Under the Radar Game of the Day – Friday, January 29

New Mexico State at Grand Canyon, 9:00 PM Eastern, Local TV/espn3

If years from now you are ever asked in a trivia contest to name the best Division I men’s basketball team that failed to win a single a game against Division I competition before at least January 29th of the season, the answer will be the 2020-21 New Mexico State Aggies.  The Aggies have been the dominant force in the WAC for years, and were the preseason pick by most people to capture yet another league crown this season.  However, due to COVID, they have only been able to play four games so far, and only one against a D1 foe (a loss at Cal State-Northridge).  Tonight, hopefully, they finally return to the court to take on the WAC-leading Lopes of Grand Canyon.

New Mexico State (3-1, 0-0 in conference) has been dealing with injuries and eligibility issues to go with their COVID problems so far this season, and Jabari Rice (foot) is still out indefinitely for the Aggies.  Wilfried Likayi led the team in scoring against non-D1 Western New Mexico earlier this week, scoring 20 points and pulling down 6 rebounds.  Likayi, and any of his teammates that can get on the floor tonight, will need an even bigger effort in tonight’s contest.  That help could also come from recent signee Gerald Doakes, who had 11 points in his first game this week after enrolling at NMSU earlier this month.

Grand Canyon enters tonight’s game at 10-3 overall and 4-0 in WAC play.  The Lopes have been led by Asbjorn Midtgaard, who leads the team in scoring (15.1 points per game) and rebounds (9.8 per game).  Two other players, Alessandro Lever and Jovan Blacksher Jr are averaging more than 10 points per game as well, giving GCU options and depth on offense to go along with one of the top-rated defense in the WAC so far this season.  A win over the Aggies tonight could put the Lopes in position to be the favorites to take the school’s first ever D1 NCAA Tournament bid this season.

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The Olympians: HoopsHD interviews 2000 Olympic gold medalist Shareef Abdur-Rahim

The NBA Finals date back to 1947 (when they were known as the Basketball Association of America Finals) and the very 1st NCAA tourney was held in 1939. Olympic basketball competition is even older: it debuted as a demonstration event in 1904 and the men’s version became a medal sport in 1936, with the women finally getting their chance to go for the gold in 1976. The United States has dominated Olympic basketball competition from the start: the men have won 15 gold medals in the 18 tournaments they have participated in during the past 84 years, while the women have won 8 gold medals in the 10 tournaments in which they have competed during the past 44 years. Those of you who were looking forward to the 2020 Olympics opening ceremonies in Tokyo on July 24, 2020 will have to wait an extra 364 days, as the coronavirus caused a postponement until July 23, 2021. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel decided to fill the void by trying to interview as many prior Olympic players/coaches as possible so that you have something to read while waiting for the Summer Games. We continue our coverage by chatting with Shareef Abdur-Rahim about winning a gold medal in 2000 and being named an NCAA Silver Anniversary Award earlier this month.

In 1995 you were named 1st-team Parade All-American: which of your fellow honorees impressed you the most (Vince Carter/Kevin Garnett/Stephon Marbury/other)? They were all good players but Kevin was just at a different maturity standpoint then everyone else.  He played the game at a different level and was able to make others better.

In 1996 at Cal you became the 1st freshman in Pac-10 history to be named conference POY after leading the league with 21.1 PPG: how were you able to come in and dominate right from the start? I really surprised myself: I worked hard over the summer to prepare myself but exceeded my expectations. I started fast that season and my coach/teammates just encouraged me to keep going.

In the summer of 1996 you were drafted 3rd overall by Vancouver (2 spots behind Allen Iverson): did you see that as a validation of your college career, or the realization of a lifelong dream of reaching the NBA, or other? It was just exciting! I had no expectations coming out of high school but felt that I was heading in the right direction to fulfill a distant dream. I was in the right places and tracking toward my goal but did not think it would happen so fast. I really did not have the time back then to slow down and take it all in but it was a lifelong dream. I did not view it as the culmination of anything because I was so young and there was still so much more to do so I felt that I could not rest on that.

You averaged 18.7 PPG as a rookie and finishing 3rd in the ROY voting behind Iverson/Marbury: how were you able to make such a smooth transition from college to the pros? It was not that smooth: it was tough! My team needed me to score so I was put into that situation from the start. I moved to a new country and was forced to grow up very fast in a new culture. In college I had someone guiding/directing me but as a pro it was left up to me. On the court it was challenging but I had a ton of fun there: my individual success was a result of being on a young team.

You won a gold medal with team USA at the 2000 Olympics: what did it mean to you to represent your country, and what did it mean to you to win a gold medal? That felt more cumulative than anything else. Winning an Olympic gold medal was always a dream: I was back on a team with guys like Garnett and Jason Kidd (who also went to Cal). It was a longer process rather than just a single event so the whole experience was exciting: it was a great time.

In November of 2001 you scored a career-high 50 PTS/21-30 FG for Atlanta in a 7-PT win over Detroit: was it just 1 of those scenarios where every shot you put up seemed to go in because you were “in the zone”? Sometimes you just get into a rhythm: it was right around Thanksgiving and my family was there. What also made it special is that we needed all of those points to beat a good Detroit team. I got going early and when your teammates/fans get behind you it is a lot of fun.

In the 2002 All-Star Game you scored 9 PTS for the East in a loss to the West: what was it like to have Michael Jordan as a teammate (in his 1st All-Star appearance back in the league after he retired in 1998)? It was awesome and Michael being there made it special. 1 of the biggest misnomers is that everyone in the NBA is friends: it is hard to spend time with guys on other teams because it is such a transient league but All-Star Weekend is different.

You became president of the G League in 2019: why did you take the job, and what have you been able to accomplish so far? I retired from playing in 2008, finished college, worked in the Kings’ front office, and went to business school. This job brought in all of my different experiences both on and off the court. It was a great opportunity to contribute something to the game that has given me so much.

You have a brother who is head coach at Kennesaw State (Amir) and a son who is a freshman at Virginia (Jabri): who is the best athlete in the family, and who will you cheer for if the Owls ever play the Cavaliers? My younger sister was a really good basketball player and probably the best pure athlete. I love my brother…but would pull for my son to win!

Earlier this month you were named an NCAA Silver Anniversary Award recipient: where does that rank among the highlights of your career? It is a great honor: I did not realize that it has been 25 years because I still feel young! When you see all of the great things that the other honorees did it shows how phenomenal they all are and I am excited to be included in that.

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News, Notes, and Highlighted Games: Friday, Jan 29th

NEWS AND NOTES

CLICK HERE for our latest Hoops HD Bracket Rundown, where we build a seedlist on the air

-Overall it was a pretty chalky night.  Nothing much cataclysmic or Earth shattering happened, so if you decided to take a night off from college hoops, last night may have been the night!

-Rutgers absolutely pasted Michigan State.  Part of that was great play by Rutgers, part of it was rust on the part of Sparty, and part of it is Sparty not being nearly as good as we thought they were anyway.

-Stanford also got a much needed road win against Arizona to help shore up their resume.

 

HIGHLIGHTED GAMES

-UNC ASHEVILLE AT WINTHROP (Big South).  Winthrop had to sweat this one out last night, but they did get the win, they are still undefeated, and they are looking to stay that way.

-SAINT LOUIS AT RICHMOND (Atlantic Ten).  This is a hugely important game for both these teams.  Saint Louis showed some rust in their last game after being shut down and desperately needs to start stringing together wins in order to catch back up to the pack and be safely inside the bubble.  Richmond is also outside the bubble and needs a strong finish to the season to help secure their NCAA Tournament hopes.

-IOWA AT ILLINOIS (Big Ten).  Both teams are in the rankings, both are teams that could end up as protected seeds, but both need to string together some wins and finish strong in order for that to happen.

-BOISE STATE AT COLORADO STATE (Mountain West).  This is a bubblicious game between two teams that we think are inside the bubble right now, but are by no means in a position to be able to just coast on in.  This game definitely has a pivotal feel to it.

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Hoops HD Bracket Rundown: January 28th

This show was recorded at 10:15pm on January 28th.  Any game that went final after that was not considered when building the seedlist

Chad, Jon, Joby, and David 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 which four teams belong on the #1 line, where teams like Illinois and Iowa belong, whether or not Oklahoma State belongs as a protected seed, where Drake should be on the seedlist, and which teams that are on the bubble just made it 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: Jan 28th

NEWS AND NOTES

-For the latest Under the Radar Video Podcast – CLICK HERE

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

-The surprise of the day had to be BYU’s loss to Pepperdine.  Pepperdine had won three out of four and had been playing well relatively speaking, but it didn’t look like they’d beat a team that appears to be squarely inside the bubble like BYU.  For BYU, it’s a setback, but it’s not a game ender.  They are still in relatively good shape as far as making the tourney.

-Ohio State had to sweat out Penn State at home, which was kind of a surprise, but they held on for the 83-79 win and maintain their status as a solid protected seed caliber team.

-Seton Hall did a fantastic job controlling the first 37 minutes of their game against Creighton!  The Hall is a bubble team and this was exactly the kind of performance they needed!  The problem was that Creighton went on a 14-2 run to close the game and ended up winning 85-81.

-Clemson snapped their three game blowout loss streak with a 54-50 win over Louisville in a defensive battle.  This was a game that both teams could have really used not just from a resume standpoint, but from a momentum standpoint.

-Providence held off Marquette in overtime 72-63.  Like so many Big East games, it was close all throughout with several momentum shifts, one of which was in overtime where it looked like Marquette just failed to show up.

-Drake got a big road win at Missouri State to remain unbeaten.  The two face each other again tonight.  Missouri State probably isn’t a team that will land inside the bubble, but it was just their second home loss of the season so the committee should give Drake some credit for that as a quality win.

-Colorado State basically blew Boise State’s doors off.  The Rams were hovering around the bubble and were really needing an impressive win.  Well, they got one!

 

HIGHLIGHTED GAMES

-OREGON STATE AT USC (Pac 12).  USC should win this, but after a pitiful start to the season Oregon State has gotten hot all of a sudden, so the Trojans don’t want to overlook them.

-UNC ASHEVILLE AT WINTHROP (Big South).  Winthrop is looking to remain undefeated and have a strong case that they belong inside the bubble.

-MICHIGAN STATE AT RUTGERS (Big Ten).  Michigan State is finally back on the court, and their first game is a trial by fire.  It’s actually a trial by fire for both teams as both could really use this win today.

-TCU AT KANSAS (Big 12).  TCU has shown some signs of life this year, but I don’t think they have what it takes to beat a protected seed caliber team like Kansas.  Having said that, Kansas has lost their last three games and could really use a bounce back game like this one.

-MEMPHIS AT SMU (American).  SMU isn’t out of strikes just yet, but they are running out of them.  They can’t afford to lose this one tonight.

-GONZAGA AT SAN DIEGO (West Coast).  The clear #1 team in the nation is on the road against a team that isn’t very good.  I’ll just leave it at that.

-HOUSTON AT TULANE (American).  Houston continues to look like a solid protected seed and seems like they are good enough to win out until the NCAA Tournament.

-WYOMING AT SAN DIEGO STATE (Mountain West).  San Diego State is hovering much closer to the bubble than what many of us (including myself) thought they’d be.  They should be able to win tonight, but they don’t want to just overlook Wyoming.

-BELMONT AT AUSTIN PEAY (Ohio Valley).  A win for Belmont will get them to 17-1 on the season, and that bloated of a record should be enough to at least get them sone national attention and some attention from the committee.

-STANFORD AT ARIZONA (Pac 12).  Stanford continues to straddle the bubble and they could really use a road win like this to nudge them into the right direction.

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Under the Radar Game of the Day – Thursday, January 28

Belmont at Austin Peay, 9:00 PM, ESPNU

Don’t miss our latest Under the Radar podcast!!!

The Under the Radar Game of the Day turns its attention to the Ohio Valley Conference today as the Belmont Bruins put their 10-0 conference record on the line in Clarksville, Tennessee against the Austin Peay Governors.  Belmont has only lost once all season, a somewhat inexplicable home loss to Samford back in December, and the Bruins are establishing themselves as one of the most dangerous Under the radar teams out there this season.  Nick Muszynski (15.2 points and 5.4 rebounds per game) and Luke Smith (15.0 points per game) lead the way for the Bruins, who present a strong balanced scoring attacks with five players averaging in double figures.  It is no shock that they have the best Adjusted Offense in the OVC according to KenPom.

Austin Peay was a preseason pick to contend for the conference title, but the Governors have faltered a few times and are currently sitting at 8-5 overall and 4-3 in OVC play.  They are led by one of the best guards in the OVC, Terry Taylor.  Taylor enters the game tonight averaging 21.2 points and 10.8 rebounds per game.  Given Belmont’s high scoring and fast-paced offense, Taylor could be on track for a big night tonight, but his team’s #306 rated defense has to be vastly improved if the Govs want any shot at winning tonight’s game.

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