Insider: Tough Break

Dear readers:Wash U guard Sean Wallis provides his latest Insider update.

Sean WallisFirst things first: As a lot people already know and have been speculating, I got injured in our game last Tuesday at Maryville. I currently have a displaced tibial plateau fracture and a partially torn MCL. Winning by 20 points midway through the first half, I drove down the lane and Cam’s [Smith] man stepped over to help onto me. His defender accidentally stepped on my right foot then the rest of his leg crashed into my leg. Since he was on my foot—my leg had no way to give at the contact so it kind of just snapped and I heard a crack.

Luckily my dad was in town for the game and drove me to the emergency room for x-rays. I got looked at right away and got an appointment with our team doctor from Washington University Physicians, Dr. Matt Matava, early Wednesday morning. He’s an orthopedic surgeon and one of the head physicians for the St. Louis Rams and St. Louis Blues, so I’m very lucky that he’ll be working with me. Within an hour of the appointment, he squeezed me in for an MRI and within an hour after that we had the MRI results back.

The injury is going to require surgery by Dr. Matava this Tuesday to put a screw in my leg to fix the fracture. During the surgery there’s no plans to touch up the MCL—as he feels that will heal on its own through rehab by the time the fracture is better. Post surgery, I’m going to have to be on crutches for six-eight weeks most likely since I can’t put any weight on my right leg. After that the rehab will be strenuous for a few months. Doing the math: November + 4 months = March. To say there’s 100% chance I will not play the rest of the season would be a lie, but I’m not approaching the situation with expectations of coming back because it seems pretty unlikely.

Yes it sucks and yes I’m pretty bummed. But I will be miserable if I keep talking about the negatives so as my family says, I’ll tell you how I’m going to attempt to make lemonade from the lemon life has handed me:

-I have the options for this year being a medical redshirt year. The NCAA, I’m assuming, would grant me the redshirt since I played in less than 25% of the season. The issue here is whether or not after next year I would want to graduate with my peers and start “real” life (hopefully living back in Chicago with friends with a real job in the financial world and begin being a quasi-adult) or stay in St. Louis an extra year and pursue higher-education options such as an MBA or a MS in Finance and play basketball here. I’m going to meet with people in our business school (which I’m currently enrolled in as a Finance and Accounting major) to explore my opportunities if I’m looking to stay a fifth year. The good thing is I don’t think I need to decide this any time soon, but knowing the redshirt is an option is definitely nice.

-Next, one thing I’ve always thought about doing when I grow up (am I still allowed to say ‘when I grow up’ if I turned 21 last week?) is being a basketball coach. We’re down an assistant coach from last year so I’ve talked a lot about it with Coach Edwards and [Tim] Whittle with regards to working on scouting reports, sitting with them on the bench and really trying to be another set of eyes with them as opposed to sitting on the end of the bench. I haven’t been able to do as much this first week as I hoped with regards to scouting and preparation but post-surgery I know I can use this opportunity to better our team while determining if pursuing a coaching career is something I may want to do.

-Lastly, I’m thankful that this is an injury that will definitely heal in a reasonable period of time. With a torn ACL or a blown Achilles rehab can take a year and still sometimes people aren’t back to their full initial strength. Since the brunt of my injury is a fracture it seems like soon enough I’ll be back to full strength which is fantastic.

Moving on, with or without me, the team had a big weekend. We opened up Saturday against #5 Augustana. Tyler [Nading] said, “We kind of looked like chickens running around with our heads cut off.” We all knew there’d most likely be a transition period trying to find who was going to fill the point guard void and Augustana didn’t really give us much room to figure it out or seem to care that we were searching for an answer. They played some stifling full court pressure defense en-route to a 17-point halftime lead in which we had 12 turnovers. We did some things to really slow them down in the second half (they shot 29% from the field) while handling their pressure much better and cut the lead to two points with just over 40-seconds left– but they hit free throws to seal the deal and win by six.

We came back Sunday and got a great win against UW-Platteville. Tyler was UNBELIEVABLE. He completely dominated and put our team on his back with a career high 31-points, eight rebounds and school-record seven steals. It wasn’t even like he was on-fire or not missing, he just had a refuse to lose attitude that was contagious and we’re going to need that out of him the rest of the season.

I’ll be back next week with a surgery update and a recap from THE CLASSIEST tournament in the country- the 24th annual Lopata Classic.

Take care,

Sean

p.s. Since it is Thanksgiving-week and all—and most would guess I’m down in the dumps—here are some things I’m VERY thankful for:

-The Facebook messages and words from players/friends on Calvin, Carnegie Mellon, Illinois Wesleyan, Chicago, Rochester, Emory and both the players and coaches on UW-Platteville, Webster, Augustana, and Lake Forest expressing their distress about my injury

-WU Trainer Rick Larsen for taking care of me at the game and WU Dean of Students Justin Carroll for staying with me in the emergency room and hooking me up with a handicap parking pass on campus

-My sisters Jenna and Amanda (both on Glenbrook North’s 3-1 girls varsity basketball team!) and parents still coming down this weekend to hang out and see me even though I didn’t play

-All my closest buddies, friends, and family from home for their phone calls and texts

-All of the WU athletic family (C-Mitch especially) for support and kind words this week

-A few of my friends writing obnoxious responses to my last blog with regards to my love life, FIFA ‘08, hanging off-speed pitches from sixth grade travel baseball and calling Jon Scheyer for help with women (what a joke that would be—he needs all the help he can get!)

-My teammates and coaches for making me feel like I’m still a part of the team

-And lastly, Tyler for being the greatest roommate and best friend anyone could ever have. At the beginning of this week I was thankful for his ability to finish lay-ups on my full court passes, and now I’m thankful he’s willing to take care of me and help me put on my right sock.

Courtside at the Provident Pride Tournament

It is hard to imagine the beginning of the basketball season without plenty of tournaments, especially over Thanksgiving. And that is what I am enjoying this weekend in Baltimore, Maryland.

It is the 3rd Annual Provident Pride of Maryland Basketball Tournament with the final two days being hosted at Johns Hopkins University.

I am court-side for all eight games over the next two days, including a live broadcast of “Hoopsville” during the championship game Sunday night.

Today’s (Saturday) schedule is:
1:30 – Goucher vs. Villa Julie
3:30 – Washington vs. Johns Hopkins
6:00 – Salisbury vs. McDaniel
8:00 – St. Mary’s vs. Hood

This tournament has used the JP Morgan Chase Tournament in Rochester as a blue print and should give many of us a good sense of what teams in the Mid-Atlantic Region are the ones to watch this season. And as Pat Cummings mentioned on Hoopsville last Sunday, it will give us a great way to compare teams and their opponents for the rest of the season.

I will hopefully give many of you can’t make these games an idea of what is going on throughout the weekend!

Happy Thanksgiving!

I just wanted to wish everyone checking in a happy Thanksgiving from D3sports.com.

My family and I will be braving the wilds of I-95 in the infamous Northeast Corridor this weekend as we head to the Philadelphia suburbs. Wish us luck. No basketball games in the Philly area on Friday, unfortunately.

Hope you and yours are having a happy and safe holiday, especially those of you serving overseas. Keep safe.

Insider: Introducing Sean Wallis

Dear readers:We’ve asked some Division III players to join our blog and give us an inside look into life in Division III basketball. Please welcome Wash U guard Sean Wallis.

Sean WallisFirst off, I want to thank Pat Coleman for all of his work on D3hoops.com and for giving me the opportunity to write this weekly (or bi-weekly as the season and traveling schedule gets more hectic) blog.

After we lost to Virginia Wesleyan by a basket in the NCAA semifinals last year the wait until the beginning of this season seemed like seven years, not seven months. Losing a heartbreaker to end the season is never fun, but it did provide my teammates and me with a taste of how special a national championship would be. Watching the happiness of the Amherst players and coaches as they celebrated was pretty neat and seeing it gave us something to work towards.

At Wash U. it’s tough because our team is from all over the country so we don’t get to play together in leagues during the summer. That being said, it’s difficult to keep each other accountable during the summer making sure the time is being put in to get better. So, it was pretty great to get back to school in the fall and clearly see that most of the team had spent their summers playing a lot of basketball, as our pick-up games were much more competitive than they had ever been.

Before I knew it fall pick-up was joined by 7 A.M. lifting and afternoon conditioning sessions. Practice started in the middle of October and then we had scrimmages with Rose-Hulman and Greenville College leading up to the season opener this past weekend in Grand Rapids, Mich.

During the weekend our team learned a lot and made me excited for the rest of the season. As the D3hoops.com pre-season #1 team in the country, we knew that we had a big target on our back. It was a nice honor and made us feel good that people respected what we accomplished last year, and that we could be just as good, if not better, this season. With that target we know (especially after Friday and Saturday) that we’re going to get our opponent’s best night-in and night-out. While this could get some teams nervous, I think we understand that it will ultimately make us better when conference play and (hopefully) post-season play comes around.

Coach [Mark] Edwards thought the tip-off tournament at Calvin was one of the most talented tournaments (not including the NCAA) he had been a part of in all of his time at Wash U. Our first game of the season was against Ohio Northern on Friday night—man, did they get after it on defense. We ended up winning by 16 points but the final score may have made it seem like an easier win than it actually was. ONU is a talented team that I can see making a real push to win their conference if they play with that intensity the entire year. Troy [Ruths] took over down the stretch and our experience played a big factor in being able to close out the game even with their tough on-the-ball defense.

After a physically demanding Friday night game we had a quick turn-around for a Saturday afternoon match-up against Calvin in their gym. As most know, we got beat by five in what was a good basketball game. Every time we made a run to cut into their lead they seemed to hit big shot after big shot. We fought and didn’t throw the towel in, even with Troy and Tyler [Nading] fouling out and it showed a lot of heart from our squad. Calvin is a great team that definitely has the makings of a group that could make a run in March. I think that it also shouldn’t go unmentioned that while being talented on the court they also seemed like good guys. Caleb Veldhouse and Derek Griffin (who forgot how to miss in our game) are both extremely talented and have good heads on their shoulders so I look forward to tracking their scores throughout the year.

Not much time to hang our head from the tough loss though as we take on local Maryville (Mo.) on Tuesday night, #5 Augustana on Saturday and always-tough UW-Platteville (2-0) on Sunday of this week. Coach Edwards sure wasn’t joking when he said we were going to be challenged in our non-conference schedule!

I’ll check back in a week… Take care,

Sean

P.S. Feel free to comment or ask any questions (basketball, sports, school, life or even my love life if you’re a single/female/d3hooper) and I’ll do my best to respond in the next post!

I went to Disneyland and all I got was this lousy box score…

I’m borrowing that line from Hoopsville host Dave McHugh, who used it when I shared a nugget about the most interesting statistical nugget I saw from this weekend.

I know of colleagues in the media world who collect baseball box scores, and while the basketball ones aren’t as interesting, they tell some neat stories from the opening couple days of Division III hoops.

The inspiration for this piece was the showing of the Coast Guard women’s basketball team, which ventured cross-country to California for games with Whittier and Cal Lutheran. Coast Guard won both games despite shooting 2-for-29 from 3-point land in the second one (63 rebounds, 4-for-6 shooting from the field in OT, and a couple of good games from the post players helped). That and a visit to Disney made it a good trip. By the way, thanks to a little checking from CGA SID Jason Southard, I learned that it’s the first time both Bears squads (men and women) are 2-0 since 1988-89.

On the opposite end of the spectrum, you had the adventures of the Grinnell men’s team the last two days, in matchups with UW Eau Claire and Wartburg. Those used to Grinnell’s system (previously referenced on-site many times) will be familiar with this kind of box score line from Eau Claire. The Blugolds shot 74.7 percent for the game (Dan Beyer was 15-for-15, tied for 4th-best in NCAA history) and had 41 assists, yet lost, 137-132. Eau Claire had the misfortune of having its turnovers (36) match its foul total. Grinnell was 20-for-50 from 3 in the win and got its most notable showing the next day from David Arseneault, who tied a school record with 17 assists in a 105-103 win over host Wartburg.

Some other box score notables

* When there’s a Will, there’s a way…A quick perusal of some New England games found three different ones whose teams had good weekends. Wil Lyons (6-9, 260 pound Rhode Island College center) and Will Lyons (6-4 WPI forward) each came off the bench in a pair of wins for their respective teams (WPI, by the way, took 58 3-pointers in an opening win over Nichols). Will Dawkins (6-foot guard at Emerson) started and hit a buzzer-beating three-pointer as his team surprised William Paterson. Emerson is a solid 2-0 after beating Vassar by a narrow margin as well.

* What fatigue? FDU-Florham’s women’s team won the title game of Johns Hopkins season-opening tournament despite using only six players in its 68-56 win over the hosts. Shealyn Taggart gave four of her five teammates breathers as the squad’s lone sub, netting nine points and nine rebounds in 32 minutes (Katie Daly played all 40 minutes). Emily Cerankowski led the victors, who were 15-16 on free throws in the second half, with 31 points.Not as fortunate were the Texas Lutheran women, who played all five starters for all 40 minutes in losses to Pacific Lutheran (64-16) and Concordia-Portland (70-45).

Shooting Most Foul: It was an odd weekend for the No. 1 ranked Washington University men’s basketball team, particularly in this respect. The Bears, who shot 74 percent from the foul line en route to a Final 4 spot last season, were 21-44 from the stripe in the first two games of the season, including 9-20 in their loss to Calvin.

Share your favorite box score nuggets, or tidbits from the season’s opening weekend here…