Pirate Hoops

A Seton Hall basketball blog

Archive for February, 2008

Seton Hall at St. John’s

Posted by piratehoops on February 29, 2008

March 1, 2008

Carnesecca Arena, Queens, NY 4:00pm

TV: MSG, Kenny Albert (play-by-play), John Celestand (color).

All statistics noted include Big East games only.

The Pirates look to make it three straight (two on the road) wins as they take the bus ride over to Queens on Saturday to face the St. John’s Red Storm. The Johnnies (10-17, 4-11) are coming off a 64-52 loss at Georgetown on Wednesday. Just today, coach Norm Roberts was assured he will be the coach of the Storm next season.

St. John’s is led by Anthony Mason Jr and Justin Burrell, their only two double digit scorers. Mason has had a terrific Big East season, putting up 15.2 ppg while pulling down 5.6 rpg. He’s also a good three point shooter (35.2%). Burrell has turned out to be a great signing for Norm Roberts. The freshman is averaging almost 12 ppg in conference play while grabbing the same amount of rebounds as Mason (5.6). Seton Hall will need to key on these two players and keep them in check if they hope to win. D.J. Kennedy, Sean Evans, and possibly Tomas Jasiulionis will also see time in the frontcourt for Coach Roberts.

The Johnnies have a thin but somewhat talented backcourt. Larry Wright is their best shooter (connecting on 37.7% of his three point shots), Eugene Lawrence and Malik Boothe dish out almost three assists a game each, and Paris Horne can come off the bench and provide good three point shooting.

St. John’s is a team that will play a tough, grind it out style. Often difficult to watch on offense, the Red Storm will miss a ton of shots but they do play tough physical defense. Seton Hall has to be careful if they get caught in a slow physical game because that means a lot of halfcourt sets, something the Pirates are not very effective in. I expect Coach Gonzalez to press early and often, trying to speed up the tempo of the game and get some easy baskets. If Seton Hall scores 70 points, they should win this game fairly easily as St. John’s simply can’t get to that point very often. In fact, St. John’s has broken 70 points only three times in conference play, and two of those were the first two games of the season. As long as Seton Hall plays an efficient game on offense and an average game on defense, they will win.

Seton Hall 72, St. John’s 63

Posted in game previews | No Comments »

Thursday’s Predictions

Posted by piratehoops on February 28, 2008

Record: 81-38. ATS: 54-63-2.

Notre Dame (+ 8) at Louisville- Louisville, 76-70
Maryland (+2.5) at Wake Forest- Wake Forest, 68-63
Michigan State (+5.5) at Wisconsin- Wisconsin, 65-61
Wright State (+12) at Butler- Butler, 70-63
USC (+5.5) at Arizona- Arizona, 73-62
UCLA (-6.5) at Arizona State- UCLA, 63-59
Washington State (-2) at California- Washington State, 68-66

Posted in predictions | No Comments »

Wednesday’s Predictions

Posted by piratehoops on February 27, 2008

Record: 74-35. ATS: 51-56-2.

Florida (+1.5) at Georgia- Florida, 74-72
Cincinnati (+11) at Pittsburgh- Pittsburgh, 67-58
Miami (+8.5) at Clemson- Clemson, 82-76
Arkansas (+1) at Alabama- Arkansas, 75-71
Mississippi (+6) at Kentucky- Kentucky, 73-65
Texas Tech (+9) at Texas A&M- Texas A&M, 69-64
Oklahoma (+2.5) at Nebraska- Oklahoma, 67-62
Creighton (+3.5) at Illinois State- Illinois State, 71-66
West Virginia (-5) at DePaul- West Virginia, 68-65
UAB (+2) at UTEP- UTEP, 79-73

Posted in predictions | No Comments »

Tuesday’s Predictions

Posted by piratehoops on February 26, 2008

Record: 69-33. ATS: 49-51-2.

Boston College (+5.5) at Virginia Tech- Virginia Tech, 73-65
Ohio State (+ 8) at Indiana- Indiana, 76-63
Seton Hall (+4) at South Florida- Seton Hall, 71-68
Connecticut (-10) at Rutgers- Connecticut, 68-61
Tennessee (-1.5) at Vanderbilt- Tennessee, 83-77
BYU (+4) at New Mexico- New Mexico, 69-62
San Diego State (+7.5) at UNLV- UNLV, 74-68

Posted in predictions | No Comments »

Seton Hall at South Florida

Posted by piratehoops on February 25, 2008

February 26, 2008

Sun Dome, Tampa, FL 7:00pm

TV: ESPN360, Al Keck (play-by-play) and Marc Wise (color).

All statistics noted include Big East games only.

Seton Hall heads back out on the road when they travel to Tampa to face the South Florida Bulls on Tuesday night. First year coach Stan Heath’s team is led by 6-9 senior center Kentrell Gransberry. A transfer from LSU, Gransberry has become one of the better players in the Big East since his arrival in Tampa. He is averaging 18.5 ppg and 11.4 rpg while making 54.3% of his field goals. However, Gransberry’s weakness is at the free throw line. His FG% is actually higher than his FT% (53.2%), and the Pirates should look to use all 15 of their big men’s fouls on Gransberry. In the backcourt, freshman sensation Dominique Jones is the star. Jones has put up 16.5 ppg this season, much like Eugene Harvey did for Seton Hall last year as a freshman. Jones, however, has an outside shot and a better mid range game than Harvey. He doesn’t look to pass the ball as much as Eugene (only 2.4 apg), but that makes sense because he’s a shooting guard, not a point guard. Jones shoots very well from the floor, free throw line, and three point line. The other notable member of the USF backcourt is Jesus Verdejo. A junior guard out of Puerto Rico, Verdejo has quietly had a nice season. An excellent foul shooter, he is averaging almost 11 ppg in conference play. Chris Howard, Solomon Bozeman, Amu Saaka, and Aaron Holmes will also see time in the backcourt for Stan Heath. Howard is a good point guard, averaging 4.2 apg. Bozeman, Saaka, and Holmes should not be huge factors in the game, although Bozeman did have two good games at DePaul and vs. Syracuse.

Seton Hall will need to exploit South Florida’s weak free throw shooting by putting them, especially Gransberry, on the line. USF is second to last in the Big East in free throw shooting at 62.9%. They have trouble scoring, only putting up 64 points a game in conference play. The key for Seton Hall will be to execute on offense and play decent defense. As long as the Pirates have an average offensive game and play decent defense, they should win. Gransberry, Jones, and Verdejo are dangerous, but SHU did a great job defensively on Jones when the teams met on January 17 in Newark. South Florida is also second to last in turnover margin, something Seton Hall should be able to use to their advantage. Even without Paul Gause, the Pirates’ pressure should cause a lot of turnovers for USF.

After gaining some confidence by beating DePaul, the Pirates should come out ready to play. It is a road game however, and those are never easy in this league. USF has played fairly well at home recently, knocking off Syracuse and taking UConn right to the final buzzer. They’ll be ready, looking for revenge on Seton Hall. Unlike last year, Seton Hall has proven it can win road games against teams below them in the standings. I think they’ll continue that and pull out a close one in Tampa.

Seton Hall 71, South Florida 68

Posted in game previews | No Comments »

Taking a look at the bubble

Posted by piratehoops on February 25, 2008

With less than three weeks until Selection Sunday, it’s crunch time.

St. Joe’s 17-8 (8-4 A-10): RPI: 43, SOS: 82. Quality wins: @ Massachusetts, vs. Villanova, @ Rhode Island. Bad losses: vs. Holy Cross, @ Duquesne, vs. La Salle.

The Hawks are looking better after stealing a huge road win at Rhode Island on Sunday. The numbers look good, but the overall resume is a bit lacking. They should beat St. Louis and Temple at home, then they have a huge opportunity against a quality Xavier team at home on March 6. Last game is at Dayton. 3-1 down the stretch, plus one A-10 tourney win should be enough.

Massachusetts 18-9 (7-6 A-10): RPI: 37, SOS: 45. Quality wins: @ Syracuse, @ Rhode Island. Bad losses: @ Northern Iowa, @ St. Louis, vs. Fordham.

UMass is 7-6 against the top 100. Not many bubble teams can say they are over .500 against the top 100 this season, which speaks to the overall mediocrity of the bubble this season. The bad losses give me a reason to hesitate, but UMass should be there on Selection Sunday, provided they don’t have any major slip ups to close the season. 21-9 (10-6) is very possible with the soft remaining schedule.

Rhode Island 20-8 (6-7 A-10): RPI: 56, SOS: 99. Quality wins: @ Syracuse. Bad losses: @ St. Louis.

URI has lost four in a row and five of six overall, and looks to be in big time trouble right now. I had them in my last bracket, but they are probably on the outside looking in after a home loss to St. Joe’s on Sunday. The Rams must win out (@ GW, @ La Salle, vs. Charlotte) to get to 9-7 in league play, and hopefully win a game or two in the A-10 tourney.

Dayton 17-9 (5-8 A-10): RPI: 39, SOS: 26. Quality wins: @ Louisville, vs. Pittsburgh. Bad losses: @ Richmond, @ George Washington, vs. Duquesne, @ La Salle.

Dayton is a fringe case at this point, holding on to decent computer numbers and falling back on non-conference wins against Big East teams. 5-8 in any league won’t get it done, so the Flyers must win out (@ Fordham, @ St. Bonaventure, vs. St. Joe’s), and win at least two games in the A-10 tournament. Too many bad losses, no quality wins in conference play and losing 8 of 11 games has all but knocked Dayton off the bubble.

Virginia Tech 16-11 (7-6 ACC): RPI: 64, SOS: 51. Quality wins: @ Maryland. Bad losses: @ Penn State, @ Old Dominion, @ Richmond.

I don’t think Virginia Tech is in play for the tournament, but 7-6 in a major conference (ranked #1 in RPI) deserves a look. The Hokies swept Maryland, but there isn’t much else on the resume to brag about. Va Tech is 0-5 against the top 50, and 4-8 vs. the top 100. With a non-conference RPI of 102 and a road/neutral record of 6-9, I don’t see them having much of a chance on Selection Sunday. Things could change if they beat BC and Wake at home, and then win at Clemson to close the season.

Maryland 17-11 (7-6 ACC): RPI: 66, SOS: 18. Quality wins: @ North Carolina. Bad losses: vs. Boston College, vs. Ohio, vs. American.

I really don’t see why everyone has Maryland in their projected brackets. In my opinion, the Terps are hanging on by a thread with their win in Chapel Hill last month. Besides that game, there are no quality wins on the resume. Combine that with a home loss to a down BC team, as well as brutal home losses to mid-majors American and Ohio, and I really don’t see a strong case for Maryland. The SOS number is good, but you have to win games against quality teams to be worthy of a bid to the NCAA Tournament. I feel Maryland must win out in order to keep its slim hopes alive. The game at Wake Forest on Thursday could be the final nail in the coffin if they lose.

Miami 18-7 (6-6 ACC):RPI: 25, SOS: 36. Quality wins: @ Mississippi State, vs. Clemson, vs. Duke. Bad losses: vs. Winthrop, vs. Florida State.

This is what taking care of business looks like. Left for dead at 14-7 (2-6) on February 6, the Canes have reeled off four straight wins, including a win over Duke, to get back on the right side of the bubble. The computer numbers are very strong, as are the quality wins on the resume. The only reason I included FSU as a bad loss is because it was at home. While Florida State isn’t a bad team, NCAA Tournament teams should beat teams like FSU at home. Miami can solidify themselves with a win at Clemson on Wednesday. They should win home games against Virginia and BC, and then a trip to rival FSU closes the regular season. Even at 8-8, I think Miami gets in provided they win a game in the ACC tourney.

Wake Forest 16-9 (6-6 ACC): RPI: 62, SOS 77. Quality wins: vs. BYU, vs. Miami, vs. Duke. Bad losses: @ Georgia, vs. Georgia Tech.

Wake is basically a fringe case, but the opportunity to finish 8-8 or 10-6 in the ACC is there. They should be favored against Maryland and NC State at home, but roadies at Ga Tech and Va Tech could be tricky. If they win the home games and split the road games, the Deacs could have a legitimate case come March 16. The computer numbers are poor, so that certainly will go against them. 6-7 record against the top 100 does help a little compared to other bubble teams, but it’s certainly not great. Their downfall will most likely be the 2-8 road record. Still, how can you not root for this team down the stretch considering all they’ve been through over the last year? It’s Dino Gaudio’s team now, but you can’t ignore the impact the late Skip Prosser had on their success this season. It’s been both tangible and inspirational.

Oklahoma 18-9 (6-6 Big 12): RPI: 28, SOS: 6. Quality wins: vs. Arkansas, vs. Gonzaga, @ West Virginia (Charleston), @ Baylor. Bad losses: @ Colorado.

With strong computer numbers, four quality wins and only one bad loss, Oklahoma looks to be in the field. The only hesitation is the 6-6 Big 12 record, but the Sooners have a manageable schedule down the stretch (@ Nebraska, vs. Texas A&M, @ Oklahoma State, vs. Missouri). Taking care of business or finishing 2-2 at worst should be enough to get a berth.

Baylor 17-8 (6-6 Big 12): RPI: 34, SOS: 30. Quality wins: vs. Notre Dame (neutral), @ Texas A&M, vs. Kansas State. Bad losses: none.

The Bears got their must win over Kansas State on Saturday, now they look to keep it rolling and go 3-1 down the stretch. Avoiding the bad loss at Colorado is essential, then they get Missouri and Texas A&M at home. They should beat Missouri, and they already have beaten A&M (the 5 OT game). They end at Texas Tech, a tough place to play but a very winnable game. Prior to beating KSU, Baylor had lost six of seven games after starting the season 15-2 (4-0). Going 3-1 down the stretch and picking up a win in the Big 12 Tournament will probably be enough for Scott Drew’s team, though they are just 5-8 against the top 100 as of today. 7-5 road/neutral record is a positive.

Texas A&M 19-7 (6-6 Big 12): RPI: 47, SOS: 78. Quality wins: vs. Texas. Bad losses: vs. Oklahoma State, vs. Nebraska.

A&M has lost three in a row and 6 of 11 to fall onto the bubble. The computer numbers aren’t great, so they need to get some wins down the stretch. It will be tough, as they will be underdogs in road games against Oklahoma and Baylor, as well as a home game with Kansas. Of the last four, the only game I see them winning is at home against Texas Tech. It’s looking like they are going to need a run in the Big 12 tourney just to stay in the discussion. A shame, considering they started the year 14-1 (1-0). However, the only non-conference win of note was Ohio State at Madison Square Garden, and even that is not a spectacular win this year.

West Virginia 18-8 (8-6 Big East): RPI: 35, SOS: 43. Quality wins: vs. Marquette. Bad losses: vs. Cincinnati.

West Virginia has won and lost the games they were supposed to, aside from the Marquette and Cincinnati games which cancel out. The problem for the Mountaineers could lie in the non-conference schedule. They had no quality wins, but they did play Tennessee and Oklahoma. No shame in losing to those two, but I think Bob Huggins needed a little more beef in the non-conference schedule this season. In conference, WVU has basically taken care of business. I feel they must win at DePaul on Wednesday and St. John’s on March 8. Stealing a game against UConn on the road, or Pitt at home would be big. This team is hard to figure out and they should be a very interesting case come Selection Sunday.

Pittsburgh 18-8 (7-7 Big East): RPI: 26, SOS: 23. Quality wins: vs. Duke (neutral), vs. Georgetown. Bad losses: vs. Rutgers.

The Panthers have lost four of six to fall onto the bubble. While they should still get in because of their quality wins and strong computer numbers, their chances are a lot less than they were two weeks ago. Pitt hasn’t won a game since Levance Fields came back, and I don’t feel that is a coincidence. When a guy has been out for so long, coming back can sometimes mess up a team’s rhythm. I feel that has happened with the return of Fields to the Pitt team. Once that adjustment period is over, however, the team and player usually get back to playing like they did before the injury. I think Pitt faces must win games at home against Cincinnati and DePaul. In between those games, they have two on the road at Syracuse and WVU. Gain a split there, in addition to the two home wins, and Pitt should be comfortably in the field of 65. Get swept on the road and finish at 9-9? Then I think Pitt must win at least one at Madison Square Garden. I’d say they’ll get in, but I wouldn’t bet a lot of money on it just yet.

Villanova 17-9 (7-7 Big East): RPI: 50, SOS, 55. Quality wins: vs. Pittsburgh, @ Syracuse, vs. Connecticut. Bad losses: @ DePaul, @ Rutgers.

Villanova is an interesting case. The Cats had lost six of seven before winning three straight, including Saturday’s upset of UConn. At 7-7 in the Big East, Villanova is right there in the discussion. There isn’t much heft to the non-conference resume, but you could make a case that they should be 18-8 with a win over NC State. If you remember, a controversial call ended that game and gave the Wolfpack a one point win back in November. Similarly, a bad call gave Georgetown a win over Villanova two weeks ago. That call is different, because Georgetown still could have won the game in overtime. At the same time, Villanova could have as well. We’ll never know what would have happened, but it will be very interesting to see how the committee evaluates those two questionable calls, if at all. Nova should beat USF and Providence to close the season, so 9-9 is very attainable. A win tonight against Marquette or Sunday at Louisville would be huge.

Syracuse 17-11 (7-8 Big East): RPI: 48, SOS: 7. Quality wins: @ Villanova, vs. Georgetown. Bad losses: @ South Florida.

Despite the very strong SOS, Syracuse is in trouble. An under .500 record in conference, plus a resume devoid of quality wins (save for Nova and Gtown), means the Cuse is on the outside looking in right now. 2-1 down the stretch to get to 9-9 is absolutely essential. Of the remaining three games, none are easy. Pittsburgh is a desperate team, so despite hosting them at the Dome it will be a battle. Seton Hall will likely be 8-8 in conference on March 5 and desperate themselves, looking to get back into the at-large picture. Marquette is the best of the three teams Syracuse has left and they visit the Dome on March 8 to close the regular season. I could see Syracuse winning all three, or losing all three. The truth usually lies somewhere in the middle, but I see Syracuse going 1-2 down the stretch to finish at 8-10. The Orange are 4-7 on the road, have lost four of five, and are just 5-10 against the top 100. Besides the SOS, I don’t see how you can make a good case for them at this point in time. Syracuse also has a poor record against fellow bubble teams, and that could play a factor if they are deemed to be one of the last eight or so teams under consideration.

Ohio State 17-10 (8-6 Big Ten): RPI: 54, SOS: 40. Quality wins: vs. Syracuse (neutral). Bad losses: @ Iowa, @ Michigan.

Ohio State is 8-6 in conference, but the Big Ten is really down this year. Having lost four of six and 7 of 12, I don’t see Ohio State getting in. Road trips to Indiana and Minnesota will be difficult, as will home contests against Purdue and Michigan State. I’d say OSU will be lucky to split the remaining four games and finish at 10-8. With a resume that is really lacking in the quality win department, I don’t see how Ohio State gets in the field this year. In addition, they are 1-8 against the top 50, 5-7 on the road, and 4-8 against the top 100.

Virginia Commonwealth 21-6 (13-3 Colonial): RPI: 51, SOS: 150. Quality wins: vs. Maryland (neutral). Bad losses: @ Hampton, @ James Madison, vs. Old Dominion.

VCU has a strong record, but if you break it down they really don’t have much heft to the resume. Unfortunately they really can’t change that because of the conference they play in. They are 4-3 against the top 100 which is good, but three losses to teams with sub-100 RPI’s (sub-200 in James Madison’s case) will probably prevent them from making the tournament as an at-large. Of course, the CAA’s automatic bid is another way to get in, and they have a great chance of winning it.

George Mason 19-9 (11-5 Colonial): RPI: 69, SOS: 128. Quality wins: vs. Kansas State (neutral). Bad losses: vs. East Carolina (neutral), @ Georgia State, @ Delaware, @ UNC-Wilmington, @ Old Dominion, vs. UNC-Wilmington.

Wow, that’s a lot of bad losses. The only reason George Mason deserves a look is because of the marginal RPI. They are basically a fringe case, but as with VCU the conference’s automatic bid is there for the taking.

Houston 20-6 (9-3 C-USA): RPI: 63, SOS: 136. Quality wins: none. Bad losses: none.

Houston is a strange case because they have no quality wins or bad losses. Does the committee take a 20-6 team in a mid-major conference (ranked 10th)? Your guess is as good as mine.

UAB 19-8 (9-3 C-USA): RPI: 68, SOS: 130. Quality wins: none. Bad losses: vs. Georgia Southern (neutral), @ South Florida, @ Wichita State, @ Marshall, @ Southern Mississippi.

UAB did beat Houston, but there’s nothing on their resume to suggest they are NCAA worthy besides the close loss to Memphis. Too many bad losses have UAB just about out of the at-large conversation.

Kent State 23-5 (11-2 MAC): RPI: 29, SOS: 135. Quality wins: @ St. Mary’s. Bad losses: @ Detroit, @ Toledo.

Kent State will probably win the MAC Tournament, but just in case they don’t you have to take a look at their resume. Kent is 7-3 against the top 100, a mark that should get them in the field alone. They picked up their marquee win at St. Mary’s late Saturday night, they have a non-conference RPI of 19, and a road/neutral record of 8-5. Despite the two bad losses (one was the first game of the season), I think Kent State has done enough to get in. Getting to the MAC Tournament finals should put them in good position for a bid.

Illinois State 19-8 (11-5 MVC): RPI: 42, SOS: 81. Quality wins: none. Bad losses: @ Eastern Michigan, @ Northern Iowa, @ Indiana State.

Another team victimized by a bad conference, Illinois State is squarely on the bubble. They are 6-6 against the top 100 and have a decent RPI, but the bad losses are concerning. You could go either way with this team, but I have them out as of now. Winning at home against Creighton is essential, and then an opportunity for a solid road win presents itself at Southern Illinois on Saturday.

UNLV 19-6 (9-3 MWC): RPI: 32, SOS: 84. Quality wins: vs. BYU. Bad losses: @ Air Force.

UNLV is probably going to get in, but finishing 12-4 in conference would be a good idea. Home games against SDSU, TCU, and Utah give them the opportunity to do so. A big bubble road game at New Mexico on March 4 is an opportunity to clinch a bid with a road win in a very tough place to play. UNLV’s computer numbers are good, they’re 5-5 against the top 100, and above .500 on the road. They’re on the right side of the bubble at this point.

New Mexico 22-6 (9-4 MWC): RPI: 44, SOS: 149. Quality wins: none. Bad losses: @ New Mexico State, @ TCU.

After starting 3-4 in league play and taking themselves off the bubble, Steve Alford’s team has rebounded to win six in a row in order to get back in the at-large discussion. The game against BYU tomorrow night provides the Lobos a chance to get a much needed quality win. The loss at New Mexico State can be softened a little because it’s a rivalry game, but they need something to cancel out the loss at TCU. After BYU, the Lobos host UNLV in the Mountain West bubble fest. New Mexico should win at Colorado State to close the season, so 3-0 down the stretch would put them in very good position to earn a bid. Even 2-1 would be alright, but they must at least split the two big home games.

Arizona State 17-9 (7-7 Pac 10): RPI: 70, SOS: 79. Quality wins: vs. Xavier, vs. Arizona, @ Arizona, vs. Stanford. Bad losses: vs. Illinois (neutral), @ Nebraska, vs. Washington.

ASU is a strange team. After losing five straight to drop to 4-5 in league play, the Sun Devils beat Arizona on the road and Stanford at home to climb back over .500. They followed that up by losing to California at home and Washington State in Pullman. They are back to .500 with their next two games against the LA schools. Splitting those games would be big, winning both would make them a lock for the tournament, provided they don’t slip up in their last game at Oregon State. If they go 2-1 in the next three (vs. UCLA, vs. USC, @ Oregon), they will definitely get in the tournament. 1-2 would probably be fine, but not assured. 0-3 means they must win at Oregon State and get at least one in the Pac 10 Tournament.

California 15-10 (6-8 Pac 10): RPI: 76, SOS: 46. Quality wins: vs. USC, @ Washington State, @ Arizona State. Bad losses: vs. Utah.

Cal is in trouble with very mediocre computer numbers and record, but there are some quality wins on the resume. Sweeping the Washington schools at home and splitting at the LA schools is probably what they need to do, barring a significant run in the Pac 10 Tournament. A 6-10 record against the RPI top 100 is hurting them.

Kentucky 15-10 (9-3 SEC): RPI: 65, SOS: 19. Quality wins: vs. Vanderbilt, vs. Tennessee, vs. Arkansas. Bad losses: vs. Gardner Webb, vs. San Diego.

Perhaps the most interesting case of all the bubble teams is Billy Gillispie’s team. Kentucky finished the non-conference schedule at 6-7, but they have gone 9-3 in the SEC to get to 15-10 overall. The SEC is down, but it’s hard to exclude a 9-3 team from a major conference. If Kentucky can get to 18-11 (12-4), they’ll have a chance as the SOS is working for them. They should beat Mississippi and Florida at home, but they have two tough road games at Tennessee and South Carolina sandwiched in between the home games. Winning at Tennessee would probably clinch a bid, but they need to avoid the loss at South Carolina. Despite their bad RPI, SC is never easy to beat at home. If UK finishes 11-5, they probably need to win a game or two in the SEC Tournament. At 12-4, it’s awfully hard to deny them a bid, especially if they win a game at the conference tournament. Kentucky is only 3-8 against the top 100 right now, so that will certainly go against them. A 3-6 road record also hurts.

Florida 20-7 (7-5 SEC): RPI: 60, SOS: 115. Quality wins: vs. Vanderbilt. Bad losses: vs. Florida State, vs. LSU.

The defending champs are only 3-6 against the top 100 and have a non-conference RPI/SOS of 99/294. That’s pretty bad, and 7-5 in the SEC this year isn’t exactly spectacular. Two questionable home losses have prevented the Gators from being 22-5 (8-4), which would be a great position. Bad computer numbers are also going against them, so I imagine Billy Donovan’s team needs to finish at least 9-7 to have a chance at a bid. The remaining schedule is not easy, as Florida visits Georgia on Wednesday before returning home to face Mississippi State and #1 Tennessee. They conclude the regular season at Kentucky, which will likely be a huge game for both teams. Florida needs a split over the last four to get to 9-9 in the league, then they probably need to win two games in the SEC Tournament to feel safe. If they only get one, they will be sweating it out on March 16.

South Alabama 20-5 (14-2 Sun Belt): RPI: 24, SOS: 111. Quality wins: vs. Mississippi State, @ Western Kentucky. Bad losses: @ North Texas, @ Middle Tennessee.

South Alabama is a very good team in a bad league. With an RPI of 24, they are probably in the field. The win at Mississippi State is the marquee non-conference performance. USA is 3-3 against the top 100, a good record for a mid-major that doesn’t have the opportunity to play many good teams. They are 8-5 in road/neutral games and have a non-conference RPI of 37. At 14-2 in league play, I feel South Alabama would receive a bid as long as they reach the Sun Belt Tournament finals. I think they’ll win the league, but they should at least get to the finals if they want to feel safe.

Western Kentucky 20-6 (14-2 Sun Belt): RPI: 53, SOS: 145. Quality wins: none. Bad losses: @ Northern Arizona.

With only one bad loss, Western Kentucky is in the conversation. However, they were swept by South Alabama, not a good sign for an at-large candidate in a mid-major conference. They had three opportunities in non-conference play, coming close against Gonzaga, Tennessee, and Southern Illinois. While there’s no shame in that, they failed to pick up a quality win over that stretch of games. All of their wins are against teams with RPI’s over 100, as they are 0-5 against the RPI top 50. I think they really needed to beat South Alabama at home last week, and they probably need to win the conference tournament in order to get into the NCAA Tournament. They’re a good team, but they really haven’t proven it to the nation.

Posted in bracketology | 1 Comment »

Monday’s Predictions

Posted by piratehoops on February 25, 2008

Record: 68-32. ATS: 48-50-2.

Marquette (-2) at Villanova- Villanova, 76-72
Texas (+3) at Kansas State- Texas, 81-77

Posted in predictions | No Comments »

Top 25 through games of February 24

Posted by piratehoops on February 25, 2008

1. Tennessee (2)
2. North Carolina (3)
3. Memphis (1)
4. Texas (4)
5. UCLA (6)
6. Stanford (9)
7. Louisville (11)
8. Kansas (5)
9. Duke (7)
10. Wisconsin (12)
11. Indiana (13)
12. Connecticut ( 8)
13. Purdue (10)
14. Xavier (19)
15. Michigan State (1 8)
16. Georgetown (21)
17. Notre Dame (20)
18. Marquette (22)
19. Washington State (15)
20. Drake (25)
21. Vanderbilt (24)
22. Butler (16)
23. Kansas State (14)
24. Clemson (17)
25. South Alabama (NR)

New additions: South Alabama.
Dropped from rankings: #23 Texas A&M.
Also considered: Gonzaga, Kent State, Mississippi State, Davidson.

Posted in top 25's | No Comments »

Big East Rankings

Posted by piratehoops on February 25, 2008

Through games of February 24.

1. Louisville (2)
2. Connecticut (1)
3. Georgetown (4)
4. Notre Dame (3)
5. Marquette (5)
6. Villanova (10)
7. West Virginia (6)
8. Pittsburgh (7)
9. Syracuse ( 8)
10. Seton Hall (11)
11. Cincinnati (9)
12. DePaul (13)
13. Providence (12)
14. South Florida (16)
15. St. John’s (14)
16. Rutgers (15)

This week’s Big East games:

Mon. Feb. 25: Marquette at Villanova.
Tues. Feb. 26: Seton Hall at South Florida, Connecticut at Rutgers.
Wed. Feb. 27: Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, St. John’s at Georgetown, West Virginia @ DePaul.
Thurs. Feb. 28: Notre Dame at Louisville.
Sat. Mar. 1: Pittsburgh at Syracuse, West Virginia at Connecticut, Georgetown at Marquette, Seton Hall at St. John’s, South Florida at Rutgers.
Sun. Mar. 2: Notre Dame at DePaul, Providence at Cincinnati, Villanova at Louisville.

Score predictions (14-1 last week):

VILLANOVA 76, Marquette 72

Seton Hall 71, SOUTH FLORIDA 68
Connecticut 69, RUTGERS 56

PITTSBURGH 65, Cincinnati 59
GEORGETOWN 71, St. John’s 52
West Virginia 77, DEPAUL 73

LOUISVILLE 81, Notre Dame 71

SYRACUSE 66, Pittsburgh 62
CONNECTICUT 70, West Virginia 60
MARQUETTE 68, Georgetown 64
Seton Hall 72, ST. JOHN’S 63
RUTGERS 65, South Florida 61

Notre Dame 84, DEPAUL 70
CINCINNATI 65, Providence 59
LOUISVILLE 80, Villanova 69

Posted in Big East Rankings | No Comments »

DePaul Game Recap

Posted by piratehoops on February 25, 2008

Everyone exhale, it’s ok. Seton Hall found a way to hold on against a game DePaul squad last night at Prudential Center. With the win, the Pirates improved to 16-11 (6- 8) and look to be in prime position to clinch a berth in the Big East Tournament next month at Madison Square Garden. A balanced effort, paced by Brian Laing’s 22 points on 8-14 (5-7 3pt FG) shooting, led the Hall to victory. Jamar Nutter played well, continuing an astounding trend: In the Pirates’ six Big East wins, Nutter is averaging 14.0 ppg on 27-52 (51.9%) shooting from the floor, and 19-33 (57.6%) from downtown. Conversely, Nutter is averaging 7.9 ppg on 22-74 (29.7%) shooting, and 12-42 (28.6%) from downtown in Seton Hall’s eight Big East losses. Last night, Jamar had 15 points on 5-10 shooting (5-9 from 3). Look for Seton Hall to play well down the stretch if Jamar Nutter plays well. John Garcia chipped in 10 points in one of his best performances of the season. Eugene Harvey added nine assists to only one turnover, one of Eugene’s best games of the year as well.

Seton Hall got off to a good start, taking control for just about all of the first half. The Pirates gave up some fast break baskets early, but settled into a 3-2 zone that really confused DePaul on offense. They ran the shot clock down to below five at least three times (by my count), and forced DePaul into some bad shots. DePaul did shoot 52.4% in the first half, but they only scored 29 points. After intermission, things changed. Jerry Wainwright had his team adjust to the zone as the Blue Demons looked more comfortable on offense. Will Walker and Karron Clarke hit some three pointers (DePaul made seven in the second half), and that enabled their team to cut the lead down under five for part, and the end, of the second half. Nutter and Laing hit some big threes along the way in order to preserve the Pirate lead, as Seton Hall never trailed at any point in the game. Both teams shot the same percentages in the first and second half from three point range as they combined to make 20 3’s on the night. Will Walker led all players, going 5-5 from downtown.

I thought Seton Hall played an efficient game. Despite the close score at the end, I never felt the game was in danger of being lost as the Pirates seemed in control throughout. It was a much needed win over a similarly desperate team in DePaul. With a two game lead over 13th place St. John’s, a fairly easy schedule down the stretch, and a tiebreaker over DePaul and Cincinnati, Seton Hall is all but assured of making the Big East Tournament. The Pirates are tied with Syracuse in the loss column, so a win over the struggling Orange next Wednesday night at home could propel the Hall into as high as an 8th or maybe even 7th seed in the Big East Tournament. If everything breaks right, Seton Hall could finish as high as 6th place heading into MSG. That would be the highest they could possibly finish, as Marquette and UConn own tiebreakers over the Pirates. I highly doubt those teams would not win another game, anyway. For the Pirates to finish 6th, they would need to win out and have West Virginia go 1-3. The Mountaineers have road games at DePaul, Connecticut, and St. John’s, in addition to a home game against rival Pittsburgh. I’m not predicting anything, but anything can happen in college basketball. How much does the failure to get a rebound at Villanova and the fastbreak failures at Marquette hurt now?

The Pirates will now hit the road for two games, Tuesday at South Florida and Saturday at St. John’s. These are games against two bottom feeders that the Hall should win. However, South Florida has played well of late, especially at home. I expect a tough game on Tuesday night, but I will be disappointed if Seton Hall loses. Let’s make it a 2-0 week and be 8-8 heading into a big sold out, nationally televised home game against Jim Boeheim’s Syracuse Orange. Go Hall!

Posted in game recaps | No Comments »