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4-Point RoundUp & AP Top 25 – “Jordan Adjusted”

February 11, 2014 By admin

Jordan Adjusted

1. Syracuse Orangemen are number one in the country, but best ever? I don’t know all about that.

2. Richard Sherman is not the greatest or loudest or best ever sh*t talker in sports. Top 10, Top 25, Top 50 lists are futile. All vocal sh*t talking awards will always go to Muhammad Ali. Any questions?

3. Michael Sam is here to stay, no problem. Just don’t tell me “being gay” is just like “being Black,” it’s not. So big company media, “Stop comparing the two.” Being gay is in another category just like religion or age or creed etc., are in different categories. Again no problem, now lets play some football.

4. Join the MARCHVEGAS Crowdfund, no matter what race, color, creed, religion, age, gender or national origin, we need you. Sh*t talkers welcome.
 

Associated Press Top 25:

   1.  Syracuse  23-0
   2.  Arizona  23-1
   3.  Wichita State  26-0
   4.  Florida  22-2
   5.  Cincinnati  22-3
   6.  San Diego St.  21-2
   7.  Villanova  21-2
   8.  Kansas  18-6
   9.  Duke  19-5
   10.  Michigan State  20-4
   11.  Iowa State  18-5
   12.  Saint Louis  22-2
   13.  Louisville  19-4
   14.  Kentucky  18-5
   15.  Michigan  18-6
   16.  Iowa  18-6
   17.  Virginia  20-5
   18.  Creighton  19-4
   19.  Texas  19-5
   20.  Memphis  18-5
   21.  Wisconsin  19-5
   22.  Ohio State  19-6
   23.  SMU  19-5
   24.  Connecticut  18-5
   25.  Pittsburgh  20-4

 
By Ellis Jordan
 

 
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[MARCHVEGAS] – noun 1. “March to Vegas” symbolizes the humanistic tendency to march, migrate, or advance as a deliberate or organized body in a habitual manner back to Las Vegas. 2. Marriage of March Madness and Las Vegas, especially during tournament time. 3. The “MARCHVEGAS 4-day™ Holiday” (March 20 – 23, 2014) – Sign the Petition.

 
 

Dwight Powell leads Stanford past Cal

February 5, 2014 By admin

Cardinal vs Bear
By John Crumpacker
Photo Brant Ward

There was a type of home-and-home symmetry to Stanford’s 80-69 win over Cal at Haas Pavilion to start the second half of the Pac-12 season.

The Bears got over on Stanford 69-62 at Maples Pavilion on Jan. 2 in the first game of the conference schedule.

On Wednesday, a Cardinal team determined not to be swept by the Bears turned in a dominant performance and brought Cal back to reality after its upset of then-No. 1 Arizona Saturday night.

Stanford’s win leaves the rivals tied for third with Colorado in the Pac-12, all at 6-4.

Forward Dwight Powell powered the Cardinal (15-7 overall) with 22 points, 11 rebounds and six assists, all while avoiding any personal fouls in 39 minutes. Guards Chasson Randle (19) and Anthony Brown (16) combined for 35 points.

“Anytime you have a rival game, you never know what you’re going to get,” Stanford head coach Johnny Dawkins said. “We’re fortunate we came out as the winner tonight. I was proud of our guys, mainly because Cal made that run in the first half that’s hard to withstand. I found out our guys have a lot of substance.”

Cal, meanwhile, dropped to 15-8 overall, unable to use the momentum of its win over Arizona for anything tangible.

So who is this Cal team? The one that toppled Arizona a few days ago or the one that has dropped four of its past five in the Pac-12? It’s hard to get a read on the Bears.

“There’s no read to be gotten,” head coach Mike Montgomery said. “If you play well, if you play hard, you can beat anybody. If you don’t, you can get beat by anybody. It’s no more complex than that.”

Asked about the disparity in his team’s recent play, forward David Kravish said, “It’s frustrating. We’ve got to figure that out.”

Point guard Justin Cobbs had 24 points for the Bears but his five turnovers proved costly; all told, Stanford scored 21 points off 13 Cal turnovers. Guard Tyrone Wallace had a career-high 21 points and Kravish had 12, six in the game’s first three minutes.

After Stanford bolted to a 38-20 lead in the first half on Randle’s three-point shot with 6:32 to go, Cal responded with a 16-4 run to close out the half trailing 42-36.

“We got three good looks coming out of the locker room (for the second half) and didn’t make any of them,” Montgomery said. “We made some poor decisions mentally instead of being patient. Turnovers happened at critical times.”

Cal got Stanford’s lead down to five on two occasions in the early going of the second half but got no closer. When Powell dropped in a free throw with 10:08 left for 57-47, Stanford’s lead stayed at 10 and above the rest of the way.

Brown’s driving layup and free throw pushed the Cardinal’s lead to 68-52 with 3:52 to play and served as a “game’s over” moment when many in the crowd of 9,115 headed for the exits.

“This was a big game for us,” Brown said. “Cal was ahead of us in the standings. We didn’t want them to sweep us. This is not something you can take long-term. You have to take it one game at a time.”

For more….

 
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[MARCHVEGAS] – noun 1. “March to Vegas” symbolizes the humanistic tendency to march, migrate, or advance as a deliberate or organized body in a habitual manner back to Las Vegas. 2. Marriage of March Madness and Las Vegas, especially during tournament time. 3. The “MARCHVEGAS 4-day™ Holiday” (March 20 – 23, 2014) – Sign the Petition.

 
 

I played basketball for Gaddafi

February 5, 2014 By admin

Alex Owumi
 
When US basketball player Alex Owumi signed a contract to play for a team in Benghazi, Libya, he had no idea that his employer was the the most feared man in the country. Nor did he guess the country was about to descend into war. Here he tells his story, parts of which some readers may find distressing.

It was a beautiful flat. Everything was state of the art and it was spacious, too. It had two big living rooms, three big bedrooms, flat screens everywhere. The couches had gold trim and were so big and heavy they were impossible to move. The door to the apartment was reinforced steel, like on a bank vault.

It was 27 December 2010 and I had just arrived in Benghazi, Libya’s second biggest city, to play basketball for a team called Al-Nasr Benghazi. I had stayed in some nice places playing for teams in Europe, but this seventh-floor apartment in the middle of town was something else. It was like the Taj Mahal.

I didn’t immediately notice the photographs dotted around the place – of Libyan leader Col Muammar Gaddafi and his grandchildren.

When I did, I phoned the team president – we called him Mr Ahmed – and he told me how it was. “The apartment belongs to Mutassim Gaddafi, the Colonel’s son,” he said. “Al-Nasr is the Gaddafi club. You are playing for the Gaddafi family.”

Gaddafi! When I was a young kid growing up in Africa – I was born in Nigeria – Gaddafi was someone we all looked up to. He was always on the news and in the paper, helping out countries like Niger and Nigeria. I thought of him as one of the faces of Africa – him and Nelson Mandela. As a kid I wasn’t really aware of any of the bad things he was doing. Maybe I was too busy playing sports.

dual-photo

Libyan leader Gaddafi watched Alex (right, centre) and his Al-Nasr team play

In my first practice with my new team-mates there was a weird atmosphere. I asked the other international player on the team, Moustapha Niang from Senegal, “Why does everybody look so depressed?” And he explained it to me. “We’ve been losing,” he said. “They haven’t been getting paid, some of them are getting physically abused. If we don’t win our next game, some of these kids are going to get beat.”

A lot of the players had scratches and banged-up bruises on their arms. One had a black eye he was trying to conceal. Gaddafi’s security goons would push them up against lockers, things like that – and some of these guys were not big athletes like me and Moustapha. During practice you could see some of them were just scared to make mistakes. But in any sport you’re going to make mistakes, you’re going to make bad plays. I can’t go into a game and trust people who are scared.

The next day, we travelled to a game in Tripoli on a private jet like we were a team playing in the NBA [the National Basketball Association in the US]. That’s how it was with Al-Nasr and the Gaddafi family – they got extra funding, extra millions of dollars. But the deal was we were supposed to win – and when we lost, it was a problem.

Col Gaddafi was at that game. Before the start I saw him sitting with his military personnel up in the stands in a white dress uniform. Walking on the court was his son, Saadi Gaddafi, the man in charge of sport in Libya. We spoke and honestly, he seemed like a nice man who just loved sport.

As we were talking, I looked into the stands at his father and we locked eyes. It lasted just a moment, but my team-mates saw it and my fans saw it. We won that game by 10 points and afterwards, in the locker room, Mr Ahmed handed out envelopes, each containing about $1,000 (£600) in dinars. “From our leader,” he said.

After that game I started to get a lot of special treatment around the country because I had been personally acknowledged by the Gaddafi family. I never had to pay for food at the markets or in restaurants again. Everything from socks to a new TV and laptop – I got it all free or on a sort of open-ended loan. I never had to pay anything, not a dime. And after that game, we just kept winning and winning. I was the point guard – the captain, the conductor of the orchestra. We just kept winning and my team-mates weren’t scared any more.

But we noticed that our team coach, Coach Sharif, was often sad during practice. He was Egyptian and was worried about the situation back home – by this time, the revolution there was in full swing. There were rumours that there would be an uprising in Libya, but I never really took them seriously. We’re talking about a country where the leader had been in power for 42 years. Who in their right mind would cross that kind of leadership, that kind of army?

From the roof of my apartment in Benghazi I could see the whole of the city. I liked going up to the roof, especially when I was homesick and missed my family. I could really clear my mind up there.

But on 17 February 2011, at about 09:15 in the morning, I go on to the rooftop and see 200, maybe 300 protesters outside a police station across the street. A military convoy is coming closer and closer. Then, without warning, shots. People running, people falling. Dead bodies all over the ground. I’m praying, praying that this is a dream, that I will wake up sometime soon.

With these bullets flying everywhere, I’m hugging the floor of the rooftop. I am so frightened. So many things are running through my head and I just can’t think straight. After 10 minutes or so, the shooting stops and there is only wailing and screaming.

I go back to my apartment and close the door. I call Coach Sharif. It takes a long time before my call is connected, but eventually he picks up. He tells me that he’s on his way out of the country, back to Egypt, but that I should stay in my apartment and that somebody will come for me.

I try calling Moustapha but there is no connection. Over and over I punch the numbers on my phone, but the networks are down. The internet is down. I sit huddled against a big metal bookcase, praying.

Every now and then I peek out the window. The crowds of men have dispersed. Instead, I see kids, kids I played soccer with on the street. They have turned into rebels now, with their own shotguns and machetes. Regular life is over – it’s every man for himself.

For more….

 
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[MARCHVEGAS] – noun 1. “March to Vegas” symbolizes the humanistic tendency to march, migrate, or advance as a deliberate or organized body in a habitual manner back to Las Vegas. 2. Marriage of March Madness and Las Vegas, especially during tournament time. 3. The “MARCHVEGAS 4-day™ Holiday” (March 20 – 23, 2014) – Sign the Petition.

 
 

4-Point RoundUp & AP Top 25 – “Jordan Adjusted”

December 9, 2013 By admin

MARCHVEGAS_Jordan Adjusted

1. Colorado Buffs (Love that nick-name) gets after 6th ranked Kansas 75-72 in a buzzer beater upset.

2. Missouri surprises UCLA with a victory 80 – 71 to then 18th ranked Bruins.

3. Louisville, Michigan and Massachusetts put up a century mark in points over their respective opponents.

4. Arizona climbs to the tops of college basketball after a win over UNLV 63-58 and subsequent loss from previous #1 Michigan State.
 

Associated Press Top 25:

   1.  Arizona  9-0
   2.  Syracuse  9-0
   3.  Ohio State  8-0
   4.  Wisconsin  10-0
   5.  Villanova  9-0
   6.  Michigan State  7-1
   7.  Oklahoma State  8-1
   8.  Louisville  8-1
   9.  Baylor  8-1
   10.  Memphis  6-1
   11.  Connecticut  9-0
   12.  Colorado  9-1
   13.  Florida  6-2
   14.  Kansas  6-2
   15.  Duke  7-2
   16.  Kentucky  7-2
   17.  North Carolina  6-2
   18.  Oregon  8-0
   19.  Iowa State  7-0
   20.  Wichita State  9-0
   21.  Massachusetts  8-0
   22.  Gonzaga  8-1
   23.  San Diego State  7-1
   24.  Iowa  9-1
   25.  Missouri  9-0

 
By Ellis Jordan
 

[MARCHVEGAS] – noun 1. “March to Vegas” which symbolizes the humanistic tendency to march, migrate, or advance as a deliberate or organized body in a habitual manner back to Las Vegas. 2. Marriage of March Madness and Las Vegas, especially during tournament time. 3. The “MARCHVEGAS 4-day™ Holiday” (March 20 – 23, 2014) – Sign the Petition.

No debate about new rules, interview with Mike Brey

November 20, 2013 By admin

Official Rick Byrd

By Seth Davis
 
If you’ve followed the first two weeks of the college basketball season, you’ve no doubt heard the debate about the huge impact of the new rules on physical defense. It is understandable, then, why you might not be aware of the following:

There are no new rules against physical play.
There is no huge impact.
There is no debate.

Confused? Allow me to clarify.

First, the “new rules” against physical play (hand checking, arm bars, bumping cutters, etc.) have long been a part of the NCAA’s rulebook. It’s just that they were stuck in the back of the book under Appendix III: Officiating Guidelines. However, since those were going unenforced, leading to an unsightly decline in scoring and shooting percentages, the men’s basketball rules committee voted in May to make that an official part of Rule 10, which addresses “Fouls and Penalties.”

So nobody wrote any new rules on this front. They just decided to give a new emphasis to what was already there.

(To be sure, there were some new rules written in other areas, most significantly the block-charge call, but most of the dialogue has been focused on the so-called increase in touch fouls on the dribbler.)

Second, while there has been a change in the data when compared to last season, that change is not nearly as dramatic as most people think. According to #KPI Analytics, there are only 2.71 more fouls being called per game this season than at the same time last year. That’s right — fewer than three extra whistles per game! That has resulted in 4.1 more free throws per game. Overall, scoring is up 5.86 points per game — a welcome increase — and slightly more than half of those points have come from field goals as opposed to free throws.

Tempo-free maven Kem Pomeroy has also crunched the numbers. While he discovered there was an 18.3 percent increase in free throw rate (FTA/FGA), he only found a 1.8 percent increase in the number of possessions per game. That’s disappointing. The most positive effect Pomeroy found was a reduction in turnover and steal percentages, which makes sense. If you can’t push the dribbler, it’s harder to steal the ball.

Yes, there have been some outliers. Niagara and Seton Hall combined for 73 fouls and 102 free throws, but that is not the new normal. And to the extent that we see some ugly games, we also saw lots of ugly games last season, and the season before that, and the season before that. It takes time to go from a duckling to a swan.

For more….
 
 

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