opener will be against Tulsa/East Carolina – a loss there would relegate the Bulls to the NIT and make Selection Sunday a little easier for the Selection Committee.

– It was celebration time in Logan, Utah as the Utah State Aggies hit a 3-pointer with 5 seconds remaining to give the Aggies the outright Mountain West crown with an 87-85 win against New Mexico.

HIGHLIGHTED GAMES:

– NEBRASKA AT MICHIGAN (BTN). This is a tuneup for Nebraska on the road; failing to take advantage of a winnable road game will severely damage the Cornhuskers’ seed (although it won’t knock them out of the field by itself).

– WISCONSIN AT PURDUE (FOX). While Purdue has long since clinched the regular season crown in the Big 10, Wisconsin will seek to stop hemorraging blood and get the mother of all wins to stabilize a profile that has been in decline for about a month now.

– OHIO STATE AT RUTGERS (BTN). You never want to say never as it relates to the Buckeyes, but they now travel to Jersey Mike’s Arena for a must-win game at Rutgers. And as Chad will tell you, the JMA is not a friendly place for visitors in this league.

– MICHIGAN STATE AT INDIANA (CBS). The Spartans are another team that’s been leaking oil, but they’ll be going against an Indiana team that’s permanently rusted over for the season.

– ILLINOIS AT IOWA (FS1). Iowa’s late push for an at-large bid hits a pivotal checkpoint tonight where they host Illinois in the last meaningful regular season game in the country today. (Sorry Maryland/Penn State, you do not qualify).

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Championship Week Video Notebook Day 6

WELCOME SELECTION COMMITTEE MEMBERS!!! We are here to make your lives easier!!

The first ticket was punched tonight as Morehead State won the Ohio Valley title. We look back at that game, as well as semifinals in the Missouri Valley, Big South and Northeast Conferences. Plus a ton of regular season action and thrilling early round action in other leagues!

Check out the HOOPS HD SURVIVAL BOARD, which shows who is a lock, who is on the bubble, and who needs the auto-bid

Also, don’t miss our CONFERENCE TOURNAMENT PAGE, which has brackets, times, and viewing information for all 32 conference tourney

Check out our new HOOPS HD TEAM SHEETS AND DEFCON RATINGS for all 362 D1 teams

Finally, be sure to keep an eye on our most recent BRACKET PROJECTIONS

Audio Only:

ASUN CHAMPIONSHIP

BIG SOUTH CHAMPIONSHIP

MISSOURI VALLEY CHAMPIONSHIP

PATRIOT LEAGUE SEMIFINALS

SOUTHERN SEMIFINALS

SUN BELT SEMIFINALS

BIG SKY QUARTERFINALS

CAA QUARTERFINALS

SUMMIT LEAGUE QUARTERFINALS

SOUTHLAND FIRST ROUND

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All-Access at the CAA Tournament: 2nd Round Saturday

Conference tournaments are about basketball but also so much more: the fans, parents, bands, cheerleaders, etc. The CAA Tournament is taking place this weekend in Washington, DC, and we could not be more excited to be there in person! HoopsHD will be covering all the angles so you can look forward to an abundance of articles in the days ahead. Jon Teitel continues our coverage with a recap of the 2nd round quadruple-header on Saturday.

Much like the rainy weather outside, the food selections today were a bit dreary. Flatbread pizzas for lunch were too much bread/not enough toppings, and while hot dog/burger for dinner was fine they ran out of dessert. Let’s tip it off:

GAME #1: Campbell-Monmouth
The Camels built a very early 17-8 lead and then Monmouth went on a very big run to take a 46-31 halftime lead thanks to the outside shooting of Abdi Bashir/Jack Collins and the inside shooting of Klemen Vuga (whose name must be Slovenian for “layup machine”. Campbell star G Anthony Dell’Orso tried to bring his team back in the 2nd half by knocking down several shots but the Hawks just had too much depth on offense (with 6 different players finishing in double-figures) as Monmouth won 90-67 and will face Charleston on Sunday afternoon. I missed the postgame press conference to complete a pair of interviews: you’re welcome.

GAME #2: William & Mary-Towson
I did not think the Tribe would have anything left in the tank after their quick turnaround but they looked great in the 1st 20 minutes. JR Gabe Dorsey did what he always does (make threes) and SO Chase Lowe continued his whale of a weekend by converting several layups. Most of Towson’s starters could not make a shot to save their lives but Nendah Tarke picked up the slack with a layup/jumper/floater in the lane, and Tomiwa Sulaiman subbed in to make a pair of 3-PT shots but William & Mary was still able to hang on for a 30-29 halftime lead. Tigers SR leader Charles Thompson saved the season in the 2nd half with several layups/jump shots as Towson won 67-56 and will play UNCW on Sunday afternoon.
I usually just try to summarize what the coach said in the postgame press conference…but Towson coach Pat Skerry is not your usual coach, which is why he answered my question by talking about HoopsHD with this stare in my direction:

You can see it all for yourself starting with my question at the 1:25 mark: www.youtube.com/watch?v=mRSYXrq07jM

GAME #3: Northeastern-Stony Brook
I knew that it was going to be a weird game after the 1st 12 seconds when Stony Brook G Tyler Stephenson-Moore: banked in a 3. Several minutes later his backcourt mate Aaron Clarke made a 3 to beat the shot-clock/got fouled/made the FT to complete the 4-PT play. Meanwhile, their fellow G Dean Noll made a ton of jump shots but the prettiest of all was a behind-the-back dribble leading to a step-back 3 from the top of the key. The good news for the Seawolves is that their guard play was good enough for a 35-29 halftime lead. The possible bad news is that their band/cheerleaders missed their great performance because they did not show up until halftime: would they jinx everything in the 2nd stanza?! Not so much, as the 3-headed monster mentioned above kept on scoring and almost combined to outscore the Huskies themselves (63 PTS on 9-20 3PM) as Stony Brook won it 75-65 and will play Drexel on Sunday night.
In the postgame press conference I asked Noll how it felt to finally win a postseason game: he has been playing college basketball since 2018 but his only 2 postseason appearances while at Cornell were a loss at Robert Morris in the 2019 CIT and a loss to Princeton in the 2022 Ivy tourney semifinals. He smiled and admitted that it felt great, and he is looking forward to playing again tomorrow so he can hopefully have the same feeling:

GAME #4: Hampton-Delaware
I am sure that it was a great game…but after attending 5 games in 30 hours I am calling it a wrap for today, check back tomorrow for the quarterfinal quadruple-header as the top seeds finally take the court.

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All-Access at the CAA Tournament: HoopsHD interviews Charleston/Monmouth basketball parents Jack & Kathleen Miller

Conference tournaments are about basketball but also so much more: the fans, parents, bands, cheerleaders, etc. The CAA Tournament tips off this week in Washington, DC, and we could not be more excited to be there in person! HoopsHD will be covering all the angles so you can look forward to an abundance of articles in the week ahead. Jon Teitel continues our coverage with an interview of Charleston/Monmouth basketball parents Jack & Kathleen Miller.

Kathleen: you played soccer at Monmouth, so how good a player were you back in the day, and how has the sport changed from then to now? I was a tough player but the girls now have more skill. We were ranked as high as 17th in the nation due to our toughness. The game has changed 100% and is not as physical now.

Jack: you were a D-1 women’s basketball coach at Monmouth/Seton Hall/Rider, so how much of an impact did you have on your sons’ basketball skills? I remember coaching them starting when they were in 1st grade. I coached them as much as I could but at some point you have to let others take over. 1 of the women’s basketball players I recruited to Monmouth was Christie Pearce, but she later decided to focus on soccer (where she won 3 Olympic gold medals and 2 World Cups)!

Your older son Jack plays was a walk-on/scout team member as a freshman at Charleston: how excited were you when he had made the roster last season/got a full scholarship this season? I cannot even put it into words. We were so happy for him because he works so hard…and now has fewer student loans! It just does not happen that often and took us totally by surprise: we were so thankful to the coaching staff and it was a dream come true for him.

Your younger son Corey is a freshman at Monmouth: how big a deal was it when he made the 1st basket of his career last month vs. North Carolina A&T? We were screaming! It was cool because he works hard too..and does not have a bad-looking shot!

Kathleen: wou are a school principal and have spent your professional life working in education, so what have you taught your boys about balancing their work on the court with their work in the classroom? You have to work hard at both because ast some point basketball will come to an end. Fortunately, we never had to worry about them because they have such a huge work ethic and are still making dean’s/presidents’s lists. We balanced it all while they were growing up so we do not have to get on them now: sports kept them in check and taught them a schedule from the get-go.

What is the best part of being a “basketball parent”, and what is the not-so-best part (if any)? The best part is just seeeing them so happy and loving what they are doing…although Sunday might not be the best part! We have memories of watching them play basketball from middle school up to now and doing something they are passionate about, and now my husband can just enjoy it without having to worry about coaching them.

Each of your kids’ teams played 31 regular-season games this year: how many were you able to make it to in person?
We went to 3 games for Jack and were able to make it to most of Corey’s home games. We have to thank ESPN+/FloSports because we have just as much fun watching the games at home: I think that we saw every single game either at home or in person.

You are in a unique situation as a parent as both of your sons will be playing in the CAA tourney: are you planning to spend all week just watching every single 1 of your kids’ games? Oh yeah: we even got a hotel directly in between their team hotels! We will be here until the end: we were here last year and it was an unbelievable exprience.

Your sons faced each other in January when the Cougars had an 11-PT win over the Hawks: was that a dream come true for you, and what on earth will you do when they face each other again in DC on Sunday?! I think that it was a dream come true: we could never have planned for it so it was unbelievable to watch. Our social meda was blowing up and both coaches were really getting into it by getting them into the game at the end and telling them to go after each other. You do not see it everyday and we were lucky to have that situation take place in front of 10,000 fans.

Any predictions for the son vs. son game? I just want them to have fun. Either way we win…and either way we lose, so may the best team win. Coach Kelsey has won the CAA for 2 years in a row but Coach Rice has also kept his guys in the mix this year.

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