Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Final Four


89 (3-1) // Sperry // Kansas City, MO

85 (3-1) // Theresa Ann // Rochester, MN

82 (1-3) // KittyKatKevKev // Portland, OR
82 (2-2) // Van Ness // Portland, OR
82 (2-2)// Bev // Overland Park, KS

81 (3-1) // Butterworth the Bulldog // Washington DC

78 (2-2) // Edward Feedtime // Lawrence, KS

75 (3-1) // Nayt Dogg // Lawrence, KS

73 (1-3) // K Dees // Washington DC
73 (1-3) // Ma O’Neil // Lenexa, KS
73 (1-3) // Jim // Overland Park, KS

72 (1-3) // Simba // Los Angles, CA*
72 (1-3) // Stoph // Washington DC
72 (1-3) // Kitty// Rochester, MN
72 (2-2) // Liam // Kansas City, MO
72 (2-2) // Spurgin // Portland OR

71 (1-3) // Argo // Portland, OR
71 (1-3)// Gern Blanston // Roca Baton, FL

70 (0-4) // Victoria // Portland, OR
70 (1-3) // Pa O’Neil // Lenexa, KS

67 (2-2) // Truffle the Bulldog // Washington DC

Saturday, March 24, 2007

1-2-1-2-1-2-3-1






















All of the top seeds advance to the Elite Eight, except the Badgers who are replaced by the third seed Ducks. If the Elite Eight lacks an upstart small program like George Mason, it has been replaced by an undersized player: Oregon’s Freshman 5’ 6” Tajan Porter. He shot the Ducks into the Elite Eight and Sunday they will face Florida who survived the pesky Butler Bulldogs.

Runnin’ Rebel Kevin Kruger looks just like his dad but with moppy hair. The Silver Lake, Kansas native coached his fourth different team to the Sweet Sixteen (UNLV, Florida, Illinois, Kansas State) and Kevin had the Rebels on a late rally against the Ducks. They could not overcome one of this years great tournament performances by Porter. His late free throws iced the game for the Ducks, who were withering something terrible, almost throwing away a late second half 15 point lead. Porter went 8-12 from behind the arc to get the
Ducks up big and finished with 33 points.

This from ESPN:

“You get the feeling he (Porter) was feeling good,” Ducks guard Aaron Brooks said. “He’s been doing it all year. It’s not surprising to me. I had a front-row seat, the best seat in the house.”

The Ducks wouldn’t be on the precipice of their first Final Four since winning it all in 1939 without the diminutive guard, who hit four 3-pointers against Winthrop in the second round to send Oregon to the second week of the tournament.

That he’s playing at this level at all is an upset of sorts.

The Oregon coaching staff went to Renaissance High School in Detroit to scout guard Malik Hairston, a McDonald’s All-American. But an assistant coach spotted Porter—two years younger than Hairston —draining shots from all over the court. He implored Kent to give him a chance.

Porter jumped on the scholarship offer from Oregon — the only big-name school to come calling. Now he’s become the darling of a tournament lacking a true underdog.

“I just came out with a lot of confidence,” Porter said.

After he and Hairston hit back-to-back 3-pointers to make it 66-49 with 5:23 to play, UNLV began chipping away.

Kevin Kruger and Michael Umeh combined for 13 points during a 17-4 run that got the Runnin’ Rebels within 70-66 with 50.2 seconds to play. But Porter hit 4-of-6 from the line in the last 41 seconds and UNLV’s Joe Darger missed a 3-pointer with 30 seconds to go.

"I did get a little heated by our intensity, about our effort and
about our concentration…"


The other bracket saw both of the top seeds overcome double digit deficiets. The Tarheels climbed out of the deepest hole:

Even before they heard coach Roy Williams hollering, Brandan Wright and his North Carolina teammates could tell they were in big trouble.

Down by 16 points early in the second half, the top-seeded Tar Heels suddenly shifted into another gear. Fueled by a huge run, they pulled off their biggest rally of the season and beat Southern California 74-64 Friday night in the East Regional semifinals.

“It was a fantastic comeback to say the least,” Williams said. “I have a great deal of confidence in my team. ... I knew we wouldn’t give up.”

“At halftime, I didn’t throw any chairs,” he said. “I did get a little heated by our intensity, about our effort and about our concentration, but I personally never lost faith in our kids,” he said.

Despite off games by Tyler Hansbrough and Ty Lawson, the Tar Heels (31-6) saved themselves with an 18-0 run, triggered when they pounded the offensive glass.

The turnaround seemed to catch Wright by surprise.

“I didn’t know it was an 18-0 run,” he said. “When our team can make spurts like that ... we really are going to be hard to stop.”

77 (7-1) // KittyKatKevKev // Portland, OR

74 (6-2) // Sperry // Kansas City, MO

72 (6-2) // Van Ness // Portland, OR
72 (6-2)// Bev // Overland Park, KS

70 (6-2) // Victoria // Portland, OR
70 (6-2) // Theresa Ann // Rochester, MN

68 (5-3) // K Dees // Washington DC
68 (7-1) // Edward Feedtime // Lawrence, KS*
68 (6-2) // Ma O’Neil // Lenexa, KS
68 (6-2) // Jim // Overland Park, KS

67 (5-3) // Simba // Los Angles, CA*
67 (5-3) // Stoph // Washington DC
67 (5-3) // Kitty// Rochester, MN

66 (4-4) // Butterworth the Bulldog // Washington DC
66 (5-3) // Argo // Portland, OR
66 (5-3)// Gern Blanston // Roca Baton, FL

65 (5-3) // Pa O’Neil // Lenexa, KS

62 (4-4) // Liam // Kansas City, MO
62 (5-3) // Spurgin // Portland OR

60 (4-4) // Nayt Dogg // Lawrence, KS*

57 (3-5) // Truffle the Bulldog // Washington DC

* adjusted score [kittykat error]

Friday, March 23, 2007

Survive and Advance

Only 12 points seperate first from last.

Here is an incredibel stat: 22 Final Four picks have been eliminated thus far. 6 brackets have all four remaining, 8 have only lost one and 7 have lost two. That’s it! An average of 1 Fianl Four team per bracket is out. With only 12 teams left in the tournament, that’s an incredible number.




62 (4-0) // Simba // Los Angles, CA
62 (4-0)// Victoria // Portland, OR

61 (3-1) // KittyKatKevKev // Portland, OR

60 (3-1) // Van Ness // Portland, OR
60 (3-1) // K Dees // Washington DC
60 (3-1)// Bev // Overland Park, KS

59 (3-1) // Stoph // Washington DC

58 (2-2) // Sperry // Kansas City, MO
58 (2-2) // Butterworth the Bulldog // Washington DC
58 (3-1) // Argo // Portland, OR
58 (4-0) // Edward Feedtime // Tulsa, OK

57 (3-1) // Pa O’Neil // Lenexa, KS
57 (3-1) // Kitty// Rochester, MN

56 (3-1) // Ma O’Neil // Lenexa, KS

54 (2-2) // Theresa Ann // Rochester, MN
54 (2-2)// Gern Blanston // Roca Baton, FL
54 (3-1) // Nayt Dogg // Tulsa, OK

53 (2-2) // Truffle the Bulldog // Washington DC

52 (12-2) // Jim // Overland Park, KS

50 (1-3) // Liam // Kansas City, MO
50 (2-2) // Spurgin // Portland OR

Monday, March 19, 2007

Who-Picked-Who

Hang Loose Kansas: 21 out of 21 brackets picked KU to the Elite Eight and two-thirds of the field picked Kansas to win it all

This field is the closest of any Citrus Basket to date. There are 13 brackets out of 21 within 4 points of the lead. 3 brackets have all 8 of their picks still alive and 7 brackets have a potential of getting 7 correct. Folks kept with the high seeds advancing to the Elite Eight and it has paid off big. I included an article about the death of Cinderella at the tail end of this post breaking down the 2007 Sweet 16.

If you are trailing and you have Kansas winning it all, that won’t do the trick alone; you will need to find another advantage somewhere else in the bracket to make up the difference or separate yourself from the pack. The 6 brackets tied for 8th with 46 points all have picked Kansas to win the championship. Plus there are 3 brackets ahead of that group with Kansas winning, including the co-leader Sperry.

Even Nayt Dogg, who is tied for last place, yet is only 8 points behind the leader, could sneak out a win with a perfect storm (first things first Nayt Dogg, Vandi needs to pull off that upset or your out).

The two teams who caused the worst damage to the brackets were Texas, who raised the most havoc hands down, and Wisconsin. The game which will make the biggest difference in the next round will be Texas A&M (13 picks) against Memphis (6 picks). Here are a few lists to see how many brackets picked which teams followed by individual picks then the article:

Elite Eight
18 : Florida
1 : Butler (Truffle)
9 : Oregon
2 : UNLV (Stoph, Bev)
21 : Kansas
0 : South Illinois
5 : Pittsburgh
12 : UCLA
11 : North Carolina
0 : South California
1 : Vanderbilt (Nayt Dogg)
17 : Georgetown
18 : Ohio State
1 : Tennessee (Gern Blanston)
13 : Texas A&M
6 : Memphis

Runner Up
5 North Carolina
5 Ohio State
3 Georgetown
3 Texas
2 Kansas
1 Florida
1 Washington State
1 Gonzaga

Championship Picks
14 Kansas
3 Florida
2 Georgetown
2 Texas

Here is a list of what each person has left in their bracket:
(Possible Elite Eights) CHAMP/Runner Up/ final four, final four : Pts : Name

(8) KANSAS / Ohio State / georgetown, florida : 50 : Sperry
(7) GEORGETOWN / Kansas / ohio state, florida: 50 : Butterworth

(8) FLORIDA / North Carolina / texas a&m, kansas: 49 : KittyKatKevKev

(7) FLORIDA / Ohio State / north carolina, kansas: 48 : Van Ness
(6) TEXAS/ Kansas / ohio state, wisconsin: 48 : K Dees
(7) KANSAS/ Ohio State / north carolina, florida: 48 : Bev

(5) KANSAS / Texas / ohio state, maryland: 47 : Stoph

(8) KANSAS / Georgetown / ohio state, florida: 46 : Theresa Ann
(7) KANSAS / North Carolina / texas a&m, florida: 46 : Argo
(5) KANSAS / Georgetown / texas a&m, florida: 46 : Liam
(5) KANSAS / Ohio State / texas, maryland: 46 : Simba
(7) KANSAS / Texas / memphis, florida: 46 : Gern Blanston
(6) KANSAS / Washington State / memphis, wisconsin: 46 : Victoria

(6) TEXAS / Florida / texas a&m, kansas : 45 : Pa O’Neil
(5) GEORGETOWN / Gonzaga / ohio state, butler : 45 : Truffle
(6) KANSAS / Texas / texas a&m, florida : 45 : Kitty

(7) KANSAS / Georgetown / texas a&m, wisconsin : 44 : Ma O’Neil
(6) KANSAS / North Carolina / virginia, florida: 44 : Jim

(7) KANSAS / North Carolina / ohio state, wisconsin: 42 : Edward Feedtime
(6) FLORIDA / Ohio State / texas, ucla: 42 : Nayt Dogg
(6) KANSAS/ Ohio State / north carolina, florida : 42 : Spurgin

Power teams reign supreme in ‘07 tourney
Pat Forde

Cinderella, the plucky princess of March Madness, died a quick and undramatic death over the weekend. She was 12.

Check the chalk outline of her body, produced by the chalk-heavy outcomes in this NCAA Tournament: This marks the first time since 1995 that the Big Dance arrived at the Sweet 16 without at least one double-digit seed along for the ride.

Pause with us while we mourn Cindy’s passing for a moment.

Goodbye, Virginia Commonwealth. Sorry you couldn’t come along another round, but beating Duke and taking Pittsburgh to OT made for a pretty swell weekend.

Adios, Winthrop. At least you’ll always remember your first NCAA victory.

They were the last double-digit seeds standing. Without them, the tenor changes.

There is no George Mason or Bradley left in this dance -- no mid-major school that barely squeaked in and never was given a chance to win even a single game, much less two. No Wisconsin-Milwaukee of ‘05 (although that team’s coach is here, now dressed in orange). No Chattanooga or Valparaiso or Miami (Ohio) or Missouri State or Kent State, to name a few double-digit seeds that played into the second weekend in recent years.

But the fracturing of the fairy tale didn’t stop there. The big boys have eliminated every team seeded outside the top half of the 65-team bracket -- every team outside the top 28, in fact.

The 2007 version of a glass-slippered party crasher is No. 7 seed UNLV, which is a joke. As I’ve been saying since the brackets were unveiled, Vegas was criminally underrated by the selection committee. The Runnin’ Rebels were a 4- or 5-seed in underdog’s clothing.

By RPI, 13 of the top 21 teams in the country are still playing. The other three come in at No. 27 (Butler), No. 40 (USC) and No. 47 (Vanderbilt). The only team in the RPI top 10 to be evicted from Bracketville to date is No. 4 Wisconsin, which had the bad luck to draw UNLV in the second round.

What we’re left with are seven of the top eight seeds, nine of the top 12 and 10 of the top 16. It’s been 11 years since seven of the top eight seeds advanced to the Sweet 16 (and the one that didn’t was No. 1 seed Purdue, which was felled by Tubby Smith’s Georgia Bulldogs).

Of the nine teams I believed could win the whole thing, eight remain. Only Texas (I was seduced by Kevin Durant) has been dismissed.

Bottom line: Either the committee really did its job well (except for Vegas) or Cinderella has had a fatal four days.

This doesn’t mean she can’t (and won’t) rise from the dead in years to come. But for the time being, we’ll have to stuff a sock in all the parity talk. Or at least revise it down to, say, the top 30.

That’s about where the competitive balance seemed to stop this year, after only five first-round upsets by seed (three in the tossup 8-9 games) and five in the second round (three in the tossup 4-5 games). At least the games got closer and more dramatic Friday and Saturday, bookended by a distressingly dull Thursday and a rather unremarkable Sunday.

What we have left are 12 teams from the big six conferences. And with three from the Pac-10, three from the SEC, two from the Big East and two from the Big 12, no league has established undisputed bragging rights. (The ACC and Big Ten, with only a single team left apiece, have some explaining to do.)

Even the quartet of schools from the smaller conferences come wearing regulation basketball sneaks, not glass slippers.

Memphis, king of Conference USA, has been a national title contender two years running. UNLV of the Mountain West won 30 games and ranks 10th in the RPI.

Even Southern Illinois of the Missouri Valley Conference and Butler of the Horizon League didn’t exactly fall off the turnip truck on the way to the Sweet 16. Both were ranked for much of this season, sport tremendous power numbers and were locks to be at-large selections -- which, ultimately, they both were after losing in the final game of their league tournaments.

And they were respected enough by the selection committee to be seeded fourth and fifth, respectively.

Within the past five years, both schools got to the Sweet 16 the hard way, as double-digit seeds. Their progress up the seed ladder was in part paved by the mid-major successes of previous seasons.

Despite their well-earned seeds, SIU and Butler will revert back to major underdog status now. Butler takes on the defending national champion and overall No. 1 seed, Florida. Southern Illinois gets a shot at the hottest team in the tournament, Kansas.

If either wins, we’ll be back to rhapsodizing about the achievements of the little guys. But neither will qualify as Cinderella.

She’s stretched out on a cold slab in the March Madness morgue.

Sunday, March 18, 2007

Round II - Sunday Update


Well, it’s Sunday night and the best weekend in sports has wrapped. Kansas topping Kentucky has made for a great 2007 season for the Jayhawks. We won two conference championships, pushing the school past Kentucky for the most conference championships at 51 titles, and a Sweet 16 birth to boot. After enduring two years of first round exits, I can’t help but look at any more wins from here on out as whipped cream and cherries.

If South Illinois can slow us down with their tough defense and hit a bunch of threes to knock us off, so be it. It will be disappointing not to see KU play UCLA or play Florida in the Final Four—which would rank up there with KU vs Maryland in the 2002 semis as two loaded teams playing on a high level dueling it out on the biggest stage. What a ride that would be, eh? Only one way to top off that would be to meet Roy and the Tarheels in the Championship game to become the first school in the modern era to face all of the highest potential seeds in each round on the way to cutting down the nets. Just dreaming here at the end of a basketball soaked week.

Sometime during the week I’ll post "Who-Picked-Who" to go to the Final Four plus Championship picks.

Jim and Bev picked Southern California and UNLV to the Sweet 16. Very nice indeed! Liam, Stoph and Butter got the UNLV pick plus Victoria got USC. Everyone else came up empty in those pods.

50 (12-4) // Sperry // Kansas City, MO
50 (13-3) // Butterworth the Bulldog // Washington DC

49 (12-4) // KittyKatKevKev // Portland, OR

48 (11-5) // Van Ness // Portland, OR
48 (12-4) // K Dees // Washington DC
48 (13-3)// Bev // Overland Park, KS

47 (11-5) // Stoph // Washington DC

46 (10-6) // Theresa Ann // Rochester, MN
46 (10-6) // Argo // Portland, OR
46 (10-6) // Liam // Kansas City, MO
46 (11-5) // Simba // Los Angles, CA
46 (11-5)// Gern Blanston // Roca Baton, FL
46 (12-4)// Victoria // Portland, OR

45 (10-6) // Pa O’Neil // Lenexa, KS
45 (10-6) // Truffle the Bulldog // Washington DC
45 (11-5) // Kitty// Rochester, MN

44 (9-7) // Ma O’Neil // Lenexa, KS
44 (11-5) // Jim // Overland Park, KS

42 (9-7) // Edward Feedtime // Lawrence, KS
42 (10-6) // Nayt Dogg // Lawrence, KS
42 (10-6) // Spurgin // Portland OR

Round II - Saturday Update


It was a good day today for Bulldogs: Butler beat Maryland to get to the Sweet 16! Congratulations to Truffle, Butterworth, and Kitty who picked the Butler Bulldogs to get this far. K Dees, Sperry and Bev had solidarity with the pets with their Sweet 16 picks, so congratulations to them too.

Ohio State and Texas A&M survive! Both came close to blowing the South bracket to smithereens. All the brackets had Ohio State winning. Only Jim and Spurgin had the Loisville upset over A&M while everybody else picked A&M. 9 brackets have Ohio State to the Final Four and 6 brackets have A&M going to the Final Four so these close calls had big implications. Should be fun for Citrus Basket V if A&M and Ohio State can advance to the Elite Eight.

There are three brackets at this point that don’t have Ohio State or A&M to win the South regional. Gern and Victoria picked Memphis while Jim has Virginia. I’m still waiting for Nate Dogg, Edward Feedtime and Simba to arrive in the mail.

Pitt got by VCU in overtime. This time VCU could only get a tie being down 10 with 10 minutes to go and couldn’t finish off the Pitt Panthers. Pitt missed many key freethrows to open the door for another VCU upset though they hit their last one with a few seconds left in overtime to ice it.

The double overtime game was a great game to watch. It also had Citrus Basket implications. 8 had Vanderbilt and 10 had Washington State.

Hope you had a few on your Irish day!

42 (8-0) // Sperry // Kansas City, MO

40 (8-0)// K Dees // Washington DC
40 (7-1)// Theresa Ann // Rochester, MN
40 (7-1)// Argo // Portland, OR

38 (7-1)// Butterworth the Bulldog // Washington DC
38 (6-2)// Van Ness // Portland, OR

37 (7-1)// Kitty// Rochester, MN
37 (6-2)// KittyKatKevKev // Portland, OR
37 (6-2)// Stoph // Washington DC

36 (6-2)// Simba // Los Angles, CA
36 (5-3)// Liam // Kansas City, MO
36 (5-3)// Ma O’Neil // Lenexa, KS

35 (5-3)// Pa O’Neil // Lenexa, KS
35 (5-3)// Truffle the Bulldog // Washington DC

34 (5-3)// Gern Blanston // Roca Baton, FL
34 (6-2)// Nayt Dogg // Lawrence, KS
34 (6-2)// Victoria // Portland, OR
34 (6-2)// Bev // Overland Park, KS
34 (5-3)// Edward Feedtime // Lawrence, KS

32 (5-3)// Jim // Overland Park, KS
32 (5-3)// Spurgin // Portland OR

Saturday, March 17, 2007

Round I — Friday


Winthrop beat Notre Dame 74-64 surviving a furious rally for the second big upset of Round I. Thresea Ann, Liam, Van Ness, KittyKatKevKev, Gern and Spurgin all picked this 6 over 11 upset. Bev, K Dees, Ma O’Neil and Pa O’Neil had Notre Dame to the Sweet 16 and no one had them going any further than that.

Liam had the best day going
14 - 2 and getting into a tie for the lead. Kitty went 13 -3 to claw her way out of the cellar. Ma O’Neil and Argo debut in the
top spot.


The Basket is tight at this point. Six are tied for first @ 26 -6 with seven more brackets needing a one game bump to get a piece of the lead. Beware of the implementation of the Boca Raton rule!

26 - 6 // Sperry // Kansas City, MO
26 - 6 // Theresa Ann // Rochester, MN
26 - 6 // Liam // Kansas City, MO
26 - 6 // Van Ness // Portland, OR
26 - 6 // Argo // Portland, OR
26 - 6 // Ma O’Neil // Lenexa, KS

25 - 7 // KittyKatKevKev // Portland, OR
25 - 7 // Truffle the Bulldog // Washington DC
25 - 7 // Stoph // Washington DC
25 - 7 // Pa O’Neil // Lenexa, KS

24 - 8 // Gern Blanston // Boca Raton, FL
24 - 8 // Butterworth the Bulldog // Washington DC
24 - 8 // K Dees // Washington DC

22 - 10 // Jim // Overland Park, KS
22 - 10 // Spurgin // Portland OR
22 - 10 // Bev // Overland Park, KS
22 - 10 // Victoria // Portland, OR

0 - 0 // Edward Feedtime // Lawrence, KS
0 - 0 // Nate Dogg // Lawrence, KS
0 - 0 // Simba // Los Angles, CA

"Niagara Falls" plus a Kentucky Preview


I had to dig around to find the KU box score that showed minutes played. KU was playing so fast and were up and down the court, I was wondering what kind of gas the starters spent running the floor against Niagara. Brandon Rush once again was on the floor the longest though he logged under 30 minutes. Jeremy Case and Rod Stewart almost got 10 minutes each, two players we might need in a crunch down the road to the Final Four. if we get in a bind like Ohio State did today, it will be nice to have Jeremy Case as an optioin to hit a 3. Case was 3-5 from beyond the arc yesterday.

ME TEAM: KANSAS JAYHAWKS 31-4
## Player Name.........Reb...Pts...Ast...S..MIN
30 Wright, Julian.......10.....10.....0.....1....23
24 Kaun, Sasha...........3......2 ....0.....0....13
15 Chalmers, Mario......0......19.....2.....3....21
25 Rush, Brandon........5.....9......6.....0....28
3 Robinson, Russell.......4......16...8....5....25
00 Arthur, Darrell........8 .....12....1.....0 ....17
4 Collins, Sherron.......1......15....6.....4....20
32 Jackson, Darnell......9.......4.....0.....0....16
5 Stewart, Rodrick.......2......3.....4......1.....9
10 Case, Jeremy..........2 .....9.....1......0.....9
12 Morningstar, Brady.....0 .....5.....0....0.....7
11 Bechard, Brennan.....1.....0.....0.......0.....4
40 Witherspoon, Brad....2.....1.....1.......0.....3
54 Kleinmann, Matt........1....2 .....0......0.....5

Arthur and Kaun each had 3 blocks. Robinson had a huge game. He also went 3-5 for 3 pointers. Chalmers went 3-4 behind the arc. Got to love the firepower we get off the bench from our two Freshmen. There was nothing the Purple Eagles could do to stop Darrell Arthur in the paint and Sherron Collins is so much fun to watch when he is attacking the rim.

So, KU now gets Kentucky. This Second Round reminds me of the 1999 NCAA tournament when Kentucky was a 1 seed and Kansas was the 8. KU was in a bit of a transition that year starting Ryan Robertson and Jeff Boschee at guard, Eric Chenowith, TJ Pugh, and Nick Bradford started in the front court; Kenny Gregory, Lester Earl and Marlon London made for a decent bench. Remember Marlon London? London was a Chicago native and was home sick so he transferred to DePaul for his Junior season.

This KU team tied for second in Big XII play and won the Big XII tournament by knocking off Oklahoma State 53-37 in the title game. It was Jeff Boschee’s Freshmen year and Ryan Robertson and Kenny Gregory’s Senior season. Before the Kentucky game Roy Williams was talking about taking their turn as being the upset 8 seed over the 1 seed. Ryan Robertson scored 31 points and Jeff Boschee shot 18 threes in that game only to make 6 of them. Kentucky had Scott Padgett who hit a couple of key three point shots late in regulation, along with 13-17 from the stripe, to lift Kentuky over the Jayhawks in overtime.

This year Kentucky isn’t so deep nor as talented as former iterations. They have struggled to find someone to run the point. That is not good for them as they prepare to face a stingy Kansas defense who looks to turn poor ball handling and pressured decision making into steals that lead to easy points in transition. You can already see some highlight reel dunks coming off our fast break.

Kentucky’s strength is in the front court with Randolph Morris. Sasha Kaun suddenly becomes much more important with his size and strength. KU has such a versatile team this year that they can match up well with anyone. This can’t be more evident as they transition from Niagara’s run and gun to Kentucky’s half court grind. There will be fewer possessions in this game and a much lower score. Kentucky is similar to Niagara in the fact that they depend on the three point shot from their guards to be effective. The difference here is that Kentucky will slow it down into a half court game and will feed the ball into their big man to try for easy buckets inside. Once they establish Morris they hope that will open up kick outs for clear three point J’s.


Kentucky will need to bring their A game at both ends of the floor, something they have struggled to do all year, to hang with Kansas. KU has a clear advantage with their strong identity at small guard play. Pressure defense on the ball by Chalmers, Collins and Robinson may be the key for a KU victory. The Jayhawks will make it difficult for the Kentucky guards to get good looks at feeding the ball to Morris. An added bonus for KU is that they have depth in the front court and they routinely smother the ball when the other team gets it into the low block. All of this makes me think that Randolph Morris is going to have a rough day in Chicago. Sasha Kaun will be able to body up Morris while Wright and Arthur will be able rotate over to swat away any weak shots. There will not be many other options in the low post once they contain Morris.




















Bill Self, since taking the helm at KU, is 2-0 against Tubby Smith.

Here is a bit from a KUsports.com article

“I know Kentucky has strong transition defense,” said KU sophomore Brandon Rush, who exploded for a career-high 24 points off 9-of-15 shooting in the Jayhawks’ 73-46 rout of the Wildcats last season at Allen Fieldhouse.

“They are very good on defense. They’ll want to make up for that game last year.”

KU junior Russell Robinson said the Wildcats, “will have big incentive. A lot is riding for their coach (the embattled Tubby Smith). They’ll remember the last two years (KU also won, 65-59, at UK during Robinson’s freshman year). It’s two great programs.”

“They are a better team than last year and more balanced,” Self said. “They really guard, don’t give up easy baskets. They have always been that way under Tubby Smith.

Here is the Blue Ribbon Report for Kentucky:

The Front Court
It begins with 6-11, 260-pound Randolph Morris,
who all season led Kentucky and hovered around the
top six or seven in the SEC in scoring, rebounding, field
goal percentage and blocked shots, leading barometers
of a competent post man. When Morris played well, the
Wildcats stood a better than average chance of winning.
When he struggled, or teams found a way to contain
him, Kentucky was beatable.

On the plus side, consider his 23-point, 13-rebound
performance against Santa Clara, his 25-10 effort against
Eastern Kentucky and a 20-10 night against Houston.
On the minus side, well, he never put together a monster
game like those against SEC opponents. It took him
until the Wildcats’ 13th league game to score as many as
20 points, and that was against LSU, which was playing
without Glen Davis.

To be fair, nearly every team in the SEC has two or
three enormous post players capable of keeping an
eye on Morris and holding him in check. And he did
have some solid performances in the league, piling
up double-doubles against Ole Miss, South Carolina,
Tennessee and LSU.

But when Morris struggled in the league—four
points, six boards in a loss at Vanderbilt, 11 points,
two rebounds in a loss at Georgia—the Wildcats were
vulnerable.

The rest of Kentucky’s frontcourt pretty much consists
of journeyman types, a bone of contention for
demanding fans who wonder why Smith and his staff
haven’t been able to sign a quality four man in recent
years. Kentucky has been in the hunt for several, but
couldn’t close the deal.

Of the group, 6-8 senior Bobby Perry is the most
skilled and experienced; he’s made more than 50 starts
the last two seasons. Perry is neither exceptional nor
terrible in facet of the game. At his best, he’s capable
of the kind of performance he showed during his last
Kentucky home game, when he scored 22 points in a
win over Georgia.

Fellow 6-8 senior Sheray Thomas averaged around 18
minutes a game in the regular season, but his contributions
weren’t significant. He reached double figures one
time (12 points in a loss to Vanderbilt) and is capable of
a six- to eight rebound game.

Backcourt
Herein lies perhaps the Wildcats’ problem—the lack
of a true, take-charge point guard. Ramel Bradley,
a 6-2 junior, started the season at the position, but
Bradley is more of a scorer by trade, so Smith moved
6-6 freshman Derrick Jasper to lead guard. Jasper did
a decent job, presiding over an 11-game winning streak
that lasted from Dec. 5 to Jan. 20. He rang up some big
assist games—eight against UMass, six against Houston,
Georgia and South Carolina, but he also committed a
pile of turnovers. Worse, he’s a liability in late-game situations
because of his free-throw shooting prowess, or
lack thereof.

That meant Bradley had to swing back to the point
at times, but though he led the Wildcats in assists,
clearly he’s better when he’s unencumbered by having
to run the offense. A four-game stretch late in the SEC
season when he averaged 21.5 points against Tennessee,
Arkansas, South Carolina and Florida represented
Bradley at his finest.















Bradley’s greatest weapon is the three-pointer, though
he doesn’t need the three to score; he was 3-for-12
against Tennessee and 3-for-10 against Florida yet still
scored 21 and 20 points, respectively. Bradley’s shot went
AWOL late in the season when he was 1-for-10 from
three against Georgia and 0-for-2 against LSU, but he’s
still Kentucky’s top perimeter threat.

Joe Crawford, a 6-5 junior, enjoyed his best season
in Lexington and was generally a consistent scorer.
Ironically, the ’Cats lost when he scored 29 at Georgia
and 24 at Tennessee. When Crawford has some help,
usually from Bradley, the Wildcats are a lot tougher out.
Smith has said Jodie Meeks, a 6-5 freshman, is the
most impressive athlete he’s coached. He’s a potential
game-breaking scorer who occasionally took over at
the point when Jasper had to be pulled because of his
inability to make free throws. Meeks, who shot nearly 90
percent from the line, doesn’t have that problem.

When Kentucky Wins
The Wildcats are a lot harder to beat when Morris
is ready to play and getting his touches in the post.
Because he usually commands a double team, that
almost always leaves wide-open shooters on the perimeter.
Kentucky usually won on the nights three-point
shots were falling. In turn, that forced defenses to ease
off Morris and guard the perimeter, which gave the big
man some room to operate.

Defense is another key to this team’s success. When the
’Cats expend some energy on that end of the floor, they
always give themselves a chance to win. But unlike some
of Smith’s best teams in Lexington, Kentucky hasn’t been
a consistently good defensive team.

Beating the Wildcats
Kentucky folded down the stretch of several games
toward the latter part of the season, in large measure
because of their lack of a true point guard and inability
to make winning plays. But there were other factors.
Liken it to a golfer who drives the ball well one day
and hits his irons poorly, or hits every green in regulation
but can’t make a putt. In Kentucky’s losses, the
Wildcats couldn’t get both aspects of their game clicking.
Some nights, the defensive intensity was there but
the shots weren’t falling. On other nights, it was exactly
the opposite.

The Final Word
This isn’t one of Tubby Smith’s better teams at Kentucky, but the Wildcats are capable of winning a game or two in the NCAA Tournament if they can figure out a way to make plays down the stretch.

Friday, March 16, 2007

KU Faces Niagara in Round I


All of the emphasis that Bill Self puts on defense pays off today. Self has compared Niagara’s ability to score to Texas. The last game Kansas played was against Kevin Durrant and the Longhorns so that comparison should come in handy as KU prepares for their first match up in this years big dance. The key is to find someone in the KU rotation to match up against their center J.R. Duffey (6’ 7”, Sr, 32.4 min, 10.4 pts, 5.5 reb.) who can hit the three. If Darrel Arthur and Darnell Jackson can’t find Duffey on the perimeter and contest his shot, Niagara will find an advantage that they can exploit.

Don’t be surprised to see KU go small for long stretches this evening since Duffey is only 6’ 7”. Sasha Kaun might not get past the 10 minute mark of playing time due to his injury and the ability of the Niagara big men to hit the 3 point shot. The KU camp is emphasizing that all 5 starters for Niagara can shoot the ball from long range. Sasha is going to need to get out on his man to deny the trifecta if he’s going to see much playing time tonight. Sasha has been stiff all week from a bruised back he received in the Big XII championship game.

KU will be at their best against Niagara when Wright and Rush are guarding their best two players, Cliff Brown (6’ 7”, Sr, 33.8 min, 16.5 pts, 9.8 reb) and Charron Fisher (6’ 3”, Jr., 33.5 min, 20.7 pts, 8.1 reb). That’s a tough match up for Niagara on their offensive end and they can’t match us with stoppers when they defend the goal. Per usual, our small guards will need to pressure the ball to force Niagara out of their offensive sets. If the trio of Robinson, Chalmers and Collins can frustrate the ball handling of the Niagara guards, Niagara will go on several long droughts of scoring the ball. That’s when KU will need to have big spurts to get Niagara on the ropes and keep them there.

It will be interesting to see how much time Rod Stewart will log. Stewart has played a big chunk of his minutes this year at the 4 spot and is a valuable asset off the bench with the match up against Niagara. KU will need a smaller, quicker defensive unit to play the up tempo, spread out game that Niagara will want to play when they have the ball. Niagara likes to push the ball and they have already said that they don’t plan on slowing the game down. They will want to break us down on the dribble and find open shooters on the outside. Hopefully Rod Stewart will give KU some good minutes in the first half so that the starters energy levels will be high coming down the stretch.

The key for Niagara will be their ability to scramble back down court to set up their defense so that KU can’t ring up big numbers in the paint. Darrel Arthur and Darnell Jackson are great scores in the paint. Sasha Kaun likes to feast on smaller, under sized front courts. Niagara is going to need to limit their touches in close and it doesn’t seem like they have the size or the defensive interest to sustain that.

After his 2-28 team lost to the Purple Eagles by an 81-80 count in late January, Iona coach Jeff Ruland remarked that Niagara’s goal on defense was not to break a sweat. The Blue Ribbon report comments, “it’s dangerous to try to fly with these Eagles and outscore them, so the key is to get back on defense and shut their potent offense down.”

If Niagara doesn’t exert energy defending on the ball, you’ve got to like our guards ability to get into the paint to either score or dish to our bigs. Sherron Collins must get to the paint regularly and if Rush is being aggressive and draining the mid range jumper, KU should be able to hang with Niagara even if they are hitting their three’s in bunches.

I haven’t seen any mention of Niagara playing any kind of zone however it seems like the best strategy for them against the top seed KU. Wrights ability to pass and Collins ability to break a zone down on the dribble are the two strongest assets KU has when the outside shot isn’t falling. If they play a zone or not, Niagara will need to pack it in close to the goal, get plenty of defensive rebounds and hope that the KU guards have a cold shooting night.

With KU as one of the best defensive minded teams in the country, you can be sure that their focus will be getting plenty of pressure on the ball, getting between their man and the goal, and contesting the long range jump shot. If Niagara struggles to find their touch against our top ranked defense, KU gets plenty of transition buckets and are able to attack the rim freely, it should be a romp for the Jayhawks in Chicago.

Round I — Thursday

Click on photo to enlarge.

Four people picked VCU in the pool: Sperry, Theresa Ann, KittyKatKevKev, and Liam. KittyKatKev is the only one to pick VCU to the Sweet 16.

Only one person picked Duke into the second weekend. Stoph had the Blue Devils going to the Elite Eight.

There was only one other Elite Eight pick going down and this was a major loss. Truffle the Bulldog had the Gonzaga Bulldogs going to the Championship Game only to lose to the Georgetown Hoyas. It’s Truffles first Citrus Basket and maybe she’ll learn from her big brother that sometimes you don’t pick a team to the Final Four just because their mascot happens to be a Bulldog. I should have known this was coming when I got an email from my niece on Sunday complaining that Georgia didn’t get an at-large bid.

Call it breedism, specieism, or what ever you would like. Truffle had the 4 seed Salukis losing to KU in the Sweet 16 yet had the 10 seed Gonzaga Bulldogs beating the 1 seed Jayhawks in the Elite Eight. Gonzaga to the championship game just wasn’t a very good pick this year Truffle.

Take cousin Kitty’s bracket for instance. She had the Cougars of Washington State, the Tigers from Memphis and the Pitt Panthers going to the Sweet 16 only to lose. All three of those picks would have been reasonable to take to the championship game, yet Kitty picked zero cats to the Elite Eight.

Truffle, maybe Butler will pull off that upset over Florida and you can tell me to stuff it.

15 - 1 // Sperry // Kansas City, MO (missed Xavier)

14 - 2 // Theresa Ann // Rochester, MN
14 - 2 // KittyKatKevKev // Portland, OR

13 - 3 // Van Ness // Portland, OR
13 - 3 // K Dees // Washington DC

12 - 4 // Liam // Kansas City, MO
12 - 4 // Stoph // Washington DC
12 - 4 // Jim // Overland Park, KS
12 - 4 // Gern Blanston // Roca Baton, FL
12 - 4 // Butterworth the Bulldog // Washington DC

11 - 5 // Truffle the Bulldog // Washington DC
11 - 5 // Spurgin // Portland OR
11 - 5 // Bev // Overland Park, KS

9 - 6 // Kitty // Rochester, MN

In the mail:
0 - 0 // Pa O’Neil // Lenexa, KS
0 - 0 // Ma O’Neil // Lenexa, KS
0 - 0 // Edward Feedtime // Lawrence, KS
0 - 0 // Nate Dogg // Lawrence, KS
0 - 0 // Simba // Los Angles, CA
0 - 0 // Argo // Portland, OR
0 - 0 // Victoria // Portland, OR