#A10Tournament

2024-04-01

The NCAA has uncovered severe violations from the Atlantic 10 that have hurt the conference’s 2025 men’s basketball season, which have led the NCAA to strip the A10 of it’s automatic-bid to the 2025 NCAA Tournament.

According to the NCAA offices in Indianapolis, “The Atlantic 10 conference has been found guilty of multiple violations according to the NCAA bylaws. We are unfortunately forced to hand down a harsh punishment of stripping the conference of its 2025 automatic bid toward the 2025 NCAA Tournament.”

The Atlantic 10 office was shocked to hear of the punishment from the NCAA.

“We are deeply disappointed in the NCAA for this harsh punishment,” said A10 public affairs coordinator George Ham. “We as a conference pride ourselves on our integrity on how we handle our highly competitive men’s basketball season.”

The violations uncovered by the NCAA involve tampering with the 2024 conference tournament multiple times.

The NCAA took this drastic action in response to attempts by the A10 to influence the results of games. These attempts range from prematurely shooting their load of confetti in an attempt to bring bad vibes upon Duquesne, to paying an evil witch to cast an evil curse on Dayton ensuring they will never win an Atlantic 10 Tournament, and to what the suspension explanation simply referred to as “Siegel Center Refs.”

“Frankly, this level of playing favorites and trying to influence who wins games is only acceptable at the power conference level, where our TV and betting partners genuinely want brand names like Duke, Kansas, and NC State to have easy paths to victory so ratings are better,” said NCAA President Charlie Baker.

Baker continued: “What makes the Atlantic 10’s acts so abhorrent is that no one really cares whether Duquesne or VCU represents the conference in the Atlantic 10 outside of insane VCU fans and Duquesne fans who had never known happiness until this year. Because of this, we felt we had to come down extra hard on the conference and strip it of its automatic bid. This will ensure that a deserving 18-15 Big 10 team will make the tournament next year, as an added bonus.”

The most conspiratorial twitter account in the A10, @Flyerfan010621, tweeted “I knew it!” in response to the news.

Around the country, multiple power conference commissioners weighed in on the news, including SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey. “We applaud the NCAA on holding the Atlantic 10 accountable for their actions. We look forward to replacing an A10 conference tournament champ with a really good 13-17 Vanderbilt team next season.”

Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti wasted no time commenting on the situation via a zoom call with A10 Talk. “We have been waiting for Commissioner Baker to do something about that damn league for a long time,” Petitti said while popping off a bottle of champagne. “It’s about time the NCAA started to bully the bullies like the A10 and reward the little guys like the Big Ten, ACC, SEC, and the Big 12.” Sankey was also seen on this zoom call with a glass of champagne in the background as well.

When asked if they were going to appeal the sanctions from the NCAA, the A10 responded with, “Whatever power you think the NCAA has….we have less.”

As a result, the A10 is mulling different solutions for its conference tournament champion for 2025. We have been told by the league office that solutions include the champion being given an auto bid into the NIT, CBI or CIT (with programs still having to pay their own way into those tournaments), or each player and coach on the winning team’s roster be given a $25 gift card to Ruby Tuesday.

A10 Associate to the Commissioner Bernie McBoyd spoke to the possible solutions, saying “We are talking to other tournaments to see if our tournament champion can join them if they don’t get an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament, so for right now, the front runner is definitely the Ruby Tuesday gift cards. We have a long standing relationship with Ruby Tuesday, where we conduct the conference schedules and count the paper ballots mailed in for the post season awards. Their establishments are well equipped to handle any team in the A10.”

Several A10 programs have responded differently to the news.

The A10 office has told us that, “Because of this news, UMass is actively working with the MAC to join in Winter 2024, ahead of their July 1st agreement. Dayton and VCU have both been contacted by the Big East, as the conference has expressed their sympathies and has reengaged in expansion talks with both A10 programs out of respect.”

Even some of the A10 coaches are handling the news differently. According to sources, after hearing this news Frank Martin flew directly to the NCAA offices in Indianapolis and waited in the parking lot preparing to bare knuckle box Charlie Baker.

Stay tuned in the coming weeks as we update you more with this story as we gain more information.

 

Photo credit:  Hunter Hensel, A10 Talk

https://www.a10talk.com/2024/04/breaking-ncaa-strips-the-a10-of-its-2025-automatic-bid-amid-multiple-violations/

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2024-03-24

Dayton finished their season on Saturday with a loss to Arizona in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. For the standards of the Dayton basketball program, making the round of 32 was an accomplishment and brought back the momentum that was lost from the 2020 season incompletion and missing the NCAA tournament from 2021-2023.

While the program now has made its way back into the national spotlight during the 2024 season, Dayton has some questions as it heads into the offseason.

Let’s take a look:

 

1. What is the future of DaRon Holmes II?

There’s no doubt that DaRon Holmes II was one of the best players in the country this season. He made a name for himself throughout the season and again in the NCAA Tournament, scoring 18 points and 9 rebounds in the win over Nevada, and following it up with an impressive 23 points and 11 rebounds in the loss to Arizona.

Holmes still has one year left of eligibility, but anyone who follows college basketball closely knows that players like Holmes usually will go to the NBA Draft as soon as possible. However, Holmes could have declared for the draft after the 2023 season, but he chose to come back to college and improve his game and his draft stock. He could have transferred to a bigger program and taken a giant pay increase from a big school NIL collective (rumors of Duke throwing him a giant deal to come play for the Blue Devils surfaced), but Holmes chose to stay at Dayton.

What we do know is that while Holmes can live his dream as being drafted to a team in the NBA, we have no idea where that draft pick would be. Is he a top 15 pick or a late first rounder? Is he an early second rounder? Or does he follow former teammate Toumani Camara and be taken late in the second round, betting on himself to make an NBA roster anyway. Camara is already a starter for the Portland Trail Blazers, even as a second round pick last summer. Betting on yourself is not a bad plan either.

Now, what are the reasons for DaRon to stay at Dayton? Well, if he feels that where he is drafted does not matter and the compensation from endorsements and the Dayton NIL collective is good enough, the same, or better than the rookie compensation where he would be possibly drafted, then he could elect to stay for his final year at Dayton. Another reason he could stay is that he and his family’s relationship with Anthony Grant is very strong by all accounts. His family has stated that loyalty is very important to them, and the relationship between Holmes and Grant could be something that trumps any NBA compensation or NBA dreams at the moment. Holmes could really value finishing his college degree from Dayton and living out his final year as a Flyer. Every player is different, and you just don’t know what is going on with that certain player. Most believe that he will declare for the NBA draft, but you just never know.

We should know in the coming days what Holmes’ final decision will be.

 

2. What about the futures of anyone else?

Koby Brea made a huge name for himself along with DaRon Holmes. Brea was the top three-point shooter in the country this season, shooting 100-201 from three on the season. That is wildly impressive from the junior. He was also the ultimate team player, being that good and also accepting his role as the 6th man on this team. Dayton doesn’t get as far as it does without Brea’s role and efforts this season.

What happens with him? Well, he has already stated in an interview that there is a “high possibility” that he returns for his senior season. Good news for Flyer fans. The bad news is that his skill set as a sniper three point shooter in the age of analytics is one of the top skills that teams and scouts look for. There have already been rumblings of teams wanting to throw a big NIL deal to him to come play for them. That could very well happen, but a few things fans need to keep in mind: (1) Brea has to be in the transfer portal before teams can make offers, (2) Dayton can offer big money from their NIL and endorsements from businesses in the area as well (more on that in a moment), and (3) He has a role on this team and a great relationship with Anthony Grant, who recruited him out of high school. People often downplay the importance of coach/player relationships, which is important to some players and what makes Anthony Grant a good coach. We should see soon what Brea elects to do.

As for other players, we already know that Kobe Elvis elected to go through with senior night, but he still has a year of eligibility left. Does he elect to turn pro and go overseas, enter the transfer portal, or come back for one more season?

We know that one player has already entered the transfer portal, and that is Zimi Nwokeji. According to Anthony Grant, Zimi was suspended from team activities near the end of the season and later left the team to enter the transfer portal before the NCAA Tournament. This results in one scholarship being open right now.

What about the two redshirt freshmen? Jaiun Simon and Marvel Allen were highly touted freshman signings last offseason, but they both redshirted this season. We have seen Grant do this in the past, notably with Obi Toppin (look how that turned out), but that was before the NIL era and the boom of the transfer portal era. Many Flyer fans were confused and concerned that Simon and Allen would transfer due to being redshirted, but both are still with the team and stayed on the team throughout the entire season. It feels like if they did not buy into that plan, they would have left already, but they did not. Hopefully we can look forward to Simon and Allen playing in a Flyer uniform next season.

Finally, not mentioning any other player would not be accurate. Any one of these players this season could have plans to leave for a better opportunity, whether it be for more playing time, more NIL compensation, or just a change of scenery. Anything could happen and it should not be surprising to anyone if multiple players decide to leave. It is the age of the player’s preference, and fans should expect the unexpected.

 

3. What is the situation with the Dayton NIL collective?

It was reported this season that Dayton’s roster has a $1 million compensation total among the roster, with DaRon Holmes understandably getting the most at around $650,000, but that does leave other players with a good chunk of change as well. Being the only big name team in the city of Dayton has its dividends too, with many players getting advertisement and endorsement deals from car dealerships, restaurants, and other businesses. There is no real competition from the Dayton Dragons (the Cincinnati Reds single-A baseball team) or even from Wright State basketball. Dayton is the only hot ticket in town, and players have really taken advantage of gaining compensation from businesses in Dayton and the surrounding area.

While other programs can offer big money, Dayton can as well. Dayton operates as a bigger program than most outsiders would think, being a team in the Atlantic 10. The NIL collective is getting stronger, especially with the team being in the AP Top 25 for the majority of the season and earning an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament, and even more-so now with the win in the first round over Nevada. When the team performs well, the wallets open up. Don’t be shocked if the Dayton collective can match an offer from some of these Power 6 schools.

With the landscape of NIL in college athletics changing all the time, the rules for how programs and collectives can operate together have changed. Programs can now talk directly with players on potential compensation amounts. This was not the case before. Players are starting to have “NIL agents” and are pinning programs against each other. This will be the first offseason where we will see the effects of this new rule. It will be interesting to see how Dayton is affected.

 

4. What does the non-conference schedule look like for next season?

A tough, quality non-conference schedule and winning enough quality games in said schedule is one of the biggest reasons Dayton got an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament. However, Dayton will have many holes to fill this offseason in the schedule.

We already know that Dayton will be one of the eight teams in the Maui Invitational, which is the marquee event for in-season tournaments on ESPN. Dayton will get three really good opponents at that event. Maybe a free trip to Maui is enticing to keep Holmes for one final year? (joking).

The good non-conference games we know for certain is that Northwestern will be making a return trip to UD Arena next season, and hopefully the UNLV game that was canceled this season will most likely be made up next season at UD Arena.

The bad news is the SMU series ended with the game this year in Dallas and the neutral site game against Cincinnati was a one-time deal. There are no good true road games scheduled so far for next season.

Dayton is going to really have to dig deep to schedule some more quality non-conference opponents in order to get back to the tournament next season. The worry is that as a mid-major, Dayton will not get any quality teams to play outside of Maui due to Power 6 conferences not wanting to give Dayton an advantage over their conference’s teams in receiving an at-large bid to the dance. Hopefully that is not the case.

Here are some small questions to put in the back of your mind as well:

 

1. What about the future of Anthony Grant?

Last offseason, it was reported in circles that Anthony Grant was mulling retirement. Later on, those rumors were put to rest when it was reported that Grant wants to come back to Dayton to try and get his alma mater back to the NCAA Tournament. It was clearly the overall goal of the team this year to get to the NCAA Tournament and win. Mission accomplished. Now that has happened, does Grant ride off into the sunset? 

My instinct is no, but with retirement rumors last offseason, you just never know, especially with how close to the chest Grant keeps his personal life. My thought is because of the season he just had and with the players he potentially has coming back to Dayton, he would want to come back too. He has a great job, he is safe, and he got many of the fans back on his side for the job he did this season.

 

2. What about conference realignment?

I mentioned earlier how Dayton operates like a bigger program than most outside fans would think, especially for being a school in the Atlantic 10. Dayton is longing for a spot in another conference, and their top choice is the Big East. Dayton has the profile of a Big East basketball program being a private, catholic, and basketball-centric school. Dayton also has the facilities and budget of a Big East program. Dayton has also shown success against Big East teams with a record of 3-1 against their teams since the new Big East began in 2014 with wins over Providence, Butler, and St. John’s, putting the hypothetical to rest that Dayton would not compete well in the Big East. Their success this season could also be enough good exposure to convince the Big East that Dayton would be a good addition.

However, Dayton’s location of not being in a major populated city as well as being close to the Xavier media market in Cincinnati is not an attractive proposition for the Big East. Along with that, this season and the 2020 season being the only recent successful seasons for Dayton makes them a questionable addition to the third best conference in the country. Finally, the Big East has stated that they like having 11 teams for their balanced, round robin schedule, and they feel that there are no other teams that they would want right now other than Gonzaga.

The reason I bring this up is because the Big East and FOX have been in negotiations for a new media deal since this past winter. The current media deal with FOX ends in 2025, which is why the two parties are having conversations one year out from the expiration date. The landscape of college athletics has drastically changed over the last 12 months. Mega conferences are forming in the Big Ten, SEC, ACC, and Big 12, guided by college football, but those conferences have dominated in terms of getting multiple teams into the NCAA Tournament. The Big East was notably left with a disappointing three teams in this year’s NCAA Tournament, although they were all top three seeds, including the number one overall seed in Connecticut. For a conference like the Big East, that is not good enough. Could the Big East see this as a clue to start adding more teams in order to get more bids, opening the door for a team like Dayton to enter the conference? Could FOX see how conferences like the Big Ten, SEC, ACC, and Big 12 are adding teams and the Big East needs to follow suit? Media and exposure are the factors that matter the most, and these networks will do whatever it takes to maximize profits.

Things change quickly in college athletics. This summer could see a big shift yet again in conference realignment. Dayton is obviously looking to get out of the Atlantic 10 as soon as possible. Could the new media deal and the lack of bids for the Big East finally be Dayton’s ticket in?

 

This will be yet another interesting offseason for the Dayton Flyers. With college basketball drastically changing, fans should once again expect the unexpected. Anything could happen.

 

https://www.a10talk.com/2024/03/questions-for-dayton-in-the-offseason/

#A10 #A10 #A10Basketball #A10Talk #A10Tournament #AnthonyGrant #Atlantic10 #Atlantic10Basketball #BigEast #compensation #connecticut #daronHolmes #daronHolmesIi #Dayton #DaytonFlyers #daytonOffseason #featured #fox #kobeElvis #kobyBrea #NCAATournament #NIL #NILCollective #questionsAboutDayton #transferPortal #Transfers #zimiNwokeji

2024-03-17

(Photo courtesy of Hunter Hensel)

BROOKLYN, NY – One of the first questions that senior guard Jimmy Clark III was asked after No. 6 seed Duquesne beat No. 7 St. Bonaventure in the Atlantic 10 Tournament semifinals was if he had any extra motivation facing VCU in the finals with an A-10 title and trip to the NCAA Tournament on the line. 

“Man, I couldn’t,” said Clark. “Can’t make this up, man.” 

Duquesne head coach Keith Dambrot chimed in. 

“I forgot about that,” said Dambrot. 

Senior guard Dae Dae Grant, with a stone-cold expression on his face, responded to what his coach said. 

“I didn’t,” said Grant. “I know I didn’t.” 

Clark spent the first two seasons of his collegiate career at VCU before being dismissed due to undisclosed reasons in the middle of his sophomore season.

Before his departure from the program was officially announced, former VCU head coach Mike Rhoades said that Clark was serving a “university suspension.” 

Prior do being dismissed, Clark was averaging just 5.8 points, 1.4 rebounds, 1.8 assists and 1.8 steals in 16.1 minutes per game as VCU’s third string point guard behind two A-10 Player of the Years, current Los Angeles Clipper Nah’Shon “Bones” Hyland and Penn State Nittany Lion Ace Baldwin. 

This season for Duquesne, Clark has averaged 15.3 points, 3.4 rebounds, 3.9 assists, 2.3 steals and shot 49.6% from the field and 34.2% from three in 30.9 minutes per game. Clark was also named to the All-Conference second team and All-Defensive team. Clark made the All-Defensive team last season as well.

Later in the press conference, Dambrot provided some more context about the history between Clark and VCU, and why he was such a good fit for his program. 

“When we recruited Jimmy [Clark], one of the reasons we hit it off so much is we were both looking for redemption. I had an issue in my career and Jimmy had an issue in his career.” said Dambrot. “And you have choices at that point. Either you keep fighting or you put the white flag up. And I think for Jimmy, the whole thing is a whole redemption thing.”

Dambrot continued, “That’s why he came back into the Atlantic-10, because he wanted to show people, one, that he was a good player. But most importantly, that he’s a good person… We have to understand young people at times make some mistakes. And old people do, too — me included. So I think that’s kind of why we hit it off so well.”

Dambrot is likely referring to an incident in 1993 when he was the head coach at Central Michigan where he asked his players permission to use a racial slur. They said it was OK, but Dambrot was suspended once the administration found out. Dambrot was officially fired soon after despite his players continuing to defend him.

After being dismissed from VCU in 2021, Clark did not have the opportunity to play Division I basketball the next season. Instead, he transferred to Northwest Florida State, where he helped them win a national title at the junior college level. 

Then, Clark made the decision to return to the A-10 with Duquesne where he would have the chance to play VCU every season. 

Dambrot and Clark spoke to Pittsburgh Sports Now’s Zachary Weiss after Duquesne beat VCU 79-70 last season on Jan. 4 at the UPMC Cooper Fieldhouse in Clark’s first matchup against his former team. 

“When people go through some things in their life, that redemption factor is a big thing and that’s one of the reasons he came to Duquesne,” said Dambrot. “He wanted to play in the Atlantic 10 again.”

“Coming from VCU and having that chip on my shoulder, having to go to JUCO and then coming back to the same conference and be able to play my old team, All I can say is thank God,” said Clark.

That game, Clark scored what is still a career high 26 points, hauled in six rebounds and collected a then-career high five steals. 

Clark is 2-0 against VCU in his two-year Duquesne career, also picking up a 69-59 win earlier this month on March 5. Clark was more of a facilitator that game, only scoring nine points but dishing out a team-high four assists. It is important to note that VCU’s All-Conference first team guard Max Shulga did not play in that game. 

Even with Duquesne’s first NCAA Tournament appearance since 1977 on the line, it’s clear that because he’s playing VCU, the stakes are higher for Clark.

“I think he’ll play like it’s the last game he ever played tomorrow,” said Dambrot.

https://www.a10talk.com/2024/03/jimmy-clark-iii-faces-former-team-in-a-10-tournament-final/

#A10Tournament #DaeDaeGrant #Dukes #Duquesne #DuquesneDukes #featured #JimmyClarkIII #KeithDambrot #Rams #VCU #VCURams

2024-03-16

(Photo courtesy of Hunter Hensel)

BROOKLYN, NY – Upsets have dominated the headlines so far during the Atlantic 10 Tournament, with the top four seeds, who had all earned double-byes, losing in the quarterfinal for the first time since 2006.

But, the biggest underdog this week in Brooklyn may be Noel Brown, St. Bonaventure’s redshirt junior backup center who has stepped up and been the catalyst in their run to the semifinal. 

Brown is in his first season at St. Bonaventure after transferring from intra-conference rival George Washington, and has primarily played in a low-usage reserve role, backing up All-Conference second teamer Chad Venning. During the regular season, Brown averaged a career high 5.9 points and 2.1 rebounds over 13.6 minutes per game.

After Brown’s second season at GW, Jamion Christian, the head coach who recruited him, was fired. Chris Caputo, GW’s current head coach, replaced him, and inherited a roster of players meant for a different system. Caputo prefers to play a smaller, quicker and more defensively versatility lineup, which did not put the 6-11, 265 Brown in a position to succeed.

“It was kind of a thing where I felt like the direction that the team was heading, not that it was bad or anything, just something where the focus wasn’t trying to get me to a certain level of play and I just wanted to give myself a shot,” said Brown. “Even if it worked out or didn’t work out, I wanted to give myself the best opportunity, the best shot and see what it looks like in a year.” 

Brown continued, “St. Bonaventure, they just promised to work me out. They didn’t make a bunch of core promises, none of that extra stuff. They were just like, ‘There’s a real opportunity for you, we can work you out if you do these things, you’ll be in good shape.’”

The first time Brown really became aware of St. Bonaventure was during his first season of college basketball in 2020-21. In the final game of the regular season, GW trekked up to Olean, and lost 41-88. Brown played 14 minutes and had four points and two rebounds. 

“They beat us by like 50. It was nuts,” said Brown. “After that, I kind of had an imprint of the Bonnies.”

Brown also had someone in his ear who knew what it was like to play, and win, at St. Bonaventure. His teammate for two seasons at GW, Brendan Adams, is the brother of St. Bonaventure legend Jaylen Adams. The former A-10 co-Player of the Year who helped upset UCLA in the NCAA Tournament spoke about the success he had and the culture at St. Bonaventure, and helped convince Brown to give them a shot.

Head coach Mark Schmidt also seemed like the perfect person to help Brown blossom. Venning, at 6-10 255 plays a similar bruising, physical post-centric basketball, and was able to transform his game when he transferred to St. Bonaventure. In his first two seasons of college basketball at Morgan State, he was effective in limited minutes, but struggled to get any real opportunity, only starting 11 games his sophomore season and averaging just 13.8 minutes per game. Schmidt was able to help develop Venning into one of the top centers in the conference. This season, he averaged 14.0 points per game, 5.0 rebounds and 1.7 blocks while shooting 53.7% from the field.

“I think we made a living on individual instruction programs, skill development. We didn’t want [Brown] to just be a rebounder or a physical guy. We wanted him to have skills,” said Schmidt. “I thought he’s really worked on his jump hooks with his right and left hand. And he’s going to be a guy that’s going to come off the bench and spell Chad [Venning]. But we wanted him to be a productive player.”

“My footwork, my moves, they were like, ‘it’s good, you have a good base, but your footwork can be so much better.’ They started drilling that over and over again,” said Brown. “Offensively, they’ve just gotten me to progress to see more reads, make plays, not necessarily when I’m scoring but trying to get other people open and run the offense.” 

While Brown still was coming off the bench and playing a limited role, he was having by far the most efficient and productive season of his career and looked like a completely different player. He shot 72.5% from the field, up from an already respectable 58.1% that he shot in his junior season at GW. Brown was also showing off a far more advanced offensive skill set, proof that the plan that Schmidt pitched to Brown in the offseason and the work that they both put in was working. 

Despite his clear improvement, Brown still rarely closed games, and mostly acted as someone who could step in and play a style of basketball similar to Venning so St. Bonaventure wouldn’t need to alter their schemes in a major way when Venning sat. 

In his reserve role, Brown was able to earn the trust of his coaches and teammates. When Venning began to struggle when things mattered most, Brown was there.

In St. Bonaventure’s first game of the tournament as the No. 7 seed, a second-round matchup against No. 10 La Salle, Brown was subbed in for the second time at the 10:58 mark for Venning, and took over. He quickly scored five points, extending St. Bonaventure’s lead to nine. 

After checking out for about two minutes, Brown re-entered the game and immediately scored again. And, just as the first half clock was winding, Brown got the ball in down low and nailed a turnaround jumper at the high post off the glass for his ninth points of the half and to beat the buzzer, sending St. Bonaventure to the break with a 42-34 lead.

Well timed ⏰@nsbrown19 || #Unfurl pic.twitter.com/5w0VOzYuIw

— Bonnies Men's Basketball (@BonniesMBB) March 13, 2024

 

Brown only scored two more points in St. Bonaventure’s 75-73 win, but continued to be effective while he was on the court. He ended with a game-high +/- of +9, and played just one fewer minute than Venning, who had a team-low -6. 

Speaking after the win over La Salle, Brown addressed on his development this season. 

“Honestly, I just have to say — I keep saying “my guys,” but honestly, it is my guys and the coaches, the amount of people that have poured into me here,” said Brown. “They made me feel like I could turn around and see a whole family behind me, even though I’m not at home. These guys really stepped up. I think it’s just consistency, too.”

Up next for the Bonnies was a matchup with No. 2 and co-regular season champion Loyola Chicago. Once again, Venning struggled, paving the way for Brown, who had established that he was a more-than-capable option. 

Brown’s biggest impact came late in the second half. St. Bonaventure was down 47-58 with 6:02 left in regulation. As the Bonnies were trying to mount a furious late comeback, Brown subbed in at the 3:07 mark and was an immediate game-changer. 

At the 1:06 mark down 55-58, Brown was able to corral a no-look pass from redshirt senior guard Daryl Banks III, draw a foul and get the contested layup to go. 

NOAH BROWN AND ONE TIE GAME 😱 WHAT A PASS FROM BANKS

58-58, 39.6 left. USA NETWORK NOW pic.twitter.com/ihfgnHdJkb

— A10 Talk (@A10Talk) March 14, 2024

A10Talk apologizes for getting Noel’s name wrong in the heat of the moment. Live tweeting highlights isn’t easy. 

Brown then got the free throw to fall, converting the and-one and tying the game.

In overtime, Brown continued to see the court and contribute on both ends. He ended up fouling out in the second overtime period, but his timely free throw shooting, rebounding and interior defense while he was in was key for the Bonnies holding off Loyola.

Just like against Saint Bonaventure, Brown had a game-high +/- at +9, and Venning had a game-low -20.

“We were able to give [Brown] the ball inside. Loyola was pressuring us on the perimeter. From a coach’s perspective, or an X’s and O’s perspective, you want to relieve pressure by throwing the ball inside,” said Schmidt. “And Chad [Venning] struggled a little bit yesterday. And Noel was scoring inside and played good defense.”

Schmidt continued, “I just thought that his physicality and the skill around the basket was really good for us.”

Brown spoke about what’s led to him being able to step up when his team needed him most. 

“I think first and foremost, definitely my faith in God. Every night before I go to sleep, and whenever I’m feeling panicked, I just open my Bible and read through some scriptures. It always calms me down,” said Brown. “And the next thing obviously, my family and the team. I’m thankful for this opportunity and what’s happening, but it’s not necessarily just me out there, you know what I’m saying? I’m representing everyone who pours into me.” 

It’s become clear that those within the St. Bonaventure program aren’t surprised by Brown’s dominant conference tournament performance.

“It’s been that way all year. We wouldn’t have the record that we have without Noel’s presence. Chad [Venning] can only play 20 minutes a game. Noel has been a godsend,” said Schmidt. “You hear him speak, he’s articulate, he’s smart. He’s just–he’s been everything. He’s the best backup five-man that we’ve had since I’ve been here. 

Schmidt continued, “We wouldn’t have just won the last two games, but we wouldn’t have won a lot of games this year without his productivity.” 

“Right now, yes, it’s me for the past two games. Next game it could be anyone,” said Brown. “I’m grateful right now. God is using me, giving me this platform. I think honestly, I’m just blessed right now.” 

With the way things are looking, it’ll be tough for Schmidt to shy away from playing Brown. But, Brown only played about five minutes and was held scoreless in each of their two losses to semifinal opponent No. 6 Duquesne in the regular season. 

“I just try and do my best and stay focused and support the team however I can,” said Brown. “I know it’s not always going to look like scoring, it’ll be passing, setting good screens, being physical, but these guys are important to me.” 

St. Bonaventure likely would have been bounced in the second round against La Salle without Brown’s first half scoring. If they were able to advance, there’s no chance they would have come back against Loyola Chicago without Brown’s game-tying and-one and stifling interior defense that helped hold the Ramblers scoreless for the final 6:02 of regulation and the first 2:18 of the first overtime period.

Whether or not Brown continues playing such a critical role going forward, these past two games have been special. Brown is someone who was just waiting for his moment. 

He was cast off of a GW team that finished last in the A-10 this season. Then, he tirelessly worked on his craft while backing up an All-Conference player. Now playing the most important minutes of St. Bonaventure’s season, Brown has showed just what type of player he was, and always could be.

https://www.a10talk.com/2024/03/a-godsend-noel-brown-keeps-stepping-up-in-the-a-10-tournament-for-st-bonaventure/

#A10Tournament #Bonnies #ChadVenning #featured #GeorgeWashington #MarkSchmidt #NoelBrown #Revolutionaries #StBonaventure

2024-03-15

(Photo courtesy of Hunter Hensel)

BROOKLYN, NY – No. 9 seed Saint Joseph’s was able to pull off the upset of the tournament so far, erasing a 10-point second half deficit and beating No. 1 Richmond 66-61.

The Hawks are the lowest seed to advance to the semifinals since 2017, when No. 9 Davidson lost to eventual conference champion No. 4 Rhode Island. They’ll play No. 5 VCU in the semifinals at 1:00 pm on Saturday, where they’ll look to become the lowest seed to advance to the finals since No. 9 Dayton lost the championship to No. 3 Richmond in 2011 and could become the lowest seed to win the conference tournament since No. 10 Xavier in 2006.

Earlier in the season, Saint Joseph’s showed that when things are clicking, they’re not only able to play with the best in the A-10, but the best in the country.

They arguably had the best single-game performance of any A-10 team this season when the took then-No. 17 Kentucky to overtime at Rupp Arena. Later in non-conference play, Saint Joseph’s won the Big 5 Classic, beating then-No. 18 Villanova 78-65 on the road to begin the tournament and then taking down Temple 74-65 at the Wells Fargo Center in the title game. The Hawks also beat likely-Ivy League champ Princeton 74-70 at home.

Despite these impressive non-conference wins, there were also some very low moments. They lost 57-54 at home to Texas A&M Commerce, who is currently ranked 333 in the NET and lost in the second round of the Southland Tournament. During A-10 play, they lost to first-round participants Saint Louis and Rhode Island.

It’s clear that through their first two games of the A-10 Tournament, Saint Joseph’s is looking like the team that took Kentucky to the wire and beat Villanova.

Junior guard Erik Reynolds II is one of the biggest reasons why Saint Joseph’s was able to take down top seeded and co-regular season champion Richmond.

Reynolds had an excellent regular season, averaging 16.6 points per

Despite Reynolds dealing with a right elbow injury after hitting the court hard at the end of their second-round matchup against George Mason and his availability being “uncertain” until game time, he had one of the best games of his career.

“I took a pretty hard fall yesterday, but the resources we have, I’m extremely thankful and blessed,” said Reynolds. “They got me ready for the game, so pretty thankful for that.”

He had 30 points, three rebounds and two steals while shooting 11-19 from the field, 3-8 from three and a perfect 5-5 from the free throw line. For long stretches during the game, the Hawks’ offense ran almost entirely through Reynolds.

“It felt great, all my confidence that I have making those kinds of plays comes from my teammates,” said Reynolds. “They believe in me and they believe in every shot that I take.”

Perhaps most impressively from Reynolds, he was able to play 38 minutes of elite-level basketball despite injuring his right elbow yesterday and picking up multiple other knocks during the game. At different points, he appeared to roll his ankle, get hit in the head and re-aggravate his elbow injury, yet he continued to fearlessly draw contact at the rim and play aggressively.

On the defensive end, head coach Billy Lange’s approach to defending graduate center Neal Quinn was the driving force behind them limiting Richmond to just 61 points, their lowest since they beat Loyola Chicago 58-56 on Jan. 9 and second-lowest all season.

Quinn, who made All-Conference second team, averaged 12.4 points per game, 5.5 rebounds and 3.9 assists as the lynchpin of Richmond’s signature Princeton offense. Quinn often operates outside the paint as Richmond’s primary facilitator, whipping passes down low and hitting his teammates on backdoor cuts near the basket.

Even though Quinn isn’t often asked to put the ball in the basket and be the main source of scoring, that doesn’t mean he isn’t a capable shot-maker. Lange decided that he was comfortable giving Quinn more of an opportunity to score, instead focusing his defense on eliminating his passing lanes.

Quinn ended up scoring 21 points, two shy of his season high and three shy of his career high. He was also hyper-efficient from the field, converting 10-13 shots from the field and making a rare three pointer, only his fifth of the season. But, Richmond’s offense was noticeably off.

After the game, Lange was asked about his defensive strategy against Quinn.

“That dude is ridiculous. Let me tell you something, he’s like the A-10 version of [Nikola] Jokic,” said Lange. “You’re picking your poison.”

Lange continued, “They put so much pressure on you with their cutting. They’re an elite three-point shooting team that is very selective. They don’t take a lot of bad ones. And so you have to be willing to get on a bus and go home and know why you won and why you lost. So we were trying to do both best, but the main thing was the pass.”

Richmond excels at holding on to the ball and preventing turnovers. The Spiders only average 8.7 turnovers per game, and are second in the country (behind Princeton, funnily enough) in turnover percentage at 12.8%. This game was no exception, as they only gave the ball up eight times, just under their season average.

Even though Saint Joseph’s wasn’t able to force turnovers at a high rate, they were able to dominate the glass, out-rebounding Richmond 40-29 only surrendering up five offensive rebounds and five second-chance points.

Perhaps the most important way the Hawks have been able to succeed not just against Richmond, but also against George Mason in their second round matchup, has been their ability to execute in the final minutes with the game on the line.

Saint Joseph’s was within one possession of their opponent in the final 10 seconds in both of their A-10 Tournament games.

They’ve been able to convert in-bound plays, advance the ball and make free throws when they matter most.

“We’ve played in a lot of close games, and when you walk that fine line, you live and die sometimes with the decision,” said Lange. “And Erik [Reynolds] has been in a lot of close games, and Cam [Brown], since they’ve been here. A few years ago, Erik’s freshman year, we won 11 games. I think the month of February, maybe four or five of them in a row that we lost came down to the end. So they’re experienced in that setting.”

Lange continued, “Justin Scott, our associate head coach, his preparation in these special teams situation areas–we have a saying, it doesn’t matter until it matters. So it better matter before it matters. His film studies witht he guys, the way he’s just focused at the end of practice, the stuff that he does to get them prepared, he really deserves a lot of the credit, in addition to the guys.”

The high-level execution was exemplified in the final moments against Richmond. Up just three points with 12 seconds left, Lange ran a play made famous by Kansas State head coach Jerome Tang last March. Called “Mahomes” by Tang after Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, while inbounding from the baseline, the inbounder acts as the “quarterback” and the four other players line up on the baseline as if it’s the line of scrimmage. When the whistle blows, they act as if they are wide receivers running routes to get open.

It worked, and with Richmond defenders swarming the ball, Lange and the Hawks on the floor elected to concede the jump ball instead of using his final timeout in that situation knowing that the possession arrow favored them.

Moments like that are what win you games.

Saint Joseph’s narrowly lost 69-73 on the road on Feb. 25 to their semifinal opponent, VCU. If they continue to play the way they did against Richmond, there’s no reason why the Hawks can’t pull off another upset and advance to the finals on Sunday.

https://www.a10talk.com/2024/03/how-no-9-seed-saint-josephs-was-able-to-stun-no-1-richmond/

#A10 #A10 #A10Basketball #A10Talk #A10Tournament #Atlantic10 #Atlantic10Basketball #BillyLange #ErikReynolds #featured #hawks #NealQuinn #Richmond #RichmondSpiders #saintJosephS #saintJosephSHawks #Spiders #tournament

2024-03-13

(Photo courtesy of Hunter Hensel)

BROOKLYN, NY – Despite exceeding expectations by almost every metric in head coach Tony Skinn’s first season, beating then-No. 16 Dayton at home and earning a very respectable No. 8 seed in the Atlantic 10 Tournament, a different storyline hijacked the end of George Mason’s season. 

Instead of celebrating the successful start of a new era of George Mason basketball, the circumstances surrounding sophomore forward Keyshawn Hall’s ankle injury dominated headlines. The All-Conference second teamer missed the final three games of the season, and despite Skinn confirming that he was available for their second round tournament game against No. 9 seed Saint Joseph’s, Hall only played for four minutes in the first half. 

In those four minutes, Hall went 0-3 from the field. Skinn never looked Hall’s way for the rest of the game, even when George Mason was attempting a furious second half comeback, coming back from being down by as many as 18 points to make it a three point game with 1:25 left in the game with a chance to tie. 

“[Hall] did practice a couple of days in a row. But this time of the year, we’re not really going that hard. So he’s been dealing with that, and we were going to use him as fit today,” said Skinn. “Obviously, for the most part, it was a rhythm game. I thought that Woody Newton has been playing exceptionally well the last couple of games, so I didn’t want to throw that off. I just thought that tonight, when he was in, he didn’t do anything wrong. But just from a rhythm standpoint, it just wasn’t there.” 

Skinn then confirmed that Hall did not re-aggravate his ankle injury during his four minutes on the court and that he was available to return after he was benched for good with 9:38 left in the first half.

George Mason ended up losing 57-64 to Saint Joseph’s, failing to advance to the quarterfinals of the A-10 Tournament. 

A George Mason spokesperson said that Hall was unavailable for comment after their second round loss and that he had already made his way to the bus by the time the postgame press conference concluded. 

Hall led the A-10 in rebounding with 8.4 per game, was fourth in scoring with 17.2 points and shot 35.7% from three. 

The first game that Hall missed due to what Skinn described as a “tough ankle sprain” was on March 2 against Duquesne. The Dukes beat George Mason 59-51 at EagleBank Arena, and after the game, Skinn was asked about whether or not he could get some traction at that point in the season. Here’s what he had to say according to Patrick Stevens of the Washington Post:

Tony Skinn on whether Mason can get some traction at this point … pic.twitter.com/XuOttTxI3N

— Patrick Stevens (@D1scourse) March 2, 2024

“I hope so. I will be realistic, though. It’s March 2nd, and the nature of the beast is portal time is coming,” said Skinn. “When you’re dealing with that, you can humanly try to put together a locker room that still has to fight. We’re trying to stay away from playing on Tuesday [in the A-10 tournament.] But when you add that portal combination with NIL, it’s tough.”

Skinn continued, “when you start losing some bodies and you start throwing some of the other variables in there–I’m going to coach my ass off for the next two weeks, but it’s a variable that exists.” 

After that, speculation on Twitter and other parts of the online college basketball world began to circulate as to why Hall was really out. 

Check around, Jon. Hall has been poached and is sitting out, per his new NIL deal. The glories of “player empowerment”! Quitting on his school, teammates, coaches, and fans during the season. EXPOSE THIS STUFF! Be a journalist!

— Sausage Sassone (@SausageSassone) March 6, 2024

Rumors about Hall supposedly “quitting” on George Mason in order to stay healthy and save himself for the transfer portal became so pervasive that he released a statement on his own Twitter account claiming that he was still “locked in” with George Mason and that he was just focusing on returning to the A-10 Tournament. 

Anything anyone heard is not true still locked in with Mason💚💛 if you know me you know I never quit or just sat out of any game I always want to play! just getting treatment on my ankle so I can be Good for A10 tournament🙏🏽. https://t.co/502OoHDcgr

— xkeyy (@xkeyy2) March 6, 2024

Technically, Hall did return for the A-10 tournament. But, something felt off. If he was deemed healthy enough to play those four minutes in the first half, why wouldn’t Skinn have had a little more faith in his best scorer, especially when Mason just needed to get some points on the board down big in the second half?

Before finding his way to George Mason, Hall spent his freshman season at UNLV. Hall struggled with weight, weighing-in as high as 295 during his senior year of high school. He dropped down to 225 by the time he was able to get on the court at UNLV, but he struggled to get consistent minutes. 

Hall only played in 18 games for the Runnin’ Rebels, averaging 5.4 points per game, 1.6 rebounds and 0.4 assists in 10.7 minutes. 

Once the season was over, Hall entered the transfer portal, and found his way to George Mason. Skinn, who was forced to rebuild after former head coach Kim English took a job at Providence and brought former Patriots Josh Oduro, Ticket Gaines and Justyn Fernandez with him, had seen Hall play in the summer of 2021 in Ohio when he was an assistant coach at Ohio State. 

Hall committed to George Mason in April. 

Bet On YourSelf let’s Rock Mason Nation💚💛
Shock the world! @CoachTonySkinn @MasonMBB pic.twitter.com/EYDPlIbMgV

— xkeyy (@xkeyy2) April 22, 2023

At the time of Hall’s commitment, it was NCAA policy that in most circumstances, two-time transfers would have to sit out a season, meaning Hall would likely finish out his collegiate (or at least his undergraduate) career at George Mason. 

However, this past December, a federal judge ruled that student-athletes who were sitting out due to the two-time transfer regulations were immediately eligible to play. It is unclear whether or not student-athletes who transfer for a second time will be eligible for the 2024-25 season, but most in the industry are acting under the assumption that they will be. 

Skinn’s comments on March 2 confirmed that belief.

“I’m pretty sure they’re going to pass the two-time transfer,” said Skinn. “I got a little birdie that told me that.”

This upcoming offseason was further complicated after another federal ruling lessened the NCAA’s ability to regulate how student-athletes are able to earn deals off of their name, image and likeness (NIL). 

These two rulings would hypothetically give Hall the ability to transfer to a high-major school with a significantly larger NIL collective, capitalize on the lack of NIL regulations and be able to immediately play without sitting out a season despite having already transferred. 

George Washington head coach Chris Caputo spoke to A10Talk before the A-10 Tournament about Skinn’s comments on March 2nd and how the transfer and NIL rulings have impacted college basketball.

“With the way the goalposts moved in the middle of the season… the NCAA, the courts and the attorney generals have created a very destabilized environment in college basketball,” said Caputo. “The difficulty is when you get young people who don’t have a ton of life experience in an environment where they’re being told if something doesn’t go their way, they can always leave, and you add in the financial part to that, it’s going to probably cause some bad decisions, certainly going to cause some moments that take away from the group or even take away from that player’s development.”

Caputo continued, “If a guy in his mind is thinking, ‘I’m out of here in two weeks,’ because their people are talking to them, I can see there being frustration with that. You can’t control that if you’re a coach, that’s the environment that’s been created.”

The college basketball transfer portal officially opens on Monday, March 18. Based on Skinn’s comments and Hall being benched in George Mason’s second round A-10 tournament loss, it seems like an inevitability that Hall’s name will be one of the first to officially enter the portal. 

If that happens, expect a long list of elite programs with significant NIL opportunities to be in the running for Hall’s services.

Liam O’Murchu and Nick Perkins of WRGW Sports contributed to the reporting of this story. 

https://www.a10talk.com/2024/03/what-we-know-about-the-confusing-end-to-keyshawn-halls-season/

#A10Tournament #ChrisCaputo #featured #GeorgeMason #GeorgeMasonPatriots #KeyshawnHall #NIL #patriots #TonySkinn #transferPortal

2024-03-13

Recap of Season

The Saint Joseph’s Hawks finished the 2023-24 regular season with their best record in years. The Hawks were able to clinch a 19-12 overall record and 9-9 conference record, placing them 7th overall in the Atlantic 10. This is the first time in the Coach Billy Lange era that the team was above .500 and didn’t finish in the bottom quarter of the league. Which, yes you heard right, no more pillow fight for the Hawks! Feels weird not to see them play on a Tuesday! 

To say the season was full of ‘ups and downs’ would be an understatement. This team has had their highs and their lows. But, if you told fans at the start of the season that the Hawks would finish above .500 overall, and 7th in the conference, they would admit that there was  real improvement from last year. It’s always good to put this in context, especially for a team that has had some great flashes on the court. However, consistency was not their friend. 

With that said, Saint Joe’s has a chance to make waves in this conference tournament. Do I expect them to win the entire thing? Probably not. Would I be surprised if they go on a three game win streak and make waves, definitely not. However, it’s now win or go home. Let’s look take at the first matchup, George Mason. 

Keys to Success

This will be the second time this season that Saint Joe’s and George Mason face off. The last game was on January 31st and was hosted at Hagan arena. Saint Joe’s won that game 75-73 in what was a thrilling matchup, which helped to snap SJU’s home losing streak to the Patriots. 

George Mason’s Keyshawn Hall will be top of mind for Saint Joe’s. Hall leads the Atlantic 10 in defensive rebounds and total rebounds per game. For context, Hall averages around 8.4 rebounds per game. He is also the Patriots top sorcerer, leading with 17 points a game. In January’s game against Saint Joe’s he finished with 19 points and 8 rebounds.  

On the other end, Saint Joe’s will be looking to their big men to help guard the paint. Rasheer Fleming leads in the A10 in total offense rebounds, so look for him and Hall to battle for loose balls. Freshman Christ Essandoko and Junior Kacper Klaszek will also be key. Saint Joe’s is a strong team when they have three forwards who can rotate through the lineup. Especially if foul troubles come into play, which has been the case especially with Fleming. 

Of course, it would be foolish not to mention that the leaders of this team, the guards, are what will make or break Saint Joe’s. The scoring campaign starts and ends with Erik Reynolds II who was awarded first team all A10. Reynolds, Lynn Greer III and Xzayvier Brown (A10 rookie of the year btw) dictate the pace and style of play. Billy Lange needs at least two of those three to come out hot and help drive the offense. If that happens, the previously mentioned Forwards, and senior Cam Brown, will do their part to help close the game out. But, that can’t happen if the leading three aren’t at their best making the decisions when taking the ball down the court. 

Final Thoughts

Saint Joe’s has a tough matchup to start this tournament. George Mason will in no means be an easy team to beat. But, if you asked me to give a prediction, I have to say that I think Saint Joe’s will beat the Patriots and make a significant run in the tournament, like they did last year. I don’t think they will win the entire thing, but there is a world in which I see them beat Mason and Richmond. Would I put money on it? No. But, the pieces are there to get it done. 

As I said, guard play is going to be key. Inconsistency has plagued this team. But when those three guards are active and engaged they are impossible to beat. And that’s just if they are making the right plays on offense. At their best, they disrupt passing lanes and generate easy fast breaks. That’s when the team is dangerous, but that can only happen if those guys want to make it happen. Defense is a mind set, they need to hit the ground running and weather any storms of adversity. 

There are few starting fives as well rounded as this team. Saint Joe’s can be the team we saw beat Villanova and give Kentucky headaches. The question is, do they want to be that team this week?

Saint Joe’s v. Mason will tip off at 11:30 am EST and will air on USA Network.

https://www.a10talk.com/2024/03/saint-joes-atlantic-10-tournament-preview-can-they-catch-lightning-in-a-bottle/

#A10Tournament #feature #featured #GeorgeMason #SaintJoeS #SJU

2024-03-13

(Photo courtesy of Hunter Hensel)

BROOKLYN, NY – The first round of the Atlantic 10 Men’s Basketball Tournament, infamously (and affectionately) known as the “pillow fight,” featured three thrilling games between the bottom-six teams in the A-A-10, perfectly setting up what is expected to be an evenly-matched high-stakes week at the Barclays Center.

Game No. 1: No. 12 Fordham Rams vs. No. 13 Davidson Wildcats

The first game of the day was between No. 12 seed Fordham and No. 13 seed Davidson.

This game was a grind at the start. By the second media timeout, Davidson was winning by a score of just 7-5. The Wildcats had committed six turnovers at this point (ended the first half with 13, game with 20) and Fordham was shooting 2-15 from the field and 0-4 from three.

While the offenses picked up a little bit more to end the half, it was still a low scoring affair through 20 minutes, with Davidson leading Fordham 27-19 heading into the break, with freshman Bobby Durkin beating the halftime buzzer with a three to put an exclamation mark on Davidson’s start.

Connor's deflection, Hunter's grab, Bobby's bucket 🤩

Wildcats with a triple at the buzzer to pull ahead by nine going into the break!!! pic.twitter.com/g3UHTb3CCS

— Davidson Basketball (@DavidsonMBB) March 12, 2024

The second half was all Fordham. The Rams began to mount a furious comeback as regulation wound down, erasing a 13 point deficit with about three-and-a-half minutes left, tying the game on a basket by sophomore forward Joshua Rivera.

Then, in the final seconds of regulation, senior guard Kyle Rose, who was named to the All-Defensive team earlier in the day, got the ball, worked his way inside and fought through contact to tie the game at 61 and send the game to overtime.

KYLE ROSE‼️ TIE GAME 😱

HEADED TO OVERTIME IN BROOKLYN 🍿 pic.twitter.com/BRCuQsftCF

— Michael Bergman (@MLBergman_) March 12, 2024

Fordham dominated in overtime. The Rams outscored Davidson 10-2 in the extra period, led by five points from senior guard Antrell Charlton, win 71-63 and book a date with No. 5 VCU in the second round.

Sophomore guard Will Richardson took on a bulk of the scoring load off the bench for Fordham, scoring a team-high and season-high 20 points on 6-14 shooting from the field and 3-8 shooting from three.

“These guys know they’re capable of winning more games. Whoever we play, we’re going to give ourselves a chance if we continue to defend and rebound,” said Fordham head coach Keith Urgo. “When you get ini the tournament, it’s great to win one, But that’s not our goal… The mindset has changed from the top down, from the entire institution.”

Game No. 2: No. 10 La Salle Explorers vs. No. 15 George Washington Revolutionaries

Next up, No. 10 La Salle faced off against No. 15 George Washington.

After giving up the first two points of the game, GW led for the entire first half, going up by as much as nine. However, despite holding their lead, the Revolutionaries had a difficult time generating any real offense outside of the occasional free throw. In the first half, there was a 6:27 stretch where GW did not register a field goal, but was able to keep their lead due to a much-improved defensive effort.

GW went into halftime with a 30-23 lead of La Salle.

The second half was much more back and forth.

La Salle was able to tie the game with 11:35 left after back-to-back threes from senior guard Jhamir Brickus and sophomore center Rokas Jocius.

JIG IS ON A MISSION#Authenticity | #GoExplorers🔭 pic.twitter.com/Hy93LRnhFM

— La Salle Men’s Basketball (@LaSalle_MBB) March 12, 2024

TIE BALL GAME.#Authenticity | #GoExplorers🔭 pic.twitter.com/0CDmDwBWr5

— La Salle Men’s Basketball (@LaSalle_MBB) March 12, 2024

From that point on, GW and La Salle battled, keeping the score within two possessions the rest of the game.

Senior guard James Bishop put the GW offense on his back down the stretch, pulling up from deep and keeping the Revolutionaries in the game with his outside shooting.

JB with eight of our last 10. #RaiseHigh pic.twitter.com/L67wcS4LL9

— GW Men's Basketball (@GW_MBB) March 12, 2024

As the game entered its final possessions with the clock ticking down and La Salle down 60-61, Brickus got the ball in his hands and went to work. He backed down freshman guard Jacoi Hutchinson, turned around, sank the midrange jumper and drew the foul to give the Explorers the lead with 20 seconds left in regulation.

HIM.#Authenticity | #GoExplorers🔭 pic.twitter.com/x0NIqPjPBc

— La Salle Men’s Basketball (@LaSalle_MBB) March 12, 2024

Brickus was exceptional all day for the Explorers. He ended the day with a game-high 21 points, hauled in eight rebounds, and shot 9-16 from the field and 3-5 from three.

After Brickus missed his free throw, and GW gave the ball to Bishop and let him work. He missed his first attempt, a fadeaway midrange jumper, but with time still on the clock redshirt freshman forward Darren Buchanan Jr. was able to crash the offensive glass and kick the ball back out to Bishop for one last shot. Bishop heaved from three, but was unable to convert, ending his storied GW career and sending La Salle onto the second round for a matchup against No. 7 St. Bonaventure.

Heartbreak.

GW: 60, La Salle: 61 pic.twitter.com/IMmzgM9ocV

— David Korn (@david_korn4) March 12, 2024

“I wasn’t ready to go home,” said Brickus. “In that moment, I was just trying to do anything that I could do for my team to win.”

“We’ve got do have our act together and do a good job tonight of debriefing from today briefly, and then we’ve got to move on to St. Bonaventure,” said La Salle head coach Fran Dunphy. “I know how good they can be… It will be an absolute war and battle out there, and we need to do our very best.”

Game No. 3: No. 11 Rhode Island Rams vs. No. 14 Saint Louis Billikens

The final game of the day was between No. 11 Rhode Island and No. 14 Saint Louis.

The Billikens controlled the first half, with redshirt junior guard Gibson Jimerson and senior forward Terrance Hargrove Jr. both scoring 12 in the opening frame to help Saint Louis jump out to a 41-32 halftime lead.

Jimerson set the tone early by hitting back-to-back threes to open the game and Hargrove Jr. hit back-to-back threes to end the half to give Saint Louis momentum heading into the final 20 minutes.

TJ taking us into the half!#SLUBillikens x #TeamBlue pic.twitter.com/Ob5hxoDI3v

— Saint Louis Men's Basketball (@SaintLouisMBB) March 12, 2024

Rhode Island fought back in the second half to make it a game, and ensure that all three first round games would go down to the wire. They came out of the break firing, going on a 16-2 run through the first seven minutes, taking a 49-45 with David Green leading the charge, scoring nine points in the Rams’ run.

5-0 run for @dloading21_ 🔥#GoRhody // #AttitudeIsEverything pic.twitter.com/gEOJEmH4kY

— Rhody MBB (@RhodyMBB) March 12, 2024

After continuing to go back-and-forth, Saint Louis was able to get a 74-71 lead after Jimerson hit one of two free throws, giving Rhode Island one last chance. Green missed a three with a few seconds to spare, junior guard Jaden House grabbed the rebound, retreated back to the three point line, hoisted a last second heave that was just off to give the Billikens a narrow victory and ensure a matchup with No. 6 Duquesne.

“That’s all you’re trying to win, one game. and we won one game today,” said Saint Louis head coach Travis Ford. “Now we’ve got to try and figure out how to win just one more.” Just one more is all we want. And put everything you have into one more, everything we’ve got. We don’t have many guys out there, but the ones that are out there have got a lot of fight in them.”

Second Round Schedule:

The second round of the A-10 Tournament begins Wednesday morning at 11:30 am when No. 8 George Mason faces No. 9 Saint Joseph’s. Up next at 2:00 pm, No. 5 VCU plays No. 12 Fordham. Then, No. 7 St. Bonaventure plays No. 10 La Salle at 5:00 pm. To end the day, No. 6 Duquesne plays No. 14 Saint Louis.

Make sure to stay tuned for more coverage tomorrow and the rest of the week live from the Barclays Center in Brooklyn.

https://www.a10talk.com/2024/03/thrilling-first-round-kicks-off-2024-a-10-tournament/

#A10 #A10 #A10Basketball #A10Talk #A10Tournament #Atlantic10 #Atlantic10Basketball #Blog #Davidson #featured #Fordham #GeorgeWashington #LaSalle #PillowFight #RhodeIsland #SaintLouis

2024-03-13

In March, when the next loss means the end of the season for many programs across the country, much of the conversation is about building momentum entering the conference tournament.

The VCU Rams (19-12, 11-7 Atlantic 10) have not done that this season.

The Rams limp into Brooklyn on a three-game losing streak, dropping a narrow road loss to Richmond and a double-digit home loss to Duquesne before losing the final A-10 Friday ESPN showcase game in overtime to No. 25 Dayton in an overtime squeaker.

While the Rams led by as many as 17 points in the Friday night contest and played exceptional against a team many have tapped as the favorites in Brooklyn, the loss meant that VCU did not clinch the double-bye in the A-10 tournament and open their postseason on Wednesday afternoon as the No. 5 seed against No. 12 Fordham.

Before Wednesday afternoon’s Rams vs. Rams matchup, here are the things to know as VCU enters postseason play.

Mad Max

VCU senior guard Max Shulga was named to the Atlantic 10 All-Conference First Team on Tuesday, the only VCU player honored in this year’s roundup of A-10 awards.

The Utah State transfer had a banner year in 2023-24, notching career highs in points per game (15) and rebounds per game (4.6) on 44.3% shooting from the floor.

The Ukrainian played in 30 of VCU’s 31 games, missing just the home finale against Duquesne with back spasms.

On the season, Shulga led VCU in a variety of stats, including total minutes (992), points per game, made 3-pointers (76) and total assists (108).

As such, Shulga often stuffed the stat sheet across categories, perhaps most notably in a 13-point, 10-rebound, 7-assist performance against Fordham on Feb. 6 that gave Shulga his first double-double as a Ram and had him flirt with the first VCU triple-double in many years.

Ten days later, Shulga notched his season-high of 26 points in a road victory against Saint Louis, connecting on five 3-pointers and adding seven rebounds to a standout performance.

In sum, Shulga was VCU’s best, most consistent player in 2023-24, and the senior has been rewarded with one of the A-10’s highest honors.

Shulga’s award continues a mini streak for VCU. This year marks the fourth straight year that VCU has placed a player in the A-10 All-Conference First Team, with Shulga joining Bones Hyland (2021), Vince Williams (2022) and Ace Baldwin (2023) as recent honorees.

Additionally, former VCU guard Tre Clark III was named to the A-10 All-Conference Second Team following a standout year at Duquesne.

Injury report

VCU will make the journey to Brooklyn with no names on the injury report – a relative rarity for VCU this season.

Through 31 games, the quartet of Max Shulga, Sean Bairstow, Joe Bamisile and Zeb Jackson have all been active just 15 times, with Bamisile and Bairstow each missing the first 10 games of the season due to Bairstow’s foot fracture and Bamisile’s eligibility concerns.

As such, much of VCU’s potential remained unrealized for significant portions of the schedule, namely during the important non-conference slate when tournament resumes can be built.

The quartet are the only Rams averaging double figures on the season, with all shooting above 40% from the floor except Jackson, who is shooting 39.9% from the field.

Additional injury concerns surrounded redshirt freshman Fats Billups, who had to be helped off the floor late in the first half in last week’s loss to Duquesne. Billups was active in the Dayton game on Friday, playing four minutes in the overtime loss.

The best ability is availability, and VCU has weathered the storm and has all players ready for a potential four-games-in-five-days run in Brooklyn.

Key players

Beyond all-conference selection Shulga, VCU’s most significant players are the other double-digit scorers: Sean Bairstow, Zeb Jackson and Joe Bamisile.

Bairstow’s averages approach Shulga’s in minutes per game and his total assists trail just Shulga and Jackson despite missing 13 games due to injury. Bairstow is a great facilitator and can see the floor well, and has recently uncorked some athleticism in the paint with some great dunking ability.

Bamisile is among the conference’s best sixth men, providing a scoring spark off the bench and igniting VCU’s offense when it becomes stagnant. He most notably pieced together back-to-back 25-point games earlier this season – the first time a VCU player has done that in seven years.

The team captain, Jackson has recently shown his ability to take over games with a career-high 26 points in Friday’s loss to Dayton. Jackson is second on the team in assists and is a reliable presence running the offense. If things get tough, look for head coach Ryan Odom to lean on his veteran guard.

Of course, players of note would not be complete without sophomore Tobi Lawal, who dazzles with his pure athleticism and vertical. Along with Christian Fermin, Lawal’s defensive presence in the paint will be key in battling against some of the other bigs in the conference, while his dunking ability will be sure to make an all-A-10 tournament highlight reel.

Possibly key to VCU’s success is the 3-pointer, and nobody can shoot it as well as grad transfer Kuany Kuany. After an ice cold start to the season, Kuany ended the season shooting just a hair over 40% from 3-point range, second on the team of players with more than 30 attempts. Kuany has the ability to light it up from deep, which could become important if VCU begins to trail in the tournament.

Fordham preview

Fordham trailed for much of the game Tuesday against No. 13 Davidson before a late Kyle Rose jumper sent the Rams into overtime.

From there, an explosive 7-0 run to begin overtime buried the Wildcats, who would not score for the first 4:57 of the overtime period. Fordham hung on to win by eight points and set up a rematch against VCU, who defeated Fordham at Rose Hill Gym in the Bronx 75-60 on Feb. 6.

On that day, Shulga and Bamisle led VCU with 13 points each. It was the only game that Bairstow came off the bench in this season, as he was returning from injury. The grad transfer from Australia flirted with a double-double, ending with 12 points and eight assists on the day.

Fordham’s team leader in points is Rose, who is averaging 10.5 points per game while shooting 42.5% from the floor and 38.8% from deep. The fifth-year senior was also named to the A-10 All-Defensive Team for the second consecutive year on Tuesday.

On the season, Rose is averaging 2.1 steals per game, good for 40th in the country. His 64 total steals rank him second in the conference entering tournament play, trailing Tre Clark.

Rose added five more to that mark on Tuesday in the win against Davidson, to pair with six rebounds, four assists and five points.

But the story of the game on Tuesday was sophomore guard Will Richardson, who scored 20 points in the game to pace the Rams. Sixteen of those points came in the second half.

Josh Rivera added 14 points of his own on the day, connecting six times from the floor on seven attempts.

The gameplan for VCU? Lock in on Kyle Rose and find a way to slow down Abdou Tsimbila, Fordham’s 6-9 big man. The senior from Cameroon came one point shy of a double-double on Tuesday and leads Fordham with 6.4 rebounds per game. Tsimbila ranks second in the conference with blocks per game at 2.3.

No. 5 VCU and No. 12 Fordham will tip off from the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York at 2 p.m. on Wednesday, the second game of the tournament’s second round. USA Network will have live television coverage.

Nuggets of note

  • Wednesday is the first time VCU has been seeded outside of the double bye since the canceled 2020 tournament, when VCU and UMass made up the No.8 vs No. 9 matchup. The tournament was canceled as the Rams and Minutemen were warming up for a 12 p.m. tip-off.
  • In a contested A-10 tournament, VCU has never failed to make it to the quarterfinals. In 10 prior contested A-10 tournaments, VCU has made the title game seven times and lost three times in the quarterfinals.
  • If VCU is able to complete the A-10 tournament run with a championship on Sunday, it will be VCU’s third since joining the conference in 2012-13. The Rams would also become the first back-to-back champion since Temple, which three-peated from 2008-2010 under head coach Fran Dunphy.
  • Both of VCU’s prior A-10 titles were clinched at the Barclays Center, the host of this year’s tournament.
  • Head coach Ryan Odom enters the A-10 tournament with one career conference tournament title: the 2018 America East championship with UMBC. Later that month, the UMBC Retrievers knocked off Virginia, the No. 1 overall seed, and became the first No. 16 seed to defeat a No. 1 seed in the history of the NCAA tournament.
  • The winner of VCU and Fordham’s Wednesday tilt will take on No. 4 UMass on Thursday in the A-10 quarterfinals. The Minutemen, playing their penultimate A-10 tournament, boast two All-Conference First Team selections in Josh Cohen and Matt Cross. UMass defeated VCU 74-52 on Feb. 20 in the only matchup between the two teams this season.

https://www.a10talk.com/2024/03/vcu-rams-2024-atlantic-10-tournament-preview/

#A10Tournament #featured #JoeBamisile #MaxShulga #SeanBairstow #VCU #VCUBasketball #VCUHoops #VCURams #VCUTournamentPreview #VCUFordham #ZebJackson

2024-03-12

(Photo courtesy of Hunter Hensel)

BROOKLYN NY – No. 15 seed George Washington lost in heartbreaking fashion to No. 10 La Salle in the opening round of the Atlantic 10 Tournament. 

Down 60-61, senior guard James Bishop missed a fadeaway midrange jumper, then missed a deep contested three after redshirt freshman forward Darren Buchanan Jr. grabbed the offensive rebound off of Bishop’s first miss.

Heartbreak.

GW: 60, La Salle: 61 pic.twitter.com/IMmzgM9ocV

— David Korn (@david_korn4) March 12, 2024

 

“The first shot, I’m just trying to get space to get open to shoot. The second one, the ball kind of rolled to me,” said Bishop. “I saw the clock was up to 2.1 seconds, so I was trying to get a look off. Had a pretty clean one, just didn’t go in.”

Bishop scored a team-high 19 points on 4-8 shooting from three, but was much more inefficient inside the arc, going 1-10 on two-point field goals.

On the previous play, Senior guard Jhamir Brickus made what would end up being the game-winning basket on a turnaround midrange jumper just outside the paint. Brickus also drew a foul on the make, but was unable to convert the and-one. 

JHAMIR BRICKS AND 1 FOR THE LEAD 😱 pic.twitter.com/ObOslV8gIK

— Michael Bergman (@MLBergman_) March 12, 2024

“I wasn’t ready to go home,” said Brickus. “In that moment, I was just trying to do anything that I could do for my team to win.

Brickus was exceptional for the Explorers all game. He scored a game-high 21 points, grabbed eight rebounds, dished out three assists and shot an efficient 9-16 from the field and 3-5 from three.

After giving up the first two points of the game, GW led for the entire first half, going up by as much as nine. However, despite holding their lead, the Revolutionaries had a difficult time generating any real offense outside of the occasional free throw. In the first half, there was a 6:27 stretch where GW did not register a field goal, but was able to keep their lead due to a much-improved defensive effort.

The second half was much more back-and-forth after La Salle was able to make some key halftime adjustments.

“We double-teamed three different times and it cost us dearly,” said La Salle head coach Fran Dunphy. “We eliminated that in the second half… and we just walled up and tried to make [Babatunde Akingbola] shoot up and over the top of us.”

GW once again found themselves struggling to score, but was able to get it going with about nine minutes left in the game after La Salle had taken a five point lead when redshirt sophomore guard Maximus Edwards was able to score five straight points in his new role as sixth man.

Edwards ended the game with 10 points and nine rebounds.

Buchanan, who scored 12 of his 14 points in the second half also began to take on more of the scoring load in crunch-time. He was attacking the basket, getting to the free throw line and made a clutch corner three with just under two minutes to go to give GW a 60-59 lead, their final lead of the game.

One of the bright spots of GW’s season was Buchanan. as a redshirt freshman, he averaged 15.7 points per game, 6.6 rebounds, 2.3 assists and 1.3 blocks on 54.9% shooting. Buchanan also acted as GW’s primary ball-handler for large stretches of time, allowing Bishop to operate off-ball as a pure scorer.

Just hours before the game, Buchanan learned that he lost out on A-10 Rookie of the Year to Saint Joseph’s freshman guard Xzayvier Brown, who averaged 13.3 points per game, 3.8 rebounds, 3.3 assists, 1.9 steals and shot 43.2% from three.

“I don’t pay too much attention to that stuff, honestly. Hats off to the kid who won it. He had a good year,” said Buchanan. “I didn’t really care, honestly. I was more focused on the team and what we had at stake. That will always be my focus, the team. I couldn’t care less about my personal success.”

Buchanan’s three was the last basket GW would make all game.

“Disappointing ending to what’s been a very difficult year for us,” said GW head coach Chris Caputo.

Not only was this the final game of GW’s season, but it was the final game of Bishop’s collegiate career. Despite having one of most decorated in bodies of work in program history,  Bishop was never able to find any real postseason success, going 1-4 in the A-10 tournament in his four seasons at GW.

His only win came in 2021, when as the No. 11 seed, GW was able to beat No. 14 Fordham in the first round before losing to No. 6 George Mason. In 2022 as the No. 7 seed, GW lost to No. 10 UMass in the second round. In 2023 once again as the No. 7 seed, GW lost to No. 10 Saint Joseph’s.

“I don’t think it’s clicked in yet, but I mean, Im just happy I was able to play for GW and help the program and be around this special group of guys this year,” said Bishop. “It didn’t necessarily go our way, but I love how we fought. I wouldn’t change the decision to come back for anything.”

“[Bishop] is a pleasure, really, to be around every day. So low maintenance, he’s so even-keeled. For me, he was really crutch as you’re trying to build a program,” said Caputo. “To have a guy that you know you can kind of lean on a little bit in certain situations was certainly a blessing.”

GW season, highlighted by a 12-game losing streak in conference play and a last-place finish was an overwhelming disappointment. After beginning the year 14-3, everything seemed to go wrong.

Redshirt freshman forward Garrett Johnson, who was averaging 13.4 points and 5.6 rebounds, ended up missing the final eight games after experiencing soreness and mobility issues in his left hip that stemmed from his rare benign tumor that caused him to be away from basketball for two-and-a-half years and undergo four different surgeries and nine rounds of chemotherapy.

Buchanan also dealt with injury issues, missing three games and playing through significant pain in a game in which Caputo later admitted he should sat out with a lower-body injury.

During the postgame press conference, Buchanan confirmed that he would be returning to GW next season.

“Disappointing year. That it. It was disappointing,” said Buchanan. “I’m just eager to come back next year and be back in this position here and just make sure everything is different.”

Just as GW finally appeared to be turning a corner after beating St. Bonaventure at home and narrowly losing to Duquesne on the road in their final two games, their season, and Bishop’s career, is over.

La Salle will face No. 7 seed St. Bonaventure on Wednesday 5:00 pm. The Explorers beat St. Bonaventure on Feb. 21 72-59, and has now won five of their last seven.

https://www.a10talk.com/2024/03/gw-caps-off-disappointing-season-with-last-second-loss-in-a-10-tournament/

#A10 #A10 #A10Basketball #A10Talk #A10Tournament #Atlantic10 #Atlantic10Basketball #Blog #ChrisCaputo #DarrenBuchananJr_ #Explorers #featured #FranDunphy #GeorgeWashington #GeorgeWashingtonRevolutionaries #GW #JamesBishop #JhamirBrickus #LaSalle #LaSalleExplorers #Revolutionaries #tournament

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