Under The Radar: February 2nd

Tonight’s feature conference is Conference USA, and how North Texas has emerged as the team to beat after their big win against Louisiana Tech.  UAB is right behind them, but dropping games to Rice and Marshall has hurt their resume.

From there we move on to the other 21 UTR conferences and discuss how Vermont is continuing to dominate the America East, and how their best challenger Stony Brook is now ineligible for the conference tournament.  Hawai’i and Cal State Fullerton are the surprise frontrunners in the Big West, Longwood and USC Upstate are the surprise teams in the Big South, Jacksonville State is the new frontrunner in the ASun, Seattle is a surprise team in the WAC, and Murray State, Loyola Chicago, and Iona are all still fighting to stay inside the bubble.  We discuss all that, and more!  And as we do every week, we close the show with our UTR Top Ten.

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

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Hanging with the Hoyas: Part 7

HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel will spend the upcoming weeks covering some Georgetown basketball home games, with (hopefully) a very special reward coming in March. Part 6 was published last month:
https://hoopshd.com/2022/01/23/hanging-with-the-hoyas-part-6-2
He continues his series with Part 7 featuring the Hoyas’ matchup last night against Seton Hall:

I arrived starving for the pregame meal because it was a late tip time…but there was only popcorn/soda available. The good news is that some chicken tenders/nachos were served shortly thereafter…but the bad news is that just as I was heading for my seat I saw bags and bags of PF Chang’s being delivered: son of a bee-sting! On the plus side, there is a Hall of Famer in the house, as Dikembe Mutombo stood courtside to see his son Ryan play for Georgetown:


An 8:30 PM EDT game on a Tuesday night in February for a team that has lost 8 in a row against an opponent who was missing its 2nd-leading scorer in Bryce Aiken (who sat out due to concussion protocol) meant that there were plenty of good seats available:


The Big East is celebrating Black History Month in February by partnering with the Black Fives Foundation to host 22 games honoring Black athletes/coaches/communities who played a critical part in the history of basketball in the US. Georgetown came out in warmup shirts featuring the logo of the Washington Bears, an all-Black pro basketball team from the 1940s whose roster included Hall of Famers such as Pop Gates/Tarzan Cooper/John Isaacs:


Let’s tip it off with some truly tall men (7′ Timothy Ighoefe vs. 7’2″ Ike Obiagu!):


Georgetown coach Patrick Ewing wore his Washington Bears shirt all night long while Seton Hall coach Kevin Willard opted for a suit/tie:


Pirates sophomore Kadary Richmond went scoreless against the Hoyas last year as a freshman at Syracuse but got things going early with a floater in the lane, a pretty jumper, and a 3:


His teammate Jared Rhoden has only made about 25% of his 3-PT attempts this year but looked quite comfortable in the 1st half as he knocked down a pair of shots from behind the arc in his pink sneakers:


Aminu Mohammed (left) and Dante Harris (right) tried their best to keep it close via a series of layups/jump shots but it looked like they were going to be trailing by double-digits heading into the locker room:


However, the Hoyas got the ball to Kaiden Rice at the end of the half and he made a tough 3 at the buzzer to cut the deficit to 35-28 at halftime:


The last time there was a basketball game on this floor was a Clippers-Wizards NBA affair last week featuring a center matchup of 7′ Ivica Zubac vs. 6’10” Daniel Gafford. Tonight we have a college game featuring a pair of 7’2″ big men going at it (Obiagu vs. Mutombo). Mutombo was very active off the bench with 6 PTS/6 REB/3 BLK, but while Obiagu only had 2 PTS/2 REB he showed why he is 1 of the best interior defenders as he had more blocks (5) than the entire Georgetown team (4):


Seton Hall F Tray Jackson only scored 21 PTS in his previous 3 games combined but apparently he is out of his slump. He had a big follow-dunk early in the 2nd stanza and then took care of business outside, finishing with a career-high 5 3PM and tying his career-high with 21 PTS:


Hoyas’ captain Donald Carey did not play a single game from December 19-January 19 due to illness but appeared pretty healthy with a team-high 15 PTS including a baseline drive that resulted in a circus shot/foul/&1:


Georgetown actually took a 5-PT lead with under 9 minutes to play but just ran out of steam as Seton Hall won by a score of 70-63…followed by the tallest handshake that I have ever seen in person featuring the Mutombo men:


That is a wrap on the Hoyas’ 1st game in February, I will not be at tomorrow night’s game on-campus at McDonough Arena, but check back in the weeks ahead as there are still 4 games at Capital 1 Arena left on the schedule.

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News, Notes, and Highlighted Games: Wednesday, Feb 2

NEWS AND NOTES:

-It was a great night of hate!!  For the 9pm est slate of games we had Chris Beard’s return to Texas Tech where the Red Raider fans were (not) waiting to great him with open arms and show their appreciation for all he’d done, as well as Alabama visiting Auburn.

Starting with Auburn, they opened up a big lead and Alabama actually cut into it, but in the latter stages of the game Auburn blew it open again.  The other night on the Hoops HD Report I had mentioned that I thought Alabama was shooting at the moon in this one, and everyone else disagreed.  While they disagreed with my choice of words, I don’t think they disagreed with the point I was trying to make.  Teams that go to Final Fours and win National Championships oftentimes do not have a true road win against a top five team during the regular season.  It’s damn hard to win at Auburn.  No one, not even a protected seeded caliber team, would be EXPECTED to win there.  Alabama has a great resume.  They’ve beaten Gonzaga in Seattle, and Baylor and Houston at home.  They could use a few more true road wins, and they are certainly good enough to pick those up between now and the end, but I wouldn’t look at the game at Auburn and think “hmmm…that’s a game the Tide should win!”  It isn’t, and they didn’t.

As for Texas, they had been playing better, but they still didn’t look to be as good as Texas Tech, much less good enough to beat Texas Tech on the road.  So, it wasn’t really that much of a surprise that the Red Raiders pretty much controlled the game from tip to buzzer.

-Michigan State escaped from Maryland with a tip in at the buzzer for a 65-63 win.  They had to sweat a lot more than expected in this one.

-Creighton had been in a bit of a tailspin, especially after completely blowing it in the second half against Xavier, but they went on the road to UConn last night and picked up a very impressive and very much needed 59-55 win.  It is a bit of a setback for UConn, but not a significant one.  They’re still very safely in the top half of the bracket, and still have a path to a protected seed if they can finish strong.

-Ole Miss, who doesn’t appear to be anywhere close to the bubble, won at LSU yesterday.  LSU is a team we were all big on, but I’m less big on them now.  They’ve lost five of their last six, and the loss last night was at home to a non-tournament caliber team.

-Davidson bounced back after looking kind of sluggish in their last few games with an impressive win at Saint Bonaventure.  The Bonnies made a run late to make the score look close, but Davidson appeared to be in control for pretty much the entire game.  Our friend and colleague Bracket Miller from Rocketeer.Org was on hand for the action!

-If you want to see some really awful officiating and an absolutely enraged group of fans, check out the final minute of overtime between North Carolina and Louisville!!  It was comical.  There was a tie-up situation at a key moment in the game where both players were going for the ball, and understandably REALLY going for it!  The momentum of the play sent a player from Louisville to the floor, which prompted another Louisville player to shove (if it even qualified as a shove) the Louisville player.  A flagrant foul was called.  It was a poor decision to call it (IMHO), but you could at least understand the thought process in doing so.  What the refs did next there was no thought process whatsoever.  It was one of the worst foul calls I’ve ever seen.  But, all that aside, North Carolina went on the road and won a game that was not easy to win, which is something that their resume very much needed.  It was arguably their best win of the year on paper.

 

HIGHLIGHTED GAMES:

-FLORIDA AT MISSOURI (SEC).  The Gators are straddling the bubble and are on the road against a weak Mizzou team.  They need to hold serve in this one.

-PURDUE AT MINNESOTA (Big Ten).  Purdue looks to be a solid protected seed who could even end up as high as a #1 seed with a strong finish.  Minnesota is a team that’s played well at times, but is still outside the bubble.  It’s not easy to win there, though.

-VANDERBILT AT KENTUCKY (SEC).  Kentucky is looking as good as anyone in the country right now and should roll at home.

-BUTLER AT XAVIER (Big East).  There aren’t that many easy games in the Big East, but a home game against a struggling Butler team is about as easy as it’s gonna get.  Xavier is in very good shape, especially after their road win at Creighton.

-NOTRE DAME AT MIAMI FL (ACC).  Notre Dame had strung together several wins, but kind of crapped the bed against Duke in their last game.  It wasn’t so much that they lost to Duke, but rather how bad they looked in that game.  I like Miami’s team and resume and think they will make the field, so this is another chance for the Irish to pull off a quality win.

-PITTSBURGH AT WAKE FOREST (ACC).  Wake is right on a lot of people’s bubbles, so this is obviously a game where they need to hold serve.

-FLORIDA STATE AT CLEMSON (ACC).  After an impressive stretch where Florida State won six in a row, they’ve now dropped two straight to teams that aren’t being projected into the field.  They need to avoid dropping a third one tonight.

-ARKANSAS AT GEORGIA (SEC).  After a really nasty stretch over a month period in December/early January, Arkansas has really been playing well.  They’ve won six in a row, gotten themselves back inside the bubble (at least according to our forecasting), and have another winnable road game tonight.

‘-TULANE AT HOUSTON (American).  This should be an easy win for Houston.  Tulane’s program is showing signs of moving in the right direction very quickly, but they aren’t quite there yet and are way overmatched on the road tonight.

-ILLINOIS STATE AT LOYOLA CHICAGO (Missouri Valley).  Loyola is going through a stretch where they have lost games they should have won, and when they’ve won games the haven’t looked all that good doing it.  They can’t afford to keep playing with their food or they’ll fall all the way outside the bubble.

-WISCONSIN AT ILLINOIS (Big Ten).  Both teams are good, both have good profiles, and both appear to be improving as the season goes along.  It wouldn’t shock me at all if both ended up as protected seeds, so tonight’s game should be a fun litmus test as well as a chance at a resume building win.

-OKLAHOMA STATE AT KANSAS STATE (Big 12).  I still don’t think K State is entirely out of the picture, but every game has a pivotal feel to it and they need this one tonight.

-DAYTON AT VCU (Atlantic Ten).  VCU is clearly outside the bubble, but they’ve been playing really well lately, and appear to be good enough to win out.  If that happens they will at least be in the discussion.

-VILLANOVA AT MARQUETTE (Big East).  What a game this could be!!  Marquette is coming off a close loss to a very good Providence team, but outside of that they have absolutely been on fire.  Nova at times has looked like a Final Four caliber team, but only at times.  At other times they’ve merely looked like a solid top 25 team.

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News, Notes, and Highlighted Games: Tuesday, Feb 1

By David Dorman – Hoops HD Senior Staff Writer

NEWS AND NOTES:

CLICK HERE for the latest HOOPS HD REPORT Video Podcast

-West Virginia hadn’t looked good at all for the last couple of weeks, but they really played well against Baylor yesterday and were in a position to win it all the way until the very end.  They couldn’t hold on (and to be fair, Baylor was not at full strength), but had they played like that for the last couple of weeks they wouldn’t be on the losing streak that they’re on.

-Duke won at Notre Dame.  Given the streak the Irish were on we thought they might be able to make a run at the bubble.  After watching them yesterday I’m starting to wonder how they ever beat anyone.

-Wyoming knocked off Colorado State in an 84-78 overtime thriller.  The game was close all throughout, the atmosphere was intense, and the Cowboys picked up a big win.  It isn’t so much that the loss hurt the Rams, but a win would have really helped and when you start to look at Colorado State’s profile and see that they’re now three games behind the conference leader, there is some cause for alarm.

-TCU is heading in the right direction.  They picked up a road win against an Oklahoma team that is…well…NOT heading in the right direction.

 

HIGHLIGHTED GAMES:

-CREIGHTON AT CONNECTICUT (Big East).  There are some standout wins on Creighton’s resume, but overall their resume is slumping a little bit and a win like this could really give it a boost.  UConn keeps getting better and better and should probably be ranked a little higher than what they actually are.  They are looking to pick up their sixth straight Big East win tonight.

-KANSAS AT IOWA STATE (Big 12).  Both teams are in the rankings, and Kansas is on a pace that will land them on the top two lines despite their blowout loss to Kentucky in their last game.  A big road win like this will offset that.  Iowa State has been a surprise team this year and it should be a crazy atmosphere tonight.

-MICHIGAN STATE AT MARYLAND (Big Ten).  I still think that Michigan State is one of the better teams in the Big Ten and will likely end up as a protected seed.  They should be able to pick this one up on the road tonight.

-TEXAS A&M AT TENNESSEE (SEC).  Texas A&M is outside the bubble, but they’re close enough to it to where if they win a game like this on the road they will be in the picture.  Tennessee is looking to bounce back after their loss at Texas over the weekend.

-DAVIDSON AT SAINT BONAVENTURE (Atlantic Ten).  Davidson has had a really good season, but they’ve struggled their last few times out.  They will likely really be tested tonight against a Saint Bonaventure team that has been a disappointment this year, but that can still play up to a high ceiling, especially if they are at home for a big game.

-TOLEDO AT EASTERN MICHIGAN (MAC).  The path to landing inside the bubble is narrow for Toledo, but if they can win out they should at least be in the discussion.

-SOUTH CAROLINA AT MISSISSIPPI STATE (SEC).  Both teams are pretty far outside the bubble, but both have a path to it if they can put together a long string of wins between now and the end of the season.

-NORTH CAROLINA AT LOUISVILLE (ACC).  North Carolina’s resume is flimsy at best.  In fact if they win this game tonight it would arguably be their best win of the season so far.  They are still on a lot of people’s boards, but from where I sit it seems like they have a ton of work to do.

-SETON HALL AT GEORGETOWN (Big East).  Seton Hall is in a bit of a tailspin,, but Georgetown is an absolute train wreck, so if Hall can’t win tonight they’re really going to be in trouble even though this is a road game.

-ALABAMA AT AUBURN (SEC).  It’s a rivalry game between the #1 team in the nation and an Alabama team who has been inconsistent this year, but that has also managed wins against Gonzaga, Houston, and Baylor.  Winning at top ranked Auburn is a HUGE ask, though.  A loss really won’t set them back at all.

-TEXAS AT TEXAS TECH (Big 12).  Texas Tech is ready to welcome back Chris Beard and show how appreciative they are for everything he did for that program.  They are going to be so happy to see him!  Texas Tech has thrown some heavyweight punches this year and is really looking good.  Texas really didn’t have much on their resume until about a week ago, but they’ve put together a couple of impressive wins, so I wouldn’t count them out tonight.  This one is going to be FUN!

-PROVIDENCE AT SAINT JOHN’S (Big East).  Providence just keeps racking up win after win after win.  Winning on the road at Saint John’s isn’t the easiest thing to do, but Providence has been winning tough games all season long and should be able to add another road win to their resume tonight.

-CALIFORNIA AT STANFORD (Pac 12).  Stanford is outside the bubble, but could reach it if they finish strong and avoid bad losses.  Like…for instance…at home to Cal.

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The Hoops HD Report: January 31st

We look back at the SEC/Big 12 Challenge, particularly Kentucky’s blowout win at Kansas and how it was probably the single most impressive showing by any team this season so far.  Baylor also suffered their third loss of the year as they fell at Alabama, and we look ahead to another busy week in both the Big 12 and the SEC.

From there we look at the Big East and how impressive Providence has looked this year, as well as Xavier’s big come from behind win at Creighton.  We look at the Pac 12 and how UCLA is continuing to dominate, and how Oregon is starting to slip again.  In the ACC we look at a lack of quality teams outside of Duke, and debate whether or not North Carolina and Wake Forest belong in at all.  We think as many as four teams from the Mountain West and the West Coast could make the field, and we discuss both of those leagues at length.  In the Atlantic Ten, Davidson has hit a bit of a skid, and VCU seems to be red hot and good enough to win out.  All that, and more!!

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

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Happy Birthday!: HoopsHD interviews George Mason legend George Evans

The Colonial Athletic Association almost ran out of awards during George Evans’ career at George Mason because he basically won all of them. In addition to joining David Robinson as the only 2 players in CAA history to be named conference POY on 3 separate occasions, he was also named 1st-team all-conference 3 times, conference DPOY 2 times, and CAA ROY in 1998. Additionally, he is 1 of a handful of college superstars to finish his career with 200+ STL/200+ AST/200+ BLK including legends such as Danny Manning/Lionel Simmons/Shane Battier. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with George about serving in the Army during the Persian Gulf War and playing pro basketball overseas. Today is George’s 52nd birthday so let us be the 1st to wish him a happy 1!

Before enrolling at George Mason you served several years in the Army, including a tour of duty in the Persian Gulf War: why did you choose to join the Army, and what did you learn from war that has helped you in life? I joined the Army because I had to do something to help my family out. The Army taught me about discipline/respect and to not take anything for granted, which translated well to the basketball court.

Your nickname at GMU was “Sarge”: who gave you that nickname, and how did you like it? 1 of my teammates gave me the nickname. I did not really like it because I wanted to close that chapter of my life. It was already tough enough to be 26 years old and starting college but I took it in stride.

You were recruited by Paul Westhead but played for Jim Larranaga: what did you like about each of them as coaches? Westhead was all about winning a championship. His game was fast-paced and the up-and-down tempo appealed to me. Larranaga showed interest in me even after Westhead was fired and was always there to support/show faith in me.

You were named to the All-CAA team 4 times and the All-CAA defensive team 3 times: how were you able to come in and contribute as a freshman, and how were you able to continue to dominate throughout the rest of your college career? It was a culture shock when I 1st started. There was an incident where several players got suspended so I got to jump in and play from the start. Once I built that confidence and continued to work with the coaches I got better and better.

In November of 1999 you scored a career-high 37 PTS in an 8-PT loss at Toledo: was it just 1 of those scenarios where every shot you put up seemed to go in because you were “in the zone”? We were a defensive team but would create opportunities when we ran. That day I found myself with the good luck of getting open shots: once you get going it is hard for anyone to stop you.

What are your memories of the 1999 NCAA tourney (you went scoreless on 0-6 FG in a loss to Cincinnati)? Coming from a small conference and playing against a big-time team with guys like Kenyon Martin/Steve Logan in front of 19,000 people: it was overwhelming for us.

In the 2001 NCAA tourney you scored a tourney-school-record 27 PTS/10-15 FG but Tremaine Price’s bounce pass went through your legs with 6 seconds left in a 3-PT loss to Maryland: where does that rank among the most devastating losses of your career? It was definitely the worst loss of my career. Steve Blake was guarding the pass and tipped the ball so I could not get my hands on it. We played a great game against a great team but came up just short.

You and David Robinson are the only 2 players to be named CAA POY 3 straight years: do you feel like you are 1 of the best players in the history of the CAA? That is for other people to decide but it is nice to be mentioned in the same breath as a player like Robinson. I was just thankful to get an education and play basketball.

In the spring of 2001 you were the 1st overall pick of the Maryland Mustangs in the USBL draft: were you thrilled to be picked #1, or unhappy that you were not drafted by an NBA team, or other? It was an opportunity for me to continue my basketball career: my mother taught me never to take any opportunity for granted. I knew that it would be hard to make the NBA due to my age so I have no regrets.

You later played pro basketball in Belgium/Germany for a decade: what did you learn from the experience, and how did it compare to college basketball? There are some different rules and the crowds are more feisty. It is also a livelihood so it is important to view it as a job: if you play bad in college then you just head home and go to class the next day. I loved playing abroad and would love to stay involved even at the coaching level.

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