The Confidential

The ACC Sports Blog

Archive for the category “Basketball”

Confidential Bracket: Update 3/22/13

Who is in the running for the prize?  With a long way to go (the rationalization of a team at the bottom), here is the top 25:

1
Florida State
28 Kansas 12 40
2
Rebecca’s Dandy Bracket
26 Duke 12 38
2
WinnersBracket
26 Louisville 12 38
4
LenVILLE
28 Louisville 8 36
5
TheEssentialsOfCool.com
24 Louisville 8 32
5
Boeheimian Rhapsody
24 Syracuse 8 32
7
Goop’s Bracket
22 Miami (FL) 8 30
7
BracketBuster.
22 Kansas 8 30
9
Cards 80 86 13?
24 Louisville 4 28
9
KC’s Bracket
24 Louisville 4 28
9
Bye Bye Big East
24 Georgetown 4 28
9
Da Cuseman Cometh
24 Syracuse 4 28
9
Maverick
24 Louisville 4 28
14
Cuse Stormin the ACC
22 Syracuse 4 26
14
Boeheims possible farewell
22 Syracuse 4 26
16
win prizes
20 Gonzaga 4 24
17
My Legit Bracket
22 Louisville 0 22
17
Will Bonn’s Bracket
18 Indiana 4 22
17
Allen’s Bracket
22 Louisville 0 22
17
QBcuse
22 Louisville 0 22
17
Otto the Great and Powerful
22 Louisville 0 22
22
mikemab wolf
20 Ohio St. 0 20
22
Mr. Tar Heel
16 Saint Louis 4 20
22
*Commander Caffrey
20 Indiana 0 20
25
BeerThirty
18 Miami (FL) 0 18

And Down Goes Pitt…

Once upon a time, Pitt’s football team was the sole source of disappointment.  Year after year, the decent recruits at Pitt have failed to live up to the hype.  They have more trips to Birmingham than the BCS.  But now the basketball team is joining the football team in mediocrity.  This year, Pitt was insulted (by some) to have received “only” an 8-seed, and then went out and lost by 18 to the 9th-seeded Wichita St. Shockers.

All you need to do is go here to read the comments from the Pitt fans.  They seem to be losing some faith in Jamie Dixon.  Of course, they should also recognize that Syracuse fans had lost faith in Jim Boeheim after 10 seasons too.  And even in the 1990s, Syracuse fans questioned whether Boeheim could win a national title.  For Dixon, he needs to just get the Panthers to a Final Four first.

But the 2012-2013 season was not about that.  From a Big Dance standpoint, losing to Wichita State is not the end of the world.  It is highly disappointing, however, to lose by 18.  So it is understandable if Panthers fans are frustrated.  Dixon is getting the recruits… like the football team, those recruits need to start meeting their potential.

 

2012-13: Year of the Louisville Cardinals

#L1C4(Credits: www.gocards.com)

#L1C4
(Credits: http://www.gocards.com)

As I sit and look at the bracket and ponder about how the Louisville Cardinals gracefully landed in the top spot, many thoughts about my alma mater come to mind.  The superstitious person in me doesn’t want to speak about the excitement I feel as we begin the future and the tournament as the favorite.  Saying these things aloud could have detrimental effects.  Maybe.

Please be advised that the following article is not me speaking.  Rather, I share my thoughts out of respect for the team and conscious of my part in not producing a disaster.

[So, Louisville won a share of the Big East regular season title and then went on to win the conference tournament.  Wow. In its last year as currently aligned, the Big East from 2005 to 2013 will go down in history as arguably the toughest conference in the country’s collegiate basketball scene.  The pride I feel as a graduate of the university is palpable to anyone who encounters me – notwithstanding church events and tennis matches as a coach at a local high school, I have been wearing nothing but Cardinal gear for the past year.

2012 was a soaring year for Cardinal athletics.  From the numerous Big East championships won across the program to keeping Charlie Strong as head coach of football to being invited to the ACC to winning the Sugar Bowl in striking fashion to having a fabulous season in basketball, I’m not sure what else I could have asked for as a fan.  Sure, playing for a national championship in football would have been nice, but I’m confident that rosy scenario will someday arise and I don’t believe any fan could possibly be disappointed with Charlie Strong & Co.’s success thus far.

And let’s not forget about academics.  When West Virginia was chosen to join the Big 12, I think it’s fair to say the decision was based solely on the Mountaineers’ earned status as a football powerhouse.  In contrast, UofL’s unanimous selection as a future member of the Atlantic Coast Conference was purely a decision made with all facets of the university’s attributes in mind.  Everyone knows our athletic programs and facilities are top notch, but keep in mind that the ACC, much like the Big Ten, would not allow any school to enter its ranks unless it saw something tangible and obvious in the academic reputation of the institution.

When Florida State was added to their ranks, detractors complained that FSU’s academics were not strong enough to warrant admission.  This sentiment has been repeated about UofL and, of course, I take offense to it.  We have a Top 100 law school, a respected medical school always pushing the envelope, a business school which receives accolades on a yearly basis and an undergraduate program dedicated to a vast plethora of academic programs.  The university’s footprint is seen throughout the commonwealth and we are well represented across the nation in business, research and academia.

What the ACC saw in Florida State is akin to what it now sees in UofL – the trajectory of the university’s academics are on the rise and rising fast.  While not at the AAU level (besides, the AAU’s wheels of adding member universities is arguably much slower than those of the judicial system), Louisville will soon become associated with consortiums and programs alongside institutions like Duke University and UNC Chapel Hill and Wake Forest University and the University of Virginia.  That association and willingness to share academic success and research opportunities with all ACC members partially strengthened FSU’s reputation and no doubt Dr. James Ramsey kept his university eye on the ACC for this reason.

There is a reason there were all kinds of rumors and reports that we had an invite “in hand” to the Big 12 but were not acting on it.  It’s one thing to say that a source believes something might happen, but to say that an invite was already extended and the ball was in our court is a whole ‘nother beast.  Personally, I believe Dr. Ramsey and athletic director Tom Jurich had agreed early on that the ACC would be the better body to associate with,  and with time and continued diligence on our part, that invite would come.

But back to the major event ahead of us.  The NCAA tournament is perhaps the most widely known event in America, save the Super Bowl and the Kentucky Derby.  We have already proved that our football program was indeed worthy of the ACC’s glance and we have shown that our basketball legacy is strong enough to be included with the likes of Duke and North Carolina.  However, on the biggest stage in America in the same timeframe as our invite to our soon-to-be new conference, winning the tourney will blow the roof off every building in Louisville.  It’s that big of a situation here in Kentucky.

Nothing else matters right now.  The banter with Kentucky fans, the arguments from detractors, the long-positioned monkey of Big East football on our backs, the unspoken title of Little Brother, the association with “poor and backward” Appalachia – none of it matters.  Of course, those things have never really mattered to many of us living in the Bluegrass State, but I think it’s safe to say nothing else has mattered less that those do right now.

The Road to the Final Four should be tread with a determination unlike any other, and I know Rick Pitino, Peyton Siva, Gorgui Dieng, Chane Behanan, Russ Smith, Wayne Blackshear, Stephan Van Treese, Kevin Ware, Luke Hancock, Montezl Harrell and everyone associated with basketball team has it in them.  Every indicator points to the events of the 2012-13 season as the Year of the Cardinals.

This has been a long time in the making, my friends.  Perhaps I am more biased than the next guy, but living in the City of Louisville and seeing and experience all it has to offer makes me fully believe we are an idea whose time has finally come and will continue to come to many around the country.

Go get ‘em Cards.  Represent your fine university, represent your big city and represent your upstanding identities.  Win or lose, this is a special time in Louisville.  Good things come to those who wait, but success comes quicker to those who wait and plan and execute.  This. Is. Our. Year.]

#L1C4

The Confidential Bracket Contest: Only Minutes Left…

Again, we will be holding a contest for friends of the Confidential.  That means YOU, plus anyone else that you want to invite.  The prize will be $25 via PayPal.  If interested, we will be using Yahoo:

Group ID#: 25957
Password: acc

Here is the link: http://y.ahoo.it/dHZr68Lp

Go ahead and join today…

The Confidential.

Scandal-Cuse

Syracuse joins the ACC in a few months.  Nevertheless, it has been one scandal after another since Syracuse and Pitt announced that they were joining the ACC.  Might as well just call the Orange ScandalCuse at this point.

First, the current scandal.  Giving credit to a fellow blogger, instead of the hit-driven, quasi-media type that broke the “story,” Troy Nunes is an Absolute Magician” had this to say:

Syracuse University basketball has been under NCAA investigation for a period of “years,” a source with knowledge of the case told CBSSports.com.

That source said the school has received a letter of preliminary inquiry from the NCAA.

The specific nature of the alleged violations was not disclosed by the source but the transgressions were described as both major and wide-ranging in nature. The investigation also encompasses football but is believed to primarily involve basketball. Syracuse has been penalized only once by the NCAA in a major case according to the association’s legislative database. That was in 1992 in a case that focused on extra benefits in the basketball program.

Later blog entries on the site revealed a calmer analysis.  And Jim Boeheim went the calm route, as well, eschewing the opportunity to spew venom.  In any event, it is yet another negative news story regarding Syracuse.

Second, just look at the recent timeline of negative news stories here:

  • September 19, 2011: Syracuse and Pitt announce that they are leaving the Big East for the ACC.
  • November 17, 2012: The Bernie Fine scandal breaks.
  • January 21, 2012: Fab Melo suspended for unknown reasons.
  • March 13, 2012: Fab Melo suspended again, misses NCAA Tournament
  • January 15, 2013: James Southerland suspended
  • March 20, 2013: Today’s news.

Really, it is understandable if Syracuse fans feel a bit reluctant to reach for a newspaper link to a news story.  Lately, despite having uber-competitive teams and the Bernie Fine scandal being seriously overblown, the news has been mostly negative.  Especially in March, which also includes the March 15, 2010, injury to Arinze Onuaku.  Other schools have had similar injuries, suspensions, scandals, and bad news… but all of it in a three-year span?

So, yeah, let’s just call it ScandalCuse from now on.  And give a Syracuse fan a hug.  It is needed.

 

The Confidential Bracket Contest: Only 15 Hours Left…

Again, we will be holding a contest for friends of the Confidential.  That means YOU, plus anyone else that you want to invite.  The prize will be $25 via PayPal.  If interested, we will be using Yahoo:

Group ID#: 25957
Password: acc

Here is the link: http://y.ahoo.it/dHZr68Lp

Go ahead and join today…

The Confidential.

One Recommended NCAA Tournament Change

The Confidential thinks that one particular NCAA Tournament change is in order.  This one is going to be controversial, but the Confidential believes that the reigning national champion should get an automatic invite to the Big Dance, so long as they meet the minimum criteria of, say, 18 wins.

This year, Kentucky went 21-11 overall and 12-6 in conference, albeit in the admittedly weak SEC.  For that, they were rewarded with a trip to the NIT.  Really?  Would it have been THAT awful to slap an 11 seed on the Wildcats?  Give someone a chance to upset the reigning champion?  This is a no-brainer to the Confidential.  With 68 teams, many of whom are mediocre and/or only there based on “automatic” bids, there is plenty of room for one more automatic bid.  The Earth will stay on its axis–just be a bit more fun.  Let’s see someone dethrone the prior champ, regardless of how easy or hard it is to do.

The cons are obvious, but not without flaws.

Con #1.  Only the best 68 teams should be in the tournament.

Bull. Crap.  Bullcrap.  Liberty is 15-20 and validly in the tournament.  And that rule should not change either.  If nobody from Liberty’s conference (probably should have looked that up) can beat Liberty in its tournament, nobody else deserves the spot.  Might as well be Liberty.  It’s what makes March madness an event.  But if Liberty is OK, then why not Kentucky?  Who is more likely to make a run?  Let’s not pretend that this is exclusively about only the top teams participating.

Con #2.  OK, if you don’t win your tournament, then you must be one of the best at-large teams.

Now we are really splitting hairs here aren’t we?  To include Kentucky would be to exclude Boise State.  Is everyone 100% sure that Kentucky is worse than Boise State.  This is like deciding between two 6-6 football teams.  Let’s give the nod to the team that will juice up the tournament the most.  Moreover, while we all love the underdog story (at least until it reached the point where you feel weird picking Butler to lose and/or a 5 seed to win), we love watching the elite teams lose even more.  Admit it… which interests you more… Lehigh winning or Duke losing?  Most people would take the latter.  It’s as much about schadenfreude as it is rooting for the underdog.  C’mon, let’s see a Kentucky cheerleader cry!

Con #3.  Why are we screwing over the midmajors?

Who is screwing over a midmajor?  Virginia and Maryland were among the teams left out of the Big Dance.  The NIT is full of major conference schools.  More likely than not, allowing a national champion to enter the bracket would exclude a team that was around .500 in a major conference.  This is essentially trading a .500 team that is interesting for a .500 team that is not.  Let someone enjoy beating Kentucky rather than sigh after beating some other middle of the pack big conference mediocrity.

Con #4.  You just like Kentucky, don’t you?

Heck no.  The opposite.  You cannot let hate cloud your judgment.  This is about seeing Kentucky be both part of the Big Dance and losing.  Let’s see who gets to take down the former Goliath.  That is a lot more exciting than some other 12 seed.  And it gives the tournament just that much more excitement.

Con #5.  This Kentucky team looks nothing like last year’s team, so why bother?

Well, we are all just rooting for jerseys anyway.  Does it matter than 5 guys left and were replaced with 5 new guys?  In theory.  But it is still Kentucky’s championship to lose until someone beats them.  At least it could be.  That would be neat.

Con #6.  Who cares, how often could this possibly happen?

According to this article, only 5 times in the past 25 or so years.  But three of those have been since 2008.  This is a new trend.  It will likely happen more and more as the NBA continues to draft kids with potential instead of men with a flaw here or there.  And if it truly is are, what is the problem?  If anything, rarity is a benefit to the change.  After all, it would not be that much of a burden to make the switch.

Con #7.  Did you see that Kentucky just lost to Robert Morris?  There goes that theory. 

Hardly.  The fun is (a) having Kentucky rally around its championship and play better than they have all season; and (b) giving some other team the thrill of eliminating them.  Every year, we see good teams “give up” at NIT time.  It is perplexing, but the disappointment of not being in the Big Dance can lead to some surprises.  So it does not matter than Kentucky lost.  Except that those kids lost out on a chance to play more and develop character.  Of course, it also shows how hard it is to play a true road game.  For those who defend neutral site games, there is nothing like playing in a small, packed gym.  Teams better than Kentucky might have wilted under that pressure.

Finally, this is NOT about this Kentucky team, but about the principle.  Let the champion have an automatic bid.

What say you?  Is there a better reason to include the prior year’s champ?  Disagree vehemently?  Let us know…

The Confidential Bracket Contest: Deadline Looming!

Again, we will be holding a contest for friends of the Confidential.  That means YOU, plus anyone else that you want to invite.  The prize will be $25 via PayPal.  If interested, we will be using Yahoo:

Group ID#: 25957
Password: acc

Here is the link: http://y.ahoo.it/dHZr68Lp

Go ahead and join today…

The Confidential.

The Confidential Bracket Contest: 2 More Days to Enter

Again, we will be holding a contest for friends of the Confidential.  That means YOU, plus anyone else that you want to invite.  The prize will be $25 via PayPal.  If interested, we will be using Yahoo:

Group ID#: 25957
Password: acc

Here is the link: http://y.ahoo.it/dHZr68Lp

Go ahead and join today…

The Confidential.

The ACC & The Postseason

While the Confidential continues to invite fans and friends to join its bracket contest, what about the ACC teams themselves?  Well, numerous ACC teams are still dancing.

From a mini-dance standpoint, Virginia and Maryland did not make it to the NCAA tournament, but both were eagerly invited to the N.I.T.  Last year’s ACC champion, Florida State, stumbled this year.  But they still landed a #4 seed in the NIT and will host Louisiana Tech tonight.   Maryland was given a #2 seed and hosts Niagara tonight.  Virginia earned a #1 seed and will be hosting Norfolk State tonight.  You may recall Norfolk State as a mainstay on the Rutgers’ football schedule.

But everyone is interested in the Big Dance.  How about Louisville?  Set to join in 2014, everyone knows by now that the Cardinals are the #1 overall seed.  Many prognosticators are prognosticating that Louisville will win it all.  Giant leap of faith there.  But it is hard to disagree with that pick.  Syracuse, Pitt, and Notre Dame will be playing ACC games in the fall.  But all three are dancing, receiving #4, #8, and #7 seeds, respectively.  Pitt may have been screwed with its seed, but it can beat Gonzaga.  Will they?  We’ll see.  Syracuse also got sent to San Jose to play West Coast teams.  But they are all dancing.

The ACC is further represented by Tobacco Road, which placed Duke, North Carolina, and North Carolina State as #2, #8, and #8 seeds.  Those seeds seem fair.  Miami finishes out the ACC teams with a #2 seed in the East.  While a #2 seed is argued by some as unfair or disrespectful, it seems within the realm of appropriate.  Remember, the Committee can adjust seeds by one or two places to keep the conferences sorted out and prevent rematches.

In any event, there are eleven ACC teams left standing.  This time of year, rivalries are set aside and we can all root for our conference mates…at least until they face each other.  So good luck to all ACC teams… may your March Madness continue as long as possible…

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