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March 7, 2005

Official All-Big East Team

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 12:23 pm

Has been announced. Apparently I think much higher of Marcus Williams than the Big East Coaches, who put him on the third team. Chris Taft was put on the “Honorable Mention” squad. Ronald Ramon made the All-Rookie team. Here’s how the list looks:

2004-05 All-BIG EAST First Team

Jared Dudley, Boston College, So., 6-7, 220, San Diego, Calif.
Craig Smith, Boston College, Jr., 6-7, 250, Los Angeles, Calif.
Chevon Troutman, Pittsburgh, Sr., 6-7, 240, Williamsport, Pa.
Ryan Gomes, Providence, Sr., 6-7, 240, Waterbury, Conn.
Gerry McNamara, Syracuse, Jr., 6-2, 182, Scranton, Pa.
*Hakim Warrick, Syracuse, Sr., 6-8, 219, Philadelphia, Pa.

2004-05 All-BIG EAST Second Team

Josh Boone, Connecticut, So., 6-10, 237, Mt. Airy, Md.
Charlie Villanueva, Connecticut, So., 6-11, 240, Brooklyn, N.Y.
Carl Krauser, Pittsburgh, Jr., 6-2, 200, Bronx, N.Y.
Allan Ray, Villanova, Jr., 6-2, 200, Bronx, N.Y.
Curtis Sumpter, Villanova, Jr., 6-7, 223, Brooklyn, N.Y.

2004-05 All-BIG EAST Third Team

Marcus Williams, Connecticut, So., 6-3, 205, Los Angeles, Calif.
Brandon Bowman, Georgetown, Jr., 6-8, 219, Santa Monica, Calif.
Chris Thomas, Notre Dame, Sr., 6-1, 190, Indianapolis, Ind.
Daryll Hill, St. John’s, Jr., 6-0, 167, Queens, N.Y.
Randy Foye, Villanova, Jr., 6-3, 205, Newark, N.J.

Five forwards on the six-man 1st team. Well, that’s one way to get very deserving Dudley and Gomes on the squad. I still can’t believe Marcus Williams was dropped so far. I don’t really have much of a problem with Foye getting in over Quinn. I realized late that I left him off my just missing list. Not real sure about Brandon Bowman. He had a solid year, but there were several players I thought were better.

UPDATE: Here’s the press release announcing the squad from the Big East.

All-Big East Team

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 12:10 pm

[Originally posted in College Basketball Diary]

I gave my player of the year pick last week. Now it’s time for my All-Big East Teams. I debated about wussing out and making all 3 squads, 6 deep (as the Big East often does), but I’m going to limit it to 5.

1st Team

Hakim Warrick, Syracuse, Forward
Craig Smith, BC, Forward
Chevon Troutman, Pitt, Forward
Marcus Williams, UConn, Guard
Carl Krauser, Pitt, Guard

Leaving Ryan Gomes and Jared Dudley off the squad was tough. If it was purely the best players in the Big East they’d be on, but I’m trying to make an actual squad. Warrick is the best player in the Big East this year. Craig Smith barely gets the nod over his teammate Jared Dudley. Chevon Troutman is the best inside presence in the Big East on both sides of the ball. Marcus Williams was the best point guard in the Big East this year. Maybe it’s a bit of bias on my part, but Krauser has become one of the better one-on-one defenders to raise him to first team guard over Allan Ray. McNamara misses because he has struggled in the last 2-3 weeks due to being overworked.

2nd Team

Jared Dudley, BC, Forward
Ryan Gomes, Providence, Forward
Chris Sumpter, Villanova, Forward
Gerry McNamara, Syracuse, Guard
Allan Ray, Villanova, Guard

Hell of a second team on offense. Gomes is the leading scorer in the Big East. Ray, Sumpter, Dudley and McNamara are #5-8. The forward position in the Big East was so strong this year. Dudley is the best defender of the bunch. Chris Thomas has struggled shooting, and matching the numbers and efficiency as freshman.

3rd Team

Charlie Villanueva, UConn, Forward
Josh Boone, UConn, Forward
Daryll Hill, St. John’s, Guard
Chris Thomas, Notre Dame, Guard
Chris Quinn, Notre Dame, Guard

Just missing the cut Rashard Anderson, UConn, Guard (his injury took him out of the last 2 weeks of the season) and Don McGrath, Providence, Guard. Anyone else notice that Hill is the 3rd leading scorer in the Big East this year? If he actually comes back like he says, that will help St. John’s immeasurably. Thomas may be disappointing from the perspective of his potential and expectations. But he is still one of the best point guards in the Big East. Chris Quinn is the best 3-point shooter in the Big East (more than 100 attempts). He also has a 2.8/1 assists to turnover ratio. Boone and Villanueva are both horribly talented, but also horribly inconsistent this year. Villanueva seemed disinterested and disengaged in the first 1/2 to 2/3 of the season. He scored and rebounded on just being so much better than most players. Boone had a lot of trouble through most of the Big East Conference schedule scoring. He still rebounded, but suddenly could not buy a basket.

Noticeable by their omissions — Chris Taft, Pittsburgh, Forward/Center; Ricky Shields, Rutgers, Guard; and Kelly Whitney, Seton Hall, Center/Forward. All were pre-season 1st or 2nd team Preseason All-Big East.

Of course, making picks will be even worse next season with 16 rosters. Will we have a 4th team All-Big East?

Big East Player of the Week

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 11:40 am

Is Chris Taft (PDF).

Taft averaged 19.0 points and 9.5 boards while shooting 66.7 percent from the field in a pair of road wins. He scored a career high 26 points and grabbed 11 rebounds in an 85-77 victory at Notre Dame. Earlier in the week, Taft had 12 points and eight rebounds in a 72-50 win at Boston College.

He shares the honor with Ryan Gomes.

PSB Tournament Challenge

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 9:20 am

Since there was significant interest, I have set up a group on ESPN’s NCAA Tournament Bracket.

The group’s name, unsurprisingly enough is Pitt Sports Blather (hopefully this direct link will work).

Obviously, you can’t make picks yet, but you can sign up.

Preparing for the Big East Tournament

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 8:03 am

The Big East Tournament site is here.

Here’s an interesting thought.

Ask yourself this question today as Pitt prepares to head to New York for the Big East tournament: Are the Panthers playing better entering the postseason this season than they were last year when they had three losses by a total of seven points?

Pitt was 27-3 heading into the Big East tournament last season and was playing for a No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament.

But that team wasn’t exactly hitting on all cylinders before heading to Madison Square Garden to defend its championship. Despite winning five of their final six regular-season games, the Panthers were mired in a late-season offensive slump.

There was that 49-46 home loss to Syracuse in late February, a game in which the Panthers scored their fewest points in 22 years. Then there was the regular-season finale against Villanova, when they scored 17 points in the first half of a come-from-behind 59-45 victory.

Here’s the thing. Last year, I picked Pitt to win the BE Tournament against UConn. It was all about match-ups. The way the BET was set, Pitt had a relatively clean line to the BET Championship game.

This time things are a bit different, if for no other reason than the first game against Villanova. It’s not that Pitt lost to ‘Nova earlier, it’s that ‘Nova’s style of game — with Sumpter able to go inside and out, along with guards who don’t live just on the perimeter — is a match-up headache for Pitt.

So whether Pitt is playing better or not, is not an issue. It’s whether Pitt has figured things out.

The Big East Tournament will decide Pitt’s seeding in the NCAA Tournament. In most published “bracketologist” boards, Pitt is a #5 seed (BTW, ESPN.com has Pitt with a potential 2nd round match against Holy Cross (Ralph Willard) and even a Sweet 16 against UCLA (Howland), but take this bracket with a grain of salt since it puts Kent St. in the Cleveland pod as a 12 seed.). If Pitt wins their first game, they might move up one spot to a #4. Make it to the Championship, and it is clinched. If they win the BET, then they almost have to be a #3 seed.

Bendel’s notebook observes that Kendall has seen his minutes drop to next to nothing as his production has plummeted. Benjamin has played 1 minute in the last 4 games.

Pitt has already put out its game notes for Villlanova (PDF) on Thursday. The Big East Tournament Media Guide is here (PDF) with Seniors Hakim Warrick and Chris Thomas on the cover (Where’s Troutman?).

For those who are working or unable to get to a TV, the Big East will be providing live stats during games.

Boston College seems to be getting ready for the BET by convincing the team that the BE is out to screw them. The charge is led by their, oh so honorable, AD Gene DeFilippo.

Boston College athletic director Gene DeFilippo lashed out yesterday at Big East commissioner Mike Tranghese for presenting the University of Connecticut with a championship trophy after the Huskies clinched a share of the league’s regular-season title with an 88-70 victory over Syracuse Saturday afternoon, and not doing the same for the fifth-ranked Eagles, who not only clinched a share of the league title but earned the top seed in this week’s conference tournament with a 78-66 victory Saturday night at Rutgers.

“It was not surprising and very petty that the commissioner and the Big East Conference would go to Connecticut and present their coaches and their players with a championship trophy and not do the same for our players and our coaches and our fans,” DeFilippo said at the Big East women’s tournament in Hartford.

DeFilippo claimed the move was an attempt to punish BC for joining the Atlantic Coast Conference next season.

“Our coaches and our players had absolutely, positively nothing to do with Boston College’s move to the Atlantic Coast Conference,” DeFilippo said. “If they want to blame somebody, they should blame me and they should take it out on me, and not on our players and not on our coaches.”

DeFilippo was also not at the BC-Rutgers game to, you know, honor the achievement. BC is up in arms because a co-championship trophy was given to UConn that day, because the game was played on UConn’s home court.

Tranghese said UConn got the trophy because the Huskies played at home, and the Eagles didn’t get theirs because they were playing on the road.

In 26 years, we have never presented a trophy on a foreign floor,” said Tranghese, who arrived at the women’s tournament after BC had already played (coincidence?).

Tranghese also said he attended the UConn-Syracuse game Saturday to present awards to coaches Jim Calhoun and Jim Boeheim for winning their 700th games.
“Connecticut called me and asked if I’d give (the trophy) to them if they won,” the commissioner said. “There was no slight intended toward BC. I just wouldn’t do that to Al (Skinner) and his kids.”

The facts back up the Big East since the Rutgers women’s basketball team won the regular season on the road and did not get a trophy presentation.

This is simply BC’s AD trying to game the BE officials and refs in advance of the BET, generate sympathy in the media and get the BC team convinced they are alone against the whole conference.

Well it’s worked in one way. The crowds at MSG should be very, very hostile to BC when this gets wider play.

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