Following the Chase

From Rochester, New York, welcome to the JP Morgan Chase Scholarship Basketball Tournament.

Each winter for 42 years the colleges from this area have gathered for a men’s basketball tournament. In 1992-1993 the women’s teams joined the fun. And while the name has changed with the times and bank mergers, it’s still a great event and a good opportunity to put eyes on a slew of East region teams at once.

On the women’s side, St. John Fisher plays NAIA Division II Roberts Wesleyan in the third place game (1 pm), which we’ll broadcast live. Obviously the game has no impact on the Cardinals’ Division III season, but it does matter to Coach Phil Kahler’s quest for 800 wins. He entered the season with 784 wins and the Cardinals won 13 last year, needing a three-win improvement to get him the milestone.

The championship (5:30 pm) features No. 22 Rochester, the top seed in the tournament, and cinderella-story Nazareth, the seventh seed. Tough to see the Golden Flyers (5-7) hanging with the Yellow Jackets, but they weren’t supposed to win the first two games either. JC DeLass and WYSL do a fantastic job so we’ll just link to their broadcast below.

The men’s games should be particularly interesting given the depth of this year’s field. The third place game features two teams who are likely to see a lot of each other, Geneseo State and Brockport State. In fact, they’ll see each other again on Tuesday night to re-open conference play.


The Knights picked up their first loss last night after Nazareth rallied from a double-digit second half deficit
. The Golden Eagles have played better this week after dropping three straight to start the New Year. They pushed No. 1 Rochester to the limit last night. But it’s tough to have a moral victory and lose five of six so Brockport needs the win here today against Geneseo State (3 pm). We’ll broadcast that one.

The men’s title game (8 pm) is a rematch from earlier this year, won by Rochester 68-51. The Unpronouncables (Onyiriuka and Ndubizu) combined for 42 points and 21 rebounds in that one. Nazareth is playing without injured Ryan McAdam but has already had a nice showing in the tournament. WYSL will carry that broadcast.

Webcasts

1 pm : Roberts Wesleyan 79 St. John Fisher 67 F
3 pm: Brockport State 83 Geneseo State 59 F
5:30 pm: Rochester 83 Nazareth 46 F
8:00 pm: Rochester 87 Nazareth 75 F

In addition to the broadcasts, we’ll keep the blog updated throughout the day and post coaches interviews later. So check back in between all the other big games, the NFL playoffs and whatever else your Saturday entails.

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What D3 basketball players get for Christmas…

We are three junior women who play basketball for Oglethorpe University. We would like to share with you the life of a D3 basketball player. We will recap our Christmas break.

The campus was a buzz about the ensuing month long winter break. The women’s basketball team was excited about the 9 day break we received! While everyone else was joyously stuffing there face with chocolate cookies, mac & cheese, Aunt Kathy’s chocolate cake, or anything that tasted delicious, we had to watch what we ate! We knew that we could not return to the gym as big as buses and slow as snails.

On Christmas Eve we were all snug in our beds dreaming of good ol’ Saint Nick and his presents. But the real excitement came when we realized the real Santa, aka Coach Sattele, had many more surprises in store for us. Once we anxiously returned we received these surprises. What else could they be but two-a-days and game film! What else would a girl need?!

No matter how grueling two-a-days can be we all knew that this was something that needed to be done to rise above the competition. We willingly sacrifice our break because we love the game and want to be the best. The goals we have set this year are high. We want to go as far as possible in the NCAA tournament as we can. We are not practicing two-a-days to have another disappointing ending, what team does? Now that the break is almost over we’re looking forward to the second half of the season. There will be more blogs to come just so you can really get into our basketball shoes!

Top 25 News and Notes–Week 6

In the abbreviated week since the Week 5 poll was taken, the teams that made up the women’s Top 25 compiled an overall record of 28-2, and the only two losses were both in Top 25 matchups—with, in each case, the higher ranked team winning. As a result, the Week 6 poll looks amazingly like its predecessor. Nineteenth-ranked Baldwin-Wallace and #20 Lake Forest swapped positions, but otherwise the top 22 teams in last week’s poll remained the same in this week’s edition.

The men compiled a relatively pedestrian 30-8 record, but five of those 8 losses were confined to just two teams, last week’s #3 UW-Stevens Point (which went 0-2 and fell to #14) and then-#11 Brockport St. , losers of three games. Brockport, however, was the only Week 5 ranked team to fall out of the Week 6 poll; this is partly because the heirs apparent had generally bad weeks too—the top 5 teams in the ‘others receiving votes’ category had a composite 5-4 record this week.

This week could well see more of the same. Among the 51 games on the schedules of the Top 25 women’s teams this week, just one matches ranked teams: #15 Southern Maine at #25 Eastern Connecticut this Saturday. Then men’s schedules, on the other hand, are chock full of great matchups, including key games in the CCIW (#10 Elmhurst at #5 Augustana Sat.) and ODAC (#17 Virginia Wesleyan at #11 Guilford Sun.), as well as the Little Three matchup of #4 Williams and #3 Amherst (Saturday at Amherst) and the annual JP Morgan Chase Tournament, featuring #1 Rochester as well as unbeaten and unranked Geneseo St. and a dangerous Brockport St. team looking to rebound from their miserable beginning of 2008.

Debutantes:
Women: None this week.
Men: It’s a happy new year for #24 California Lutheran, which parlayed a Jan. 1 victory over then-#3 UW-Stevens Point into a first-ever berth in the D3Hoops.com Top 25. Congratulations to the Kingsmen!

Streakers:
Women: Twelfth-ranked DePauw has now received votes in the last 120 consecutive polls. Carroll is off to a good start in matching that string, having received votes in 10 straight polls.
Men: #20 Wooster, the holder of most of the men’s poll records, extended one of them this week, receiving votes for the 130th consecutive time. If Wooster were to drop from the voting rolls (something that’s not happened since the poll’s inception in 1999), it would take #3 Amherst (next best at 86 weeks) about 3 years to equal this streak. It would take #14 UW-Whitewater about about 8 years to do it, but they’re off to a good start by receiving votes for the 10th straight week. Mississippi College dropped from the voting rolls for the first time in 45 weeks.

Milestones:
Women: Sixth-ranked Messiah is a Top 10 team for the 50th time in this poll. Lake Forest dropped a notch to #20, but still achieved a Top 25 ranking for the 20th time, while #13 Kean is ranked for the 10th time. #12 DePauw was left out of the Week 10 poll in the 1999-2000 season, but has received votes in every other women’s poll ever compiled, making this week their 130th appearance among the votegetters. Other votes-received milestones achieved this week include #24 Capital (90 weeks), Wheaton (IL) (90), #18 George Fox (75), Puget Sound (50), Washington & Jefferson (40), and William Paterson (25).
Men: Top-ranked Rochester achieved three milestones with this poll: their 90th week in the voting, 60th appearance in the Top 25, and 40th berth among the Top 10. #9 Puget Sound is a Top 10 team for the 30th time. #3 Amherst is ranked for the 90th time in 130 polls. #13 Wheaton (IL) and #15 UW-Whitewater each made their 60th appearance in the Top 25 this week, while #17 Virginia Wesleyan is ranked for the 40th time and received votes for the 60th time. #20 Wooster has received votes in all 130 polls, and is joined in the achievement of votegetting milestones by #5 Augustana (80 weeks), #8 Hope (80), UW-Platteville (60), and Roanoke (30).

High-Water Marks:
Women: With the women’s poll virtually static, no new highs were set, but several were equaled, including #2 UW-Whitewater, #7 Thomas More, #8 McMurry, #10 Illinois Wesleyan, and #17 Tufts.
Men: Top 25 debutante #24 Cal Lu is at an all-time high ranking, while #2 Brandeis equaled their best-ever mark.

Movers and Shakers:
Women: There was very little shaking and almost no moving among the women this week. The biggest move was made by Puget Sound, which shed 78 points and dropped from #23 out of the rankings. The largest upward movements were virtual baby steps, gains of 27 and 26 points by #17 Tufts and #18 George Fox respectively, neither of which was enough to change their ranking. #24 Capital moved into the Top 25, despite actually losing six points from their Week 5 total.
Men: Former #11 Brockport St. had a dismal 0-3 week which cost them 327 points and their berth in the Top 25. Then-#3 UW-Stevens Point dropped two straight, shedding 244 points and eleven slots in the poll. The Pointers were knocked off at home by #12 UW-Oshkosh, which gained 153 points and six places in this week’s poll.

Rant: What’s with the baggy uniforms?

I am certainly not a fashion expert or a style guru – being color “deficient” doesn’t help! However, when it comes to recent trends in uniforms, I feel I have to speak up!

 What are with the baggy uniforms? There are some guys out there playing with shorts that don’t stop until they are below their knees – some women might compare them to carpi’s! And the uniform tops are so baggy they look more like a baggy t-shirt one would wear to bed! Seriously?! Do they have to be that baggy?!

Don’t get me wrong, I certainly don’t want to go back to the days-of-old where the uniforms were as tight as spandex and the shorts probably revealed far more than many wanted to know. But, the recent trend has been to the rather far extreme. As I said, shorts on some guys (mainly small guards) end up below their knees and tops on most guys are so baggy I think guys are battling for more than position under the basket, they are trying to get unwound from an opponents jersey.

 There is another problem. The uniforms are so loose and the shorts hardly ever tied tight, that there is quite a bit of time wasted while referees ask for players to constantly tuck their jerseys back in. It is a rule, after all, that uniforms be tucked in so the uniform doesn’t come into play during a game.

If a ball touches a player’s uniform on the way out of bounds, even if it might not touch the player’s body, it is considered having touched his body. So, refs want the uniforms tucked in to avoid issues like this. Of course, uniforms are so baggy these days, it doesn’t matter if they are tucked in. That’s because sometimes the ball might touch a uniform but the player is actually two feet from the ball!

It is really ridiculous! Do the uniforms really have to be this baggy? If this is a fashion “thing”, what exactly are the players trying to “say” or represent? And who exactly is in charge of picking the size of the uniforms? Can we chat about not giving the 5’6″ point guard an XL, but more like a M or L at most?

I am worried that if these uniforms keep getting bigger and baggier, some championship game is going to be decided by them. Imagine a guard bringing the ball up the court, but only dribbling in one hand. That’s because he has the other hand holding up his shorts. However, his defender then decides to get aggressive and the guard needs to use both hands to protect the ball. That results in his shorts sliding down, he trips, the ball comes lose, the defender (who is now using one hand to hold his shorts up) gets a free lay-up at the buzzer for the win. Now, that would be a strange finish to a game! And all thanks to a baggy jersey!

Southern Hospitality: Coaches speak

That’s “coaches speak” rather than “coachspeak” because I felt like we got some really well thought-out responses in speaking to coaches on the Southern Hospitality tour this week in the deep South.

In all I talked to 13 coaches with the recorder rolling, as well as a couple of others. Most interviews were preceded or followed by some more discussion off the record. Those discussions are great background for me to use in understanding what’s going on.

But I spotlight four coaches in this section, three of them from Georgia and one from Alabama. They have varying levels of experience in Division III and in coaching, varying lengths of time at their schools. But if you listen, you’ll hear some common themes.

For Mitch Cole, at Birmingham-Southern, it’s building a team from scratch. The program itself has been there throughout, obviously, with the infrastructure in place. But every player is new this year after the school did not field a team last season. The things that have to be micromanaged by the coach are somewhat surprising. Listen to his interview for more.

For Philip Ponder, at Oglethorpe, it’s a battle to grow into a competitive program with a young team.

For Lee Glenn, at Piedmont, the concern is getting numbers into the program. And taking care of a newborn baby, as his wife gave birth about five hours after this interview concluded. (Congrats!)

For Jason Zimmerman, at Emory, it’s also getting adjusted to Division III. He’s new to Emory, with a team that has six seniors but not a lot of experience. He has something to say about how Division III players compare with Division I players, having coached at both levels.

But the benefits of some of the schools are interesting as well. Listen in to each take.

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