- Joined
- Aug 26, 2011
- Messages
- 9,381
- Reaction Score
- 23,714
Every year during conference play - particularly the infant stages of it - it's as if a few hundred guys gathered at the YMCA, threw a bunch of jerseys into the middle of the court, and selected them at random from there. The teams that are supposed to be good don't just lose...they lose in a way that makes you wonder if it's their first time playing together.
Let's start in Morgantown, where the #1 team in the country - eight days removed from looking like they could beat the Spurs - turned the ball over 22 times and lost by double-digits despite shooting 10 of 20 from three. Oh, and West Virginia shot 47 free throws.
The number three team in the country drew an unranked Michigan team, playing without the services of their best player, and trailed pretty much wire-to-wire. The same Melo Trimble that looked like a sure-fire all-American on Saturday somehow scored two points and had more turnovers than assists. Inexplicable.
As I'm speaking, #17 Iowa State drops one in overtime to Texas, still without Cameron Ridley. In a sport full of bi-polar teams, Iowa State might take the cake. This is a team that can fall behind by 30 before the first TV timeout and tie the game by the second one.
Then there's Providence and Creighton...which words simply will not due justice. Providence shot under 30% from the field, 4 of 24 from the field, turned it over 15 times...and won. Creighton, among the best offenses in the country on KenPom, shot 25% from the field. It was a stunningly horrid display of basketball that ended in the most fitting way possible, with Kris Dunn - seemingly - bricking a jumper in the final seconds, when it somehow caught the forgiving part of the back iron and rolled in. That's your #12 team in the country.
The moral of the story is double-edged: one, good teams are going to perform inexplicably terribly at least a couple times during an 18 game conference schedule that involves lots of travel and greatly varying crowds/atmospheres/energy. Losing at home to Temple is a lot different than losing @ West Virginia or @ Michigan, but these are college things and weird things happen.
Perhaps most importantly as it relates to UConn, the aforementioned Texas and Michigan teams both scored big victories. If you weren't sure whether winning in Austin was anything to apologize for before tonight, you should be now that the Longhorns have added a second scalp (with UNC being the first) to a collection that will likely grow in a conference consisting of, seemingly, entirely top 25 teams. Without Ridley, it's hard to imagine them finishing better than .500 in conference, and they have a look of a bubble team. But the win in Austin, without Brimah, is one the committee will look fondly on, and they should.
Then there's Michigan. The more I watch them, the more convinced I am that they are going to be one of the best teams in the country when they get whole. If you like shooting and scoring, watch them. They have shooters out the a** (Duncan Robinson is about to become Jimmer and Doug McDermott's media love child) and they can space the floor with one of the best pick-and-roll guys in the country and a couple of skilled big's. They are going to have games where their lack of size is exposed (see the SMU game), but I'd be surprised if they didn't contend for the Big Ten title.
Add Ohio State to the equation, who is 3-1 in the Big Ten despite getting hammered at Assembly Hall on Sunday, and this team still has everything in front of them for as inconsistent as they've been.
Let's start in Morgantown, where the #1 team in the country - eight days removed from looking like they could beat the Spurs - turned the ball over 22 times and lost by double-digits despite shooting 10 of 20 from three. Oh, and West Virginia shot 47 free throws.
The number three team in the country drew an unranked Michigan team, playing without the services of their best player, and trailed pretty much wire-to-wire. The same Melo Trimble that looked like a sure-fire all-American on Saturday somehow scored two points and had more turnovers than assists. Inexplicable.
As I'm speaking, #17 Iowa State drops one in overtime to Texas, still without Cameron Ridley. In a sport full of bi-polar teams, Iowa State might take the cake. This is a team that can fall behind by 30 before the first TV timeout and tie the game by the second one.
Then there's Providence and Creighton...which words simply will not due justice. Providence shot under 30% from the field, 4 of 24 from the field, turned it over 15 times...and won. Creighton, among the best offenses in the country on KenPom, shot 25% from the field. It was a stunningly horrid display of basketball that ended in the most fitting way possible, with Kris Dunn - seemingly - bricking a jumper in the final seconds, when it somehow caught the forgiving part of the back iron and rolled in. That's your #12 team in the country.
The moral of the story is double-edged: one, good teams are going to perform inexplicably terribly at least a couple times during an 18 game conference schedule that involves lots of travel and greatly varying crowds/atmospheres/energy. Losing at home to Temple is a lot different than losing @ West Virginia or @ Michigan, but these are college things and weird things happen.
Perhaps most importantly as it relates to UConn, the aforementioned Texas and Michigan teams both scored big victories. If you weren't sure whether winning in Austin was anything to apologize for before tonight, you should be now that the Longhorns have added a second scalp (with UNC being the first) to a collection that will likely grow in a conference consisting of, seemingly, entirely top 25 teams. Without Ridley, it's hard to imagine them finishing better than .500 in conference, and they have a look of a bubble team. But the win in Austin, without Brimah, is one the committee will look fondly on, and they should.
Then there's Michigan. The more I watch them, the more convinced I am that they are going to be one of the best teams in the country when they get whole. If you like shooting and scoring, watch them. They have shooters out the a** (Duncan Robinson is about to become Jimmer and Doug McDermott's media love child) and they can space the floor with one of the best pick-and-roll guys in the country and a couple of skilled big's. They are going to have games where their lack of size is exposed (see the SMU game), but I'd be surprised if they didn't contend for the Big Ten title.
Add Ohio State to the equation, who is 3-1 in the Big Ten despite getting hammered at Assembly Hall on Sunday, and this team still has everything in front of them for as inconsistent as they've been.