Tag Archives: College Basketball

UNC & Duke Headline Top NBA Earners By College Alumni

If you want to ask your friends a great trivia question, or perhaps settle a debate, check out the Wall Street Journal’s list of college basketball programs whose players have earned the most money in the NBA since 1985. The WSJ calls it the ‘Basketball Alumni Loot Index.’ This is the kind of intense research that pays off, as this article is now a great bookmark for fans’ reference.

A look at the data shows plenty of interesting results. North Carolina and Duke are the first and second schools on the list, to nobody’s surprise. Our beliefs are confirmed that these two programs produce the most successful NBA players. Powerhouses like Arizona, UCLA, Georgetown, Connecticut, Kansas, and Kentucky all round out the top 10, again legitimizing the findings. Incredibly, Division II school Virginia Union cracks the top 50 of the list thanks to the $100 million-plus earnings of Ben Wallace and some of Charles Oakley’s deals from the 90s. DePaul has made the NCAA Tournament just once in the past 12 years, but they rank #31 on this list, thanks to recent pros like Wilson Chandler, Quentin Richardson, Bobby Simmons, and Steven Hunter. They also had Rod Strickland in the late 80s, who signed multiple lucrative contracts in a great 17-year career.

Full story on Rush The Court

The best traditions in college hoops

College football is filled with long-standing traditions, from rubbing Howard’s Rock for luck at Clemson to dotting the `i’ at Ohio.

College basketball has a few of its own and some of them are, shall we say, a bit unique, including one that involves pajamas and another rolls of toilet paper.

Here are a few of the best ones we know of:

Silent Night, Taylor University: The tiny NAIA school in central Indiana has held its ”Silent Night” every Friday before finals for the past two decades. In one of the most unique traditions anywhere, the students remain silent until Taylor scores its 10th point, then erupt into a cheer as if the team had just won the national championship. Many of the students come dressed in costumes or pajamas and cram into every nook of little Odle Arena. When the game is over, they join arm-in-arm to sing the Christmas song ”Silent Night,” and many head off to Habecker’s Holipalooza, a university-sponsored Christmas party that includes a reading of ”A Christmas Story” by the university president. All that’s missing is a Red Rider BB gun to make this perfect.

The TP Game, John Brown University: It sounds like a line from Beavis & Butthead: I need TP for my basketball game. No one’s exactly sure how it started, but about 30 years ago, students began bringing toilet paper rolls to the home opener and chucking them onto the floor following the home team’s first basket. Thousands of rolls come down in a blizzard of two-ply, covering every inch of the floor at rustic Murray Sells Athletic Center at the NAIA school in Siloam Springs, Ark. The school’s Golden Eagle mascot has even been known to do fluffy snow angels in what has been called the best technical foul in all of sports.

Rock Chalk Chant, Kansas: Allen Fieldhouse is already one of the toughest places in basketball to play, with all that history oozing from the banners, retired numbers and atmosphere. It gets downright spooky at the end of games when, with the Jayhawks firmly in command, the fans sing a ghostly chorus of ”Rock, Chalk, Jayhawk, KU.” The chant evolved from a cheer that a chemistry professor created for the science club in 1886, with the original ”Rah, Rah” later replaced by a transposition of chalk rock, the name for the limestone outcropping found on Mount Oread, site of the Lawrence campus. The fans do a spirited version of the chant before the games to get the home team juiced, then let the visiting team know they’ve been conquered with the eerie rendition.

St. Joseph’s Hawk, St Joseph’s. A mascot flapping its wings isn’t particularly exciting or original. What makes the St. Joe’s Hawk interesting is that he never stops. The Hawk, or at least the various students who have inhabited his bird suit, has been flapping his wings for 56 years. Representing the St. Joseph’s motto of ”The Hawk Will Never Die,” the Hawk was once estimated to flap his wings 3,500 times during a regulation game. The Hawk is one of the few mascots that travels with the team on the road and the student inside the costume – two have been women – receives a full scholarship to the school. So kids, if you’re looking for a way to get a full ride, you might think about switching from shooting hoops to flapping your arms.

Cameron Crazies, Duke. Cameron Indoor Stadium is not exactly modern and holds just 9,300 fans but is one of the most intimidating places in the country to play. The Cameron Crazies, one of the most boisterous and creative student sections anywhere, make sure of that. The Crazies brave the elements to get their seats in a tent city known as Krzyzewskiville and face painting is almost part of the required attire. The Blues Devils student section has been credited with coming up with the chant of ”Air Ball!” when an opponent misses everything on a shot. They also once taunted one super-sized opposing player by tying a McDonald’s Happy Meal to the end of a fishing pole and dragging it across the front of the bench before a security guard put an end to it.

Philadelphia Big 5, La Salle, Penn, St. Joe’s, Temple and Villanova. There are plenty of great rivalries in college hoops, from North Carolina-Duke to Kentucky-Louisville. This one is a fivesome that’s become as Philly as the cheese steak. The Big 5 have played each other since 1954 in the musty, high-ceilinged Palestra on Penn’s campus. And, this being a rivalry and the City of Brotherly Taunting, there isn’t much love lost between the teams and their fans. Among the most entertaining parts of the rivalries are the ”rollouts,” banners brought in by fans that often include unprintable insults. They’re almost always witty, including this one by Temple’s student section in a game against La Salle last year: ”La Salle has 3 Ls. Your team has nine.” Good times.

Honorable mention: Moses Parts the Red Sea, Central Catholic High School, Lawrence, Mass. This is a high school but worthy of noting because of the sheer imagination of it. With the fans in the student section waving their arms – they’re the sea – a student shows up dressed as Moses with a broom in hand. With a thunderous slam of the broom to the hardwood, the students part and Moses marches up the bleachers, setting off a wild cheer that turns into a chant of ”Let’s go Central!” You have to see it to believe it.

College Basketball Scores 12/6/11

College Basketball Scores 12/6/11

#10 Missouri 81, Villanova 71
#14 Pittsburgh 97, VMI 70
#6 North Carolina 97, Evansville 48
#20 Memphis 71, Miami 54
#13 Kansas 88, Long Beach St. 80
#3 Syracuse 62, Marshall 56
TCU 75, Texas Tech 69
#11 Marquette 79, Washington 77

Kansas could have tough year ahead

It’s not even close to panic time in Lawrence. So don’t go that far just yet.

But there is a reality that might be setting in early here in the 2011-12 season: This year, Kansas might not belong with the so-called ‘elites’ in the college basketball ranks.

It wasn’t that Kentucky picked apart Kansas on Tuesday night at Madison Square Garden with a superior game plan or veteran savvy. Both teams were sloppy. But with that said, it was simply talent that won out in a 75-65 Wildcats victory.

The Jayhawks, right now, are good, but not great. In terms of the overall talent at Bill Self’s disposal, it’s likely the thinnest team KU has put on the floor since the 2000-01 campaign, which oddly enough had its season ended by a Self-led Illinois team in the first round of the NCAA tournament.

Story from Yahoo Sports

Izzo: Carrier Classic to be a memory-maker

CORONADO, Calif. (AP) — The aircraft carrier that buried Osama bin Laden at sea is ready for the first college basketball game to be played on an active flat top.

As long as the rain stays away from the Carrier Classic on the flight deck of the USS Carl Vinson on Friday afternoon, coaches Tom Izzo of Michigan State and Roy Williams of No. 1 North Carolina are confident their teams will put on a great Veterans Day show for the approximately 7,000 in the crowd, including the nation’s basketball-fan-in-chief, President Barack Obama, plus a national TV audience.

Izzo and Williams said they and their players were blown away when they boarded the nuclear-powered carrier, which stretches 1,092 feet, weighs 95,000 tons and has four steam catapults that can accelerate a jet fighter from 0 to 165 mph in just more than two seconds.

“My first impression when I walked in far superseded whatever I thought it could be, and we’ve been talking about this for seven or eight years,” Izzo said Thursday aboard the carrier, which is berthed at North Island Naval Air Station. “If you could have seen our players’ eyes as we walked in, you just had such an appreciation for what we’re doing. It’s bigger than a game. It’s bigger than North Carolina against Michigan State. It’s kind of a dream come true for us. In a small, small way, I think we feel we’re giving a little bit back and maybe recognizing the people that deserve to be recognized, instead of just the athletes.”

The game, a rematch of the 2009 national championship game won by North Carolina, was conceived to celebrate Veterans Day and salute active-duty military personnel.

“Wow,” Williams said about his reaction to seeing the ship and the basketball court. The island, which serves as the command center for the ship and flight-deck operations, looms just 50 feet from one end of the court. For some high enough in the stands, there’s a view of the San Diego skyline across the bay.

Williams said his players’ eyes and mouths were wide open as they walked around the flight deck after arriving in San Diego on Wednesday.

“This is a celebration,” Williams said. “The basketball game, from the tipoff till the final horn, we’re going to be working our tails off about the game. But every single second prior to it and as soon as the game’s final horn is over with, we’re thinking about hopefully putting a smile on some people’s faces who represent our country and serve our country.

“I’m as thrilled as I could possibly be,” Williams said. “They’re not fake – I’ve got cold chills up here talking about it. It’s the neatest thing that I’ve ever been involved with.”

Forecasts earlier in the week suggested that a storm might hit around tipoff. But based on updated forecasts, the game will be played on the flight deck, said Mike Whalen of Morale Entertainment Foundation, which is organizing the game. Had the threat of rain been greater, the game would have been moved below to the hangar deck.

The coaches shrugged off suggestions that playing outdoors, with possible wind gusts, would be a concern.

`’I would be willing to bet 90 percent of our players will be thrilled to death to do something that nobody else has ever done,” Izzo said. “That’s the uniqueness of this, too. There are a lot of great players, a lot of great programs, but you talk about a memory-maker, there’s been no player that’s ever done something like this. So if they want to play indoors, I hope they tell me before the game; I’ll make sure I don’t play them. Unless it’s a starter.”

Added Williams: “They can go downstairs and play 3-on-3. Nobody will be watching.”

The court is surrounded by stadium-style seating, which organizers hope will block any wind. No balls will be in danger of bouncing into San Diego Bay.

The coaches think it’ll be neat playing outdoors.

“When Tommy and I played, we used to play outside,” Williams said. “But kids don’t play outside anymore. We better get a lot of shooting in today and tomorrow because we haven’t been outside. He may have outsmarted me, but we haven’t been outside.”

Said Izzo: “My guys haven’t shot real well in the exhibitions. I told them to shoot the exact same way and the wind will blow it in.”

Tar Heels senior center Tyler Zeller said the coaches keep teasing the players about who’s going to fall off the ship. At one point, he worried that the massive carrier will move during the game.

“It is something that none of us have ever experienced,” he said. “I’m looking forward to it but I’m also a little nervous about it. It’ll be fun to be able to give back to them and be able to play a game in front of them.”

Michigan State athletic director Mark Hollis, credited with coming up with the idea for the game, said he was looking for a “dramatic way to reach out” to the military.

By chance, the carrier that became available to host the game was the one that conducted bin Laden’s burial at sea after he was killed by Navy SEALs in a raid ordered by Obama.

Capt. Bruce H. Lindsey, the commanding officer of the flat top, said neither he nor any of his sailors can talk about that mission.

But Lindsey did say his daughter is a senior at Chapel Hill, “so I just have to root for Chapel Hill.”

Magic Johnson and James Worthy will be honorary captains for their alma maters.

When the Carl Vinson is at sea, following sports events – when possible – is important for the crew, Lindsey said.

“They follow sports all the time, so much so that I have to steer the ship so I get the satellite beam hitting us just right,” he said.

© 2011 The Associated Press

Cut college basketball player goes on naked rampage

A Fresno Pacific University basketball player went on a naked rampage Monday night after being told that he had been kicked off the team, Fresno police said Tuesday.

The Fresno Bee is reporting that Leonard Young was booked Tuesday into Fresno County Jail on suspicion of carjacking, resisting arrest, vandalism, harming a police dog and being under the influence of a controlled substance.

Young was dismissed from the team for a violation of team standards, according to the university.

Story from USA Today

Butler gets to work after two runner-up finishes

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Butler stuck to its traditional opening-night schedule Friday.

Coach Brad Stevens closed practice, ditched the dunk contests and got down to coaching basketball earlier than most other teams.

Just 15 minutes after the official start to basketball season, the two-time national runner-ups hit the floor at Hinkle Fieldhouse without a fan in sight.

“We’ll emphasize different things because we are different, and I think we’ll be able to do more than we did last season,” Stevens said referring to his team’s strategy, not outside expectations. “I think we’re more versatile on defense than we were last season. Now they don’t know all the action coming at them, but I think we’re more versatile.”

That’s not good news for opponents already familiar with Butler’s stifling defense.

But this is not the same team.

Butler must replace three starters — Matt Howard, Shelvin Mack and Shawn Vanzant — from a squad that reached college basketball’s biggest stage, the national championship game, the last two seasons. Sophomores Khyle Marshall and Chrishawn Hopkins, who played key roles in last season’s postseason run, should fill two of those spots.

Finding a replacement for Howard, a fan favorite and the heart and soul of the Bulldogs in the locker room, will be tougher.

“Of course it will be different,” Marshall said. “Matt was the face of this program for the last four years, but we have to move on.”

Stevens also has to find a new rotation.

The Bulldogs need productivity out of a highly touted freshman class and key contributions from a host of upperclassmen, two of whom have gotten ready for the season in unorthodox ways.

Ronald Nored, the starting point guard for 2½ seasons before losing the job in February, and Garrett Butcher, the 6-foot-7 forward, have done their conditioning on bikes and in the pool after battling leg injuries the last two seasons.

Stevens said both reported to practice in top shape.

And nobody was more excited to get started than Butcher, a former Indiana high school all-star who had surgery on both knees after his sophomore season. The persistent pain was so bad last season that Butcher spent the second half of the year riding a stationary bike during practice instead of working out with his teammates.

“This is my first full practice since this time last year,” Butcher said, grinning. “Frankly, it’s really exciting for me.”

Even if no one is around to watch.

But that is the Butler Way.

The Bulldogs never celebrated Midnight Madness when it was covered live on late-night television, and still don’t open it up for fans even though the NCAA has agreed to let teams start working out earlier in the day.

Here, it’s always been just another practice.

The one difference from last year is that the Bulldogs are back on their old stomping grounds.

In 2010, Stevens moved practice from Butler’s campus five miles north of downtown Indy, to Franklin College, a Division III school just south of Indiana’s capital city, because of scheduling conflicts with football and volleyball. Stevens thought the awkward time slots available for practice and the continual flow of fans through Butler’s basketball cathedral would be too distracting.

This year, there was no such problem.

The volleyball team is on the road and the opening of basketball practice does not fall on homecoming weekend, so Stevens simply shut the curtains in the old gym and got back to business.

“I never read too much into the first day of practice,” Stevens said. “Last year was the best first practice I’ve ever been a part of. Two years ago, was the worst first practice I’ve ever been a part of, so it’s not a good indicator.”

Butler wound up playing for a national championship both times.

And now they’re back, hoping to achieve the one result Howard & Co. couldn’t — winning a national title.

“That’s the ultimate goal, to be there and be one game better than we were last year and the year before,” starting guard Chase Stigall said. “We can’t focus on the end result right this second because we’re still trying to get this team started and get ready to play.”

Notre Dame was scheduled to hold Irish Madness later Friday night, and Indiana moved back its traditional Hoosier Hysteria festivities to Saturday night. Purdue also had a closed practice Friday night.

Brandon Davies dismissed from BYU for premarital sex

It has come to light that Brandon Davies was dismissed from BYU for having premarital sex. He admitted his “mistake” to teammates and coaches on Monday.

I guess I’m sort of speechless. On one hand he knows the rules of BYU and he agreed to them. On the other hand you have got to be kidding me. Is BYU not a major university and as such do you not want to be taken seriously. You have the #3 team in college basketball right now and you dismiss a major contributor for premarital sex. Seriously.

So you’re telling me that of all the thousands of students and student athletes at BYU none of them are having premarital sex. Gimme a break. Grow up BYU.

Utah State goes through three backboards in one game

Maybe Utah State bought poorly made discount backboards. Maybe the whole night was just a complete fluke.

Either way, the Aggies probably set a bizarre record Wednesday night by somehow going through three backboards in a single game.

Backboard-breaking dunks are rare in this era of shatter-resistant hoops throughout college basketball, so the always innovative Utah State student section chose to celebrate Wesley’s achievement during the lengthy delay.

Read more at Rivals on Yahoo

Why do #1 teams lose so often?

It’s starting to seem like #1 teams in college football and basketball are going down with more regularity than they used to. Epidemic like.

Kansas wasn’t even #1 for 24 hours before they lost to Kansas State… and it was never really in doubt. How can a team be 24-1 and look pretty dominant, then all of a sudden get the #1 ranking and lose? Duke and Ohio State also went down this year. Logic tells you Texas will probably be the next #1, which puts them on the clock to lose, if they don’t lose before they even get to #1.

Without checking, my memory tells me that a vast majority of #1 teams lose on the road. Duke, Ohio State and Kansas all lost on the road. Why? The home team gets more pumped to protect their house, the home crowd pushes the players through tough stretches and keeps them motivated when they might get tired otherwise…..and those giant heads, forget about it.

Yep being #1 can be treacherous…..watch out #2, you’re next.

Tim Hardaway Jr. becoming star for Michigan Wolverines

Freshman Tim Hardaway Jr. has proven he was up to the task of starting at point guard for the Michigan Wolverines his rookie season in the Big Ten.

Hardaway Jr., who averaged 31 points a game in his senior year of high school, is Michigan’s second leading scorer this season. The son of five-time NBA All-Star Tim Hardaway Sr. has established himself as one of the top freshmen in the Big Ten as well, ranking second among his conference classmates in points per game.

Read more at Yardbarker

Jeff Capel calls out Sooners’ effort

Oklahoma did something it hasn’t done all season Saturday. When the going got tough, it caved in an 84-61 loss at No. 20 Missouri.

“I thought when adversity hit us in the second half, we backed down,” OU coach Jeff Capel said Monday.

The Sooner coach wasn’t saying anything he hadn’t told his team already. Players had already received the message.

Read more at The Norman Transcript

College basketball coaches Top 10 tempers

It’s not easy coaching a college basketball team. Coaches have to deal with the hormones of college students, expectations of fans, and, oh yeah, the X’s and O’s. Tonight you’ll see one of the more volatile coaches ever, Kansas State’s Frank Martin, lose his cool on ESPN in what’s likely to be another loss to in-state rival Kansas. With that in mind, look at the 10 most infamous tempers among coaches in college hoops over the last 25 years.

These are some good ones. Loved the John Cheney vs John Calipari one, actually forgot about that.

Read more at Yardbarker