News Archive on Louisville University

Big East Basketball Displays Its Dominance

Saturday, March 13th, 2010

If you are a college basketball fan and haven’t tuned in for this year’s Big East tournament, its time to stop calling yourself a college basketball fan.  After four days and fourteen games, West Virginia and Georgetown will square off this evening for the Big East tourney crown and the automatic bid to the NCAA.  It wraps up perhaps the most highly competitive league championship tournament in NCAA history.

Greg Monroe Leads 8th-Seeded Georgetown To The Big East Championship Game

Let’s take a moment to review some of the highlights of the tournament:

  • Saint Johns blowing Connecticut off the floor to register the first upset of the tournament, 73-51, and ensuring that Connecticut will not be dancing this March.
  • Seton Hall blowing a 29 point second half lead with 13:36 left to Providence and escaping with an unbelievable 109-106 victory in a matchup of amazing offensive basketball.
  • Cincinnati nailing its free throws with 1.8 seconds left to seal a 69-68 victory over Rutgers.
  • Marquette squeaking by Saint Johns 57-55 in a back and forth second-half brawl.
  • Cincinnati outrebounding Louisville 54-33 (with 28 offensive boards) to stave off and register a 69-66 upset
  • Georgetown shocking top-seeded Syracuse 91-84 as Syracuse watched it’s big man Arinze Onuaku carried off the floor due to a knee injury.
  • Marquette upsetting Villanova 80-76 with some late scoring success, dropping in 50 points in the second half.
  • Notre Dame upsetting Pittsburgh 50-45, making its free throws down the stretch to pull out the victory.
  • West Virginia hitting a three pointer at the buzzer to beat Cincinnati 54-51  after an unbelievable turnover that gave the Mountaineers the one extra opportunity for the win.
  • Georgetown upsetting and demolishing Marquette 80-57.
  • West Virgina winning another last minute heartstopper over Notre Dame 53-51.

All this and they still didn’t play the championship game yet.  It almost makes you feel bad for the kids on Georgetown and West Virginia as it is almost impossible for tonight’s game to live up to what has transpired in the tournament thus far.

The results of the Big East tournament this weekend are bound to lead to much controversy when the NCAA Tournament Selection Committee announces the brackets Sunday night.  There are those that will complain that the Big East is getting too many spots.  There are others that will disagree and say the Big East is being not being represented enough.

After watching this tournament, I have to side with the latter part of the argument.  It is expected that the Big East will likely send just 8 of its teams to the NCAA tournament this year.  Given the quality of basketball displayed in Madison Square Garden this week, it is a gross injustice that at-large bids will be granted to bubble teams from other major conferences that simply aren’t deserving.

Let’s take at the list of teams that are on the bubble and will likely be dancing in March:

  • Illinois
  • Minnesota
  • Washington
  • Arizona State
  • Ole Miss
  • Virgina Tech
  • Georgia Tech

If any of these teams played in the Big East, they’d likely be the 12th seed or lower in the conference.   Most would make the case that the Big East #12 team, Connecticut would handily defeat this group of bubble teams on a consistent basis.  These bubble teams will get the nod over South Florida, Seton Hall and Cincinnati simply because they performed better in drastically weaker leagues.

Lets take a look at the Pac-10 for example.  Here is a league that will no doubt get three participants in the NCAA Tourney despite being less competitive than the MAAC or Horizon leagues.  If you took Siena, Northern Iowa or Butler and placed them in the Pac-10 this year, they win the league championship handily.  But they will get multiple at-large bids at the expense of the Big East teams.

Arizona State is the 2nd rated team in the Pac-10.  Looking back at their season, they played three tough out-of-conference games against Duke, Baylor and BYU, losing every game.  Washington played Texas Tech, Texas A&M and Georgetown.  The only game they won was against Texas A&M and that really had nothing to do with Washington, as that was the game A&M star Derrick Roland snapped his leg in half in a horrific injury that completely shocked the whole Aggies team.

Then you have Pac-10 champion California.  Here is their resume out of conference.  Blown off the court by Syracuse.  Handled with relative ease by Ohio State.  Spanked by Kansas.  Beaten by New Mexico.   Their only quality non-conference win came against Iowa State whom came in 11th place in the Big 12.

Be assured, the Pac-10 will get three representatives in the NCAA tournament regardless of how bad this conference has been this year.  While California, Arizona State and Washington get undeserving invites to the Big Dance, South Florida, Cincinnati and Seton Hall will likely be playing in the NIT.

Lets hope that the NCAA Tournament Selection Committtee was watching the same basketball games the rest of us were viewing this week in New York City and awards 11 invites to the Big East and sends the message to conferences like the Pac-10 to improve their games or don’t expect to get invited.

College Coaching Carousel Deflates National Signing Day

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

Put yourself in a set of different shoes.  You are 17 years old and receiving the attention of top NCAA college football coaches around the country.  You narrow down your choices, you take your maximum three campus visit and make a verbal decision to attend that school.  Then you get a 1oPM phone call from the assistant coach that recruited you who informs you that the head coach is leaving and we’re all going with him.  Want to come with us?

Kiffin Ditched Vols For USC

That was the real world awakening this past January for those kids recruited to play at Tennessee.  Coach Lane Kiffin chose to head off to take over Southern Cal and his assistant coach Ed Orgeron was now telling the very same kids why they should play for Tennessee  just a few days before why they shouldn’t go there now and why USC was the best choice.

Its a nasty party of the college football game and it is a tragedy that 17 year old kids are being caught up in the middle of it.  As college coaches pressure these kids to commit early, graduate in December before your classmate and get yourself to campus for spring practice, those very same coaches are thinking about their next career stop without regard to the kids and parents to whom  promises were made in their living room.

Tomorrow is signing day for recruits, but for some what was supposed to be a joyous occasion has gone sour.  Since the completion of the regular season, 22 coaches are no longer with their respective teams.   Some coaches were fired for performance, others chose to seek out better positions and a few displayed gross misbehavior towards their athletes that sent them packing.  In their wake are the kids now figuring out what to do.

Let’s take the story of Cleo Robinson, as reported by the Philadelphia Inquirer.  An outside linebacker from Haddon Township, NJ, Robinson gave an early commitment to play at Louisville.  Robinson choose Louisville partly because it was the first school to offer him a scholarship and they did so before his senior season.  Robinson never visited the campus of the school.

In late November, Louisville fired its head coach Steve Kragthorpe after three rough seasons.  Kragthorpe made an opportunistic decision to jump from his successful position at Tulsa for opportunity to play in the Big East for a BCS bowl bid.  He replaced another opportunity job seeker named Bobby Petrino who jumped for a job in the NFL and then jumped again during the middle of the season to Arkansas.  A whole lot of hopping going round.

Kragthorpe ended up losing a portion of the recruiting class that Petrino had pulled together and was hampered with a group of players brought in to fit a system that was no longer going to be employed.  While Kragthorpe was able to keep the juniors on the team from departing for the NFL, everything sputtered and the Cardinals fell flat.  Some of those kids lost NFL opportunities because of the coaching shakeup.  Kragthorpe was eventually fired and replaced by Florida University assistant Charlie Strong, who’ll likely be looking for new digs back in the SEC if he generates any success with the Cardinals over his first three seasons.

For Cleo Robinson, he was left in the lurch. With the head coach gone and the system to be employed, Robinson did the smart thing and rescinded his scholarship.  He did so with a lot at risk.  Most other schools have filled their recruiting dance cards and are no longer in market.  Unless you are a blue chip recruit, the decision Robinson made is terribly risky.  Robinson recently committed to Stanford after an official visit, where he will play under head coach Jim Harbaugh.  The irony…Harbaugh has been tied to more head coaching jobs than you can shake a stick at.

So where does the student athlete’s welfare come in?  The student gets pressured to live up to his commitment, he goes to the school, hates it and then transfers out losing a year of eligibility. How do we offer the student more flexibility if the situation around him changes before he even enters his dorm room?

The NCAA needs to begin rethinking the arcane structure that surrounds the recruiting process to eliminate the damage being done by coaches that are looking at the kids as their meal ticket.  When coaches begin calling recruits telling them not to attend class so they can play football at their school, you know something has going horribly wrong with the system.

School

Out

In

Akron

J.D. Brookhart

Rob Ianello

Buffalo

Turner Gill

Jeff Quinn

Cincinnati

Brian Kelly

Butch Jones

Central Michigan

Butch Jones

Dan Enos

East Carolina

Skip Holtz

Ruffin McNeill

Florida State

Bobby Bowden

Jimbo Fisher

Kansas

Mark Mangino

Turner Gill

Kentucky

Rich Brooks

Joker Phillips

Louisville

Steve Kragthorpe

Charlie Strong

Louisiana-Monroe

Charlie Weatherbie

Todd Berry

Louisiana Tech

Derek Dooley

Sonny Dykes

Marshall

Mark Snyder

John Holliday

Memphis

Tommy West

Larry Porter

Notre Dame

Charlie Weis

Brian Kelly

San Jose State

Dick Tomey

Mike MacIntyre

Southern California

Pete Carroll

Lane Kiffin

South Florida

Jim Leavitt

Skip Holtz

Tennessee

Lane Kiffin

Derek Dooley

Texas Tech

Mike Leach

Tommy Tuberville

UNLV

Mike Sanford

Bobby Hauck

Virginia

Al Groh

Mike London

Western Kentucky

David Elson

Willie Taggart