Closing down the Salem Civic Center

Many years, we are the last ones out of the Salem Civic Center. It’s a working night for us, where we try to update the site before heading out and grabbing dinner and a couple of drinks.

So happy St. Patrick’s Day. The Purple and White will be wearing the green, and the Walnut and Bronze.

We’re the last ones on the floor, our crew and Diehardfan and David Collinge, posting Hall of Famers. The Amherst players left about 20 minutes ago, destined for the Golden Corral. No lie. I suggested to Dave Hixon, the D3hoops.com Coach of the Year by the way, that since the NCAA was paying for it, they might want to step up a couple classes in restaurant. But they don’t have all night, exactly. Might take a while to get served.

Congrats to Amherst and the NESCAC for adding another title. I asked in the postgame news conference whether the players had any extra glee over joining their archrival Williams in the pantheon of champions, and I think there is.

And congrats to DePauw and coach Kris Huffman for their title as well. We’ll leave it to our Springfield crew to wax poetic about the weekend.

We will post the All-American teams later tonight.

DePauw/Washington U.

Please note the broadcast is available here.

Although this afternoon’s title game is a rematch of the season opener for Washington U and DePauw, I’ve a feeling these two teams are quite different — and a lot better — than they were back in November. The Bears certainly are as they’ve gone 24-2 since starting 1-3. Bondi scored 14 points for the Tigers in that first match-up, a 75-68 DePauw win.

Here are some keys to success for both teams…

DEPAUW

    Don’t get killed on the glass:

Washington U has obliterated its last two opponents on the glass, outrebounding Puget Sound 47-31 in the sectional final and NYU 46-27 in the yesterday’s semis. Rebecca Parker and Jaimie McFarlin have made a living off second chance baskets and follow-up shots. DePauw needs its forwards to limit those.

    Establish offense inside the arc:

As obvious as that sounds, there was a stretch in yesterday’s Mary Washington game where Tiger guards were taking a lot of long jumpers early in the shot clock. Fortunately, they were also following their shots and grabbing boards. That’ll be harder against Wash U so the Tigers need to get Liz Bondi and Bridge Bailey going to prevent the Bears from packing into a zone defense.

    Critical players:

Liz Bondi has played like a tournament MVP so far. She has the athleticism, skill and court knowledge to be the best player on the floor. Cassie Pruzin struggled yesterday (0-5, 2 points) and needs to bounce back to her average (8.8 ppg).

    X-Factor:

Emily Marshall is the kind of forward who can help neutralize the Bears’ Parker/McFarlin tandem. Bailey will likely play more minutes but, should she get in foul trouble, it’ll be up to Marshall to prevent the Bears from blasting the Tigers on the glass.

WASHINGTON U

    Youth Movement:

As well as Parker and Schell have played during the tournament, it’s sophomore Jaimie McFarlin and freshman Zoe Unruh who push the Bears to another level. Unruh will likely have a size advantage on whoever guards her and McFarlin has an excellent array of low post moves.

    Make your freethrows:
    Wash U shoots free throws at a 63.2 percent clip, way below DePauw (73.0 percent). If the game is close late as expected, Parker and McFarlin will have to shoot better than their 45.1 and 60.8 percent average to win.

    Critical players:

McFarlin is very talented and has played with a lot of poise in this tournament. If Bondi and her are matched up, that will be a lot of fun to watch. Much like Pruzin for DePauw, Sarah Schell did not play well last night (1 for 8 in 21 minutes) and looks to finish her career strong.

    X-Factor:

The Bears don’t shoot threes very often, but Jill Brandt (35.7 percent) is probably the best candidate to take a late three. Unruh also has good range and the quick first step to get free.

PlayPlay

On the floor in Salem…

The Wooster Scots are first on the floor to begin practice at the renovated Salem Civic Center. A new floor awaits the teams, which was first used during the Old Dominion Athletic Conference tournament.

New scoreboards, new floor, new end zone backdrops and blue, blue, blue everywhere.

One of the Wooster players comments that they are surprised there is no center-court scoreboard hanging from the rafters. Steve Moore stands and center court taking some notes…88:10 left on the clock.

Practices today are precisely 90 minutes for each team. No more, but less if they choose. Amherst will be next. More from Salem coming up.

Plenty of good seats still available

Let me first say that no one from either the NCAA or Springfield asked me to do this. I want to get that out of the way because this is going to sound like an advertisement, though you’re on your own as far as getting the necessary phone number or web link for more information goes.

It’s likely that the women’s Final Four isn’t going to fill Blake Arena to capacity as it did last season. Last year’s games had three schools that draw huge fan support- Hope, Southern Maine, and Scranton- and for two of those schools, travel was pretty easy. This year’s contest has only one school- NYU with both a huge fan base and a location within three hours of Springfield, Mass.

It’s too bad, because last year’s Final Four was the most fun of the six I’ve covered for this site. There was an energy in the building that greatly enhanced the event. The players felt it. The coaches felt it. And the fans felt it.

So I’ll say this, and hopefully it won’t sound like shilling. If this event has even the slightest bit of significance to you, you should go.

If you’re a fan of any of these teams, it goes without saying that you should be there. This is a once in a lifetime kind of opportunity and if cost/work/school doesn’t get in the way, you should be there, loud and proud.

If you’re a basketball fan, go to “ooh” and “ah,” which is what I remember most from the first one of these I attended, when Washington University and St. Benedict went toe-to-toe for 40 minutes in Danbury, and my 28k dial-up connection on my laptop allowed for the occasional listing of game updates on “Posting Up” (how far we’ve come since then). There was a buzz in the building, particularly when 3-time national player of the year Alia Fischer hit a couple hook shots, one with each hand.

If you’re a player, go to see what your game is missing. That’s what Eastern Connecticut’s Allison Coleman did, driving all the way out to Terre Haute, Ind. to watch the Final 4. The next year, she was playing in the game, and despite the team’s loss to Trinity, her efforts in sparking comebacks in both the semifinals and title game, made her and her team the story of the tournament.

If you’re a coach, go to take notes. One told me last year of sitting close enough to the Southern Maine bench to hear the team’s coaches making in-game adjustments and finding the process fascinating. The coach sitting next to me at this year’s Sweet 16 at Emmanuel, pulled out pen and paper every few minutes and started diagramming the plays run by DePauw with machine-like precision. One listening to our coverage on the internet said they were so inspired by our descriptions that they were thinking of making a last-minute 1,000 mile trip to check out what they were missing.

You may recall that in this space a few weeks ago, I wrote about my 80-mile trek to catch scoring maching Mike Hoyt’s final collegiate game for Mount St. Mary. The weather wasn’t too great that day, but while sitting in a parking lot outside a Barnes & Noble in Hartford, Connecticut, I thought to myself: “Is this something I’m going to wish I had seen?” Next thing I knew, I was sitting next to Hoyt’s family, 2 rows from the court. I’m glad I went that day and I think you’ll be glad you went if you find your way to Springfield.

Final Four broadcast plans

Many already know this, but there will be live video coverage from both Salem and Springfield. We are honored to have been asked to provide the play-by-play and analysis for the NCAA’s official video broadcast of the national semifinals and third-place game.

We recommend visiting CSTV’s Web site, which will be streaming those games, and registering and testing your system now — don’t wait until game time.

CSTV’s streaming requires, unfortunately, a Windows PC. They are not Mac friendly. They also require Internet Explorer (no Firefox, Opera, etc.).

You need to be running Microsoft Internet Explorer 6.0 or 7.0 on the following systems in order to enjoy All-Access:

Microsoft Windows XP Home / Professional SP2, Windows XP Media Center 2005, Windows 2000 SP4; Windows Media Player 9 or 10.

We will provide our traditional audio stream of each national championship game, as always. That is accessible to Macs and PCs.

All links will also be available on our Live Audio page.

Virginia Wesleyan's Marques Fitch talks to HoopsvilleHoopsville will be airing Thursday night from Roanoke, Va., in a live show from the Wyndham Hotel starting at 8 p.m. ET. We’ll talk about the tournament so far, the Final Four games, and talk with each team as they return from the championship banquet. Come sit and listen, ask questions, point and laugh at Dave, etc.

The Wyndham is just off Exit 3 on I-581 and is the teams’ official hotel. Meet fans of other teams and just celebrate Division III basketball in general. We’ll go from 8 until at least 10, if not later, to get all four teams in.

And on Friday, whether you’re at the games or not, check out our scouting reports, which will be on the Web site during the day. We’ll also have live audio pregame coverage from Salem starting at 4 p.m. ET Friday, and Saturday’s broadcasts will start with the coaches’ roundtable in Salem and take you all the way through the postgame news conferences at both sites, including our annual audio highlight reel of the NCAA Tournament.

So fire up your browsers! It’s a long weekend of Division III on the air! And I love exclamation points, apparently!