Surprise, Surprise!

One of the best surprises I’ve ever had is sitting right under my finger tips.

It was a couple years ago and my parents slid an innocuous box toward me on Christmas morning. “We wanted you to open this one last,” they said with a decent enough poker face.

As a single guy with two very young siblings who rightfully get most of the big, exciting gifts, I hadn’t asked for – or expected – much. I was several years removed from holidays where I bolted to the tree to see if “Santa” had left me that Atari 2600 or the denizens of Castle Greyskull I coveted. So when I unwrapped a new lap top computer, I didn’t really know what to say.

I think “wow” was the first word. “Awesome” probably was in there, too. Flash forward to this evening and that pleasant surprise has enabled me to do a lot of things I love for a couple years now, like contributing to this site.

There are a handful of teams who will start the New Year with a pleasant surprise of their own – a great record that may enable them to do something they love, namely play basketball past the end of February.

Here are ten teams, one from each region with two bonuses, who have made their fans say things like “wow” and “awesome” so far.

* * *

Northeast – Anchors Away: “I’m kind of a big deal” – Ron Burgundy, Anchorman.

In his short tenure at Rhode Island College, Head Coach Bob Walsh has also been kind of a big deal. His Anchormen opened the season with three wins against 2005-06 tournament teams beating Division I Iona in the preseason (MAAC Champs) and then Endicott (CCC Champs) and Tufts on opening weekend. RIC is 8-1 going into the New Year with their lone loss to Keene State (another good candidate for the region’s pleasant surprise).

Walsh played under 700-game winner Tom Murphy at Hamilton and then joined the staff of Tim Welsh at Iona. Welsh’s father, Jerry, coached Potsdam State to two national championships in the 1980s. Bob Walsh then coached under Tim Welsh at Providence before taking over RIC last season.

Rutgers-Newark Barnes

Atlantic – Un-B-ten: That’s what Rutgers-Newark is nine games into the season, thanks in part to super sophomore Chadd Barnes (pictured). Barnes has followed up his 2006 NJAC Co-Rookie of the Year award by averaging 17.8 ppg thus far. Barnes is also an aspiring rapper known as Chad “B” according to the Scarlet Raiders’ website. He’s also our second favorite Chad on the internet.

There is a very long road ahead of Rutgers-Newark playing in the fast-paced, physical meat grinder that is the NJAC. But the Raiders may have their best basketball in front of them. All-conference forward Jermont Horton returned to the lineup yesterday after sitting out the fall under the NCAA’s 10 semester rule. Horton has scored over 1200 points in his career and will be a big boost to the Raiders’ playoff hopes.

East – SLU to clinch bid: St. Lawrence is 9-0 and on the verge of clinching an NCAA playoff spot.

Okay, maybe that’s a little hasty.

But then again, SLU is 8-0 in region. Let’s assume they can sweep the bottom three teams in the Liberty League, none of whom they’ve played yet. That’s 14 wins. Then consider that the trip to St. Lawrence is brutal, particularly in the winter. Isn’t that home court advantage good enough for a few more wins? Last year’s Pool C threshold was about 20-6 (Utica’s record). Suddenly putting the Saints in Pool C isn’t so far-fetched.

Mid-Atlantic – Special Delivery: When the DeSales offense is working, it’s a thing of beauty. Crisp passes along the perimeter, players driving into the lane to collapse the defense, then more passes to wide open three point shooters. It’s the kind of offense where a great ball distributor can thrive.

And that’s what Eddie Ohlson is. The junior guard is only 5-foot-8 and has attempted just 34 shots in 10 starts. But the point guard has great court vision and, in that offense, that equals a lot of assists. He’s got 65 so far, which seems like a high number. We’ll know how that compares to other leaders once the Division III stats are posted after January 3.

As for the Bulldogs, they have to overcome the ghosts of near misses past. In 2003 DeSales lost to Scranton in the Freedom tournament final and missed the NCAA playoffs. In 2004 DSU had 22 wins but lost to Wilkes in the Freedom semis and missed the big show again. In 2005 the Bulldogs had a furious second half rally fall just short against King’s in the Freedom Tournament final. Will 2007 finally be the Bulldogs’ year?

Great Lakes – Storm Watch: Most of the surprises in this region haven’t been pleasant ones. Preseason Top 10 picks Baldwin-Wallace and Calvin have had slow starts, particularly the Knights who are just 5-5.

So let’s go a little off the beaten path to the town of Painesville, Ohio (population 17,789), home of Lake Erie College (8-1, 4-0 AMCC). The Storm got pounded by Findlay (99-67) but Findlay is ranked in the Top 10 of Division II. On the positive side Lake Erie beat Rochester by 11 at the Yellow Jackets’ place.

The Storm won the AMCC last year and then got squashed by Wittenberg (76-40) in the tournament. Maybe that Rochester result shows the Storm is ready to be more than rain drops on the windshield of someone’s tournament run come February.

Back with more later this week…Happy New Year everyone!

Heading to Ohio

Ready for basketball season to get back into gear this weekend and tomorrow I leave for Ohio to see Wooster’s Mose Hole Tournament. We open the first night with UW-La Crosse vs. Calvin and Ohio Northern at Wooster. Should be a doozy of a weekend.

I don’t have time to write a lot about this now but I’ll be blogging occasionally on the subject and we will be broadcasting. Hope to see people there.

Good news from Salem

I just got back yesterday from the Stagg Bowl, the Division III football championship game which is played in Salem. The teams’ annual banquet is held in the Civic Center, site of the Division III men’s basketball Final Four.

The Civic Center is going through some upgrades. The new seats, which went into the side of the arena with the benches last season, are now on both sides of the arena. The old sound studio-style brown acoustic tiles are no longer part of the decor and have been replaced by blue padding on each wall. And there’s a new scoreboard, which wasn’t completely installed when we were there but will be in plenty of time for March.

Tour de Tejas: One night in Abilene

The McMurry men led by 13 at the half. They were up 11 with five minutes to go. The lead was nine with 1:51 left and was seven entering the final minute.

Then, seniors happened.

Hardin-Simmons senior Zach Pickelman, who came in averaging 20 points per game but was held scoreless in the first half, hit a three-pointer in the corner to cut the lead to 61-57. After Terrance Booker made one of two foul shots for McMurry, senior guard Matt Brackett, finding nobody open, took the ball to the hole for HSU, cutting the lead to 62-59 with 30 seconds left.

Booker again made one of two foul shots. Then Brackett did the same thing — as a play to get Pickelman open was slow to develop, he took the ball to the hole one more time, cutting the lead to two points with 16 seconds left.

As McMurry was attempting to push the ball upcourt and stay away from HSU’s foul attempts, it threw the ball away, giving Hardin-Simmons the ball at the other end of the floor with nine seconds left. And Pickelman got the basketball with three seconds left, faked his man up in the air, got himself a wide-open shot and buried it with 0.9 remaining.

Pickelman stole the ensuing inbounds pass and it was bedlam, with fans pouring out of the stands and dancing on the floor at Hardin-Simmons.

The women’s game saw McMurry score the first seven points and hold a 16-6 lead but McMurry was stuck on 16 for an awful long time. Hardin-Simmons went on an 18-0 run to take a 24-16 lead. McMurry scored 10 of the final 13 points to make it a two-point game at halftime. The second half featured seven ties and nine lead changes.

Although the status of Hope/Calvin as the No. 1 rivalry in Division III cannot be questioned, McMurry/Hardin-Simmons is one of several in contention for the No. 2 slot. Amherst/Williams and Wooster/Wittenberg are on that list as well, as would be Bates/Bowdoin on the women’s side, and my fried brain is probably missing others. (And for those of you who would push for their own rivalry as being No. 1, let’s see you put 11,000 fans in the seats first. That’s the bar to reach right now.)

Great night of basketball, and a great capper to the trip. Thanks to the folks at McMurry for making this journey possible.

Now I’m going to go sleep for three days and I’ll re-emerge for the Mount Union/St. John Fisher football game. 🙂

Traveling Texas

U.S. HWY. 84, Texas — After 900 miles of traveling Texas roads, I’ve learned a few things.

Coleman, Texas It’s amazing what happens when roads don’t freeze. I drove quite a bit of Texas highway and didn’t see a pothole other than on an interstate around San Antonio. When roads don’t freeze, ice doesn’t force cracks and those don’t turn into potholes. How refreshing.

Drivers are polite. Excessively. Having driven a lot of U.S. highways, many of them two lanes, I’ve never been in a state where a driver will get over and drive on the shoulder so you can pass them. Most places I’m more likely to have someone try to speed up to cut me off.

Lot of small towns. A lot. Really, a lot. Saw a lot of places with population in the triple digits. Not Coleman, Texas, though. Woo hoo!

And it’s a long way in between them. It was so far from one town to the next on Monday that I nearly ran out of gas even though the warning light hadn’t come on when I passed the previous gas station. Note to the Big 3: Vehicles in Texas should be required to have their gas light come on earlier.

Cactus. Tons and tons of cactus. And goats. But only two longhorns. Perhaps UT-Austin should change its mascot. 🙂

Gas prices are OK but not great. I figured gas would be cheaper here than I’ve ever seen. But it was about 10-15 cents more expensive than New Jersey. Still, 15 cents cheaper than I’ve been paying in Connecticut.

And, well, I already knew this, but things are pretty far apart here. All I hope is that I avoid the propeller planes tonight and get a jet. Then I can sleep without having to worry about my stomach contents. 🙂

Been a good time. Will post separately on the Day 5 games.