Sunday, February 26, 2017

Bubble breakdown: Michigan, Michigan State take down Big Ten's top two to near lock status

Michigan’s fifth win in its last six was its most impressive yet, an upset of No. 14 Purdue. (AP)
What has happened to Michigan?
Three weeks ago, that was the pertinent question. The Wolverines lost at home to Ohio State, their second-straight defeat, and a team that had returned most of the pieces from an NCAA tournament team a year ago looked destined for the NIT.
Fast forward to the present, and Michigan isn’t just on the bubble; after an electrifying 82-70 win over Purdue, their second over a Big Ten favorite in two weeks, the Wolverines have skipped off the bubble and likely into the NCAA Tournament.
John Beilein’s team has won five of six, and has looked extremely impressive in the process. The fun began with a 29-point pounding of Michigan State. It picked up steam with a win at Indiana and a home victory over Wisconsin. The latest performance — 1.32 points per possession against a top-15 team — was evidence of Michigan’s rise, from a mediocre team in a mediocre conference to an outstanding offense capable of shooting over, passing around and punishing some of the nation’s best defenses.
Michigan certainly looks NCAA tournament worthy; barring a collapse, its résumé will too.
And then a day after the Wolverines all but secured their bid, Michigan State matched its in-state rival with a 84-74 victory over Wisconsin to move similarly close to locking up its invite to the Big Dance. The injury-hit Spartans have languished on the bubble for much of the season, but now look well on their way to the program’s 20th-straight NCAA tournament appearance.
Here’s a look at other bubble teams who have helped or hurt their causes on the second to last weekend of the regular season.
 
Weekend Bubble Winners
 
Michigan State (18-11, 10-6, KenPom 50, RPI 47): Sparty is in good shape. Tom Izzo’s team has now won four of its last five and six of its last eight. It also now has six wins over the Big Ten’s top eight after a rough non-conference season that yielded nothing of note outside of a victory over Wichita State. Even if a win over Wisconsin isn’t what it was three weeks ago, it was a huge step toward the NCAA tournament.
 
Middle Tennessee State (25-4, 15-1, KenPom 41, RPI 32): The Blue Raiders won at UAB Sunday, making a 17-1 conference record and 27-4 overall mark a strong probability heading into the Conference-USA tournament. Could they be at-large candidates even with a loss in the tournament? Maybe. They have non-conference wins over Vanderbilt, at Ole Miss, at Belmont, and on a neutral site over UNC-Wilmington, another strong mid-major. Three of their four losses are bad, but a respectable non-conference schedule should have them in the mix.
 
Indiana (16-13, 6-10, KenPom 49, RPI 88): The Hoosiers stayed alive with a last-second win over Northwestern. They still have a lot more work to do, however, and probably need at least one of their two upcoming road games, at Purdue and at Ohio State, plus at least one Big Ten tournament win. After all, they’ve still lost seven of their last nine.
 
Michigan (19-10, 9-7, KenPom 28, RPI 53): In addition to recent wins over Michigan State, Wisconsin and now Purdue, the Wolverines have November neutral site wins over Marquette and SMU. Both how aged well. Michigan isn’t quite secure yet, but one more victory — at Northwestern or Nebraska, or at the Big Ten tournament — would probably be enough.
 
Providence (18-11, 8-8, KenPom 56, RPI 55): Four wins in a row, all over for KenPom top-40 teams, for the Friars after Saturday’s triumphant battle against Marquette. Providence has gone from a bubble afterthought to “in” 15 days away from Selection Sunday.
 
Rhode Island (19-9, 11-5, KenPom 54, RPI 47): Rhode Island resuscitated its March hopes by battling back from an early deficit against VCU for a crucial 69-59 win, the Rams’ third straight victory. A home loss to Fordham 10 days ago still stings, but Rhode Island has at least taken the necessary steps since then to keep itself in contention. Its remaining two games, at St. Joe’s and home against Davidson, are more or less must-wins.
 
Dayton (23-5, 14-2, KenPom 33, RPI 23): The Flyers came back to force overtime at Davidson Friday night, then won in OT. They’re not yet a lock because of the lack of quality wins, but one more win would probably be enough.
Illinois (17-12, 7-9, KenPom 62, RPI 56): With four victories in its past five games including Sunday’s over Nebraska, Illinois has improbably played its way into contention for an NCAA bid. The Illini swept Northwestern and beat Michigan and VCU, but they’re also under .500 in the Big Ten, dropped a pair of games to Penn State and lost to Winthrop.
 
Other bubble winners: California (beat Oregon State Friday); Wichita State (won at Missouri State); Seton Hall (won at DePaul); Illinois State (won at Northern Iowa); Vanderbilt (beat Mississippi State); Virginia Tech (won at Boston College); Arkansas (won at Auburn); Houston (won at Memphis)
 
Weekend Bubble Losers
 
Xavier (18-11, 8-8, KenPom 38, RPI 21): Could Xavier be in trouble? Possibly. After falling to Butler Sunday, the Musketeers have lost five in a row, are 1-6 against the top half of the Big East, and are 3-8 against non-bottom-three Big East teams. Their best non-conference win came at home against fringe bubble team Wake Forest. And after losing star guard Edmond Sumner for the season, Xavier has been trending in the wrong direction. It’s probably time to start worrying at least a bit.
 
Northwestern (20-9, 9-7, KenPom 36, RPI 45): Northwestern fans are in full-on freak out mode after a loss to Indiana. The Wildcats led the Hoosiers by two with under 10 seconds remaining, then fouled Thomas Bryant on a dunk for an and-one. Northwestern has now lost five of seven, and its final two games are against Michigan and Purdue. It is still on the right side of the bubble, but needs another win to stay there.
 
USC (21-8, 8-8, KenPom 68, RPI 32): The Trojans blew a late lead at Arizona State on Sunday night, a bad loss that could force the selection committee to take a closer look at their surprisingly thin resume. There’s two outstanding home wins over UCLA and SMU and … uh … well, they won at Texas A&M back when that seemed significant. USC’s two final games of the regular season are at home against dreadful Washington and Washington State. The Trojans would be wise to win both.
 
Kansas State (17-12, 6-10, KenPom 30, RPI 61): Oklahoma 81, Kansas State 51. Oof. The Wildcats have lost five of their last six, eight of their last 10, and have fallen out of the tournament field as things stand right now.
 
TCU (17-12, 6-10, KenPom 41, RPI 56): The Horned Frogs are they only Big 12 bubble team that hasn’t beaten one of the conference’s top three teams (Kansas, West Virginia and Baylor). A few weeks ago, they entered a five-game stretch that presented them with three opportunities to get one of those wins; it also included a road game at Iowa State and home date with surging Oklahoma State. Even a 1-4 record might have kept TCU on the right side of the bubble. Instead, Jamie Dixon’s team lost all five, and has a lot of work to do.
 
Marquette (17-11, 8-8, KenPom 33, RPI 69): The Golden Eagles won at (pre-Mo Watson injury) Creighton and upset Villanova in back-to-back late-January games. Since, they’ve gone 3-5, with two of the wins coming over DePaul and St. John’s. After Saturday’s loss to Providence, Marquette finds itself in some trouble. The good news: The final week of the regular season presents opportunities to atone for bubble sins, a road game at Xavier and home matchup with Creighton.
 
Clemson (14-14, 4-12, KenPom 37, RPI 59): Stop us if you’ve heard this before: The Tigers lost another close game in ACC play, falling at home to No. 19 Florida State, 76-74. Amazingly, this was Clemson’s ninth league loss by six or fewer points. Clemson’s NCAA hopes were already on life support entering Saturday, and with three straight losses and six losses in its last seven games — and with only NC State and Boston College left on the regular-season schedule — anything short of a ridiculous run in the ACC tournament will likely keep the Tigers from dancing this March.
 
Other bubble losers: Pittsburgh (lost to North Carolina); Tennessee (lost at South Carolina); Texas Tech (lost at Oklahoma State); VCU (lost at Rhode Island); Syracuse (lost at Louisville); Georgia Tech (lost to Notre Dame)

Tom Izzo subs in injured Eron Harris for emotional senior day send-off

One week ago, Michigan State guard Eron Harris was ruled out for the season. He suffered a serious knee injury in a loss at Purdue, and his teammates teared up as he was stretchered off the court. A day later, Michigan State announced that Harris’ career was over.
Technically, Michigan State was wrong.
With Sunday’s game against Wisconsin wrapped up, Michigan State coach Tom Izzo called timeout with 11.2 seconds remaining to sub the injured senior into what would have been his final game at the Breslin Center. Now it was actually his final game.
Harris, knee brace and all, hobbled onto the court. Michigan State inbounded the ball to Matt McQuaid, who took a few dribbles, then started walking with the ball. That forced the officials to call traveling, and gave Harris a chance to have his moment:
 
 
Kissing the Spartan logo at center court on senior day is a Michigan State tradition, and after Harris went down in West Lafayette, it appeared he wouldn’t have an opportunity to partake in the tradition. Izzo devised a plan that would let him.
What an awesome moment.
Harris also got to walk in full uniform at the postgame senior day ceremony:

Weber, Hornets agree to deal hours after Warriors release him

Briante Weber wasn't unemployed very long.
Less than 12 hours after the Warriors released him, the guard has reportedly agreed to sign a 10-day contract with the Charlotte Hornets.
News of the agreement was first reported by Yahoo Sports.
Weber's second 10-contract with the Warriors expired following Saturday's game against the Nets. Immediately after the contest, the team announced they were releasing the 24-year-old.
In seven games with the Warriors, Weber averaged 1.7 points, 0.7 assists and 0.6 rebounds in 6.6 minutes.
Shortly after being released by the Warriors on Saturday night, Weber sent out a pair of tweets. He didn't appear to be upset by the move.
"[Fuel] 2 [Fire] #NewBeginning," Weber tweeted.
About an hour later, he sent this:
"I don't function well with pitty(sic) I dont need it [world] turns [sun] comes up in am and STILL I RISE lol #NewBeginning," Weber wrote.
Shortly after midnight, Warriors veteran guard Shaun Livingston sent a message to Weber.
 
"@Sir_deuce2 a player in this league. Stay focused keep it pro and good karma will follow you. Keep grindn Brodie. Luv," Livingston wrote.

Bogut expected to join Cavs after 76ers buyout

It appears Andrew Bogut is set to see what the view is like from the other side of the NBA's top rivalry.
Traded by Dallas to Philadelphia on Thursday, the former Warriors center will receive a contract buyout from the 76ers and then join the Cleveland Cavaliers for the stretch run, according to ESPN.
On Saturday, the Cavs, Spurs and Rockets were all reported to have interest in Bogut if he was made available following a buyout.
Injuries have derailed Bogut's season. He appeared in just 26 games with the Mavericks this season and averaged 3 points, 8.3 rebounds and 1 block per contest.
Bogut was part of the two Warriors teams that faced the Cavs in the last two NBA Finals matchups.
Bogut's tenure with the Warriors came to an end on July 7, 2016 when he was traded to Dallas in order for Golden State to clear salary cap space to sign Kevin Durant.

Steph Curry leaves timeout huddle to help fan win $5,000

During a timeout in Saturday’s Nets-Warriors game, Golden State had a little game show for a couple fans. The premise of the game show is basically Skee-ball: Roll a ball up a ramp and into a bucket, and you get a cash reward.
One fan, Carly, had trouble getting the first two balls to even hit the ramp. Steph Curry was also sneaking by while this was happening, and when she rolled the third ball onto the ramp, he intercepted the ball and threw it into the $2,500 bucket. The ball was also gold, which doubled Carly’s winnings to $5,000. (It also looked like he was going to throw it into the $250 bucket in the middle, but he caught himself.)
Curry ran back to the Warriors bench as if nothing happened, and when the announcer said they’re giving Carly the money, he raised his arms in excitement. It was a cute, little moment that reminded people how fun and generous Curry can be on and off the court.

TODAY IN HISTORY - FEBRUARY 26TH

1829 – Levi Strauss, German-American fashion designer, founded Levi Strauss & Co. (d. 1902) is born.
1846 – Buffalo Bill, American soldier and hunter (d. 1917) is born.
1852 – John Harvey Kellogg, American surgeon, co-created Corn flakes (d. 1943) is born.
1866 – Herbert Henry Dow, Canadian-American businessman, founded the Dow Chemical Company (d. 1930) is born.
1903 – Richard Jordan Gatling, American engineer, invented the Gatling gun (b. 1818) dies.
1909 – Kinemacolor, the first successful color motion picture process, is first shown to the general public at the Palace Theatre in London.
1914 – HMHS Britannic, sister to the RMS Titanic, is launched at Harland and Wolff shipyard in Belfast.
1916 – Jackie Gleason, American actor and singer (d. 1987) is born.
1919 – President Woodrow Wilson signs an act of Congress establishing the Grand Canyon National Park.
1928 – Fats Domino, American singer-songwriter and pianist is born.
1929 – President Calvin Coolidge signs an executive order establishing the 96,000 acre Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming.
1952 – Vincent Massey is sworn in as the first Canadian-born Governor General of Canada.
1953 – Michael Bolton, American singer-songwriter and actor is born.
1971 – U.N. Secretary-General U Thant signs United Nations proclamation of the vernal equinox as Earth Day.
1979 – The Superliner railcar enters revenue service with Amtrak.
1993 – World Trade Center bombing: In New York City, a truck bomb parked below the North Tower of the World Trade Center explodes, killing six and injuring over a thousand.
2005 – Jef Raskin, American computer scientist, created Macintosh (b. 1943) dies.
2008 – The New York Philharmonic performs in Pyongyang, North Korea; this is the first event of its kind to take place in North Korea.

Saturday, February 25, 2017

UCLA uses defensive switch, offensive rebounding to beat Arizona, keep Pac-12 wide open

Allonzo Trier scored a game-high and season-high 28 points, but UCLA’s defense kept the rest of the Wildcats in check.
The 180-degree turning point of UCLA’s biggest win of the season wasn’t a Lonzo Ball dunk, wasn’t a Bryce Alford bomb, wasn’t a TJ Leaf drive. It wasn’t a flash flood of a fast break, wasn’t a 3-point barrage, wasn’t a crafty set play. No, it was something UCLA hasn’t often been praised for this season.
It was defense.
Oh, and rebounding. Rebounding too. Specifically offensive rebounding, the one facet of the nation’s top offense that isn’t typically anything special.
The fifth-ranked Bruins, who trailed No. 4 Arizona by four at halftime in the first Pac-12 game between top-five teams in nine years, used a zone defense and nine second-half offensive rebounds to beat the Wildcats, 77-72, and ensure that the Pac-12 race will come down to the regular season’s final weekend.
Arizona closed the first half on a 16-5 run behind 16 first-half points from Allonzo Trier, and led 43-39 at the break. But in the second half, UCLA head coach Steve Alford went primarily to a 3-2 zone that interrupted everything Trier and the Wildcats were doing well offensively.
The zone had Arizona swinging the ball around the perimeter for a good portion of the second half. It halted the Wildcats’ penetration. It had Arizona coach Sean Miller frantically gesticulating, trying to get his team to move, trying to get the ball to move, and trying to figure out a defensive look that the Bruins have shown at times this season, but hadn’t shown much in the first half.
Miller used his final timeout with 6:47 to play in an attempt to solve the zone before the game got away from his team, but the solution arrived too late. The zone, along with some hot shooting and second-chance points, had allowed UCLA to turn a four-point halftime deficit into a double-digit lead. The Wildcats made a late charge, and had the ball down three with under 30 seconds to play, but Kadeem Allen air-balled a 3. It was the closest the Wildcats would get.
But the game was lost in the 11-minute stretch smack dab in the middle of the second half, when Arizona scored just nine points against the zone. The length of Ball, 6-foot-6, at the head of the 3 in the 3-2 made the Wildcat guards hesitant. The urgency of UCLA close-outs prevented Arizona from finding open looks from beyond the arc. It wasn’t until the final five minutes that the Wildcats finally found routes into the teeth of the zone.
While Arizona’s offense faltered, UCLA’s flourished in large part due to hustle plays. The Bruins, on average, retrieve about 30 percent of their missed shots, a mediocre mark, but in the second half tracked down 56 percent of their misses. They then converted offensive board after offensive board into 14 second-chance points, several of them on kick-outs for 3s. They shot 4 of 9 from deep in the second half after going 4 of 17 before the break. Alford hit three of the 3s, and led a balanced scoring effort with 15 points.
Trier finished with 28 points for Arizona, a season-high, but didn’t get enough help. Lauri Markkanen was cold all game; he finished with 10 points, and didn’t make a 3-pointer. The Wildcats shot 5 for 18 from beyond the arc, and 2 for 10 in the second half against the zone.
The loss drops Arizona to 15-2 in the Pac-12, and into a tie with Oregon atop the conference. The Ducks beat Stanford earlier on Saturday. UCLA, with the win, pulled to within one game in the loss column of the league leaders.
UCLA’s final two games are at home against Washington and Washington State, so it should conclude Pac-12 play at 15-3. Arizona and Oregon each have one game remaining; the Wildcats play at Arizona State, while the Ducks play at Oregon State.
If the two current co-leaders win and finish tied atop the standings, Oregon would received the No. 1 seed in the Pac-12 tournament. Arizona would be the 2, and UCLA the 3.
But perhaps the Bruins’ victory will impact a more important seeding decision, the one the NCAA tournament selection committee will make 15 days from now. UCLA has been projected as a 3- or 4-seed in recent weeks. A road win over a top-five team won’t singlehandedly vault the Bruins up to the 2-seed line, but puts them in position to get there.
And if nothing else, Saturday’s victory sent a message to all those who gave up on UCLA after two-straight losses in late January: The Bruins, defensive fragility and all, are dangerous. And if that defense gets a big more sturdy, even just in spurts? UCLA will be pretty darn tough to beat.