Hoops HD Bracket Rundown: February 11th

NOTE: This was recorded on Thursday, February 11th at 9pm, est.  Any game that went final after that was not considered.

Chad and the panel are back for this week’s Bracket Rundown.  They build a seedlist line by line and debate, discuss, and assess each team as they put them in the field.  There are debates over whether Gonzaga or Baylor should be the overall #1 team, who the protected seeds should be, whether or not Drake and Loyola Chicago belong in the field, whether a team like Maryland who has big wins against a tough schedule but doesn’t have a winning record belongs in the field, and which bubble teams should be in.

Below is a bracket of the seedlist, but do not look at it until you’ve watched the show!!

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

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News, Notes, and Highlighted Games: Thursday, Feb 11th

CLICK HERE for our latest UNDER THE RADAR Video Podcast

NEWS AND NOTES

-For Chad Sherwood’s UTR Game of the Day, which is a big one between Winthrop and Radford – CLICK HERE

-So when Ole Miss beat Tennessee I thought it was a fluke and was kind of disappointed in the Vols.  Ole Miss has followed that up with a blowout win over Missouri.  Ole Miss went through a stretch where they lost five out of six and it was easy to write them off, but since then they’ve won five of seven, beaten a ranked Tennessee team, and blown a top ten Mizzou team off the floor.  If they can finish strong they will likely end up inside the bubble.

-Iowa had a bit of a bounce back win as they held off Rutgers 79-66.  It wasn’t a blowout, but it was a game where the Hawkeyes were in control pretty much the entire way.

-UConn could have really used a win against Providence last night, but came up short.  I think the Huskies are still inside the bubble, but they are slipping down the seedlist.

-Indiana needed double overtime to get by Northwestern, and had to come from behind both at the end of regulation and in both overtimes to get the win.  Northwestern has lost close games to tournament caliber teams in three of their last four games.  They are nowhere near the NCAA Tournament, but they are probably a little more dangerous than what their record indicates.

 

HIGHLIGHTED GAMES

-PURDUE AT MINNESOTA (Big Ten).  Purdue is in to the rankings and in good shape overall.  While Minnesota isn’t a protected seed, they play like one at home, so this will be a real test for the Boilermakers and a chance to boost their resume even more.

-IOWA STATE AT KANSAS (Big 12).  After slumping through several games, Kansas finally looked really good their last time out and have a winnable home game tonight so they should be able to keep that momentum going.

-COLORADO AT STANFORD (Pac 12).  We have both teams inside the bubble, but neither team is in a position to just put it on cruise control yet and both could really use this game today.  It actually has a really pivotal feel to it.

-OREGON AT ARIZONA STATE (Pac 12).  Oregon has been effected by COVID protocol, which has probably been a reason why they haven’t hit their stride and played the way we’ve expected them to yet.  They need to pick this one up on the road tonight.

-EASTERN KENTUCKY AT BELMONT (Ohio Valley).  With just one loss, I think there will be room for Belmont inside the bubble if they win out through the regular season.  They should at least be in the discussion.

-USC AT WASHINGTON (Pac 12).  USC is 10-1 since New Year’s Day and even though they’re ranked in the top 25, they’re probably even better than what they’re getting credit for.  This will likely be another conference road win for them.

-UNLV AT BOISE STATE (Mountain West).  Boise State is going through a rough patch where they’ve lost three out of their last four, and they need to pull themselves out of it and finish strong if they want to finish the season inside the bubble.

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Under the Radar Game of the Day – Thursday, February 11

Winthrop at Radford, 6:00 PM Eastern, espn+

In a normal year, first place Winthrop (13-1 Big South, 16-1 overall) travelling to second place Radford (12-2 Big South, 13-7 overall) would clearly be the game of the season in the Big South conference.  This year, with team’s playing modified schedules due to the COVID-19 pandemic, it is actually just part 1 of the games of the year, as the first place Eagles will be in Radford both tonight and tomorrow night.

The Winthrop Eagles have only lost once all season, a somewhat shocking 2 point home loss of UNC-Asheville a couple weeks ago (which was also the last time the Eagles played a game).  Despite an impressive 16-1 record, their wins have come for the most part against teams rated in the bottom quadrant of the NET.  They did pick up a pair of early season notable wins, however, over a pair of teams that have featured in our Under the Radar Game of the Day twice this week alone — Furman and UNC-Greensboro.  Winthrop is led by do-everything Chandler Vaudrin’s 12.6 points, 6.6 rebounds and 7.1 assists per game.  Vaudrin has already notched two triple-doubles this season.   Adonis Arms and Charles Falden should also be watched as they are both also averaging double-digits in scoring.

Radford struggled this season in their 6 non-conference games, only winning against non-D1 Mars Hill, though they were competitive in pretty much every other game, losing to Virginia Tech, James Madison, Vanderbilt, East Carolina and Norfolk State.  However, the Highlanders have won 12 of 14 league games so far, including a thrilling two point home win over South Carolina-Upstate a week ago when the Spartans’ Tommy Bruner appeared to steal a win with a half-court buzzer beater, only to have the basket waived off as having come after the clock expired.  Chyree Walker is the key to Radford’s attack, as he has notched four double-double’s on the season already including a 12 point, 13 rebound effort last time out.

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Under the Radar: February 10th

Tonight we highlight the Northeast Conference, which is one of our favorite leagues.  The top seven teams are separated by just one game!  With just four teams making the conference tournament this year it creates some high stakes games between now and the end.

From there we run through the other 21 UTR leagues and discuss Vermont’s struggles to get games in, Toledo’s loss to Ball State and what that means for them, Drake’s unbeaten season coming to an end, Belmont and Morehead State both being red hot in the OVC, South Dakota’s split with South Dakota State keeping both those teams neck and neck in the Summit League, and more!  And as we do every week, we close with this week’s UTR Top Ten.

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

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Ready to Ignite: HoopsHD interviews Jerry Pimm about Brian Shaw

Today is the tip-off of the 20th season of the NBA G League, which will be held entirely in a bubble in Florida due to COVID, but only 17 of the 28 teams from last season will participate. The list of G League coaches is fascinating: it includes the 2004 NCAA runner-up coach at Georgia Tech (Paul Hewitt), a former Arizona Wildcat who won an NBA title in 2016 as an assistant for Cleveland (Bret Brielmaier), and a player who won 3 straight NBA titles with the Lakers from 2000-2002 (Brian Shaw). In addition to those 3 rings as a player, Shaw was also named 1988 Big West POY at UCSB and won 2 more rings as an assistant to Phil Jackson in 2009 & 2010. Shaw is currently the head coach of the G League Ignite, a developmental basketball team that is a part of the league’s development program that offers elite NBA prospects like Jalen Green/Jonathan Kuminga salaries of up to $500,000. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Shaw’s college coach Jerry Pimm about recruiting his star player and what makes him such a good coach.

At Bishop O’Dowd High School Brian had a 1-PT win over Castlemont in the 1981 state title game and a 7-PT OT loss to Crenshaw in the 1983 state title game: what made him choose UCSB for college? He was the 6th man on his high school team. My assistant Ben Howland and I went to watch him play in person: we liked his potential but he was more of a forward and we were looking for a guard. He went to St. Mary’s for 1 year and the following summer he called Ben. I said that if his coach (Bill Oates) wanted to call me I would talk to him. He played another year at St. Mary’s but still wanted to transfer. Oates finally called me, who gave me permission to talk to him, and he came here for a visit with his parents, who were very nice.

Take me through the 1986 FIBA World Championship:
He made a huge 3-PT shot towards the end of a 2-PT win over USSR to win the gold medal for team USA: where does that rank among the most clutch shots that you have ever seen, and what did it mean to him to win a gold medal? I was coaching the team: we had 50 guys try out in Colorado Springs and Brian was 1 of 2 alternates until Dave Butler from Cal got hurt. Lute Olson/Bobby Cremins were the other 2 coaches. We were practicing in Tucson when Butler got hurt: he made the trip to Paris with us but was still hurt and had to leave the team. Brian flew out and knew the rest of our guys.  Our backcourt was Steve Kerr/Sean Elliott/Tommy Amaker/Muggsy Bogues/Kenny Smith: talk about a good team! We won our pool in Malaga before heading to the mountains in Oviedo. We made the Final 4 in Madrid and beat Brazil even though Oscar Schmidt came in averaging 45-50 PPG. We put Bogues on him and told him to stay attached to Oscar for 6 minutes, then Brian came in and did the same thing: we were absolutely crushing them by 20 PTS. Oscar started backing up from 30’ away from the hoop to 33′ away and started getting hot: he ended up with around 30 PTS but we still won. We did a good job of preparing for guys like Arvydas Sabonis: they were pros but we were the last amateur team from the US to win a gold medal. We were quicker/younger and had a big lead toward the end. They started fouling us and Sabonis banked in a 3 from straight-away to cut our lead to 10 before Brian hit a clutch 3 to help stabilize us. Kerr had already been sent home to have knee surgery. We won the gold medal and Brian and I did a press conference in Las Vegas before heading back to California.

That competition featured a legendary all-tourney team of 4 future Hall of Famers (Drazen Petrovic/David Robinson/Arvydas Sabonis/Oscar Schmidt) and 1988 Olympic gold medalist Valeri Tikhonenko: which of those 5 players impressed you the most, and could you foresee the future explosion of the sport around the globe? Italy beat the hell out of us in an exhibition game and it was a good awakening for us. We played more physically after that because we realized that we were not playing against college teams. I had a little inkling that the pros would eventually take over but the Russians had enough talent to win even though they were on the downside of their careers. All 5 of those guys deserved to make the all-tourney team: Sabonis was big/mean/tough but David just ate him alive because he was so much quicker. We moved David off of the block where he had some room to drive after turning and facing him.

In 1988 he was named conference POY after leading the league with 8.7 RPG: what did it mean to him to receive such an outstanding honor, and how was he able to get so many REB as a PG? He had never played PG before: he was 6’6” and could always see over the top of his opponents. He had a high dribble at 1st so we had to hone all of his skills. His 1st game as a PG came during his junior year in 1986: it was at Santa Clara with his family in attendance. We lost the game and Brian had 9 TO: I was doing my postgame radio show and saw his dad Charles standing nearby. We went into the corner of gym and his dad that Brian was just not a PG. I said that I would leave him at PG for now and told him try to be positive/patient because it was just 1 game. He was so embarrassed that he learned to fake the pass high and then throw bounce passes to get the ball inside. I give him a lot of credit for putting in a lot of extra hours working to be a PG. We had a heck of a league by his senior year with UNLV as the anchor so my whole thing was building our program to beat Coach Jerry Tarkanian if we hoped to make the NCAA tourney. We needed guys who would not be afraid of Anderson Hunt/Moses Scurry and would be willing to punch back. I had a good bunch of assistants and we got some really decent players who wanted to stay 4 years. Dick Vitale came to 1 of our games at Long Beach and Brian was really upset because Dick kept saying that he was too skinny. Brian had a great game and toward the end he yelled out “How’s that Dickie V?!” I got to know Coach Jim Valvano pretty well and even brought him and his wife out on my yacht 1 year before we played NC State. Brian came out and almost had a triple-20 (20 PTS/20 REB/20 AST) against the Wolfpack!

In the summer of 1988 he was drafted 24th overall by the Celtics (5 spots behind Rod Strickland), but after spending 1 year in Boston he signed a 2-year contract with Il Messaggero Roma: what did it mean to him to get drafted, and why did he decide to go to Italy? Boston’s GM drafted a 1-year contract stating that if he made the All-Rookie team then they would give him a long-term deal. The Celtics ended up changing GMs and my friend Dave Gavitt got the job. I told David that Il Messaggero already offered Brian and Danny Ferry $1 million to play 30-40 games for them and that Brian had already decided to go abroad: it was a lot of money back then. Their owner flew me and Brian’s dad over to watch a game: it was fun. His mother/father/sister later died in a tragic automobile accident in June of 1993: I did not know if he would bounce back from it but he eventually did. He was also close friends with Reggie Lewis before he passed away in July of 1993.

After signing a 5-year deal with the Celtics in 1990 he told them that he planned to go back to Rome, and the resulting contract dispute (Celtics v. Shaw) became a famous sports law case: how big a deal was it at the time? It was big. I know that Dave was upset with me for not stepping in but I was still a college coach at the time. It was a dispute that took quite a bit of time to resolve: the Il Messaggero owner had a lot of land/cattle and was a nice guy who offered Brian even more money to return. It generated a lot of bad feelings and Boston ended up trading him to Miami in 1992.

In 1993 he scored a career-high 32 PTS for Miami by making a then-NBA record 10 3-PT shots in a win at Milwaukee: what was his secret for making shots from behind the arc? He would kick his legs out and clip some shins so his opponents would not get close to him. He was not a prolific shooter but had many games when he was just “on”. He just worked harder than most people at that time: he loved to be in the gym and even when he went home to Oakland he would play with guys like Gary Payton.

Take me through the 2002 Western Conference Finals as a player with the Lakers (which is regarded as 1 of the classic series in NBA history with each of the final 4 games coming down to the final seconds): He became very good friends with Shaq.

Robert Horry made a 3-PT shot at the buzzer for a 1-PT win over Sacramento in Game 4: did everyone just feel that Horry would always make that type of shot in that type of situation? Horry was unbelievable and would come up with magic stuff.

The Lakers attempted 27 FTs in the 4th quarter of Game 6 while the Kings only took 9 FTs (convicted NBA referee Tim Donaghy later said that this game was fixed by 2 referees): at the time did you think that the refs called a fair game, and looking back on it now do you think the game was fixed? I do not think that it was fixed but 1 of the refs in that game made an exorbitant number of calls as if he had it out for the other team.

His team swept New Jersey in the 2002 Finals for the 1st 3-peat since the Bulls in the late-1990s, then he won 2 more titles as an assistant coach for the Lakers in 2009/2010: what kind of relationship did he have with Phil Jackson, and what makes him such a good coach? Phil was unique as a coach: I knew his college coach at South Dakota very well. He was a big gangly guy who learned the game extremely well and then developed a bunch of techniques as a coach such as zen/tai-chi. He got the guys to concentrate on things other than basketball. I remember the time when Scottie Pippen refused to go back into the game: Brian told me that Phil did not go back into the dressing room because he would let the players work it out themselves.

When people look back on his career, how do you think that he should be remembered the most? He was very well liked by most of the guys I talked to: Kobe loved him. He was a good person, a hard worker, and a loyal teammate. He is a good coach because he can really relate to his players.

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News, Notes, and Highlighted Games: Wednesday, Feb 10th

NEWS AND NOTES

-For Chad Sherwood’s UTR Game of the Day – CLICK HERE

-West Virginia got a huge road win against Texas Tech, which will give thier resume a nice boost.  It was a close game, but WVU had a lead for most of it, and once it looked like they had the game wrapped up Chris Beard STILL managed to keep things interesting by totally flipping out at the officials and getting tossed out of the game.

-Alabama really had to sweat at South Carolina, but they held on for the 81-78 win.

-Texas also had to sweat against a rather pitiful K State team, but held on for just an 80-77 win.

-Metaphorically speaking in regards to the NCAA Tournament, Syracuse isn’t inside the house, but they are at least right outside in the yard.  They got a conference road win against NC State which keeps it within reach.

-Michigan State got a much needed win against Penn State.  Both teams were really kind of bubblicous, and the Spartans still have work to do, but it was a big step in the right direction.

-Arkansas held on to beat Kentucky 81-80 and maintain their spot right on the bubble.

-Saint John’s, who had been on a roll, fell at Butler last night in a bit of a surprising loss considering how well the Johnnies had been playing.

 

HIGHLIGHTED GAMES

-UCONN AT PROVIDENCE (Big East).  UConn has slipped a little bit, but only a little bit.  They are still safely inside the bubble and will remain in good shape if they can pick up this road win.  Providence has struggled this year, but they’ve also looked really good at times so it’s by no means an automatic win for the Huskies.

-INDIANA AT NORTHWESTERN (Big Ten).  Indiana is coming off a nice win against Iowa and has a winnable road game at Northwestern tonight, which will help stabilize their resume a little more.

-HOUSTON AT SOUTH FLORIDA (American).  This should be an easy road win for the Cougars, but we’ve seen them stub their toes before so you don’t want to take wins for granted.

-VIRGINIA AT GEORGIA TECH (ACC).  Virginia has cracked the top ten and is playing really well right now.  Georgia Tech isn’t inside our bubble, but they have looked like a tournament team at times and are just a few big wins away from making a strong case for themselves.  Granted, I guess a lot of teams are only a few “big wins away,” but still…

-NORTHERN IOWA AT DRAKE (Missouri Valley).  Drake is coming off their first loss of the season, which was a somewhat surprising result against Valpo.  They should still be inside the bubble and should be able to get this win tonight at home.

-WICHITA STATE AT UCF (American).  No one is really talking about Wichita State, and while they’re probably not inside the bubble they do have a rather decent 11-4 record and should at least be in the discussion if they win out.

-RUTGERS AT IOWA (Big Ten).  Rutgers went through a bit of a slump but has been playing well lately.  Iowa seems to be heading in the other direction.  They’ve lost four of their last five and need a big win like this to swing the momentum back in their direction.

-GEORGIA AT TENNESSEE (SEC).  Tennessee still has a strong resume, but they haven’t looked all that strong lately.  They are coming off a win against Kentucky, and normally that’s a really good thing, but this year it’s just sort of blah.  They need to take care of business and hold serve tonight.

-MARQUETTE AT VILLANOVA (Big East).  Marquette continues to be all over the map, but even if they play at the top of their game getting a win at Villanova is probably still above their ceiling.  Nova hasn’t looked lights out impressive in their last two games, but all and all they’ve been really strong.

-MISSOURI AT OLE MISS (SEC).  Mizzou continues to climb the seedlist.  Ole Miss isn’t in the discussion for a bid, but they did beat Tennessee at home earlier this year and are capable of playing well on their home floor.

-RHODE ISLAND AT SAINT LOUIS (Atlantic Ten).  Every game has a pivotal feel for SLU.  They were hit hard by COVID protocol, have a lot of games to make up, and they have a very small margin for error the rest of the way.

-LSU AT MISSISSIPPI STATE (SEC).  LSU is straddling the bubble and needs to hold serve in this one tonight.

-WISCONSIN AT NEBRASKA (Big Ten).  Wisconsin is coming off a loss to Illinois where the Illini just kind of ran away from them.  They’re still in position to earn a protected seed and this should be a winnable road game for them.

-SAN JOSE STATE AT SAN DIEGO STATE (Mountain West).  San Diego State is inside the bubble and just needs to hold serve tonight.

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