Rollie Massimino

Thank you Rollie!

Posted by Chris on November 05, 2009
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Things are exactly falling my way in the sports world these days (hopefully that all changes as ‘Nova kicks it off tonight). The New York Giants are in a freefall, and I just had to watch the Yankees and Phillies duke it out for the World Series. Seriously, having an orchiectomy sounded more fun that actually picking a side in that fight.

But my main man Rollie Massimino delivered me a gift last night. His NAIA Northwood squad took it to Isaiah Thomas in his coaching debut and knocked off Florida International 71-61. Remember back when Isaiah was complaining about having to face North Carolina in the season-opener? How many points do you think the Tar Heels score? Can they hit 150? And better yet, how many does FIU score themselves? When you only get to 61 against an NAIA school, you might be looking at the teens vs. the big boys.

So thank you Rollie! And for the upteenth time, f*ck you Isaiah Thomas! It is truly amazing that because you, the New York Knicks do not have a draft pick next year. You’re gone, and you’re still haunting us. I hate you. So much.

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3 more days…

Posted by Chris on November 02, 2009
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I don’t care if it is Kutztown and the game doesn’t really count. I want to win by 50. I want Corey Stokes and Taylor King jacking up (and sinking) 3’s from just over mid-court. I want alley-oops.  I want Mouphtaou Yarou to shatter a backboard. I want Jay’s best suit. I want people diving for loose balls. I want Rollie Massimino to trip a ref.

And I’m going to celebrate the win like I would any other. I’m pumped.

Note: Working on a different sort of prediction thread. It’ll be up by tomorrow.

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ESPN: ‘Nova at the top of Big East

Posted by Chris on August 24, 2009
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ESPN continues their Summer ShootAround series with a look at the Big East. The article, which contains many aspects concerning Villanova, is a great read, so I highly suggest taking the time to sort through it as it really gives you a good feel of what to expect as the conference turns over a new leaf. Below are the Villanova highlights.espn_logo

Jay Bilas on Villanova, who he ranks as the best team in the conference:

“The Wildcats are a bit younger, but very talented at every position. Jay Wright has guards that he encourages to make plays, and Villanova is versatile enough to attack mismatches on offense and switch every screen on defense. Scottie Reynolds, Corey Fisher and Corey Stokes form one of the nation’s strongest backcourts, and all can get into the lane and to the free-throw line. Freshmen Dominic Cheek and Maalik Wayns can play right away. But making up for Dante Cunningham and Dwayne Anderson will be a challenge.”

Dana O’Neil on Mouphtaou Yarou, who she believes is 1 of 10 key players in the conference:

“How far the Wildcats go may depend heavily on how quickly the rookie big man succeeds. Jay Wright always has been a guard’s coach, and Villanova has no shortage of backcourt talent again this year. But it is not a coincidence that when the Wildcats finally found a talented inside man — Dante Cunningham — they went to the Final Four. If Yarou, with the help of fellow freshman Isaiah Armwood, can make up for Cunningham’s loss, Nova might be busy on the final weekend of the season again.”

John Stovall on Mouphtaou Yarou and Dominic Cheek, both a part of 10 freshman to watch this season:

Yarou – “He’s big, strong and has solid skills. ‘Mouph’ should definitely have an immediate impact. He’s physically ready to play and skilled enough to have his presence felt right away in the Big East.”

Cheek – “He’s talented enough to be an all-conference player. He has to improve his motor, but once that happens he’ll be heading to the next level. Look for Villanova’s two other recruits — Maalik Wayns and Isaiah Armwood — to make an immediate impact as well.

Dana O’Neil on Villanova vs. Maryland, 1 of 10 non-conference games to watch:

“Two of the most exciting guards in the nation, Greivis Vasquez an Scottie Reynolds, square off in the nation’s capital. The Terps, who return just about everybody, are good enough to give Big East favorite Villanova a run for its money.”

Dana O’Neil on a potential Villanova/Georgia Tech matchup in Puerto Rico:

“This is a big if, because the Yellow Jackets would need to knock off A-10 favorite Dayton in the first round (and Nova has to beat always-pesky George Mason), but this semifinal matchup would feature some of the best freshmen in the country: Mouphtaou Yarou, Isaiah Armwood, Maalik Wayns and Dominic Cheek for Villanova; Derrick Favors and Mfon Udofia for Georgia Tech. Mix in the fact that Tech coach Paul Hewitt, like Jay Wright, is a Rollie Massimino disciple and you have the stuff for a high-level game in November.”

And finally, ESPN’s ‘quick take’ on Villanova:

“Jay Wright is at the point where he is reloading, not rebuilding. The Wildcats bring one of the top recruiting classes in the country, headlined by Dominic Cheek and Maalik Wayns, to go with the nucleus from the Final Four team. Senior guard Reggie Redding, arrested for marijuana possession, will be ineligible until mid-December. But with plenty of depth at the guard position, Villanova ought to survive without him.”

…The last part about reloading instead of rebuilding has really been a theme around Villanova’s program lately…I love it…I say it everyday but I really wish the start of the season was closer…

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Rollie Massimino inducted into Big 5 HOF

Posted by Chris on August 17, 2009
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Jonathan Tannenwald at Soft Pretzel Logic is reporting that Rollie Massimino will join John Chaney and Speedy Morris in the Big 5’s Hall of Fame Class of 2010. The date and location of the induction ceremony have not been announced yet.

Credit: Winslow Townson (AP)

Credit: Winslow Townson (AP)

Here’s Tannenwald on Rollie’s induction:

“I also wonder if people will complain about Massimino’s induction. I think he deserves it because of the national championship. Or, to put it another way, I don’t see how you can’t induct him – especially when Harold Jensen, Dwayne McClain and Ed Pinckney are already in. If you’re going to have a place to honor the best players and coaches in Big 5 history, then Massimino should be there, even with everything that came afterwards.”

Massimino finished with a record of 357-241 (.596) in 19 seasons at Villanova and took the Wildcats to 11 NCCA Tournaments, including the school’s only National Championship in 1985.

…It’s about damn time…I wasn’t even born yet when they won it all in ‘85 but I did get the chance to meet Rollie after the Pitt win and he’s still a great guy…

…Kind of crazy that Rollie, Chaney and Speedy are all going in at the same time…pretty much the 3 biggest coaches in their respective school’s history…

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Dominic Cheek and Replacement for Chambers

Posted by Chris on May 28, 2009
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ESPN’s Andy Katz breaks down the 17 players who will try out for the 12 spots on the U-19 National Team.  Tryouts are June 16th-18th in Colorado Springs, and as Chris mentioned in the previous post, Dominic Cheek will be trying out.  Katz on Cheek,

He is a part of a heralded freshmen class entering the Main Line campus. If the ‘Cats are to win the Big East — and they will be favored to do just that — Cheek will likely be a key element.

Additionally, Katz believes that New Mexico assistant and former Villanova player Chris Walker will be the replacement for Patrick Chambers as assistant coach.  Katz on Walker,

Expect Jay Wright to announce Villanova graduate and current New Mexico assistant Chris Walker as his new assistant coach in the near future. Though the deal isn’t finished yet, a source told ESPN.com that Walker will be hired to replace Pat Chambers, who left Villanova last month to become the head coach at Boston University.  A former point guard for Rollie Massimino, Walker led the Wildcats in assists for three seasons and made three postseason berths in his collegiate career.

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postGame: We're going to Detroit!

Posted by Chris on March 30, 2009
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(Note: This is more than likely going to be the longest thing I have ever written on here. So if need be, print this one out and take it to “the office” or a place where you can sit back, relax, and relive the memories.)

As I drove back to Villanova this morning, I was listening to Evan Roberts and Joe Benigno on WFAN. Benigno repeatedly used the phrase “one of the all-time great games” to describe Villanova’s monumental win over Pittsburgh to send the team to the Final Four. Every time he said that, all I could think of was that this was one of the all-time great weekends. If you were lucky enough to be there, it was special. And even if you weren’t, and you were at one of the various alumni functions, or just on your couch, you’ll remember it for the rest of your life.

My weekend started on Thursday morning when I left Villanova, picked up Liz at Newark Airport and proceeded up to Boston. We got into town around 4:30, picked up our tickets at 5:30. and headed over to The Greatest Bar, where ‘Nova alums gathered. Not knowing we needed to register for this event, we weren’t allowed in, and instead headed next door to DJ’s and grabbed a few drinks. A few hours later, we got into The Greatest Bar, and that is where the night really began.

We began to meet up with friends, whether they were current students, recent graduates, our friend’s fathers, and alums we’d never met. It was out of control. Everyone was buzzing about the game and the atmosphere was flat-out incredible.

With about 20 minutes to game time we headed over to The Garden and found out seats, which were about 5 rows from the court behind the basket. We had been talking about this all night, but the Thursday night crowd felt like it was 80-20 in ‘Nova’s favor. The fans were everywhere. We ourselves had a great section of Villanova fans, and Boston fans in general who just wanted to see us knock the snot out of Duke.

The crowd, including an amazing student section in the upper tank, was out of control all game. It felt like we were at home, but better. Villanova home crowds rarely get that wild, much less when we’re on the road. But ‘Nova Nation came out in droves and took over Boston all weekend.

Anderson loved the beatdown of Duke (AP/Winslow Towson)

Anderson loved the beatdown of Duke (AP/Winslow Towson)

Despite our proclamations all week that we were going to kill Duke, I have to admit the nerves set in as the opening tip was thrown into the air. But a monster dunk by Dante Cunningham set the tone for the night — we were not going to lose. Our defense swarmed the Dukies all night. They looked like they had never seen anything like that. At one point a Celtics fan behind me remarked, “They don’t just look scared. They are legitimately afraid to do anything.” And it was true.

Duke, led by fearless Jon Scheyer couldn’t muster the courage to take the ball into the lane. Maybe they had seen our dismantling of UCLA and feared for their lives, but I’ve never seen a team look like a deer in headlights like the Blue Devils. Gerald Henderson and Kyle Singler, two players who were lauded all week, were taken completely out of the game. With about 10 minutes left, I yelled out, “It’s over!” to the delight of everyone around me except for Liz, who slapped me and was convinced I had jinxed us.

But it didn’t matter, that game was in the bag. With each play, the crowd got louder. We could feel it. When it was over, we went wild. About two rows in front of us, our friends Ted, Thomas, Keith and Brian had been going ballistic all game. I posted it before, but as Brian continually belted out,”There’s something special about this team!” you could begin to feel the people in the arena really starting to believe it.

At Hurricane O’Reilly’s after the game, it was a party. We were living the dream. But in the back of our minds we knew a greater challenge awaited us. We weren’t going to get a soft scared team on Saturday night. We were going into the trenches for a war.

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When Saturday morning rolled around, even more people had come up to Boston. For whatever reason, be it work or other obligations, nearly everyone knew some other person or group who was making their way up for what was going to be an epic night.

We were wiser this time around, opting to register for the alumni pre-game reception. There was such a big turnout on Thursday that the Boston Alumni had to rent out a 2nd bar to host everyone. We made it to Hurricane O’Reilly’s at about 3:45, and were greeted with 100 people standing outside ready to start the festivities.

What occurred in that bar was nothing short of spectacular. Alumni of all ages, as well as current students, and even future Wildcats began to party like we had already won. People offered toasts, cheers, drinks, etc. It was a great afternoon with great people (most of whom I didn’t even know). But the fact that we were all ‘Nova fans brought us all together.

Finally, it was time for the game. I had been saying all morning that I just wanted it to start. I couldn’t wait. And now, it was here. Liz and I made our way down to our seats, and then realized that the pro-Nova section we had on Thursday was completely dominated by the Pitt fans. Damn. No matter, because we’re here and we’re going to make the best of it.

I know that everyone who reads this blog saw the game, so I’m going to skip to the last 4 minutes. This game was a war. That’s really all that needs to be said about the first 36 minutes.

With just under 4 minutes left, and ‘Nova and Pitt trading baskets and stops, Pittsburgh made a mini-surge and built a 4 point lead. The Pitt fans exploded. The ‘Nova fans were stunned. Could this really be the end?

Pitt brought the ball up the court with a 4 point lead. And then the crowd noise rose. Jermaine Dixon had nowhere to go. And then boom! Dwayne Anderson is taking off in the other direction with the ball, and he gets hacked, and STILL manages to lay it in! The Garden was going bonkers. My ears hurt from the noise, and even as I tried to yell as loud as I could, I couldn’t hear myself. It was insanity.

Then another turnover (this time by Sam Young)! Reggie Redding finds a slashing Corey Fisher for the layup! We have the lead back! I’m shaking a random Bostonian next to me, and he is shaking me back.

Pitt scores again, but it’s short lived. Anderson drains a 3 from the top of the key. The building is shaking. Fans from both teams are on their feet and losing their minds. Just 90 seconds left. I’m praying for the clock to move faster, but it won’t. Young jacks up a 3. Missed, but Levance Fields snags the board and dishes it to DeJuan Blair. Blair turns it over! Now the place is really rocking. We can feel it. We’re going to do it.

Corey Fisher steps to the line with under a minute to go. He had a rough first half, but now it’s his time. He calmly drains both free throws. We’re up by 4, and we can feel. And just like that, we’re quickly shut up as Sam Young drills a 3 with Shane Clark draped all over him. I’m upset, scared, angry and impressed all at the same time. What is going on?

Pitt fouls Fisher. He drains both shots again. Does this kid have ice water running through the veins or what? Now we’re up just 3. Villanova isn’t giving up another 3 again. They are pressing at the top of the key. Fields launches a 3 but it’s no good! I’m now about 4 rows from my actual seat just jumping around and going nuts.

AP/Winslow Towson

The team celebrates the win( AP/Winslow Towson)

Reggie Redding steps to the line. A Pitt fan realizes ‘Nova is perfect from the stripe. “They’re due to miss” he yells out. And he’s right. Redding’s first attempt rattles in and out. It’s okay, just make the next one and make this a two possession game. Redding puts it through.

No 3’s, no 3’s. We’re all screaming. Villanova overplays Fields, who finds a wide open Blair for a layup. Now I’m nervous again. With 10 seconds left, there is plenty of time.

After a timeout, Redding is inbounding the ball. He looks and looks. Nobody is open. Cunningham is streaking down the court. Reggie decides he’s Peyton Manning and launches a home run pass. It’s overthrown, and Pitt is rushing back the other way. Fisher tries to take a charge, but is called for the block. Fields to the line. That kid is a warrior. Before he even steps up I know that both are going in.

With 5 seconds left, ‘Nova Nation is stunned. Are we really going to overtime? Redding with the ball again. He’s looking far down court! Please don’t heave it deep again, Reg. He finds Cunningham, who hands it off to a streaking Scottie Reynolds! This is the Scottie Reynolds who never saw a big-time shot he didn’t like.

He’s in the open court! He’s crashing into the lane and getting hacked by Pitt players. 3 seconds. 2 seconds. He’s starts to rise and gets met by Gilbert Brown.

The ball is at the rim with 1 second left, and it falls through. Don’t ask me what happened next, because I don’t remember. All I know is that I had a random 10 year old boy hoisted over my head. His father didn’t mind at all, and was even jumping up and down next to me.

There was one final heart attack as Levance Fields decided he was going to hoist a 70-footer and miss by 1 foot, but we did it. We’re going to the Final Four!

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The team was rushing the court. Players, coaches and fans embraced. Magic was in the air. The cutting of the nets was something I’d never seen, and it was incredibly special. Nearly all the fans stuck around to witness this piece of history, but the night was young.

We headed back to The Westin at the Waterfront, which just so happened to be the official hotel of Villanova’s trip to Boston. Hundreds of fans gathered in the lobby. Drinks flowed everywhere. You could tell this party was going to go on all night.

After about 45 minutes, and countless cheers whenever the TV’s showed Reynolds’ last shot, a police motorcade approached the hotel. Fans streaked to the front doors. Slowly, chants of “Let’s Go Nova” poured out. And finally, the team entered to cheers even louder than the ones at the game.

Chatting with Rollie was one of the highlights of my trip (AP/Winslow Towson)

Chatting with Rollie was one of the highlights of my trip (AP/Winslow Towson)

Players hugged fans, and fans cried. This felt more like war heroes returning from the battlefield than a basketball team returning from the hardwood, and I guess in some ways, it was.

Jay Wright stood up and thanked everyone for all the support. Dwayne Anderson said it was a night he’d never forget. And finally Dante Cunningham reminded everyone that we had not 1, but 2 more games left to win.

That brought the house down, and then ‘Nova Nation partied all night.

Congrats to everyone everywhere, this was one weekend that we’ll never forget.

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Bloody lip links

Posted by Chris on March 22, 2009
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A lot in the news today about how Villanova set the tone early vs. UCLA when Scottie Reynolds drew blood from Darren Collison with the first foul of the game, and then Dante Cunningham proceeded to abuse Josh Shipp (you can see that one in the highlights in the last post I made). Here’s some good reading for everyone.

  • Collison insisted it was nothing the Bruins haven’t seen before, even though he was spent a lot of time lobbying for mercy from the officials…Sports Illustrated
  • As Rollie looked on from the front row, Jay Wright continued to establish his own ‘Nova legacy…Philadelphia Inquirer (Phil Sheridan)
  • UCLA played like they’d never seen a Big East before. It was a rude welcome to Philly…Philadelphia Inquirer (John Gonzalez)
  • After Scottie Reynolds let UCLA know how it was going to be, ‘Nova won by TKO…Philadelphia Inquirer (Joe Juliano)
  • Dwayne Anderson’s diving steal from behind while ‘Nova was up 20 sums him up in a nutshell. The kid won’t be denied…Philadelphia Inquirer (Mike Jensen)
  • Back in the Sweet Sixteen for the 4th time in 5 years, Jay Wright says it’s just another game…Philadelphia Inquirer (Joe Juliano)
  • Dante Cunningham is a mix of “a rhinoceros, Karl Malone and Pete Rose.” And Suge Knight owes him money…CBSSports
  • Fresh off complaining about Villanova’s home court advantage, Bill Plaschke concedes that in the end it didn’t matter where the game was played…Los Angeles Times

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postGame: Villanova 89, UCLA 69

Posted by Chris on March 21, 2009
NCAA Tournament / 3 Comments
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Game recap and box score in case you couldn’t see the game.

“UCLA came to the Philly playgrounds, where men play.” – Jay Bilas

Yep, that probably sums up the way most of us feel after today.

AP/Michael Perez

AP/Michael Perez

UCLA officially now stands for “U Can Leave Anytime” (I can’t take credit for that, but I laughed hard when I heard it). Villanova looked as good as they have all year today. From Rollie Massimino in the stands to the walk-ons at the end of hte bench, the Wildcats were firing on all cylinders today.

Dante Cunningham led 6 Cats in double figures with 18 points and 10 rebounds, and Dwayne Anderson recorded a double-double of his own with 10 points and 11 rebounds.

Corey Fisher and Corey Stokes were both brilliant off the bench. Fisher ignited the team and finished with 13 points and 5 assists. Stokes had 12 points, and was actively looking for his shot all day, which was great to see.

The Wildcats played as a team for a full game today, something that was refreshing for the packed house of ‘Nova fans. But Fisher put it best with a quote that sums up the entire game.

“We kind of jumped on them and set the tone early,” Fisher said. “That was huge. We always say it’s about 40 minutes of basketball. We didn’t want to let up when we got a lead. I don’t think we did. We had a lot of intensity from the start of the game to the end.”

UCLA couldn’t get anything going all day. The Wildcat defense was suffocating, and held stars Darren Collison and Josh Shipp to a what felt like a quiet 15 and 18 points, respectively. Jrue Holiday was held in check all day, finishing with just 4 points. Credit to Reggie Redding for his usual defensive prowess, but really the entire Wildcat team, who truly looked like a national title contender today.

It was the last “home” game for me as I’ll be graduating this spring, and it sure was a memorable one. I couldn’t ask for a better game to go out on. I thought everyone was near perfection today, and even if I wanted to, I couldn’t nitpick about anything.

Villanova will play next week in Boston vs. the winner of Duke and Texas.

Enjoy this one Wildcat fans.

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Blogger Beat: Keepin' it casual

Posted by Chris on February 27, 2009
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For the second round of blogger talk, I chatted with Andrew from CasualHoya. As you can probably surmise, Andrew takes a lighter approach to the blogging experience. We had a good Q&A and took a few potshots at each other all in good fun. If you head to his site you can see me dishing out some junk.georgetown-logo2

Chris (I Bleed Blue and White): When Chris Wright and DaJuan Summers inevitably throw down this season, who wins? And who’s on the undercard?

Andrew (CasualHoya): That fight would have to go to the judges scorecards for the following reasons.  First, Wright would constantly attack Summers but be unable to finish/land any punches, and second, Summers would simply hang around at the perimeter of the ring and occasionally throw an ill-advised haymaker.  Seriously, that fight would likely have zero punches that would actually reach the opponent.  One would think that Summers would have the veteran savvy to take out CW, but if he has shown anything on the court this season, it’s nothing.The undercard would have to be a fight that wouldn’t have any real implications, but would nonetheless keep the fans in their seats and entertained until the Main Event. For that reason, I’d love to see an Omar Wattad – Nikita Mesheriakov bout.  Winner gets to sit on the bench the entire game.  Loser gains a spot in the rotation and the inevitable chorus of boos that will meet him upon every touch.

Chris (IBBW): Why did John Thompson II have a press box all to himself for the Marquette game, and what does he do up there all by himself?

Andrew (CH): No one really knows what JT does up there, but no one has the balls to ask, either.  JT is sort of like the overlord of all things Hoya, and know one dares to question anything at this point.  If I had to take a guess, he was probably plotting the latest move to sabotage the post-hoops career of Fred Brown, or maybe cursing under his breath that a school like Marquette is even in the Big East.  If I were left to my own devices in a suite like that for every game, I’d probably have curtains installed have them closed for some privacy.  The last thing I’d want is some annoying Villanova blogger asking questions about me.

Chris (IBBW): Who’s the more underwhelming big man who is supposed to dominate, Roy Hibbert or Greg Monroe?

Andrew (CH): I don’t see how you can say Hibbert has been underwheling in the NBA.  Have you even seen is numbers?  He is crushing the league in fouls per minute and is on pace for about 13 fouls per 48 minutes.  All of those who thought Oden would be a better pro are clearly idiots, since, in addition to the injuries, Greg is only averaging about 8 fouls per 48 minutes.  That’s domination right there.  But seriously, I think that Roy will have the NBA career that we all knew he would – he’ll be a nice role player for over a decade who will average about 8-10 points and 6-8 rebounds.

As far as Monroe goes, after the UConn game I thought he’s be the next Chris Bosh.  But for some reason as Conference play has unfolded, Monroe simply hasn’t seen the ball enough.  Now, this may be a genius strategy by JT3 since it has likely caused Monroe to slip in the Draft and maybe stay for another year.  The problem is, that by letting Summers take all the shots, his Draft status has crashed to the extent that he may have no choice but to stay as well.  Monroe is a very good player, and probably the best freshman at Georgetown since Iverson.  He’s very polished for a freshman, and I dig that he’s from New Orleans.  The one thing Monroe clearly doesn’t understand yet, which makes sense, is JT3’s defensive schemes.  You’ll see it for yourself on Saturday, but Nova’s going to get a lot of easy looks under the basket.

Chris (IBBW): Honestly, what do you dislike most about Villanova basketball (could be a player, coach, anything)?

Andrew (CH): The worst part of Vilanova basketball is that you beat Georgetown in the ‘85 Championship.  Everytime a ‘David’ takes on a ‘Goliath”, CBS will flash to a clip of that elvish Massimino running all over the court after that win.  It’s annoying, but it’s fine.  So, aside from that stigma which will likely never go away, right now my animosity is driven at Jay Wright.  And don’t get me wrong, Jay Wright is a great coach.  I think he does more with Nova-level talent than anyone else in the Conference.  The problem is he just looks like too much of a dandy.  Oh, and I hate Scottie Reynolds, too.  Talk about sticking around too long.  I feel like the Hoyas have faced Scottie Reynolds for the past 10 years.  And I’m not bitter that he wanted to play for Georgetown, either.  It’s not like Stephen Curry wanted to.  Oh, wait…

Chris (IBBW): If you could punch one person associated with Syracuse, who would it be and why?

Andrew (CH): I truly believe that anyone who has ever attended ‘Cuse or currently does suffers enough by having to be up there for 4 years.  That being said, I would first punch every single one of the students who threw stuff at the few Hoyas fans that made the horrible trek to the Carrier Dome a few weeks ago.  ‘Cuse fans are really the worst.  Well, maybe except for those Nova fans who dressed up in prison gear when Iverson led the Hoyas into the Philly that year.  But, if I had to choose a single ‘Cuse player whose face I would put on a punching bag, it would have to be Devendork’s.  That guy is horrible.  It’s one thing to single-handedly ruin your team’s chances when you’re on the court, but punching women? Come on!  Yeah, definitely Devendork.

Thanks to Andrew. Definitely a change of pace, but a lot of fun at the same time.

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Read: 'The Big Brutal'

Posted by Chris on February 18, 2009
Article, Big East Play / No Comments
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Jack McCallum of Sports Illustrated followed Syracuse around for a stretch of games to learn just how tough the Big East can be on the players of a ‘good’ team. MaCallum’s trip showed the struggles that Syracuse went through in road trips to Villanova and UConn before finally pulling out a win against Georgetown last weekend.sicom-logo2

“Our bottom teams would be middle to top tier anywhere else in the country, including the ACC,” says Pitt point guard Levance Fields, whose Panthers are ranked fourth behind UConn, Oklahoma and North Carolina in the latest AP poll. “Quality teams like Georgetown and Notre Dame are struggling because of how tough the league is.”

McCallum’s article details the struggles that Paul Harris is experiencing, as well as the growing leadership of Jonny Flynn and how Andy Rautins came here with the knowledge that it would be like this.

…This is without a doubt one of the best articles I’ve ever read…McCallum does a great job of showing how the toughness of this league can way on not only a player, but an entire team…after reading that I have a newfound appreciation for just how well Villanova is playing this year…

…There are som nice shoutouts to Jay Wright and Rollie Massimino in there, as well as come compliments towards Villanova’s toughness in the league…make sure you read this one…

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