The Merriest Christmas: HoopsHD interviews former Alabama A&M star Mickell Gladness

As a college player the best Christmas gift is a chance to put final exams behind you, travel back home, and celebrate with your family (I suppose a trip to Hawaii to play in the Diamond Head Classic would be a close 2nd!). As a pro player the best Christmas gift is a chance to play on TV in front of a national audience. The latter wish came true for Mickell Gladness 8 years ago today when he made his NBA debut with Miami on Christmas Day 2011 (3 minutes of action during a win at Dallas that was a rematch of the 2011 NBA Finals). HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Mickell about having a Christmas to remember and owning the greatest shot-blocking performance in NCAA history.

You grew up in Alabama: what made you choose Alabama A&M? I initially was recruited by UAB but at the time I wanted to leave my junior college they told me that I would have to walk-on: that is when Alabama A&M came along and offered me a full scholarship. The chance to play D-1 made the choice easier, as well as the fact that I did not have many other options.

On February 24, 2007 you set a D-1 record with 16 BLK in a 6-PT win over Texas Southern: do you think that anyone will ever break your record? I am very proud of that record. It has been more than a decade and no one has broken it yet so I do not think that it will ever be broken. If someone does break it then my hat goes off to them because it was not easy to set the record back then and it is probably even harder to do it now. You do not really see shot-blockers like that in the NCAA anymore.

As a junior you led the nation with 6.3 BPG: what is your secret for blocking shots? I honestly do not think it is a secret: it is just God-given talent. The most important things are timing and being fearless. I have gotten dunked on/scored on numerous times…but in my mind I will block or disturb your shot more often than you score and that is the key.

You were named 1st-team All-SWAC in 2007/2008: what did it mean to you to receive such outstanding honors? It meant that I had the respect that I was striving for from my peers (most importantly) and also the coaches around the league.

You graduated with 396 career BLK in only 3 seasons of D-1 basketball (which remains in the top-25 all-time): do you consider yourself 1 of the best shot-blockers in NCAA history? I do. I feel that if I had played at that level 1 more year then I would have been in the top-5 all-time, but I have always hung my hat on defense so I am very proud that the record book shows that.

You have spent the past decade playing pro in several countries as well as the D-League: what is the biggest difference between basketball in the US vs. basketball overseas? I think it is more about “team” basketball overseas as opposed to a lot of individual skills and 1-on-1 in the US.

In 2010 you won the D-League title with the Rio Grande Valley Vipers: what did it mean to you to win a title? I really wish that I would have played more on that team (Mickell ranked 16th on the roster with 12.8 MPG) but they still gave me my first taste of success at the professional level.

On December 25, 2011 you made your NBA debut with Miami: where does that rank among the best Christmases of your life?! It is really hard to top achieving one of your career/lifelong goals on Christmas.

You played 26 games for the Heat that year: what is your favorite memory from your time in the NBA? I think just being around the guys who everyone around the world looks up to. Being in the locker room/on the court with guys like LeBron, D-Wade, J-Howard, and Chris Bosh (to name just a few) was an experience that I will never forget. I gained a lot of knowledge and my last game against the Spurs really made me realize that I could play at a high level: not a lot of people get to do what I have done.

How long do you plan to keep playing for, and what do you hope to do in the future? Playing pro basketball overseas is a nice place to be but it is just a stepping stone for me to get back to the highest level, whether that is the NBA or Euroleague. I plan on getting back to 1 of the highest levels before I am done.

Posted in Interviews | Tagged , | Comments Off on The Merriest Christmas: HoopsHD interviews former Alabama A&M star Mickell Gladness

Hoops HD Report – December 23, 2019

It is the final podcast before the Holidays from the Hoops HD crew, as Chad, David and John run down all the big news in the major conferences.  They discuss the amazing week that the Big East Conference had, including a dominating 8-2 win in their challenge series with the Big 12.  Gonzaga’s position as the new #1 team in the nation, the depth of the Big Ten conference and Memphis’ prospects with James Wiseman no longer set to return also get a lot of discussion.  All that and a whole lot more, including a look at just how good San Diego State is (hint: we think they are DAMN good!).

For those that prefer audio only, click below:

Posted in Bracketology, CBB, Hoops HD Report | Tagged | Comments Off on Hoops HD Report – December 23, 2019

Bracket Projections (David Griggs) – Dec 23rd

CLICK HERE for our latest Under the Radar Video Podcast

For John Stalica’s UTR Game of the Day, as well as the rest of the News and Notes from around college basketball – CLICK HERE

Below are my latest bracket projections, and below that are some comments from myself and from the rest of the staff.  Some of the rest of the staff, especially that Stalica guy, are going to probably disagree with what I’ve done.  HE IS WRONG!!

This is NOT a forecast of what I think the bracket WILL look like on Selection Sunday.  I am making no attempt whatsoever to guess the actual committee two months before the Selection Show.  Jon Teitel does that, and he is one of the best in the world at it, so if that is what you’re looking for then this isn’t for you.

This is what I think the bracket SHOULD look like if the season ENDED TODAY.

-The bracket reflects all games played through Sunday, Dec 22nd

OTHERS CONSIDERED: UNC Greensboro, Richmond, George Mason, Illinois, Oklahoma, Rutgers, Ole Miss, Houston, Florida, Miami FL, Xavier, VCU, Pittsburgh, SMU, USC, UConn, Saint Louis, Arizona State, New Mexico, Marquette, Akron, Arkansas

-Basically everyone on my top two lines has some sort of high caliber win away from home.  Michigan’s resume is probably a little stronger than Memphis’s, but Michigan also doesn’t have a true road win yet.  Having said that, the three wins down in the Bahamas were spectacular, so I can understand that there is a strong argument to have them on the #3 line.  My other issue with them is…well…they just haven’t looked all that good since that tournament.

-Saint John’s resume looks really good, especially with the wins against West Virginia and Arizona.  This is a team that has improved as the season has progressed.  Mike Anderson has done an amazing job with the Johnnies, and they won’t be an easy team to beat in the Big East.

-When I look at the teams that were omitted, I can understand thinking that Florida, and Xavier, and a few others, they just haven’t done anything, nor have they looked all that good.  Having said that, Xavier did get a nice road win against TCU yesterday, and looked good doing it, but TCU is hardly a consensus NCAA Tournament caliber team.

-Dayton is a case of a team being a lot better than their resume.  They do have a dominant road win over a pretty solid Saint Mary’s team, but nothing against anyone that’s solidly in the top half of the bracket.  Not only that their opportunities will be limited the rest of the way.  I have them as a protected seed, and it’s very conceivable that they could end up there, but it is unusual for a team to get a protected seed with no wins against the top half of the bracket.  They lost to Colorado in overtime this past weekend.  Beating them would have made a world of difference.

-Lastly, we’ve got some UTR teams that are inside the bubble.  I like this Northern Iowa team a ton and think they will end up ranked in the top 25 before the season is over.  Liberty and SFA also have a real good shot at winning out or coming close to it.  If they do that, then they’ll have resumes with bloated records, but very little in the way of top 200 wins.  SFA does have that huge win at Duke, and I think that will help them out a ton when it comes to seeding, and perhaps make it so they don’t need to win the Southland Tournament.  All three are interesting cases.  They could all three have huge records, be ranked in the top 25, but have a very limited number of top 100 wins (and in the case of SFA and Liberty, a limited number of top 200 wins)

 

COMMENTS FROM STAFF

From Chad:

I only have one comment.  Virginia is an 8 seed.  Wow, Tony Bennett’s seat is definitely getting hot!!!!

From that Stalica guy:

-In honor of today’s Festivus celebrations, it is now time for the Airing of Grievances against the Puppet. We definitely need to start with his obsession with having Dayton as a protected seed. I know he’s still stuck on their performance in Maui against Georgia, Virginia Tech and their near win against Kansas. I still think they’re about 5 or 6-seedish, but I would say that a 3 is frankly their ceiling if they’re able to take care of business in the A-10.

-On the other hand, I do appreciate that David is starting to come around on Penn State this year. Their win at Georgetown continues to look better and better, and their only real strike at this point was losing to Ole Miss in come-from-ahead fashion back in November.

-I’ll agree that Northern Iowa has earned the right to be above the bubble, but I would again say that a seed like #6 is their ceiling, not their current checkpoint. I do not agree that Liberty gets the benefit of the doubt yet as to whether or not they should be above the First Four right now. At least not until they can pass their test at LSU after Christmas break.

-Kentucky. Honestly, I’m not sure I would even have them in my field right now, much less on my first ballot (aka top 8 seed caliber). They do have a season-opening win against Michigan State, but that has been watered down by the Spartans’ underwhelming start this season. Losses to Evansville and Utah negate that, and quite frankly if your best win besides that is Georgia Tech, we need to send them to the Feats of Strength. Until then, Festivus is not over.

-Texas is this year’s box of chocolates from Forrest Gump – we just never know what we’ll get. One minute they’re winning soundly at Purdue, the next minute they’re getting humiliated against a Providence team that is the only real disappointment in the Big East. And that’s not counting the food fight they had at home against McNeese before they cleaned up that mess and managed to get a W.

-Minnesota. If this were last week, I would have given this bracket an F and told the Puppet to redo his homework. This week, the Gophers have improved with wins at home against Ohio State and in a quasi-road environment against Oklahoma State. I still think they need a few more wins of note to get in, but their schedule is about as brutal as anyone has played so far this year.

Posted in News and Notes | Comments Off on Bracket Projections (David Griggs) – Dec 23rd

Under The Radar: Monday, December 23rd (and other News, Notes, and Games)

For our weekly and belated UTR Podcast recorded last night – CLICK HERE

For Jon Teitel’s coverage of the GW-Harvard game – CLICK HERE

Canisius (5-5, 0-0) at Siena (3-5, 0-0) – 6:00 PM EST (ESPN3)

Tonight’s UTR Game of the Day takes us to Albany, New York for the MAAC opener between the Canisius Golden Griffins and the hometown Siena Saints. After winning four straight games towards the end of November, Canisius has stumbled of late with losses in three of their last four games. All of those losses were on the road – which may not bode well for the Griffs tonight. Malik Johnson is averaging 14.4 points a game and 5.3 assists a game.

Both Siena and Canisius have wins against St. Bonaventure and Bucknell thus far, although the Saints have played a tougher schedule that also includes losses at Xavier, Harvard and Yale so far. The win at home against Bucknell also broke a four-game losing streak that included losses at Colgate and Cal Poly. Elijah Burns has averaged 16 points a game and 6.3 rebounds a game through the first eight games for the Saints.

We will also be taking our Holiday Break from this column after today – our next UTR game will be on Friday this week. That said, be on the lookout for our regular Hoops HD Report podcast later tonight and enjoy your holidays!

 

OTHER NEWS NOTES AND GAMES

-Virginia fell at home to South Carolina.  Although they were ranked in the top ten, when you look at Virginia’s profile it is suddenly lacking, at least by top ten/protected seed standards.  I think they’ll end up kicking it into gear after Christmas, but they have had their struggles so far.

-Xavier picked up a really nice road win at TCU.  It was probably their best win of the year when you consider that it was a true road game, and how good they looked yesterday.  It was the first time all season they’d looked like a tournament caliber team.

-Duquesne is no longer unbeaten.  They fell to UAB in the Saint Pete’s Shootout by a score of 77-68.

-The second round of the Diamond Head Classic is today.  Houston and Washington both won yesterday and are still on pace to meet in the championship game Wednesday.  Washington will get a bit of a test from a pretty good Hawaii team tonight, so that one will be worth staying up to watch.  The final round of the tournament will be on Christmas Day.

-GEORGIA STATE AT SMU.  SMU has an impressive 8-2 record, but as of now they don’t have much meat on their resume and need to make sure they hold serve tonight.

-SAN FRANCISCO AT FRESNO STATE.  It’s a winnable road game for the Dons, and if they can continue to string together wins they could end up hovering somewhere around the bubble come March.

-GRAMBLING AT DAYTON – buy game

Posted in CBB on TV, Daily Rundown, Under the Radar | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Under The Radar: Monday, December 23rd (and other News, Notes, and Games)

Under the Radar: December 22nd

Tonight’s highlighted conference is the SoCon, which contains three teams that have a really good shot at landing inside the bubble and making a lot of noise in March.  East Tennessee State just got a big win at LSU, and Furman and UNC Greensboro are having big years as well.

After that we look at the other 21 UTR conferences and discuss how the America East and Big West are kind of fading, how Rider has been a bit of a surprise in the Metro Atlantic, how tough the MAC is looking, and how we expect Northern Iowa, Stephen F Austin, and Liberty to dominate their leagues.  And as always, we finish off with this week’s UTR Top Ten

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

Posted in Podcasts, Under the Radar, Videocasts | Comments Off on Under the Radar: December 22nd

Crimson Peaking: HoopsHD is in the house for Harvard-GW

HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel took a break from the Georgetown beat to check out the Harvard-GW game yesterday:

The pregame meal was Domino’s and a bottle of water: it may not be fancy but it certainly got the job done on a cold Saturday afternoon. Winter break at GW meant there were plenty of good seats available but at least the band played on while the mascot danced:

Let’s tip things off:

My perch up in the 200 level meant that I could peek right into the Colonials huddle: I feel like a real Patriot! I will not give away any secret strategy but 1 innovation that caught my eye is how Coach Jamion Christian’s staff uses a chart of their opponent’s players during timeouts. It is a simple thing but for a visual learner like me it seems simply ingenious:

Harvard will only play 1 home game from November 15-January 3 and it showed during the 1st half as the team looked a bit ragged at times. They were both inaccurate (1-7 from behind the arc) and unaggressive (2-4 from the FT line) as Harvard coach Tommy Amaker tried to do some problem-solving during a timeout:

The player who kept them in the game on offense was PF Chris Lewis, who dominated inside with dunks/layups/old-fashioned 3-PT plays:

On defense the key guy was SG Rio Haskett, who collected a trio of STL and was even able to convert some of them into PTS on the other end. For a player who comes off the bench he has very active hands and always appears to be having fun on the court.

1 familiar name on the GW roster is FR PG Jameer Nelson Jr. (son of the 2004 national POY at St. Joe’s). The good news is that he is not just living off of his father’s name: he can actually play and his layup at the buzzer gave his team a 39-37 halftime lead. The bad news is that he went 0-3 from the FT line despite entering the day as an 81.5% FT shooter:

The shooting star for the Colonials was SG Maceo Jack, who made a 3-PT shot on 3 straight possessions during 1 stretch to really get the crowd into the game. The passing star was SR PG Armel Potter: in addition to using his speed to get into the lane and make a bunch of layups, he also tied his career-high for a game with 7 AST in the 1st half. Coach Christian began the 2nd half with a quick heart-to-heart with Potter on the bench:

Coach Christian has a very short rotation so when his super-sub Justin Williams collided with Harvard’s Bryce Aiken with 13 minutes left in the game and had to go to the locker room you got the sense that the starting 5 would have to play even more minutes than usual. The other big injury occurred off the court, as 6’10” PF Ace Stallings had a huge BLK that sent the ball into the stands…and right into the face of a helpless member of the GW dance team. She jogged off the baseline to collect herself and thankfully it did not appear to require a trip to the ER: no photo available.

The refs helped out with about 10 minutes by whistling 4 different Crimson players for fouls during a 19-second span: needless to say Coach Amaker looked like he had received a lump of coal in his stocking:

Jack went ice-cold in the 2nd half (a scoreless 20 minutes due to 0-5 shooting from behind the arc) but his teammates both young and old picked up the slack. FR SF Jamison Battle continued his weekly improvement with a trio of 2nd half threes to tie his career-high of 18 PTS:

Potter kept making both layups and smart passes to finish with 22 PTS/10 AST in what has to be the best all-around game of his career. Unfortunately, big man Arnaldo Toro was unable to provide much interior assistance after picking up his 3rd foul just 2 minutes into the 2nd stanza and then his 4th foul with 12 minutes remaining in the game.  With Toro on the bench Lewis was able to keep making dunk after layup while finishing with an efficient 22 PTS/10-13 FG and not a single turnover. He also got help from his fellow SR big man Robert Baker, who converted a pretty alleyoop from Aiken and a couple of REB/putbacks to end up with 14 PTS/6-8 FG/3 BLK. Harvard only made 2 threes all day but won 88-75 thanks to superb FT shooting (16-18), a ton of PTS in the paint (62-28 advantage), and some great bench scoring (26-2 advantage).

Coach Amaker did not hold a postgame press conference but I asked Coach Christian how he balances his desire to have his best players in the game while also keeping them somewhat rested, as his 3 top scorers each played the full 40 minutes. He said that it is a battle every game due to a variety of factors: who is healthy, how much time off they have before their next game, etc. He lamented that having Williams pick up 3 fouls in less than 3 minutes of action before getting injured hurt his team because when he is on the floor he provides such great understanding of the game. He also admitted that he would love to get his starters’ minutes down to 32/game as his optimal #:

That’s it for now: happy holidays to all!

Posted in CBB | Tagged , | Comments Off on Crimson Peaking: HoopsHD is in the house for Harvard-GW