Saturday, March 17, 2018

NCAA Tournament Diary

Have I really never done a running diary of the first Friday of the NCAA Tournament?  It’s one of my favorite days of the year.  I haven’t gone to work on this day for the last nine years.  You have sixteen basketball games that last for about 12 hours or so.  It’s beautiful.  Let’s make this happen.

12:14- The CBS college basketball music is the best.  Providence-Texas A&M is our first game.  I saw Providence play of couple of exciting games in the Big East Tournament.  I’m definitely rooting for them.

12:15- The Friars go mantaman.  Bill Raftery is doing the game with Jim Nantz and Grant Hill.  I have nothing against Grant Hill, but is he really necessary when you have Bill Raftery?

12:18- It took a few trips back and forth, but Providence scores the first basket of the game.

12:21- 4-0 Providence as we go to commercial.  I’m cool with Texas A&M not scoring.

12:24- Some other games where I have strong rooting interests today:  Lipscomb over North Carolina, Butler over Arkansas, Creighton over Kansas State, UMBC over Virginia (I so want to see a 1 seed that isn’t a Catholic school lose to a 16 seed), and TCU over Syracuse.  The most important game of the day is TCU over Syracuse.  There are five teams that I can’t stand to see win the tournament.  Duke, Kentucky, and Michigan won yesterday.  It’s doubtful that North Carolina is going to lose today.  Can we at least get one of these teams out of the tournament in the first round?

12:34- The Pac-12 is out of the tournament.  I didn’t realize that.  Now can we get rid of the Big 10, SEC, Duke, North Carolina, and Syracuse?  That would be beautiful.

12:38- Cal State Fullerton and Purdue are about to get started.  Days like this are when I need my Redzone Cable Box idea.  Apparently there’s a way to do it online with mlb.tv.

12:49- Providence’s Kyron Cartwright makes me think of this:



12:51- In the Purdue game, they just showed a replay of Purdue getting away with a goaltending.  Cal State Fullerton would be up one only down two if they had those two points (Purdue made a three as I was typing this sentence).

1:01- Providence has the ball for the last shot in the first half down one.  They call timeout.

1:02- Cal State Fullerton just took the lead.

1:05- That was a long timeout.  Providence airballs a three at the buzzer.  Texas A&M is up 28-27 at halftime.

1:08- Not only did Cal State Fullerton have to play a game that starts at 9:40 their time, they also had to go to Detroit.  That’s pretty rough.  They’re down five.

1:16- Cal State Fullerton is only down two and they just got a stop.  They’re hanging around.  This has a chance to be a really fun game.  Yesterday we got two great finishes (and an overtime game before those two).  I stopped on my way home from work at Dave’s Goldmine Mexican Grill.  I wanted to get home as quickly as possible so I didn’t want to go someplace out of the way.  I was debating whether to eat there or take it home.  I checked my phone and saw Loyola-Miami was close with six or seven minutes left so I decided to take it home.  Good call.  I got to see the last minute of the game with a buzzer beating three for Loyola to go from down one to victory.  Houston-San Diego State was another great finish.  Some guy with terrible hair had a great game and hit a nifty layup with one second left to win the game.  When you have sixteen games going in one day, you have a decent chance to get something like that.

1:21- Cal State Fullerton has better shooting numbers than Purdue right now, but turnovers are hurting them.

1:23- Purdue has extended the lead to seven.  Timeout Cal State Fullerton.

1:24- The next game up features Gregg Marshall coaching against Marshall.

1:29- Purdue just hit a three to go up ten.  Maybe this won’t be a particularly fun game.

1:41- Conner Frankamp just hit a three for Wichita State.  Hasn’t he been in college for six or seven years?

1:54- Texas A&M had opened up a nice lead, but an 11-3 run by Providence has it tied at 50.

2:00- Georgia State and Cincinnati just tipped off.  Now that we have four games going on at once,  I have to go on a rant about court design because I have some thoughts:

I absolutely hated those old standardized courts that they used in the tournament for way too many years.  They finally got rid of them three years ago and replaced them with a snazzier standardized court.  The out of bounds colors are different for each site, but it’s all the same design.  Why can’t we just play on the regular court of the arena?  The ones they have now are definitely better than what they used to have, but they’ve quickly gotten old.  I don’t like the key being white.  Out of bounds should just be one color rather than whatever design they have going on with blue, white, and one other color.  I’m fine with slapping a March Madness logo at halfcourt (it’s much better than the old boring NCAA blue circle logo), but other than that, just play on the regular courts.  I like knowing where the tournament games were played just by looking at the court.  Now sure, they have their own out of bounds color (for part of the out of bounds area), but I’m never going to remember which place is which color when the rest of the design is exactly the same.  I want to see the tournament being played on some wacky court in Boise.

I have other general court design thoughts.  I want to make the paint the paint again.  It’s become so trendy to not have the key painted and not have the out of bounds painted.  I don’t think that’s a bad look, I just wish you didn’t see that everywhere these days.  For places that do have the key painted, another thing I don’t like that you see in college is having the key outlined in the same color as the paint (like at the Big East Tournament, for example).  You end up with this noticeable gap between where the key is painted and where the outline is.  Paint the key a dark color and outline it in white or black or black or dark blue.  I don’t like the gigantic halfcourt logos that you see in a lot of college arenas.  You know who has a nice looking floor?  Notre Dame.  Blue paint out of bounds and in the key with white lines, a reasonably sized halfcourt logo (yes, they have the big shamrock that’s stained a different shade, but I think it works for Notre Dame), nothing weird going on.  Seton Hall is another school that has a nice design.  I could even go for some wacky 1990s looks where everything inside the three point line is painted except for the key and the free throw area.  It wasn’t a great look, but at least it was something different rather than these courts that aren’t painted at all that all look the same.  One thing that I do like that you see is when they put a city’s skyline on the court in different shades of wood.  George Washington and Xavier have that.  But I wouldn’t want to see everybody do that.

As far as the NBA, there’s a trend there that I don’t like either.  So many teams have taken the lines for the college lane out.  Sure, those lines are completely unnecessary for the NBA game, but I think the key looks better with those lines in there.

2:06- Another Texas A&M run has them up 59-52.  Come on, Providence.  They did play three overtime games in three days last week.  That could be catching up to them.

2:08- They just showed a Bud Light commercial on one of the tournament channels.  But you can’t get a beer at these games.

2:11- This article says that “preliminary talks are already underway to serve beer and wine throughout every round of both the men’s and the women’s hoops tournaments.”  Here’s how those talks should go:

Arena guy:  Can we sell beer?
NCAA guy:  Of course, this is America.  Wait, did we really not let you guys sell beer before?
Arena guy:  Yep.
NCAA guy:  Yeah, that was stupid.  What moron was responsible for that?  We’re sorry.  I will immediately let the other arenas know that they can serve beer now and apologize to them also.
(End of talks)

2:14- Texas A&M is pulling away here.  Purdue is up by 21.  That’s unfortunate.

2:17- Wichita State is on an 11-1 run at the end of the first half, but they’re only up by three.

2:18- The only game not in commercial is the uncompetitive Purdue game.  We were close to having a quadruple Urkin.

2:20- Wichita State misses a three at the buzzer.  They lead 37-34 at halftime.

2:21- A blocked Providence three led to a Texas A&M dunk.  Game over.  Georgia State is up on Purdue about halfway through the first half.  Purdue is up big.  And Marshall-Wichita State is at halftime.  I’m taking a break for a little while.

3:30- I’m picking up with Marshall up three on Wichita State with 44.1 to go.

3:31- Wichita State blocks a shot out of bounds.  They’re reviewing to see who it went off of.  It looks like it’s off Marshall.

3:32- TNT needs to give us more looks rather than showing us players and coaches huddling or referees looking at the replays.  One replay made me think it might be Marshall’s ball.

3:34- Still no decision.  I think you have to stick with the call on the floor, which was that it was off Wichita State.

3:35- It is Marshall’s ball.  They added four tenths of a second to the clock.  It’s a new shot clock and 36.2 on the game clock.  Marshall has the ball up three.  Wichita State should foul.

3:36- Marshall couldn’t get it in.  Timeout.  We’ll see what Wichita State does.  If you let them take 30 seconds off the clock, they might score and end it.  Even if they miss, it’s going to be really tough to get a good look at a three to tie.

3:37- Marshall gets a dunk on the out of bounds play.  They’ll review the clock.

3:38- Marshall’s coach is wearing a blazer with a t-shirt.  He looks pretty silly.  But I like the way Marshall’s team looks.  Green is way too good of a color to be this uncommon in the NCAA Tournament.  What is this, the Big East (where just about everybody wears blue)?  They’re still reviewing the clock and which players are on the floor because the teams can’t sub.

3:41- Four minutes after the last basket, we finally resume play.  Wichita State is going to get one and one.

3:42- Wichita State missed the front end and then two threes after offensive rebounds.  The ball goes out of bounds and they’re going to review again.

3:43- Wichita State keeps the ball with 15.9 to play.

3:44- Marshall gets a steal and a timeout with 11.6 left.  Georgia State-Cincinnati was competitive, but Cincinnati is up 14 with less than two minutes to play.

3:46-  This is the first time since 2008 that two 13 seeds won in the first round.  It’s Marshall’s first NCAA tournament win ever.  And it took 16 minutes to play the last 44.1 seconds.

4:57- I had to leave to pick up my car from the shop.  Cincinnati won, North Carolina is going to beat Lipscomb (I haven’t watched a second of that game, which is nice because I despise North Carolina), Butler is up nine on Arkansas, Texas is up five on Nevada, and West Virginia is up eight on Murray State.

5:00- We don’t have another game starting until 6:50.  This reminds me of the old days when the entire tournament was on CBS.  You’d have an hour or two where there was only one game going on out west and they wouldn’t show it on the East coast.  They would put news on.  If I wanted to watch news, I could watch lots of other channels.  I wanted to watch basketball.  This hasn’t been a problem in years, but I’m still complaining about it.

5:17- Butler is up 12 on Arkansas.  The other two games are at halftime with nine-point leads.  I’m going to take it easy until things get interesting.

6:12- We have Texas up 62-59 on Nevada, who just hit a three.  Maybe we can get a good finish here.

6:13- Another Nevada three makes it 64-62.

6:16- West Virginia leads 64-53 with 7:00 to play.  There’s still time, but Murray State has to start cutting into this.

6:23- I got distracted, but Nevada just scored to cut it to one.  Less than a minute to go.  And Nevada just wasted 15 seconds before fouling.  We’re down to 18.3.

6:24- One and one for a 65% free throw shooter.  He misses the front end.  Nevada gets a shot blocked, gets the ball back, and draws a foul with 3.8 left.  Two shots coming up for Nevada down one.

6:25- Jordan Caroline is at the line.  He’s a 72% free throw shooter.

6:27- After a timeout by Texas, Caroline misses the first and makes the second.

6:28- Texas turns it over on the inbound pass.  Nevada takes a timeout with 1.6 left.

6:30- Nevada misses a three at the buzzer.  We’re going to overtime.

6:33- Texas leads by three, but Nevada ties it.

6:34- Texas hits a three and has a chance for a four-point play.  And the free throw is good.  Three minutes to play.  Nevada answers with a big slam.

6:35- West Virginia is going to win.  Nevada just hit a three to take their first lead since 5-2.

6:36- Another three for Nevada!  They’ve gone from down four to up four.  Texas cuts it to two, but Nevada gets it back to four.

6:37- We have 46 seconds left and Texas is going to the line for two.  We get a horn as the foul shooter had the ball because the Nevada player fouled out.  We’ll see if they can get these 46 seconds played in less than 16 minutes.

6:38- One out of two at the line.  Texas fouls with 38 seconds left.  That’s the right decision, but it’s two shots for Nevada.

6:39- One out of two for Nevada.  It looks like Nevada had a steal, but the ball goes out of bounds.  They’re going to review it.

6:41- Texas has the ball with 27.6 left.  They miss and have to foul after Nevada gets the rebound.  It’s looking good for Nevada.

6:43- I thought it was over, but after Nevada only gets one out of two, Texas answers with a three to cut it to two.

6:45- Nevada has two shots with 14.5 to go.

6:46- Nevada makes both, Texas misses a three, and Nevada runs out the clock.  And now I have to wait four minutes until the next game tips off.  But I want it now!



6:50- Kansas State-Creighton is underway.  Finally.  That was a rough four minutes.  By the way, I’m going to see these two teams play in baseball in a couple of weeks.  Somebody will be looking for revenge, baseball style.  Yes, I’m going to Omaha.  I’ll get to see the stadium where the College World Series is played.  I’m sure it will be a much smaller crowd than you get at the College World Series.  I’m also hoping to cross at least two states off of my beer list.  I have nine states left to go:  Indiana, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Kansas, West Virginia, Iowa, Nebraska, South Dakota, and Alaska.  Nebraska is guaranteed, Omaha is right across the border from Iowa.  Maybe I’ll be able to get another one as well while I’m there.  That’s stop number two of four on my pretty much annual Easter vacation trip.  Past Easter vacations:

2013:
Los Angeles Part 1
Los Angeles Part 2
Milwaukee

2014:
Los Angeles
San Francisco

2015:
Salt Lake City
Albuquerque
Dallas

2016:
New Orleans and Biloxi

2017:
Trenton- I had to look this one up because I didn't remember it.

7:45- I took a little break.  Kansas State is up six at halftime.  Michigan State is up two.  I have Michigan State going to the Final Four, but I don’t really want to see that (even though it would definitely be more tolerable than Duke or Syracuse winning that region).  Auburn has an early lead against Charleston.  Texas Southern and Xavier just started.

7:50- Xavier just hit a three to go from down one to up two early on.  I did some math yesterday.  If we say that every number 1 seed has a 0.99 probability of winning in the first round, it’s about a 50/50 chance that 1 seeds would be undefeated over the course of 17 years.  They have only about a 25% chance of being undefeated over 34 years (this is the 34th tournament since they expanded to 64 teams).  Of course, now that they’ve gone 134-0, it would be a 98.01% chance that they make it to 136-0 if Xavier and Virginia both have a 99% chance of winning tonight.

7:59- Bucknell is only down one with less than a minute left in the first half.  We’ve had two 13 seeds win.  Can a 14 seed get a win?

8:01- After getting a three-point play and a stop, Michigan State hit a three, but it came right after the shot clock expired.  We’ll go to halftime with Michigan state up four.

8:03- Xavier had gone on a little run and looked like they were going to run away with it, but Texas Southern has climbed back and taken a four point lead.  We’re still not halfway through the first half, though.

8:07- Kansas State just missed a dunk.  Creighton goes the other way and scores to cut the lead to two.

8:13- Xavier went on a big run.  They’re up six.  I want a 1 seed to lose, but I don’t want it to be a Big East Catholic school (unless they were playing some other Catholic school).

8:31- Michigan State is up nine, Kansas State is up seven, Xavier has opened up a big lead, and Charleston-Auburn is tied at halftime.

8:33- Mike McGuirl just made a three and got fouled for Kansas State as we go to a TV timeout.  He has 12 points.  Jim Nantz tells us that he’ll match his point total for the season if he makes this free throw.  McGuirl wears 00, which is a number that really should be worn more.  It seems like there are a lot of 0’s, but not many 00’s these days.  I prefer 00.  This year, one of the girls on my basketball team had a choice between 0 and 35.  She did not want to be 0.  Like I said, I prefer 00, but I would have taken 0 over 35.

8:37- Kansas State is up 11 with less than seven minutes to play.  Can Creighton make a run?

8:39- Creighton just threw the ball away.  It’s not looking good.

8:48- Kansas State is in control with just over two minutes to play.

8:49- We could get Clemson vs. Auburn on Sunday.  Tigers vs. Tigers.



8:53- Michigan State leads by ten with just over nine minutes to play.

8:54- And the lead is now 15 for Michigan State.  These early evening games haven’t been great.  Maybe we can get a good finish from Charleston-Auburn.

8:57- Xavier is up 12 at halftime.  When I saw them against Providence, it seemed like they were in complete control of that game.  Maybe there’s hope for Texas Southern.

9:00- Bob Gibson played basketball at Creighton?  How did I not know that?  Anyway, Creighton can’t beat Kansas State in basketball.  I’ll see what happens in baseball next month.

9:11- My first beer of the night is a Sam Adams Irish Red.  It’s my St. Patrick’s Day Eve/Notre Dame women’s basketball victory beer (even though I didn’t watch any of their game).  I’m more interested in the NIT.  If Notre Dame can make it to Madison Square Garden, I definitely want to go.

9:24- Charleston is up two with five and a half to play.  It would be nice to see them pull off this upset.

9:26- Auburn just got an extra chance to make a free throw on a lane violation, but they missed that one too.

9:27- Michigan State won by four.  I didn’t watch the end of the game.  I don’t know how it got that close.  Xavier’s up big.  This Charleston-Auburn game is the only other game going on right now.  Hopefully it will be a good finish.

9:28- We go to the last TV timeout with Auburn up one.

9:32- Notre Dame beat Florida State in baseball so that’s nice.

9:33- UMBC goes mantaman in Bill Raftery’s last game of the day.

9:34- 100 seconds left to play in Charleston-Auburn.  Charleston has two free throws with a chance to tie and take the lead.

9:35- They make one out of two.  Auburn comes down the floor and makes a three.

9:36- Charleston misses the front end of a one and one.  They foul and Auburn will shoot one and one with 46.8 to go.  I like fouling, but apparently they fouled the wrong guy.

9:37- Auburn only made the front end and now Charleston will get two shots as they’re in the double bonus with 37.7 left.

9:38- Charleston only made one out of two.

9:39- Auburn will get another one and one with a three point lead and 29.3 to go.

9:40- After one out of two again for Auburn, Charleston will get two more free throws.  Can they make both?

9:41- Nope.  They get one.  They’re three for their last seven.  They give a foul with 14 seconds left.

9:42- Auburn gave Charleston chances.  They missed another free throw.  Charleston took a terrible three (it would have tied it) that wasn’t close.  Auburn will survive.

9:46- My second beer is Sam Adams Chocolate Bock.  It’s so good.  I have a few left to get me through the rough three-four months without Summer Ale.  I drink them on special occasions (Christmas, my birthday, the first Friday of the NCAA tournament, etc.).  The only games we have going on now are 1-16 games.  I’d like to see all the play in games be for the 16 seeds.  That would elevate the teams at the bottom of the tournament slightly.  You’d have two at large teams as 12 seeds or whatever instead of being in the play in games.  You’d have two teams playing play in games instead of being 15 seeds.  They’ll never do that because people will watch Syracuse in a play in game.  People are not going to get excited about watching four games where the winner of each one is most likely to be a sacrificial lamb for a 1 seed.

9:51- UMBC has a 9-7 lead.  It would be wonderful if they could pull off an upset.  I’m putting it in the “extremely doubtful” category until they have a lead at halftime (when it could get upgraded to just “doubtful”).  We have three games left to tip off tonight.  They all have the potential to be good games.

9:59- We are all TCU fans now.  I accidentally typed that sentence with Syracuse in it instead of TCU.  I promise I’ve only had less than a beer and a half so far.  It would take a lot more beers than that for me to not catch that egregious mistake.  I’m taking a break for now until things get interesting.

10:16- UMBC missed a three at the buzzer that would have given them the lead at halftime.  We’re tied at 21.  I’m upgrading the game to very doubtful.  But this could be one of those games where Virginia scores 44 points.  The problem is that could be enough in this game.

10:22- After a Chocolate Bock, my final beer of the night is a Kentucky Vanilla Barrel Cream Ale.  Some googling revealed that it was available near me.  I bought a six pack to cross Kentucky off my beer state list.  Kentucky was number 41.  I will not drink it on any night that Kentucky plays because, you know, Kentucky basketball is everything that is wrong with college basketball.  That reminds me, I was talking to my friends about who my least favorite person in college basketball is.  The candidates are John Calipari, Roy Williams, Jim Boeheim, Mike Krzyzewski, and Grayson Allen.  It was Rick Pitino, but he’s not in college basketball anymore.  I think it’s Boeheim.  Coach K is redeemed by USA basketball.  Grayson Allen hasn’t been part of college basketball nearly as long as the coaches and he won’t be around much longer.  Calipari and Williams don’t have any redeeming qualities, but the love that the media has for Boeheim is what puts him number one, I think.  That makes me think about my least favorite players in other sports all time and currently.  In college football, Pete Carroll is easily the all time leader.  I think currently it would be Jimbo Fisher, but Jim Harbaugh is right up there (it could be Lane Kiffin, but he's nowhere near successful enough for this dishonor).  In baseball it’s Barry Bonds/Ryan Braun (Madison Bumgarner merits a dishonorable mention).  In the NBA it’s Kobe Bryant/LeBron James.  And in the NFL it’s Tom Brady both all time and currently.

10:41- I just went back to UMBC-Virginia for the first time in the second half.  Virginia has two foul shots, but UMBC is up six.  I guess we have to upgrade this game to just doubtful.

10:43- UMBC is up seven.  Timeout, Virginia!

10:47- This is starting to get interesting.  Virginia could end up winning this thing by 15, but we have a game on our hands.

10:50- I missed the fact that TCU took the lead.  That game is at halftime.  I despise Syracuse much more than Virginia (I actually don’t dislike Virginia at all), but Syracuse will have other chances to lose.  The 16 seeds are down to their last chance in this tournament.  Of course, there’s no reason why Syracuse and Virginia can’t both lose tonight.

10:52- Jim Nantz just went through the history of 16 seeds that came close to winning.  There’s still a lot of basketball left to play.

10:53- After three free throws, Virginia faces its biggest deficit of the season (14).  I’m upgrading this game to highly questionable.

10:54- Virginia answers with a three-point play.

10:56- Kyle Guy is not my buddy.



10:58- Virginia just picked up a loose ball foul.  Something to keep an eye on though:  UMBC has five team fouls already, Virginia only has three.

11:00- UMBC leads by 16 with 11:39 to play.  I’m upgrading it to questionable.

11:03- UMBC has already scored more points in this half than they did in the first half.  I was worried that 44 points could be enough for Virginia, but not anymore.  How many points does UMBC need?  I’m going to say 65 (it might not be that much, but I think 65 would be safe).  They’re at 45 with just under 11 minutes to play.

11:05- This guy Jairus Lyles on UMBC is impressive.  I watched him hit the game winning three with 0.5 left on the road to beat Vermont to get into the tournament.  He had 27 in that game.

11:09- Timeout, UMBC.  They lead by 12 with 7:12 to play.

11:10- Syracuse is losing by three, which is nice.

11:12- Lyles is dealing with cramping.  That could be a problem.

11:13- Lyles is back in.  Hopefully there’s no issue.

11:14- Virginia blocks a shot out of bounds with three seconds left on the shot clock.  UMBC misses a shot as the shot clock was expiring.

11:15- Virginia picks up their sixth team foul, but UMBC is still at five.

11:16- Lyles hits a runner to put the lead back to 14.  They call a foul on UMBC on the other end.  It sounds like the crowd has gotten behind UMBC.  It’s in Charlotte, which isn’t all that far from the Commonwealth of Virginia, but any neutral fans are definitely rooting for UMBC.

11:18- After a turnover and a basket for Virginia to cut it to 12, UMBC calls a timeout with 4:07 to play.

11:22- Lyles just scored again.  And then UMBC gets a stop and a three!  Timeout, Virginia, with 3:29 to play.  61-44.  It’s time to upgrade it to probable!

11:25- ESPN has UMBC with a 99.9% chance of winning.  2:51 to go.

11:27- I said 65 would do it.  UMBC is at 65.

11:29- UMBC calls timeout up 17 with 1:51 to go.  This is happening.

11:31- Apparently UMBC lost to Albany 83-39 this year.

11:32- UMBC is up 20.  Game over.  It’s finally happened.  Virginia will have to live with the infamy of being the first 1 seed to lose to a 16.  UMBC is dribbling out the clock, but they’ll have to take a shot clock violation.

11:33- It’s over.  I’ve wanted to see this for so long.  I didn’t want it to happen to Villanova or Xavier.  Ideally, it would have been Duke, North Carolina, or Kentucky, but I’ll take it.  Lyles had 28.  It seems like a good time to post this.

11:54- We have less than three minutes to play in Syracuse-TCU.  The forces of evil lead by one.

11:56- Syracuse by five.  TCU is in trouble.

11:57- TCU just let Syracuse run 30 seconds off the clock when they were trailing by five.  What are you doing?

11:59- Syracuse has one and one up four with 26.2 left.  It looks like we’re all going to be Michigan State fans soon.

12:00- TCU did not handle the last two minutes well.  I don’t like having to root for Michigan State, but here we are.

12:01- The forces of evil went 5-0 in the first round.  Hopefully we can get rid of at least two of them in the second round.

12:12- I have a strong rooting interest in seven of the eight games tomorrow (which is technically today).  I don’t really care about Florida-Texas Tech, but I’m definitely rooting for Villanova, Rhode Island, Buffalo, Loyola, Seton Hall, Gonzaga, and Houston.

12:17- Clemson is going to win.  Florida State is up by 13.  So the ACC has that going for them.

12:28- I’ve been watching basketball for over 12 hours with only brief interruptions.  That’s a pretty good day.  I would close up shop, but Missouri is hanging in there.  They’re down seven with 9:29 to play.

12:32- Florida State has the lead back up to 13.  I’m shutting this down unless Missouri makes it interesting again.  If you made it this far, thanks for reading.  It was fun.  I randomly picked this year to do a running diary and I got the biggest upset in the history of the tournament.  There are lots of interesting games tomorrow, including Notre Dame in the NIT (I know, nobody else cares).  Go Irish!

Wednesday, March 14, 2018

Make College Basketball Great Again

I love college basketball, but it has some serious problems.  There’s a reason that it’s being investigated by the FBI.  Before I try to fix college basketball, let’s talk about the problems.  So many people seem to want to fix college basketball without identifying the problems first.

The biggest problem with college basketball is that the college part of college basketball has been taken out for so many of the players.  People want to blame the NBA for that with the one and done rule.  The NBA rule has certainly contributed, but certain colleges bear much greater responsibility for problems than the NBA.  You hear people wanting to pay college basketball players.  I do not think that will fix anything and will just create other problems.  I’m no expert, but I’d imagine you’d have Title IX issues with that.  What do you do about women’s basketball?  And then what do you do about other sports?  And you know that NCAA Basketball Tournament that you love?  It’s over if you start paying players.  There are 351 Division I basketball schools.  How many schools could actually pay their players?  Kentucky, Duke, North Carolina, and maybe 30-50 others.  I’m pretty sure St. Bonaventure or South Dakota State or the College of Charleston has any desire or ability to pay basketball players.  Part of the beauty of the NCAA Tournament is that all of these schools get a chance to compete with Kentucky, Duke, and North Carolina.  If you start paying players, that’s over.  I’m not saying that they couldn’t compete with schools paying players; I’m saying that they wouldn’t compete.  They wouldn’t be playing the same level of basketball anymore.  You’d have to split Division I into two separate divisions (one where they pay the players and one where they don’t).  I’m not getting excited about watching a 16 team tournament or whatever of semi-pro basketball teams.

All of that brings me back to the problem of college not being a part of college basketball anymore.  College basketball players receive a scholarship for a free education to play basketball.  The university is providing something in exchange for something else.  For the vast majority of these players, that is an extremely good deal for them.  For the ones that it is not an extremely good deal, it’s because those players have no intention of getting a college education and the universities know that.  So all they’re doing is providing a place for them to live and play basketball in exchange for the players playing basketball.  That’s not as good of a deal anymore.

One other thought about money in college basketball.  You hear about how these players generating all this money.  That is really overstated.  Let me use Bonzie Colson as an example.  I love Bonzie Colson.  I don’t know what’s going to happen to him next year, but let’s just say he ends up playing in the NBA G-League.  Are you going to have the crowds for G-League games to see Bonzie Colson play that you have to see him play at Notre Dame?  No.  Are you going to have people buying his Maine Red Claws (or whatever team) jersey the way you have people buying number 35 Notre Dame jerseys?  No.  People are going to care about Notre Dame, Duke, Kansas, Gonzaga, or whatever school’s basketball team regardless of what players are on the team.  And they’re not going to care about the NBA G-League teams in all likelihood regardless of what players are on the team (unless maybe there’s a change that I’ll get to later).

Another problem is all the stupid NCAA rules.  While I’m totally against the colleges paying players, I am not totally against the players having an opportunity to make money in other ways.  Remember those NCAA football/basketball video games?  They don’t make them anymore because of all the lawsuits.  When they did make them, they didn’t use the players’ names.  Why not just put the players’ names in the game and have EA Sports give them $100 or something and a free copy of the game?  Who would that hurt?  I’m sure the players would be pretty excited about it.  I would be in favor of letting players do endorsements up to a certain amount of money.  I don’t know what the amount would be, but I wouldn’t want a situation where it would be like, “Come to UCLA because you can get a million dollars in endorsements in Los Angeles and there’s no way you’re going to get that much if you go to Washington State or wherever.”

So what could change to fix the situation college basketball finds itself in?  Let’s start with what the NBA could do?  They could make it two years out of high school before you could play in the NBA.  That would definitely be better than what we have now, but I don’t think it’s going to happen.  They could go to the baseball rule or something similar.  In baseball, you can be drafted right out of high school, but if you decide to go to college you’re not eligible for the draft again until three years later.  That would be great for college basketball.  I’d be very worried about what it would mean for the NBA.  Get paid now or wait three years to get paid?  If 18 year olds were making that decision, I’d be very worried about what they would do.  It would be good for college basketball, but it could be pretty bad for the NBA.

Here’s what I’d like to see.  Give players more options.  Make it a combination of the baseball rule and the current rule.  What do I mean?  You have the rule about not being eligible for the draft for three years if you decide to go to college.  If you don’t decide to go to college, you still have to wait a year to play in the NBA.  The difference would be that you could be drafted right out of high school.  You’d just have to play a year in the G-League first.  And you would get paid a real salary.  Right now, players could play in the G-League right out of high school or they could get paid to play overseas right out of high school.  But those choices are not very appealing.  You either have to move to a foreign country very far away from home (where you have no intention of staying) or get paid a very small amount.  I’m pretty sure DeAndre Ayton is getting paid more to play at Arizona this year (which is against the rules, of course) than he would be if he was playing in the G-League this year.  So with my rule change, you’d keep players from going to the NBA too soon, but you’d also get some more talent into the G-League.  If NBA teams drafted some players that they’d have to stash in the G-League for a year, suddenly there would be a lot more excitement about the G-League.  Right now, you don’t have future stars in the G-League.  You would under my plan.  If the Nets drafted a superstar high school player (whenever they have a draft pick again), people might be a little more interested in seeing the Long Island Nets play in the G-League.  My plan would also reduce the talent level in college basketball.  I’m fine with that.  If they have no interest in being college students, they shouldn’t be playing college basketball.

The other thing the NBA could do would be to incentivize players to stay in college.  You could set up some type of system that rewards players based on how long they stay in college.  The rookie salary scale could be based on how many years a player was in college.  I would have a base salary scale for rookies and add certain percentages for each year a player was in college.  Any percentage added on top would not count for salary cap/luxury tax purposes.  Another incentive could be that if you stay three or four years, you have one less year on your contract before reaching free agency.

What could the NCAA do besides fixing silly rules?  Let’s assume the NBA doesn’t make any of these changes.  How about a rule that when a university offers a scholarship, they’re making a four-year commitment to that player.  So if you have a player that leaves after a year to go to the NBA, that scholarship is burned for the next three years.  You have teams like Kentucky and Duke that are pretty much teams of hired mercenaries (or in Duke’s case, hired mercenaries plus Grayson Allen, not really any better than Kentucky).  Are they going to bring in a freshmen class of five guys that have every intention of going to the NBA after a year if they know that recruiting a player that has no intention of being a real college student is going to leave them with a dead scholarship for three years?  They might take one or two here or there, but they’re not going to build an entire team like that.  The burned scholarships would have to be for players that declare for the NBA Draft, not for players that transfer.  If a player is in good academic standing and transfers for more playing time or to be closer to home or whatever, the university shouldn’t be punished for that.

And what about the universities?  Again, assume no NBA changes or NCAA changes.  How about this:  only recruit athletes that are going to be real students.  If a kid has no intention of being a real student, he shouldn’t be getting a scholarship to play basketball.  Before you tell me that you have to recruit the one and done players to win, you don’t.  Villanova won a National Championship with a team that wasn’t full of hired mercenaries.  Even Louisville went undefeated in an NCAA tournament with a team that wasn’t full of guys who left for the NBA after one year (I worded that sentence carefully).  Where’s the oversight?  Why do university presidents allow their athletic departments to be run like this?  If I was Villanova’s president, I’d be proud of the school’s basketball team.  If I was Duke’s president, I’d be ashamed of the mockery the basketball team is making of the university.  Just because the NBA has the one and done rule, that doesn’t mean that these colleges need to go after these players (which is why I’m in favor of providing them with more reasonable options if they don’t want to go to college).  The colleges owe their players an education.  When they don’t care if they provide an education, that’s a big problem that needs to be fixed (in both basketball and football).  If you recruit a good player who develops well over three years and decides to go to the NBA, there’s nothing wrong with that.  You didn’t recruit somebody that made a mockery of college athletics and they could probably easily return at some point and finish their degree.  The one and done players are not going to be returning to finish their degree.

I have one other unrelated change that I’d like to see made.  Let’s give more teams from the weaker conferences a chance.  I was disappointed that Notre Dame didn’t make the tournament.  I wasn’t surprised by it and I wasn’t really upset with being left out.  What annoyed me was that we were the first team out and Syracuse was the last team in.  We had the same ACC record, we got one round further in the ACC Tournament, and we beat them … on the road … without our two best players … who are now back.  But even if we took their place, we’d be the ninth ACC team in the tournament.  It would have made it more fun to be a Notre Dame fan for sure, but it’s not at all likely that we were going particularly far.  Possible yes, likely no.  But do we really need nine teams from a 15 team conference?  If you’re the seventh best team in the Big 12 (a conference with ten teams), do you really deserve a spot in the NCAA Tournament.  I would say no.  Give St. Mary’s and teams like that a chance.  My rule would be that you can’t get more than half of the teams from a conference into the NCAA tournament.  I could even live with no more than 60%.  That would make the regular season more meaningful.  You better take care of business in the regular season because you don’t want to be the ninth best ACC team.  That’s not going to be good enough.

Enjoy the tournament.  If you root for Michigan, Syracuse, Duke, North Carolina, or Kentucky, you deserve disappointment.  Make College Basketball Great Again.

Monday, March 12, 2018

The Big East is Back

We had the Big East and ACC with their conference tournaments in New York City again.  I bought tickets for the ACC on Wednesday night and for the Big East on Thursday-Saturday.  Last year I ended up only going to two nights of the ACC and I didn’t blog about it.  But I did see Notre Dame finally beat Virginia.  This year I was supposed to see Notre Dame on Wednesday, but it was not to be.

There was a snow storm in the forecast for Tuesday night into Wednesday.  I was hoping that it would be enough for school to be closed on Wednesday, but not too much to prevent me from getting to Brooklyn.  I got my snow day even though it probably wasn’t totally necessary.  That was important because I got some extra sleep on Wednesday during the week where I get the least amount of sleep each year.  I also got extra sleep on Thursday thanks to a delayed opening.  For most of the day Wednesday it was rain, but it did change to snow in the afternoon.  It probably would have been a pretty rough drive home.  I shoveled in the 3:00 hour and there wasn’t too much snow yet.  About an hour later, I got in my car to go to the train station.  Things had gotten much worse.  I pulled out of the driveway and decided that this was not a very good idea.  I decided not to go and pulled back in.  I was supposed to get a 5:03 train.  I probably wouldn’t have made it even if I got to the train station.  At 5:21, there was a tweet from the Long Island Railroad that service had been shut down on several branches, including mine.  So I watched the game at home.  It was not looking good for Notre Dame.  We trailed by as many as 21.  Our biggest deficit was early in the second half.  At 8:15 (which would have been early in the second half), I texted some of my college friends saying “I did not make it to Brooklyn.  I’m either missing a really crappy performance or what’s going to be a great comeback.”  I had a feeling.  And I did miss a great comeback.  In fact, it was the biggest comeback in the history of Notre Dame men’s basketball.  Oh well, it’s not like I really had a chance.

Notre Dame took on Duke the next night.  I was going to one of the tournaments with Vin.  I had Big East tickets, but he was trying to get ACC tickets from work.  He couldn’t get them so we went to the Big East.  I stumbled into some really good seats.  I like to sit near halfcourt.  In the past, I had bought tickets right away.  I didn’t this year, so by the time I actually bought tickets, the ones I would normally get were sold out.  So I was looking for affordable tickets that wouldn’t be a terrible view.  I ended up getting seats in section 218.  It was on the end of the court, but it was the first row of the section.  What I did not realize when I bought the tickets was that the first row had TVs for every two seats or so.  When I first saw them, I assumed they’d have the same video feed as the scoreboard.  Nope, you could change channels.  I was planning on trying to watch Notre Dame on my phone, but I didn’t have to.  Unfortunately Duke was too much.  Notre Dame hung in there for the first half (down four at halftime), but Duke pulled away in the second half.

I was five miles away from where Notre Dame was playing.  Fortunately, I was still able to watch them.  I'm going to try to get similar seats next year.

I had been a long time since I saw Vin.  We ran into Bill Murray on the way out the last time I went to the Big East Tournament together.  We didn’t have anything quite like that this time, but we saw some good basketball.  I drank some Brooklyn Lager because I drink by mood and Notre Dame was playing in Brooklyn.  We saw a pretty easy win for Villanova over Marquette in the first game.  I was rooting for that because Marquette was another bubble team and they wear terrible uniforms.  The second game was Seton Hall-Butler.  I was rooting for Seton Hall because Butler is the only non-Catholic school in the Big East (I definitely don’t dislike Butler because of the Brad Stevens/Gordon Hayward days, but I can’t root for them to win the Big East).  We got a great game.  The last four minutes had 22 points scored between the two teams and no lead more than three.  Seton Hall took the lead with 54 seconds left.  Butler took the lead with 35 seconds left.  Seton Hall tied it and then took the lead with 12 seconds left on a three-point play.  Butler scored the winning basket on a put back with 3.6 seconds left.  Seton Hall got a decent shot at the buzzer for the win, but it didn’t go in.  I was glad that I stayed for the whole game.  It was good to see Vin again.

The train ride home was interesting.  I thought I was going to get the 12:14, but I made it to the 11:42.  I don’t know if it was something I ate before the games or what (it’s not like a drank a ton or anything), but I felt miserable.  I felt fine at the games, it just hit me on the train.  I didn’t know what was going on.  It kept getting worse and worse.  I thought I was going to throw up or something.  By the end, I thought I might pass out.  I was kind of stuck because by the time I really felt like throwing up, I was just about to get to Hicksville, which is where my car was.  If I went to the bathroom on the train, I would have missed my stop.  I decided I had to just try to make it off the train.  But even if I made it to Hicksville, I didn’t know if I was going to be able to make it home.  My vision started getting messed up.  My field of vision started turning white.  It was weird and kind of scary.  But once I got off the train and felt the cold air, I felt a lot better.  Still not great, but good enough to make it home.

I got to sleep that night around 1:45.  I set my alarm for 5:45, which is 20 minutes later than when I usually get up.  My first thought when I got up was that I had set my alarm, but I didn’t actually have to go to school.  Nope, I had to get to work.  My stomach was still a little unsettled, but not nearly as bad as it had been.  The lack of sleep really wasn’t an issue during the day.  The good news was that I was giving tests pretty much all day.  I surprised myself with how productive I was in grading the tests as the day went on.  I was headed back to the city for the Big East semifinals with Kyle.  It was Xavier-Providence and Villanova-Butler.  We were in the last row of section 415, not nearly as good as where I was the night before.  Friday night is the most expensive night of the Big East Tournament.  You should be getting better teams than Thursday night and one more game than Saturday night.  So by the time I bought tickets, the last row of the 400s level was the only thing left that wasn’t ridiculously expensive.  I was hoping the crowd would clear out and we could move down, but that didn’t really happen too much until pretty late in the second game.  It was Friday night, the first game started at 6:30 instead of 7:00 (like the two nights before), and Villanova was playing in the second game.  It was not a recipe for people leaving early.

Our view on Friday night

I was rooting for Xavier and Villanova because I thought that would be a cool championship game, but I’m glad it didn’t turn out that way.  Xavier-Villanova (which Tom and I saw three years ago) would have been a Villanova home game.  Providence-Villanova was pretty evenly split.  Anyway, Xavier looked to be in control for much of the game.  Their biggest lead was 17, but Providence chipped away in the second half.  They tied it for the first time with 3:47 left.  Xavier took the lead with 37 seconds left, but Providence tied with with two free throws with 12 seconds left.  Providence blocked a game-winning shot attempt with one second left and it went to overtime.  Providence took the lead in overtime, but Xavier cut it to one with two free throws with 40 seconds left.  Providence missed with 12 seconds left, but J.P. Macura got called for a charge with seven seconds left as he took it to the basket.  Providence took a three-point lead with two free throws with six seconds left.  Xavier drove the ball inside the three point line.  Then they were pretty much stuck with nothing to do.  By the time they kicked it out for a game-tying three, the clock expired (the shot after the buzzer went in).  Villanova beat Butler easily in the second game.  It was over early.  Villanova scored the first 19 points of the game.  I thought Butler waited way too long to call timeout.  It was 16-0 before they finally called one.  Kyle left with five minutes left or so.  I snuck down to the lower level for the last few minutes, but there really wasn’t much to see as the game was already decided.

This was my view for the last four minutes or so.  Unfortunately, there wasn't much to see.

My dad and I went to the Championship Game on Saturday.  After two late nights, I slept until 11:20 on Saturday.  It was pretty awesome.  My dad and I went in early so that we could go to a vigil mass before the 6:30 game.  I wanted to go before the game so that I didn't have to worry about it on Sunday morning with the time change.  There are three Catholic churches within three-tenths of a mile of Madison Square Garden.  The two closest (which are about two blocks away from each other) both had 4:00 vigil masses (4:30 or 5:00 would have been ideal for a 6:30 game, but we didn’t have control over that).  I decided to go to St. John the Baptist because St. John’s is named after him so it seemed appropriate for the Big East Championship (even though St. John’s hasn’t played in that game since 2000).

This is before mass at St. John the Baptist.  This church and St. Francis have come in handy when I'm in the city on a Saturday evening or Sunday.

When we got to Madison Square Garden after mass, it was still too early to get in.  We heard the bands for both schools perform in the lobby.  My dad and I had the same seats that Vin and I had two nights earlier.  We used the TV to check out some other conference championship games, but there wasn’t anything too entertaining going on.  It was a game of runs early on.  Villanova would build up the lead, but then Providence would make a run.  Villanova led by as many as 12 in the second half, but Providence took their first lead on a three-point play with 7:49 left.  Providence led by as many as four, but Villanova tied it with two free throws with 30 seconds left.  Providence had the last shot of regulation for the win, but they missed.  Overtime was a bit anticlimactic.  It was close for most of overtime, but Villanova pulled away in the last minute to win 76-66.  Jalen Brunson and Mikal Bridges combined for 56 of Villanova’s 76.

They have these plaques of people who have played/performed at Madison Square Garden on the floor in the lobby.  I found this one before the game.

Big East Champions for the third time in four years.  They won the National Championship the one year they didn't win the Big East Championship.

A couple of final Big East thoughts.  The Big East is back.  After the conference split up, it didn’t seem to be the same.  The first two years of the tournament, attendance ranged from 12,588-15,580.  This year’s tournament had a Wednesday crowd (when the four worst teams are playing) of 16,866 (I'm sure having St. John's playing Georgetown helped, but still).  The last three sessions (the ones I went to) were all sold out.  Villanova has been consistently great (including a National Championship).  Even though Notre Dame has had more success in the ACC, my dream would be for Notre Dame to rejoin the conference and be truly independent in football again (it’s not going to happen anytime soon) with Dayton or somebody as the 12th team.  That would make Wednesday a much better day.  You’d get four games.  Right now, you only get two and usually you get three teams that are pretty bad.  Since the new Big East was created, the old teams have dominated.  In five tournaments, we’ve had an old Big East team win every one (three for Villanova).  Creighton and Xavier are the only new Big East teams to even make it to the championship game.  Marquette and DePaul haven’t been to a championship game yet and they’ve been in the conference since 2005.  Georgetown hasn’t been to the championship game since 2010 and they haven’t won it since 2007.  St. John’s last appeared in the championship game in 2000 (which they won).  It’s always going to be more exciting at Madison Square Garden when you have the old teams doing well (unless maybe a team like Creighton has a player like Doug McDermott).  St. John’s is obviously going to be the most popular team at Madison Square Garden.  I would think Georgetown and Villanova would be the next two (even though Seton Hall is closer) and then Seton Hall and Providence.  But the Garden was pretty evenly split for Villanova-Providence.  My dad's theory was that any neutral fans are tired of seeing Villanova dominate (they’ve been in the championship game four years in a row and won four of them).  I really hope I get to see St. John’s and Georgetown be good again.  This year’s Big East Tournament was really good, but I think it would be amazing if you had St. John’s really good plus at least one of Georgetown/Villanova and at least one of Seton Hall/Providence.  Maybe someday.

It was fun this year after missing a year.  The ACC leaves New York next year so I’ll definitely be back for the Big East next year.