Their City: Charleston postgame celebration

Here is a quick recap of the best photos I took during the Charleston postgame celebration last night:

The Cougar mascot was in a good mood:

The cheerleading team huddled together:

You do not need to be a tall coach to be a successful coach:

CAA Commissioner Joe D’Antonio handing over the hardware to the winning coach, who handed it to his players, who hoisted it skyward:


If you are going to punch your ticket then you better make it a big old ticket:

If Coach Pat Kelsey falls off that ladder with those sharp scissors then someone is getting sliced up!

The best father/son moment was when Coach Kelsey lifted his son Johnny up the ladder to cut down a piece of the net:

Johnny was everywhere at once: getting hoisted by Pat Robinson III, wondering when he will be tall enough to play for his dad, and letting everyone know who is #1!


Apparently postgame victory cigars are back in fashion:


Last, but not least, Ante Brzovic standing with his teammate Dalton Bolon, followed by Ante asking me to send him a copy, so if you see it on his Instagram feed: you’re welcome.

Posted in News and Notes | Comments Off on Their City: Charleston postgame celebration

Bracketology 2023: March Madness Predictions (Version 10.3)

-For the latest CHAMPIONSHIP WEEK VIDEO NOTEBOOK – DAY 9 where we break down all of yesterday’s conference tournament action and preview all of todays, and with links to brackets, schedules, the Survival Board, and more – CLICK HERE

We are only 4 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 2022 tourney and each of his 67 of were within 1 spot of their actual seed, including 49 right on the money. He will spend the upcoming days predicting which 68 teams will hear their names called on March 12th. 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 12th out of 148 entries over the past 5 years), check out: www.bracketmatrix.com

SEED: TEAM (CONFERENCE)
1: Alabama (SEC)
1: Kansas (Big 12)
1: Houston (AAC)
1: Purdue (Big 10)

2: UCLA (Pac-12)
2: Texas (Big 12)
2: Baylor (Big 12)
2: Arizona (Pac-12)

3: Marquette (Big East)
3: Gonzaga (WCC): AUTO-BID
3: Kansas State (Big 12)
3: Tennessee (SEC)

4: Connecticut (Big East)
4: Xavier (Big East)
4: Indiana (Big 10)
4: Virginia (ACC)

5: St. Mary’s (WCC)
5: Miami (ACC)
5: San Diego State (MWC)
5: Iowa State (Big 12)

6: TCU (Big 12)
6: Kentucky (SEC)
6: Texas A&M (SEC)
6: Creighton (Big East)

7: Duke (ACC)
7: Michigan State (Big 10)
7: Northwestern (Big 10)
7: Missouri (SEC)

8: Iowa (Big 10)
8: Maryland (Big 10)
8: Illinois (Big 10)
8: Arkansas (SEC)

9: Florida Atlantic (C-USA)
9: West Virginia (Big 12)
9: Auburn (SEC)
9: Memphis (AAC)

10: Boise State (MWC)
10: USC (Pac-12)
10: Providence (Big East)
10: NC State (ACC)

11: Pittsburgh (ACC)
11: Utah State (MWC)
11: Mississippi State (SEC)
11: Nevada (MWC)
11: Rutgers (Big 10)
11: Penn State (Big 10)

12: Charleston (CAA): AUTO-BID
12: Oral Roberts (Summit): AUTO-BID
12: Drake (MVC): AUTO-BID
12: VCU (A-10)

13: Toledo (MAC)
13: Utah Valley (WAC)
13: Princeton (Ivy)
13: Iona (MAAC)

14: Louisiana (Sun Belt): AUTO-BID
14: Furman (SoCon): AUTO-BID
14: UC-Irvine (Big West)
14: Kennesaw State (Atlantic Sun): AUTO-BID

15: Colgate (Patriot)
15: Montana State (Big Sky)
15: Vermont (America East)
15: UNC-Asheville (Big South): AUTO-BID

16: Northern Kentucky (Horizon): AUTO-BID
16: Texas A&M-Corpus Christi (Southland)
16: Fairleigh Dickinson (NEC): AUTO-BID
16: Southeast Missouri State (OVC): AUTO-BID
16: Howard (MEAC)
16: Alcorn State (SWAC)

1ST 4 OUT
Arizona State (Pac-12)
Oklahoma (Big 12)
Oklahoma State (Big 12)
Wisconsin (Big 10)

Posted in Bracketology | Comments Off on Bracketology 2023: March Madness Predictions (Version 10.3)

Happy Birthday! HoopsHD interviews former Florida Atlantic coach Tim Loomis

FAU coach Dusty May certainly has things going in the right direction. After being hired in 2018 he had 4 straight winning seasons before taking it up a few notches this year with a 28-3 record as he prepares for his C-USA quarterfinal game on Thursday night. The coach who helped get the program going in D-1 back in the 1990s was Tim Loomis, who later was hired as head coach at Thiel College and just finished his 17th season in Greenville, PA. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Tim about a quadruple-overtime game and making the leap to D-1. Today is Tim’s 70th birthday so let us be the 1st to wish him a happy 1!

You spent 2 years as an assistant under legendary head coach Eddie McCluskey (1 of the best high school coaches in Pennsylvania history) at California University of Pennsylvania before becoming head coach yourself: what made him such a great coach, and what was the most important thing you ever learned from him? He was the best coach I ever worked with. He was a national COY once and won a lot of state titles. The biggest thing I learned from him was how to make adjustments at halftime and manage a team. He is 1 of the most knowledgeable guys that I have ever met.

In 1984 you had a 2-PT 4-OT loss to Philly Textile: where does that rank among the most exciting games of your career? Herb Magee and I are good friends: he is a legend. I recall that we each ended up with only 4 players on the floor due to everyone fouling out! It was a strange and exciting game. Textile was a D-2 powerhouse and we were just starting to get good. We played UDC after they won the national title and had the D-2 tourney MOP (Michael Britt) and a future 1st round pick (Earl Jones): that was the other biggest game I was ever involved with.

You were an assistant coach under Bruce Parkhill at Penn State from 1986-1989: why did you decide to take the job? I did not start out wanting to coach but different things lead to different paths. I thought about staying in California but I was young and figured I would see what D-1 was like. Bruce was great to work for and I do not have any regrets.

What are your memories of the 1989 A-10 tourney title game (Rick Dadika made a pair of 3-PT shots in the final minutes of a 4-PT win by Rutgers)? It was a tough game and the loudest crowd that I have ever heard in my life. Bruce had taken the program a long way so it was disappointing to miss out on a spot in the NCAA tourney. My ears hurt for 2 days after that! We had a young pair of guards that year so it was a turning point for our program.

In the 1989 NIT 7’3” Tom Greis scored 24 PTS/9-11 FG in a 9-PT win by Villanova: I assume Greis was the “biggest” reason for the Wildcats’ win? The biggest thing from that game is that I distinctly remember Rollie Massimino switching from a matchup zone to a man-to-man defense. He came into our locker room after the game and was very gracious. It was great to break down film with coaches like him and John Chaney: they were so crafty and such great coaches.

Later that year you became head coach at Florida Atlantic, where you oversaw the team making the transition from D-2 to D-1: what is the biggest difference between the 2 levels of competition? Not a lot: good coaches can coach anywhere but the talent level is a bit different because the guys are bigger and the PGs are quicker. We figured we would stay at D-2 for awhile but the administration decided for a quicker switch so we had to get a lot of talent in there ASAP. Chaney’s advice was to just play it 1 half at a time and keep making adjustments. We had about 5 athletic directors during my 7 years there so it was hard to maintain a consistent winning atmosphere.

You have spent almost 2 decades as head coach at Thiel College: how do you like the job, and what do you hope to do in the future? I love it here. Everyone in D-3 has a couple of low D-1 or D-2 guys and everyone can coach a little bit so you just have to keep recruiting talent. The last several years we have been good and we should have won the conference title at least once or twice so hopefully we can get to the D-3 tourney this year. We are kind of building our own good program and are well respected in the region.

Posted in Interviews | Tagged , | Comments Off on Happy Birthday! HoopsHD interviews former Florida Atlantic coach Tim Loomis

Tourney Talk: HoopsHD interviews Southeast Missouri State coach Brad Korn

On Saturday Southeast Missouri State beat Tennessee Tech 89-82 in OT in the OVC tourney title game to earn an automatic bid to next week’s NCAA tournament. The Redhawks won 11 games in 2021 and 14 games in 2022 but won 19 games this year to claim the school’s 1st NCAA tourney bid since 2000. Yesterday HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to speak with Southeast Missouri State coach Brad Korn about his own run to the Sweet 16 as a player at Southern Illinois back in 2002.

You played for Coach Bruce Weber at Southern Illinois: what made him such a great coach, and what was the most important thing that you ever learned from him? A lot of what we will do leading up to the Selection Show is what I learned from him. He was a genuine person who challenged us but treated us like the stars of the show.

In 2002 you made the Sweet 16 before losing to UConn: what is your favorite memory from that remarkable run? I grew up watching Michael Jordan so to play well in the United Center in Chicago with my family there in the NCAA tourney was pretty great. It was kind of a storybook situation back then: just walking in and seeing the Jordan statue was a dream come true!

You lost in the 2003 NCAA tourney on a Ricky Paulding FT with 4.1 seconds left and in the 2004 NCAA tourney on an Antoine Pettway runner with 5 seconds left: what makes the difference in March in games that come down to the wire? Everything in society is results-based: I guarantee that if you go back and watch those games you could find a missed FT or turnover. People focus on the final play but everything means so much in a survive-or-go-home scenario so there is no play that is too small. It can come down to “1 shining moment” but it is not just about the last possession.

As a senior your coach was Matt Painter: would it be a dream or a nightmare if you end up facing Purdue in a potential 1 vs. 16 matchup?! A dream if we win and a nightmare if we lose! The crazy thing is that when I was at Kansas State we were in Charlotte for the 8 vs. 9 game in the 2018 NCAA tourney when UMBC upset Virginia so I have seen the only #16-seed upset in tourney history.

In the 2016 NCAA tourney as an assistant to Weber at Kansas State you made it all the way to the Elite 8 as a #9-seed: what is the secret to advancing as an underdog? I do not watch a ton of NBA basketball but I have heard Shaquille O’Neal/Charles Barkley talk about how “The Others” have to step up. We had some of our non-stars do a bunch of intangible things during our conference tourney. The top guys will always get keyed on by the opposing defense so you need to get some good minutes from your bench.

Last Saturday in the OVC tourney title game Chris Harris scored 26 PTS en route to being named conference tourney MVP in a 7-PT OT win over Tennessee Tech: how were you able to stay focused after Diante Wood’s amazing shot to tie the game at the end of regulation, and what was the feeling like in your locker room after winning 4 games in 4 days? I give Dylan Branson a ton of credit. Some of our guys came back to the huddle with tears in their eyes because they thought that we had lost the championship on a 3-PT shot, but Dylan told them that we had 5 more minutes to live out our dream. It just speaks to the level of resiliency that our guys have. There is so much that goes into it with so many people from our families to our support staff. It was an extremely nice celebration!

Your school had not made the NCAA tourney since a 3-PT loss to LSU in 2000: what has the reaction been like since returning to campus? We had a great crowd come up to Evansville. I think a lot of people have been sitting around and waiting for it to happen again but it has been a long time coming. This region knows basketball so it is almost like a sense of relief and hopefully it will bring out a lot of people. Hopefully we can bust it open and stay on the map.

You had a couple of road losses in December to teams who will probably make the NCAA tourney in Missouri/Iowa: which of them impressed you the most? I have been impressed with Missouri all year long, as well as teams like Bradley/SIU. We played a challenging schedule and hit our head a little bit but it was a microcosm of how we played in the tourney. Coach Dennis Gates has done an amazing job with the roster he inherited while playing an SEC schedule.

You only have 3 seniors/1 junior on your roster: while your team has proved it is built to win now, how excited are you by the fact that most of them will be sticking around for the foreseeable future? That is how we constructed our roster. We lost 10 players last year and then 2 assistant coaches so we strategically attacked that. We also had a bunch of guys hurt this year who will help us next year so I think the future is bright. It is always nice to ask recruits if they want to join a championship-level program …and we can now say that.

What kind of seed do you think you deserve, and what kind of seed do you think you will get? They are not even going to look at our resume but I do hope that they look at our non-conference schedule. I am hopeful for a 14/15 but due to the metrics we will probably get a 16 seed, and maybe even a play-in game. The most important thing is that SEMO made the NCAA tourney. You saw that our kids do not quit and keep fighting so we will take this opportunity and run with it.

Posted in Interviews | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Tourney Talk: HoopsHD interviews Southeast Missouri State coach Brad Korn

Championship Week Video Notebook – Day 9

WELCOME SELECTION COMMITTEE MEMBERS!!!  We do this work for you so you don’t have to!!!

CLICK HERE for the HOOPS HD SURVIVAL BOARD, which shows who is a lock, who is on the bubble, and who needs the auto-bid

CLICK HERE for our CONFERENCE TOURNAMENT INFO PAGE, which has brackets, times, and viewing information for all 32 conference tourney

CLICK HERE for our most recent BRACKET PROJECTIONS

There were five championships tonight, most notably Gonzaga blowing out Saint Mary’s to win the WCC (again), Charleston hanging on in a seesaw battle against UNC Wilmington, Northern Kentucky getting past Cleveland State to win the Horizon, Merrimack winning the NEC over Fairleigh Dickinson despite not being eligible for the NCAA Tournament, and Oral Roberts blowing out North Dakota State to complete the perfect season in the Summit League.  We had some crazy semifinal action in the Big Sky with Northern Arizona pulling another upset to advance to the championship, and multiple overtime games in some of the other conferences.  We discuss it all and preview all of tomorrow’s action.

And for all you radio lovers, below is an audio only version of the show…

BIG SKY CHAMPIONSHIP:

PATRIOT LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP:

SOUTHLAND CHAMPIONSHIP:

METRO ATLANTIC QUARTERFINALS:

SWAC QUARTERFINALS:

MEAC QUARTERFINALS:

ACC 2ND ROUND:

ATLANTIC TEN 2ND ROUND:

BIG 12 OPENING ROUND:

PAC 12 OPENING ROUND:

BIG EAST OPENING ROUND:

MOUNTAIN WEST OPENING ROUND:

CONFERENCE USA OPENING ROUND:

BIG TEN 1ST ROUND:

SEC 1ST ROUND:

Posted in Championship Week Video Notebook, Podcasts, Videocasts | 1 Comment

All-Access at the CAA Tournament: Title Game Tuesday

Conference tournaments are about basketball but also so much more: the fans, bands, cheerleaders, etc. The CAA Tournament is taking place in Washington, DC, this weekend and we could not be more excited to be there in person! HoopsHD will be covering all of the angles so you can look forward to a cascade of coverage in the days ahead. Jon Teitel wraps things up with a recap of the Tuesday night title game.

The final pregame meal was great: BBQ beef/pulled chicken/string beans/sweet potato/cheesecake/lemonade!
Let’s tip off the title game:

UNC-Wilmington vs. Charleston

The breakout star of this tourney remains…Coach Pat Kelsey’s son Johnny, who stood front and center during the national anthem, made sure everyone got a high-5 during the introduction of the starting lineup, then took his seat on the end of the bench to cheer on dad.


Both team’s fans were standing to start the game, realizing that 1 (or maybe both!?) of their schools was 40 minutes away from dancing.


The clear winner of the deja vu award is Seahawks big man Nick Farrar: exactly 1 year ago he played his final game in a Charleston uniform and scored 5 PTS in a 3-PT loss to UNCW that ended his Cougar career…and tonight he is playing for UNCW against Charleston! The 1st half was what you might expect from a pair of teams who were playing their 3rd game in 3 days and facing each other for the 3rd time this season. A lot of jump shots off the front of the rim, no easy baskets, and constant subbing to keep everyone fresh for the 2nd half. Charleston SR G Ryan Larson scored 8 PTS in a low-scoring 1st half but his team’s 2-14 shooting from behind the arc left them in a small hole at halftime, trailing 27-24. Fortunately, they are somehow 5-0 this season when having a halftime deficit!

The 2nd half got off to an exciting start with the ever-popular “mascot dance-off”:


Charleston big man Ante Brzovic dominated the 1st 3 minutes after intermission with 8 quick PTS and Larson chipped in a pair of shots from behind the arc as the Cougars opend up a 9-PT lead (40-31). However, Seahawks G Trazarien White became a 1-man comeback machine with back-to-back old-fashioned 3-PT plays and then a deep 3 to help his team finish off a 15-0 run to take a 49-42 lead. If you thought that a 30-win Charletson team would just roll over and die, think again. Larson keyed a late comeback with a long 3, a huge STL, and a coast-to-coast layup to help his team take a 57-53 lead with under 3 minutes to go as the Cougar fans were screaming at the top of their lungs. Brzovic made 2 tough jumpers in the final 80 seconds to give his team a 61-56 lead and they hung on to win it by a score of 63-58.



There was a nice trophy presentation followed by the cutting of the nets: tune in tomorrow for all of the celebration photos. What an exciting finish to a terrific tourney, congrats to the Cougars, and good luck to whoever gets matched up against them on Selection Sunday!

Posted in CBB | Tagged , | Comments Off on All-Access at the CAA Tournament: Title Game Tuesday