The Boubacar 11/30/2007 (TWIsM Edition)DAVIDSON, N.C. -- Welcome to your weekend Big B, the final one of November. Hard to believe it's almost December already. Season's almost a month old. Say, how's the family? Kids alright? Good, good to hear. This weather we're having... never thought we'd still be in short sleeves and singing Christmas carols at the same time. Global warming, I guess, right? Yeah, you got me, I've never been one for small talk. Let's Boubacar!
This Patriots team is stocked, and like the picture indicates, the CAA world belongs to Jim Larranaga right now.
The upshot of all this? I think that the UNC-Wilmington Seahawks are going to sneak in and win a lot more games than they were initially projected to. T.J. Carter is all the way back, the scoring is balanced, they're getting solid production from the freshmen and getting to the line. You can still shoot over the Seahawks on the other end, and you can take the ball away from them relatively easily, but they're still scoring a whole lot more points than they have in the recent past. I can see them pulling some key splits with some of these early favorites, while sweeping the Georgia States and Towsons and Delawares. They could go into Richmond with a four seed. Maybe even a three.
It's probably too early to toss out the two-bid talk and focus on the always-hot MAC race, because there have been bright spots. Before tanking at Valpo the other night, Western Michigan beat "it" team Davidson. Miami is Pollitz prize-worthy. Though Ohio lost to Temple last night to go 0-2 on its Eastern swing, our spy at the game loved Leon Williams' performance, saying he "got to the rim with ease," and was "a freaking monster inside." But MAC fans are sick of moral victories. This weekend would be a good time to start making some headlines: in addition to hot mid-on-mid action like Kent State at SoCon power UNCG, Toledo's at Pitt and Miami's at Louisville.
But head coach Houston Fancher is looking on the bright side. He points out that at this time last year, a team destined for 25 wins had only one D-I victory (against Campbell), and this team has three wins against four losses. And while the team lost a lot of senior leadership, it still has a lot of frontcourt talent -- probably still the best in the SoCon -- including a healthy, productive Donte Minter. "We're so frontcourt-heavy, I think that makes the young guards a little gun-shy," said Fancher said glumly in his office last night, reflecting on the loss. "They're focused on pounding it inside instead of shooting it... There's a team in there somewhere, we're going to find it."
But tonight is the night that the Bulldogs go down. At their Iowa Realty Invitational, they've invited D-I newbie North Carolina Central to play them in the first round, in keeping with the tradition of tourney hosts picking the weakest team as an initial opponent. The Eagles are 1-7 and the 262nd-ranked team in the poll, and have given up an average of 100 points a game so far. I've done a little number crunching, and for Drake to maintain that top spot, the Bulldogs will have to do a number of key things, like scoring 2.63 points per possession and holding NCC scoreless for the entire evening. Can they do it? Tune in and find out! |
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We've all sat through failed mid-major upset attempts in which the starters rush out to an early lead with favorable matchups, that end sadly in 15-point losses because most of the power-conference teams have three guys on the bench who were chased around by half the coaches in the ACC and Big XII out of high school. What a luxury it is to have guards like championship veteran Jordan Carter, a dangerous midsize shooter like Cameron Long (shooting 60 percent so far, by the way), and a DeMatha boy like Isaiah Tate for the next four years. What mid-major team wouldn't love to have a Vlad Moldoveanu, a big Romanian dude with a nice three-stroke and solid U-18 European Championships experience.