Friday, March 20, 2015

ORU vs. UC Santa Barbara — the good, the bad and the reality

Hey, Oral Roberts is in the Elite Eight. OK, not that "Elite Eight," but an elite class of eight teams remaining in the College Basketball Invitational.
The Golden Eagles outlasted UC Santa Barbara in a track meet Wednesday night, beating the Gauchos (South American cowboys) 91-87 at the Mabee Center. The 1,687 fans — absurdly low, by the way — that did show up saw a highly-entertaining game.
The pregame notes that the CBI provided highlighted how its tournament features close games. ORU and UC Santa Barbara made sure to oblige.  
And as you might imagine, the good far outweighs the bad for the Golden Eagles after that one....

The good
- The Golden Eagles shot 55.6 percent (30 of 54) in the game, they were 17 of 28 (60.7 percent) from the field in the second half. It's almost as if Omaha had returned to the Mabee Center to allow the Golden Eagles to do whatever they wanted offensively.
ORU coach Scott Sutton averted all credit to playing relaxed basketball.
"I told them to play loose and have fun and shoot with confidence," Sutton said. "And they did that."

- Obi Emegano was at it again. ORU's junior guard from Edmond Memorial continued his late-season scoring blitzkrieg with 30 points on 9 of 18 shooting. He was also 3 of 3 from beyond the arc and 9 of 11 from the free throw line.
"It starts in practice," Emegano said. "We been hard, practicing well. That's just my foundation."
Eighteen of Emegano's points came in the first half when he was 6 of 12 from the field.
"I just try to take advantage of the mismatches that I have," Emegano said. "They played a smaller guy on me, and I can take him to the post. Just trying to play the matchups."

- Offensive help has been hit or miss for Emegano all season long, but he had plenty of assistance against UC Santa Barbara. Bobby Word (16 points), Aaron Young (14) and Brandon Conley (14) were all key contributors on the offensive end. That trio combined to shoot 15 of 25 from the field.
"My coaches had confidence in my and my teammates had confidence in me, and (UC Santa Barbara) was really keying on Obi," said Young, who scored nine points on three 3s inside the final five minutes of the game. "I just tried to move to an open spot and shoot it like I know I can."
Conley, mired in a particularly long season slump, also added eight rebounds before fouling out.
- They combined to play 20 minutes, but they were mostly quality minutes from Darian Harris and Albert Owens. Harris' two rebounds were both big after he found himself in the right spot at the right time, and his 3-pointer from the left corner sent ORU on a 9-0 run midway through the second half.
Owens had to body up UC Santa Barbara's Alan Williams — who drew the attention of two NBA scouts in the game — while scoring six points and hauling in six rebounds. That kind of production, plus maybe two or three more points and two or three more rebounds, is exactly what ORU will be looking for from Owens on a per game basis next season.

- Probably goes unnoticed sometimes, but ORU does a pretty good job of taking care of the basketball. The Golden Eagles turn the ball over 11.8 times per game, which is 103rd in the country.
And when ORU churns out 16 assists and only has nine turnovers, it has to bring big smiles to the faces of Sutton and the rest of the coaching staff.
Young dished the ball out four times. Much like Owens, if he adds to that total next season, ORU will reap the benefits.

- The 30-second shot clock? Fantastic. Honestly, though, to say it made a huge difference would be somewhat of an overstatement, but it perhaps did force teams to put an extra pep in their step.
ORU was averaging 69 points per game prior to playing UC Santa Barbara. The Gauchos were scoring 67.8 points per game.
Something forced them to be more offensive.
And yes, both teams were making a lot of shots, but the shorter shot clock forced more aggression toward the basket. That also yielded 37 personal fouls and 43 free throw attempts (31 of which were made).
"I like it; I think it's where college basketball needs to go," Sutton said. "I think 35 seconds is too long. I don't think we're ready for 24 seconds by any means, but 30 is good. And I think it'll be 30 next year."

The bad
- John Green wasn't a prolific 3-point shooter for UC Santa Barbara coming in. He was a 33.3 percent shooter from deep.
ORU, though, failed to guard him all night, resulting in Green's 4 of 4 effort from beyond the arc.
In the end, UCSB made 10 of 23 3-pointers, and ORU could have done a better job of defending the perimeter.
But, when you're guarding Williams, you also tend to pack the bodies into the lane. 

- To see only 1,687 in attendance was a shame. Easily the smallest crowd at the Mabee Center all year long. That includes a schedule that featured Haskell and Tabor.
To not even get 2,000 in the arena is an embarrassment. Crowds that small are verging on Western Illinois, IPFW and IUPUI crowds on the road.

The reality
ORU's season continues on while other NCAA teams fall by the wayside. Next up: a trip to the Windy City to play at Loyola Chicago on Monday night.

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

An eye on the CBI

The College Basketball Invitational — or CBI to the layperson — is a day old, and Loyola Chicago is already basking in the quarterfinal glow. The Ramblers rallied past Rider and won 62-59 on Tuesday.
Tonight, Oral Roberts will host UC Santa Barbara, and six other first-round CBI games will take place. Before things kick into high gear, here's your chance to get to know each team a little better...

Oral Roberts Golden Eagles
Record: 18-14
Coach: Scott Sutton
Win-loss in last 10 games: 6-4
Notable wins/losses: 77-68 win over Tulsa in season opener; 74-58 win over North Dakota State; 85-53 loss at Oklahoma; 78-63 loss at Memphis.
Players to watch
- G Obi Emegano - Six-foot-3 junior averages 18.2 points per game, good enough for 42nd in the country. His free throws attempted (244) and free throws made (193) are fifth and sixth in the nation, respectively.
- G Aaron Young - Sophomore from Edmond Memorial has become a defensive specialist late in the season. Teaming up with Emegano on defense has caused headaches for opponents in recent weeks.
Notes: Golden Eagles lost to North Dakota State in the semifinals of the Summit League Tournament. ... ORU is 8-3 in games decided by one to five points. The Golden Eagles are 10-11 in all other games.

UC Santa Barbara Gauchos
Record: 19-13
Coach: Bob Williams
Win-loss in last 10 games: 8-2
Notable wins/losses: 74-60 win over UC Davis (Feb. 26); 54-51 win over UC Irvine (March 1); 69-59 loss to Kansas (Nov. 14); 80-73 loss to SMU (Dec. 8).
Players to watch
- C Alan Williams - Senior post player averages 17.2 points per game. His 11.9 rebounds per game are a national best.
- G Michael Bryson - Six-foot-4 junior has had nine games of 20 points or better this season. He's also failed to reach double digits in scoring 10 times.
Notes: Gauchos are 31st in the country with 491 assists. ... They also take care of the ball with only 352 turnovers this season, good enough for 38th nationally.

Delaware State Hornets
Record: 18-17
Coach: Keith Walker
Win-loss in last 10 games: 6-4
Notable wins/losses: 63-57 win over North Carolina Central (March 13); 72-65 win over Wake Forest (Nov. 28); 99-71 loss to Arkansas (Nov. 21); 83-70 loss to Oregon (Dec. 20.)
Players to watch
- G Amere May - Senior wing is 6-3 and averages the nation's sixth-best points-per-game total (21.0). His 544 field goal attempts are second only to Joseph Young at Oregon.
- C Kendall Gray - The 6-10 big man has a national best 401 rebounds this season. His 11.8 rebounds per game is a tenth of a rebound beyond Williams of UC Santa Barbara.
Notes: The Hornets defense is ragged, allowing 72.3 points per game. ... Delaware State has also turned the ball over 469 times this season, and it averages 13.4 turnovers a game.

Radford Highlanders
Record: 21-11
Coach: Mike Jones
Win-loss in last 10 games: 6-4
Notable wins/losses: 73-66 win over High Point (Jan. 22); 67-64 win over High Point (Feb. 3); 76-49 loss to Georgetown (Dec. 13); 64-46 loss to Richmond (Nov. 14).
Players to watch
- G Javonte Green - His 15.1 points-per-game total is a best, and 8.8 rebounds — at 6-4 — are a Highlanders best, too.
- G R.J. Price - Despite 12.6 points per game, the 5-11 senior shoots 36.6 percent (133 of 363) from the field.
Note: Fourteen of Radford's 21 wins were against teams with a RPI of 202 or worse.

Vermont Catamounts
Record: 18-13
Coach: John Becker
Win-loss in last 10 games: 7-3
Notable wins/losses: 71-57 win over Stony Brook (Jan. 10); 57-48 win over Stony Brook (Feb. 7); 64-52 loss to Harvard (Dec. 6); 57-56 loss to Yale (Dec. 18).
Player to watch
- F Ethan O'Day - The 6-9 junior is the only Catamount averaging more than 10 points per game (12.0). His 68 blocks are also in the top 40 in the country.
Notes: Vermont is 11th in the nation in field-goal percentage defense (38.3 percent). ... The Catamounts holding opponents to 57.7 points per game is 13th best in the country.

Hofstra Pride
Record: 20-13
Coach: Joe Mihalich
Win-loss in last 10 games: 6-4
Notable wins/losses: 66-65 win over Stony Brook (Nov. 21); 68-56 win over NC-Wilmington (Jan. 3); 76-64 loss to NC State (Nov. 17); 91-83 loss to Northeastern (Jan. 14).
Players to watch
- G Juan'ya Green - The Philadelphia native, at 6-2, averages 17.1 points and 6.5 assists per game (ninth in the country). He did have a triple-double (15 points, 10 rebounds, 10 assists) against LIU Brooklyn on Dec. 28.
- F Ameen Tanksley - Another Philly native, his 16.3 points per game is second best for the Pride.
Notes: Hofstra's 78.4 points per game is 12th best in the nation. ... Green has made 200 free throws this season, fourth best in the country.

Gardner-Webb Bulldogs
Record: 20-14
Coach: Tim Craft
Win-loss in last 10 games: 5-5
Notable wins/losses: 89-84 win over Purdue (Dec. 22); 72-71 win over High Point (March 6); 91-65 loss to Arizona (Dec. 2); 58-46 loss to Old Dominion (Nov. 24).
Players to watch
- F Jerome Hill - Scores 18.9 points per game. His 344 free throws attempted and 216 free throws made are the tops in the country.
- G Tyler Strange - A true facilitator at 7.4 assists per game, fifth best in the country.
Notes: The Bulldogs are ninth in the nation with 551 total assists. .. Gardner Webb also makes 8.1 3-pointers per game, ranking 30th in the country in that category.

Colorado Buffaloes
Record: 15-17
Coach: Tad Boyle
Win-loss in last 10 games: 4-6
Notable wins/losses: 62-56 win over UCLA (Jan. 2); 64-58 win over Stanford (Feb. 15); 68-54 loss to Arizona (Jan. 15); 74-49 loss to Utah (Jan. 7).
Player to watch
- F Josh Scott - Missed eight games this season, but the 6-10 junior is averaging 14 points and eight rebounds per game.
Notes: The Buffaloes' leading scorer, Askia Booker, will not play for Colorado in the CBI. The senior guard dealt with sore hips all season. ... Twelve of Colorado's 17 losses came against teams ranked inside the RPI top 95.

Pepperdine Waves
Record: 18-13
Coach: Marty Wilson
Win-loss in last 10 games: 5-5
Notable wins/losses: 67-61 win at BYU (Jan. 8); 67-62 win at St. Mary's (Jan. 31); 78-76 loss to Gonzaga (Jan. 15); 72-61 loss at Iowa (Nov. 24).
Players to watch
- F Stacy Davis - Averages 15.9 points and 7.8 rebounds per game. He also makes 47.5 percent (162 of 341) of his field goals and 81.5 percent (154 of 189) of his free throws.
- G Shawn Olden - Former Union standout is the Waves' third leading scorer at 9.4 points per game.
Notes: Pepperdine's roster features zero seniors. ... The Waves lead the nation in 3-point field goal defense, holding opponents to 26.3 percent from deep.

Seattle Redhawks
Record: 16-15
Coach: Cameron Dollar
Win-loss in last 10 games: 6-4
Notable wins/losses: 76-67 win over UC Davis (Dec. 30); 58-52 win over New Mexico State (Jan. 17); 87-75 loss to Eastern Washington (Dec. 6); 87-46 loss to UC Santa Barbara (Dec. 4).
Player to watch
- G Isiah Umipig - The Cal State Fullerton transfer is averaging 17 points and 3.6 3-pointers per game.
Notes: Dollar is a former UCLA guard. ... Redhawks have only committed 519 fouls this season, 48th best in the country.

Stony Brook Seawolves
Record: 23-11
Coach: Steve Pikiell
Win-loss in last 10 games: 8-2
Notable wins/losses: 59-56 win over Albany (Feb. 17); 71-61 win over Western Kentucky (Nov. 25); 79-61 loss at Providence (Dec. 13); 78-52 loss at Cincinnati (Dec. 2).
Player to watch
- F Jameel Warney - Averages 16.5 points and 11.6 rebounds per game. He leads the nation in double-doubles with 23.
Note: Seawolves were seconds away from the NCAA Tournament, until Albany's Peter Hooley nailed a 3-pointer with four seconds left to give the Great Danes the America East Tournament championship.

Mercer Bears
Record: 18-15
Coach: Bob Hoffman
Win-loss in last 10 games: 6-4
Notable wins/losses: 75-72 win over Chattanooga (Jan. 29); 69-64 win over East Tennessee State (Feb. 28); 75-62 loss at Colorado State (Nov. 23); 86-77 loss at Georgia (Dec. 27).
Player to watch
- G Ike Nwamu - Averages 14.7 points per game.
Notes: Hoffman graduated from Oklahoma Baptist in 1979. ... Junior guard Phillip Leonard is a former Union standout that averages 8.2 points per game.

Eastern Michigan Eagles
Record: 21-13
Coach: Rob Murphy
Win-loss in last 10 games: 6-4
Notable wins/losses: 85-59 win over Toledo (March 6); 45-42 win over Michigan (Dec. 9); 66-46 loss at Michigan State (Dec. 17); 78-63 loss to Buffalo (Feb. 18).
Player to watch
- G Raven Lee - Six-foot-3 sophomore posts 16.7 points per game, good for second in the Mid-American Conference.
Notes: Eagles specialize in steals, swiping a nation's 11th-best 8.6 takeaways per game. ... Eastern Michigan is 12th in the country with 802 free throw attempts.

Louisiana Monroe Warhawks
Record: 21-12
Coach: Keith Richard
Win-loss in last 10 games: 6-4
Notable wins/losses: 71-68 win over Georgia Southern (Feb. 7); 74-65 win over UAB (Nov. 15); 65-45 loss at Georgia State (Dec. 30); 61-56 loss at Florida (Nov. 21).
Player to watch
- F Tylor Ongwae - The Kenya native makes 84.9 percent (101 of 119) of his free throws while averaging 13.5 points per game. He, however, struggles from deep, making only 23.6 percent (17 of 72) of his 3-point attempts.
Notes: The Warhawks won nine homes games and nine road games this season. ... Opponents shoot 37.9 percent against ULM, which ranks sixth in that category.

Thursday, March 12, 2015

2015 All-State wrestling teams

Large East
113: Cody Randall (Sand Springs)
120: Christian Moody (Collinsville)
126: Markus Simmons (Broken Arrow)
132: Kaid Brock (Stillwater)
138: Cody Karstetter (Sand Springs)
145: Justin McGinnes (Glenpool)
152: Wyatt Jordan (Collinsville)
160: Paden Bailey (Broken Arrow)
170: Joe Smith (Stillwater)
182: Thomas Shepard (Shawnee)
195: Walker Smith (Shawnee)
220: Blaine Gorges (Durant)
Hwt: Que Overton (Jenks)

Large West
113: AJ Draper (Noble)
120: Kalani Gradle (Yukon)
126: Malik Slater (Lawton Mac)
132: Cy Trindle (Edmond North)
138: Boo Lewallen (Yukon)
145: Alex Nelson (Guthrie)
152: Jake Thornton (Norman North)
160: Cameron Loving (Altus)
170: Hayden Hansen (Norman North)
182: Colton Jump (Lawton Mac)
195: Brody Largent (Piedmont)
220: Evan Hudson (PC North)
HWT: Korey Walker (Midwest City)


Still waiting on small school All-Staters....

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

ORU vs. North Dakota State — the good, the bad and the reality (Summit League tourney edition)

Well, Oral Roberts' 60-56 loss in the semifinals of the Summit League Tournament was about what you'd expect from the Golden Eagles.
Signs of promise early dashed by missed opportunities and lack of options late.
Same song, different verse for the Golden Eagles this season. (That's assuming the season is officially done and a CIT tourney berth doesn't land in ORU's lap.)
This will be one of many final thoughts on the Golden Eagles' season, but we'll start with the traditional good/bad/reality stuff first...

The good: Obi Emegano, of course. The dude had no choice but to be good ever since Korey Billbury was suspended. Otherwise, ORU was probably going to score about 36 points per game.
Also, Emegano is probably already licking his chops to get after North Dakota State again next season. The former Edmond Memorial guard averaged 28 points against the Bison in three games this season. Impressive.
Not to get lost in the scuffle should be Emegano's eight rebounds. I guess if no one else in an ORU uniform is going to get the basketball, it might as well be Emegano.
The three assists and two steals in 40 minutes made an impressive stat line by the end of the night.

- Only six turnovers for the Golden Eagles. They had to play a clean game to have a shot at beating NDSU, and they did just that.

- ORU made 14 of 18 free throws and you can't stick your nose up at that. The Golden Eagles made 539 of their 754 foul shots (71.5 percent) this season, and that's a number you'd like to see much higher.

- Brandon Conley's eight points and six rebounds. Where was that all season long?
Conley's problem all year long was foul trouble, and Monday night against the Bison displayed Conley's poor fouling tendencies. (More on that in a second.)

- Lawrence Alexander didn't completely go off and have a monster game against the Golden Eagles, thanks in large part to Emegano and Aaron Young teaming up in the last couple of weeks to become a formidable defensive duo. Aside from Alexander's 31 points in the first meeting between ORU and North Dakota State, the Golden Eagles really did a fine job of bottling up Alexander in the final two showdowns.

The bad: ORU's shooting woes — a constant in this category. Putting the ball in the basket was a season-long problem, and it's one that needs a strict dissection of in the offseason. I know coaches will often say, "well, he makes those shots in practice." OK, cool. But if a player isn't making those shots consistently during games, tell them to stop shooting and drive to the basket.
The Golden Eagles shot 38.5 percent (20 of 52) from the field to wrap up the season. That's just about right for a team that shot 42.6 percent (743 of 1,743) for the season. ORU connected on 183 of 529 3-point attempts (34.6 percent), and take away Bobby Word's 49 treys and no one else made more than 28. Not having several long-range threats allows a defense to pack it in, and the Golden Eagles need some quality members added to the long-range firing squad.

- I figured the suspension of Billbury would force Denell Henderson to become a wrecking ball on the low post. Thought that ORU would transform from a guard-oriented team to a high-low team with an emphasis on getting Henderson involved.
It never happened.
Henderson's final scoring outputs were: 8, 13, 9 and 4 points. His collegiate career ended with a four-point, one-rebound effort against North Dakota State. That's rough.
Henderson could have easily been a guy who averaged 11 points and eight rebounds a game, but he instead finished at 8.8 and 5.2, respectively.
I'm sure the effort was there, but there were plenty of times this season when I noticed Henderson going full-throttle. It just didn't translate into stuffing the stat sheets.
ORU now has to hope that Albert Owens is capable of filling Henderson's void next season.

- Another sour night for ORU's supporting cast around Emegano. Bobby Word had 10 points but needed 12 field goals (and four makes) to get there. Darian Harris, zero points. Adrion Webber, five points. Albert Owens, zero points. Conley's eight points saved an almost non-existent effort from the bench.
Only Henderson and Webber are seniors for ORU, so the Golden Eagles need to figure out a solid bench rotation and who can actually help, because bench production was mostly horrific this season.
Will it be some incoming freshmen? Maybe. Javan White and Chris Crawford can hoop it up. Will it be a JUCO signee? Possibly. Who knows? Playing time should be up for grabs at this point.

- ORU ended up tying the game eventually, but Conley fouling North Dakota State's A.J. Jacobson on a 3-point attempt with 5:28 left was not a wise move. Conley was merely trying to the contest the shot, but his aggressiveness got the best of him, sending Jacobson sprawling on the hardwood. Jacobson made all three and the Bison went up four.
Conley got bailed out a minute later while fouling Carlin Dupree on a shot attempt. NDSU could have gone up six, but Dupree missed both. Conley had to breath a sigh of relief, for sure.


The reality: A season that featured such promise resulted in ORU's second straight season without a postseason game of any kind. (Again, a CIT tourney berth is possible, but I'd give the chances of that happening somewhere in the zero to 3 percent range.)
The Golden Eagles entered the season with two of the better talents in the league (Emegano and Billbury) and a solid supporting cast. Problem was that Emegano had to do too much, Billbury was hot and cold and the supporting cast didn't support consistently.
End result: a lost season for the Golden Eagles, who let plenty of games get away from there. (We'll get more into that as the week plays out.)
Time will tell if there was an unevenness in the locker room, but I get a sense that there was. The chemistry just wasn't there for most games. It'll be interesting to see how the roster looks as the offseason rolls along.
Now, only eight months until the next basketball season is underway.