Dribblings 11/29/2004 (It's Not In The Game Edition)

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Santa Clara strikes again! A week after making North Carolina extremely angry, the Broncos beat Stanford 86-76 at home. They were led by Travis Niesen and his jump hook - 31 points and 11 rebounds for the reigning MMBOW.

Independent Texas A&M-Corpus Christi free-threw a tired Old Dominion team to death last night in their home tournament, 71-67. Take note: the Islanders have now beaten Florida State, Texas Christian and ODU, and these are the same guys who shocked Tournament-bound Murray State last year.

Speaking of two of those teams, TCU nipped Florida State in the Caller Times Challenge losers' bracket. Both teams will, I'm sure, be happy to get out of Corpus Christi after the embarrassing losses they've taken there.

Fox Sports sends Eric Moneypenny to go find life beyond the power conferences. Like I've been trying to tell you, mid-major basketball is cool.

For gamers, this is horrible news. If you've played any college basketball titles, you probably know that NCAA restrictions disallow actual player names, so you're forced to figure out who "PG 2" and "PF 44" are on unfamiliar teams. No matter, there's always been the excellent website of D.T. Lindner, which has offered constantly-updated, detailed data files of all 300-or-so NCAA Division I rosters. Just download, USB-link to your PlayStation 2, and you're fulfilling your mid-major fantasies in no time.

But now it's been discovered that EA Sports' new NCAA March Madness 2005 only allows edits to 325 players, which allows you to fill out the rosters of a select handful of teams. That makes the game about as much fun as "Hot Hoops '82" on the ColecoVision (for me, at least), and it's a good thing I didn't buy it yet. I will investigate ESPN College Hoops 2K5 and get back to you.


What We Do
Having recently completed its fourth season, The Mid-Majority is a blog about the 22 smaller Division I college basketball conferences (and independents) by me, Kyle Whelliston. I write for ESPN.com and Basketball Times, and maintain the Basketball State statistics website as well.

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About This Entry

This page contains a single entry by Kyle Whelliston published on November 29, 2004 9:20 AM.

It Used To Be A Basketball Town was the previous entry in this blog.

MMBOW #3: Jose Juan Barea, Northeastern is the next entry in this blog.

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