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| Thursday, February 17 | |||||
ESPN.com | ||||||
NEW YORK -- Iowa seemed like the obvious choice to leave New York 0-2 this weekend. Steve Alford was putting in a half-court system in his first year as head coach of the Hawkeyes.
When Iowa drew defending national champ Connecticut in the first round of the Coaches vs. Cancer Classic, Alford was obviously concerned.
He's probably not wishing that now after Iowa's 70-68 victory Thursday night over the preseason No. 1 Huskies. This win should stay with Iowa the rest of the season. The first tournament usually has season-long ramifications.Talk to Tennessee coach Jerry Green. A year ago, Tennessee played in the first game of the season in a one-day doubleheader in Albuquerque, N.M. The Volunteers, fresh off the preseason publicity of being a Top 10 team, had their inflated bubble burst when they lost 73-72 to what was supposed to be a rebuilding Arizona. Suddenly, three weeks into practice, the Volunteers found out they weren't that good. Three games later, Tennessee lost at Miami (Ohio) and fell off the Top 10 radar at 2-2. "We had most people back but we got all this publicity for not doing much," Green said. "We were picked in the Top 10 and didn't play up to it. We didn't handle those expectations well and that game (against Arizona) had a great deal to do with it." While the Volunteers were humbled, Arizona was jacked up over its win. The Wildcats found out Michael Wright could rebound, Jason Terry could handle the heat after replacing Mike Bibby, A.J. Bramlett was tough enough to be the go-to post player and Richard Jefferson might be more of an offensive threat. The Wildcats ripped off seven more wins before losing at UCLA to open the Pac-10. "Five of our top eight were freshmen and we didn't know where we were," said Arizona coach Lute Olson, who gets another early call with the Preseason NIT opener against Kansas State on Nov. 16. "That Tennessee game helped us confidence-wise so much. It propelled Michael Wright because he knew hecould play at this level." DePaul discovered its freshman trio -- Quentin Richardson, Lance Williams and Bobby Simmons -- equaled their preseason billing. The Blue Demons lost at the buzzer 82-81 to New Mexico in the second game. DePaul didn't make the NCAA Tournament, but playing the Lobos that early didn't hurt. "Our kids showed a tremendous amount of maturity for freshmen in that game," DePaul coach Pat Kennedy said. "That game pushed us along quicker." New Mexico won a game that might have been the quality win it needed on its résumé to earn an at-large berth. But more importantly, the Lobos found out it wasn't going to be easy to win without Kenny Thomas, who sat out the first semester. "We were down 15 and overcame playing without Kenny," former New Mexico coach and present Baylor coach Dave Bliss said. "Lamont Long proved he was a big-time player in that game." In this tournament, Iowa simply needs to get Alford's system down. Junior Dean Oliver must go from being an up-tempo point guard to settling the team into a set offense and looking for the safe shot, not the first one. Connecticut needs to see if freshman Doug Wrenn can replace Richard Hamilton's scoring, junior Albert Mouring can be a Ricky Moore-like defensive stopper and just how dominant can sophomore Ajou Deng be in the post. Duke will get a much-needed glimpse at freshman Jason Williams at the point, classmate Carlos Boozer in the post (he's back after breaking his foot when he arrived on campus this fall) and the rest of the heralded class -- centers Nick Horvath and Casey Sanders and wing Mike Dunleavy Jr. Stanford finally gets a chance to see the Collins twins (Jason and Jarron) play together after injuries kept them apart for all but eight games the past two years. Testing its point guards -- oft-injured Michael McDonald and freshman Julius Barnes -- against Duke's Williams, and seeing if freshman Casey Jacobsen can stroke the 3-pointer under pressure are even more important barometers. "You know you can't possibly have your team ready by this time," Stanford coach Mike Montgomery said. "But this is a high-quality early-season game for us. It shouldn't define the season because there's a lot that can happen. But it did put a sense of urgency (in practice) as a result of playing this type of competition." Hot on the heels of the Coaches vs. Cancer Classic is the NABC Classic, played Friday and Saturday in Syracuse, N.Y. Friday's matchups are Wisconsin vs. Missouri and Syracuse vs. Princeton. The only team ready for this tournament will be Syracuse. The Orangemen return nearly intact from last season and are secure at two key positions -- point guard Jason Hart and center Etan Thomas. Princeton's system is hard to manage this early, especially without ageless Tigers Brian Earl and Gabe Lewullis, who graduated last spring. Missouri coach Quin Snyder has to find out if he has an inside game to match an athletic, sharp-shooting perimeter (Keyon Dooling, Kareem Rush, Brian Grawer and Josh Kroenke). Wisconsin may be the least ready in trying to get new guards to run a disciplined offense.
Weekly chatter Wisconsin's decision to redshirt 6-foot-6 shooting guard Julian Swartz was just as stunning. Swartz was the Badgers' top recruit last year after averaging 23.1 points at Waukesha (Wis.) South High. Swartz said he wanted the year to mature on the court. On the surface, the Badgers needed Swartz now with the loss of Ty Calderwood and Sean Mason. But Wisconsin's system isn't easy to learn overnight.
Arenas wasn't supposed to be this good so soon. If anyone were going to challenge Douglas, it was expected to be JC recruit Lamont Frazier. But he has been slowed by injuries and barely practiced the first two weeks. If Arenas can give Arizona pop on the wing and Jason Gardner be a steady presence atthe point, the Wildcats can challenge for the national title. They already have a mature Loren Woods in the post. Despite being in his first season eligible at Arizona, Woods was named a co-captain with longtime walk-on/student coach Josh Pastner. Arizona opens with Kansas State in the Preseason NIT on Nov. 16 and with a potential second-round matchup against Ohio State, which plays host to Notre Dame.
But Big Brother must show the same compassion for the lesser-known players. Gonzaga is waiting for word on the status of freshman point guard Germayne Forbes. The London native took a social science class that is now in dispute. Instead of practicing, Forbes has spent the last few weeks alone in a side gym, banished from team participation. So, instead of a normal adjustment to college life, not only as a freshman but also as an exchange student, Forbes has been forced into solitary confinement. The archaic appeal process of a collection of NCAA professors gathering for a conference call or reviewing via fax every few weeks leaves students like Forbes depressed and anxious until their situation is resolved. A year ago, Fresno State freshman Andrea Bona went through a similar situation. He wasn't eligible until after the first semester while he waited for this group to convene. The NCAA constantly loses sight of the human side of these rulings -- the student-athlete who has to wait each day without hearing a response.
Andy Katz's Weekly Word on college basketball appears every Thursday.
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