Welcome to Salem

The D3hoops.com team is beginning to arrive in Salem, as Ryan and I are about six miles from town as I begin to tap this out on my cellphone.

The Jostens Trophy ceremony begins in 15 minutes. Team practices do as well and we will be blogging from courtside as those go on. If you’re in the area, those practices are open, plus you can come check out your seats.

Dave McHugh is a little more than an hour behind us on I-81 and Bob Quillman is flying in later.

Weather is great — headed for highs in the mid 50s today, mid 60s tomorrow.

No mention of the games in the local paper today, which is disappointing.

Last word for this post — mind the speed limit coming into town. The cops patrol Rte. 311, which is the primary road from I-81 to the Civic Center.

The Ron Sattele-approved road to Holland

You may remember us writing about Oglethorpe coach Ron Sattele, or us interviewing him on Hoopsville or the Southern Hospitality tour.

Back in December, Sattele told me about many things, including his trip to the 2007 Final Four in which he refused to drive the interstate.

So while the NCAA will be flying Sattele and the Stormy Petrels to the Final Four, you may be curious: If Sattele were driving his Porsche, how would he go? Look no further — it may not be MSN Mappoint’s shortest possible distance, but it’s sure a complicated route.

View Larger Map

Turn by turn, by turn by turn by turn by turn by turn, from Oglethorpe to Holland:

1. Head northeast on Peachtree Rd NE toward Lanier Dr NE 0.2 mi
2. Turn left at Ashford Dunwoody Rd NE 5.1 mi 11 mins
3. Slight right at Mt Vernon Rd 0.2 mi
4. Turn left at Chamblee Dunwoody Rd 0.5 mi 1 min
5. Continue on Roberts Dr 1.3 mi 2 mins
6. Turn left at Spalding Dr 0.3 mi 1 min
7. Turn right at Pitts Rd 0.7 mi 1 min
8. Turn right at Roswell Rd 2.2 mi 4 mins
9. Continue on S Atlanta St 1.7 mi 4 mins
10. Continue on Canton St 0.8 mi 3 mins
11. Continue on Crabapple Rd 4.6 mi 10 mins
12. Turn left at Birmingham Hwy/GA-372 9.9 mi 16 mins
13. Turn left at Freehome Hwy/GA-372
Continue to follow GA-372 12.1 mi 17 mins
14. Turn right at GA-372/GA-5-BR 2.1 mi 3 mins
15. Turn left at GA-372 N/GA-5-BR N 1.8 mi 3 mins
16. Slight right at GA-5 N/GA-515 N 11.2 mi 13 mins
17. Turn right at Antioch Church Rd 0.2 mi 1 min
18. Turn left at GA-136/GA-754
Continue to follow GA-136 14.8 mi 18 mins
19. Turn right at Old GA-61/Old US-411 8.5 mi 11 mins
20. Turn left at GA-282/Mountain Rd/US-76 0.2 mi 1 min
21. Continue on Smyrna Ramhurst Rd 3.6 mi 6 mins
22. Turn left at Smyrna Church Rd 0.1 mi
23. Turn right at Spring Place Smyrna Rd 2.7 mi 4 mins
24. Turn right at GA-225
Entering Tennessee 16.9 mi 23 mins
25. Continue on Spring Pl Rd SE/TN-74 11.6 mi 16 mins
26. Turn right to merge onto APD 40/TN-60 N/US-64-BYP E/US-74 E
Continue to follow TN-60 N 29.3 mi 50 mins
27. Turn right at Rhea County Hwy/US-27 N 17.3 mi 27 mins
28. Turn right at TN-68/Wassom Memorial Hwy
Continue to follow TN-68 21.2 mi 31 mins
29. Slight right at US-127 N
Entering Kentucky 67.2 mi 1 hour 29 mins
30. Turn right at US-127 N/S Washington St
Continue to follow US-127 N 4.6 mi 6 mins
31. Turn left at KY-90/US-127
Continue to follow US-127 24.3 mi 30 mins
32. At the traffic circle, take the 3rd exit and stay on US-127 51.3 mi 1 hour 6 mins
33. Turn left at S Danville Bypass/US-127-BYP N/US-150-BYP N
Continue to follow S Danville Bypass/US-127-BYP N 5.3 mi 8 mins
34. Continue straight onto Harrodsburg Rd/US-127 N
Continue to follow US-127 N 22.2 mi 29 mins
35. Continue on US-127-BYP N 6.6 mi 8 mins
36. Turn left at KY-151/US-127
Continue to follow KY-151 7.9 mi 13 mins
37. Turn left at US-60 12.1 mi 17 mins
38. Turn right at KY-55-CONN 1.2 mi 3 mins
39. Continue straight onto KY-55 21.6 mi 32 mins
40. Turn left at US-421 22.2 mi 31 mins
41. Turn left to stay on US-421
Entering Indiana 0.8 mi 2 mins
42. Turn left at E 2nd St/US-421
Continue to follow E 2nd St 0.4 mi 2 mins
43. Turn right at Jefferson St 0.4 mi 2 mins
44. Continue on US-421 N 25.2 mi 30 mins
45. Turn left at US-421/US-50
Continue to follow US-421 23.3 mi 32 mins
46. Turn right at IN-46 0.1 mi
47. Turn left at N Lincoln St 1.4 mi 4 mins
48. Turn right at IN-3 N 17.6 mi 26 mins
49. Turn right toward US-52 233 ft
50. Turn left at US-52 0.5 mi 2 mins
51. Continue on IN-3/N Main St
Continue to follow IN-3 14.2 mi 22 mins
52. Turn left to stay on IN-3 24.7 mi 36 mins
53. Turn right to merge onto IN-3 N/IN-67 N
Continue to follow IN-3 N 42.5 mi 57 mins
54. Turn left at E 600 S/IN-124 3.7 mi5 mins
55. Turn right at IN-5/S Warren Rd 8.7 mi 11 mins
56. Continue on S Broadway St 2.2 mi 5 mins
57. Turn left at E Park Dr/US-24-BR W 0.7 mi 2 mins
58. Turn right at N Mishler Rd/Old IN-9
Continue to follow Old IN-9 1.0 mi 3 mins
59. Continue on IN-9/N Mishler Rd
Continue to follow IN-9 17.9 mi 25 mins
60. Turn left at US-30-BR/W Van Buren St 0.2 mi
61. Turn right at N Line St 1.5 mi 4 mins
62. Continue on IN-109 11.0 mi 15 mins
63. Turn left at US-33 10.2 mi 15 mins
64. Continue on IN-5/Lincolnway S
Continue to follow IN-5 19.4 mi 29 mins
65. Turn left at W 600N/IN-120
Continue to follow IN-120 5.3 mi 7 mins
66. Turn right at IN-13
Entering Michigan 2.3 mi 5 mins
67. Continue on US-131 6.5 mi 9 mins
68. Continue on N Washington St 0.2 mi
69. Continue on Youngs Prairie Rd 5.2 mi 6 mins
70. Turn left at M-60 3.9 mi 6 mins
71. Turn right at M-40 8.8 mi 11 mins
72. Turn left at M-40/W Main St
Continue to follow M-40 37.5 mi 50 mins
73. Turn left at N Cedar St/M-40/M-89 0.2 mi
74. Turn left at Cutler St/M-40/M-89
Continue to follow M-40 22.0 mi 33 mins

You pull into Holland in a mere 17 hours, 52 minutes. It’s 747 miles.

In contrast, the directions including interstates have 10 turns and takes you 798 miles, but only takes 12 hours, 15 minutes.

Insider: Alternate Spring Break ’08

As the season went along we realized that we would have a chance to go far in the NCAA tournament but we decided to have a back up plan just in case. We, as in 7 upperclassmen on the team, thought that Cocoa Beach would be a good vacation spot. We found a huge beautiful house right on the beach. But once the NCAA tournament started we just all knew that our Cocoa Beach getaway was probably not going to happen. Of course going to the final four is way better then the beach. We really wanted to go to Michigan anyways 😉

With the game coming to an end we knew our alternate spring break plans were not needed. Being able to go as far as we can in the NCAA tournament is what we have all dreamed about and have worked our butts off for. To be able to go to the Final Four is such a great chance especially since many people did not think we would make it this far! We feel so fortunate to be one of the four teams that are still in season. Michigan is going to be a great way to spend our Spring Break!

Insider: What I’ve Learned

As I’ve been sitting out I have found that people, friends, or fans have approached me before and after games with two different attitudes. The first is the parent or fan saying “how sorry they feel for me”, “how much they wish I could be out on the court and can’t wait until next year” or asking me about rehab — all of which is very nice and greatly appreciated. Then there is the other fan… this fan, very rare, asks “in sitting out and spending time viewing the game from a different angle — what have you learned?”

Saturday night I learned more than I had all year.

We were miserable in the first half. We underestimated Millsaps’ athleticism and how tough they would make it for us to score.

We trailed 27-18 at halftime shooting 2-11 from 3, 26 percent from the field, while having five assists compared to our 11 turnovers. We were down nine and in a weird way I felt lucky we were only down that much considering how we played.

Wash UWhat does a coach do when his team is on the ropes, his season on the line and his players are starting to lose belief in themselves and each other? This is where I learned the lesson.

At halftime as the coaches met privately before going into meet with the players, Coach Edwards wasn’t frantically scrambling X’s and O’s trying to figure out a way for us to score. He wasn’t cursing out players for underperforming in a game where a trip back to Salem was on the line. Instead, he brought up a game six weeks ago at Skibo Gymnasium in Pittsburgh, Pa., against Carnegie Mellon.

Wait, Coach, that was the beginning of February against the fifth-place team in our conference in front of a generously stated 422 people — what on Earth does that have to do with playing against Millsaps (28-3) in front of a noisy WU Field House to get to the final four?

Well, we played Carnegie Mellon the Sunday morning after an epic overtime loss at Rochester. The game against Rochester was a draining, emotion filled, over-time effort which wore us down. With tired legs and exhausted minds, we sat in the locker room trailing Mellon by 10 at halftime — we shot the ball poorly, turned it over, and looked as sloppy as we did during the first half against Millsaps. After halftime, we let the wear take over our minds and got blown out. Losing 86-55 may have been generous as we were down 37 points in the second half.

Going into the locker room at halftime to talk with 15 players questioning themselves, Coach Edwards laid it out very clearly saying “We’ve been here before.” He reminded them of the Carnegie Mellon game. He said our draining game against Rochester was exactly like our strenuous game with Buena Vista the previous night. During the first half of tonight’s game not only were our legs tired, but our minds were tired. Instead of going out and playing a second half like we did against Carnegie Mellon (getting outscored 48-27), we had the opportunity to learn from the regular season and a chance to play a second-half and conquer the demons taking over our minds. We had 20 minutes to show how we had grown this season and learned from our experiences.

After halftime we were a different team. We had energy on both ends of the floor. We went on a 17-2 run to open the half and gave Millsaps fits with our defense. We took better care of the ball, for the most part, and hit a few timely shots while doing what we do best — getting it into Troy. I don’t know if it was exactly Coach’s comparison at halftime that turned it around, but it sure seemed like it.

Maybe he pointed out one or two small adjustments on a few plays during the locker room talk, but what I learned is that at this part of the season it isn’t about X’s and O’s — that’s what the entire regular season was for. As a coach and as a player I learned March is different. It’s really about mental coaching and both player’s and coaches being mentally strong enough to withstand the doubt that they can’t do it. Sure teams need to be prepared for what they’ll see from opposing teams and individuals, but a team’s mindset is truly what’s most important to its success. If we would have let the tiredness take over our minds I’m sure the Millsaps second half could’ve been similar to the second half at Carnegie Mellon — but Coach helped us realize if we stayed mentally strong, we could survive and advance to the Final Four.

Sean Wallis cutting the nets downObviously I would rather be playing than sitting on the bench this upcoming weekend but I can’t tell you how excited I really am to go back to Salem. As a coach, player, or fan there is no better place to celebrate Division III Men’s Basketball. The people of Salem truly take pride in putting together a great weekend and making all participants feel special. Congratulations to all the teams that have made it this far, I look forward to watching some great basketball in the coming days. Please come introduce yourself in Salem, I look forward to soaking up this weekend and hopefully enjoying our program’s first ever (with a few more to come in the next couple years…?) National Championship.

Take care,
Sean

P.S. Congratulations to my buddy Troy on the Jostens Trophy. It is very well deserved and I couldn’t be happier for him. I couldn’t think of anyone that represents our program better on and off the court.

Who cuts the nets down?

Kean and Oglethorpe are underway, with Oglethorpe out to an early lead.

Four men’s teams and four women’s teams will cut nets down tonight on the way to the Final Fours at Salem, Va., and Holland, Mich., with one more on each side cutting another net down a week from now.

I ran into the St. Mary’s team downtown in St. Louis today — appreciate the St. Patrick’s Day wishes, guys. I was too stunned to come up with a good response, and to be honest, what do you say to a team that had its season end last night? Great run? Tough loss? Good effort? All of the above apply but I don’t know if any of them are that helpful.

Coast Guard and Wheaton have Cinderella runs in progress on the men’s side, with Oglethorpe definitely playing the role in the women’s bracket. At this rate, everyone will know how to pronounce “Stormy Petrel.”

Enjoy the games. Keep us updated on what you’re seeing where you are.