Nobody beats the Tis: HoopsHD interviews Brian Schodorf and Billy Tubbs about Wayman Tisdale

Buddy Hield is sensational: 2-time Big 12 POY, the favorite for 2016 national POY, and if he has 2 more great games left in him then maybe even a tourney MOP award on Monday night and an eternal place in the hearts of Sooner fans everywhere.  However, when I think about Oklahoma basketball the name that always comes to mind is Wayman Tisdale: 3-time Big 8 POY, the 1st D-1 player to ever be named 1st-team AP All-American in each of his freshman/sophomore/junior seasons, 1984 Olympic gold medalist, and election to the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame in 2009.  After averaging 15.3 PPG during a 12-year NBA career, he retired in 1997 to focus on his first love: music.  He passed away in 2009 at age 44 due to cancer, and the following year the United States Basketball Writers Association renamed its outstanding freshman award as the Wayman Tisdale Award.  With the Sooners ready to play in their 1st Final 4 since 2002, HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with 2 men who know quite a lot about the legacy of this outstanding player who died too soon: Brian Schodorf (director/producer of “The Wayman Tisdale Story”) and Billy Tubbs (Tisdale’s college coach).

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Wayman’s father was a well-known pastor in Tulsa, OK, and church was so important to Wayman that Coach Tubbs allegedly changed the team’s Sunday practice from the morning to the evening to allow his star player to attend Sunday morning services at his father’s church: was he worried that the rest of team would not appreciate doing something like that just to please a freshman, or was it worth accommodating his religious beliefs because he was a McDonald’s All-American? Brian Schodorf: I think that story was a bit embellished. They usually did not practice on Sundays anyway but if they did then Coach Tubbs would move it to the evening. Tubbs would often go with him to church to watch him play bass in the church band: he was a great guitar player. Billy Tubbs: I do not really remember that but I would always try to accommodate practices so that people could go to church. Sunday practices were more in line with church…or a Dallas Cowboys game!

In December 1983 he had a career-high 22 REB and broke Wilt Chamberlain’s conference record by scoring 61 PTS in a 40-PT win over Texas-San Antonio: where does that rank among the greatest performances you have ever seen? BS: At that point it was definitely the biggest performance in the history of the Big 8. It was not in the NCAA tourney but it is still up there and may still be a conference record. BT: I do not know how many PTS Chamberlain had (52 in his college debut vs. Northwestern  in 1956) but Wayman made the game look so easy that you never realized how many PTS he had scored himself. 1 time he had a chance to break a record and I took him out because I was unaware, but after my SID informed me I put him back in. His turnaround jumper could beat a double or triple-team.

What are your memories of the 1984 NCAA tourney (Tisdale had 36 PTS/11 REB, but Roosevelt Chapman scored 41 PTS in a 4-PT win by Dayton)? BT: Chapman had a great game but we were really disappointed with the loss. We had a 1st round bye but Dayton had our full attention after they beat LSU.

He led the 1984 Olympic team with 6.4 RPG en route to winning a gold medal: what was his secret to being a great rebounder, and what did it mean to him to him to win a gold medal? BS: Those Olympics were tough for him because Coach Bobby Knight challenged him to be a better rebounder/defender. Wayman was a nice guy who always smiled and Knight did not like that, but he found that Wayman was a warrior who could overcome all the yelling in practice to help win it all. Charles Barkley/Karl Malone/John Stockton got cut so making the team showed how good he really was. BT: It is a great honor for anyone to win a gold medal: it was big. What made him such a great rebounder was his strength in a crowd, a knack for knowing where the ball would come off the glass, and being an explosive jumper.

Take me through the 1985 NCAA tourney:
He scored 29 PTS (14-16 FG) in a 6-PT win over Illinois State: was it just 1 of those scenarios where every shot he put up seemed to go in because he was “in the zone”? BT: Every time he shot the ball I felt good about it. I had a lot of confidence in him and playing in his hometown of Tulsa made it very special for him.

He had 23 PTS/11 REB and made the game-winning shot that bounced around the rim several times before going in with 2 seconds left to clinch a 2-PT OT win over Louisiana Tech (led by 20 PTS/16 REB from Karl Malone): did you think the shot was going in? BT: The neat thing about that was since the ball took so much time to get in the hole it took a lot of time off the clock.

He had 11 PTS (on a season-low 10 shots)/12 REB and Anthony Bowie missed a 20-foot shot at the buzzer in a 2-PT loss to Memphis State: did you think the shot was going in, and what was the reaction like when you got back to campus? BT: We felt like we had a team that might win the national championship so it was a big-time disappointment. Memphis had us out-sized and it came down to who could make the plays at the end. Bowie took a nice shot: we played hard despite losing some guys to foul trouble late in the game.

He was a 3-time Big 8 POY and the 1st player to ever be named a 1st-team AP All-American in each of his 1st 3 years: what did it mean to him to win such outstanding honors? BS: It meant a lot to him and he obviously cherished it but he was such a humble guy that it did not change him. It was quite a feat. BT: We took all honors as a team honor: he was great but he had some good players around him. The guys that played with him were very unselfish: I never sensed any jealousy from his teammates as he was getting all his accolades because we won a lot of games. Wayman was definitely a team player so it was me who insisted that the ball go to him inside.

In 1985 he declared early for the draft and was picked 2nd overall by Indiana (1 spot behind his Olympic teammate Patrick Ewing): did he see that as a validation of his college career, or the realization of a lifelong dream of reaching the NBA, or other? BS: He told me that it was 1 of the biggest days of his life. The Indiana fans were holding up signs saying, “We got Wayman!”, which made him happy. They wanted to use him as a franchise player to build around. BT: Most players have a goal of making it to the NBA and I think it was big for him to get drafted very high.

What are your memories of Game 7 of 1995 Western Conference Semifinals when he played for Phoenix (Mario Elie made a 3-PT shot with 7.1 seconds left in a 1-PT win on the road by eventual champion Houston)? BS: He went to Phoenix to try and win a championship: your career is defined by where you end up and the players around you. It was his 1st chance to be on a good playoff team. Even though he was 1 of the best power forwards in the league, people had not seen him play very much because he was on some horrible teams, so when he got to Phoenix he felt that he was finally in the NBA. The Suns just could not hit any of their FTs that night when it counted, but Houston had Hakeem Olajuwon/Clyde Drexler and were the defending champs. BT: I think it was a big disappointment for him because he and some of his teammates (like Danny Manning) gave up bigger salary offers to go to Phoenix and try to win a title.

He finished his NBA career with 50.5 FG%, which is just outside the top-100 all-time: what was his secret to being a great shooter? BS: He just had a nice “flipper”: a left-handed shot that was real smooth. He was not a 3-PT gunner but was a natural shooter. BT: He was a natural, which says it all. He had the perfect shot to make our offense work at Oklahoma. We had to have a guy on the block who could make a turnaround jumper, so our offense was the perfect one for him despite being a post player who was only 6’6”. I had a lot of great players but without that kind of player we would not have a good team.

In 2007 he was diagnosed with cancer and he passed away in 2009 after being elected to the Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame: what impact did his death have on you, and how do you want him to be remembered the most? BS: Oklahoma made it to the Elite 8 in 1985, but had they gone to the Final 4 and/or won it all then he might have gone down as perhaps the best college player ever. Oklahoma was a football school so he really put the entire program on his back. I have talked to a million people (Michael Jordan, Toby Keith, etc.), and they all said that Wayman was a guy who loved to make other people happy. I think he was the most-liked guy in the history of the NBA. Every time you saw him it was like a party bus…and he was the driver! BT: It had a great impact on me and my family: my son came to Oklahoma at the same time that Wayman ded and they were like brothers. It was tragic to say the least.

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Under The Radar Postseason News, Notes and Highlighted Games – Tuesday, March 29

The final week of the season is upon us, and last night marked the beginning of both the CBI best-of-3 Championship Series and the debut of the Vegas 16, albeit with only 8 teams. Tonight, the CIT championship game will be played at Columbia between the Lions and the UC-Irvine Anteaters, and the semfinals of the NIT will also be staged at Madison Square Garden.

NIT Semifinals

(1) VALPARAISO VS. (2) BYU (7:00 PM, ESPN) – Although the Crusaders are technically the only Under-The-Radar team to make it to Madison Square Garden, they are the highest-seeded team remaining in the NIT field. They got off to a slow start against St. Mary’s last week, but were able to cruise to a somewhat decisive 60-44 win over the Gaels. Their semifinal opponent will be BYU; the Cougars got to this stage by defeating Creighton at home by a final score of 88-82.

(2) SAN DIEGO STATE VS. (4) GEORGE WASHINGTON (9:30 PM, ESPN) – If Valpo is not the favorite to win the NIT, it will likely be San Diego State as the team to beat in the Garden. The Aztecs defeated Georgia Tech 72-56 at Viejas last week; like Valpo and BYU, this will be the first time in the NIT that the Aztecs will play a game away from home. GW beat Florida 82-77 to get to the semifinals, but the Smith Center felt like Florida North at times in that game. The Colonials also got a win away from home in the NIT against Monmouth, but San Diego State will also be a step up in competition from their last 2 games.

CIT Championship

UC-IRVINE AT COLUMBIA (7:00 PM, CBS Sports Network) – As confirmed by our own Chad Sherwood, Columbia is playing for the Ivy League’s first postseason title since 1975; Princeton defeated Holy Cross, South Carolina, Oregon and Providence to win the NIT Championship that season. Columbia advanced to the championship game by defeating NJIT 80-65; Irvine showed once more their road warrior status with an easy 66-47 win at Coastal Carolina on Sunday night as well.

CBI Championship Series

In Game 1, Morehead State held serve in the lone game to be played in Morehead, Kentucky. The Eagles were led by Lyonell Gaines’ 27 points and 14 rebounds; they defeated Nevada 86-83 in a game that featured 13 lead changes and 16 ties. Tyron Criswell had 31 points to lead Nevada, but the Wolf Pack now get to finish the rest of their season at home with Game 2 on Wednesday night and a potential Game 3 on Friday night should the Wolf Pack win on Wednesday.

Vegas 16 Semifinals

OLD DOMINION VS. UC-SANTA BARBARA (9:00 PM, CBS Sports Network) – In the opener yesterday, Old Dominion defeated Tennessee Tech 75-59 thanks to 3 players who scored in double-figures for the Monarchs – Trey Freeman (18 pts), Aaron Bacote (16 pts) and Zoran Talley (14 pts). They will take on the UC-Santa Barbara Gauchos; they defeated Northern Illinois 70-63 despite trailing for the first 14 minutes of the 2nd half. Maxwell Kupchak hit a layup with 5:55 remaining to give the Gauchos the lead for good; Gabe Vincent and Sam Beeler led UCSB with 20 and 16 points, respectively.

OAKLAND VS. EAST TENNESSEE STATE (11:30 PM, CBS Sports Network) – If you’re looking for star power in the Vegas 16, look no further than Oakland’s Kay Felder and East Tennessee’s Ge’Laun Gwyn. Oakland advanced to the semifinals thanks to an easy 90-72 win over Towson; Louisiana Tech hung around with East Tennessee for the entire game but were unable to get any closer than 1 point (a 60-59 deficit in the 2nd half). Gwyn iced the game with 3 free throws in the final 15 seconds as the Buccaneers won 88-83.

COACHING CAROUSEL – THE LATEST

  • As expected last week, Rick Stansbury is officially the head coach at Western Kentucky following the resignation of Ray Harper.
  • Chris Beard parlayed his successful season at Arkansas-Little Rock into the head coaching position at UNLV; this came only days after Mick Cronin did a 180 and decided to remain at Cincinnati.
  • One familiar face will re-emerge in the coaching ranks; Herb Sendek will be the new head coach at Santa Clara.
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Orange you in the Final 4? HoopsHD interviews Bob Snyder about Jim Boeheim

Some people STILL do not think that Syracuse should have made the NCAA tourney…but if you are good enough to overcome a double-digit 2nd half deficit against Virginia then you are worthy of a career retrospective.  Head coach Jim Boeheim has done just about everything in the world of basketball: an NCAA title in 2003, a Hall of Fame induction in 2005, a national COY award in 2010, and a pair of Olympic gold medals in 2008 and 2012.  Last summer he announced that he will be retiring in the spring of 2018, but apparently he is not just walking softly into the sunset, as he has the Orange back in the Final 4 for the 1st time since 2013.  HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to interview Bob Snyder, the legendary local sportswriter who is a member of the Greater Syracuse Sports Hall of Fame, about how Boeheim played in the 1966 NCAA tourney, how the Orange beat North Carolina in the 1975 NCAA tourney, and how his coaching legacy stacks up against the best.

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In the 1960s Boeheim went from freshman walk-on to team captain at Syracuse, and was also a roommate of All-American Dave Bing: how good a player was he back in the day, and how close are he and Bing to this day? Boeheim was good enough to average 14.6 PPG as a senior…albeit for a Fred Lewis-coached team that ran-ran-ran its way to an NCAA-record 99 PPG. He went for 27 against Niagara and 28 vs. Cornell in back-to-back games. His coach would say of the skinny, bespectacled former walk-on: “The greatest catalyst on that club was Jimmy Boeheim.” Boeheim had Bing as his presenter when he was enshrined in the Hall of Fame. The ex-roommates have remained close friends who would always be there for one another. By the way, is there any wonder that Boeheim was less than thrilled to leave Manley Field House for the Carrier Dome in 1979? “We’ll lose home-court advantage,” said Boeheim. “But if we average 15,000 fans a game, I guess it will be worth it.” He was 30-3 at Manley as a player and 55-1 as a head coach at the time the Orange moved to the Dome!

What are your memories of the 1966 NCAA tourney (Boeheim scored 14 PTS [7-9 FG] in a win over Davidson and then scored 15 PTS in a 10-PT loss to Duke)? While Boeheim played well in both games in the East Regional, Bing’s play was a mixed bag. Bing scored 20 PTS and clearly outplayed fellow All-American Dick Snyder of Davidson in a 94-78 win in the semis, but he had probably his worst collegiate game (especially considering it was for a berth in the Final 4) while scoring only 10 PTS in a 91-81 loss to Duke. SU had Duke on the ropes but the favored Blue Devils had 6 players score in double figures. SU’s 22-6 record that season was even more impressive because just a few years earlier the team had lost an NCAA-record 27 games in a row over the course of 2 seasons.

After graduation he played professionally with the Scranton Miners of the American Basketball League and won 2 titles despite being the only player in the league who wore glasses on the court: did he ever think about playing in the NBA or did he always know that he wanted to go into coaching? As the son of a mortician he did not grow up thinking that he wanted to become a coach. After SU he was the final player cut by the Chicago Bulls. He had a fine career in the Eastern League for Scranton while also attending grad school and working on SU’s staff. In 136 games over 6 very full seasons Boeheim averaged 17 PPG (including 20.8 and 23.4 in back-to-back seasons) while dishing out assists at a 4.1/game clip. Coach Paul Seymour offered him a shot in the NBA but Boeheim acknowledged that he was not good enough. He felt it would be better to try the coaching racket: a wise decision!

What are your memories of the 1975 NCAA tourney after he became an assistant coach at Syracuse (Jim Lee scored 24 PTS [12-18 FG] in a win over North Carolina, then Jack Givens had 24 PTS/11 REB in a win by eventual national runner-up Kentucky in the Final 4)? Many Syracuse fans think that Orange hoops history began with Boeheim. Big-time hoops, yes, but in the Final 4, no. Jim was Coach Roy Danforth’s top aide in 1975 when SU surprisingly played its way to San Diego along with a trio of other legendary programs (John Wooden’s UCLA Bruins, Joe B. Hall’s Kentucky Wildcats, and Denny Crum’s Louisville Cardinals). Truth be known, SU’s initial road to the Final 4 should have ended with its NCAA opener in the Palestra where 6’10” Joe Bryant (Kobe’s father) had a 5-foot baseline jumper that would have advanced La Salle and ended SU’s season. His shot went around and out and then SU pulled away in OT to win by 4 PTS (87-83). You would think that if North Carolina shot 65.3% (not from the FT line, from the field!) and their backcourt of Phil Ford/Brad Hoffman combined for 44 PTS that Dean Smith’s favored Tar Heels would have won their East Regional semi against SU…but SU shot a lofty 58.3 FG% and guards Jimmy Lee/Jimmy Williams combined for 43 PTS. Trailing by 1 after calling its last timeout, 7-PT underdog SU sought “Divine Providence” in the Civic Center. Danforth wanted his guys to start out on the left side and run the “High 3” but Carolina had it cut off. The ball swung inside to Rudy Hackett and then back out to Lee: from “Rag Man” to “Rat Man”. Rat let it fly from 18 feet with 5 seconds left: final score Syracuse 78, Heels 76. The silence was heard all the way down Tobacco Road. In the East finals SU needed Jimmy “Don’t Call Me Bug” Williams’ 5-second dash up the left sideline and pass to Hackett, who fumbled the ball but somehow managed to get it up/over the rim/in to get to OT vs. Kansas State at 76-all: SU ended up winning 95-87 and it was “California Here We Come”! Cinderella’s slipper got lost in San Diego against towering Kentucky with its twin 7-footers and Jack “Goose” Givens. The heavily-favored Wildcats won 95-79 but lost the title to UCLA in Wooden’s swan song. In the consolation game SU rallied from 18 PTS down to play its 3rd OT game in 5 NCAA contests, losing to Louisville 92-88. Lee led the tournament in scoring and was named to the all-tourney team.

He is famous for playing a 2-3 zone defense: how did he come up with it, and what makes it so effective? Boeheim played in a 2-3 zone during college and knew the fundamentals, so he just tweaked it over the years primarily to reflect changes in the game (most notably of course the 3-PT shot). Initially it was a conventional 2-3, but then he moved it out farther to contend the 3 and made some other subtle changes. Boeheim feels that today’s SU zone is “fairly unique and different from most 2-3 zones.” Teams do not see that many zones and this 1 (having evolved into a bit of a rarity) causes problems. For example, when Oklahoma faced the Orange in the 2003 NCAA tourney (won by Syracuse), the Sooners responded as if they were a deer in the headlights. They dribbled and passed east-west while struggling to move the ball at all north-south. Most teams try to attack SU’s zone from the high-post (for a 12-15’ jumper or a pass to the baseline) or inside-out (for the corner trifecta: see Louisville).

What are your memories of the 1987 NCAA title game (Keith Smart scored 21 PTS and made a jumper with 5 seconds left to clinch a 1-PT win by Indiana)? In light of the departures of 1000-PT scorers Pearl Washington/Raf Addison/Wendell Alexis, nobody thought that SU’s 1st national championship could have (some argue “should” have) come in 1987. However, when they got to the NCAA tourney, down goes Georgia Southern and Western Kentucky…then down goes Florida (Rony Seikaly scored 33 PTS)…and just like in 1975, bye-bye North Carolina (Seikaly had 26 PTS/11 REB). In the Final 4 in New Orleans Rick Pitino (Boeheim’s 1st coaching hire) goes down by 14 PTS and it was time to face Indiana and bombastic Bobby Knight for all the marbles. Once again, 5 seconds to play provided the decisive moment: it had already happened against North Carolina and Kansas State. However, this was not Divine Providence: this was the Left Coast and SU broke a 70-70 deadlock in the final minute on Howard Triche’s jumper in the lane. When Keith Smart missed a shot, Triche rebounded and was fouled by Steve Alford. IU called timeout with 38 seconds left and then Triche made his 1st FT before missing the 2nd. Smart scored in the lane and IU calls a timeout down by 1 PT. Derrick Coleman (who hauled in a freshman-record 19 REB) was fouled and IU called another timeout with 28 seconds to go. Coleman missed the front end of a 1-and-1, the Hoosiers come down the floor, and with 5 seconds left Smart rose/fired from 16 feet while barely avoiding Triche’s outstretched arm…and hit nothing but net to take the lead. SU’s desperation heave was intercepted: IU 74, SU 73, even though Syracuse looked to be the better team. “We outplayed them,” Boeheim would say. “We didn’t have the game won … but we were close.”

He had a 2-PT OT win over Puerto Rico to win a bronze medal as assistant coach of team USA at the 1990 FIBA World Championship after Kenny Anderson made 2 FT with no time on the clock at the end of regulation: where do those FTs rank among the most clutch that he has ever seen? Clutch FTs for sure…but for the bronze, not the gold. That team included SU star Billy Owens. If you are looking for clutch FTs, how about the 1990 regular-season finale with a top-10 matchup against Georgetown? There were more than 33,000 fans in the house for the very 1st time. Sam Jefferson inexplicably fouled Owens more than 40 feet from the basket with 1 second remaining in regulation. Owens canned both FTs en route to a 2-PT OT win in a game that was highlighted by Coach Thompson’s 3 technical fouls (1 from each of the 3 officials!) that triggered a 10-PT play and saw Big John banished from courtside.

Take me through the 1996 NCAA tourney:
After Jason Cipolla made a 16-footer at the end of regulation, John Wallace (30 PTS/15 REB) dribbled up the court and made a 3-PT shot with 3 seconds left for a 2-PT OT win over Georgia: where does that game rank among the most exciting in school history? Wallace to Cipolla for a 16-footer forced OT as Cipolla slid on the seat of his pants in the left corner. Boeheim opted not to call a timeout as Wallace dribbled over mid-court and threw up a last-gasp shot in OT: good! SU wins 83-81. That buzzer-beating combination made the Orange “Kardiac Kids” the Cinderella story of the 1996 NCAA tourney. Among the top-5 heart-stoppers in Syracuse annals, Boeheim said of that West Regional semi in Denver: “such a classic … really one of the great tournament games ever.”

Wallace had 15 PTS/9 REB and Jacque Vaughn missed a 3-PT shot at the buzzer in a 3-PT win over #2-seed Kansas: did you start to get the sense that the team was going to go all the way? SU was the best in the West and headed to the Meadowlands for the Final 4. Mississippi State (which upset Kentucky in the SEC tourney) fell to SU by 8 in the national semis but Kentucky would be the country’s last team standing.

Tourney MOP Tony Delk scored 24 PTS (7-12 3PM) in a 9-PT win by Kentucky in the title game: how devastating was that loss, and what was the feeling like in the locker room afterwards? Pitino’s Wildcats were double-digit favorites in the final. I wrote in my newspaper that the Cats would cut down the nets but Cuse would cover the point spread: both happened. Wallace carried SU on his back throughout the tourney and scored 29 PTS in the title game. SU had a legit shot (they were down 5 PTS with the ball in the final 5 minutes), but Delk’s 7 threes keyed the Cats, who were loaded with potential pros. SU had overachieved in the tourney but it was a somber/disconsolate dressing room following the heartbreak. “Not many times has a team not picked in the top-40 gotten to the Final 4,” suggested Boeheim. “This year, it was more fun just getting this team there.”

What are your memories of the 2003 NCAA title game (Carmelo Anthony had 20 PTS/10 REB in a 3-PT win over Kansas)? Hakim Warrick’s in-flight block ruined 4th-ranked Kansas’ bid for OT in the Superdome: that is a vision etched in Orange hoop annals. One Shining Moment to be sure. When you think of the 2003 championship game (SU 81, Kansas 78), Hak soaring has to be #1. Carmelo was tourney MOP but Warrick put a lock on SU’s (and Boeheim’s) 1st national championship.

In 2002 the school named the Carrier Dome floor “Jim Boeheim Court”, and in 2005 he was inducted into the Hall of Fame: where did these two moments rank among his career highlights? His Hall of Fame induction in Springfield was the maraschino cherry atop the whipped cream for Boeheim. The guy whose name used to be mispronounced on national television, who critics said came up short in late-game situations, who was known more for whining than winning, had finally joined the fraternity’s elite. Naming the Dome floor after him was also a proud moment for him, but not in the same league with the Hall of Fame or the NCAA title.

He won a bronze medal as assistant coach of team USA at the 2006 FIBA World Championship after losing to Greece in the semifinals despite having a roster that included Carmelo Anthony/Chris Bosh/Dwight Howard/LeBron James/Chris Paul/Dwyane Wade: how on earth did a team with so much talent not win it all? The loss to Greece was inexplicable/embarrassing, so much so that Team USA boss Jerry Colangelo made certain that it was not going to happen again come the 2008 Olympics. Player selection and preparation has paid off, as the US has not lost a game on the world stage since. Under head coach Mike Krzyzewski, Boeheim, and the rest of the braintrust, Team USA (including the addition of Kobe Bryant/Jason Kidd, among others) won the 2007 FIBA Americas Championship and beat Spain for the Olympic gold medal in Beijing and again in London.

Jonny Flynn had a game-high 34 PTS/11 AST in 67 minutes in a 10-PT 6-OT win over UConn in the 2009 Big East tourney (the longest game in the history of Big East conference play): did it reach a point where you thought that evening would never end? The Orange and 3rd-ranked UConn went through the night and into the next morning before SU won 127-117, and then SU came back to the Garden and beat West Virginia in the semis by 5 PTS in OT before a tired Orange bunch bowed to 5th-ranked Louisville by 10 PTS in the title game. The 6-OT shirt has become a collector’s item: hundreds of thousands of Orange faithful will swear to you that they were at the Garden on March 12, 2009, when SU had 103 field goal attempts plus another 51 shots from the free-throw line!

He won a gold medal as assistant coach of team USA at the 2010 FIBA World Championship after MVP Kevin Durant set a USA World Championship scoring record with 22.8 PPG: how good was Durant at age 21? Durant (22.8 PPG) was MVP while leading the 2010 team to its 1st World Championship gold medal since 1994. After beating host Turkey in the championship game, he went on to pan Olympic gold in London 2 years later as Team USA beat Spain in the title game. Durant has a chance to be among the 10 best players of all-time, possibly the top-5…but you need to have at least 1 “crowning” moment in the NBA (and I do not mean a scoring crown).

He served as an assistant coach for Team USA at the 2008 Olympics and reprised his role at the 2012 Olympics: how does he like coaching in the Olympics, and what kind of a relationship has he developed with Coach Krzyzewski? Boeheim has thoroughly enjoyed his Olympic experiences and international head coaching/assistant coaching assignments: how could you not? He and Coach K are great friends. They have never wanted to coach against each other and never scheduled games against one another before Syracuse joined the ACC. They met in the 1998 South Regional semis in St. Petersburg, where #2 Duke topped unranked SU by 13 PTS. Their other big coaching confrontation came in the 1989 ACC/Big East Challenge in Greensboro, with #1 SU topping #6 Duke by 2 PTS. Of course, now they regularly face each other as conference opponents.

He currently has the 2nd-most wins among active D-1 coaches (behind only Krzyzewski) and the most wins of a coach at a single school (just ahead of Dean Smith): where do you think that he ranks among the best coaches in history, and did he ever come close to leaving Syracuse? He is second in all-time victories on the court…but for the NCAA stripping him of more than 100 wins.  There was a Big 10 job he could have had in the late 1980s but he has never really been serious about leaving central New York. There was also a rumored NBA job but Boeheim has said there was nothing to that. The fact is that James Arthur Boeheim came here more than a half-century ago and has never really left. Boeheim will go down somewhere in college basketball’s coaching top-10: after all he is #2 on the all-time wins list. If he can win a 2nd national championship, he likely would be thought of by some as belonging in the top-5 with Wooden/Krzyzewski and then fill in the blank with 2 of Knight/Rupp/Smith/Pitino/Calhoun/etc. The jury is still out but Boeheim just coaches on, and on, and on.  While he will always have his critics, the back-to-back double-digit comebacks vs. Gonzaga and #1-seed Virginia speak to two things: how hard his players compete right to the end (despite a lack of depth) and Boeheim’s Hall of Fame feel for when (and for how long, considering that lack of depth) to apply the press.

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News, Notes, and Highlighted Games (Elite Eight): Sunday, March 27th

Welcome to the semifinals of this year’s ACC Tournament!!!

Both Villanova and Kansas had trouble getting it going offensively yesterday, which was sort of a surprise given how well both had looked throughout the tournament so far.  Nova ended up getting the win and knocking out the overall #1 seed in a game that came down to the final few possessions.  Oklahoma played one of their best games of the year, especially on the offensive glass, and ran away from Oregon to earn the other Final Four spot.

#10 SYRACUSE VS #1 VIRGINIA (Chicago IL, 6pm, est, TBS).  Syracuse’s path to the Elite Eight has involved knocking off Middle Tennessee and Gonzaga, both of which are teams that got much deeper into the tournament than many were expecting.  They have a very tall order today against a familiar conference foe in Virginia that’s seeking its first Final Four since 1984.  Both teams play very good defense, and when you factor in how familiar the two already are with each other then it could be a real rock fight.

#6 NOTRE DAME VS #1 NORTH CAROLINA (Philadelphia PA, TBS, 8:49pm, est).  Notre Dame had to sweat out Michigan a little bit in the round of 64, they then needed a shot in the final seconds to get past Stephen F Austin in the Round of 32, and their Sweet Sixteen win against Wisconsin came down to the final minute as well.  They are taking “Luck of the Irish” to a whole new level.  North Carolina has blasted past everyone they’ve faced so far.  But, the last time these two met Notre Dame was right in there.  Again, the familiarity the two have, and given how well Notre Dame played against them recently means that the Irish do have a chance.

CIT Semifinals (click on the link for both live streams)

NJIT AT COLUMBIA (6:00 PM, CBS Sports Network) – For the second straight season, NJIT has won their first 3 games in the CIT at home – their latest win was a 2nd half comeback victory against fellow UTR darling Texas-Arlington. The Highlanders need only travel across the Lincoln Tunnel this year to play at Columbia; the Lions are also coming off of a close win against Ball State in their quarterfinal game in the CIT last week. I don’t have confirmation of this, but this would likely be the first time a team from the Ivy League would play in the championship game of a postseason tournament should Columbia be able to win tonight.

UC IRVINE AT COASTAL CAROLINA (9:00 PM, CBS Sports Network) – The Anteaters have proven to be road warriors in their first two games in the CIT (as they got a bye in Round 2) – they won at North Dakota and also hit a game-winner against Louisiana-Lafayette to advance to the CIT semifinals. Coastal Carolina is the only team that will have hosted every game in the first 4 rounds of the CIT; they defeated Mercer and New Hampshire and survived a potential game-winner by Grand Canyon to make it to the semifinals along with Irvine.

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News, Notes and Sweet 16 Recap/Elite 8 Preview – Saturday, March 26

Last night was a banner night for the ACC – not only does it assure them of 4 teams advancing to the Elite 8, it also assures them of having 2 teams make the Final Four and one team in the national championship game. The first of the 4 teams to win last night was Virginia; they beat Iowa State 84-71 despite Georges Niang scoring a game-high 30 points for the Cyclones. The Hoos raced out to a 14-point lead at halftime; their smallest lead of the 2nd half was 7 points. Anthony Gill scored a team-high 23 points for Virginia.

They will be matched up with Syracuse; the Orange beat Gonzaga 63-60 despite trailing for much of this game. Michael Gbinije hit the go-ahead shot with 22 seconds left, and Syracuse was able to survive despite a late judgment call in which Trevor Cooney made a steal in the baseline corner but was ruled to have stepped out of bounds. The play was reviewed not to see if he had stepped out, but rather how much time Gonzaga would have to get off a game-winning shot. They failed to do so, and Syracuse iced the game with 2 free throws with under 2 seconds remaining.

Notre Dame and Wisconsin had a tight game throughout the evening, but the Irish scored the final 8 points of the game in a span of about 18 seconds and ended up beating Wisconsin 61-56. VJ Beachem had 19 points for the Irish; Demetrius Jackson also had 16 points for Notre Dame. They advanced to the Elite 8 for the 2nd consecutive year for the first time since the 1978 and 1979 NCAA Tournaments.

Their opponent will be North Carolina; the Tar Heels looked very much like the team that was expected to win the national title in preseason. They beat the Hoosiers 101-86 thanks to 21 points from Marcus Paige and 20 points from Brice Johnson. North Carolina also shot an astounding 11-for-20 behind the arc last night; they were 32-for-62 overall with only 9 turnovers on the night.

As for today:

(2)OKLAHOMA VS. (1)OREGON (6:09 PM, CBS) – The West Region is the first of 2 regional finals to be played tonight; both games feature the top 2 seeded teams in their respective regions. Oregon had relatively easy games against Holy Cross and Duke to get to this point; only Saint Joseph’s gave the Ducks a scare in round 2. Ironically, Oklahoma’s toughest games came in OKC against Cal State-Bakersfield and VCU; they had their easiest game on Thursday night against Texas A&M in Anaheim’s Honda Center. Oklahoma has the star power to go all the way, but Oregon will also be shooting for their first Final 4 in 77 years tonight.

(2)VILLANOVA VS. (1)KANSAS (8:49 PM, CBS) – The South Region in Louisville also had its top 2 seeds survive the first 3 rounds en route to tonight’s matchup. Both Kansas and Villanova have had early NCAA exits in recent years relative to the seeds they earned, but neither team has been seriously challenged in the first 3 rounds. Kansas had 3 easy wins against Austin Peay, UConn and Maryland; Villanova looked equally as impressive against UNC-Asheville, Iowa and Miami. Kansas will also be looking for revenge against a Villanova team that beat them 2 years ago in the Battle 4 Atlantis Championship; that game was the impetus for Villanova’s 3-year reign of terror in the newest incarnation of the Big East.

LATEST COACHING CAROUSEL MOVES:

Out – Brian Gregory from Georgia Tech

Staying Put – Mick Cronin will remain at Cincinnati; UNLV’s search for a head coach goes on.

In – Mike Dunleavy Sr. will be the new head coach at Tulane.

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NCAA Tournament and Under The Radar Postseason News, Notes and Recap – Friday, March 25

NCAA TOURNAMENT NEWS AND NOTES

-It seems like the more upsets we have in the early rounds, the more chalk we have in the later rounds.  That was definitely the case last night as all of the better seeded teams not only won, but won big.  Duke made Oregon sweat for a half, but Oregon opened it up before the game was over.  Same with Maryland, who was right in there with Kansas for the first half, but nowhere close by the end of the second half.  Villanova and downed Miami and Oklahoma got by Texas A&M without too much trouble at any point.  In fact, what was by far the best game of the night was NJIT’s CIT win over Texas Arlington as discussed below.

#4 IOWA STATE VS #1 VIRGINIA (Chicago IL, CBS 7:10pm, est).  Virginia got a bit of a scare from Butler, but held on to win after an incredible shooting performance and defensive adjustment in the second half.  Iowa State pretty much blew past both Iona and Little Rock to get here.  Virginia is one of the best and most frustrating defensive teams in the nation, so it will be interesting to see how Iowa State matches up.

#7 WISCONSIN VS #6 NOTRE DAME (Philadelphia PA, TBS, 7:27pm, est).  Both of these teams needed dramatic shots in the final seconds to advance past the Round of 32 with Wisconsin hitting a three at the buzzer to down Xavier, and Notre Dame hitting a shot in the final seconds to get past Stephen F Austin.  Wisconsin is a very tough defensive team, and that will likely give the Irish fits.  Wiscy has also won thirteen of their last fifteen and knocked off teams like Iowa, Michigan State, Maryland, Pittsburgh, and Xavier in that stretch, so although they’re a #7 seed they are a red hot #7 seed.

#11 GONZAGA VS #10 SYRACUSE (Chicago IL, CBS, 9:40pm, est).  Gonzaga is the only remaining team that would not have made the tournament had it not been for the automatic bid.  But, you can’t say they didn’t earn their way here.  In fact, speaking strictly of the NCAA Tournament, they’ve probably had the most impressive road after blowing out a red hot Seton Hall team that had just won the Big East Tournament, and then destroying Utah who was a #3 seed.  Syracuse blew past both Dayton and Middle Tennessee to get here.  These are the only two double digit seeds remaining, and one will advance to the Elite Eight.  Gonzaga has been clicking on offense, but Syracuse’s zone will not be fun to play against.

#5 INDIANA VS #1 NORTH CAROLINA (Philadelphia PA, TBS, 9:57pm, est).  North Carolina has looked like one of the most impressive teams in the nation since just before Championship Week.  Indiana has looked really good as well minus their B10 Tourney loss to Michigan.  The Hoosiers come in to this on an emotional high after knocking off a highly talented Kentucky team that they have a history of not liking.  UNC, on the other hand, blew past their first two opponents.  As good as the Hoosiers have looked, they’ll probably have to play better than they’ve played all season to knock off the Tarheels today.

 

UNDER THE RADAR

There was only one game played outside of the NCAA Tournament last night, but both NJIT and Texas-Arlington put on a memorable show in Newark last night. Despite being outrebounded 45-31 and being down by as many as 11 points in the 1st half, the Highlanders were able to mount a successful 2nd-half comeback and move on to the CIT semifinals. NJIT ended up shooting over 50 percent from the field in the 2nd half, and hitting 11 3-pointers helped lead the way to a 63-60 win for NJIT. The Highlanders will play at Columbia at 6:00 PM on Sunday night, and Texas-Arlington ends one of their better under-the-radar seasons in recent memory (included early-season wins at Ohio State and at Memphis).

There were a couple of notable goings-on as it related to coaching news at UTR schools. Tim Cluess signed an extension at Iona; his contract is now scheduled to run through the 2020-21 season. As of last night, Zach Spiker is now expected to become the next head coach at Drexel, and there is also a distinct possibility that former Mississippi State head coach Rick Stansbury could be on his way to Western Kentucky to take the top job. We at Hoops HD will continue to monitor the head coaching carousel throughout March and the offseason, both above and below the radar.

EDIT: 11:15 AM

Multiple outlets are now reporting that Jerod Haase is expected to take the Stanford job; Haase has led UAB to the 2015 NCAA Tournament (including an upset of 3rd-seeded Iowa State) and the NIT this season, including a regular-season championship in C-USA in 2016 and the 2015 C-USA tournament championship.

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