News, Notes and Final Four Games – Saturday, April 6

For Jon Teitel’s photo essay of last week’s Virginia Tech-Duke game in the East Regional Semifinal – CLICK HERE

As the Final Four prepares to get underway in Minneapolis today, there were quite a few moves (and non-moves, for that matter) that fell into place for the 2019 Coaching Carousel. There was a feeling that Jamie Dixon was the frontrunner to be UCLA’s next head coach, but that is no longer the case after Dixon told the TCU brass that he would remain with their program. Vanderbilt also announced that Jerry Stackhouse would be their next head coach; he will replace Bryce Drew.

Elsewhere, Kevin Willard was a favorite target for Virginia Tech, but he has opted to remain at Seton Hall and is no longer in the running down in Blacksburg. There were also rumors that Chris Mullin would be dismissed at St. John’s, so their athletic department issued a press release earlier today stating that Mullin would still be head coach and that they were not looking at any other candidates at this time.

Meanwhile, in the CBI Championship Series, South Florida won the decisive Game 3 77-65. David Collins led the Bulls with 19 points and 8 rebounds; this was USF’s first win in any tournament since they won the Sun Belt Tournament in 1990. This was also the second time Brian Gregory won a postseason tournament; he had previously won the NIT in 2010 as Dayton’s head coach.

FINAL FOUR

(5) AUBURN VS (1) VIRGINIA (6:09 PM, CBS) – Something is going to have to give in this game – Virginia is the nation’s top team in terms of fewest points allowed, and Auburn has been arguably the hottest team remaining in terms of offensive production. However, Auburn did show that they could win a defensive struggle as evidenced in their overtime victory against Kentucky in the Midwest Regional Final last Sunday. Virginia needed a last-second shot to take their game against Purdue into overtime in the South Regional Final and took advantage with their win against the Boilers.

(3) TEXAS TECH VS (2) MICHIGAN STATE (approx. 8:39 PM, CBS) – Despite navigating through various injuries throughout the season, Michigan State finds itself in the Final Four for the eighth time during Tom Izzo’s coaching career after taking out a Duke team that was a heavy favorite to win the national title going into the NCAA Tournament this year. They will now face a Texas Tech team that is experienced in their own right and has advanced to the Elite Eight last year and now their first Final Four in program history in back-to-back seasons.

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All-Access at the East Regional: HoopsHD is in the 2nd row for Virginia Tech-Duke

The NCAA tournament is about basketball but also so much more: the fans, bands, cheerleaders, etc. The East Regional is taking place in Washington, DC this weekend and we could not be more excited to be there in person! HoopsHD is all over it and covering all of the angles so you can look forward to a cascade of coverage in the days ahead. Jon Teitel continues our coverage with a photo essay recap of the Sweet 16 ACC rematch featuring the Hokies vs. the Blue Devils (all of the photos below were taken by HoopsHD, but since the NCAA was kind enough to award us a credential…and to cover our butts, we will extend the courtesy for everything to both the NCAA and CBS Sports just in case).

There was plenty of star power in the audience with the majority of it named David: CNN political analyst David Gregory sat about 5 rows up from center court while billionaire Duke alum David Rubenstein was located right behind the Duke bench (the grey-haired gentleman in the center of this photo):

There was plenty of star power on the court as well with 2 notable absences: no Justin Robinson in the starting lineup for Virginia Tech and no Cam Reddish in the starting lineup for Duke (due to an undisclosed knee injury). Let’s go:

SR SG Ahmed Hill had a birthday the previous week and appeared to keep the celebration going throughout the 1st half: he kept making threes and then turning to the crowd to let them know about it. It did not end well for him…but we will get to that later on:

When Robinson finally checked into the game he received a huge ovation from the anti-Duke crowd. He made an instant impact off the bench with an alleyoop to Hill for a big dunk before making a pair of threes:

Reddish remained on the sideline all night but his 3 fellow super-frosh all made notable 1st half contributions. RJ Barrett only made 1 basket in the 1st half but instead of forcing the issue he focused on the distributing the ball and had 7 AST by halftime:

In contrast, Tre Jones (the regular PG) turned into the 2nd coming of JJ Redick by knocking down 3 after 3 and even mixing in an and-1.  I should have had a better idea of his strategy after seeing him warm up outside the 3-PT line:

This was my 1st chance to see Zion Williamson in person and he did not disappoint. He shared a moment early on with uncle Buzz, although it looks like neither of them will be involved when these 2 ACC foes play again next season:

Zion had a tough layup inside, a huge 2-handed follow-dunk of an RJ miss, a 3, and an impossibly-high BLK on a Kerry Blackshear Jr. shot that was somehow NOT called goaltending. The lowlight was when he air-balled a 3 that drove the Hokie crowd wild, but the highlight was when he caught an alleyoop with his back to the basket/rotated 180 degrees in mid-air/laid it in. He can simply do things that most human being cannot do so it is no wonder that he was recently named national POY:

Virginia Tech was up 38-34 at the half and Tom Izzo decided to sit down right in front of me to talk to the Spartan radio crew and do a little scouting since he would be playing the winner of tonight’s game on Sunday:

In contrast, LSU JR SG Skylar Mays came out of the locker room to be consoled by his family/friends (he is the 1 holding his head in his hand in the center of this photo) while wondering how Izzo’s defense was able to hold him to just 7 PTS earlier that evening:

I do not know if Duke alum Grant Hill had to expel some nervous energy but he did feel the need to stand up and stretch his long legs during a Virginia Tech trip to the FT line:

SR SG/SF Ty Outlaw was under a “haze” of suspicion after being cited for marijuana possession the week earlier but after being cleared to play he scored 5 PTS in the 2nd half on a 3 and a layup:

Blackshear kept the Hokies in it until the very end despite playing in obvious pain: after having foot surgery a couple of years ago he is forced to run around the court with his left heel up in the air all game long. He was only 5-14 from the field but made 8 FT and owned Duke inside with an insane 11 offensive REB. Not only did he finish with has 2nd straight double-double against the Blue Devils, he became only the 2nd player since 1995 to have at least 18 PTS/16 REB/5 AST in an NCAA tourney game (Angel Delgado had 24 PTS/23 REB/5 AST in a loss to Kansas last March). Coach K looked very concerned after seeing RJ bent over at the waist in pain but both of them turned out to be just fine:

Barrett overcame his injury by scoring at will in the 2nd half: a layup on the very 1st possession, a bunch of layups including an and-1, and a pull-up jumper off the glass. He also kept finding open teammates and set a new career-high with 11 AST:

Somehow Jones was even better: despite making only 4-25 shots from behind the arc in his previous 5 ACC/NCAA tourney games combined, he finished with a career-high 22 PTS on 5-7 3PM and even out-jumped the 6’10” Blackshear to tip a REB over to Alex O’Connell. The only downside was when he missed the front end of a 1-and-1 with 30 seconds left and his team up 75-73. Zion continued to dazzle by spinning to the hoops for a series of dunks/layups/finger rolls and slamming home an alley-oop from Jones that caused the crowd to explode:

The Hokies set up an inbounds play for the final second in the hopes of sending it to OT, but Hill could not drop the ball into the hoop despite making a perfect curl to the basket and receiving a great pass. Duke escaped with a 75-73 win as their fans let out a huge sigh of relief:

JR C Marques Bolden only played 20 minutes off the bench but got to do the postgame radio spot due to his all-around play (4 PTS/6 REB/2 BLK):

The line to get into the Duke locker room rivaled that of the halftime restroom line:

I tried to chat with a few of the role players while the superstars and their coach were on the podium:

However, even the law firm of O’Connell/Bolden/DeLaurier was busy consulting with a bunch of potential clients:

Props to Zion for keeping his locker room neat…and props to me for not stealing his jacket (unlike the reporter who stole Tom Brady’s jersey after the Super Bowl!):

Marty Smith had enough juice to schedule a stand-up with the podium players:

I wanted to interview Tre when he was standing by himself after returning to the locker room, but he was spending some face time on his phone with 1 of his loved ones so I just gave him some room to enjoy a semi-private moment:

I also wanted to interview Zion and RJ but the crowd for each was about 5 reporters deep:

That’s all for now, check back later for continuing coverage.

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UTR Postseason News, Notes and CBI Preview – Friday, April 5

For Jon Teitel’s interview with former James Madison 2-sport star Steve Stielper – CLICK HERE

Last night in Madison Square Garden, Lipscomb’s amazing season came to a screeching halt where they were defeated by Texas 81-66. The Longhorns made their game-defining run late in the first half; after trailing by 3 points following a shot by the Bisons’ Rob Marberry; the Longhorns went on a 17-2 run to take control of the game. Dylan Osetkowski led Texas with 19 points and 11 rebounds. Kerwin Roach II was named the Most Outstanding Player for the NIT and Texas won their second NIT crown; they last won the tournament in 1978.

Green Bay started their game at Marshall strong; after a 3-point shot by Sandy Cohen III, the Phoenix jumped out to a 37-24 lead at the 6-minute mark. From there, Marshall was able to cut their deficit down to 2 points at halftime. The first 8 minutes of the 2nd half was back-and-forth between both teams, but a 26-8 run by the Thundering Herd effectively ended the competitive phase of this game. Marshall won their first CIT Championship and their first national title since winning the 1947 NAIA National Championship.

CBI Championship (Game 3)

SOUTH FLORIDA AT DEPAUL (7:00 PM, ESPNU) – The first two games of this series have either come down to a last-second shot or overtime. South Florida won the first game at home on Monday with a game-winning drive with under 2 seconds remaining, and DePaul returned the favor with an overtime victory on Wednesday.

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2-sport star: HoopsHD interviews former James Madison player Steve Stielper

We have seen plenty of multi-sport stars in the past including Bo Jackson, Deion Sanders, Charlie Ward, etc. Kyler Murray was selected 9th overall by Oakland in the 2018 MLB draft, but after winning the Heisman Trophy last December at Oklahoma he may very well be the 1st overall pick by Arizona later this month in the 2019 NFL draft. Another player who excelled at 2 different sports was Steve Stielper: he finished his college basketball career at James Madison in 1980 as the all-time leading scorer/rebounder in school history, and a few decades later in 2016 he was inducted into the Maryland Slow Pitch Softball Hall of Fame. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Steve about playing both sports and what he has been up to since retiring.

You grew up in Maryland: what made you choose James Madison? I was averaging about 33 PPG coming out of a small high school in Maryland. They had been recruiting me for most of the past year and at the time it was actually called Madison College: I did not know that it would eventually become JMU.

You played several different sports as a kid: which sport were you best at, and which 1 did you enjoy the most? The 1st sport I played was football, then baseball, and I started basketball at age 9. As I grew taller my parents suggested that I should play basketball.

You joined the Dukes in 1976 as they were making the leap to D-1: what was the best part of the transition and what was the not-so-best part? I do not think there were any bad parts. The best part was the name recognition that we got: it put us further along on the map.

The university president allegedly tried to broaden your horizons by taking you to dinner/wine tastings/plays: what kind of bond did you have with Dr. Roland Carrier? It was a unique friendship because he was a unique person. He cared about all the students but he took me under his wing, called me to make sure I was going to class, and we even shared some chili dogs!

You averaged 20.9 PPG/10.7 RPG as a freshman: how were you able to make such a smooth transition from high school to college? It was not that much of a transition because my teammates were very unselfish. Sherman Dillard got hurt, which game me some more playing time, and Coach Lou Campanelli just wanted me to put the ball in the basket.

In January of 1979 you scored 51 PTS in a win over Robert Morris: was it just 1 of those scenarios where every shot you put up seemed to go in because you were “in the zone”? There was a time that year during practice where most of my shots were going in. I missed a few FTs that night but was 20-25 from the field. A lot of different people were the reason for that 51-PT night: I was very confident in my ability but a lot of people helped me get there.

Your 2126 PTS/917 REB remain the most in school history: did you realize at the time how prolific a player you were, and do you think that anyone will ever break your records? At the time I thought my numbers were right about where they should have been. I do think that someone will break my records someday because I only played 104 games: now the guys play 120+ games and have a 3-PT line that I did not have. JMU has a couple of sophomores right now in Matt Lewis/Darius Banks who could do it if they stick around for 4 years. It has been a privilege for me to hold these records for the past 39 years.

In the summer of 1980 you were drafted by Indiana before getting cut during rookie camp and then playing pro basketball in Spain/Australia: what is the biggest difference between basketball in the US vs. basketball overseas? Back then I was the only American in my town and nobody spoke English so the language barrier was pretty big. We only had 1 game/week so the other players had jobs during the week that they scheduled around our practices. The players’ ability was on a relatively equal level. My tenure in Australia was cut short because the team did not pay me so I came back to the US and became a Hall of Fame softball player.

You currently work as a student advocate/tennis coach: how do you like it, and what do you hope to do in the future? Sometimes I teach driver’s education in Spanish! I still go down to JMU 1-2 times/year to see some games and visit some friends. I live about 1 hour from the school I work at. I am somewhat upset that I did not prepare myself better but I have a wonderful wife/kids and have been blessed to have a great life.

When people look back on your career, how do you want to be remembered the most? I hope I am remembered as a great teammate that did not have anyone play harder. I want my legacy to be that of a good dude/teammate who gave everything he had for JMU.

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UTR Postseason News, Notes and Highlighted Games – Thursday, April 4

For Jon Teitel’s interview with National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Famer Lute Olson – CLICK HERE

For Jon Teitel’s photo essay of Michigan State’s victory against LSU last Friday – CLICK HERE

In nine of the first eleven seasons of the CBI, the championship has been decided in three games (only VCU in 2010 and Loyola-Chicago in 2015 had swept the best-of-3 series). South Florida looked like they might be able to become the third team to get the sweep after coming back from a double-digit deficit at halftime and forcing overtime after not allowing DePaul to get a shot off in the closing seconds of regulation. LaQuincy Rideau hit a 3-point shot to give the Bulls their only lead in the first minute of overtime, but a shot by Paul Reed on the next possession put DePaul ahead for good and the Blue Demons won 100-96 to force a third and deciding game on Friday night. Reed had 28 points and 16 rebounds to lead DePaul; Max Strus also had 32 points for the Blue Demons.

NIT Championship

(5) LIPSCOMB VS (2) TEXAS (7:00 PM, ESPN) – After Lipscomb took a halftime lead into their game with Wichita State on Tuesday night, they exchanged runs with Wichita in the 2nd half and ended up getting a 34-point performance from Garrison Matthews to vault the Bisons into their first ever appearance in the NIT Championship game. Texas has been on a roll in their past two games; they defeated TCU on Tuesday night without much difficulty. Shaka Smart will be looking for his second postseason crown as a head coach; he previously won the CBI in 2010 while coaching at VCU.

CIT Championship

GREEN BAY AT MARSHALL (7:00 PM, WatchCIT.com) – This game, much like South Florida-DePaul last night, figures to be an offensive explosion on both ends with Sandy Cohen III leading the way for Green Bay and Jon Elmore leading the way for Marshall. Both teams had close victories in their semifinal games, but Green Bay needed a game-winner in overtime to beat Texas Southern.

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Call to the Hall: HoopsHD interviews 2-time National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Famer Lute Olson

In December of 2006 HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel headed up to New York with some friends to see his Arizona Wildcats on 1 of their very rare basketball road trips to the East Coast. The local alumni club had scheduled a pregame pep rally at a bar near Madison Square Garden before everyone walked over to see the team face Louisville and the place was packed. Arizona coach Lute Olson showed up to give a short speech, looked around for an open place to stand, and after finding none he asked Jon if he could help him up so that he could stand on a chair to address the crowd. Jon eagerly gave him a hand, became the envy of everyone in the bar, and capped off an unforgettable night by watching his alma mater beat the Cardinals 72-65 at “The World’s Most Famous Arena.” Nobody realized at the time that they were witnessing Lute’s last season in Tucson, but earlier this week he was named a member of the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame Class of 2019 for the 2nd time (after previously being inducted in 2006). He made 28 NCAA tourneys in a 29-year stretch from 1979-2007 at Iowa/Arizona, won a combined 13 conference regular season titles as a D-1 coach, was an 8-time conference COY, and led Arizona to its only NCAA title in 1997. Jon got to chat with Lute about his spectacular career a few years ago and is proud to present that previously unpublished interview for the very 1st time: congrats Coach!

In 1952 you helped lead your Grand Forks High School team to a North Dakota state basketball title: what did it mean to you to win a title? The goal is to be the last team standing at whatever level you play at. It really feels good to get to the end of the season and have no one left to play!

In the 1979 NCAA tourney as coach at Iowa, Stan Joplin scored 15 PTS and made a 20-foot shot at the buzzer in a 2-PT win by Toledo: where does that rank among the most devastating losses of your career? Anytime you are in the tourney it is 1-and-done so that was very disappointing…but it might have helped us the next year. You always feel bad for the seniors because it is very difficult to take.

In the 1980 NCAA tourney Steve Waite scored 15 PTS (4-4 FG/7-7 FT) and converted a 3-PT play with 5 seconds left in a 1-PT win over Georgetown: did you think that your team had enough momentum to win the title that season? Yes I did. We beat Syracuse/Georgetown, who were 2 of the top teams in the country. Ronnie Lester was 1 of the top PGs in the country but he hurt his knee in a Christmas tourney. We were good enough to win it all but Ronnie hurt his knee again in the tourney: he was 1 of the best PGs I ever had.

In the 1982 NCAA tourney Brian Kellerman scored 14 PTS and made a 15-foot jumper that bounced high off the rim before dropping through at the buzzer in a 2-PT OT win by Idaho: did you have any change in your coaching philosophy when it came to regulation vs. overtime? No: we worked every day in practice on late-game situations and won a lot more than we lost in situations like that.

In 1986 you coached team USA to a 2-PT win over the USSR in the FIBA World Championship gold medal game (which remains the last US amateur basketball team to win an international competition): what was it like to face a 21-year old Arvydas Sabonis (who scored 16 PTS)? It was a special time for me: that was the only amateur US team to ever win the World Championship. Most of the foreign press felt that we would never make the final in Madrid but we beat Brazil quite easily (96-80) before facing the Soviets. David Robinson was our only senior: everyone else on the roster was an underclassman. After seeing Sabonis in person, his size/shooting ability made you wonder that if he had come over to the US earlier he might have become 1 of the 15-20 best players in NBA history. Even so he still had a great career. The USSR had a lot of other really good players too so it was a huge upset on our part.

In the 1993 NCAA tourney as coach at Arizona, Steve Nash scored 10 PTS in a 3-PT upset by Santa Clara (the 2nd game ever won by a #15-seed): do you think that we will ever see a #16-seed upset a #1-seed? I do not think so because there is a huge difference in talent. Steve Nash was a great player and their whole team had shot the lights out in their conference tourney. That was 1 of my biggest disappointments as coach of Arizona.

Take me through the magical 1997 NCAA tourney, where you became the only team to ever beat 3 #1 seeds in the same tourney:
AJ Bramlett had 12 PTS/12 REB in a 3-PT win over top-ranked Kansas: was your team out for revenge after a 3-PT loss to the Jayhwaks in the 1996 NCAA tourney? I think that was a key to our win. We had lost to them in Colorado in 1996. Our best defensive player (Joe McLean) got food poisoning at dinner the night before that game and had to go to the hospital: he tried to give it a go but was just too weak. Our guys felt that we would have won if Joe had been healthy so we were not afraid of the Jayhawks even though they were ranked #1 for most of the year.

Tourney MOP Miles Simon scored 30 PTS in a 4-PT OT win over Providence, 24 PTS in an 8-PT win over North Carolina, and 30 PTS in a 5-PT OT win over defending champion Kentucky to win the title: what made Simon such a great player, and what was the reaction like when you got back to campus? Miles is a tremendous competitor and a great leader. Some people viewed him as cocky but he was just confident in himself and his teammates. We had different guys step up at different times to get us there and by the time we got to the Final 4 we felt like we could win it. Kentucky had an outstanding ballclub but they did not come out in a press due to our speed/quickness.

In the 2001 NCAA tourney title game Loren Woods had 22 PTS/11 REB in a 10-PT loss to Duke: what was it like to face Coach K with a title on the line? Duke was very good and had about 8-10 McDonald’s All-Americans: we were a fairly young team ourselves at that point but did an outstanding job. Luke Walton had a broken thumb so we were not at full strength. You have to be good to get there…but you have to be lucky to win it.

In the 2003 NCAA tourney Channing Frye/Jason Gardner each scored 22 PTS in a 1-PT 2-OT win over Gonzaga: where does that rank among the most exciting games of your career? I think that it was a classic game because Gonzaga was really good. They had a 17-foot shot toward the end of regulation that could have won it. It was a case of 2 teams playing their hardest: I think that ESPN Classic has shown that game a number of times.

Take me through the 2005 NCAA tourney:
Salim Stoudamire scored 19 PTS and made an off-balance jumper with 2.8 seconds left in a 1-PT win over Oklahoma State: what is the key to setting up a game-winning shot in the huddle? You want to get the ball into the hands of your best shooter. The great thing about Salim is that not only was he a great shooter but he could create his own shot as well. We wanted Salim to take the final shot but only if he had a great look. I get asked a lot about who was my best shooter: Steve Kerr was the best at coming off of a screen but Salim was the best at creating his own shot.

After opening up a 15-PT lead with just over 4 minutes left in regulation, IL had a 20-5 run to force OT, and Hassan Adams missed a 3 at the buzzer to give Illinois a 1-PT OT win in 1 of the most thrilling tourney games ever (Deron Williams had 22 PTS/10 AST): what was the feeling like in your locker room afterward? It was a horrible feeling because that was my only senior class that did not make it to at least 1 Final 4. There were 19,000 Illini fans at the arena in Rosemont. I still think that the officials thought the game was over with 3 minutes left and just stopped working: Illinois was trying to foul us but the refs would not even call a foul.

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