The CAA: Life as a Mid Major

September 28, 2007

Ah, Back to the Summer Friday Habits…

Filed under: Uncategorized — mglitos @ 8:45 pm

Working on a good one for you but need to get permission to release the information. I’m even going to have to figure out how to plop art into this bird.

Who would’ve thought that “dropping a jpg into your blog post on a website” would be thought of as archaic?

I also had a huge deadline I just met, and it is happy hour. You will live through the weekend. Wait, here’s one nugget:

VCU has added a player to its roster. Terrell Elliston is walking on as a junior. Elliston is from the Bronx and played at Polk Community College. Side note: we share a birthday, but he was born the year I graduated high school.

Oh, it is SO happy hour now.

September 27, 2007

General Hospital

Filed under: Uncategorized — mglitos @ 5:31 pm

Hey I’m home during the days, so it is only fitting.

Towson’s Tommy Breaux goofed up his foot. They’re talking surgery, which brings about the dreaded six-and-six (cast, then boot). This is horrible news for Pat Kennedy–Breaux played so much better towards the end of last season and was poised to have a breakout year. Even if “breakout year” is a ridiculously nebulous term that means nothing, Breaux is/was a key part of this team.

There are second opinions and second courses of treatment, but Breaux is an active, bouncing machine. No matter the final decision, he will be less effective with a bum hoof.

From the beaches of Wilmington to the shores of New Orleans, UNCWs Darryl Felder has put the kaibosh on his season, going as far as to withdraw from The Dub this winter. Felder plans to re-enroll in the spring, but wow: if your back is injured enough to the point you want to stay home, there are serious issues. That is no joke. We can deal with basketball later, but you hope the kid can walk upright.

***

On a happier note, Tom Pecora has landed a kid by thename of Tony Dennison for next season. Dennison averaged 27.7 ppg last year in at Broward Community College (second overall in all of the JUCO ranks).

Dennison went to high school in Queens, so he is eligible under the Pecora roster rule of having to be from New York or Lithuania. I don’t follow recruiting, but I can look at 28 ppg and that Kansas, Tennessee, and Oklahoma were also after him and tell you that this is a good thing for Hofstra.

September 26, 2007

Getting Back Up On the Horse…

Filed under: Uncategorized — mglitos @ 8:36 pm

TJ from G:TB with a kick-save and a beauty. The post from yesterday with no rhyme or reason now has both, including a fancy concept called readability. Props or ups or mad props or whatever the cool kids are saying these days. I need to tune back in to Dog: the Bounty Hunter to catch back up on the lingo.

***

We’ll use the TJ metaphor not to stalk, but to provide a cheesy segway into TJ Carter. And UNCW. But specifically UNCW beatnick Brian Mull. (See how that works?)

Anyway, Brian was bold enough to publish his preseason picks on who will finish where in the conference race. Thankfully, he was smart enough to include rationale.

Brian is either really smart or really stupid. I’m not sure yet, but I will tell you that his picks were fairly close to mine so I’ll lean towards brilliance. I’ll let him get credit for your click, but the summ:

We agree on the top three, that William & Mary won’t duplicate last year, and that this isn’t the year Georgia State starts climbing. The rest of the teams get the sombrero treatment (though I flipped many of them).

I do have to point out his choice for Delaware finishing fifth. Now, if you’ve read these pages for awhile you know my new coach-crush is on Monte Ross. Impressive all the way around. But I can’t get past the irony of “fifth” place and what Brian may have been drinking with that choice.

Kidding aside, his is the best I’ve seen so far.

September 25, 2007

Mea Culpa, Celeritas Sinister

Filed under: Uncategorized — mglitos @ 10:16 pm

I promise to clean up the horrific copy/paste job. Eventually. Egad, I thought it would be easier to fire a post into Word and paste it here.

Much like Lindy’s, wrong.

We Are The World…Revisionist History

Filed under: Uncategorized — mglitos @ 7:19 pm

Yeah, it’s the preseason. Heck, practice doesn’t even start for another coupla’ weeks. We love to spend this time boasting and worrying and extrapolating to make the case we need for being smart.

It is easily the most lawyerly time of the college basketball season, September. Your picks are always solid. Granted, we all know preseason prognostication is about as scientific as laundry. (Make a couple of piles and throw the soiled into one.) It also carries a shelf-life of approximately two sprained ankles and a failed econ mid term. By the time Your Team is 10-5 (1-1 in conference) what some hack wrote in August (or April, in Lindy’s case) doesn’t matter.

But we have fun here, especially at other people’s expense. That why, thanks to Extra P. over at The Extrapolater, we’re going to take those shots this season. This is the first of hopefully many collaborative posts where the Blogging Elite (defined as blogs I like to read) combine wit and intelligence to entertain and inform you.

Feel free to jump in with your feedback on…

The Lindy’s rankings. Eric felt it would be right to take their preseason rankings, add our intelligence, and revise them. The challenge: you get to pick one team and move it up or down in the rankings as far as you like. The only rule: explain.

To review, here is the Lindy’s List:

1. VCU
2. Mason
3. Hofstra
4. Drexel
5. The Dub
6. Georgia State
7. ODU
8. Towson
9. JMU
10. William & Mary
11. Delaware
12. Northeastern

First up: Rob, of the esteemed Gheorge: The Blog, where you should never skip the comments…

“So I’m driving around Norfolk last weekend, in hot pursuit of a brace of high-end malted beverages to quaff in pregame celebration of William and Mary’s gridiron contest with Liberty (CAA football, baby!), and I cruise past the Constant Center on the campus of Old Dominion University.  I’m not from Norfolk – in fact, I’m generally discouraged from visiting as a result of some long-ago college-era shenanigans – so I hadn’t seen the ODU facility before, or at least hadn’t looked at it closely.  With all that as preface, then, let me note for the record that the Ted is one righteous-looking collegiate athletic barn.

I’m not nearly as qualified as the noble MGL and the talented Extra P to assess the actual basketball-related bonafides of the 2007-2008 CAA hoops contenders, so my contribution here will be a bit more, um, random.  (Which, frankly, is in very good keeping with the spirit of Gheorghe: The Blog, my home course.)  I figured choosing William and Mary, my alma mater, as the team on the move would be a copout, even though I believe that the 10-year anniversary of the fabled Moran/Phillips Team of Destiny is good for at least 3 wins for the Green and Gold this year.  (For the record, Bill Phillips and his hormones destroyed Charlie Woollum’s program just as it was turning the corner.  Transferring to be closer to a girl?  At least make up an excuse.)

Instead, I’m taking a cue from the Big Blue Beast’s snazzy digs and moving them up Lindy’s Ladder from 7th to 4th.  The Monarchs lose some serious talent, with 1st-team All-CAA standout Valdas Vasylius (cripes, no wonder MGL abbreviates that name), 2nd-teamer Drew Williamson, and rugged inside presence Arnaud Dahi moving on.  But they’ve still got the league’s best moustache (and, let’s not kid ourselves, one heckuva coach) courtside in Blaine Taylor and two of the conference’s great names in Etoile Imama and Abdi Lidonde.  More importantly, Gerald Lee gets a chance to prove he’s the real deal.  ODU needs a couple of their highly-touted youngsters to step up, but it says here that they will – and they’ll defend the hell out of the ball regardless.

And if they don’t, they’ve still got that great-looking arena to fall back upon.”

***

Next: Eric, from The Extrapolater, where breadth is paramount: you can read minor league baseball, rugby, and some rookie rater comparing everyone to Albert Pujols. Or something like that.

“I am going to resist the homer urge to move Old Dominion anywhere.  If I’m honest with myself, I can only admit that this team has lost too much, and has too many question marks, to qualify for much more than a middle-of-the road assessment at this point. 

The team I will move is Drexel.  Bruiser’s a good, experienced coach.  He’s got a good team.  But that’s not why.  I am moving the Dragons because I believe that karma is in Bruiser’s favor.  He got ganked but hard by the NCAA last year, and I think the hoop gods will make it up to him with a good conference run.  I cannot and will not pick him to take the conference from Maynor and the Rams, but I will concede that Drexel will make it interesting by coming in a very competitive second in the CAA.  Bruiser and his man-jewelry are going to the Big Dance this year.  Mark it down.”

***

Whitney, from G:TB. Don’t miss the next installment of Whitneypedia:

“Instinctively I looked to ratchet the Tribe up the standings, having sipped–albeit judiciously–from the “Shaver Sounds Like Savior” punch bucket (and heartily endorsing the Bigus Dickus-like name of W&M’s leading scorer).

Upon further review, however, I predict that my alma mater actually gets leapfrogged by the resurgent Blue Hens of Delaware.  William & Mary has had their trouble topping UD in other sports, anyway, but a quick glance at who’s back from the atrocious cellar-dwelling team of a year ago shows all the signs of a leap in the standings for Delaware.   Herb “Half-” Courtney and Brian “Breakfast Club” Johnson sound like guys you want doing your Physics homework for you, but they’re legitimate returning stars for the “ass-kickin’ chickens.”

Factor in a pair of transfers from Georgetown & Nebraska, and there might be some noise in Newark this year . . . that isn’t hollering about all those damn toll booths.  The key to actually competing in the CAA is whether still-green coach Monté Ross can harness the talent and turn potential into production.  Stay tuned. Betting against Delaware sports this year has already cost me the insult of being forced to publicly sport a hat with a chicken on it later this year.

(Not to mention the humiliation of having to endure a text message that read, “Squawk, squawk, baby.”)  This time I’ll go with the Hens and call them a 6 or 7 seed.  Squawk, squawk, indeed.”

***

My contribution?

I’m going to move the Poor Bills, aka Nor’Easter, aka the Northeastern Huskies, WAY up the ladder. If this team finishes last in the conference this year, I will ride a bike, in a thong, only, from Richmond to Boston. In February. (Line up your charitable causes now.)

This is the case of some guy seeing three seniors graduating from a team that has no “big names,” other than the conference frosh of the year who is built like Paris Hilton. The dude has never seen some of these guys play—Manny Adako is a horse—and Bill Coen can coach. Nor’Easter is clearly in the middle strata of the conference. I’m putting them at sixth, but they could be anywhere from 4th to 9th.

It’s like this. Ever since they came into the CAA, Nor’Easter has been treated with shrugs. They are located in Boston and play in the winter—between the Bruins and Patriots and Red Sox Hot Stovers they aren’t supposed to be any good. Filler material to keep the brackets from being all screwed up. But all they’ve done is win basketball games and there’s no reason why it won’t happen this year.

And so you don’t think this is a love-fest, I’ve got to say that the players they lost weren’t exactly all-world. Adrian Martinez was serviceable, and Bobby Kelly really just a role player. I’ll give you Bennet Davis, though. Still, the difference is that Coen is bringing some legit talent to the floor.

12th? My arse, which thankfully you won’t see.
 

September 24, 2007

The Ye Olde Review/Preview Post Strategy…

Filed under: Uncategorized — mglitos @ 10:10 pm

Today, Kyle answered the somewhat hysterical question during his chat of “can the CAA get three teams into the dance?” I love it because it shows (1) progress; and (2) A Bruiser Flint mentality. Why be happy with two teams? Imagine if Mason had been happy with its Sweet 16 appearance. Imagine, too, how thrilled you were when Stewie Hare flushed the statement against USC.

Different world.

By the way, Kyle’s answer was spot on–through some sort of power poll, Old Dominion could sneak in and win the CAA tourney, with VCU and Mason each winning about 25 games and having great noncons.

Later, he also answered the UNCW question in the best way I’ve seen yet: getting TJ Carter back is an NBA mentality–get a great free agent for one year and presto, it is titletown. Doesn’t really work that way. Kyle was much smarter than I have been (big shock there) in saying the same thing–the middle of the CAA is rather like playing Yahtzee.

***

Tomorrow, we will take Lindy’s to task in a collaborative effort with some of the finest, smartest, and funniest bloggers ever linked from the right hand side of this blog. Stay tuned.

***

Hoping to be back up to full speed by next week.

September 21, 2007

Saddle (Sidle?) Up…

Filed under: Uncategorized — mglitos @ 8:16 pm

This is exactly the time of year you need to spend the weekend–or Monday–preparing your best and biggest CAA query.

We have Athlon and Lindy’s preseason mags out, and I’ve seen the CAA write up in Blue Ribbon. There’s lots to talk about and lots to digest and lots to not know. (Side note: Athlon is tons better than Lindy’s but still far inferior to Blue Ribbon.)

So get it all together and tune in to Kyle’s chat on ESPN.com (link forthcoming) Monday afternoon at 4:00. Consider yourself warned.

September 20, 2007

Holy Crap, I’m Alive !!!!

Filed under: Uncategorized — mglitos @ 11:42 pm

Eh, I could go the long, personal story route as to why this space was vacant for a week. But I’m smart enough to know that using my personal life as an occasional punchline is really all you care to know. It’s hoops here.

Suffice to say I’ll be catching up tomorrow. There will be a post, but I cannot guarantee any nuggets. We may use tomorrow to give you one of those posts crafted in the same spirit and forcefulness as the first mile of the first time you go running after a year-long layoff.

Lame Tease:  We’ll have something special for you next week in this space. A collaborative effort, no less. So there.

September 13, 2007

If Only It Were Vacation…

Filed under: Uncategorized — mglitos @ 10:27 pm

We’re not looking back. Yes, I missed a pile during my one-week hiatus/sojourn/re-programming, but really, until the opening tipoff it’s all prep work. Look for oddly-timed catch-up posts and I ramp back up.

First up is your life lesson, and I’ll reach to one of the world’s greatest philosophers for help: “Don’t look back, something might be gaining on you.” No matter the crap laid in front of you by even the most ignominious dullard, keep moving forward. There’s nothing you can do about the past. Learn from it, but let it go. You can only control today, and tomorrow. Focus your energy there. (Other than Old Satch, can you tell I’ve been reading some eastern philosophy lately?)

That said, I’ll use the philosophy of looking forward to set up one of the better transitions  ever used on this blog. I was fortunate enough to chat with Delaware coach Monte Ross the other day.

One of the things I wanted to talk to him about was their season-ending loss to Nor’easter in last year’s CAA tourney. If you remember, Delaware trailed by some ugly score of 50-25 or 58-30. After winning five of 29 games, it would be reasonable to think “pack it in” would be the next play call.

But the Hens played HARDER the final 10 minutes of their season and lost the game by only 10. I left the Richmond Coliseum that day impressed and with a mental note that I carried with me about seven months.

Um, why?

“We teach them to play with passion, heart, and desire every day,” Ross said. He also said a few things about nobody being able to stop you if you want to play hard.

Fine–good to hear but not really groundbreaking material. Then…

“We tell them to fight through it and overcome, because if you give up on a BASKETBALL GAME, how can you respond when a real trial comes along in life,” Ross continued. “We’re trying to teach the natural reaction to fight.”

Monte Ross is the right man for that job at Delaware.

Couple other tidbits: Ross said the biggest compliment he paid Brian Johnson was that they forgot Johnson was a freshman last year. He also said Herb Courtney didn’t rest on his laurels and worked his tuchus off over the summer. Ross is also pleased at the prospect that Courtney can get off the floor a little more this season, which will make him a better player.

Pau Geli was cleared by doctors for full contact about a week ago.

***

This is a legit question I haven’t had much time to ponder. So guards, especially ballhandlers, are THE most important player on the floor in college basketball these days, right? At least that’s what the really smart guys who create conventional wisdom say. (You bet your bippy that was a shot at a couple of folks.)

So what does this say: the CAA last season had three freshmen point guards who all averaged 30-plus minutes per game (Janning, BJohnson, Curtis).  VCUs Eric Maynor was a sophomore. Towson’s CC Williams was a junior but in his first season of D1 basketball.

What does that bode?

September 12, 2007

Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow, Creeps in…

Filed under: Uncategorized — mglitos @ 12:09 am

We should be back up to speed tomorrow–perhaps even later tonight. Methinks I’ve got the cap screwed on straight, finally.

Much to catch up, including ODU at #3/#68, Threatt officially on campus in DeeCee, and some insight from my conversation with Monte Ross.

I’m certain I’ll have some funny (to me) comment about my disappearance tomorrow. Right now the Dewars and grappa needs to wear off, which has made me particularly rambunctious today.

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