The Sock 'Em, Bust 'Em Board Because that's our custom

‘Cleveland is a very nice city’

Outgoing Big East commissioner Mike Tranghese enjoyed his final Big East Tournament this past week with all the pomp and circumstance you’d expect and understand. There were endless interviews, a halftime ceremony and, really, a whale of a tournament that seemed perfectly symbolic. For every great game and historic moment, the league’s first employee was asked for an opinion or perspective and you could tell he really enjoyed it all and would miss it terribly.

For 19 years he ran the conference and he weathered some clouds and one brutal storm with ACC defections and Conference USA-aided expansion. Reorganizing is one of his greatest achievements as well as one of the greatest challenges for his successor, John Marinatto. The size of the league, the concerns of the membership and the potential for a split has always been an issue, but one that was never really openly discussed, at least not like it was in a press conference Wednesday night.

But, you know, our coaches, you all hear they complain it’s too hard, it’s too big.  I tell them, there are a lot of benefits to it.  We’re the conference in this building playing.  It’s the best tournament in the country because it’s in this building, in this city.  Nobody else has that.

Coaches are talking about splitting.  I told one of the coaches, fine, where do you think you’re going to go play your tournament?  Why don’t you go play in Cleveland if you want?  They’re going to lose that.

Secondly, they all complain we’re getting unbelievable players.  It isn’t by happenstance.  Louisville is coming in here now, Marquette is coming in here, you know, and the old standbys, Villanova and Georgetown are still here.  We’re so good and competitive.

The thing that’s struck me the most and I don’t think the coach will admit it, I think they are scared silly because if they slip, they’re not going from 1st to 3rd, they’re going from 1st to 8th or 9th.  I think they’re scared and work harder than they ever worked.   

WVU v. Dayton by the numbers

Friday’s first-round opponents are surprisingly similar. A few things to note:

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Talking points

… from the weekend that was. For your use in elevator rides, trips to the water cooler and other awkward moments on a Monday. Sponsored by Gus Johnson.

– WVU rifle! One for the … well, I guess it’d be one of your toes.

– Oh yeah, it’s Mountaineers v. Dayton, a team that immediately grabbed hold of WVU’s attention.

– Nothing wrong with what lies ahead

Really?

– Stewart will not be denied his place in the headlines! Good news for special teams.

We’ll dig into the game a bit later. Computer issues linger. A replacement is supposed to arrive shortly. I do need to mention Alex Ruoff was surprisingly concerned about my laptop issues at the Big East Tournament and was prepared to go out of his way to see if Bird Sowards would let me borrow his. His assists know no boundaries.

Sorry to do this to you

Photobucket

Early in the first half, I blurted out, “Whoa!” which got the attention of a colleague to my left. I explained Kristof Ongenaet had hesitated and stepped inbounds before he inbounded the ball following a basket. That’s a turnover. Worse yet, the official was looking right at it and didn’t do anything. So I kept an eye on this and it happened a couple of times, which isn’t at all unusual in a game. I don’t remember the last time I saw that called, though I think Ebanks was guilty once this season. Don’t hold me to that.

Anyhow, about this picture. After Truck made his 3 at the end of the half, Ongenaet pretty much took the ball out of the basket and flipped it to Devendorf. This time, the official wasn’t looking and instead admired the 55-footer … which they had to review anyway. I was right there and saw Ongenaet’s feet — I’m sick — and I mentioned it to some people afterward. Said one player, “Great, that’s the game.”

(Just for fun, what if they did spot Ongenaet and waved off another Devendorf 3?) 

In truth, the game was much more about Syracuse soldiering on and WVU falling in, but that shot did matter. It completely changed momentum and, if nothing else, was a hell of an omen. Really, didn’t you think that was it? Credit WVU for fighting fate as long as it did, but kudos to the Orange for extending a really remarkable run.

Take your pick

I don’t think there’s much argument, if any, but there is at least a discussion to be had today. Better Big East quarterfinal dunk? Joe Alexander over Stanley Robinson or Devin Ebanks over Jermaine Dixon?

Let’s go to the tale of the tape… 

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About tonight

overtheSEC said:

Mike, do you think there will there be a single person not wearing blue and gold in MSG tonight who cheers for the Eers or will everyone favor the exhausted Orangemen? I remember when the fans rallied behind us when we upset BC several years ago but we were the underdog beating the soon-to-defect Eagles (hence the great “ACC!” cheer). Do our three Big Apple freshman earn us any neutral support?

The Garden will be pro-Orange and possibly anti-WVU. NYC crows are fantastic in that they get behind the story. In 2005, it was all about WVU … until the final against Syracuse. Then the Mountaineers found themselves getting rooted against.

Let’s be honest, Syracuse is the protagonist now. You’ll have 20,000 fans in there. Immediately, 1/3 plus are Syracuse fans. That’s the case every year. Another 1/3 is there to cheer for Louisville, Villanova and WVU. The Louisville and Villanova fans will pick sides after their game and you can reasonably assume they’re pulling for Syracuse. For one, it’s the story. And not only that, but the winning side is definitely pulling for Syracuse because they want to see the team that played six OTs and battled through WVU in the final.

WVU will get some support, for sure. There are a lot of fans here and more will arrive today, there are a lot of Ebanks/Jones/Truck fans and there are a lot of people who just like what WVU did last night. It’s a minority, though.

All of that said, the team won’t mind that one bit. They rather like finding motivation.

The Mountaineers thought Pittsburgh was playing it a little too cool while warming up.

“They were over there laughing, throwing the ball around and having a good time,” WVU forward Da’Sean Butler said. “Granted, they beat us twice already, but it was kind of like a slap in the face. They’re sitting over there warming up for what’s supposed to be a good game and they’re acting like it’s nothing.”

The Mountaineers headed to their locker room for what Devin Ebanks reported was a rather brief set of final instructions from WVU Coach Bob Huggins.

“Coach came in and said, ‘They’re not ready to play. We need to jump on them,'” Ebanks said. “We took that pretty serious.”

Another gem from Syracuse

The Post-Standard Twitters throughout the game and Twitteree Mike Waters filed this dispatch shortly after Pitt-WVU.

Word at Madison Square Garden is that Pitt guard Levance Fields tried to go after referee Jim Burr in the tunnel after the game! MW

Wow … just wow

This is kind of difficult. It took me about an hour and a train, air tran and shuttle ride to get back to my room and the words still escape me. Six overtimes? Syracuse and UConn? Boeheim and Calhoun? Big East tourney? MSG? Really? No, really?

I don’t want to wander into sacrilegious, but that was every bit of WVU v. Wake Forest, which is (was?) the best I’ve seen. Just amazing and inspiring performances across the floor. My head hurts. Devendorf’s “game-winner” was unlike anything I’ve witnessed and, stunningly, the officials made the right, though impossibly difficult decision to wave it off. And Syracuse never wilted and hung in, though never leading, through five overtimes. By the sixth, it just looked like UConn was done and didn’t want any more.

It was nuts. And not only that, but the six overtimes — that just doesn’t look right — were played at a really high, really competitive level. Just an incredible game on an incredible day. I mean, you completely forget Villanova won a terrific game at the buzzer and WVU smothered Pitt hours earlier. I guess that happens when you play one of the best … games … ever.

Is that fair?

I’m physically tired from watching — everyone was; that’s when you know it’s good — and I need sleep. Just a few other thoughts to accompany the Diet Coke and Sun Chips:

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Pregamesmanship

Ryan J. Boyd is not here, but the pep band will not go without notice.

The Pitt band was playing one of those recognizable pregame songs and finished to a small cheer. Why did I call it a recognizable pregame song? Because WVU’s band plays it in its pregame … and proceeded to play it right after Pitt!

The Pitt band and fans were not happy. The same cannot be said of WVU, which laughed and high-fived afterward.

Game on!

Reunion

Wednesday night was the first time Pete Thamel of the New York Times entered a WVU locker room following his accurate, though eyebrow-raising depiction of the team’s take on Duke last March.

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