Championship Week Video Notebook: Day 5, Friday

WELCOME SELECTION COMMITTEE MEMBERS!!  We are glad you’re here!!  That way we can tell you what you need to be doing!!

We saw several exciting games in the Big Ten with Michigan State barely holding on, and Rutgers taking Purdue down to the final minutes.  Penn State also beat Ohio State for the third time this year, and Michigan blew past Nebraska to set up a rematch with rival Michigan.

The Metro Atlantic completely collapsed with both Rider and Canisius losing in the quarterfinals.  We review that and debate whether or not they should restructure their tournament.

We saw four exciting games in the Missouri Valley, another upset in the Big South as UNC Asheville went down at home to Liberty, and opening round action in the SoCon, West Coast, and Horizon League.  We run through all that, update our SURVIVAL BOARD, and end with our nightly Notebook Trivia Question

And for you radio lovers, here is an audio file of the show…

 

SURVIVAL BOARD NOTES – Click here to view our Survival Board

-CONFERENCE USA – If Rice loses or UTEP wins, Rice out.  Otherwise UTEP is out.

-SOUTHLAND – Texas A&M Corpus Christi, Abilene Christian, and McNeese State are in a three way tie for the final spot in the Southland Tournament.  If TAMUCC wins, they’re in and the other two are out.  If TAMUCC loses and ACU wins, then ACU is in and the other two are out.  If TAMUCC and ACU both lose and McNeese wins, McNeese is in and the other two are out.  If all three lose, then TAMUCC is in.

IVY LEAGUE – Princeton, Cornell, and Columbia are tied for the final spot in the Ivy League Tournament.  If Columbia wins at Harvard, they are in.  If Columbia loses and Princeton wins at Yale, then Princeton is in.  If both Columbia and Princeton lose and Cornell wins at Dartmouth, then Cornell is in.  If all three lose and Brown wins, then Cornell is in.  If all three lose and Brown loses, then Columbia is in.

BELOW ARE THE BRACKETS FOR ALL THE CONFERENCE TOURNAMENTS THAT ARE IN ACTION TODAY

Big Ten

Missouri Valley

Northeast

America East

Summit League

Horizon League

Colonial

 

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Under the Radar Game of the Day: Cornell at Harvard (and other News and Notes)

CLICK HERE for our latest Bracket Rundown

CLICK HERE for our latest Championship Week Video Notebook

Cornell at Harvard, 7:00 PM Eastern, espn3

We are almost at the end of our regular season of our Under the Radar Games of the Day.  With our final installment looming tomorrow (as conference tournaments are ineligible for recognition), tonight we head to the Ivy League where the battles for both the regular season title and the final spot in the conference tournament are both heating up.  Entering play tonight, the Penn Quakers hold a one game lead over Harvard, meaning that a Penn win tonight (at Yale) combined with a Harvard loss would lock up the outright title, while the reverse would put us in a tie heading into tomorrow’s finales.  Although Yale has all but locked in the third conference tournament spot behind the top two teams, the fourth spot is still an amazing four team battle between Cornell, Columbia, Princeton and Brown.  Cornell and Columbia are 5-7 in conference play while Penn and Brown are 4-8 and playing each other in a virtual elimination game tonight.

Tonight’s choice for our Game of the Day is the Cornell-Harvard battle in Cambridge.  Harvard enters play at 15-12 overall, though they have won 6 of 7, only losing last weekend at Penn.  Seth Towns was impressive in that game, despite the loss, scoring 22 points and grabbing 8 rebounds.  Cornell enters play tonight at 11-14 overall, with one of those defeats being a 3 point home loss last month to Harvard.  Keep a very close eye on Stone Gettings for the Big Red tonight, as had had a career high 32 points (to go along with 10 rebounds) the first time these two teams met.  It may require similar if not more heroics for Cornell to score the road upset tonight, but if they do, especially with Columbia having to play at Harvard tomorrow night, the Big Red may find themselves with a spot in the Ivy League tournament next weekend.

NEWS AND NOTES

-After leading top ranked Virginia for the entire game and appearing to have picked up a big win that would have almost assuredly secured them a spot in the Tournament, Louisville fouled a three point shooter while up four with less than a second to go, then after rebounding the third missed freethrow and getting fouled traveled due to running the baseline while inbounding the ball.  Virginia then banked in a three at the buzzer for a win.  I don’t know how many more ways Louisville can have their hearts broken this year.  Both on and off the court.

-Wichita State needed overtime, but held on to win at UCF, which sets up a season finale against Cincinnati for the top seed in the American Tournament.

-Middle Tennessee blasted Western Kentucky.  I think they deserve to be in the field if they can avoid a loss prior to the semifinals of the conference tournament.  I just hope the committee feels that way as well.

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Championship Week Video Notebook: Day 4, Thursday

WELCOME SELECTION COMMITTEE MEMBERS!!  We know you’ve got a tough job!  that’s why we are here to tell you how to do it!!

To watch our latest Bracket Rundown Show – CLICK HERE

Thursday was a very busy day with quarterfinal action in the Patriot League, Big South, and Ohio Valley.  We also had opening round action in the Metro Atlantic and Missouri Valley, and second round action in the Big Ten.  Rutgers is the Cinderella Story so far with their win over Indiana to advance into the Big Ten quarters.  All the Big Ten games were exciting today.  The Atlantic Sun Championship Game is set between Florida Gulf Coast and Lipscomb.  We review all of today’s action, preview all of tomorrow’s games, update the Hoops HD Survival Board, and end with our nightly Championship Week Trivia Question

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

 

SURVIVAL BOARD NOTES – CLICK HERE to view the Survival Board

-IVY LEAGUE – The loser of the Princeton v Brown game will be eliminated.

TODAY’S CONFERENCE TOURNAMENT ACTION

Ohio Valley

Big South

Big Ten

Missouri Valley

Metro Atlantic

West Coast

Southern

Horizon League

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Hoops HD Bracket Rundown: March 1st

NOTE: The seedlist for this show were submitted on Thursday, March 1st at 7pm and does not reflect any games that went final after that

March is finally here!  This is our latest installment of the Hoops HD Bracket Rundown, where each staff member submits a seedlist.  They are then cross country ranked, and the master seedlist is put into bracket form and revealed line by line on the show in a Selection-Sunday-is form.  We discuss, debate, and assess each team as it is placed into the bracket.  We go from the #1 seeds all the way down to the bubble.

 

Below is the final version of the bracket that we built.  It’s more fun to watch the show before you look at it!

 

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

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Call from the Hall: HoopsHD interviews new Hall of Famer Ceal Barry

Last month the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame announced the 7 members of its Class of 2018: Ceal Barry, Rose Marie Battaglia, Chris Dailey, Mickie DeMoss, Chamique Holdsclaw, Katie Smith, and Tina Thompson.  Coach Ceal Barry got her start in coaching at Cincinnati, but made a name for herself at Colorado.  In 20+ years on the sideline for the Buffaloes she won more that 400 games, 4 Big Eight COY awards, and became the 1st coach in conference history to go undefeated in league play.  After retiring from coaching in 2005 she joined the administration in Boulder, where she currently serves as senior associate athletic director for internal relations/senior woman’s administrator.  HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with the brand-new Hall of Famer about upsetting a #1 seed in the NCAA tourney and winning a gold medal at the 1996 Olympics.  

You played basketball/field hockey at Kentucky: which sport were you best at, and which sport did you enjoy the most? Good question! I scored more in field hockey because I was a center forward and the wings centered the ball to me as we ran down the field and approached the goal. I was better in basketball during my first 3 years at UK. However, by the time I was a senior the younger players had better basketball skills due to improved coaching for girls at the high school level in the early 1970s. I loved both sports but it was basketball that I was most excited about. Field hockey was a sport I enjoyed because it was a fall sport: it kicked off the new year and helped me get in shape for basketball.

After 2 years as a graduate assistant at Cincinnati you were named head coach in 1979 and proceeded to have 4 straight winning seasons: how were you able to make such a smooth transition from grad assistant to head coach? During my final year at Kentucky I had a really good head coach named Debbie Yow, who is currently the Athletic Director at NC State. Debbie is the younger sister of Hall of Famer Kay Yow and was also a tremendous college basketball coach. When I took the job at Cincinnati I modeled myself after Debbie in behavior/leadership as it related to the team. I also had just returned from 5 weeks of working summer basketball camps for Billie Moore on the West Coast. Billie was the 1976 Olympic women’s basketball coach who won a silver medal in Montreal. I soaked in all of the drills she used, watched her work with post players, picked her brain at lunchtime, etc. She was definitely an older mentor who took an interest in me. I was 100% committed to doing a great job since I was so young and they were willing to take a chance on me.

In 1983 you were hired as head coach at Colorado: why did you take the job, and were you nervous after starting 16-40 during your 1st 2 seasons? I took the job because Boulder was beautiful, which clearly made it an easy place to recruit women athletes to. CU was a very good school academically, which fit my core values for recruiting academically-motivated student-athletes. Lastly, CU had just joined the Big 8 Conference, which sponsored a 14-game round-robin schedule for women’s basketball in 1983-84. I was upset that we were 16-40 during my first 2 years. I never had a losing season at Cincinnati so this was a different challenge. I knew that I had to change the character of the program after my first 2 years there.

You turned things around and in 1989 your team became the 1st in conference history to go undefeated in league play: how was your team able to stay focused for 14 straight games? That team had a unique blend of skill, athleticism, brains, personality, and leadership. To win 14 in a row (including 7 on the road) you have to rely on different amounts of each quality depending on the situation. Most of all it was about focus/readiness. By the final few weekends the media took over the motivation aspect so all I had to do was keep them healthy and have a good scouting report. The whole state of Colorado wanted us to go undefeated!

In the 1993 NCAA tourney you had a 13-PT win over #1 seed Stanford: how were you able to pull off the upset of the defending national champ, and did the Cardinals seem out for revenge when they beat you by 16 PTS the following March? We matched up really well with Stanford in 1993. Our players had a quiet confidence that we would win that game. It had to do with defensive matchups and that 1993 team was the best defensive squad that I ever coached. They were committed, experienced in playing our defense, and not afraid of pain down the stretch. They were super-mentally-tough as a unit and very cohesive. When we drew Stanford in the Sweet 16 on their home floor in 1994 I knew that they were going to be out for revenge…and they were!

You were named Big 8 COY 4 times from 1989-1995: what did it mean to you to win such outstanding honors? I think that when you are coaching you kind of dismiss those honors at the time because you do not want to get caught up in ever thinking that you did it alone…because you did not! Assistant coaches, trainers, players, strength coaches: they all pitched in and functioned at a really high level in their respective roles. I tried to be humble about those honors because our team goals were really the things that were fun for everyone connected to the program and I did not want our players focused on individual honors.

In the 1996 Olympics you were an assistant to Stanford head coach Tara VanDerveer for team USA: what did it mean to you to win a gold medal, and where does that team (including Lisa Leslie/Dawn Staley/Sheryl Swoopes) rank among the greatest in the history of the sport? It was such an honor to be asked by Tara to be on the staff of the 1996 Olympic Team. It was a tremendous experience to be part of a team that was so focused on winning the gold medal. That whole experience of being an Olympian was a special time. I think that team, because of the Olympics being in Atlanta that summer, and with some of the all-time greats participating (Staley, Swoopes, Teresa Edwards, Katrina McClain, etc. being part of the roster), and the WNBA being in its infancy, was a historic group.

In 2005 you made the transition from coach to administrator, and you currently work as senior associate athletic director for internal relations: how does coaching compare to administrating, and how long do you plan on sticking around for? Coaching is a lot more fulfilling because you are making an immediate and very direct impact on a student’s life. They emulate you, follow your lead, and do what you ask…for the most part. With that being said, it is a huge responsibility for a coach to fill that role and be responsible for the direction of young lives. I loved that part of mentoring and teaching kids how to win in both basketball/life. Administration is slower, less connected to student-athletes, and as SWA (Senior Woman’s Administrator) you are not the final decider. You are a part of a team but not the head coach. However, the stress of being in charge does not fall on your desk.

Your teams had well over a 95% graduation rate and you coached 85 Academic All-Conference student-athletes: how much importance do you place on academics? On our team it was always academics first. I knew that none of my players would make a good living playing pro basketball in the United Sates. It was my responsibility to make sure they understood the value of going to class, keeping up with their class assignments, and being mature in their decision-making as it related to being a CU student. We had a team goal of carrying a cumulative GPA greater than 3.0. We had a rule that you could not move off-campus unless you carried at least a 2.5 GPA after 2 years of being on the team: you had to earn your way off-campus by the time you were a junior. It was important for our team members to be smart players and in general smart/interesting conversationalists.

A couple of weeks ago you were selected to the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame: how did you learn about the news, and where does it rank among the highlights of your career? The Executive Director of the Women’s Basketball Coaches Association (Danielle Donehew) called me while I was in my office at CU. I did not tell anyone for a while because I wanted to think about it/reflect on it alone before the word got out. The experience of the induction weekend with family/friends will be the highlight of the honor.

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News, Notes, and Highlighted Games: Thursday, Mar 1st

NEWS, AND NOTES

-ALL of the Championship Week Action is covered in our CHAMPIONSHIP WEEK VIDEO NOTEBOOK.  CLICK HERE to watch the latest installments and view the tournament brackets of all of today’s action

-For Chad Sherwood’s UTR Game of the Day between Hampton and Norfolk State – CLICK HERE

-There were a lot of exciting games last night, but for the most part it was a pretty chalky night.  Villanova needed overtime at Seton Hall, but pulled out 1 point win.  Xavier clinched at least a share of first place in the Big East with their win over Providence, and will lock it up out right if they can beat DePaul this weekend.  Clemson picked up a nice home win against Florida State and is continuing to look like a protected seed.  And, Nevada blasted UNLV on the road.

-The only (sort of) surprise was Butler’s overtime loss at Saint John’s.  It doesn’t sink Butler, but it does pull them down some.  I still think they’ll make the field, but if they lose their next one and lose their first Big East Tournament game it’s going to be a nervous Selection Sunday for them.

HIGHLIGHTED GAMES

-WICHITA STATE AT UCF (American).  Wichita State is good enough to win out and will likely end up as a protected seed if they do.  This won’t be the easiest road game, but it’s certainly winnable.

-VIRGINIA AT LOUISVILLE (ACC).  Virginia is looking like they’ll end up as a #1 seed, and Louisville is squarely on the bubble.  This is the kind of win that could push the Cardinals into the field, but it’s easier said than done.  Virginia’s defense has been suffocating all year, and they’re ranked #1 for a reason.

-WESTERN KENTUCKY AT MIDDLE TENNESSEE (Conference USA).  We know Middle Tennessee is in the rankings.  We know they’re good.  The question is whether or not the selection committee will take them if they fail to win the conference tournament.  Western Kentucky is a good team, and this won’t be an easy game for Middle to win, but it’s one they need to win if they want to end up inside the bubble.  It should be a fun one.  It’s hard to remember the last time Middle Tennessee had a home game as charged up as this one is likely to be.

-NC STATE AT GEORGIA TECH (ACC).  NC State is safe so long as they hold serve, and that means being able to beat sub-NIT teams even if it is a road game.

-CINCINNATI AT TULANE (American).  Cincinnati is ranked in the top ten, but in order to end up as a protected seed they, at the very least, need to hold serve in games against sub-NIT teams and probably need to get at least one win against Wichita State or Houston before the end of the American Tournament.

-CALIFORNIA AT ARIZONA STATE (Pac Twelve).  Arizona State simply cannot afford to lose this game.  They are way down in the Pac Twelve standings and while they’re still in the field their resume continues to slip.  Losing at home to one of the worst P5 teams in the nation this year would be more than just a slip.

-WEBER STATE AT MONTANA (Big Sky).  Montana can clinch first place outright with a win tonight.  Weber State is dangerous, so it’s not necessarily a given.

-STANFORD AT ARIZONA (Pac Twelve).  I’ll just say that this is a winnable game for an Arizona program that needs something to feel good about.  It’s hard to say what the status of their coach will be at this time tomorrow.

-OREGON STATE AT WASHINGTON (Pac Twelve).  If Washington has any chance of landing inside the bubble they need to win their final two games and then come up with a very strong showing in the conference tournament.

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