Under the Radar Game of the Day: Monmouth at Canisius, 7:00 PM Eastern, espn3
For our most recent Under the Radar video podcast, which includes a length discussion of the Monmouth Hawks, CLICK HERE.
Daniel Pillari. Louie Pillari. Tyler Robinson. Greg Noack. Four players that have combined for under four minutes of game time so far this season (and all of the from Daniel and Tyler). And yet these four kids have made national headlines for the Monmouth Hawks. They are the “Monmouth Bench”. If you have not seen them yet, you have probably been living under a rock. But just in case you haven’t, here it is:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dkv2XI6n9qs
It is fun. It is entertaining. And here at HOOPS HD we fully support and endorse anything that makes the GAME even more FUN!!
By the way, Monmouth has been a pretty darn good team on the court as well. Entering tonight’s game, the Hawks are 4-2 with wins away from home over UCLA, USC and Notre Dame, three of the biggest name brands in college sports. And oh yeah, they did something at UCLA (namely winning) that a certain program named Kentucky could not even do! The Hawks have two losses, neither of which was awful by any means (at USC — a loss they have already revenged and a neutral court loss to a very good Dayton team). Five non-conference games still remain, including a trip to Georgetown and their lone early season home game (December 13 vs Wagner, tickets still available!). However, before the Hawks get to those games, they will be spending this weekend in Buffalo, New York for a pair of early season conference games, at Canisius tonight and at Niagara on Sunday.
The Canisius Golden Griffins enter play tonight with a 2-3 record, coming off of an overtime loss last weekend over Western New York Big Four rival Buffalo. They will present a balanced scoring attack to the Hawks, as five players were in double figures in scoring last time out, led by Kassius Robertson’s 43 points and Phil Valenti’s double-double. The Griffins finished 11-9 in MAAC play last season and would like to servce notice to the conference that they intend to move up in the standings this year. They could certainly do so with a victory in tonight’s game.
On the court, Monmouth has been led by one of the most exciting payers this season, 5-8 Justin Robinson. Robinson may be one of the smallest players every time he takes the court, but that hasn’t slowed him down one bit. He has scored at least 22 points in every game since the opener, and amazingly added in 7 rebounds in the USC victory last time out. And Robinson is not alone, as the teams does have size and talent, including the likes of Deon Jones, Zac Tillman and Micah Seaborn. All of the pieces for a fun and exciting season are certainly here. And when you add in the best non-playing bench in college hoops, we can very easily call Monmouth thee most entertaining story to come out of the MAAC in quite some time. Now it is up to the team to make certain that they can turn this excitement into wins and the eventual goal of an NCAA Tournament berth. Oh…and just how much fun would the Monmouth Bench guys be in March Madness?
OTHER GAMES OF NOTE
-KANSAS STATE AT GEORGIA. K State has just one loss, but I think their record is more impressive than their team. If they win tonight I’ll change my mind about them, though. Georgia is a team that I thought would be good, and they still might be, but like last year they had a sluggish November and have a lot of work to do.
-PITTSBURGH VS DUQUESNE. The City Game! This is a very one sided rivalry, but the atmosphere for this is always more venomous than what most outsiders probably realize. Duquesne is actually decent this year at 6-1, and a win in this game would be their biggest statement win since….I can’t even remember!
-ARKANSAS AT WAKE FOREST. I like this Wake team. They’ve done some good things on paper already and can improve to 6-2 tonight.
-SAINT JOSEPH’S AT COLUMBIA. If Joe’s is gonna show us anything this year, this is the kind of game they’re expected to win.
-ALABAMA AT SOUTHERN MISS. If there is any such thing as a “Road Buy Game” then that’s what this practically is.
-NORTHERN ILLINOIS AT MISSOURI. Northern Illinois is unbeaten, and Missouri has really struggled this year. Could be interesting.
-OREGON AT UNLV. I wasn’t expecting much from UNLV this year, but as of now they’re 6-1 with some impressive wins and will probably be the toughest test for an unbeaten Oregon team so far, since this is the first “sort of” road game for the Ducks (it is being played in Vegas, but at the MGM Grand).
BUY GAMES
-Saint Francis University @ Maryland
-Jackson State @ Louisiana Tech
-Samford @ Texas
Throwback Thursday: 1986 NCAA Tournament
Click here for David Griggs’ write up of today’s slate of basketball
Also click here for Jon Teitel’s interview with Mel Nowell regarding his teammate John Havlicek
We continue looking at the evolution of the NCAA Tournament – one of our colleagues has suggested looking at the 1986 NCAA Tournament. And I absolutely agree – this was the 2nd year of the field including 64 teams. This was also the first season that the NCAA had a uniform 45-second shot clock; some conferences had experimental rules in prior seasons that would include a shot clock and/or the 3-point line (which did become official in all NCAA competition for the following season). In fact, on many of CBS’s telecasts in the mid-80s, they would put a disclaimer on the TV screen if the shot clock was not used in the game – click here for an example (this links to a DePaul-Notre Dame game in 1984).
The 1985-86 season was also noteworthy for several programs in the NCAA. For the Duke Blue Devils, this marked the first season under Mike Krzyzewski where Duke was a national power. For Kentucky, they said adios to the Joe B. Hall regime and introduced Eddie Sutton as their head coach. For the Indiana Hoosiers, their season would be chronicled by John Feinstein in his best-selling book A Season On the Brink (whose name will be explained later). The Hoosiers had a rare losing season in conference play the year before; they would come back and wind up finishing 2nd in the Big 10 behind eventual conference champion Michigan.
Since there would now be 32 first-round games scheduled, ESPN would have TV coverage of those games and would “whip around” to competitive games as they took place. One of the first stunners that took place would be Arkansas-Little Rock’s upset of Notre Dame in the first round in Minneapolis. Syracuse’s region lent itself to even more upsets; Cleveland State was a relative newcomer to the NCAA Tournament and immediately made a splash with their full-court press. With a team featuring Eric Mudd and Mouse McFadden, the Vikings would knock Indiana back to the brink (click here for NCAA On Demand’s coverage) and then defeat Saint Joseph’s to advance to the Sweet 16. Even more remarkable was the U.S. Naval Academy; the 7th-seeded Midshipmen featured Doug Wojcik and the future Admiral in David Robinson. The Middies beat Tulsa in their first-round game before scoring a decisive win against the hometown Orangemen. Navy would defeat Cleveland State in the Sweet 16 before falling to Duke in the Elite 8 amid chants of “Abandon Ship” from the Duke fans.
In the Southeast Regional, Kentucky earned the top seed and would eventually accomplish an NCAA first in the Sweet 16 by defeating Alabama for the 4th time in the season. (Cincinnati would duplicate the feat in 1992 with 4 wins over Memphis State). However, the Wildcats would not advance to the Final 4 because of the enigmatic Louisiana State Tigers. 11th-seeded LSU would actually win their 1st and 2nd-round games on campus against Purdue and Memphis State, respectively. Turnabout was fair play in the Sweet 16 since LSU would have to play Georgia Tech in Atlanta (at the Omni but not on Tech’s Thrillerdome). Georgia Tech entered the season with high expectations and a roster featuring John Salley and Mark Price, but were not able to overcome the Tigers. After defeating Kentucky in the regional final, the Tigers completed the rare feat of defeating the #1, #2 and #3 seeds in the same regional.
The Midwest region did not have as many upsets beyond Little Rock’s win over Notre Dame, but the Jayhawks had a relatively easy path while not facing a team seeded higher than 5th. Their wins over Michigan State and NC State came in front of a hometown crowd in Kansas City; there they would punch their ticket to the Final 4 in Dallas. In the West region, another SEC team would pull off a Cinderella run to help disrupt the region. Auburn would stun top-seeded St. John’s in the 2nd round in Long Beach, California; they would also beat UNLV before falling to the Louisville Cardinals in the Elite 8. Louisville advanced to the Final 4 for the 4th time in the 1980s; no other team was able to match that feat during that decade.
When the Final 4 convened in Dallas, Louisville (headed by Milt Wagner and Pervis “Never Nervous” Ellison) would mark the midnight hour in LSU’s Cinderella season. The other game between Duke and Kansas was more competitive. It was also a rematch of the teams’ earlier meeting in the 1985 Preseason NIT. With Danny Manning in foul trouble for the Jayhawks, Duke was able to capitalize and advance to the national title game for the 3rd time. However, Krzyzewski would lament years later about not being able to use his bench more during the Kansas game. They were not quite as fresh down the stretch as Louisville would be on Monday night; the Cards would finish the Devils 72-69 to claim their 2nd national title in program history. Pervis Ellison would be named Most Outstanding Player.
Click here to see the official 1986 Final Four video.