By Pat Forde Special to ESPN.com Aggrieved and injured, the Cincinnati Bearcats may have been backed into the corner they've been longing for all season. Bob Huggins and his teams have always seemed more comfortable with a chip on their shoulders. All teams nowadays moan about a "lack of respect," but Huggins' crew hungered for disrespect and used it as fuel for its furious style of play. The coach tends to be in his element when he's in combat -- with the NCAA, with the refs, with the media, with rival coaches, even with his own players.
Arkansas was on the NIT bubble a week ago, before launching its stunning four-game run to the Southeastern Conference title. Coach Nolan Richardson has compared this baby-faced team to a basket of puppies, prone to running all over each other in mass confusion -- but now the sharp-teethed pups are coming to heel at just the right time. The 11th-seeded Razorbacks are not big but are scary quick, led by freshman Joe Johnson and sophomores Brandon Dean and Teddy Gipson. And the coach knows his way around March: Richardson is 26-13 in the NCAAs and has won at least one game in his last 10 trips. Contrast that with first-round opponent Miami of Florida. The sixth-seeded Hurricanes have won one NCAA Tournament game in their history -- five fewer than Miami of Ohio. Don't believe the hype Tennessee will face a legion of doubters in Birmingham who are waiting for the Volunteers to finally prove their worth in March. Under specific scrutiny will be coach Jerry Green and point guard Tony Harris. The school that gave you Bernard King, Ernie Grunfeld, Dale Ellis, Allan Houston and many other talented players has also given you a total of six NCAA Tournament victories. In history. And five of those belonged to Don DeVoe. Green arrived and quickly began refurbishing a dilapidated program -- with great help from the players Kevin O'Neill left behind when he left in a snit for Northwestern. He also took about two minutes to puff out his chest and start talking big talk that hasn't played well into the postseason. Green's SEC Tournament record: 1-3, with the lone victory coming over a 9-18 LSU team. Green's NCAA Tournament record: 1-3, with the lone victory a shaky one as a No. 4 seed a year ago that was followed by a 30-point loss to 12th-seeded Southwest Missouri State. Tennessee's habit of self-congratulation -- following a big win with a flat loss -- has been in part fueled by mercurial point guard Harris. The junior from Memphis can beat anybody off the dribble -- including himself. Harris' ability to play with a controlled fury still escapes him from time to time, as he pinwheels off into fits of one-on-one ball. It's hard to see him producing 4-6 games of smart play. In seven postseason games (SEC and NCAA tournaments), Harris is 22 for 94 from the field (23.4 percent) and has 26 turnovers. On a roll Nobody in the entire field is hotter than Utah State, winner of 19 straight in a romp through the Big West Conference. Its last loss was Jan. 8 to Brigham Young -- and the game before that, the Aggies upset tourney team Fresno State. The Aggies were one of three teams to run the table in conference play -- Cincinnati and Penn were the others -- and then followed that with a three-game stand in the league tournament. Utah State, which plays UConn, attacks with depth and balance. Four players average between 10.2 and 11.9 points per game, and nobody plays 30 minutes per game. The bad news for the Aggies: Utah State is fighting recent precedent AND the defending national champ. Big West teams have lost six straight first-round games. On life support Missouri's garnering of a No. 9 seed indicates that it was a relatively safe entry to the Dance, but a flurry of late losses had the Tigers a wee bit nervous. Missouri had a late rally fall short at home against Oklahoma State in the final weeks of the season, then followed that up with a thorough stomping at Oklahoma on Senior Night and a close loss at Kansas. The Sooners then nipped Mizzou again in the Big 12 tournament quarterfinals, leaving the Tigers with two days to sweat out their at-large bid. Hot hand If the Huskies are going to mount a serious defense of their national title, it must begin with point guard Khalid El-Amin. The junior point guard is always capable of acquiring the hot hand at any time -- but has been just as capable of losing it at key junctures as well. El-Amin has had some great NCAA moments already -- keeping the ball alive on the glass in the final seconds for the winning shot against Washington in 1998, hitting critical free throws to seal the title in '99 -- but he also failed to make the West All-Region team a year ago as the Huskies won almost in spite of him. He's been emblematic of UConn's fitful season this year: His stats remain strong, but he's thrown in a few clunker games in ugly losses. El-Amin has always loved the big stage, dating back to his 42-point game in the Minnesota state high school title game his senior year, Minneapolis North's third straight state title. Hard to believe he won't rise to the occasion now. Hero in waiting Casey Jacobsen is hardly a nobody, leading Stanford in scoring as a freshman. But Jacobsen tends to get lost among the trees (mascot and otherwise) on a team crowded with good players. The first name everyone mentions with the Cardinal in tough guy Mark "Mad Dog" Madsen. Then comes twins Jason and Jarron Collins. From there, Jacobsen may or may not be next in line on the marquee, along with David Moseley, Ryan Mendez and others. Such is life on one of the most balanced teams in the country. But Jacobsen could be the Stanford player with opportunity to light up the scoreboard this March. Averaging 14.7 points and shooting 44.5 percent from 3-point range, he'll benefit from outmuscled teams trying to throw everything they have at Stanford's inside bulk. And he's more than just a stand-still perimeter shooter. The high school All-American -- who was overshadowed on that level by the likes of Jonathan Bender, Jason Williams, Jason Gardner, Keith Bogans, DerMarr Johnson and Joseph Forte -- can find other ways to score. Look for him to do plenty of it this weekend. Pat Forde of the Louisville Courier-Journal is a regular contributor to ESPN.com. |
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