Hoops HD Bracket Rundown: Preseason Edition

Chad reveals his preseason NCAA Tournament Bracket!  And the rest of the panel banters back and forth with him as it is revealed line by line!  Some of the picks are conventional and consistent with the preseason rankings.  Others are way out on a limb.  At the end of the show the panel discusses who is in and should be out, and who is out and should be in.  We also each give our Final Four and national champion picks, and in closing we reveal this year’s Team of the People!!

 

Below is Chad’s Bracket.  Be sure to watch the show to see how he explains it and how everyone else argues with him.

 

And for all you radio lovers, below is an mp3 version of the show…

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Season Preview: HoopsHD interviews Central Arkansas head coach Russ Pennell

CLICK HERE for all of Jon’s interviews, and the rest of our extensive and continuous preseason coverage

We are great fans of GCU but realize that even though Dan Majerle is currently running the show it was Russ Pennell who 1st helped get the Lopes going.  After making the Sweet 16 as head coach at Arizona in 2009, Pennell traveled a couple of hours north up I-10 from Tucson to Phoenix and had 4 straight winning seasons at Grand Canyon from 2010-2013, then took the Phoenix Mercury to the Western Conference Finals that final summer.  It has been slow-going after he was hired at Central Arkansas in 2014 but we have faith in him.  HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Coach Pennell about 1 of the most famous shots in NCAA tourney history and getting to coach his alma mater.  We also with him a happy early birthday a few weeks in advance!

You played basketball at Arkansas/were an assistant at Oklahoma State to Eddie Sutton and were an assistant to Lute Olson at Arizona: what was it like to learn the game from these Hall of Famers? It was an unbelievable opportunity that helped me immensely. In many respects they revolutionizd the game: Henry Iba, the father of motion offense, was Coach Sutton’s college coach at Oklahoma A&M, and Coach Olson put Arizona on the map.

In the 1991 NCAA tourney as an assistant at Oklahoma State, Corey Williams scored 17 PTS including what he thought was a game-winning 3-PT shot from the top of the key with 2 seconds left in regulation…but his right foot was on the line and you ended up with a 9-PT OT loss to Temple: did you think the shot was going in, and did everyone think that the game was over? We thought the game was over when Corey made the shot. Temple called a timeout and we ran out to celebrate with Corey, but the refs immediately called it a 2. We looked at the tape later and his toes were clearly on the line. The following year the same thing darn near happened to us again when we lost to the Fab 5 by 3 PTS: we were close 2 years in a row.

In the 1998 NCAA tourney as an assistant to Rob Evans at Mississippi, Bryce Drew scored 22 PTS including an ESPY-winning 23-footer at the buzzer in a 1-PT win by Valparaiso: what kind of defense did you draw up, and where does that rank among the most devastating losses of your career? It is probably the most devastating loss because I thought that we had the team to go a long way. Florida State beat TCU before our game so we would have had a good chance in the next game against the Seminoles but so many things went wrong. Ansu Sesay was the SEC POY but missed a FT at the end and then we knocked the ball out of bounds: it was a 50-50 play for us. Destiny stepped in and it was a heck of a play by Valpo.

In 2013 you were hired by the Phoenix Mercury and ended up taking the team to the Western Conference Finals before losing to eventual champion Minnesota: what is the biggest difference between coaching men vs. coaching women? I did not see a big difference at all in terms of gender: the biggest difference was coaching pros vs. coaching college kids. The WNBA was a great place to coach: the pros were so intelligent that you could draw up any play and they could execute it. We drew up a play against Los Angeles in Game 3 of the Semifinals but when I saw their defense on the court I told our inbounder to look to Brittany Griner instead, and she made the shot to win the series. I loved that we were smart enough to make that work but do not know if college kids could do that. I also missed the family environment of a college team where the coaches become their surrogate dads. Some guys do not like recruiting but I do.

In 2014 you were hired as coach at Central Arkansas: what did it mean to you to become coach at your alma mater? It was kind of a delayed effect but once I stepped into the locker room a lot of good memories came flooding back into my mind. What you miss the most is the struggle to succeed: the daily practices, the sore knees, and of course the big wins. We cleaned house the 1st year but I look at it as part of the process, which means a lot to me. I left my blood/sweat on that court during my playing days.

Last year G Jordan Howard was a 3rd-team Academic All-American: how much importance do you place on academics? I put a premium on it: the reason I am talking to you is that I have a college/Masters’ degree. It is an important aspect of college athletics that we have missed: it used to be about getting an education but now it is more about chasing your NBA dreams. I have always found that the kids who are most competitive on the court are also the ones who are most competitive in the classroom. We currently have a combined 3.2 GPA and had 10 guys on the honor roll last semester, which has also helped us recruit better. If you do not take care of your business in the classroom then you do not need to worry about the NCAA: I will just suspend you myself.

Last year your 84.1 PPG allowed was in the bottom-10 in the nation: do you feel that you need a radical change on the defensive end, or just reinforcement of the fundamentals, or other? Depth has been the biggest issue for us: we had 3 guys last year who played 35+ MPG and you cannot play the kind of defense we want when you are playing so many minutes. You have to hold your positioning and be strong on the inside. We switched to a matchup zone for a short time and our opponents just lit us up from the 3-PT line. Coach Sutton was 1 of the best defensive coaches in the country and at GCU we were 1 of the best defensive teams in the nation, but last year we actually led our conference in scoring. I also want to use the bench as motivation if the starters are not defending well.

You have 5 players on the roster from Arkansas as well as players from New York/California/Canada: what sort of recruiting philosophy do you have? We are looking for a certain type of player but everything starts with being able to shoot the basketball. We look for guys who also play unselfish basketball. Since I have been in so many different leagues I still have good contacts that help us bring in good players. Our program was not highly thought of in the past and it was hard to recruit in-state kids, but that is starting to turn around with guys like SK Shittu (who is from Rogers, AR). However, it was those out-of-state kids who got us over the hump.

Your non-conference schedule includes road games at Baylor/UCLA/Cal/Oregon: which of these games do you feel will present your biggest test? 3 of those 4 teams are ranked and they will all give us a good test. I am okay with guarantee games because they are much-needed to help the entire university. When you are in a 1-bid league it gives your kids an NCAA tourney experience because guess who we will be paired with if we make it to March?! 1 of the 1st things I get asked by recruits is who we will play: they want to be playing the best teams in full arenas rather than just beating up on a bunch of D-2 teams in front of small crowds. We have been in some of those games..but have been rocked in a few as well.

What are your goals for the upcoming season, and what are your expectations for the upcoming season? I think that we can make big strides this year and I believe we will be in the mix and make a run toward the conference title. I think we have enough bullets in the gun as well as 2 of the best players in the league. We can score and have been building for this: year 4 is when people can really see what you have been doing. Almost everywhere I have been has been a building process: when you have gone through it then you will know what is coming up.

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Under the Radar: Season Preview

Chad and the Hoops HD Panel wrap up our conference previews with this year’s first edition of Under the Radar.  Plus we are joined by Rocco Miller, who you can check out at bracketeer.org!  We run through all 22 UTR conferences and discuss who we think the frontrunners will be, and at the end of the show we talk about which teams we feel may be good enough to not need the automatic bid to make the NCAA Tournament.

 

And for all you radio lovers, below is an mp3 version of the show

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Season Preview: HoopsHD interviews North Dakota head coach Brian Jones

CLICK HERE for all of Jon’s interviews, and the rest of our extensive and continuous preseason coverage

Coach Brian Jones entered the national spotlight after making the NCAA tourney last March but he has held a special place in our hearts since winning the wildest conference tourney ever.  The 2011 Great West Conference tournament only featured 6 games but they were decided by a combined 11 PTS including a title game won by the Fighting Sioux on a 3-PT shot with 4 seconds left in double-OT.  HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Coach Jones about that amazing tourney and being named conference COY.

You played basketball at Northern Iowa: how good a player were you back in the day, and how did you get into coaching? I thought that I was a pretty good player who had a solid career. I was a stretch-4 and had a high IQ and after college I played pro overseas for a few years and saw the world, which was instrumental to my future. The season in Australia was opposite of the 1 in the US so I was able to come back to the states and coach high school. I broke my hand in Portugal, got a job at a D-2 school, and have never looked back.

In the 1999 NCAA tourney as an assistant to Steve Alford at #12-seed Southwest Missouri State you held Wisconsin to 32 PTS and then beat Tennessee by 30 PTS: it is 1 thing to be a Cinderella, but how were you able to dominate a pair of high-major teams? Our team was very talented with great guard play as well as a great post player. We were fearless: we upset Missouri on the road and lost the conference title on a corner bank 3 against Evansville. We were familiar with Coach Dick Bennett’s style of play and matched up well with them.  I do not know if the Tennessee players respected us. We also played well against Duke in the Meadowlands.

In the 2006 NCAA tourney as an assistant to Alford at #3-seed Iowa, Jermaine Wallace made a baseline turnaround 3-PT shot while falling out of bounds in the final second of a 1-PT upset by Northwestern State: did you think the shot was going in, and where does that rank among the most devastating losses of your career? That was very heartbreaking because it was the best team we had at Iowa from top to bottom and we felt good after winning the Big 10 tourney title. They subbed in 5 guys at a time and pressed us, plus we missed a lot of FTs down the stretch. That is why I love March Madness because of those exact scenarios: there is so much excitement.

You were hired as head coach of North Dakota in 2006: how hard was the transition from the North Central Conference to the Great West Conference in 2008 to the Big Sky Conference in 2012? I got hired late in the spring of 2006 and took over a program that had a lot of Iowa flavor so I was excited to run a program of my own. The draw for me was transitioning to D-1 but many times it can be a career-killer. Winning the Great West twice was great and then building our product across the Midwest was also great. It was a hard journey but it has made us better coaches: we stay in our lane!

In the 2011 Great West tourney you had a 1-PT 2-OT win over South Dakota to clinch the title: what are your memories of 1 of the wildest conference tourneys ever (all 6 games were decided by a grand total of 11 PTS)? When you are a 1-bid league everyone is just trying to find their way. I remember looking back and wondering how we won each game. South Dakota is a rival of ours and it went back and forth in the title game. We fouled a guy at the end of regulation and he made a 3, and then we made a shot at the end of OT to win it: I still have that photo on my office wall. I am such a fan of the CBI/CIT because it is important to the kids/coaches even if they do not get a lot of attendance at the games.

Last year you were named Big Sky COY: what did it mean to you to receive such an outstanding honor? It was extremely humbling but I feel that if you win the league then the team will get all of the awards. It was just the icing on the cake for us and I take a lot of pride in the fact that our peers recognized the season that we had.

You made the CIT 5 times in 6 years from 2011-2016: how nice was it to finally make it to the NCAA tourney in 2017 after a 4-PT OT win over Weber State in the Big Sky tourney title game? We were the CIT poster child for a while, which is not a bad thing due to the pride factor. We have had some tough times but never strayed from the right way to go about things. Quinton Hooker carried the load for us on the floor, in the classroom, and in the community. He showed the young guys how to prepare themselves to perform. I still watch tape of the Weber State game, which was remarkable.

In the 2017 NCAA tourney you lost to Arizona: what did your team learn from that game that will help them this year? We played our way and did not try to smoke-and-mirror it up. Their length was unbelievable but we scored a bunch of points within our system. At the end of the day their athleticism is what we struggled with and it wore us down.

Your non-conference schedule includes games against Nebraska/Creighton/Gonzaga: which of these games do you feel will present your biggest test? I am a big proponent of taking my team on the road to face programs that I respect. I have known Gregg McDermott since I was 18 and Coach Miles has a North Dakota background. Our guys will always remember the Gonzaga game many years down the road because they will show up whether it is against us or UCLA. I just hope we will be fearless like we were against Arizona.

What are your goals for the upcoming season, and what are your expectations for the upcoming season? As we continue on our journey we just want to sustain success year in and year out (like Gonzaga does). We will be relentless with our effort/chemistry both on and off the floor. I do not think coaches spend enough time on the culture side of things: talent is important but you still have to bring everything together.

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Season Preview: HoopsHD interviews North Dakota G Cortez Seales

CLICK HERE for all of Jon’s interviews, and the rest of our extensive and continuous preseason coverage

It is hard to believe that North Dakota went 8-22 in 2015: they have been trending way up ever since then with a CIT berth in 2016 and a trip to the NCAA tourney last March.  1 of the main reasons the Fighting Hawks have turned things around is Cortez Seales.  The reigning Big Sky 6th Man of the Year is at his best when the game is on the line: he scored a career-high 23 PTS in an OT win at Northern Colorado last February and had a key last-second block to force OT in the Big Sky title game win over Weber State last March.  HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Cortez about making the NCAA tourney and making shots from behind the arc.

You grew up in Iowa: what made you choose the Fighting Hawks? It was mostly good recruiting: the coaching staff here stayed with me the longest.

You play for Coach Brian Jones: what makes him such a good coach, and what is the most important thing that you have learned from him? His unique way of coaching: he is not the most social coach but you can tell that he loves the game.

In the 2016 CIT you scored 16 PTS/3-3 3PM in a 3-PT OT loss to UC Irvine: where does that rank among the most devastating losses of your career? I look at every loss the same. The most hurtful loss was to Arizona in the 2017 NCAA tourney. Even though we were the underdog I think we really had a chance to pull off the upset.

Last year you were named Big Sky 6th Man of the Year: what did it mean to you to receive such an outstanding honor? Any award you win on the court is an honor but I give most of the credit to the team for putting me in positions to show my ability on the court. My teammates gave me great mentorship/encouragement whether I was struggling or playing well.

In the Big Sky tourney title game you scored 12 PTS in a 4-PT OT win over Weber State: what did it mean to you to win a title, and what was the feeling like in your locker room afterward? That was 1 of my favorite basketball experiences ever: it had never been done before so I will never forget it. It was kind of surreal so I do not think that it even hit us while we were in the locker room.

In the 2017 NCAA tourney you scored 3 PTS in a loss to Arizona: what did you learn from that game that will help you this year? What I took away from that game is that you have to play every game without thinking that you are the underdog. If you do not have the mentality that you can win then you will lose: you need a positive mentality to be successful. It was 1 of my worst games by far so I will learn from it as I grow.

You only took 24 threes last year but made 41.7% of them: what is the key to making shots from behind the arc, and do you plan on taking a few more this year? Definitely. It is not the biggest part of my game but everyone believes that I can make that shot. It is selfish of me to not take that shot if I am open because it will mess up the flow of our offense.

Your non-conference schedule includes games against Nebraska/Creighton/Gonzaga: which of these games do you feel will present your biggest test? I think that all of them will be tough. Even though it is not the postseason it will give our young guys a chance to see what top-level competition is like and learn that every play counts. All 3 of those games will help us grow.

You only have 1 senior on the roster: how much pressure is there on you to be a leader this year? I do not think there is any pressure on me because I am a natural leader.  I just need to lead by example and show them how to come to work every day and treat it like a job. Coach Jones always says, “You are a pro: act like a pro.”

What are your goals for the upcoming season, and what are your expectations for the upcoming season? The main goal I have is repeating and then making it back to the NCAA tourney. We have a lot of skilled guys who can do a lot of things. It will help us in the long run and we can do something special if we buy in and play together.

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Season Preview: HoopsHD interviews Lamar head coach Tic Price

CLICK HERE for all of Jon’s interviews, and the rest of our extensive and continuous preseason coverage

Tic Price has had a winning record at every school he has coached at in the past: 62-27 at New Orleans, 30-27 at Memphis, and 74-69 at McNeese State.  He is currently 46-53 as he begins his 4th full season at Lamar, but after leading the Cardinals last year to their 1st postseason berth since 2012 he has a good shot of getting back over .500 by the time this season comes to an end.  HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Coach Price about last year’s turnaround season and dealing with Hurricane Harvey.  We also wish him a happy early birthday a few weeks in advance!

I read that you got your nickname “Tic” from an elementary school coach who called you “Tic-Toc” due to your clutch shooting: is that true, and how do you like it? It is true: I threw up a prayer in 3rd or 4th grade that went in and the nickname has followed me all my life.

You played basketball at VCU/Virginia Tech: how good a player were you back in the day, and how did you get into coaching? The older I get the better I was! After finishing up at Virginia Tech a position became open at Roanoke College as an assistant. I told him the head coach there that I had to be the top assistant if I took the job and he told me I would be…because I was his only assistant!

You were hired as an assistant to Tommy Joe Eagles at New Orleans in 1994 but took over the head job after he died of a heart attack during a recruiting trip that summer: how on earth were you able to coach the team to 20 wins without the whole season simply falling apart? I had a group of guys who dedicated their work ethic to having a special year. We were all in shock at 1st and I did not really care about coaching, but the athletic director called me into his office and told me he wanted me to be the interim coach. I called my parents to get their input and my mom said that I was not a bandaid but rather a surgeon.

In the 1996 Sun Belt tourney title game Tyrone Garris drove the lane and made a tear drop at the buzzer in a 1-PT win over Arkansas-Little Rock: how did you draw up the final play, and where does that rank among the most clutch shots that you have ever seen? I had just seen another team run that play right before the tourney and planned to put it in during practice as a new wrinkle but never did so. I drew it up right there on the sideline, we ran it, and the guys executed the play to perfection and made me look like a genius. Tyrone was a special player.

After going 11-19 as head coach at Lamar in 2016 you went 19-15 last year: how were you able to improve so much from 1 year to the next? Good chemistry: you need to get guys who buy into what you are trying to teach. We were more willing to defend and execute offensively. We stayed the course and did not have any distractions/injuries.

In the 2017 CIT you had a 10-PT loss to Texas State: what did your team learn from that game that will help them this year? They learned that you cannot play with disappointment. We were coming off of a tough loss in the Sun Belt tourney to Stephen F. Austin and I think that we were not as focused as we should have been. Being on the road did not help us get in sync either.

You beat Oregon State on the road last season but do not appear to have any high-major teams on this year’s schedule: what sort of philosophy do you have when it comes to scheduling? When you are building a program you have to be really careful about how/who you schedule, the number of returning players you have, the travel time involved in getting to a road game, etc. There is a lot of investigative work to be done so we have to be cautious as we get back to respectability. We will probably have to play more teams like the Beavers in the future to get us ready for conference play but it is hard to win on the road.

You have 6 seniors on the roster: how crucial will all of that experience be to your team’s success this year? They have only played together for 2 years (not 4) so some people misread that as championship experience, which is not in our DNA. We need to sustain our effort/concentration to show the younger guys what it takes to be prepared. It helps to have a team that has been battle-tested.

Your campus is less than 100 miles from Houston: how bad was it hit by Hurricane Harvey, and how is everyone doing at the moment? We got hit pretty good in Beaumont and there are some areas where people lost everything so it might take a while to rebuild while others just might not come back. We are back to business and willing to help all those in need. Everyone is reaching out to help their fellow man: we have people who are trying to bring some joy to those who lost everything.

What are your goals for the upcoming season, and what are your expectations for the upcoming season? We want to win a championship just like everyone else. Everyone starts at the bottom of the mountain and it is a grind but the NCAA tourney is where we want to be. We need to play with some physicality, which is key.

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