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| Monday, January 31 | |||||||||
ESPN.com | ||||||||||
Editor's note: Every Sunday, ESPN.com's Andy Katz will break down the week that was and what's coming up in the Weekly Watch. Be sure to check out the Weekly Watch segment Sunday nights on ESPN2's College Hoops2Night with Karl Ravech and Jay Bilas at 9 p.m. ET.
Last week's storyline All it took was one game for the Orangemen to catapult into the role of national title contenders. For the first time this season, Syracuse had a national audience -- and it didn't disappoint.
The Orangemen took full advantage by dismantling Connecticut on Big Monday. Sure, it's one game, but Syracuse proved it has the offensive options, the physical strength defensively and the depth to hang with -- yes, we're speculating here -- the likes of Cincinnati, Stanford, Michigan State, Duke and Tennessee (read into that if you want). The Orange crush continued when Syracuse pulled away from a gritty Boston College team Saturday to run its record to 17-0. And, once again, Tony Bland was out front on a break finishing with a jam (this seems to be the most common highlight). Syracuse has gone through adversity, playing without injured Etan Thomas earlier this season. No one saw them handling the challenge, but they obviously sailed through without a hitch. Struggling St. John's is next on the hit list, followed by a likely win at Providence for a potential 19-0 record heading into non-conference matchups against Louisville (on the road) and UCLA (at home).
Team of the week The Volunteers have adapted throughout the season, giving Jon Higgins more time at the point to let Tony Harris run free at shooting guard. The collective inside game is crashing the boards better than any team in the SEC and no player, save LSU's Stromile Swift, is having a better breakout sophomore season than Vincent Yarbrough. Tennessee can take a commanding lead in potential tiebreakers in the SEC East with a win at Kentucky on Tuesday before finishing the week at Mississippi State on Sunday. Tennessee has already won at Florida -- pushing its school-record SEC road winning streak to six games -- which gives it a realistic shot to win in Lexington.
Player of the week Magloire has been a regular double-double performer during Kentucky's rise back to the elite of the SEC. Kentucky was once 4-4, but sits at 15-5 heading into Tuesday's showdown with Tennessee. The Wildcats have won five straight since losing at Auburn, with four of those wins coming on the road. Magloire's presence in the middle has given the 'Cats new hope for a deep NCAA Tournament run..
Climbing up The Cyclones have one of the nation's best point guard/center combinations in Jamaal Tinsley and Marcus Fizer. Fizer talked about leaving for the NBA a year ago but came to his senses and is having a Big 12 MVP season. The 18-3 Cyclones can clinch a NCAA Tournament bid if they continue to clean up during a homestand that includes Kansas State and Nebraska over the next two weeks. The win total could reach 22 with home wins over Texas and Oklahoma State in late February, giving Iowa State a gaudy record, regardless of what happens in its four remaining road games.
Falling down Akron (14-6, 8-3) lost its lead in the East Division and maybe its at-large chances with an RPI that sits at 84 in one replication of the selection committee's formula. The Zips have to play catch-up with games vs. Central Michigan and at Western Michigan on the schedule this week. Bowling Green (15-4, 7-2 and 71 in the same RPI) began its week losing at Kent (15-4, 7-3 and 13 in the RPI) before beating Akron.
Five worth tracking Tulane: The Green Wave (15-4, 4-3) are atop the National Division in C-USA with five straight wins. Tulane took apart Houston, New Orleans (a non-conference win) and UAB this past week. The UAB-UNO games were back-to-back last Sunday and Monday. A message can be sent to the rest of the league if Tulane can beat DePaul on Wednesday in Chicago before returning home to play Southern Mississippi on Saturday.
UNLV: The Runnin' Rebels took over second place in the Mountain West with a win at Colorado State. They play Wyoming on Monday in Laramie before a crucial home game Saturday against Utah. UNLV has won four straight since losing to BYU in the MWC opener. The Runnin' Rebels (13-4, 4-1) still have work to do to get at-large status (the MWC doesn't have an automatic berth). Fresno State: The Bulldogs (14-7, 4-1 WAC) had one chance to save their season. They took advantage of it by beating Tulsa on Saturday night on Demetrius Porter's 12-foot turnaround jumper. The basket and the win gave Fresno State new life in its quest to get Jerry Tarkanian into the NCAA Tournament. But the dreams could come crashing down if the fragile Bulldogs don't get through a three-game road trip to San Jose State, Hawaii and UTEP.
Question these five Detroit: The Titans were drilled at Wisconsin-Green Bay on Saturday to drop from the top of the Midwestern Collegiate Conference standings. Detroit's erratic play this season has canceled any hopes for the Titans (13-8, 4-3) to get an at-large berth if they can't win the conference tournament. Too bad. Detroit has beaten St. John's and UCLA in consecutive first-round games. St. John's: The Red Storm appeared to have righted their inconsistent play with a win over Rutgers earlier in the week. But they were taken apart by Notre Dame and Troy Murphy with a 17-2 run to close the game. The Red Storm has struggled to finish games, not a good sign going into Monday's game at Syracuse. The worst could still come. St. John's ends the season with these five games: Syracuse, Connecticut, at Duke, Seton Hall, at Miami. Delaware: The Blue Hens fell two games behind first-place Hofstra after Maine completed a rare season sweep Saturday. The loss to Maine at home put the Blue Hens (15-5, 7-3) in jeopardy of finishing third and having a tougher route during the America East tournament. Maine (16-5, 8-2) outscored the Blue Hens 43-24 in the second half. DePaul: Can anyone figure this team out? DePaul loses to Saint Louis at home, beats Florida but then loses at UAB. The Blue Demons have had trouble getting up for the non-showtime games. That had better end soon, with DePaul's bubble-like 13-7 overall record (and rather pedestrian C-USA record of 3-4). Playing surging Tulane on Wednesday and then dangerous UNC Charlotte on the road Sunday puts even more pressure on DePaul to snap out of its funk.
What worked last week Starting Kenny Satterfield at the point: Cincinnati coach Bob Huggins moved his freshman ahead of Steve Logan in the Bearcats' game at Louisville and it worked -- Satterfield scored 11 points, had 10 assists, two steals and no turnovers in 28 productive minutes. Logan's ego may have been bruised, but Satterfield answered the challenge he was given by making the No. 1 team even better. Northwestern's offense: The Wildcats had been one of the worst offensive teams in the nation prior to Saturday's game at Minnesota. Northwestern scored 29 points in a loss to Michigan State -- in Evanston -- earlier in the week. But the Wildcats found the net to their liking with 60 points, in a rare, close 69-60 loss to the Gophers. Air Force's homecourt advantage: Every year, the Falcons beat a team they're not supposed to at the Academy. This past weekend, Reggie Minton almost nabbed two. The Falcons beat BYU on Thursday and had Utah down but couldn't convert late in losing the one-point game in the final minute Saturday. Kareem Rush's improved game: The Missouri freshman returned even better after a nine-game suspension. He led the Tigers with 16 points (6 of 10 shooting, three assists and three steals) in only 20 minutes in Saturday's win over Texas A&M. Missouri coaches didn't allow Rush to sit still during his suspension, working on improving his shooting and conditioning in rare in-season individual workouts.
And what didn't work Oregon's fans attempting to rattle USC's Brandon Granville: Granville missed the first of two free throw attempts late in the game against Oregon, but the USC staff complained that fans jumping up and down were making the basket move. The officials agreed and gave him another shot. He made both free throws for a 67-66 lead, much to the anger of Oregon coach Ernie Kent. But the Ducks came down and scored on their next possession and held on to hand the Trojans their first Pac-10 loss of the season. Florida State's ability to capitalize on a Carolina win: The Seminoles became the second team in as many weeks to fail to build on a win at the Dean Dome. UCLA won in Chapel Hill but then lost its next game to Arizona. Florida State, which was hoping to climb in the ACC standings, followed the Carolina win with a road loss at Virginia and a home loss to Maryland. Duquesne's once-proud Atlantic 10 start: The Dukes should be given credit for improving from five total wins last season to eight overall in 1999-2000. But since a 2-0 A-10 start, Duquesne has lost three of the last four, including a brutal 81-37 showing against Temple on Saturday. UCLA's chances for the Pac-10 title: Any thoughts of the Bruins hanging around for first, or even second place, have ended after UCLA's loss at Oregon on Saturday. The Bruins fell to 3-4 in the league (12-6 overall), three games behind first-place Stanford, Oregon, Arizona and USC.
Andy Katz is a senior writer for ESPN.com. His Weekly Watch appears every Sunday. | ALSO SEE Cinderella Watch Projecting the NCAA Tournament Video Dunks of the Week Ratings Percentage Index |