Showing posts with label Duke Blue Devils. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Duke Blue Devils. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Washington loses another tough test to #7 Duke

By Kshell

The #7 Duke Blue Devils(9-1,0-0) defeated the Washington Huskies(4-4,0-0) 86-80 at Madison Square Garden at New York City Saturday morning. The Blue Devils showed why they are a top 10 team due to their fundamental play while the Huskies showed they have talent just a matter of applying that young talent. The Huskies have now lost three games in a row all games they could have won. During this loss the Huskies did grow as a team as a young freshman Tony Wroten had a breakout game on the big stage. The Blue Devils were helped by a fast start as they took a 40-26 halftime lead over the Huskies then hung on for the late victory with 44 free throw attempts against the Huskies.

The first half was dominated by the Blue Devils as they led 40-26 over the Huskies. The Huskies shot poorly from the field, three pointers and free throws. The Blue Devils also dominated the Huskies at rebounding in the first half as well. The Huskies couldn't stop turning the ball over either and their transition defense was terrible. This looked like another game where the Huskies were going to lose big against a top tier opponent which last year they didn't do. The Blue Devils in the first half shot 15-35(42.9%) from the field, just 2-10(20.0%) from three point range and 8-9(88.9%) from the free throw line while grabbing 24 rebounds. They were led by Andre Dawkins who scored 14 points on 5-9 shooting while making two three pointers. Mason Plumlee scored eight points and grabbed four rebounds on 4-5 shooting. While Austin Rivers scored eight points on three for seven shooting.

For the Huskies they shot terribly 10-32(31.2%) from the field and just 2-9(22.2%) from three point range. Even struggled from the free throw line making only 4-9(44.4%) from the charity stripe. The Huskies were led by Tony Wroten who scored nine points on three for four shooting including a three pointer with three rebounds. C.J. Wilcox scored seven points on three for eight shooting but just one for four from three pointers. Terrence Ross had a horrible first half scoring just two points on one for nine shooting. Aziz N'Diaye score just two points on one for six shooting but did grab six rebounds.

The second half was a different story for the Huskies who found their offense. They also featured their youngster Wroten a little more as he continued to attack the hole setting himself up and his teammates up well. The Huskies shot 21-33(63.6%) from the field in the second half as they outscored the Blue Devils 54-46 but ultimately that wasn't enough as they lost 86-80. The Blue Devils did just enough to hang on which was mainly shoot 38 free attempts in the second half. The Blue Devils for the game shot 27-57(47.4%) from the field while making just 5-17(29.4%) from three pointers. They did make 27-44(61.4%) from free throws and outrebounded the Huskies 37-33. They were led by freshman Austin Rivers who scored 18 points on 6-13 shooting.

For the Huskies they shot 31-65(47.7%) from the field only 5-17(29.4%) from three pointers. They made just 13-23(56.5%) from the free throw line. They were led by Wroten who scored 23 points on 8-12 shooting including a three pointer. He was also 6-8 from the free throw line with five rebounds. C.J. Wilcox scored 22 points on 10-19 shooting with two three pointers. Terrence Ross rebounded from his disaster of a first half with 17 points on 7-17 shooting with two three pointers and seven rebounds. Abdul Gaddy chipped in with seven points on two for four shooting with seven assists. Darnell Gant added six points and four rebounds. Aziz N'Diaye scored four points with five rebounds. Desmond Simmons off the bench scored two points but added six rebounds with three assists. The Huskies had N'Diaye leave the game due to injury with Gaddy, Gant and Wroten also all fouling out.

In conclusion, this was a tough loss for the Huskies program but a good loss. The Huskies saw a star emerge in Tony Wroten. I think it is time for Lorenzo Romar to finally start  his young freshman star Wroten. Whether that means going with a four man guard lineup or simply benching Gaddy. The last two losses to ranked opponents were lost due to slow first half performances. Romar has also developed a bad habit of losing to ranked opponents out of conference away from home. The Huskies haven't beaten a team in this scenario since the Great Alaska shootout in the 2004-05 season. Romar needs to go with talent over experience if he expects to win these type of games. The Huskies will be without N'Diaye until Pac-12 play so look for Romar to experiment with the four guard lineup. This loss will only help the Huskies down the road as they realized they can go toe to toe with Duke with Wroten being the best player on the court. The Huskies have lost three in a row but they are in a lot better shape now than when they left for New York City.

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Uconn-Butler championship game fitting end to a down college basketball season


By Kshell

As I watched UConn win yet another national championship in a game that put me to sleep I wasn't surprised. The game featured so many bricks you could build a house but that was to be expected as the women's game is pretty boring. Wait, wait this was the mens game?!! Yes it was in a game that set men's college basketball back to the pre-shot clock era. This game was a fitting end to an otherwise terrible display of basketball this year in mens basketball. Sure the NCAA tournament was great because of all the upsets but parity is only good for so long. Sports in general thrives on marquee teams and when you have cinderalla making a run every year that isn't a good thing. In this following post I'll explain why this was the worst year in the NCAA in quite some time. The first problem was the game has changed in the past 30 years especially in the last 10.


The talent pool has shrunk over the years due to players leaving early. In the 1970's and before that freshman weren't allowed to play. While you couldn't get a freshman year out of anyone most coaches often received two to three great years. Take the UCLA Bruins dynasty for an example as John Wooden won five titles with Lew Alcindor(Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) and Bill Walton. Now he didn't get either player for their freshman year but in today's game he would only get the freshman year of both. If players were allowed to leave straight out of high school back then Alcindor in today's game would be the #1 pick straight out of high school. The days of seeing elite players stay more than three years are over. Even as of 20 years ago elite players would stay like Tim Duncan stayed all four years at Wake Forest. Over 20 years ago you saw dynasties which is great for the game because either you love them or hate them. When Duke with Christian Laettner and Bobby Hurley were going for a repeat title everyone had an opinion. Now you don't see that even the team they defeated in 1991 the UNLV runnin rebels doesn't happen today. UNLV had won the title and superstars Larry Johnson and Stacy Augmon came back. UNLV went undefeated in the regular season and were upset to the Duke Blue Devils. Duke in 1992 defeated Michigan's fab five which started five freshman. Now that fab five team like the 2010 Kentucky team all leaves but they chose to come back. That is the problem by the time you learn a kid's name he is gone to the next level.


Now college basketball is being forced to be carried by freshman. Sometimes you get a great class of kids and other times like this year you get nothing. Before the one and done rule was in place you saw Michigan State win the title in 2000 led by Mateen Cleaves who was the best player in college. In 2002 Maryland won the title with such "stars" like Chris Wilcox, Juan Dixon and Steve Blake. The game safe to say was pretty weak back then which saw #1 picks overall be Kenyon Martin and then non college players such as Kwayme Brown and Yao Ming. In 2003 the champion was the Syracuse Orangemen who were led by super freshman Carmello Anthony. Anthony could have gone to the NBA straight out of high school if he wanted too. That final four also featured cinderalla Marquette who was led by Dwyane Wade. Then in 2007 the NBA implemented a rule where high schoolers had to play at least one year in college basketball. That year was a good year for the NCAA as such players who normally would have left straight of highschool had to play college. The players were Greg Oden, Mike Conley, Kevin Durant and Spencer Hawes who were all lotto picks after their one season in college. Since then you have seen guys like Kevin Love, Derrick Rose, Russell Westbrook, Michael Beasley, John Wall and DeMarcus Cousins make a huge splash as a one and done player. The problem with that is in a year like this year where there isn't that one and done type talent it kills the product.


In today's college basketball the teams who typically win are the teams without great NBA players. The last team to win a national championship with an elite player was the 2003 Syracuse Orangemen with Carmello Anthony. Ever since then look at the rosters of the winning team they feature good role players in the NBA. The last team to repeat the Florida Gators returned their whole team and only Joakim Noah and Al Horford are making an impact. While you look at a team like the Kentucky Wildcats who next year will have the #1 ranked recruiting class for the third straight season. Now if this was just 20 years ago Kentucky would probably go undefeated next year with a roster of John Wall, DeMarcus Cousins, Brandon Knight, Terrence Jones, three other first round picks and four McDonalds All-Americans coming in. Instead Kentucky for the third straight year will most likely fall short as they will once again have to rebuild that is the price you pay for being such a great recruiter.

Just look how the NBA landscape is different compared to college basketball. In the 1980's your stars were Magic Johnson, Larry Bird, Isiah Thomas and Michael Jordan. Those four players all played for a national championship and in the case of Thomas, Jordan and Magic they won the national championship. Bird played all four years in college, while Jordan played three, Magic and Thomas played just two which was unheard of back then. You compare that to today which saw just one guy in the All-Star game starting lineup win a national championship just shows how different the game is. Of the 10 starters only three played in a final four(Anthony, Wade and Rose) and two of those players played just one year in college. While in that same starting 10 you saw five guys never lace it up in the college game. Of the 10 all-star game starters only Tim Duncan who is from a different era than the other guys played all four years. The game's biggest stars Lebron James and Kobe Bryant never played college basketball. Over 20 years ago Bryant is playing for Duke and becoming the next Grant Hill while James as a senior is playing with freshman Greg Oden making one of the greatest college teams of all-time. Instead we get a year with no stars and no future all-stars in this title game. We saw Butler break WSU's record set in 1941 for worst shooting performance ever. The numbers were just sick 19-55(34.5%) from the field and 1-11(9.1%) from three point range. Those numbers are from the national championship UConn Huskies. Butler shot 12-64(18.8%) and 9-33(27.3%) from three point range and 8-14(57.1%) from the foul line. Butler was so bad they shot just 3-31(9.6%) from two point range. This is what college basketball has come to unfortunately.

All in all, there is nothing college basketball can do to stop this. You can't prevent or blame kids for wanting to make money. The NBA just pays their players too much money for a kid to want to stay in school. If you are a first round pick guaranteed you'd be a fool to stay in school. The fall back to that is you have a title game with an 8th seed who lost three starters from last year and a team who finished 9th in their own conference. This was the first final four with no #1 or #2 seeds and the games were poorly played. Nobody could hit a shot in all three final four games. Expect the NCAA tournament to continue to be wide open which is good for the smaller schools and non traditional powers. The problem is the basketball just won't be the same. You need a face and when your face is Jimmer Fredette who screams NBA bust then you know the game is in trouble. Hopefully next year some super freshman can come in and save the game. That is the problem college basketball is banking on some 18-19 year old kid to save the sport. If the kid is a junior or a senior odds are he won't be an elite NBA player or he would have left by now. This title game was epicly terrible and I don't expect another game quite like this. I also don't expect the game to improve ever again in my lifetime.