Dave’s Top 25 ballot: Week 10

Sorry for the tardiness on this, but celebrating the Baltimore Ravens Super Bowl title got me a little out of sync this week and then the computer I have my blog written on decided to quit working when I went to post this on Wednesday morning. Better late than never, I guess.

Once again, I had to do some real analyzing after not only the number one team lost, but when several other teams on my previous ballot took losses. (And as you will notice, I will already be changing my number one team next week.)

The one thing I have noticed and even discussed with other voters, there may be 15 or 20 teams everyone feels comfortable with, but those last five or ten spots are turning into a cluster(fill in the blank). For the most part, it seems like no one wants to step up and grab their position in the polls or in their conferences. As a result, I think voting this season may be getting harder in some ways than usual years when you really have a sense of who the best teams in the country are.

1 – WhitworthUp 1 spot
I really debated about this. The Pirates have certainly been on a tear winning every one of their games except the season opener against St. Thomas, but besides Whitman their conference schedule has been somewhat weak. They already had to use extra time to get past a pretty decent Whitman squad, but they have also been dominating teams for the most part. I am sure I will be changing this pick sooner than I would like (and now after the fact this is indeed true).

2 – St. ThomasUp 1 spot
I seriously considered putting the Tommies back into the number one place after they clearly rebounded from their lone loss pretty well. However, I had decided that St. Thomas’ loss to Concordia-Moorehead was worse than Whitworth’s loss to St. Thomas in game number one, so I didn’t feel comfortable changing that mentality a week later.

3 – WPIUp 1 spot
Being the Engineers are undefeated and had a nice victory of Springfield this past week, I could have easily decided to move WPI all the way to #1. However, I am still considering who they have played… or not played. WPI is clearly having a better season than anyone could have expected, but I may need to see a little more before I think #1 is the right place for WPI.

4 – RochesterDown 3 spots
I expected the Yellowjackets to get through the weekend unscathed, though maybe bruised, as my number one team. Of course if they had lost to Brandeis, I wouldn’t have been shocked. But to lose to an NYU team that I clearly had overrated earlier this year was not what I would have expected. Rochester did rally to get through the weekend 1 and 1, but they lost the wrong game. Considering it was their first loss of the season, on the road, and many teams below also lost, Rochester didn’t fall as much as I thought about moving them.

5 – MiddleburyUp 1 spot

6 – CatholicUp 1 spot

7 – Hampden-SydneyUp 2 spots

8 – Illinois WesleyanUp 6 spots
I was already starting to buy into the Titans, but when you beat Augustana (on the road) and Wheaton (at home) to sweep the season series from those two and remain three games ahead of North Central, I was ready to buy in further. Can the Titans get through the entire CCIW unscathed? Maybe, but the conference is too good in general for that to possibly happen. So I will continue to move IWU up the board, but won’t jump them into my top five until they get through the conference unscathed.

9 – RamapoUp 1 spot

10 – AmherstUp 3 spots
The Lord Jeffs had a very good week beating Rhode Island and two conference opponents, albeit at home. As a result, their win over Williams now becomes a bigger factor, especially since it was a blow out, so I moved them ahead of the Ephs. However, Amherst didn’t have the strongest out-of-conference schedule and lost two games as well, so I think this could be my ceiling unless they beat Williams on the road in the same manner.

11 – WilliamsDown 3 spots
I did move the Ephs down, but it had more to do with teams I moved ahead of them than the week they had. Granted they won two games on the road in the conference, but they were both close games against Bowdoin (12-9) and Colby (6-15). I know it isn’t the easiest thing to travel in the NESCAC especially from northwestern Massachusetts to anywhere in Maine (there is no such thing as a straight drive from Point A to Point B in that scenario), but if the Ephs are that good they should handle that scenario a bit better.

12 – UW-Stevens PointDown 7 spots
It wasn’t like the Pointers had it easy this week: they played on the road against Platteville and La Crosse who are both having solid seasons. What surprised me was the fact the Pointers were held to just 46 points against Platteville and then couldn’t recover a few days later against La Crosse and only scored 62. That is just the kind of week that can derail a team and makes a voter nervous. I am not sold on just how good the WIAC is this season maybe because the top of the conference isn’t as good as usual while the middle of the conference is just as tough as always.

13 – St. Mary’s (Md.)Up 2 spots

14 – CalvinUp 2 spots

15 – North Central (Ill.)Up 2 spots

16 – Christopher NewportDown 5 spots
I was confident the Captains were pretty good this year, but when you lose to a .500 team like Greensboro at home, I take pause. I still think CNU is a solid team, but I may have had them too high in my poll. (And since I voted they lost to Virginia Wesleyan at home and it wasn’t close.)

17 – WoosterDown 5 spots
The win over Denison at home was destruction; the loss on the road against Wabash was… well… embarrassing. I am not sure if the Scots were looking too far ahead to their game against Ohio Wesleyan or not, but this is the time of year where a team needs to put its foot down and not stub its toe.

18 – Rhode Islandunchanged

19 – Wheaton (Ill.)unchanged

20 – Rose-HulmanUp 3 spots
The Engineers put their foot down on the HCAC. With a very important game against underachieving Transylvania who beat them at home earlier in the year… they won on the road. Rose-Hulman now has a two game lead on the conference forcing everyone to go through Terre Haute, Indiana if they want to automatically pack their bags for the NCAA tournament.

21 – Cortland StateUp 3 spots

22 – UW-Whitewaterunranked
As I mentioned earlier, I am not sold on the top of the WIAC. I have also not been sold on the Warhawks a lot this season; they simply lost too much from last year’s national champions. But they keep winning and are now just a game back of UW-Stevens Point and may be finding their stride… for now.

23 – MITunranked
For the engineers, I mean beavers, no I mean Engineers (plenty of them in my Top 25), they still don’t have Jamie Karraker or Noel Hollingsworth back and may never get them back, but they are still winning. There are three seniors in double-figures including Mitchell Kates and Will Tashman who are scoring 15+ points a game and some of the underclassmen are stepping up. Only one of their four losses is a bad one (Salem State) and they have won five straight. Maybe MIT has found a way to win this season despite the challenges they have faced.

24 – WesleyDown 4 spots
I knew that trying to sweep St. Mary’s, especially with the second game being on the road, would be a tall task. So, I really wasn’t going to eliminate them from my ballot and they only moved this far down because I was moving other teams in that I think might still be better despite the fact the Wolverines have still won 12 of the last 13 (as of my voting).

25 – SUNY-Old Westburyunranked
In a constant search for who are the best 25 teams, I am taking another stab at a team that maybe isn’t getting enough attention. I don’t have the space to explain the season the Panthers have had simply from Superstorm Sandy and the aftermath. But consider that Old Westbury played their first 13 games of the season on the road, had to travel by van to every practice for the first several months at a gym off campus, and they didn’t even have their own locker rooms during that time. Still, the Panthers are undefeated in their conference and while games have been close recently it is probably because the Panthers aren’t used to playing in their own gym!

Dropped out this week:

DeSales21st last week
I will be the first to admit, I made a mistake here. Shortly after I placed DeSales in my ballot and stated they were one team flying lowest on the radar, they lost two games in conference including a pivotal game with Delaware Valley before falling asleep against Misericordia.

Transylvania22nd last week
The Pioneers did it to me again. I bought in and put them back in my Top 25 only to see them lose to Rose-Hulman, at home no less. I just can’t figure out the Pioneers who didn’t lose any of their starting offense from last year’s squad, but clearly lost something from the seniors who left even if it wasn’t on the court.

Alvernia25th last week
You can almost copy my comments about DeSales into this section: they lost a pivotal game against conference and Reading, PA rival Albright. They didn’t lose two games, but when you are on the very bottom of the ballot, any slip can cost you.

NCAA regional rankings, Week 1

The first regional rankings might well be the latest ever, at least in the post-fax machine era. But after 9 p.m. on Wednesday night, they finally got them out.

The committee used to send them out in email form, and they would generally get posted right away by people who care about Division III. Now they send them exclusively to Turner Sports, which runs NCAA.com … and they get posted whenever someone gets around to it there.

Need to know more about the regional rankings process and what they mean? Need to know more about the NCAA Tournament? Check out our NCAA Tournament FAQ.

Through games of Sunday, Feb. 3.

The first record is in-region record, followed by overall.

  • NCAA Division III men’s basketball championships handbook

    Men’s rankings
    Atlantic Region

    1 Ramapo 18-1 20-2
    2 SUNY-Old Westbury 18-1 19-3
    3 Purchase 16-4 16-4
    4 Richard Stockton 16-5 16-5
    5 Rutgers-Newark 15-6 16-6

    East Region
    1 Rochester 18-1 19-1
    2 Cortland State 17-2 17-3
    3 Stevens 15-3 17-3
    4 New York University 13-7 13-7
    5 Hobart 12-6 13-6
    6 Geneseo State 14-6 14-7

    Great Lakes
    1 Wooster 17-3 17-3
    2 Ohio Wesleyan 16-3 16-4
    3 Thomas More 17-2 18-3
    4 Calvin 15-0 19-2
    5 St. Vincent 14-3 16-5
    6 Marietta 16-5 16-5

    Mid-Atlantic
    1 Catholic 16-2 19-2
    2 Albright 18-3 18-3
    3 St. Mary’s (Md.) 14-2 19-2
    4 Alvernia 16-4 16-4
    5 Wesley 14-2 17-5
    6 Scranton 15-6 15-6
    7 Arcadia 13-6 13-8
    8 Cabrini 14-4 16-5
    9 Franklin & Marshall 13-4 16-5

    Midwest
    1 Illinois Wesleyan 15-3 18-3
    2 Transylvania 15-4 16-5
    3 Wheaton (Ill.) 13-5 16-5
    4 Washington U. 15-4 16-4
    5 North Central (Ill.) 16-3 18-3
    6 Rose-Hulman 18-2 19-2
    7 Augustana 15-5 16-5
    8 St. Norbert 15-4 15-4

    Northeast
    1 WPI 21-0 21-0
    2 Amherst 20-2 20-2
    3 Williams 18-2 20-2
    4 Middlebury 16-1 19-1
    5 Rhode Island College 18-3 18-3
    6 Brandeis 15-5 15-5
    7 MIT 15-4 16-4
    8 Curry 15-6 15-6
    9 Westfield State 15-4 17-4
    10 Springfield 15-7 15-7
    11 Eastern Connecticut 14-4 14-7
    12 Albertus Magnus 20-2 20-3

    South
    1 Hampden-Sydney 15-2 19-2
    2 Mary Hardin-Baylor 18-3 18-3
    3 Christopher Newport 14-3 15-3
    4 Concordia (Texas) 14-4 16-5
    5 Emory 14-5 14-5
    6 Virginia Wesleyan 11-5 14-6
    7 Lynchburg 12-5 16-5
    8 Guilford 13-5 16-5

    West
    1 St. Thomas 20-1 20-1
    2 Whitworth 19-1 20-1
    3 UW-Stevens Point 18-4 18-4
    4 UW-Whitewater 16-4 17-4
    5 UW-Stout 16-4 17-4
    6 Buena Vista 15-5 16-5
    7 Augsburg 15-5 15-5
    8 Luther 14-4 15-6
    9 Concordia-Moorhead 15-6 15-7

    Regional score reporting forms (including SOS) below:
    Atlantic  |  East  |  Great Lakes  |  Middle Atlantic  |  Midwest  |  Northeast  |  South  |  West

    Women’s

    The first record is in-region record, followed by overall record.

  • NCAA Division III women’s basketball championships handbook

    Atlantic
    1 Montclair State 22-0 22-0
    2 Catholic 17-1 20-1
    3 Baruch 19-1 20-1
    4 Marymount 16-4 18-4
    5 William Paterson 15-6 16-6
    6 Mary Washington 13-6 15-6
    7 York (Pa.) 13-5 17-5
    8 TCNJ 14-7 15-7

    Central
    1 Cornell 18-1 18-1
    2 Washington U. 16-2 17-3
    3 Carthage 16-3 18-3
    4 UW-Superior 17-3 18-4
    5 Monmouth (Ill.) 16-3 17-3
    6 UW-Whitewater 14-4 16-5
    7 UW-Stevens Point 17-4 18-4
    8 Wisconsin Lutheran 18-0 19-2

    East
    1 New Paltz State 18-2 18-2
    2 Ithaca 17-2 18-2
    3 Rochester 15-5 15-5
    4 Oswego State 14-5 14-6
    5 Geneseo State 14-5 15-5
    6 St. Lawrence 14-5 15-5
    7 Vassar 14-4 16-4
    8 Hartwick 13-3 16-4

    Great Lakes
    1 DePauw 16-0 22-0
    2 Ohio Northern 19-0 20-1
    3 Calvin 14-0 18-1
    4 Thomas More 20-1 20-1
    5 Hope 18-1 20-1
    6 La Roche 17-2 18-2
    7 Mount Union 16-4 17-4
    8 Otterbein 15-5 16-5

    Mid-Atlantic
    1 Messiah 17-1 19-2
    2 FDU-Florham 18-2 19-2
    3 Moravian 18-3 19-3
    4 Swarthmore 15-3 16-4
    5 Gettysburg 15-5 15-6
    6 Juniata 15-6 15-6
    7 Scranton 14-5 15-6
    8 Lebanon Valley 18-3 18-3

    Northeast
    1 Amherst 21-0 22-0
    2 Tufts 21-1 22-1
    3 Southern Maine 18-1 20-1
    4 Bridgewater State 17-3 17-3
    5 Babson 18-1 19-2
    6 Emmanuel 16-3 16-5
    7 Smith 19-2 19-2
    8 Williams 17-4 18-4
    9 Western Connecticut 16-5 16-5
    10 University of New England 17-4 17-4

    South
    1 Ferrum 18-2 18-2
    2 Maryville (Tenn.) 18-2 18-2
    3 Louisiana College 18-1 19-1
    4 Christopher Newport 17-2 18-2
    5 Emory 18-2 18-2
    6 Howard Payne 18-3 18-3
    7 Eastern Mennonite 13-3 15-5
    8 Guilford 17-2 18-3

    West
    1 Simpson 16-0 20-1
    2 Lewis and Clark 15-2 19-2
    3 George Fox 13-4 16-4
    4 Cal Lutheran 16-3 19-3
    5 Minnesota-Morris 12-0 13-7
    6 Concordia-Moorhead 17-3 17-4
    7 Chapman 13-4 15-5
    8 St. Thomas (Minn.) 15-4 15-5

    Regional score reporting forms (including SOS) below:
    Atlantic | Central | East | Great Lakes | Mid-Atlantic | Northeast | South | West

  • Road Show: One night in Brooklyn

    John Jay/Medgar Evers tipoffWhy did I end up at Medgar Evers? I got that question a few times on Monday night. Never doubted the choice, though.

    I’ve mentioned a couple times that I have a list of programs I’ve seen play and gyms I’ve seen games in. There were a couple of CUNYAC teams on the list that I’ve seen, but I’d never been in a CUNYAC gym, and this was an opportunity to change that.

    Medgar Evers College itself consists of four buildings in the Flatbush neighborhood of Brooklyn — in fact, my friend Ray Martel drove me past the Ebbets Field apartments on the way out after the game. Everyone complains about their budget, but Medgar Evers spends significantly less on athletics than anyone else in the conference. Chris Pursoo, the men’s basketball coach, also has his younger brother and his dad on his staff, which is good because the school has zero full-time coaches and family tends to work for the right price. We’ll talk more with him on a future Hoopsville.

    And it shows. The gym is one of the smallest in Division III, and shared with a high school. The fire marshal posts a maximum capacity of 272. The gym is comparable to the one that Hood had before it went co-ed, and according to your responses on Twitter, it is comparable to small gyms at Rosemont, Manhattanville, Emerson and Suffolk.

    If not for a recently redone floor, it would truly be a dump. Instead, at least it’s bright and clean, and it was packed for the men’s game as well.

    Now, the reason I chose this game is two-fold. First of all, I wasn’t going to go to a school that doesn’t post scores in the PrestoSports system. But more importantly, I wanted to see what the Medgar Evers women’s basketball team was all about. Earlier in the year, they were losing games 85-7, 74-5 and 82-6. Lately, they’ve gotten a little bit better, but they are still getting their doors blown off. But, they still have a positive attitude and they still play hard. I talked with Eric James, the Medgar Evers women’s basketball coach, about that after the game.

    Road Show: A Sunday in the UAA

    Thank goodness for the University Athletic Association, where there are always great games to pay attention to on a Sunday afternoon. But usually, the atmosphere on a Sunday in the UAA isn’t nearly as raucous as it was inside Red Auerbach Arena this afternoon for the men’s game between top-ranked Rochester and No. 25 Brandeis.

    The Judges had a significant number of fans there for their home game, but Rochester had a sizable Boston-area alumni gathering at the game as well. And Rochester pulled out to a 14-point lead early in the second half before Brandeis rallied to cut it to one, twice. You’ll see how John DiBartolomeo and the Yellowjackets responded in the video piece below.

    In the second game, the first-place and last-place teams in the UAA looked like they did a role reversal, where last-place Brandeis took it to Rochester in a 62-49 win. I talked with Carol Simon after the game as well.

    I also ran into MIT men’s coach Larry Anderson, who introduced me to women’s coach Sonia Raman. Lots of coaches seeing games this weeekend

    Road Show: Packed LeFrak

    Part of the reason I devote so much time to Division III sports in general is for the adventure of it all. I could have chosen to stay around Boston and see WPI throttle Coast Guard but not if there were a Top Five matchup a couple of hours away.

    So I hopped in the car and drove a hundred or so miles west to Amherst. These games didn’t get me anywhere on my master list — I had seen all four teams play before and I had been in LeFrak Gymnasium as well — but it was a great experience.

    I like to take the less obvious routes when possible. It helps me understand the geography of a state if I drive through more of it, so I took Mass. Rte. 2 instead of the Mass Pike. And on the way back, I dropped off my rental car and took the T to my hotel instead of a cab.

    In between, we saw two great games. Paul Carr, a broadcaster at Wheaton (Ill.) about a decade ago, called the first game with former Lord Jeff Spencer Noon, then he and I called the women’s game together.

    The men’s game was a fantastic back-and-forth affair if you like offense, and the women’s game was a fantastic game if you like defense. You can watch the archived broadcast as well, with the women’s game starting at about the 3-hour mark of the archive.

    After the game I spoke with Bridget Crowley and Bre Dufault, who played on opposite sides but have been best friends since third grade. That interview is below, but I also asked Crowley off camera about a little girl she was talking to after the game. She said coach G.P. Gromacki had passed along a letter from a 7-year-old girl that had been addressed to Bridget Crowley, LeFrak Gymnasium:

    “I really loved your game. I look up to you, you’re the best player. It was just a total confidence booster and it made my day. She drew a picture on it, she put a bunch of stickers on it. I was thinking, ‘I have to get back to this girl and make sure this mail gets to her quickly,’ and she lives right down the road. So I went to the store and got all these arts and crafts — glitter and stickers.

    “We change practice jerseys every year, so I gave her my purple practice jersey and put it in with a note as well and stuffed it in her mailbox. She told me she’d be at this game and I was hoping she’d wear the jersey so she’d be easy to pick out. And she was very easy to pick out. It was so cute.”

    Crowley spent some time with her pen pal, also named Bridget, after the game, on a day in which Crowley got pushed around quite a bit by stronger Tufts defenders. She talks more about it, with her best friend, below: