News, Notes, and Highlighted Games: Wednesday, Dec 13th

-It has been a very slow week so far. There was so little activity the last two days that we really didn’t even bother with a write-up. Today, we at least have a smattering of games that are worth paying attention to. We will also be recording Under the Radar tonight so be on the lookout for that.

-APPALACHIAN STATE AT QUEENS. James Madison has made most of the noise out of the Sun Belt, but Appalachian State looks to be just as good. One of the things App State has yet to do is win a true road game, and Queens is not an easy place to go and win despite the fact that they are a transitional program. In fact Queens has yet to lose at home, and Appalachian State has yet to win on the road, so this would be a nice win for them if they can pull it off.

-CREIGHTON VS UNLV (Jack Jones Classic, Henderson, NV). It may perhaps be a somewhat pro-UNLV crowd with the game being in Nevada, but it’s still one that Creighton should be able to win without having to sweat too much.

-WEBER STATE AT NEVADA. Both teams have shown they can play at a high level at times, and Nevada is starting to build at least a fairly decent profile at 7-1 overall, but six of those wins have come at home and Weber State has struggled with consistency so far. This would be a good win for either team, but whoever pulls it off will still have work to do.

-UTAH STATE AT SANTA CLARA. I really like what this Utah State team has been able to do so far, but this could be a bit of a tough road test for them. They’re 9-1 on the year, but just one of those wins was in a true road game, and Santa Clara isn’t the easiest place to go. This would definitely help Utah State’s resume if they’re able to pull it off.

-Bryn Athyn (nonD1) @ Princeton
-Florida International @ Florida Atlantic – it’s a rivalry game, but it’s also a huge mismatch
-Murray State @ Mississippi State – Mississippi State is a good team but their resume can’t afford another home buy-game loss
-Chicago State @ Northwestern – perhaps a more compelling game than DePaul vs. Northwestern?
-Tennessee State @ Liberty – Liberty is a good team, but they may be running out of strikes if they want any shot at landing inside the bubble
-UNC Asheville @ Auburn – a likely Big South frontrunner against an Auburn team that I think is better than what they’ve gotten credit for
-Southern Miss @ McNeese – a pretty solid UTR match-up
-Denver @ BYU (Front Range v BeeHive Challange)
-Seattle U @ San Francisco

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The Hoops HD Report (Dec 11)

Chad, David, and Jon Teitel run through all the major conferences and take a look back at a busy week. Arizona is the top ranked team in the nation and showed they were deserving of it with their blowout win over Wisconsin. In the Big 12, Houston, Kansas, Baylor, and Oklahoma are all high in the rankings and continuing to build up their resumes. Marquette, Creighton, and UConn have all managed big wins and are all ranked in the top ten out of the Big East. Ole Miss remains unbeaten, and Kentucky is starting to bounce back out of the SEC. We discuss all that, and more!

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

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SELECTION MONDAY!! Hoops HD Bracket Projections (From the Puppet) – Dec 11th

For Today’s NEWS NOTES AND HIGHLIGHTED GAMES – CLICK HERE

Before you look at the bracket, I want to make sure everyone knows what they are looking at. These are NOT my guesses is to what the actual Selection Committee’s Final bracket will look like on Selection Sunday in March. It is also not an attempt to guess what the actual Selection Committee would do if they were picking the field today. These are simply my own picks, and this is a CHECKPOINT based on CURRENT MERIT, and not a ranking of how good I think the teams actually are. I’m only really asking myself one question. How hard is it to win the games that this team has won?? That’s really it.

For instance, I personally think Auburn is really good, but I have them seeded kind of poorly. The reason is that at this point in time, they just haven’t won any games that really jump of the page.

If the season were a 40-minute game, we’d be about at the under-12 media timeout in the 1st half. There is a long way to go and I’m not trying to guess the future. Metaphorically speaking, I’m just trying to show what I think the score is at the under-12 1st half timeout.

Some notes and comments are listed below…

-Conference Champions are notated with an (*)

-Any teams that needed to move seedlines in order to meet bracketing rules have their original seed indicated in (parenthesis)

OTHERS CONSIDERED: Mississippi State, Florida, Duke, Liberty, NC State, Boston College, Saint John’s, Butler, Duquesne, Pittsburgh, Oregon, Nebraska, Xavier, Cincinnati, San Francisco, Iowa, Saint Bonaventure, Southern Illinois, Texas Tech, Indiana, Texas, TCU, Washington State

COMMENTS FROM DAVID:

-What impresses me most is notable wins away from home. The #1 seeds have all done that and I think they’ve started to set themselves apart. Purdue did lose the one true road game that they’ve played, but they’ve beaten so many good teams on neutral sites that it’s impossible to not give them credit for that and recognize that they are one of the best teams in the nation.

-A team like Duke, who was the last team in, has not done a damn thing away from home yet, and has even lost to a Georgia Tech team that is unlikely to make the NIT. I do think Duke is good, and I certainly think they will end up in the NCAA Tournament with a good seed, but this is a checkpoint and not a forecast.

-I really like what teams like Saint Joseph’s and Princeton have done. They’ve played a lot of games that aren’t necessarily against ranked teams, but that were away from home and hard to win and they’ve won the vast majority of them. Joe’s does have the one ugly loss to TAMU-Commerce, and that alone could warrant not being seeded anywhere near where I have them, but I think all their good wins have offset that.

-James Madison is unbeaten and a lot of people will probably try and say they deserve a much better seed than where I have them. While that may be true, in the current state of things that win against Michigan State isn’t quite as valuable as it appeared it would be at the time.

-The earlier in the year it is, the harder this is to do! At least if you’re trying to only measure merit.

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News, Notes, and Highlighted Games: Monday, Dec 11th

NEWS AND NOTES:

-We will be recording this week’s Hoops HD Report, so keep an eye out for that and give it a watch or a listen. We will also be posting our latest Bracket Projections later today.

-The game of the day, and perhaps one of the more exciting games of the entire weekend, was Saint Joseph’s 74-70 win over Princeton. It was a well played and exciting game between two teams that both look like top 40 caliber teams and that should end up inside the bubble come March. It was the first loss of the season for Princeton, and even though it was a missed opportunity at a big road win, Princeton’s resume still looks pretty solid. As for Saint Joe’s, they improve to 8-2 on the year and have started to build a really nice resume of their own. It’s a shame this game didn’t get more attention because it was two really good teams with quite a bit of importance in regards to the NCAA Tournament.

-When Miami FL was blown out by Kentucky earlier this year we just thought it was an amazing performance by Kentucky (which it was, but still). Miami FL was blown out again yesterday, this time by Colorado 90-63. While it was an impressive performance by the Buffs, and while the Buffs are also really good, it does start to raise questions about how good Miami actually is. Having said that, other than those two blowouts, the Canes have won all their other games.

-Memphis picked up a really impressive road win as they knocked off a very good Texas A&M rteam 81-75 and were in control for pretty much all 40 minutes. Memphis is putting together quite an impressive profile in the first month of the season and is definitely a team to keep an eye on.

-After a bit of a sluggish start, Long Beach State is now 5-1 in their last six games and they picked up a big one at USC yesterday 84-79 in overtime. I don’t know if this is quite enough to declare Beach a team that can make a run at the bubble, but considering how well they’ve been playing and in looking at their remaining opponents it looks to me that they could really finish with a bloated record. As for USC, I still think they have a ton of potential, but I suppose it’s a good thing for them that they don’t play in the Big West. They’re now just 1-2 against Big West teams with both losses coming at home.

-Ole Miss barely escaped against UCF 70-68, but the Rebels remain unbeaten on the season and pick up their second road win. When I say they barely escaped, you have to go back and watch exactly how this game ended. UCF cut it to 2 in the final seconds of play, then stole the inbounds pass and put in what appeared to be a game tying basket, but the clock expired just a millisecond before they were able to get it off.

-Boston College is now 8-3 on the year after beating Saint John’s 86-80 in the Brooklyn Showcase. BC may not quite be a tournament team, but they’ve improved substantially and should be able to make at least a little bit of noise in the ACC.

-Michigan State continues to not look good. They fell at Nebraska yesterday 77-70, which as an isolated incident is forgivable because Lincoln is not the easiest place to win on the road, but Michigan State is now just 4-5 on the year with absolutely nothing of note on their resume. They have the talent to turn it around, but they’ve shown no signs of it yet.

NOTABLE GAMES (None that are really “Highlightable”):

-HOWARD AT PENN. A MEAC frontrunner against a Penn team that has made some noise this year.

-YALE AT QUINNIPIAC. In in-state battle between a Yale team that we thought would be really good and a Quinnipiac team that’s off to a better-than-exopected 7-2 start.

-MISSISSIPPI VALLY STATE AT GONZAGA. Zags should easily bounce back after the loss to Washington.

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Hanging with the Quakers: Part 1

HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel will spend the upcoming months covering several Georgetown basketball home games, with (hopefully) a very special reward coming in March. In his free time, he traveled to Philly on Saturday and prepared this photo essay about the Kentucky-Penn game.

After attending 5 Georgetown games during November, I figured that I would shake things up a bit by heading up to Philly to see my beloved Penn Quakers host the 2nd-winningest college basketball program ever: the Kentucky Wildcats. Coach John Calipari has several players on his roster who grew up in/around the City of Brotherly Shove so he was kind enough to schedule a game back East so that all of the family/friends could come cheer on their loved ones in person. Based on the amount of blue in the stands, Big Blue Nation proved that they will also show up to cheer on their team wherever they play:

My expectations were very low going into the game but after Penn’s amazing win vs. 1 set of Wildcats last month (a 76-72 win over Villanova on 11/13) I decided to put my mascot theory to the test. I do not know how many college games are played at the Wells Fargo Center but I had to talk to literally TEN different employees before I found the media room: boo. On the plus side, I got to sit in the front row behind the basket: yay! The pregame meal consisted of a soft pretzel: what else!?

With Coach Cliff Ellis’ retirement from Coastal Carolina last Wednesday, Calipari is now the winningest active D-1 coach in the country with 790 (and counting):

In celebrity sighting news, current 76ers star/former Kentucky G Tyrese Maxey was in the house to check out his college coach:

Let’s tip it off:

Kentucky FR PF Aaron Bradshaw grew up 80 miles away from Philly in Roselle, NJ. He missed all of November with foot injury but looked as strong as an ox in the 1st half as he dominated the paint with layup after put-back after alley-oop. Kentucky is projected to end up with as many as 5 1st round picks next June and 7 guys in the top-38…and in just his 2nd game of the year Bradshaw demonstrated why he might very well be the 1st Wildcat off the board:

Another of the talented Wildcat super-frosh is G Rob Dillingham, who looked good during the 1st 20 minutes with a pair of shots from behind the arc and a lovely STL/layup. I can only hope that the fans eventually learn the proper cheer after he makes a big play: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uZjAmpG8fNk

Penn only trailed 23-21 after 14 minutes before Kentucky went on 16-2 run to SEEMINGLY put things out of reach at 39-23…but then it turned into the Clark Slajchert Show. Penn’s SR PG had a backdoor layup, a baby hook in the lane, then wrapped things up with a scoop just before the buzzer to keep it close as the Quakers cut the deficit to 39-29 at halftime:

During the intermission I looked up to see 76ers F Marcus Morris, who proved that some people are indeed capable of pulling off the “sunglasses indoors” look:

I also noticed Kentucky FR Reed Sheppard’s parents sitting about 10 rows behind the Wildcats bench. His father Jeff was named tourney MOP when he led Kentucky to the 1998 NCAA title, and his mother Stacey also played basketball in Lexington:

Penn hung around for several minutes in the 2nd half thanks to some young guards of their own. FR Tyler Perkins missed a ton of shots in the 1st half but drilled a trio of trifectas in the 2nd half:

His backcourt mate FR Sam Brown missed the 1st 4 games of the season due to an ankle injury but has quickly become 1 of the best 3-PT shooters in the nation, as his 4 threes on Saturday put him at 20-41 in his past 7 games:

The elder statesman of the Wildcats is SR G Antonio Reeves, who made a couple of baseline runners, a lefty tip-in, and a corner 3 to help his team withstand Penn’s 3-PT barrage:

Kentucky had a huge advantage in bench scoring all night (by an incredible mark of 40-5!) due in large part to Bradshaw, who kept beating up the smaller Quakers inside and finishing with a sensational stat line in just his 2nd career game (17 PTS/11 REB/3 BLK/0 TO) as the Wildcats cruised to an 81-66 victory.

In the postgame press conference I asked Penn coach Steve Donahue what it was like to face the winningest active D-1 coach in the country. He joked that Calipari would have to get in line since “I got my ass kicked in the past by Mike Krzyzewski/Jim Boeheim”. He admires Calipari for caring about the right things: he remembers facing him in the 2010 Sweet 16 when Donahue was Cornell’s coach and Calipari’s attention to detail (in a 62-45 win) really opened his eyes:

The very last question of the afternoon was directed to Calipari about taking Ellis’ place atop the active D-1 wins list…only it was not asked by me but by some mother-Quaker who stole my thunder! He joked that holding the record just means that he is old, then spent a couple of minutes praising Ellis, who he just talked to on Friday night:

That is a wrap from Philly, check back in a couple of weeks when I return to DC but head to the western part of the district to see how GW is looking this year!

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In Memoriam: HoopsHD interviews Tom Apke about Paul Silas

Paul Silas spent most of his life as a basketball player/coach…and what a life it was. At McClymonds High School he went 68-0 and was named 2nd-team Parade All-American as a senior. At Creighton he set an NCAA record for most rebounds in a 3-year career and was named a 2nd-team All-American in 1964. During his 16-year NBA career he was a 2-time All-Star, a 5-time member of the All-Defensive Team, and won 3 rings in a 6-year span from 1974-1979. He later became an NBA coach and made the playoffs 4 straight years from 2000-2003. Paul died last year but HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Paul’s college teammate Tom Apke about all of his amazing accomplishments. Today marks the 1-year anniversary of Paul’s passing on December 10, 2022, so we take this time to honor his memory.

Paul was your teammate at Creighton where he averaged 20.5 PPG/21.6 RPG and was named an All-American in 1964: was he as dominant in college as his stats seems to indicate? Paul was as dominant a player during that era as much as anyone we played against. I was 1 year behind him and could not play on the varsity as a freshman but we got to sit with the radio guys and keep stats: I kept stats the night that Paul had 38 REB vs. Centenary. 1 of the opponents that night was Riley Wallace, who later became head coach at Hawaii: I joked with him about that many years later.

He led the nation in rebounding during both his sophomore/junior seasons and remains top-25 in NBA history with 12,357 career REB: what made him such a great rebounder? People assumed that he was a fantastic athletic leaper…but he was not. I saw some old video recently of him as a sophomore: he was thin but very mobile. They faced Cincinnati in the NCAA tourney and Paul Hogue pushed Silas around the court. The following summer he stayed in Omaha, worked at an ice cream factory(!), and put on some more weight. He has a tremendous sense of timing and will to “go get it”. 1 time in practice he snatched the ball out of our teammate’s hands: the teammate said, “I had it”, and Paul responded, “Then go get it!”

In the spring of 1964 he was drafted 12th overall by St. Louis (2 spots behind Willis Reed): did he see that as a validation of his college career, or the realization of a lifelong dream of reaching the NBA, or other? He was expecting to be drafted high: he had been high school player of the year in California so he always expected to play at the next level. He stepped in and was an immediate contributor from Day 1.

In 1974 he was inducted into the Creighton Athletic Hall of Fame: where did that rank among the highlights of his career?
1 of the neat things about my career is that I was head coach/athletic director that year so I got to be the emcee at his ceremony: it was a great evening. A lot of people now forget the key contributors from years ago: even at Creighton people think the modern era started with Coach Dana Altman…but Paul was the most important player in school history. He enabled us to become competitive with all of the national powerhouses that our coach scheduled. Without Paul, we might not have attained all of our accomplishments since then.

He won 3 NBA titles during a 6-year span in the 1970s (2 with Boston and 1 with Seattle): what did it mean to him to be a 3-time champ?
Paul did a lot of the little things but was not a prolific scorer and did not have a great jump shot. His teammates/coaches appreciated his defense/rebounding. He did not need 20 shots/game to be happy: his intangibles translated into his team’s success.

He was a 5-time all-defensive team selection: what made him such a great defender? He was a great competitor and doggedly determined that his opponent’s life would be as miserable tonight as he could make it. He was not a great leaper but had very quick feet so he could react quickly by rebounding misses and prevent his opponents from getting around him.

He played 16 years in the NBA and his 1254 career games remains in the top-40 all-time: what was the secret to his longevity?
There was a lot of wear and tear back then and no corporate jets that flew you 1st-class overnight: they had to take the 1st-available commercial flight the next morning. He did not have the proper rest/nutrition that today’s players enjoy.

After retiring he spent almost 3 decades as an assistant/head coach in the NBA: since you later spent more than 2 decades as a coach at Creighton/Colorado/Appalachian State, how difficult is the transition from player to coach?
He was still playing when San Diego offered him a player/coach role. He decided that to do it correctly he could not do both at the same time: he could have played another 1-2 years but decided to coach the team he inherited in earnest. I was coaching at Creighton at the time and he invited me to become 1 of his assistants. I could not afford to do so financially (due to the salary/cost of living) and am unsure whether I could have done it emotionally either.

You later did some radio/TV work in Charlotte while Paul was head coach of the Hornets and you 2 spent some time together in retirement: how did your friendship evolve over the decades since you 1st met as college teammates?
I retired to Charlotte and we began spending a lot of time together. I got to interview him a few times on TV/radio and knew the leading questions to ask him that would elicit both a laugh and a good answer! I knew how to get him to open up/express himself. He was young for his high school graduating class and San Francisco was a major power: they wanted him to go to junior college for a year but he chose to go to Creighton instead. Our birthdays were only a few days apart in July and it was a common thing that brought us closer: I have pictures from our combined 75th birthday together with our families.

He passed away in 2022 due to cardiac arrest: when people look back on his career, how do you think that he should be remembered the most?
Most people today remember him as an NBA coach: he never won a title or was named COY so they assume that he was not a good coach, but that is not the truth. I covered a lot of his games and he had an uncanny ability to bring out the best in many of his players. I remember him telling 1 of his young players to take a shot, which blew the kid’s mind! Players today often pout about minutes but he was an extraordinary coach and as good a person as he was a player.

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