Tar Heel Panic-o-Meter Level- MODERATE
It’s been almost a month since the Confidential looked at the current Tar Heel basketball team and not a lot has changed-
We still have no idea who this team is, or what they’re capable of.
It’s been almost a month since the Confidential looked at the current Tar Heel basketball team and not a lot has changed-
We still have no idea who this team is, or what they’re capable of.
Just like football, some or all of the Confidential correspondents gather to vote on the top 10 in the ACC (including Louisville). For the first poll of the year, the votes are scattered. As they should be. We’ll save the analysis for some future weeks. Here is the Week 1 Top 10:
Amazingly, another college basketball season is upon us. This year, the ACC is joined by Syracuse, Pittsburgh, and Notre Dame. Next year, Louisville replaces Maryland. So we have 16 teams to rank! And here is how they stack up:
So it is now early August, and we are in a season that I have fully enjoyed for years…the Preseason Preview Magazine Season.
I know, this is a blog, on the World Wide Web, we don’t use books anymore. Heck, there was even an article somewhere about the last big computer magazine going out of paper-and-ink recently; print is a dying medium, right?
Not yet. Bookstores may come and go, but last I checked the magazine rack at Wal-Mart and my local grocery store still had plenty of offerings, most of which I care little for. But around the end of June comes the appearance of periodicals devoted to football, like the first sign of a new season.
I am addicted to these mags. Each offers a different perspective and more importantly, a different view of what is to come in the 2013-14 season. So once a payday I usually pick one up, two if it has been a good week. College and pro, though the NCAA issues interest me slightly more if only because there are so many teams and, of course, because I can get info about the ACC.
So here is a quick look at my favorites no particular order…
ACC Sports Journal, Fall Edition…website, ACCsports.com
David Glenn is the editor of what used to be called the Poop Sheet, and I am late to the party here as I just started reading it this year. They do an excellent job covering “our” conference and this is what they are thinking this year:
Clemson will win the Atlantic and Miami the Coastal. Not going to break it down much more as I would like you to go out and buy this thing or order it online. But I will divulge the layout…this year there are 4 pages devoted to each ACC team, packed with the usual info: head coach with record, team results since 2003, the new schedule, and lineups. The articles are based on seven questions each team must answer in the new year, and there is even a look at the 2010 recruits for each team and how they are faring now. In addition to the 14 teams playing in the conference there is an identical Notre Dame section. Louisville is not yet included as they have not yet escaped the American.
As a bonus, the Journal covers ACC basketball as well, though the articles are condensed since it is time for football. There’s a hoops recruiting section as well. And on the last page is an article by David Teel of the Newport News Daily Press about the future of the ACC that is a fascinating read.
Sporting News College Football…website: Sportingnews.com
Until 2008 there was a magazine called Street and Smith’s that was my favorite for a long time. Back then S and S merged with the Sporting News preseason mag and decided to keep the SN name, though I felt that Street and Smith’s had just as much name recognition and I do miss leafing through both of them this time of year.
The focus here is more national, though none of the “power conferences” get short shrift. Alabama is their No. 1 (yawn) and Stanford comes in at two. Clemson is ranked ninth followed immediately by Notre Dame and Louisville, in a sort of ACC/almost-ACC/future ACC trifecta. Each team gets one page of coverage but they pack in five-year results, projected starters, recruit ratings, the 2013 schedule, Fast Facts box (coach, coordinators, stadium, tix, etc), impact player and the main article which breaks the team down by Offense, Defense/Special Teams, and the Bottom Line.
Each of the power conferences gets a two page intro as well with such features as All-Conference picks by position, teams that are ascending/descending and of course, predicted order of finish. Here again Clemson and Miami get the love as division winners.
So, SN offers a lot of ACC news in addition to a look at everybody else, and they really go beyond with a look at each FCS conference, NCAA Division 2 and 3 and an NAIA preview. Plus they are published right down the road from me in Charlotte, NC, so you can’t go wrong. Trust me.
Phil Steele’s 2013 College Football Preview…website: philsteele.com
Until a couple of seasons ago I would pass this one up, thinking this guy was just a tout who would regale me with thousands of reasons to call his hotline and NEVER LOSE AGAIN!!! Not being a betting man, this interested me not at all.
I couldn’t have been more wrong. While the magazine does list results against the spread, it is really an attempt to tell us what is going to happen before it happens. Phil Steele is a guy who doesn’t want anyone telling him what team is best, but instead wants to decide based on his own mathematical formulas. He uses nine sets of power ratings he designed himself to determine his final rating, and if you look on page 326 (out of 352!) you will find an article detailing his accuracy. Although I disagree that having the best average over the last 15 years equals a 15-year winning streak as the article posits, Phil’s record is nonetheless very impressive.
Now I look eagerly for the appearance of this one. Get this- every FBS school is given two pages in PSCFP. And in these two pages is a treasure trove of information, for every one of the schools, from Air Force to Wyoming and all points in between.
Two pages, you say? Is that all? Hey, he uses very small print. Here are some of the features crammed into the team pages:
Position Outlook divided into QBs, RBs, Receivers, O-Line, D-Line, LBs, DBs, Special Teams, and Coaches. Then there’s Phil’s Forecast, which updates team history in some detail and ends with Phil’s prediction for 2013.
2013 Projected Starting Lineup – Packed with info on each player with lots of abbreviations so that pertinent stats are included
Also on Roster – The guys nobody else bothers to list
That’s just the first team page. The facing one has the schedule with room for you to write in scores if you like, plus a little info about each matchup; returning starters and returning lettermen; head coach’s record broken down more ways than I can list here; stadium info; 2012 stat leaders; signees; last 5 bowl results with all-time bowl record; every score from the last five seasons and more.
This is truly THE College football preview. If you are only going to buy one, buy this one. All it will cost you is 9.99.
So there you have it. There are other good previews out there, Lindy’s and Athlon’s to name a couple, so you may have a different favorite. But I strongly encourage you to treat yourself to at least one, whether you are a fellow ACC fan or just a football maniac. You’ll be glad you did.
Yesterday, we shared our opinions regarding the Mount Rushmore of ACC Basketball Coaches. Today, it is your turn. Who would YOU put in the 4th spot?
Around halfway through the season last year UNC coach Roy Williams realized that his team was at their best when they went small. He plugged shooting guard P.J. Hairston into the starting lineup and played with only one big in James Michael Mcadoo. UNC went on to string off several impressive victories before making a deep run in the ACC tournament.
Matt Jones is a 6-foot-4, 180 pound high school senior that will be playing for the Duke Blue Devils this coming year. He is a shooting guard with an emphasis on the word shooting. He should be contributing immediately at Duke. Jones is ranked number thirty-six on the ESPN top 100 recruiting list and played in the McDonalds All American game.
July 1st brings in a new era for the ACC as Syracuse, Pittsburgh and Notre Dame officially join the conference. It also is the dawning of a new conference, the American Athletic Conference. I hope Commissioner Aresco pardons Louisville fans for not greeting this day with applause and cheers. What we will relish is one final year with two old rivals in Cincinnati and Memphis.
Last week I took a look into the Louisville Cardinals future, their 2014 football recruiting class. Over the course of last week it has changed as the Cards received seven commitments in five days, it was truly a busy week. The week started with the news that Detrick Dukes switched his commitment to his home state Georgia Bulldogs but this bad news was short lived as the new commitments began to trickle in. Read more…
Former N.C. State forward C.J. Leslie measured 6’8.5″ (in shoes), 198 lbs with a 7’1.5″ wingspan at the 2012 Amare Stoudemire Skills Academy. Now he’ll be calling Stoudemire a teammate. The New York Knicks reached a deal with the undrafted free agent. Now it will be up to New York to tap into the potential of an explosive athlete who was projected to be a first round draft pick coming into what would be his final season playing for the Wolfpack.
The 2013 NBA draft is complete. There were some surprises. There were some disappointments. But what is done is done. Representatives of the various ACC schools did quite well in the draft.