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.

Hoopsville Podcast: Mar. 16th

Here is this week’s Hoopsville Podcast… enjoy!

Part 1:
Mark Simon – Ursinus Sectional Breakdown (Coast Guard and Ursinus)
& Women’s Final Four Preview
Mike Miller – Messiah Women’s Coach
Chris Kielsmeir – Howard-Payne Women’s Coach

Part 2:
Mark Edwards – Washington Univ. Coach
Kevin Small – Ursinus Coach
Frank Rossi – Plattsburgh Sectional Breakdown

Part 3:
Pat Cunningham – NABC Div. III Service Award & Trinty (TX) Coach
Bob Quillman – St. Lous Sectional Breakdown
Chatting with Pat Coleman

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.

All aboard for the 16: Sweet!

Gordon Mann is in the air to Dallas, I’m in the airport waiting for a flight to St. Louis, others are on the road and yet others already there.

Teams are in place and fans are either there or en route. Headed for a great night of basketball all around.

Our colleague Dean Corwin is ready to weigh in with links to tonight’s pregame coverage, so I won’t go too deeply into that. Wishing everyone safe travels. This is the gathering point for tonight’s in-game posts as well — feel free to tell us what you’re seeing or hearing as we cut the field in half one more time.

Bob Quillman and I have the last game of the night, tipping at or around 9 p.m. ET between Buena Vista and Washington U. So we’ll see you then.

Insider: Survive and Advance

What a big weekend for the Washington University Bears! After losing an extremely emotional game at the University of Chicago just a week ago, it seemed as if there were a ton of reasons for us to question ourselves as a team. All of this before we saw our draw from hell released Monday afternoon by the NCAA. This isn’t me saying we didn’t deserve such a difficult path, as we were a Pool C team just thankful to get into the tournament, but rather how many tough teams there are in Division III in the Midwest.

The Weekend: Our opening game against No. 17 Wooster, a re-match of last years third place game, was a typical battle with each team throwing punches and making runs. We opened up extremely hot and ended up holding on to the lead for the entire game. In the second half, James Cooper showed why he’s an All-American and scored 12 of Wooster’s 14 points over a two-minute span to cut our lead from 10 to two. Aaron Thompson (A.T.) held him scoreless in the first half and did a tremendous job on him for the remainder of the game. Troy Ruths was too tough down the stretch (I feel like I’ve written that sentence multiple times in my blogs this year) and we ended up holding on for a five-point win.

Our second game was against No. 6 Augustana– a team that was very familiar to us. We played them earlier in the season, the first game after I got hurt, and they handled us pretty easily on a neutral court. Saturday night’s Augustana team was missing a key piece they had earlier in the season when they beat us, however, as they were without senior Jordan Delp, who went down earlier in the season with an Achilles injury. It was a pleasure getting to commiserate with Jordan about our respective injuries, rehab time-tables, and future plans as student-athletes.

While most basketball games feature teams making runs, Saturday night’s game was different in that respect. We almost never trailed the entire second half (with the exception of 21 seconds) but at the same time never held a lead of more than five points. Up two points with less than a second left, Tyler Nading got called for his fifth-foul and Chandlor Collins nailed two free-throws for them to send the game to overtime. Talk about ice-water in someone’s veins—those were some big time free throws. Without Tyler we still pulled together and played well in overtime. We got a huge lift from our bench throughout the game, add that to A.T.’s unbelievable effort running the show and Cameron Smith’s clutch shooting… oh yea, and Troy’s 21 points and seven rebounds, and what do you get? A three-point victory and a birth in the sweet 16.

Neither game was a dominant performance, but as the ESPN analysts and my high school coach say, that’s not what the tournament play is about… it’s about SURVIVING AND ADVANCING. Every team’s record is 0-0, and all that matters is that after the game one team is still playing and one team is going home. One team survived the game and is advancing to the next round and the other team is looking towards next season. Buena Vista (who we play Friday) doesn’t care that we beat two tremendously talented teams this past weekend, so we’re going to need to play our basketball and play it well to beat them.

UAA Unity: Congratulations to all of the UAA teams on their tourney success so far. I couldn’t be happier for each team that has advanced and I think that it has quieted any rumblings or complaints of people saying we didn’t deserve the three pool C bids we were granted—considering all three of the teams are still standing. I know each team has to win a game before it happens, but the potential Amherst vs. Brandeis match-up on a neutral court to get to Salem makes me giddy to think about. I haven’t seen the Lord Jeffs play this year, but the constant pressure ‘Deis puts on opposing guards by Kwame Graves-Fulgham and Andre Roberson makes it tough for anyone bringing the ball up, so it’ll be interesting to see how All-everything Andrew Olson does against that pressure the second time around.

NCAA Tourney Thoughts: I had an interesting conversation at Augustana with the NCAA representative this past weekend. Mike Zapolski, the athletic director at Anderson College, is the head of the Midwest Region and is a member of the national selection committee. While I can’t go through and repeat all of the conversation because it could potentially bore many, his enthusiasm about the regional ranking/selection process made me feel like the process is DEFINITELY in the hands of the right people. Obviously the committee is under very heavy scrutiny by the NCAA’s geographical/travel rules but it sure seems like he and the committee understand the tournament isn’t perfect at this point and there are definitely places to tweak things for next year.

Rehab: My rehab is continuing to go extremely well and I’m realistically only 3-4 weeks away from playing basketball in live, contact situations. I’ve been running, squatting, leg pressing and lunging. While I’m enjoying my role as a “coach”– helping putting together scouting reports late into the night with Coach Whittle, pointing things out on the bench, and listening to my teammates suggestions to tell the coaches, etc…—I can assure everyone that it is MUCH more fun to play!

Take Care,

Sean

p.s. Congrats to our S.I.D. Chris Mitchell on his recent engagement to University of Missouri-St. Louis S.I.D. Mary Ann Tierney! Talk about future kids with scary potential to become the best press release writers, media guide creators and web site updaters of the future S.I.D. generation.