Under The Radar Game of the Day – Tuesday, January 31st

Saint Louis (15-6, 7-1) at Fordham (17-4, 5-3) – 7:00 PM ET (ESPN+)

We close out the month of January with a trip to historic Rose Hill Gym where the Fordham Rams will host the Saint Louis Billikens. Fordham looked like their carriage was turning into a pumpkin when they started conference play with 3 losses in their last 4 games, but a 3-game roadtrip saw 3 straight victories for the Rams, including a win against upstate foe St. Bonaventure. In their last game, Khalid Moore had 30 points in Fordham’s 85-70 win against George Washington.

The lights for Saint Louis were flickering on and off during their early season; they had wins against Memphis and Providence but also had a surprising home loss to SIU-Edwardsville in late December. The Billikens would start A-10 play with a 1-1 road trip that included a loss at UMass, but they have since won 6 straight games to take over sole possession of first place in the conference. In their 74-70 win against Davidson last Friday night, Javon Pickett had 14 points off the bench for Saint Louis.

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The Hoops HD Report – Monday, Jan 30th

A full panel has been assembled tonight, including Bryan Black who was finally able to join us.  We review a very busy week in college basketball, including this past Saturday which had more than its share of surprises.  Alabama was absolutely creamed by Oklahoma, Iowa State fell against a Missouri team that needed a big win, and TCU endured injuries and lost in overtime to Mississippi State just to name a few.  We once again look at the overall strength of the Big 12, which still has six teams that are separated by just one game and all of whom are within reach of a protected seed.  Purdue has a big week coming up as they face Indiana this weekend.  We take a look at Texas A&M, Mississippi State, and Arkansas from the SEC and talk about whether or not they belong in the field right now, and what they need to do in order to make it.  The Mountain West has several teams who are on pace to make the field, most notable Boise State, New Mexico, and San Diego State, and we take a look at their upcoming games.  We discuss all that, and more!

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

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Hoops HD Staff Bracket – Monday, January 30th

This week, it is our colleague John Stalica’s turn to do the Staff Bracket here at Hoops HD – this is not to be confused with the bracket that our colleagues Jon Teitel and Rocco Miller do where they try to guess the Selection Committee. Rather, this is what Stalica feels the bracket should look like after this checkpoint of the season.

Without further ado, here is the bracket:

First Four Out: Texas A&M, Oklahoma, Wake Forest, Charleston (if they were at-large) – next in line would be Arizona State

Worth a cursory look: Nevada, Utah State, Mississippi State, Utah, VCU, Seton Hall

COMMENTS FROM JOHN:

– Now it starts to get a little harder picking the four #1 seeds. I don’t think Kansas State continues their current pace as the Big 12 gauntlet rears its ugly head, but they do in my mind deserve the final #1 spot over teams like Arizona and Houston for now. Houston, like Gonzaga, has been playing with fire in a lot of their games and were fortunate not to have losses like Kent State and Cincinnati on their profile.

– Illinois is a little schizo, but you could also argue that wins like UCLA and Texas away from home offset some of the stink of some of their blowout losses like Penn State and Missouri. Not unexpected considering the Illini are a pretty young team.

– I expect to get skewered for having teams like Saint Mary’s and San Diego State lower than most of my colleagues, but they don’t have a plethora of wins against teams in this field. San Diego State, Duke and North Carolina can’t be pleased with Ohio State’s collapse this season.

– Teams like Creighton and West Virginia have really stabilized their profiles quite a bit the past couple of weeks; a win or two away from home would really help solidify them further. Arkansas and Wisconsin are going in the wrong direction and could be in bigger trouble if and when bid thieves surface during the Championship Fortnight.

COMMENTS FROM CHAD:

– I do NOT agree with Alabama still being on the 1 seed line.  The Tide now have a loss to a team that did not make John’s field.  Further, their only true top-caliber win was at Houston.  David Griggs like to say that road wins are great because it is so hard to win at certain buildings.  Quite frankly, winning at Houston has not been difficult this year.  The Cougars now have a home loss to Temple and single-digit wins at home over Cincinnati, Kent State, South Florida and UCF — none of which are inside the bubble.  Houston only deserves their great ranking because they are a dominant 8-0 AWAY from home.  I personally would rank Tennessee, Kansas State, Houston and even Baylor higher than the Tide.

– Speaking of Baylor, it is a complete sin for this team to be a 4 seed.  The Bears have won 6 in a row, have beaten UCLA, Gonzaga and Kansas (all of whom John rated higher than them) and have no bad losses.  I could honestly make a case for them as the fourth #1 seed right now.

– I do not understand Providence as a 5 seed.  The Friars are a good team, but they have no wins away from home against anyone in the field.  They have only beaten two tournament teams overall (UConn and Marquette), and both wins came at home.  They need to be a few lines lower.

– Clemson belongs in a 7/10 game, but probably as the 10 seed.  They almost suffered their third Tier 4 loss this weekend at home to a bad Georgia Tech team.  I get that first place in the ACC looks flashy, but a backloaded conference schedule will likely have this team sweating out Selection Sunday.

– Maryland as an 8 seems a stretch to me as well.  The Terps have exactly one road win, and it was at NET 337 Louisville.  I need to see something more away from home before I can justify giving this team the right to wear white in the first round.

– I have belied all season that Missouri’s wins and record were a fluke, but no longer.  After their huge win over Iowa State this weekend, I am completely buying stock in the Tigers.  They have no bad losses and have won a couple of road games (and a pair of neutral court ones as well).  I would have Mizzou 2-3 seed lines higher than a 9.

– Arkansas would be my first team out right now.  The Razorbacks have been hurt by injuries, but there is no current sign of this team getting healthy again.  They have not won a single road game and only have 2 wins against anyone in the field.  Couple that with bad losses to LSU and Vanderbilt, and I think the NIT awaits.

– I would also have USC and Kentucky above the First Four, probably by a couple of lines each.  USC’s win over UCLA (combined with how close they came earlier this year at UCLA) completely changes the complexion of their profile.  And Kentucky really only has one bad loss to go with one of the best wins anyone will get all season (at Tennessee).  I expect the Wildcats to start piling up wins and climbing the seed lists with their remaining schedule being a lot easier than the first half of conference play was.

– I think decent cases can be made for Mississippi State, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State being in the field, and a weak one for Texas A&M.  However, all in all I am not offended by John’s choice of teams to include — my biggest issues had to do with seeding decisions.  At least he did way better than the bracket Griggs posted a few weeks back!

COMMENTS FROM DAVID:

-A case can be made that Kansas State doesn’t belong on the #1 line.  A strong case.  In fact if I were trying to guess the actual Selection Committee I probably wouldn’t have them on the #1 line because I know the committee will gag on how weak their OOC schedule was, but I LOVE how they have TWO wins against likely protected seeds on the road.  To me, that would put them ahead of an Arizona team that, while good, doesn’t have any wins as good as that, and has their share of questionable losses (particularly Wazzu at home).

-I kind of believe in the Elo Chess concept.  If you don’t know what that is, basically it means you can’t move up by beating teams (or I guess chess players in terms of ELO) that are behind you, and you can’t get knocked down by losing to teams that are ahead of you.  I don’t think that concept should be applied absolutely, but I do think it should be applied to a point.  Kentucky lost to Kansas.  I know it was at home, but it was still to Kansas.  I don’t think that would drop them all that far, yet everyone now seems to have them just barely in the field, or not in the field at all.

-I don’t know what to make of Charleston.  I do think the real committee will take them if they win out, but lose in the conference tournament.  What I’m not sure of is whether or not I personally agree.  John has them just outside his bubble, but in the field as the auto-bid winner.  They have about three wins that I would rate as (at best) decent.  Every other team on the bubble will almost assuredly have better wins than CofC does, and that includes everyone Stalica selected, and even a few that he didn’t.  That’s tough.  But, I guess it doesn’t matter.  An outright first place team with just one league loss and a reasonably healthy NET will almost always be selected by the real committee.  In fact they’d start the process off on the Nomination Board by virtue of being a first place team, and it isn’t likely that they would ever be removed.

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Under The Radar Game of the Day (and the Puppet’s Daily Rundown)- Monday, January 30th

Maryland-Eastern Shore (12-8, 5-1) at Morgan State (11-10, 4-2) – 7:30 PM ET

Tonight’s UTR Game of the Day features a pair of Maryland rivals as Eastern Shore travels to Baltimore to face off against the Morgan State Bears. The Hawks are on a tear right now where they have won 9 out of their last 10 games; it was highlighted in the beginning with an 86-78 win at Temple. In conference play, UMES is tied for first with Howard; they beat the Bison by 9 and their only loss has come on the road at Norfolk State. Zion Styles averages 11.4 points a game and 3.4 rebounds a game for the Hawks.

Morgan State came into conference play winning their first three games; after getting a nonconference tuneup win against Hartford, the Bears have lost two of their last three games. They appeared to get back on track with a home win against Norfolk State, but they lost in the closing seconds at Delaware State 64-62 on Saturday. Isaiah Burke averages 20 points a game for the Bears.

 

DAILY RUNDOWN (Monday, Jan 30th):

-For Jon Teitel’s latest Bracket Projections – CLICK HERE

-After a crazy Saturday (that you can read about by CLICKING HERE) yesterday was rather un-cataclysmic.  Purdue, Providence, and Penn State all won games they were expected to win, Iowa got a nice win at home against Rutgers, and Memphis held serve on the road to beat Tulsa.

-VIRGINIA AT SYRACUSE (ACC).  This could be a bit of a road challenge for Virginia, but they’ve answered pretty much every challenge they’ve faced this season and should be able to knock off an NIT-ish looking team on the road.

-CHICAGO STATE AT THE CITADEL.  I’m highlighting this because I am genuinely impressed with the progress Chicago State has made this year and how they continue to play hard.  This would be their 7th overall win of the season if they can pull it off on the road.  This will be Chicago State’s 19th road game.

-BAYLOR AT TEXAS (Big 12).  Texas is looking to rebound from their loss at Tennessee over the weekend and has a hard but winnable game tonight against a Baylor team that’s been playing really well.  Oh yeah, and it’s yet another Big 12 game where both teams are within range of a protected seed.

-IOWA STATE AT TEXAS TECH (Big 12).  Texas Tech is perhaps the weakest team in the league, but they’re still good enough to where it’s hard to win on the road.  Iowa State is in the hunt for a protected seed and is looking to bounce back from a loss this past weekend.

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Happy Anniversary! HoopsHD interviews Oakland legend Carvin Melson

CLICK HERE for Jon Teitel’s LATEST BRACKETOLOGY, which is among the most accurate in the world!!

College basketball scoring has finally picked up this month: Trenton Massner of Western Illinois and Marcus Tsohonis of Long Beach State each scored 46 PTS in late-January, followed by Drew Pember of UNC Asheville becoming the 1st player this season to score 48 PTS last Wednesday in an 8-PT OT win over Presbyterian. 1 guy who knows a little about scoring 48 PTS is Carvin Melson, who set a school record when he did so for Oakland back in 1972. He still holds a few school records (including 2408 career PTS/1204 career REB) and was inducted into his school’s Hall of Honor in 1984. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Carvin about many things…including bees. Today is the 51st anniversary of Carvin’s 48-PT game so we take this time to remember his remarkable achievement.

You were an All-State selection at Murray-Wright High School in 1969: what made you choose Oakland? I was actually honorable mention All-State. We won the city championship in 1968 and I was heavily recruited by some big programs. My high school coach got the job at Oakland and I felt some loyalty because he had coached me from the time I was a young boy: I knew that he would care about me personally and professionally. When I 1st arrived I met a senior named Eddie Holloman who introduced me as a guy who would set a record that would stand for over 50 years: he was mighty prophetic!

On January 29, 1972, you scored a school-record 48 PTS vs. Grand Valley State: was it just 1 of those scenarios where every shot you put up seemed to go in because you were “in the zone”? That was really interesting. I scored 32 PTS in the 1st half and after halftime the crowd would start calling out how many points I had every time that I scored! After scoring 48 my coach took me out. 1 of our opponents scored close to 40 as well so it was 1 of those back-and-forth games.

After having some mediocre stats as a freshman you shot 59.1 FG%/81.4 FT% as a senior: how were you able to turn yourself into such a great shooter? Every year I would practice 1 particular thing and try to improve on that area. I prided myself on being an all-around player but I definitely tried to improve my shooting. If you look at my stats I scored 19 PPG as a freshman but kept scoring more PTS every single year.

You remain the school’s all-time leader with 2408 PTS: what was your secret for being a great scorer? I did not rely on any 1 thing: I tried to play defense, get some steals, and grab a lot of offensive REB. I was a double-double machine. I got my points in a variety of ways rather than just taking a bunch of jump shots. We faced some of the best defensive teams in the nation and there was no shot clock back then. My best play was coming around a pick at the top of the key: if there was a 3-PT line back then and more than 25 games/season I would have scored even more! We were not in a conference back then but I made a generic all-star team and also made the all-tourney team in every tourney that I played in. It has been 50 years since I played there and I cannot believe that I still have that record with all of the run-and-gun offenses today.

You also hold the school record with 1204 REB: do you think that anyone will ever break your records? Nobody has come close to that and I do not think that either of my records will be broken. Anybody that would have so many points by their junior year would probably turn pro. Travis Bader (2351 PTS) came close to my scoring record several years ago but fell a little short.

In 1984 you were inducted into the school’s Hall of Honor: where does that rank among the highlights of your career? Really high because I was the 1st basketball player to be inducted. They were trying to make Oakland into the “Harvard of the Midwest”. We were not known for basketball at the time but we beat some good teams like Eastern Michigan and even beat UAB handily in a scrimmage.

After your basketball career came to a close you took etymology classes at Purdue and then founded a pest control company, where you have become an expert at solving bee nesting problems: what caused you to make such a big career change? I went to the Pistons training camp in 1973 with Coach Ray Scott. I thought that I should have made it but Ben Kelso had a no-cut contract. After they cut me I spent 1 year in the ABA before going to camp with New Orleans…then getting cut again. I was a tweener back then: I could rebound very well even though my natural position as a 6’4” player was at guard. I wiped the floor every day with a guard from Central Michigan named Jim McElroy, who had played with Dan Roundfield in college (so he had a lot of scouts come to see his games), and he ended up making the team over me. I started a pest control business and had a lot of customers who were having bee problems, which allowed me to specialize in bees and carve out my own niche. I still work on it to this day and help people implement prevention procedures. It was something I had wanted to do all along after giving basketball everything I had: I love what I do. I also spent some time working with youths at a boys’ club but I did not enjoy sitting behind a desk all day. I have a lot of repeat customers so my goal now is to franchise: there is not a lot of written material on how to treat bees. I have put together a package over the past 30 years: nobody really talks about prevention so I am just trying to put it all down on paper.

When people look back on your career, how do you want to be remembered the most? As someone who dedicated himself to the cause and gave everything he had. We came into Oakland as “The Pioneers” with very low expectations. 1 thing Coach Gene Boldon does not get credit for was upgrading our schedule from junior college opponents to better teams even though we did not have scholarships. It was not so much me standing out: I was a part of a team that led our program to the next level. We would have buses break down on us and they did not want to put the money into basketball…but we had a vision and came out really respectable. The guys before us set the tone for my group to come in and we just went out and did our thing.

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Bracketology 2023: March Madness Predictions (Version 5.0)

CLICK HERE for today’s HOOPS HD DAILY RUNDOWN where we review a very busy day from yesterday, and preview all of today’s meaningful games

We are only 6 weeks 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 months 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: Purdue (Big 10)
1: Houston (AAC)
1: Tennessee (SEC)
1: Alabama (SEC)

2: Kansas (Big 12)
2: Arizona (Pac-12)
2: UCLA (Pac-12)
2: Kansas State (Big 12)

3: Texas (Big 12)
3: Virginia (ACC)
3: Iowa State (Big 12)
3: Baylor (Big 12)

4: Xavier (Big East)
4: Gonzaga (WCC)
4: Marquette (Big East)
4: TCU (Big 12)

5: Connecticut (Big East)
5: Rutgers (Big 10)
5: St. Mary’s (WCC)
5: Indiana (Big 10)

6: Miami (ACC)
6: Auburn (SEC)
6: Duke (ACC)
6: Providence (Big East)

7: Illinois (Big 10)
7: San Diego State (MWC)
7: North Carolina (ACC)
7: Michigan State (Big 10)

8: NC State (ACC)
8: New Mexico (MWC)
8: Missouri (SEC)
8: Florida Atlantic (C-USA)

9: Arkansas (SEC)
9: Clemson (ACC)
9: Iowa (Big 10)
9: Creighton (Big East)

10: Boise State (MWC)
10: Memphis (AAC)
10: Northwestern (Big 10)
10: Maryland (Big 10)

11: Wisconsin (Big 10)
11: USC (Pac-12)
11: West Virginia (Big 12)
11: Oklahoma (Big 12)
11: Mississippi State (SEC)
11: Pittsburgh (ACC)

12: Charleston (CAA)
12: Kent State (MAC)
12: VCU (A-10)
12: Oral Roberts (Summit)

13: Liberty (Atlantic Sun)
13: Marshall (Sun Belt)
13: Siena (MAAC)
13: UCSB (Big West)

14: Southern Illinois (MVC)
14: Utah Valley (WAC)
14: Princeton (Ivy)
14: Colgate (Patriot)

15: Samford (SoCon)
15: Eastern Washington (Big Sky)
15: UNC-Asheville (Big South)
15: Vermont (America East)

16: Youngstown State (Horizon)
16: Southeast Missouri State (OVC)
16: Norfolk State (MEAC)
16: Fairleigh Dickinson (NEC)
16: Southern (SWAC)
16: Texas A&M-Corpus Christi (Southland)

1ST 4 OUT
Arizona State (Pac-12)
Kentucky (SEC)
Nevada (MWC)
Ohio State (Big 10)

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