I found out about the not-guilty verdict in George Zimmerman’s trial for the death of Trayvon Martin at work. It was about 1:30 AM, and as soon as I read the news I felt physically ill. After that my eyes started to well up. A flurry of emotions and thoughts followed, one after the other, until I was feeling so much that I didn’t know what I was feeling. Trying to write a full fledged column would be a disservice to some of the outstanding pieces I’ve already read this morning, like this one and this one. For my own sanity, I will try to articulate a couple of those thoughts here, not all directly related to the Trayvon Martin incident:
This page will disseminate opinions on topics from music, to televison, to movies, to sports, to whatever may be of interest to me at that moment in time. These opinions will absolutely be short-sighted, ill-informed, reactionary, exaggerated, or just flat out wrong. But they will absolutely be my opinions.
14.7.13
Random Thoughts Prompted By The Trayvon Martin Verdict
I found out about the not-guilty verdict in George Zimmerman’s trial for the death of Trayvon Martin at work. It was about 1:30 AM, and as soon as I read the news I felt physically ill. After that my eyes started to well up. A flurry of emotions and thoughts followed, one after the other, until I was feeling so much that I didn’t know what I was feeling. Trying to write a full fledged column would be a disservice to some of the outstanding pieces I’ve already read this morning, like this one and this one. For my own sanity, I will try to articulate a couple of those thoughts here, not all directly related to the Trayvon Martin incident:
6.7.13
53 Minutes of Madness: How The Golden State Warriors Landed Andre Iguodala And How He Makes Them Better
Between 12:06 and 12:59 PM yesterday, three pieces of news
emerged that would turn the Golden State Warriors Dwight-centric off-season on
its head. The first piece went like this…
2.7.13
Wild Wild West: Making Sense Of All The Warriors News And Rumors From Day 1 Of Free Agency
ESPN/Grantland writer Bill Simmons dubbed July 1st,
the first day of NBA free agency, “Sources Say Day” because of all the rumors
and reports thrown around when 30 teams are all freed at the same time to go after
available players. And man, sources were saying a lot about the Golden State
Warriors today. There were at least 6 different rumors involving the Warriors
today, and while some of the news broken was expected, there were a few things
coming out of left field. Let’s address all of them, shall we. Let’s start with
the least surprising news, but the biggest potential impact…
29.6.13
Why The Warriors Should (And Are) Going After Dwight Howard
Golden State trying to get a visit with Dwight Howard too. Source says he'll likely meet with them.
— Chris Broussard (@Chris_Broussard) June 27, 2013
Oh boy, here we go...
20.3.13
Why Indiana Will (Probably) Win It All
Throughout this week, I will reveal my picks for this year’s Final Four, as well as detail why they are threats to win it all. You can find parts 1 & 2 here and here. My official pick to cut down the nets in Atlanta will run tomorrow.
Indiana Hoosiers (1
Seed – East Region)
Coach: Tom Crean
Conference: Big Ten
Record (Conf.
Record): 27-6 (14-4)
Rankings: Associated
Press – 4, USA Today/Coaches – 4, RPI – 7, KenPom.com – 3
You win with talent. Not that I’m breaking any news here,
but every year around this time people seem to forget that fact when filling
their brackets, getting caught up in sleepers and storylines and everything
except, you know, which team has the best basketball players. Nine out of the last ten national champions
have had future NBA lottery picks on their team, and Mason Plumlee, a member of
Duke’s 2010 Championship squad, has a decent chance of making that a perfect
ten in this year’s draft. Teams like UCONN in 2011, who weren’t a 1 or 2 seed,
still had lottery picks like Kemba Walker and Jeremy Lamb on the roster. Great
coaching and a favorable bracket are great, but if you don’t have the horses, you’re
going to run into trouble, and no team in the tournament has more thoroughbreds
than the Hoosiers of Indiana.
When talking about keys for Indiana, you have to start with
the man in the middle, Cody Zeller. The 7-foot sophomore is an incredibly
efficient player, averaging 17 points and 8 rebounds a game while shooting 57%
from the field and 75% from the free-throw line. Zeller is not a terribly
athletic player, but he has an array of moves around the basket, great touch,
and a strong body that he knows how to leverage to his advantage. When he is
assertive in calling for the ball and aggressive in his attacks, the Hoosiers
are almost unbeatable, going 15-2 in the 17 games which Zeller had double-digit
shot attempts. Any team that hopes to beat Indiana has to have someone who can
give Zeller trouble around the basket, and there just aren’t many guys like
that around.
However, keeping Zeller in check alone isn’t nearly enough
to topple Indiana. The Hoosiers have 4 players including Zeller who average
double figures, and Junior wing Victor Oladipo has turned into a one-man
wrecking crew. The 6’5” wing from Maryland is the best two-way player in the
country, averaging 14 points per game on 60% shooting (44% from 3) while being
named Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year. As important as Zeller is to the
Hoosiers fortunes, without Oladipo’s play-making on the perimeter and dynamism
on defense Indiana’s title chances would be non-existant.
It’s not a two-man show at Indiana either. Chirstian Watford
is a stretch four who provides sharp-shooting from distance on offense (49%
from 3), and rebounding and length on defense with his 6’9” frame. Jordan Hulls
is a guard with good ball control (3.1:1.2 Assist/TO) and mad bomber range (46%
from 3 on 5 attempts a game). Freshman Kevin “Yogi” Ferrell plays beyond his
years, doing a great job distributing to his many scoring options (4.2 APG) and
making his freebies (80% from the FT line) in heavy minutes for a first-year
player (28.2 MPG).
A lot of people are down on Indiana’s title chances because
they aren’t convinced that he’s anything more than a great recruiter who is average
at best as an in-game tactician. For years, that same description followed John
Calipari around, until he recruited enough talent to break through and win a
title in 2012. Now analysts mention him as one of the best in game strategists in
college. Indiana will win because they have better basketball players than
everyone else. It may be a boring reason, but it doesn’t make it wrong.
You can follow Andy on twitter at @AMOhoop34
19.3.13
Why The Pitt Panthers Will Win It All (Maybe)
Throughout this week, I will reveal my picks for this year’s Final Four, as well as detail why they are threats to win it all. You can find part 1 here. My official pick to cut down the nets in Atlanta will run on Thursday.
Pitt Panthers (8 Seed
– West Region)
Coach: Jamie Dixon
Conference: Big East
Record (Conf.
Record): 24-8 (12-6)
Rankings: Associated
Press – 20, USA Today/Coaches – 22, RPI – 43, KenPom.com – 7
In the NCAA tournament, more than in any other post-season
in sports, it’s better to be lucky than good. All too often a great team gets
stuck in a brutal part of the bracket and gets worn down before succumbing to
the one team that has the right style to beat them, while a less talented team
with serious flaws ends up in a favorable region with teams that don’t have the
necessary talent to exploit those weaknesses. Sometimes teams just get
inexplicably hot and win games they have no business winning. Villanova beating
Georgetown 66-64 in 1985 is considered by many to be the biggest upset in NCAA
Championship Game history, but that’s not really Georgetown’s fault. Villanova shot
an unbelievably absurd 78.6% from the field, missing only 6 shots the entire
game. A team gets on a run like that in the tourney and weird stuff starts to
happen. The 2013 Pitt Panthers, being in a very favorable region and shockingly
underrated by the selection committee, are going to make things get weird.
To even make a Final Four as an 8-seed you need three
things: weak top seeds, favorable matchups, and to be a lot better than your
garden variety 8-seed. The Panthers, by virtue of landing in the West Region
have all 3 going for them. With Gonzaga, Ohio State, and New Mexico occupying
the top 3 seeds, the west Region is home to the weakest 1, 2, and 3 seeds in
the tournament. Gonzaga’s shiny 31-2 record and perfect run through the West
Coast Conference, distracts from the fact that they haven’t beaten a single
team that’s a top-3 seed in the tournament, haven’t made it past the round of
32 since 2009, and haven’t been past the sweet 16 since 1998. Meanwhile,
Deshaun Thomas is the only player on Ohio State’s roster who averages double
figures, so a single off-day from him and Ohio State is dead in the water. And
New Mexico is essentially Gonzaga-lite, with only two previous tourney trips
since 2005, both of which ended in the round of 32. The top of this region is
ripe for upsets to clear the path for a lower seeded team like Pittsburgh to
crash the party.
Why Pittsburgh in particular? Largely, because they play the
exact style that can give Gonzaga fits. Pitt ranks 17th in the
country in defensive efficiency according to KenPom.com’s advanced statistics
and boasts a large and deep front-line that will challenge Gonzaga centerpiece
Kelly Olynyk more than any other opponent he’s played this year. If Olynyk and
his frontcourt mate Elias Harris are bottled up, Gonzaga will find themselves
in a world of trouble.
The Panthers glacial pace of play and low scoring numbers
have given them the reputation of being an offensively challenged team. In
reality, Pitt’s offense ranks 9th nationally in efficiency, clocking
in at over 116 points per 100 possessions. This is backed up by the fact that
Pitt ranks 18th in the country in field goal percentage, and 7th
in assists per game which is all the more impressive when you consider the slow
pace they play at. Couple this with their superb defense, and you get a team
that is much better than an 8-seed. ESPN’s Basketball Power Index has Pitt
pegged as the 15th best team in the country, while KenPom has the
Panthers at 7th. This is a 3-seed or 4-seed team, not an 8, and with
their region seemingly wide open and their proficiency on both sides of the ball,
the time is right for the Pitt Panthers to make it to the final four and, with
a little weirdness, take the whole thing.
You can follow Andy on
twitter at @AMOhoop34
18.3.13
Why Georgetown Will Win It All (Possibly)
Throughout this week, I will reveal my picks for this year’s Final Four, as well as detail why they are threats to win it all. My official pick to cut down the nets in Atlanta will run on Thursday.
Georgetown Hoyas (2
Seed – South Region)
Coach: John Thompson
III
Conference: Big East
Record (Conf.
Record): 25-6 (14-4)
Rankings: Associated
Press – 5, USA Today/Coaches – 5, RPI – 10, KenPom.com – 12
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