Season preview: HoopsHD interviews new Pepperdine head coach Lorenzo Romar

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We continue our season preview coverage with new Pepperdine head coach Lorenzo Romar. Many coaches are known as great recruiters but 1 thing the last 2 NBA draft #1 overall picks had in common was Coach Romar: 2017 top pick Markelle Fultz played for him when he was head coach at Washington and 2018 top pick Deandre Ayton played for him when he was associate head coach at Arizona. If you think that you have seen this Malibu movie before then you are correct: after winning the 1995 NCAA title as an assistant coach at UCLA he spent the next 3 years as head coach of the Waves. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Coach Romar about winning an NCAA title and why he left Tucson.

You spent 5 years in the NBA and made the 1984 Eastern Conference Finals with Milwaukee before losing to the eventual-champion Celtics: what was it like to face that legendary Larry Bird/Dennis Johnson/Kevin McHale/Robert Parish team? It was just obvious how good they were: great coaching/experience/talent was their formula for success and they played really well together. There was 1 game where we were down big at the half: Coach Don Nelson told us to try to cut their lead to 10 PTS before the 4th quarter…otherwise we should just focus on the next game because their team was really good.

You were an assistant to Coach Jim Harrick (along with Mark Gottfried/Steve Lavin) on the 1995 UCLA team that beat Arkansas to clinch the title: what did it mean to you to win a title, and how do you feel about facing Mark’s new team at CSUN next month? It was very surreal but a couple of things stood out. I had been to several Final Fours before as a spectator when my own team did not make it. We were driving to the semifinal game against Oklahoma State on the bus and got to drive past everyone else who was waiting in line to enter the building, which is when it really hit home for me that we were playing in the Final 4. When you walk out onto the floor it is a really different feel even when compared to the Elite 8. Our entire staff had great camaraderie and we had great leadership from our senior class of Ed O’Bannon/Tyus Edney/George Zidek. We has won 18 straight games entering the Final 4 and had an unbelievable feeling that we could win even if we were down by a lot of points. Years removed from that I prefer not to go up against my friends: I have played Coach Harrick once and Coach Gottfried a few times. It feels different when you face a friend.

In the 2010 NCAA tourney as head coach at Washington, Quincy Pondexter had 18 PTS/11 REB and made a bank shot with 1.7 seconds left in a 2-PT win over Marquette: where does that game rank among the highlights of your head coaching career? That was a lot of fun! I remember another game when Cincinnati had beaten us by 43 PTS in our regular season finale in 2000 when I was head coach at St. Louis and we upset them 5 days later in the CUSA tourney quarterfinals when they were ranked #1 in the nation. As far as NCAA tourney games that definitely ranks up there, but a few years before that in 2006 we beat Illinois by 3 PTS to advance to the Sweet 16 (before losing to UConn in OT).

You were a 3-time conference COY at Washington: what did it mean to you to receive such outstanding honors? It lets you know for sure that you have great players/coaches. All of my assistants were very special and I think of them, along with some outstanding players like Brandon Roy/Isaiah Thomas. You need people around you who help you do that.

You are known as 1 of the top recruiters in the country, having coached each of the last two #1 overall NBA draft picks (Markelle Fultz at Washington and Deandre Ayton at Arizona): what is the secret to recruiting? I do not know if I could give a seminar on it but you try to be honest/genuine and get to know people as opposed to just selling them something. Whether it is dating someone or developing a friendship, being honest will help you a lot more. We have also had success developing players who made it to the NBA. They need to trust you as a person but also trust that your work will help them be productive.

1 of your long-time friends is Michael Porter Sr., who you hired to be your assistant in Seattle: how do you think his son Michael Jr. is going to do in the NBA? I see no reason why he will not become an All-Star.

In March you were hired as head coach at Pepperdine: why did you take the job, and how does it compare to your 1st go-round as head coach of the Waves almost 20 years ago? At this point in my career I did not want to move to an area that I was not familiar with. I was perfectly content being an assistant at Arizona but I am familiar with coaches/schools on the West Coast and wanted a situation where it was not a total rebuild. I knew the Pepperdine president back when he was vice-president and 1 of my night-school teammates is now our athletic director. You have a great recruiting base in California and I like the school’s spiritual mission so it met all of my criteria. We also have grandkids now so we wanted to stay in 1 place where they could all come visit.

Your non-conference schedule includes a game against Oregon State: what do you remember about the Beavers from sweeping them last year as an assistant to Sean Miller at Arizona? They have some dangerous personnel with Trey Tinkle and the Thompson brothers. Coach Wayne Tinkle always has teams who are hard to play against, as they were last year and even back when I was head coach at Washington.

After making the WCC All-Freshman team in 2016, Kameron Edwards sat out the next season due to a fractured jaw and missed 9 games last year due to a concussion: how is his health doing at the moment? So far so good! Hopefully it stays that way because he is someone we will be definitely be counting on.

What are your goals for the upcoming season, and what are your expectations for the upcoming season? We have that goal of not having many days where we do not put out our best effort: if we work hard then everything else should take care of itself. Right now we just have to develop the habit of being the best that we can be.

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The Hoops HD Report: Big Ten Conference Preview

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A full panel is on board as we take a look at the Big Ten Conference.  It was an unusual year last year where the league put a team in the National Title game, but also put fewer teams in the NCAA Tournament than what we are used to seeing, and had a Nebraska team go 13-5 in league play, but not get selected, which is almost unheard of for the Big Ten or any other P5 conference.  This year we seem to have a lot more questions than answers as teams like Michigan State, Michigan, Ohio State, and Purdue all lost so much talent from last year’s team, and it’s difficult to say how the league will play out.  Nebraska and Wisconsin both return the bulk of their contributors and our panel seems to think both of those teams can do well.  And of course, David thinks Nebraska will win the league, that there was a Dark Web Conspiracy that kept them out last year, and quickly ends up being forbidden to speak about them.

 

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

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Conference Preview: Summit League

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If you have not yet heard about South Dakota State’s Mike Daum, you have not been following college basketball much.  Daum, a 6-9 senior forward, has been the driving force behind three consecutive NCAA Tournament bids for the South Dakota State Jackrabbits, including an 8-point first round loss to Ohio State last season.  Daum chose to return to the Jackrabbits for his senior season, which makes his team the overwhelming favorite to win another league title and return to the Big Dance.  In-state rival South Dakota looks to be the best of the rest, but probably will not seriously challenge for the title.  Western Illinois looks poised to finally break out of the league cellar, while the newest conference member, North Dakota, might just take the Leathernecks’ spot down there.

Predicted Order of Finish

  1. South Dakota State – Mike Daum (23.9 points and 10.3 rebounds per game) had the chance to go the graduate transfer route and probably could have played for any team in the nation. Instead, he is back for one more go-around with the Jackrabbits.  With three additional key seniors returning to join him, this has a chance to be a very special season in Brookings.
  2. South Dakota – The Coyotes followed up at 22-win 2016-17 campaign with 26 wins last season. Too bad they did so during an amazing stretch by their in-state rival from South Dakota State, as an NCAA bid eluded them both years.  Head coach Craig Smith is gone now, having taken the Colorado State job, so former Grand Canyon assistant Todd Lee comes in.  Lee does get four starters back, but the one that is gone, Matt Mooney (graduate transfer to Texas Tech), averaged over 18 points per game and will be missed.
  3. Denver – Despite losing two of their top three scorers from last season, the Pioneers should remain competitive thanks to a pair of incoming graduate transfers – Tory Stewart-Miller (Colorado) and Ronnie Harrell Jr (Creighton). Returning senior guard Joe Rosga should remain dangerous.  He is a career 43% three-point shooter.
  4. Western Illinois – It may be a stretch to pick a team that almost always finished near the bottom of the league this high, but the Leathernecks return four starters including conference Defensive Player of the Year Brandon Gilbeck and leading scorer Kobe Webster. If there ever was a year to buy stock in WIU, this may be the one.
  5. Purdue Fort Wayne – The Mastodons from Purdue Fort Wayne (no, they are neither IUPU-Fort Wayne nor just Fort Wayne anymore) could have a contender for conference Player of the Year if not for that guy over at South Dakota State. John Konchar is a double-double threat every time he takes the court – and dishes out enough assists and gets enough steals that a triple (or can we say quadruple?) double is not out of the question.  Although Konchar will put up numbers, don’t expect much of an improvement from last year’s 7-7 conference mark with three starters, including Bryson Scott (22.6 points per game), gone.
  6. North Dakota State – The Bison finished 15-17 last season and may be hard-pressed to even match that mark this year with only two starters returning. They will need to find a way to add more scoring now that Paul Miller and his 19.5 points per game are gone.
  7. Omaha – The Mavericks only won four conference games last season, in part due to an injury to double-double threat Mitch Hahn. Hahn is back healthy and is joined by last year’s leading scorer, senior guard Zach Jackson, as well as Wichita State transfer Brett Barney.  This team won’t contend for the league crown, but they should be improved.
  8. Oral Roberts – The Golden Eagles had five players average double-digits in scoring last season. Despite that, the finished 11-21 overall and 5-9 in Summit League play.  Only two of those five players are back this season, so it is hard to see how this team will improve.
  9. North Dakota – The good news for the Fighting Hawks is that they are just two years removed from an NCAA bid and return three double-digit scorers from last season. The bad news is that last year they fell to 8th place in the Big Sky, lost 20 games overall, and then saw top player Geno Crandall transfer to Gonzaga.  It will likely be a long first trip through the Summit League for the team from Grand Forks.
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Conference Preview: Southland

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The more things change, the more they stay the same.  This statement is as true in the Southland Conference as anywhere.  After “taking a year off” in 2017, Stephen F. Austin returned to the conference throne last season, capturing the league’s automatic bid for the fourth time in five years, and then gave Texas Tech a real challenge in the First Round.  This season, expect the ‘jacks to also reclaim the regular season title as they return their top two players.  Southeastern Louisiana and Nicholls State, the two teams that tied for first a game ahead of SFA last year, are both expected to take big steps back with significant offseason losses from graduation (both teams lost six key seniors).  Stepping in to give the Lumberjacks their best challenge this year may be Abilene Christian – one of only a small handful teams in this conference with significant returning starting minutes.

Predicted Order of Finish

  1. Stephen F Austin – The Lumberjacks won 28 games and gave Texas Tech all they could handle in the first round of last season’s NCAA Tournament. The top two scorers, Shannon Bogues and TJ Holyfield, return this season and the two of them almost instantly make SFA the team to beat in the Southland Conference.
  2. Abilene Christian – The Wildcats could be poised for a finish near the top of the conference standings with four starters returning led by a trifecta of J’s — Jalone Friday, Jaren Lewis and Jaylen Franklin. All three averaged double figures in scoring and both Friday and Lewis are legitimate double-double threats.
  3. Houston Baptist – Despite having top scorer David Caraher transfer to St. John’s, the Huskies may be poised for a significant jump up in the standings following a 6-25 record last season. A pair of double-digit scoring guards (Ian DuBose and Braxton Bonds) both return but, even more importantly, center Josh Ibarra got an extra year of eligibility due to a medical redshirt after averaging a double-double over the nine games he played before his foot injury last season.
  4. Central Arkansas – The Bears had a solid record last season (18-17) but will now have to get by without their top two players including Southland Player of the Year Jordan Howard. One player to keep an eye on is 7-foot sophomore center Hayden Koval, a nightly double-double (or even triple-double with his shot-blocking ability) threat inside.  Koval was named to the conference’s all-defensive team last season.
  5. Sam Houston State – The Bearkats return only one starter from last year’s team so this may be a bit of a rebuilding season in Huntsville. Keep an eye on senior guard Josh Delaney who could emerge as the team’s top scorer as he moves into the starting lineup.
  6. Southeastern Louisiana – The Lions won 22 games last season but did that with six key seniors in the rotation. All will not be lost this year, however, as the conference assists leader, Marlain Veal, returns to run the point, and Moses Greenwood proved he could score coming off the bench last season.  How quickly five newcomers gel with the returnees could decide this team’s fate.
  7. Lamar – The Cardinals only return one starter from last season but should remain competitive thanks to a pair of double-digit averaging returnees (forward Josh Nzeakor and sixth man Nick Garth) as well as a host of transfers led by Jordan Hunter (New Mexico) and Laquarious Paige (Indiana State).
  8. New Orleans – The Privateers struggled to score last season, so losing leading scorer (and the only player on the team who averaged double digits) Travin Thibodeaux does not help. Unless this team finds a legitimate outside scoring threat, even qualifying for the eight-team Southland Conference tournament may be a struggle.
  9. McNeese State – The Cowboys welcome in a new head coach in former Portland State/Wyoming/UT-Martin head man Heath Schroyer. Schroyer will have his work cut out for him in his first season as the team’s top two players (leading scorer Kalob Ledoux and double-double averaging Quatarrius Wilson) are gone from last year’s 12-17 squad.  Eight solid newcomers join a couple of double-digit scoring returning starters, so McNeese should remain competitive at least.
  10. Northwestern State – The Demons struggled mightily last season, as 14 different players moved in and out of the starting lineup and overall the team only managed 4 wins. Hopefully, the experience gained by half a dozen freshmen will pay off this year with more victories.  The one senior to keep an eye on is the team’s leading returning scorer and double-double threat, Ishmael Lane (13.7 points and 7.2 rebounds per game last year).
  11. Texas A&M-Corpus Christi – The Islanders will need to remain healthy this season if they want to find a way into the top eight in the regular season. They will also need to make up for the loss of leading scorer Joe Kilgore.  Some of the offensive load will be taken by guard Kareem South who was solid as a starting guard last year.
  12. Nicholls State – The Colonels were the surprise team in the Southland last season, tying for the regular season title and winning 21 games overall. Six key seniors are gone from that team, as is head coach Richie Riley who took the job at South Alabama.  Former assistant Austin Claunch is now in charge, but with only one starting player (sophomore guard Kevin Johnson) back, it looks like a rebuilding year for Nicholls.
  13. Incarnate Word – With two of the top three scorers gone from a team that went 7-21 last year, don’t expect much from the Cardinals this season. Carson Cunningham takes over as the new head coach and does have a roster filled with freshmen and sophomores – so experience this year could pay off in the future.
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Season preview: HoopsHD interviews Winthrop women’s head coach Lynette Woodard

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We continue our season preview coverage with Winthrop women’s head coach Lynette Woodard. In basketball you have subs, role players, starters, and superstars: on a level beyond them all are the legends whose legacies are enshrined for eternity. Coach Woodard is such a legend: 4-time All-American at Kansas, 1981 national POY, all-time leading scorer in women’s basketball history, 2-time Academic All-American, 1984 Olympic gold medalist, and Hall of Fame inductee. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Coach Woodard about becoming the 1st woman to ever play for the Harlem Globetrotters and how she likes being a coach.

You played for Hall of Fame coach Marian Washington at Kansas: what made her such a great coach, and what was the most important thing that you ever learned from her? She understood the game and was able to communicate it very well. I was gifted but still did not understand how to play the game until I had a great teacher like her who could break the game down because it was going really fast for me. She taught me to work hard, be committed to excellence, and not cut any corners. It was all fun and games at 1st but she taught me to believe in myself by being competitive.

You were a 4-time All-American at Kansas and the 1981 national POY: what did it mean to you to receive such outstanding honors? It makes me feel very proud even to this day, especially knowing where I began. After I was named an All-American for the 1st time Coach Washington took my head out of the clouds without beating me down and challenged me to improve.

You remain the all-time leading scorer in D-1 women’s basketball with 3649 career PTS: what is the secret to being a great scorer? Being determined, practicing, and loving the game. I figured that my offense could come from my defense so I got 5 SPG and that helped a lot. I wanted to be in better shape than anyone when I stepped onto the floor. In AAU ball I did not know that at first, but after seeing the guys running miles/stairs/hills I wanted to do that as well.

You also set school records with 1714 REB/522 STL: how did you balance your scoring with your rebounding with your defense? I just always hustled. Some people thought I just shot the ball all the time but I made sure to do other things like get some assists and hit the boards. I could jump/run and I was hungry for the ball so I wanted to be everywhere it was. I had a rhythm for the game and learned all the different aspects of the game by doing daily drills.

You were also a 2-time Academic All-American: how did you balance your work on the court with your work in the classroom? I was afraid that I was going to flunk out: I shared my fear with Coach Washington 1 day and she told me to organize my schoolwork and then get it done. I eventually learned some good study habits but at 1st I did not know what it took to be a student at that level. I enrolled in summer classes at Wichita State and completed all of my assignments but still had to get some self-confidence. When I finally started making good grades I realized that self-discipline was important.

You were selected to team USA for the Olympics in 1980 (but missed out due to a boycott) and 1984 (winning a gold medal as captain): how frustrating was it to not go to Moscow, and how excited were you to win a gold in Los Angeles? It was very disappointing to not go in 1980: I was stunned for a long time but the people around me said that I could just go back in 1984. It seemed like a long way away but I started counting my blessings because there were other players who would not get that chance. I saw all the good things that could come from playing in an Olympics in the US and it was a dream come true to have my family there.

In 1985 you became the 1st woman to ever play for the Harlem Globetrotters: why did you join the team, and how did that decision change your life (if at all)? They happened to be in the stands during the 1984 Olympics and have always been innovators. They even started the 4-PT shot: perhaps we will see that in the NBA 1 day! I dreamed about it as a child: they were always my team because I had a cousin who played for them (Hubert “Geese” Ausbie). When it was my time I read that the team was going co-ed and I called them and said that I was the 1. I was invited to tryouts and the rest is history. It did change my life. My mom Dorothy from Kansas had a dog named Toto(!) and I will forever be grateful.

In 2004 you were inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame and in 2005 you were inducted into the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame: where do those rank among the highlights of your career? You really do not know until you get to the ceremony but then you realize how humbling it is. You see all of the players in the room who you watched while growing up: I felt like Cinderella at the ball (and with the “ball”!). It was so amazing to feel all of the love/appreciation they had for what I had done. It is also about your family/friends because that is who they treat the warmest: they were forever touched by that.

In 2017 you were hired as head coach at Winthrop: what was the best part of year #1, and what was the not-best part? Coming into coaching was a lot different. I have very high expectations but it is a very young ball club so I focused on changing the culture. We have to understand what it will take for us to be competitive.

What are your goals for the upcoming season, and what are your expectations for the upcoming season? I love the players’ attitude/renewed energy and they are buying in. If they all put in what they have to bring to the team then we can make the most of it. As long as we remain a team and cheer each other on and pick each other up when we are down then it will make the season fun. We are going to be a better ball club.

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Happy College Basketball Season Everybody!!! (sort of)

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Today is the official soft launch to the start of the college basketball season!  At least, that’s how we at Hoops HD look at it.

Some people consider the season to be in full swing on the very first day of practice even though there aren’t any games, and most players don’t like the beginning of practice because it’s still mostly conditioning.

Others consider the season started on the first day of meaningful games, which is November 6th this year.

Others don’t care until conference play start.

There are some that don’t really care until conference tournaments begin.

The way we look at it at Hoops HD is that the entrees do not arrive until the first day of meaningful games.  But, we’ve been seated at our table, and they’ve given us a basket of bread and crackers.  Today’s game between UAB and Georgia is not an official game, and there might not be that many people in the stands, and we may not even get to watch it because at the time I am writing this there is no indication that there will be any video streaming of the game.  But, for the first time since last year’s national championship game between Villanova and Michigan, two college basketball teams are playing each other!!  And (with the exception of this upcoming Saturday and Monday and Christmas Eve) there will be at least one college basketball game every day between now and the day after Selection Sunday!!  This is a great day, because the longest possible expanse of college basketball that we could possibly have is right in front of us.  So, HAPPY COLLEGE BASKETBALL SEASON EVERYBODY!!  (sort of)

CLICK HERE TO SEE THE ENTIRE LIST OF ALL DIV1 OPEN EXHIBITION GAMES

PUPPET RAMBLINGS

-I really wish the NCAA gave a damn about charity.  They’ve certainly received enough of it via their tax exempt status, but I digress…

Last year we saw the NCAA grant waiver after waiver after waiver in which schools were allowed to schedule a third exhibition game so long as all the money raised from that event was given to charity.  Many thought (myself included) that we were getting to a point to where the NCAA would change the rules and allow all teams to play three exhibition games, so long as all the proceeds from open exhibitions against other div1 programs went to charity.  That would be a fantastic rule, wouldn’t it??  Last year I probably donated more money to more charities than I ever have before.  A lot of money was raised for a lot of good causes.  And, we all got to see basketball games that were far more exciting than your typical exhibition game.  So, doing that every year made all kinds of sense to me.  But, I guess the NCAA did not see it that way.

No waivers were granted this year.  Every school is once again limited to two exhibition contests.  What they did do is change the rules to where there are now three options.  Div1 teams can play open exhibition games against nondiv1 schools (div2, div3, or NAIA), they can play a closed three hour scrimmage against another div1 school, or they can play an open exhibition against another div1 school so long as all of the proceeds go to an approved charity.  While this is better than before, I don’t understand why we don’t just have three exhibition games.  I’ve wanted there to be three exhibition games for a while simply because just playing one more game gets teams more sharp for the start of the regular season, especially if they’re able to play that game against another div1 school in a game that’s open to fans.  While the way the NCAA decided to do it isn’t THAT big of a deal, and in two weeks no one will even care about it anymore, I do think that they’re doing it wrong.

As for tonight’s game between Georgia and UAB, it is for charity with proceeds going to the American Red Cross.  As of now there is no information about a video stream, but we should be able to listen to the game by CLICKING HERE

For those of you who end up watching, listening to, or attending some of these preseason exhibition games, I would encourage you do make at least a small donation to the charity that the games are supporting.  Three reasons: It’s a good thing to do, the more money that is raised the more likely the NCAA is to continue to approve them, and the more money that’s raised the more likely it is that schools will continue to schedule them.  Even if you just give $5-$10, which is only about what a crappy watered-down beer costs at most arenas, all that money can add up.

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