9 days: Once upon a time

Once upon a time, there was a mystical land called Division III basketball. It was a land of wonder and whimsy where heroes and heroines showed great valor, courage and mad ups. Throughout the land roamed mystical creatures – Gorloks, Red Dragons, Griffins and even a little-known Phoenix. The basketball court was full of Knights – Blue ones, Golden ones, Scarlet ones, Green ones and Gothic ones. There were Lancers and Lords, Monarchs and Student Princes, Kingsmen and King’s men (and women).

One fair day a skinny, balding bard (as opposed to Bard) told the tale of legends three. “Hear the story, dear Dose reader, of the second day of championships, a day of legendary struggles in places near and far!”

Magic men: Last year the Williams Ephs entered the NESCAC tournament with little fanfare, a 13-11 record and few expectations of a national playoff bid. They won three games, two on the road and captured the AQ. This year there is again little fanfare around Williams’ conference tournament appearance but for different reasons. The Ephs rose as high as No. 4 in the country but finished tied for sixth in their own conference. They will try to rekindle last season’s magic, starting with a road game at regionally ranked Middlebury.

Damsels in distress: The Bowdoin Polar Bears are far from being helpless maidens, but they are in danger of having their long streak of NCAA tournament appearances end. They will likely have to beat three teams with winning records, starting with the Bobcats against whom the Polar Bears lost by 10 last Saturday. Unlike recent years, Bowdoin won’t host the NESCAC semifinals, even if they do advance. Their difficult quest for the NCAA starts tomorrow.

A Knight’s Tale: It’s not a conference tournament, but Arcadia has quietly put together a run that is too impressive not to mention. On January 30, the Scarlet Knights were 7-11, 2-4 in the MAC-Freedom Conference. Since then, they have won five of six including conference wins against Wilkes and first place DeSales. If Arcadia can win tomorrow, they will clinch the fourth and final seed in the conference playoffs, completing a very memorable inaugural regular season there. Fittingly enough for this cheesy motif, the team that stands in their way is the Valiants.

All times listed are EST

2:00 pm: Women – Bates @ Bowdoin (NESCAC Quarterfinals) (Video // Live Stats)

2:00 pm: Women – Colby @ No. 14 Amherst (NESCAC Quarterfinals) (Audio // Live Stats)

2:00 pm: Men – Williams @ Middlebury (NESCAC Quarterfinals) (Audio // Live Stats)

2:00 pm: Men – Neumann @ Misericordia (PnAC 1st Round) (Audio // Live Stats)

3:00 pm: Women – Middlebury @ No. 15 Tufts (NESCAC Quarterfinals) (Video // Live Stats)

3:00 pm: Men – Arcadia @ Manhattanville (Video // Live Stats)

4:00 pm: Men – Colby @ No. 1 Amherst (NESCAC Quarterfinals) (Audio // Live Stats)

4:00 pm: Men – Bates @ Bowdoin (NESCAC Quarterfinals) (Video // Live Stats)

7:00 pm: Men – Cabrini @ Gwynedd-Mercy (PnAC 1st Round) (Video)

9 days of championships begin!

Over the next nine days we’ll fill out the majority of our dance card for the men’s and women’s NCAA tournaments. On the men’s side there are 38 automatic qualifiers (AQs) at stake out of 59 total and the women have 39 AQs out of 63 total. (The GSAC gives the women’s side one more AQ than the men). Click here for more general info on the tourneys.

We’ll also get a much better sense which teams can rest relatively easily that they’ll get an at-large bid and which ones will be furiously pacing their dorm rooms, drinking green tea and listening to Enya in a futile attempt to ease their bubble anxiety.

Time permitting, we’ll highlight a couple key games each day along with the links to follow those games if you can’t make it there in person.

The fun kicks off in New York City where the CUNYAC hands out its AQs in a doubleheader at CCNY. The Conference is usually one of the first to play its title game, but I’m not sure it’s ever been this far in advance of the bracket announcement. So the winner will have a long (but happy) wait after they cut down the nets.

On the women’s side Baruch will try to erase bad memories of last year’s painful collapse against Lehman. In 2008 the Bearcats went colder than a can of frozen peas down the stretch in a 52-51 loss. Like last year, it’s win or else since neither team was listed in the second regional rankings.

Then the men will crown a champion with top-seeded York (N.Y.) battling John Jay. The Cardinals aim for their third consecutive trip to the NCAA tournament. The Bloodhounds have certainly worn Cinderella’s slipper on their paw so far, standing one win away from the tournament despite a seven-game losing streak earlier this year.

Our bud Seth Kantor has the call for both games.

Though it’s not a playoff game per se, the ubertight UAA races should get a little more clarity. The No. 4 Washington U. men will try to defend their one game lead over No. 6 Brandeis, winners of six straight. The women’s race is even tighter with half the conference tied for first at 8-3. Two of the four tied teams (say that five times fast) – Brandeis and Wash U. – meet in St. Louis while No. 19 Rochester and Chicago host Case Western and NYU respectively.

All times are EST

5:30 pm – CUNYAC Women’s Championship: Baruch versus Lehman (Audio // Live Stats)

6:00 pm – Women: Case Western @ No. 19 Rochester (Audio // Video)

7:00 pm – Women: NYU @ Chicago (Audio // Live Stats)

7:00 pm – Women: Brandeis @ Wash U. (Audio // Live Stats)

7:45 pm – CUNYAC Men’s Championship: York (N.Y.) versus John Jay (Audio // Live Stats)

9:00 pm – Men: No. 6 Brandeis @ No. 4 Wash U. (Audio // Live Stats)

PlayPlay

One conference’s take on D-IV

The NCAA recently sent out a survey to the Division III membership looking for feedback on the growth of the division. There has been a great deal of rhetoric about whether Division III should subdivide into two groups and there’s been a lot of discussion about it on our message board.

“The membership received a lot of important information and engaged in some very good discussions at the NCAA Convention in January about the future of Division III and the association as a whole. With this survey, we are looking to build on those discussions and continue to ask Division III members what they think is the best direction to move toward,” said Dan Dutcher, NCAA vice president for Division III.

The Capital Athletic Conference issued a statement today regarding the movement and the debate. We offer it up for discussion below:

To: Members of NCAA Division III
From: Board of Directors, Capital Athletic Conference
Re: Membership Restructuring
Date: February 21, 2008

With the NCAA Division III Membership Survey currently being considered on each of our campuses, the future of our division is very much at the forefront of everyone’s mind. While the NCAA Working Group on Membership Issues has worked diligently to research what structural concerns may be developing within our landscape, much of the reaction from Nashville involved membership frustration over how this process has been approached. The Working Group’s efforts at educating the membership as to what they perceive as fundamental differences within our ranks has taken on the appearance of top-down management. These apparent differences have had no Division III membership “face” or “voice” thus far.

The Capital Athletic Conference, a widely diverse grouping of nine public and private institutions throughout the Middle Atlantic region, strongly believes that this top-down approach must change. As we craft our survey responses, the time has come for those institutions and conferences which desire change to come forward and clearly articulate their vision of the future. Publicly, we have heard a number of reasons why breaking up Division III would be a poor idea. Conversely, we have heard few reasons why reorganization would be a good idea…and more importantly, exactly what a new division would look like. We believe that a new division or structure would only be warranted if this new destination was formed with philosophies and regulations significantly different from what we currently utilize. For if this vision is not clearly different from the current model, then those desiring change would simply be advocating change for the sake of change.

From our perspective, there have been two public positions articulated as to why our division needs restructuring: potential membership growth and apparent philosophical differences based on legislative voting patterns. Membership growth is being called problematic. However, we believe growth could be one of the division’s strengths. Athletics is based on the concept of competition – one squaring off against another. However, by dividing the membership, we are actually diluting the level of competition we face. Limiting the level of competition in Division III could have a negative impact on all programs.

A recent letter to the membership from John Fry highlighted how the January 2008 voting results of proposals #5, #7 and #8 continue to outline “the existence of fundamentally different perspectives in our division”. Since none of those who desire change voiced specific reasons as to why a difference in perspective is alarming, this concern of the Working Group appears to be based upon simple legislative changes. Changes such as shifting the contest start date in basketball by a handful of days. The letter characterized the passing of this legislation as, “eroding the playing reforms adopted in 2004”. This overzealous interpretation of legislation, adopted to simplify calendar dates, is typical of the questionable examples offered by the Working Group that, in its terms, “demonstrate significant philosophical differences.” Does a disagreement of this limited degree warrant upsetting the traditionally successful and highly attractive environment we enjoy in today’s Division III? The CAC does not believe so.

Without a clearly defined and publicly stated future structure, two things occur: the motivation for change is questioned … and the effectiveness of issue-based education is limited. Based upon numerous conversations in Nashville, three possible common areas emerged as to why some believe change in necessary. They are: 1) the interests of “like-minded” institutions; 2) NCAA Championship success; and 3) more restrictive regulations. If there are a number of schools dissatisfied with the diversity amongst the membership and wish only to compete against schools similar to their own make up, this needs to be addressed publicly. Are the real issues possibly academic reputation, institutional endowment, cost and/or enrollment? If these represent the true issues, the self-selection opportunity for the dissatisfied members may very well negate the need for wholesale change in divisional make-up. If these aren’t the issues, then why is change necessary?

If having the ability to compete for a national championship is at the center of the change argument, then the CAC encourages the membership to review success patterns of various NCAA Division III tournaments (not just who becomes national champion, but who enjoys a longer stay in these tournaments). We believe you will find that success in virtually every sport’s national tournament has been achieved by schools large and small, more expensive and less expensive, public and private, and highly selective and less selective in the admissions process. If developing a smoother avenue to championship success is not one of the major reasons why those wanting a new division desire change, then we ask the change leaders to propose a more radical approach – perhaps one without national championships.

Lastly, if those who desire change are interested in a division governed by a more restrictive rule set, what would those new regulations encompass? No national championships? No non-traditional season? No off-campus recruiting? A large reduction in the playing and practice seasons? The elimination of freshman eligibility? As previously written, a new divisional structure should only be considered if the desire for change involves significant alterations to how we currently operate. If these areas of significant change are not incorporated into the new division’s format, then the reasons for change have not been articulated in a transparent and honest fashion.

There are many unanswered questions. With less than one year to formulate our thoughts on how we will define not only our institutional future but the future of our entire organization, more specific information is needed, particularly from dissatisfied members. This information must include clear definitions of the philosophical and operational differences necessary to easily separate ourselves from our divisional colleagues. The Capital Athletic Conference asks that those who desire change come forward and help us understand your vision. Provide the membership an opportunity to decide its future from a position of intellectual strength rather than from assumptions and possible miscommunication. The landscape we develop for our future student-athletes deserves much thoughtful and honest consideration of the facts and issues.

NCAA’s second regional rankings

The NCAA released its second regional rankings today. These are through games of Sunday, Feb. 17. Please note, the overall record and regional record are listed. This is not the conference record.

Men’s basketball
In-region record, followed by overall record.

Number of teams ranked is relative to the number of teams in the region.

Atlantic
1. Richard Stockton 16-6 16-5
2. William Paterson 17-5 17-5
3. Farmingdale State 19-4 18-3
4. York (N.Y.) 19-7 17-6
5. SUNY-Old Westbury 14-9 14-7

East
1. Plattsburgh State 21-2 18-0
2. Rochester 17-5 16-5
3. Brockport State 18-6 15-4
4. Stevens 20-4 20-4
5. Nazareth 17-6 17-6

Great Lakes
1. Capital 20-3 19-3
2. Wooster 20-3 13-2
3. Hope 19-3 13-2
4. Albion 16-5 12-3
5. Penn State-Behrend 19-4 17-3
6. Heidelberg 18-5 16-4

Middle Atlantic
1. Ursinus 22-2 19-1
2. Gettysburg 19-3 17-2
3. Widener 19-4 16-3
4. DeSales 19-4 16-3
5. York (Pa.) 17-6 17-5
6. Messiah 15-8 14-7
7. Moravian 18-6 17-6
8. Lycoming 15-8 13-7

Midwest
1. Washington U. 18-4 15-3
2. Augustana 18-5 17-5
3. Lawrence 18-2 16-2
4. Chicago 15-7 14-7
5. Illinois Wesleyan 15-8 14-6
6. Wheaton (Ill.) 17-6 13-6
7. Elmhurst 17-6 16-6
8. Carroll 14-6 13-6

Northeast
1. Amherst 22-2 22-1
2. Mass-Dartmouth 21-2 21-2
3. Brandeis 18-4 17-4
4. Worcester Tech 18-5 17-4
5. Rhode Island College 18-5 18-5
6. Bowdoin 19-5 19-5
7. Trinity (Conn.) 18-6 16-5
8. Middlebury 18-6 17-5
9. Emerson 20-3 19-3
10. Bates 17-7 16-6

South
1. Centre 21-1 16-1
2. Mary Hardin-Baylor 20-3 18-2
3. Guilford 19-4 18-4
4. Virginia Wesleyan 19-5 18-4
5. Maryville (Tenn.) 21-2 15-2
6. DePauw 18-5 15-4
7. Millsaps 21-3 16-2
8. Randolph-Macon 18-5 13-5

West
1. UW-Stevens Point 19-4 17-4
2. St. Thomas 20-3 18-2
3. Occidental 19-3 12-2
4. UW-Whitewater 19-4 17-4
5. Cal Lutheran 19-3 15-3
6. Buena Vista 19-4 15-2
7. UW-Platteville 17-6 15-5
8. UW-Oshkosh 17-6 14-5

Women’s basketball
In-region record, followed by overall record.

Atlantic
1 Mary Washington 21-2 20-1
2 Marymount 20-3 19-3
3 Kean 21-2 20-2
4 William Paterson 18-5 18-5
5 Mount St. Mary (N.Y.) 21-2 21-2
6 New Jersey 18-5 17-5

Central
1 UW-Whitewater 21-2 19-2
2 UW-Eau Claire 18-5 16-4
3 UW-Stevens Point 19-4 18-4
4 Illinois Wesleyan 21-2 18-2
5 Washington U. 16-6 13-4
6 Chicago 17-5 15-5

East
1 Rochester 18-4 16-4
2 William Smith 19-2 17-2
3 St. Lawrence 19-4 15-4
4 Medaille 21-2 19-2
5 Brockport St. 20-4 17-3
6 Stevens 20-4 19-4

Great Lakes
1 Thomas More 23-0 19-0
2 Hope 22-0 20-0
3 DePauw 20-3 17-1
4 Baldwin-Wallace 21-2 21-2
5 Wilmington 18-5 16-5
6 Ohio Northern 17-6 16-6

Middle Atlantic
1 Messiah 21-2 18-2
2 DeSales 21-3 21-3
3 Albright 19-4 17-3
4 Scranton 18-5 17-4
5 Muhlenberg 18-5 18-5
6 Gwynedd-Mercy 19-5 18-5

Northeast
1 Tufts 21-2 21-2
2 Brandeis 17-5 17-4
3 Southern Maine 21-2 21-2
4 Amherst 22-2 21-2
5 Salem State 18-4 18-2
6 Bowdoin 17-7 15-5
7 Bates 15-9 15-7
8 Bridgewater State 17-4 17-2

South
1 Howard Payne 23-0 21-0
2 Oglethorpe 20-3 18-3
3 McMurry 20-3 20-2
4 Trinity (Texas) 17-5 16-4
5 Piedmont 20-3 16-3
6 Christopher Newport 18-4 17-3

West
1 Simpson 21-2 17-1
2 George Fox 20-3 13-2
3 Puget Sound 19-4 14-2
4 Chapman 22-3 15-3
5 St. Benedict 19-4 18-4
6 Gustavus Adolphus 16-7 16-7

Top 25 News and Notes–Week 12

This week is the final week of the regular season for the great majority of D3 teams. Most conferences hold their post-season tournament next week, with the NCAA Tournament beginning the following week. I thought this might be a good time to catch up with last years Final Four teams.

Men’s 2007 champion Amherst sits atop the men’s poll for the third straight week and fifth this season. The Lord Jeffs have completed an unbeaten NESCAC season, finishing a full three games clear of their nearest competitors, and for the fourth consecutive year will be the top seed in the NESCAC Championship. Amherst sits at 22-2 overall, with their only D3 loss at #6 Brandeis back in early December, and hosts Colby to open the conference tournament.

Virginia Wesleyan, the 2006 champions and 2007 runners-up, have now won four straight games and check in at #19 in this week’s men’s poll. The Marlins are 13-4 in the ODAC, in second place, trailing #13 Guilford by two games in the loss column, and tied (also in the loss column) with Randolph-Macon. The Marlins finish their regular season on Saturday hosting Lynchburg, before advancing to the ODAC Championships at Salem, VA.

Both the men’s and women’s squads from Washington U. reached the Final Four last year, with the women falling in the final and the men winning the third-place game. The men’s team started this season as the #1 team, but lost two of their first four games, falling to #12 before recovering to their current ranking of #4. The Bears currently lead the UAA by a game at 9-2, and as the UAA has no post-season tournament, the league title is still up for grabs. Wash U. still has three league games remaining, starting with a matchup with second-place and sixth-ranked Brandeis Friday in St. Louis.

Last year’s fourth-place finisher, Wooster, knocked off arch-rival Wittenberg this week, clinching the top seed in the NCAC tournament for the fourth straight year, and avenging one of their two D3 losses (the other was at Lake Erie back in November.) With the win, the #12 Scots reached the 20-win plateau for the 12th straight year.

2007 women’s champion DePauw sits at #8 in this week’s poll with an overall record of 20-3. Of their three losses, one was to a quasi-scholarship D3 provisional team (Birmingham-Southern), and the other two were to teams currently in the top 5 (#3 Thomas More and #5 Messiah), both before the New Year. As the BSC loss does not count in the SCAC standings, the Tigers hold down the conference lead at 12-0, two losses better than #25 Oglethorpe and 2003 NCAA champion Trinity (TX) . The Tigers and Stormy Petrels meet this Sunday in a game that will influence the seeding in the upcoming SCAC tournament in Conway, AR.

The Bears of Washington U., runners-up in 2007 and champions for four straight years from 1998 through 2001, have had an up-and-down season. They sit at 16-6 overall after losing at Emory this past week, a loss that cost them their position in the Top 25 as well as a chance at sole possession of the UAA lead. At 8-3 in conference, the Bears are part of a four-way logjam atop the standings with three games remaining.

Preseason #1 and last year’s third-place finisher Mary Washington lost their first CAC game of the season this week at St. Mary’s, but recovered to wax second-place and then-#22 ranked Marymount by 31 points on Saturday. The sixth-ranked Eagles are 21-2 overall and lead the CAC with a 13-1 record, one game ahead of the Saints with two to play. UMW’s only other loss this season was in December at the hands of #4 UW-Whitewater on a neutral court in California.

The news is not so good for last year’s fourth-place finisher, NYU. After starting the season with twelve straight wins and reaching #3 in the poll, the Violets have dropped 8 of their last 10 to sink to 14-8 overall and just 3-8 in the UAA, leading only winless Carnegie Mellon. Of all of last year’s Final Four teams, it looks like the Violets are the most likely to miss out on this year’s tournament. Still, they can exact a measure of revenge, as their final three games are all against co-leaders of the UAA (Chicago, Wash U. , and Brandeis).

Debutantes:
Women: none this week.
Men: Not really a debutant, per se, but nevertheless congratulations to #2 Centre, which this week became the 39th men’s program to attract at least one #1 vote.

Streakers:
Women: Third-ranked Thomas More has been in the Top 10 for ten consecutive weeks. #15 Tufts, #16 Medaille, and #19 Rochester are each ranked for the tenth straight time. Longer ranking streaks belong to #12 Southern Maine (90 weeks) and #9 McMurry (40 weeks.)
Men: Guilford, the lucky #13 this week, has now received votes in 25 consecutive polls. Third-ranked Hope is Top 10 team for the tenth straight week, while #20 UW-Oshkosh is ranked for the 10th week in a row.

Milestones:
Women: Unbeaten and #2-ranked Howard Payne has now received votes in fifty polls, while Chapman has a reached the 25-poll votegetting threshold. Other voting milestones were achieved by #5 Messiah (120 polls), #21 Lake Forest and Salem State (70 each.) Tenth-ranked Illinois Wesleyan is a Top 25 team for the 25th time. #19 Rochester is ranked for the 70th week, while #16 Medaille (20) and #15 Tufts (10) also reached ranking milestones. Finally, this week marks the tenth Top 10 appearance by #3 Thomas More.
Men: Top-ranked Amherst is a member of the Top 10 for the 80th time. #16 St. Thomas has been ranked 60 times, while #22 Occidental has received votes 60 times. #13 Guilford reached two milestones this week, their 25th appearance among the votegetters, and their 20th week as a ranked team.

High-Water Marks:
Women: Thomas More remained unbeaten and moved up to a new high ranking of #3 this week. #14 Amherst also reached a new poll high, while previous highs were matched by #2 Howard Payne and #10 Illinois Wesleyan.
Men: For the second straight week both #2 Centre and #17 Ursinus reached new highest-ever perches in the poll. #11 Plattsburgh St. matched their all-time high, set earlier this season.

Movers and Shakers:
Women: UW-Stevens Point knocked off then-#3 UW-Whitewater as part of a 2-0 week, and scored the week’s largest gain (120 points.) The biggest fall was recorded by #19 Rochester, which lost at Brandeis and discarded 136 points and six poll placements. Other downward movers included NWC compatriots #18 George Fox and #22 Puget Sound, which each lost 129 points and six slots.
Men: Stop me if you’ve heard this before… UW-Stevens Point knocked off then-#2 UW-Whitewater as part of a 2-0 week, and scored the week’s largest gain (100 points.) The biggest fall was recorded by #14 Rochester, which lost at Brandeis (and at NYU in double overtime) and discarded 179 points and eight poll placements. Joining Rochester in free-fall mode was #23 UW-Platteville, which lost 159 points and seven slots after an 0-2 week.