Happy Tourney-versary!: HoopsHD interviews Bill Thomas about Curtis Perry

For the UTR Game of the Day and today’s other highlighted Games – CLICK HERE

With the 2019 NCAA tourney tipping off next month, we will spend this month taking a walk down memory lane with a choice collection of players/coaches who are celebrating an awesome anniversary this year. From a comeback win to clinch the 1954 tourney title (65th anniversary) through a last-second loss in the 2014 Final 4 (5th anniversary), these legends have all carved out a little piece of history in past Marches. We continue our series with Bill Thomas, who coached Curtis Perry at Southwest Missouri State (now Missouri State). Thomas led the golden era of Bears basketball, taking his team to 3 D-2 national title games in an 8-year span from 1967-1974. Perry (a Washington, DC native) did not play in the 1st of those title games in 1967 because he was a freshman at the time but scored 25 PTS in the 2nd title game in 1969. He later spent 8 years in the NBA and helped the Phoenix Suns make the 1976 NBA Finals, where he led the team with 15 REB in a 2-PT 3-OT loss to the Celtics in Game 5. What I will remember most about Curtis is playing for him after he was named head coach of my middle school team in Phoenix: he was a nice man and a great coach. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Coach Thomas about the 50th anniversary of the 1969 D-2 title game and his memories of that legendary Game 5 (which is often referred to as “the greatest game ever played” in NBA history).

Perry did not play as a freshman in Southwest Missouri State’s 3-PT loss to Winston-Salem in the 1967 D-2 title game (Earl Monroe had 40 PTS): could you tell at the time that Monroe was going to become a star, and what was the feeling like in your locker room afterward? The NCAA rule at the time was that freshman could not play in the postseason. “The Pearl” was unique/unreal: I told the kids afterward that they had just played against 1 of the best players we had ever faced. We actually held him BELOW his scoring average (which was 41.5 PPG as a senior!).

From 1968-1970 he was a 3-time 1st-team All-MIAA performer: how was he able to come in as a sophomore and dominate throughout the rest of his college career? Curtis was a wonderful player by the time he arrived: if we had him on the court in 1967 we would have probably won the title. He was 1 of the best practice players I ever had: I almost had to run him out of the gym after practice. He kept improving every single year. I was lucky to get him thanks to a 3-cent stamp: I sent him letters but never actually met him before he showed up at the bus station after a 16-hour ride. I told him that if he was not too tired I would love to get him some gear and watch him play. I had a lunch to go to so I sent 1 of my assistants to watch him, and when I came back to watch him a little bit myself I thought that he was the best player that we had ever had.

In 1969 he scored a career-high 39 PTS vs. Southeast Missouri State: was it just 1 of those scenarios where every shot he put up seemed to go in because he was “in the zone”? Not only did he score a bunch of points, but he was probably our leading rebounder as well.

What are your memories of the 1969 D-2 title game (he was named to the all-tourney team after scoring 25 PTS in a 4-PT loss to Kentucky Wesleyan)? Kentucky Wesleyan was a great team and we had to leave 1 of our best players at home due to an injury. They beat the devil out of us in the 1st half but we made a great game out of it in the 2nd half. We had a good chance to win but they beat us in a close game.

In 1970 he had a school-record 31 REB vs. Texas-Arlington and finished his career by averaging 13.6 RPG: what made him such a great rebounder? His talent: he was 6’7” and a wonderful/quick jumper. He was also a very intelligent player on both offense/defense and had an unreal knowledge of the game even as a teenager. In a lot of ways he out-thought our opponents to get good position on the boards.

In 1970 he was named conference POY: what did it mean to him to win such an outstanding honor? In my opinion he deserved it: he was our top scorer/rebounder and a very unselfish team player.

In the summer of 1970 he was picked in the 3rd round by San Diego in the NBA draft and by Virginia in the ABA draft: did he ever consider going to the ABA or was his heart set on playing in the NBA? San Diego gave him a nice big bonus but not a lot of playing time. He was later traded to Phoenix and turned into a starter on a great basketball team that almost won a title in 1976.

Take me through the magical 1976 NBA Finals:
His Phoenix team lost on the road to Boston in Game 5 in a 2-PT 3-OT classic: was that the most exciting game that you have ever seen, and did you realize during the game that it was turning into a classic?  My entire family was at a wedding so we missed most of the game but got back in time to see most of the extra periods.

He had 23 PTS/15 REB in 52 minutes, including a shot with 6 seconds left in the 2nd OT to put Phoenix up by 1, which turned out to be their last lead of the game: did he think that he had made the game-winning shot, and how did he have any energy left for the 3rd OT? When his shot went in we had about 25 people watching in our den and then we all went crazy!

He averaged 9.5 PPG/8.8 RPG (the latter of which remains in the top-100 in NBA history) during his 8-year NBA career before retiring due to a back injury in 1978: did he feel frustrated that he could not go out on his own terms, or satisfied that he had a nice long career, or other? He had a parent die so he gave it up to go home and take care of his other parent. I think that it was part frustration and part satisfaction: that is the kind of guy he was.

After retiring he worked as a coach/teacher: which role does he enjoy the most, and what does he hope to do in the future? I never got to see him as a coach but he taught at a Catholic school in DC and loved it. He was a great man and everyone around here thought the world of him. You cannot talk about our program without mentioning him.

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Under The Radar Game of the Day: Lehigh at Bucknell

Lehigh (16-7, 9-3 Patriot) at Bucknell (16-8, 10-2 Patriot) – 7:00 PM EST (CBS Sports Network)

Tonight’s matchup takes us to central Pennsylvania where the top two teams in the Patriot League face off for the second time this season; the Bucknell Bison host the Lehigh Mountain Hawks tonight in Sojka Pavilion. The Bison won the first meeting between both teams at Lehigh earlier this season thanks to a game-winning layup from Jimmy Sotos with about a second remaining on the clock. Bucknell did start the year a little slowly at 6-6, but their win at Vermont is still a significant one and even their win against Monmouth is looking better and better by the day.

Lehigh is a full game behind Bucknell in the standings; however, they are currently in a stretch where they have won six out of their last eight games. The only real surprise was getting swept by Colgate thus far. Their best win of the season so far was a 15-point win against Princeton back in November. Lance Tejada leads the Mountain Hawks with 14.5 points per game.

OTHER GAMES, NEWS, AND NOTES

-Houston picked up a really nice win against Cincinnati yesterday and still has just one loss on the season.  I was impressed with the play of both teams, and although Cincinnati could have really used the road win, I think they should be more encouraged from their performance than discouraged.

-Iowa overcame a double digit deficit with just minutes to go to come back against Northwestern and dodge what would have been a somewhat damaging loss, but by no means would  it have been a killer loss.  Northwestern easily leads the nation in heartbreaking losses this year.

-Indiana’s win at Michigan State was great.  The problem is that they’ve done so many things that aren’t great that I still think they’re on the outside looking in.  They fell at home to Ohio State yesterday, and are now just 4-9 in Big Ten play, which is way below what we typically see for teams that are inside the bubble.

-VIRGINIA AT NORTH CAROLINA (ACC).  I think Virginia is still on the #1 line, but they could really use a big time win like this in order to help them stay up there.  When you look at the opportunities teams like Kentucky and Michigan have to get top ten wins away from home, it’s not inconceivable that some of them could jump over Virginia.

-KANSAS AT TCU (Big 12).  TCU just picked up a win that they desperately needed over the weekend against Iowa State.  If they could get this one then they’ll really be on cruise control.  Kansas needs this win as well.  To date, they have just one true road win.  It’s a part of their resume that’s really lacking, and this particular road win could really help them out.

-OKLAHOMA AT BAYLOR (Big 12).  Oklahoma is just 3-8 in league play, and won’t make the NCAA Tournament unless that gets better.  Baylor is in relatively good shape, but could really benefit from rebounding from a loss over the weekend.

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Under The Radar Game of the Day: Siena at Rider

For today’s News, Notes and Highlighted Games – CLICK HERE

For Jon Teitel’s latest Bracket Projection where he guesses the Selection Committee – CLICK HERE

For Jon Teitel’s coverage of yesterday’s Butler-Georgetown game – CLICK HERE

Siena (12-12, 7-4 MAAC) at Rider (12-11, 7-4 MAAC) – 2:00 PM EST (ESPN+)

Today’s UTR Game of the Day takes us to the MAAC – this has quietly become one of the more competitive conferences in the country, even if the winner is likely to be going to Dayton for a First Four berth come NCAA Tournament time. The Rider Broncs will play host to the Siena Saints. To say Rider has hit a snag would be an understatement; they have lost three games in a row that included a loss at home against Canisius on Friday night; the Golden Griffins hit a 3-point shot with under 10 seconds remaining that turned out to be the difference maker. Frederick Scott leads the Broncs with 12.1 PPG and 5.5 RPG.

Four teams are tied for second in the MAAC; Siena is one of those 4 teams at the moment (along with Rider, Canisius and Quinnipiac). The Saints only had 5 wins out of conference, but 3 of those wins came against GW, Harvard and Robert Morris. They have currently won seven out of their last nine games in conference play; the only two losses were against Monmouth. Evan Fisher leads the team with 15.6 PPG and 6.1 RPG.

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Bracketology 2019: March Madness Predictions (Version 6.0)

For a look back at all of yesterday’s action, and a rundown of today’s big games – CLICK HERE

We are only 5 weeks away from Selection Sunday as we continue to make our NCAA tourney predictions. Last March HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel correctly picked 66 of the 68 teams that made the tourney, 65 of which were within 1 spot of their actual seed, including 42 right on the money. He will spend the upcoming weeks predicting which 68 teams will hear their names called on March 17th. See below for his list of who would make the cut if they picked the field today and if you agree or disagree then feel free to tweet us. To see how we stack up with other websites (ranked 9th out of 127 entries over the past 5 years), check out: www.bracketmatrix.com

SEED: TEAM (CONFERENCE)
1: Duke (ACC)
1: Virginia (ACC)
1: Tennessee (SEC)
1: Gonzaga (WCC)

2: Michigan (Big 10)
2: Kentucky (SEC)
2: North Carolina (ACC)
2: Michigan State (Big 10)

3: Kansas (Big 12)
3: Purdue (Big 10)
3: Marquette (Big East)
3: Houston (AAC)

4: Louisville (ACC)
4: Villanova (Big East)
4: Wisconsin (Big 10)
4: Nevada (MWC)

5: Iowa State (Big 12)
5: Virginia Tech (ACC)
5: Texas Tech (Big 12)
5: LSU (SEC)

6: Iowa (Big 10)
6: Maryland (Big 10)
6: Kansas State (Big 12)
6: Mississippi State (SEC)

7: Florida State (ACC)
7: Cincinnati (AAC)
7: Auburn (SEC)
7: Buffalo (MAC)

8: Washington (Pac-12)
8: Baylor (Big 12)
8: Oklahoma (Big 12)
8: Ohio State (Big 10)

9: Syracuse (ACC)
9: TCU (Big 12)
9: St. John’s (Big East)
9: Mississippi (SEC)

10: Texas (Big 12)
10: Minnesota (Big 10)
10: NC State (ACC)
10: Indiana (Big 10)

11: Alabama (SEC)
11: Arizona State (Pac-12)
11: UCF (AAC)
11: Seton Hall (Big East)
11: Temple (AAC)
11: Davidson (A-10)

12: Wofford (SoCon)
12: VCU (A-10)
12: Lipscomb (Atlantic Sun)
12: Murray State (OVC)

13: Hofstra (CAA)
13: New Mexico State (WAC)
13: Vermont (America East)
13: Yale (Ivy)

14: North Texas (C-USA)
14: Texas State (Sun Belt)
14: South Dakota State (Summit)
14: UC Irvine (Big West)

15: Northern Kentucky (Horizon)
15: Radford (Big South)
15: Loyola-Chicago (MVC)
15: Montana (Big Sky)

16: Bucknell (Patriot)
16: Rider (MAAC)
16: Sam Houston State (Southland)
16: Norfolk State (MEAC)
16: Robert Morris (NEC)
16: Prairie View (SWAC)

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

NEWS AND NOTES

-Duke’s win at Virginia yesterday may be the single most impressive win that any team has managed this season.  Duke now has wins away from home against Kentucky, Virginia, Texas Tech, and Florida State, and has future opportunities against Louisville, Virginia Tech, North Carolina, and whoever they may face in the ACC Tournament.  I don’t know what the record is for most wins away from home against ranked teams, but….Duke has a lot.

-TCU picked up what was perhaps the most needed, and most helpful, win of the season at Iowa State.  I know there have been more impressive wins, but I can’t think of a win that did more to help a team’s resume that was in desperate need of help.  TCU came into yesterday with no real quality wins, and just one road win.  So, winning on the road against a protected seed is just what the doctor ordered!

-It’s not even hard for Gonzaga anymore.  It’s like we need some sort of waiver for them that will allow them to cancel the rest of conference play and try and get a game against someone who can compete with them.

-Kentucky picked up yet another really nice road win at Mississippi State, and is looking more and more like a #2 seed or better.  With two games remaining against Tennessee, they may even have a path to a #1 seed.

-Michigan knocked off Wisconsin in a game that was close pretty much all the way through.  The Wolverines should get a protected seed so long as they hold serve the rest of the way, and it wouldn’t shock me if Wisky ended up getting one as well.

-Villanova suffered their first conference loss of the year at Marquette, but while a win would have been really nice and probably vaulted them up into the top four lines, a loss is hardly damaging, and when you consider how they kept making big plays to keep themselves in the game against a really good team in a very hostile environment, I think the result was more encouraging than discouraging.  They still have a one game lead in the league, and can still end up as a protected seed come March.

-The injury bug has hit Virginia Tech, and they fell on the road at Clemson yesterday.  We need to start looking at this Clemson team, but having said that, Clemson needs to start winning more than they have been.

-Another thriller in the ACC featured Louisville at Florida State.  It looked like Louisville was about to wrap up their third true road win of the year against a top 25 team, but they couldn’t hold on at the end of regulation and the Seminoles ended up pulling it out in overtime.  That’s now the fifth straight win for a Florida State team that is definitely going in the right direction, and while it’s probably a frustrating loss for Louisville, it is hardly a damaging one.

-Oklahoma needed to win against Texas Tech yesterday.  Oklahoma did not win against Texas Tech yesterday.  The Sooners are now five games below .500 in Big 12 play, and I can’t help but think they’re currently on the outside looking in.

-LSU had another battle, but picked up another win at home against Auburn to improve to 9-1 in conference play.

-Temple went to Tulsa needing a win.  Temple went to Tulsa, and lost.  Badly.  This is not good for an Owls team that was right on the bubble.

-Davidson, who we were trying to be nice to given how well they’d been playing lately, went to UMass and lost.  One of Davidson’s wins better be that last game of the A10 Tournament, because without that I don’t think they’re going anywhere.

-Kansas State picked up a really nice road win at Baylor, and they now stand in sole possession of first place in the Big 12 by two games.

-Washington dropped their first Pac Twelve loss of the year rather decisively at Arizona State, who desperately needed the win.  Washington is still in relatively good shape, and I think they’re good enough to win out the rest of the way.

-In Under the Radar news: Belmont, Lipscomb, and Wofford all won yesterday, which I think keeps all of them either on or inside the bubble if they were to lose in their conference tournaments.

 

HIGHLIGHTED GAMES

-OHIO STATE AT INDIANA (Big Ten).  There is a sense of urgency to this game.  Indiana did have the big win a week ago at Michigan State, but that is their only win in their last eight games and while it certainly helps, it hasn’t saved them from drowning.  A win today would help them continue to stabilize their situation.  Ohio State has a decent, but not great, profile of their own that could use some improving as well.

-UCF AT SMU (American).  UCF is hovering around the bubble, and needs a strong finish, which will involve holding serve against all non-tournament teams, in order to have a realistic chance.

-HOUSTON AT CINCINNATI (American).  These are the two best teams by far.  Houston was selected as a protected seed by the committee yesterday, so if Cincinnati is able to win this one on the road the quality of their resume will likely go through the roof.  Either way I think both teams make the field barring a collapse between now and then.

-NORTHWESTERN AT IOWA (Big Ten).  This is a winnable game for an Iowa team that looks to be in great shape.

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Hanging with the Hall of Famers: HoopsHD is in the house for Butler-Georgetown

HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel has spent the past few months covering several Georgetown basketball home games, with a very special reward coming next month. Even though he has met his quota, he will still cover a few more games to keep from getting rusty. Saturday afternoon Butler came to DC for its 14th overall meeting with Georgetown (in a series that only commenced a decade ago).

Thanks to the subway being closed it was a hurried pregame meal at the arena of an egg croissant and a pastry. Today’s game featured 2 of the 3 current Big East coaches who work for their alma maters: Patrick Ewing (Georgetown class of 1985) and LaVall Jordan (Butler class of 2001). There were no pregame notes available because I showed up late, but 1 thing they did not run out of was t-shirts for all the fans as part of the “gray-out” listing the names of some of the best Hoyas ever:

I usually try to focus on the on-court action but there were so many celebrity sightings it was hard to concentrate:

Alonzo Mourning in the front row!

Dikembe Mutombo in the front row!

Side note (because I actually have a Mutombo story): about 20 years ago Mutombo was in Phoenix for a game against my Suns, I was having a mid-afternoon beverage while catching up with a high school friend at a Cheesecake Factory that was located across the street from a Ritz-Carlton where the Suns’ opponents often stayed, we were minding our own business when the tallest man I have ever seen in person walks into the restaurant wearing a maroon velvet tracksuit, I sprint to the bartender and beg him to charge whatever drink the guy orders to my tab, the guy orders a beverage, the bartender explains why it is free and points in my direction, and the guy turns toward me and gives me the slightest of nods…and that is how I bought a drink for Hall of Famer Dikembe Mutombo!!

Do not forget about Ewing:

I felt like I had traveled back in time to the 1995 NBA All-Star Game in the great city of Phoenix, AZ:

If St. John’s (and its assistant coach Mitch Richmond) was the opposing Big East team and Grant Hill was covering the game for CBS, then we could have just replayed the entire game almost 24 years later to the day!

1 famous face who was not sitting courtside but rather in a corner suite at the top of the lower level was Vice President Mike Pence. The former Indiana governor’s wife Karen is a Butler alum, and apparently the VP is such a big fan himself that he had allegedly planned to travel to Memphis back in 2017 to watch the Bulldogs face the eventual-champion Tar Heels in the Sweet 16…but had to change his plans because the Republican party needed his help coming up with a plan to get rid of Obamacare. He did not make it onto the Jumbotron in his blue shirt from the front row of the suite, which is why this long-range photo from my baseline seat was the best that I could do:

And away we go:

Georgetown SO wing Jamorko Pickett put together 1 of his best offensive performances of the season in the 1st half via a corner 3, a layup, and 2 big dunks. His teammate Mac McClung was not too shabby either: he made a few jump shots, had a 4-PT play, and even made a corner 3 after getting his shot blocked. I attribute his success to his brand-new haircut/headband:

Or maybe he was inspired by the mascot driving an SUV:

Jordan Tucker is a Duke transfer who thought about joining the Hoyas before signing with Butler. His 1st 4 starts this season were simply terrible in terms of 3-PT shooting (5-26), but he got it going early today by making a trio of 3-PT shots and also converting an old-fashioned 3-PT play on a drive/layup/foul/&1. SR SG Paul Jorgensen made a triumphant return to DC (after spending his 1st 2 years of college as a player at GW) with a pair of jumpers and a 3-PT shot to help give his team a 41-35 lead at halftime.

The 2nd half quickly turned more physical as Butler G Aaron Thompson was whistled for a flagrant foul after taking down McClung on a breakaway drive to the hoop. “McClutch” was slow to get up and then limped around for several seconds with the assistance of some teammates:

He somehow made the 2 FTs and the subbed out for a brief moment before subbing back in and continued to play well throughout the game (finishing with a game-high 21 PTS). Alonzo Mourning’s son Trey did make a layup after halftime but got the paternal jinx by missing a pair of FTs after the arena staff showed his dad on the Jumbotron. Pickett only made 6 threes in the entire month of January but apparently saw his shadow last weekend as he now has 9 threes through 3 February games en route to a season-high 18 PTS:

The Hoyas kept it close throughout the 2nd half but PG Kamar Baldwin kept making tough layup after tough layup and matched Pickett with 18 PTS of his own while helping Butler hang on for a 73-69 victory. The visiting team has now won a whopping 7 straight games in this series with all 7 being decided by single digits. Georgetown is many things but unexciting is not 1 of them: they have played 6 home games this season in conference play and all 6 have been decided by 7 PTS or less. I asked questions of Tucker/Ewing/McClung in the postgame press conference but to be honest none of their answers were earth-shattering so I will just close with some photos of all the speakers, plus a combo shot of the 2 legends standing head and shoulders above everyone (both literally and figuratively):

  

  

Check back in the weeks ahead for our continuing coverage.

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