2010 Sweet 16 Preview

March 22, 2010

With the Kansas Jayhawks out of the picture, this tournament has “March Madness” written all over it. Here’s my take on the upcoming Sweet 16 match-ups this Thursday and Friday. I’ll start with Thursday’s regional semi-finals from the East and West Regions, located in Syracuse and Salt Lake City:

March 25, 2010 (East & West Regions)

5 Butler Bulldogs vs. 1 Syracuse Orange (Salt Lake City, Utah 7:07)

’Cuse has too many ways to hurt opponents. Andy Rautins and Wesley Johnson, combined for 55 in their win over Gonzaga. They also have Rick Jackson and Scoop Jardine off the bench who are just as good as any starting players on any other team. No Arinze Onawaku? Who cares. Without Kansas in the tournament anymore Syracuse should absolutely steam roll any team that comes in their way. They will be playing on April 5th in the 2010 National Championship game.

11 Washington Huskies vs. 2 West Virginia Mountaneers (Syracuse, New York 7:27)

This will be the game where Washington proves how bad the Pac-10 really is at basketball (finally). I like WVU in this one. They have too much going for them: Devin Ebanks, and a red-hot Da’Sean Butler. Although I do hate the Big East as well, WVU will advance.

6 Xavier Muskateers vs. 2 Kansas State Wildcats (Salt Lake City, Utah 9:37)

Jordan Crawford’s (yes the guy who dunked on LeBron last summer) heroics end here. Too much athleticism by KSU and too much of a dominating back court in guards Jacob Pullen and Denis Clemente. KSU advances to Elite 8.

12 Cornell Big Red vs. 1 Kentucky Wildcats (Syracuse, New York 9:57)

Let’s be real people, Ryan Wittman, Cornell’s savior will miss shots. Unfortunately for team’s like Wisconsin and Temple, he did not miss, and Cornell scored every possession. The smart, white boys’ run will also end here. Kentucky’s style of game will prove far more athletic than Cornell’s. And do I even need to mention John Wall, DeMarcus Cousins, and Eric Bledsoe….woops.

March 26, 2010 (Midwest & South Regions)

6 Tennessee Volunteers vs. 2 Ohio State Buckeyes (St. Louis, Missouri 7:07)

Too much Evan Turner, too much Jon Diebler. Buckeyes advance. Don’t expect this one to be close.

10 St. Mary’s Gaels vs. Baylor Bears (Houston, Texas 7:37)

This will be the first time Omar Samhan and the Australian crew will see a team with far more athleticism than they have ever seen. Quincy Acy, LaceDarius Dunn, Tweety Carter, and Ekpe Udoh of the Bears should be able to give the sharp-shooting Gaels a dose of reality. Needless to say, I would be SHOCKED if the “slipper still fits” for this Cinderella story, especially since Baylor literally has home court advantage, in Houston. Ekpe Udoh…meet your toughest task….Kyle Singler.

9 Northern Iowa Panthers vs. 5 Michigan State Spartans (St. Louis, Missouri 9:37)

Hopefully, this is the end of Ali Farokhmanesh, because I am personally tired of him and his entire team. Go back to your home in Cedar Falls, Iowa you overgrown lumberjack. But putting all bracket-ruining biases aside, the experience brought forward by Raymar Morgan, Darrell Summers, and head coach Tom Izzo should be enough to power the Spartans to the Elite 8.

4 Purdue Boilermakers vs. 1 Duke Blue Devils (Houston, Texas 9:57)

As much as this pains me, the Dookies are one of the best teams in college basketball. I would go as far as saying top-two in the nation. Too much Kyle Singler, too much Nolan Smith, too much Jon Scheyer, too much Brian Zoubek, too much Coach K. They’ve got too much going for them, for them to possibly slow down. Although the Boilermakers were my dark-horse for a final-four run, Duke will advance.


With Kansas Eliminated, The Sky Is the Limit For John Wall and Kentucky

March 21, 2010

Saturday night a number one seed in the NCAA Tournament was knocked out in the second-round for the first time since 2004. The Kansas Jayhawks fell to nine-seeded Ali Farokhmanesh and the Northern Iowa Panthers by a score of 69-67. These over-grown axe-men and lumberjacks have recently won over the hearts of many Americans.

With Kansas no longer in the picture, Kentucky has a clear cut path to a National Championship. Not one team can stop them, especially the way they have been playing as of late.

Coming off a 29 point first-round victory over East-Tennessee State (yes that’s a real college) and a 30 point blow out of ACC powerhouse Wake Forest, the Wildcats are playing unselfish, team basketball. They are looking like the Kentucky Wildcats we’ve seen all season.

With many doubters second-guessing the Wildcats because of their inexperience, they have continued to prove their haters wrong. Their youth in All-Americans John Wall and Demarcus Cousins has yet to show a downside. They even have a third freshman stud, Eric Bledsoe, a sharp shooting dark-horse who is always over looked due to Wall and Cousins, who are both going top-three in this year’s NBA Draft in June.

The youth has proved more beneficial as opposed to Bill Self’s experienced Kansas team with Sherron Collins and Cole Aldrich, who have been through it all, in their illustrious four-year careers.

Now that the hype of Kansas is gone, it is safe to say Kentucky is the best team in basketball, nobody will beat them, they will win the National Championship.

Head coach John Calipari’s unfathomable recruiting with this freshman class will payoff April 5th, and bring Kentucky Basketball back to where it used to be.


Hottest Team In Basketball: Mavericks Win 10 Straight

March 6, 2010

Ever since the February 18th NBA trade deadline, the Dallas Mavericks have not lost a game. Their last loss came on the 16th of February in a 13 point loss to Kevin Durant and the Oklahoma City Durants.

Could this be because Dirk Nowitzki is putting up MVP-like numbers (29 ppg during this streak), like he always does? Or maybe the fact that Jason Kidd, at 36 years of age, is playing like he is 25 again, averaging 14 points, 7 rebounds, and 10 assists per game during this win streak. Don’t forget the key addition of two-time All-Star Caron Butler, who is a living hell for any defender, and big-man Brendan Haywood. Since their arrival at the trade-deadline, the Mavericks are 10-1, and riding a 10-game win streak.

Whatever it is that is surging the Mavericks, they could not be defeated, Friday night against the Sacramento Kings, even with the loss of probable 6th Man of the Year and team’s second leading scorer (OFF THE BENCH) Jason Terry, and Haywood, who is averaging a 10 points and 10 rebounds per game since arriving in Big D. Both were out due to injury.

They were also without head coach Rick Carlisle, who was ejected after his second technical foul, in the second quarter while arguing numerous non-calls on Nowitzki. You tell ‘em Rick.

Friday night, Nowitzki, who cashed in for 31 points and 12 boards was the hero along with rookie Roddy Beuabois. Beaubois, who averages a mere 11 minutes per game, had to fill in for Terry and scored 22 points in 24 minutes off the bench. This ignited the Mavs to a 108-100 scrappy win over the Tyreke Evans and the Kings.

R-BB’s* performance proved pivotal in the Mavs’ success. The promising young-gun energized the team.

With R-BB having the game of his life/career, their line-up was extremely altered. Getting significant playing time at the shooting-guard position, this caused the Mavs to play small. One of their best combinations they found was when they had back-up point-guard JJ Barea playing point-guard, R-BB at the two, and Kidd playing small-forward. This also caused starting small-forward Shawn Marion to switch between small-forward and center.

The game came down to the wire, as it was within two points, with 1:36 left to go, but the Mavs snuck away with their 10th straight, leading the NBA in active win streaks.

R-BB had 17 points in 30 minutes of play the game prior to this against the Minnesota Timberwolves, so as the Mavs continue to roll, look for R-BB to get some serious playing time, with the two-week absence of Terry.

As long as the Mavs topple the Chicago Bulls tonight, which shouldn’t be too hard, I see a potential 15-game win streak for the Mavs. Chicago being 11, then Minnesota again, and then they play host to the New Jersey Nets, New York Knicks and Bulls once again. These should all be easy wins, but reality will kick in on the 20th when they match up against the Boston Celtics. Enjoy it while it lasts Big D.

*I’m referring to Roddy Beaubois as R-BB from now on. Nobody wants to type “Beaubois” ten times in one column. Nobody.


LeBron To Switch From 23 to 6

March 2, 2010

No matter where Mr. James decides to sign this summer, one thing will be different about him next year. He will wear a different number on his jersey.

LeBron recently submitted the paperwork to the NBA, and is waiting the approval to switch from 23 to 6.

Although he has recently ignited “23’s” popularity, he will be switching to 6, which he was worn in international play with Team USA in the Olympics and in the FIBA Tournaments.

Rumors were flying around the league in the beginning of the seasons when James proposed the idea of a league-wide “23” retirement in honor of Michael Jordan, who revolutionized the game of basketball, and the number “23”. LeBron is taking the first step towards doing so.

The league does not have to approve his request, but upon doing so would provide the opportunity to hit the jackpot on additional jerseys sales. Also, if they were to approve his change of number, and he follows through with it, he would have to remain with the Cleveland Cavaliers (sorry NYK fans).

Not only is 6 his Olympic number, but it is the date in which his first son was born, and the number of the month in which his second son was born. Also, his second favorite player growing up, Julius Erving, spent the majority of his career sporting numero seis.


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