Hoopsville Podcast: February 22nd

With just a week left before teams leave everything the hands of the NCAA selection committees, there is plenty to talk about, try and figure out, and react to… it is sometimes tough to figure out where to start and where to end! Tonight’s show started with reacting to the Wash U loss to Rochester and finished with UW-Platteville’s win over UW-Stevens Point.

Guests included:
– Jason Mulligan (Univ. of New England)
– Lee McKinney (Fontbonne)
– Nancy Fahey (Wash U.)

Also reports from Bob Quillman (Midwest/WIAC), Mark Simon (Northeast), and JC DeLass (Rochester-Wash U), along with Pat Coleman chatting with UW-Platteville’s Paul Combs and Jeff Skemp.

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Hoopsville Podcast: February 19th

The 2008-09 regular season is quickly coming to an end with just a few days left before many conference tournaments and about 10 days until we learn who will continue their seasons in the NCAA Tournaments.

Once again we tackled the Great Lakes, Mid-Atlantic, East, and South Regions on the Thursday edition of Hoopsville. We also took a look at where many teams stand in terms of being in good shape or not for an NCAA bid.

Guests included:
– Averett Coach Jimmy Allen
– Cabrini Coach Marcus Kahn
– Capital Coach Damon Goodwin
– Illinois Wesleyan Women’s Coach Mia Smith
– Rochester Tech Coach Bob McVean

Click the play button below to listen. You can load the podcast page in iTunes or can also get this and any of our future Hoopsville podcasts automatically by subscribing to this RSS feed: http://d3blogs.com/d3hoops/?feed=podcast

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NCAA regional rankings, week 2/3

The third men’s rankings have been released. Waiting on the second women’s rankings.

Remember there are three ways a game can be classified as in region.

Through games of Sunday, Feb. 15, 2009.

Men’s regional rankings
Records listed are overall record, followed by in-region record.
Atlantic Region
1. Richard Stockton 22-2 19-2
2. Farmingdale State 21-2 21-2
3. William Paterson 19-5 19-5
4. Baruch 21-4 19-3
5. St. Joseph’s (L.I.) 20-3 19-3

East Region
1. Ithaca 22-1 20-1
2. St. Lawrence 18-4 16-4
3. Hamilton 15-6 13-2
4. Rochester 15-7 15-7
5. St. John Fisher 15-7 12-7

Great Lakes Region
1. Capital 20-3 18-3
2. John Carroll 18-4 16-3
3. Carnegie Mellon 17-5 13-4
4. Calvin 16-6 11-1
5. Wooster 17-6 16-4
6. Ohio Wesleyan 16-6 15-5

Middle Atlantic Region
1. Franklin & Marshall 21-2 20-2
2. St. Mary’s (Md.) 20-4 17-2
3. Widener 18-5 16-5
4. McDaniel 17-6 15-5
5. DeSales 18-5 17-5
6. Wesley 16-7 14-3
7. Gwynedd-Mercy 18-5 17-4
8. Cabrini 17-6 17-6

Midwest Region
1. Washington U. 21-1 20-1
2. Wheaton (Ill.) 20-3 16-3
3. Elmhurst 17-6 17-6
4. Transylvania 17-5 14-3
5. North Central (Ill.) 16-7 14-5
6. Lawrence 15-6 15-6
7. Augustana 17-7 16-7
8. St. Norbert 18-4 17-4

Northeast Region
1. Worcester Polytech 18-4 18-3
2. Middlebury 21-3 19-2
3. Elms 21-1 20-1
4. Rhode Island College 19-4 19-4
5. Bridgewater State 17-5 16-3
6. Massachusetts-Dartmouth 20-3 18-3
7. Salem State 18-5 17-5
8. Amherst 19-5 17-5
9. New England 20-3 19-3
10. Brandeis 14-8 14-8

South Region
1. Texas-Dallas 20-3 18-3
2. Trinity (Texas) 20-3 17-3
3. Guilford 19-4 18-4
4. Randolph-Macon 19-5 17-2
5. Centre 18-4 14-4
6. McMurry 16-7 15-5
7. DePauw 17-6 13-5
8. Mississippi College 17-5 15-5

West Region
1. St. Thomas 22-0 22-0
2. Puget Sound 21-2 18-0
3. UW-Whitewater 20-3 19-3
4. UW-Stevens Point 20-3 19-3
5. UW-Platteville 20-3 15-3
6. Buena Vista 22-2 19-2
7. Claremont-Mudd-Scripps 16-6 14-4
8. Whitworth 18-5 16-5

Women’s regional rankings
Records listed are in-region record, followed by overall record.
Atlantic Region
1. York (Pa.) 22-1 22-1
2. Kean 17-4 19-5
3. Mt. St. Mary 19-3 19-4
4. TCNJ 18-4 20-4
5. Marymount 18-3 19-4
6. Mary Washington 16-5 18-5

Central Region
1. Illinois Wesleyan 20-0 22-0
2. UW-Whitewater 18-3 20-3
3. UW-Stevens Point 19-3 20-3
4. Washington U. 16-4 18-4
5. UW-Eau Claire 15-4 19-4
6. St. Norbert 17-2 18-4

East Region
1. Rochester 20-2 20-2
2. New York U. 18-4 18-4
3. Cortland State 18-3 19-3
4. Union 16-4 16-6
5. Oneonta State 16-4 18-5
6. Ithaca 14-6 15-8

Great Lakes Region
1. Hope 16-1 20-1
2. Thomas More 17-2 21-2
3. DePauw 13-3 19-4
4. Washington & Jefferson 16-3 20-3
5. Transylvania 16-3 18-5
6. Capital 16-4 16-5

Mid-Atlantic Region
1. Moravian 18-4 20-4
2. Muhlenberg 20-3 20-3
3. DeSales 19-4 19-4
4. Messiah 18-3 20-3
5. Scranton 17-4 20-4
6. Alvernia 15-5 16-7

Northeast Region
1. Amherst 22-1 23-1
2. Tufts 19-3 19-3
3. Brandeis 14-6 15-6
4. Bowdoin 19-4 20-4
5. Eastern Connecticut 21-2 21-2
6. Western Connecticut 17-4 18-4
7. Southern Maine 17-4 18-5
8. Keene St. 16-5 18-5

South Region
1. Oglethorpe 16-2 21-2
2. Texas-Dallas 20-2 20-3
3. Greensboro 20-0 21-1
4. Roanoke 19-2 21-2
5. Randolph-Macon 15-4 18-5
6. McMurry 16-4 18-5

West Region
1. George Fox 18-0 23-0
2. St. Benedict 20-3 20-3
3. Concordia-Moorhead 15-5 16-7
4. Simpson 16-3 20-3
5. St. Thomas 17-6 17-6
6. La Verne 15-4 17-5

Back-to-Back Champs!

Since my last post the Beavers have been crowned the IIAC champs for the second year in a row. We clinched sole possession with a victory of the University of Dubuque on Wednesday night and a loss by Loras. We heard after the game in the locker room that Loras had lost to Cornell. We just celebrated a little bit, and Coach made sure he told us how proud he was of us and that it was an accomplishment. However, this team has set higher goals. In order to reach those higher goals we needed to win the regular season conference championship. To keep reaching those goals we need to win the tournament championship and get into the National Tournament. Before the conference tournament we have one regular season game left against a rising opponent. Friday night we are heading to Decorah, Iowa. We play Saturday at 4 against the Luther Norse. Luther has been battling week in and week out for a final spot in the conference tournament. They beat a good Central team last Saturday and they need to win out to get the 6th and final spot. There defense is the best in the league and it will be a very good game.

I am going to talk about two more seniors today. The first is one of our guards Travis Person. Travis is a monster. He benches the most on the team, as he stands at 6,7” 230 lbs and is sold as a rock. He was a 4 man for us a couple seasons ago, but his ability to guard quicker opponents has improved and his ability to stroke it from downtown has been great consistently. My favorite story about Travis is a recent one. We were trailing to Wartburg in the second half a couple of weeks ago. Wartburg had beaten us at their place, and pretty much beat us in the first half at our place. In the second half we really moved the ball well on offense and worked for that good look against their zone. However, the ball never seemed to go any further than Travis Person. Travis was on fire, he had nine three pointers in the game. He pulled one from the IIAC symbol on our court which is about six feet behind the three point line. It was one of those nights where every time he touched it, without thinking it was going up, and it was going in. He finished the game 9 for 11 from the three point line, and had 27 points. With that game he earned Iowa Conference player of the week. Travis plans to do landscaping work for a cousin who owns a business in Des Moines. I guess he is going to continue to be a brut the rest of his life.

The other senior has been a teammate as well as a very good friend of mine for a long time. Kyle Stribe was a member of the Manning High School basketball team with me. We have been close for many years and it has been fun to watch him develop as a basketball player as well as a person. Off the court Kyle has come to be one of the funniest people of the team. At first you would think he was quiet and chill about everything, but once you get to know him he is a very funny person. He usually just sits on the back of the bus on road trips and throws his two cents in to the group of guys’ playing cards in front of him. His one line comments are some of the best. The best quality of Kyle on the court is that he doesn’t waste possessions. We always talk as a team on how important it is to not waste possessions. Kyle doesn’t turn the ball over. On top of that he doesn’t take bad shots. His three point percentage is amongst the highest in the league. He has improved his ball handling as well as passing over the years. My favorite basketball story about Kyle took place last season in a game against Benedictine College. Kyle scored 20 points including hitting 6 three pointers in the first 8 minutes of the game. It was truly one of the most amazing shooting displays I have ever witnessed. Kyle is currently student teaching at a school near Storm Lake. There is no doubt in my mind that he will be an outstanding teacher someday.

We are on the road Saturday at Luther and then home for the first round of the conference tournament next Thursday. We are focused on Luther right now as we know they are going to give us everything they have. They are well coached and very physical on both sides of the ball.

The Abegg projections

For some time now, Wash U graduate Patrick Abegg has been collecting data on Division III basketball, running his own computer rating and the like. In recent years his projections of the NCAA’s regional rankings have been impressively accurate. So, rather than duplicate his efforts, we’ve decided to recognize him as the Joe Lunardi of Division III.

From his rankings, we’re projecting out who the at-large men’s basketball candidates are, which conference leaders are currently upset proof (if they take one loss) and who’s on the bubble.

As a refresher, 60 teams make the NCAA Tournament in Division III men’s basketball, with 39 automatic bids, three Pool B bids for teams not in those conferences and 18 at-large bids (Pool C).

For the purposes of this projection, one team in each conference has to be the presumed automatic bid.

Who’s in?
These are teams that have clinched automatic bids
Washington University-St. Louis, UAA champion

Who’s safe?
These are teams that would get in even with a loss in the conference finals, no matter what. There can only really be nine locks if there are 18 at-large bids.
St. Thomas
Ithaca
Puget Sound
Franklin and Marshall
UW-Whitewater
Middlebury
Worcester Polytech
Wheaton (Ill.)
Richard Stockton

Who’s next?
For each team above which wins its conference tournament and automatic bid, a team from this list joins the ranks of the safe.
Capital
Buena Vista
Texas-Dallas
Calvin
Farmingdale State
Rhode Island College
St. Lawrence
Bridgewater State
Trinity (Texas)

Pool B ranking
Elms
Scranton
Susquehanna

No other Pool B team appears in Abegg’s regional rankings, encompassing 82 teams. The next team would likely be Maryville (Tenn.).

Safe Pool C teams
These teams are relatively safe even with the one expected loss.
1. UW-Stevens Point
2. Hamilton
3. Mass-Dartmouth
4. UW-Platteville
5. John Carroll
6. Randolph-Macon
7. Centre
8. North Central
9. Salem State
10. Elmhurst

Pool C bubble teams
These teams need a lot of things to go right ahead of them.
11. Amherst
12. McDaniel
13. Carnegie Mellon (Note, no conference tournament.)
14. St. Joseph’s (L.I.)
15. William Paterson
16. Ohio Wesleyan
17. Mississippi College
18. Whitworth

A-begging to get in
Better win out.
19. Montclair State
20. Colby
21. Wesley
22. McMurry
23. Augustana
24. MIT
25. DePauw
26. Ohio Northern
27. Bowdoin
28. Brandeis (Note, no conference tournament.)

I’ve gotten questions about Cornell and Mary Hardin-Baylor this week. They stand at No. 30 and 36 on Abegg’s Pool C list.

All other conference leaders not listed need to win out, as currently projected.