Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Schedule sets the expectation level for Tulsa

November

15 Florida International (12-19, 217 RPI)
From a PR perspective this game appears to be a home run for a home opener, but it’s hard to tell whether or not FIU will help or hurt the SOS this year. Thomas sold out on the jucos for this season to win right away grabbing the 2 Redlands kids plus another from Connors State that all put up ridiculous numbers last year (According to the NJCAA website, Watson made 54 of 75 three-point attempts last year to go along with 99 steals. That’s pretty ridiculous if it’s true). It will hurt that they lose Sun Belt freshman of the year Freddy Asprilla, who transferred to Miami Dade. The good news is that if all 3 of the juco recruits are cleared to play then they’ll team up with 3 returning double-digit scorers from last year to make a half-decent team, but FIU does play in the more difficult East division of the Sun Belt and who knows if Isiah will actually be able to win games.
Grade: B. FIU could be improved if things shake out and there should be some hype around Isiah if nothing else.


17 UALR (23-8, 91 RPI)
We should probably pay a little more attention to what’s going on in Little Rock if we plan on scheduling these guys more often. After finishing 79 in the RPI in 04-05, we played a home-and-home with UALR in 06-07 and 07-08 when they finished both seasons below 150 before bouncing back to 91 last year. Unfortunately, this year looks to be more similar to the lean years’ teams than to last year’s team. They lose their top 3 scorers from ’08-‘09 after Steven Moore was kicked off the team and 4 of their 5 starters. In fact, their highest returning scorer was a walk-on until last month. I think Steve Shields is a solid coach and if their juco-heavy recruiting pans out then it could lead to a 3rd place finish in the SB West, but I think we once again screwed up the timing on this series.
Grade: C. It’s a nice regional series, but we picked the wrong year.


21 South Alabama (19-13, 145 RPI)
I could just about copy the write-up on UALR for this one. USA loses 4 starters from last year’s team and attempts to replace them with jucos. The good news is that they’ve won 20 games for 4 straight seasons (if you fudge like we do and count non-D1 wins) so history is on their side, but it’s an inexperienced squad this year trying to keep that streak alive this year and I’d be surprised if it happened. Oh, and don’t tell head coach Ronnie Arrow about the A/V problems we’ve been having lately because he doesn’t handle those problems very well (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZyLRLADclUI).
Grade: C. Historically a good program, but this could be a tough year.


24 Loyola-Marymount (3-27, 320 RPI)
Well, the good news is that Loyola can’t be much worse than last year. I get that we signed up for this series so that Reese could play in front of his friends and family and I get that this year’s game is a return game for free, but we would’ve had to try pretty hard to find a basketball program that was a bigger mess last year than this one. They do return 3 freshman starters along with transfer Larry Davis (7.5ppg as a freshman at Seton Hall), but this is still largely the same cast that nearly shot the same percentage from the field (35.1%) as we shot on just 3-pointers (33.9%).
Grade: F. Unless we scheduled this series 20 years in advance when Paul Westhead was still there, then it was a bad idea that got even worse when Bayno quit.


28 @Missouri State (11-20, 211 RPI)
This appeared to be a decent win last year when it happened, but Missouri St really collapsed down the stretch losing 16 of their last 20 games including a season sweep by MVC bottom-dweller Indiana State. They lose 3 of their top 4 scorers and had to have been disappointed when their top 2009 recruit in Lane Adams chose baseball over college basketball. Weems is a good player and I think Edison grad Will Creekmore could develop into a nice college center, but unless something changes I think their fans will be longing for the Barry Hinson days starting this year.
Grade: B. It’s a winnable road game against an old MVC rival.


December

2 Oklahoma State (22-11, 19 RPI)
There’s no such thing as a must-win game in December, but it’s hard to imagine many scenarios where we get an at-large bid if we lose at home in our best shot at a top 50 win. For obvious reasons, it’s also a huge game for Wojcik. I think they’ll miss Eaton more than they want to admit, but this should be a tournament team for next year on the backs of Anderson and Muonelo despite virtually no depth in the frontcourt (I’m not sold on Moses/Pilgrim and that’s most likely their starting 4/5).
Grade: A. In-state rival and a top 50 shot at home.


6 Ohio (15-17, 184 RPI)
I really think the problem with this game last year was that we sandwiched the game between the South Padre final and the OU game. It didn’t help that they had one of the longest non-conference home win streaks in the country at the time. Tillman was their workhorse last year and I can’t imagine this team is better without him. They had an odd run where they beat some of the best MAC teams (Kent, Miami, Akron) around losing to some of the worst (CMU, Ball St, WMU). Hopefully they can revert back to the team that was consistently winning 20 games a year before we scheduled them last year.
Grade: C. Not really regional and not a marquee win.


Las Vegas Classic
The upside of these tournaments is that you get a chance to play good teams on a neutral floor that you might not have otherwise had a chance to schedule. The downside has been that you’re forced to play a couple dogs on the way to those games. Last year it was NC Central who rallied to win 2 of their last 3 games to finish 3-26 and A&M-Corpus Christi who performed well enough in the Southland to finish 15-15. Those games were worth it in the end for the chance to play A&M and Illinois, games which provided us with our best win of the season and a narrow miss at another big win. I’d say this year’s tournament is better on the bad side of things, but slightly worse at the top.


17 Jackson State (18-15, 183 RPI)
I’ve said many times before that I’m a fan of scheduling a couple games against the best teams from the worst conferences and Jackson St. is consistently one of the best examples of this type of team. They’re the best program in the SWAC and even when they don’t win the conference they always finish with at least 12 D1 wins avoiding that RPI anchor effect. This year’s team returns 3 starters from a 2nd place finish including their leading scorer Grant Maxey (16.4 ppg, 6.7 rpg) and should be the preseason favorites in the SWAC. This should be an easy win against a team that may win 20 games this year.
Grade: A. Should be an easy game against an 18-20 win team.


19 Chicago State (17-13, 234 RPI)
This game is a little trickier because Chicago St is coming off their first winning season in 23 years. They’ll also be playing their first season in what has to be the weirdest conference in all of college basketball (Great West) stretching all the way from North Dakota down to South Padre and from Utah to New Jersey. Losing two 19+ ppg scorers could be serious trouble, but home games against some of the worst teams in D1 should help them gather a few wins. These guys will lose a ton of games early in the season so we’ll just have to cross our fingers that they’re the best of the worst in January and February.
Grade: Probably a D. They may win some games against a bad schedule, but they could be bad enough to lose in bunches.


22 Nebraska (18-12, 76 RPI)
I wasn’t looking forward to playing against Cookie Miller with all the turnover problems we have, but his loss probably takes this team from a bubble year to the NIT bubble because they also lose 2 good players in Harley and Dagundoro. They had a decent recruiting class, but noone who can replace what they lost.
Grade: B. It’s a neutral court game against a team that has a bit of a name.


23 BYU (24-7, 29 RPI)
They lose Cummard, but that’s about it and I think it makes them the favorite in the Mountain West. This isn’t a guaranteed game, but it would be nice to have a shot at revenge for one of the more painful losses from last year.
Grade: A if we play it. Could be our 2nd best shot at a top 50 win.

or

23 Nevada (20-12, 83 RPI)
I’m sure Wolfpack fans are disappointed in back-to-back 1st round CBI losses at home to CUSA teams, but this really should be the year where they’re back fighting for an NCAA berth with 4 starters returning. If this game materializes, then it will be fun to see Babbitt match up against Jordan.
Grade: B+ if we play it. Would likely be a shot at a top 100 win.


January

2 Colorado (8-22, 235 RPI)
I wish it was our football team scheduling this game instead of our basketball team. Regardless, it’s a name team that does return 4 starters and could pull some upsets this year. The win in Boulder alone was worth signing up for the series.
Grade: C. Maybe the name draws a few fans out for the game.


20 @ORU (15-15, 142 RPI)
I think most of us can agree that we should play this game every year. It’s always tough to play in the Mabee Center and they’ll compete for the Summit title now that ND State graduated like all 13 of their scholarship players, but this version of ORU still doesn’t look like the Tutt/Green era to me and they’ll miss Jarvis bailing them out in games this year. It should be a slightly better SOS game because they didn’t repeat last year’s horrible death march scheduling mistake, but @Wake, @Stanford, @UVa, @Louisville is still quite a non-conference workout.
Grade: B. It should always be played, but it’s once again a very losable game against a team that isn’t likely to be near the top 50.


February

25 @Duke (28-6, 1 RPI)
Contrary to Canester’s prediction, I actually think this is a good game for us to play. If there’s ever a time to schedule a game at Cameron Indoor it’s (a) when your best players are seniors, (b) when you consider yourself a tournament team and (c) late in the season when Duke is in the middle of ACC play and when Wojcik’s teams play their best ball. This is a game where a bubble team could show their worth on national television even without winning the game if they play well.
Grade: A-. If only because there’s always a chance that any team could get run out of the gym playing @Duke.


Overall thoughts
First off, I’m a big fan of starting the season with a string of home games (8 of the first 9 games at home). Wojcik’s teams have been terrible on the road in November and December (4-15 away from the RenCen) and so it’s no surprise that the only season where we’ve had fewer than 4 losses by January was actually 2006-07 when we only played 2 games away from the Reynolds Center before New Year’s. There are also few trap games like @MSU right before the OkState game and @ECU right after Duke. I like that we went with mostly regional opponents, although it’s hard to believe we scheduled half the Sun Belt without getting North Texas (who I think will easily win the SB West this year along with 20+ games) or Western Kentucky. I also think we should’ve stuck with at least one Southland team (Nicholls St or Sam Houston St, in particular) because they don’t seem to have a problem playing buy games. As it is, we have a number of teams who won lots of games last year, but appear to be on the downswing for this year.
Overall Grade: B-. Only a couple shots at a big win in the non-conference and some missed opportunities with regional teams.

Just a quick look at some RPI numbers as well...

Last year’s average opponent win%: 0.5020
This year’s average opponent win% (from ’08-’09): 0.5278

That’s a pretty significant jump in opponent win% from last year to this year and appears to be evidence for an improved schedule, but you still have to win games against that schedule. We also have a similar breakdown in Home/Road/Neutral games as last year except that 1 road game is a home game this year.

From my perspective, there appear to be more teams clearly trending down (Chicago St, South Alabama, UALR, Nebraska, Ohio) than trending up this season (ORU, Jackson St, FIU) so I’ll also crunch the numbers based on my best guess of what the OOC Win% will look like at the end of the season and call it “Adjusted RPI”.

My guess at average opponent win%: 0.515

There are too many permutations to be worth including, so I’ll just look at a couple that I think are interesting. The rank is based on last year’s distribution of RPIs to give an idea of the range we’d be looking at.

Scenarios

Dream Season (14-0 in the non-conference)
RPI: 0.6389; Rank = 9th
Adjusted RPI: 0.6325; Rank = 9th

Home Cooked (9-5 with wins at home and losses away)
RPI: 0.5357; Rank = 101st
Adjusted RPI: 0.5292; Rank = 110th

Par for the course (11-3 with losses to the 3 top 50 teams on the schedule)
RPI: 0.5844; Rank = 45th
Adjusted RPI: 0.5780; Rank = 51st

My expectations (12-2 with losses in 2 of the 3 road games)
RPI: 0.6089; Rank = 24th
Adjusted RPI: 0.6025; Rank = 30th

The last scenario would probably be the best of what I consider to be realistic scenarios because it assumes at least 2 top 50 wins (OSU and BYU), puts us in the RPI top 30, and sets us up where even a repeat of last year’s conference record (12-4) adds up to a 24-6 record headed into the conference tourney. That’s the right side of the bubble if you ask me, especially if one of those wins is against another top 50 team in the conference.

UTEP goes all-in on Caracter

UTEP
2009 OOC Record: 9-5
2009 OOC Opp. Average Win %: 0.530
2009 OOC RPI: 77

Predicted 2010 OOC Record: 9-4
2010 OOC Opp. Average Win %: 0.493 (Assumes they play Niagara in the finals of their tourney)
Predicted 2010 OOC RPI: 88

UTEP backloaded this schedule for the arrival of Derrick Caracter and it shows. They shouldn’t have a problem going 9-0 in the home portion, but they’ll need to steal some road wins if they want to contend for an-large bid. If they can win 2 out of @NMSU, @Ole Miss, @OU, @Texas Tech, then I show them at 11-2 with an RPI of 40, squarely on the bubble.

Thundering Herd are set up for Success

Marshall
2009 OOC Record: 5-7
2009 OOC Opp. Winning %: 0.590
2009 OOC RPI: 140

Predicted 2010 OOC Record: 8-4
2010 OOC Opp. Winning %: 0.563
Predicted 2010 OOC RPI: 51

The schedule sets up nicely for Marshall this year and while that could’ve been said about last year as well I think they might actually have the team to make some things happen this time around. NC A&T, MTSU, Lamar, vs Ohio, Troy, High Point, St Bonaventure, @Binghamton should be very winnable games for the Herd and while there’s little shot at beating UNC or WV, they could win @ODU or @Troy. Keep in mind that I’m using last year’s records and while most of these effects while average out over the entire OOC slate, Binghamton is a likely candidate for worst turnaround of the offseason considering everything that’s happened within that program. Nonetheless, if Donnie Jones can convince his guys to play any defense this year, they should be in good shape.

Tigers' Schedule Leaves Them in a Tight Spot

Memphis
2009 OOC Record: 12-3
2009 OOC Opp. Average Win %: 0.572
2009 OOC RPI: 10

Predicted 2010 OOC Record: 11-4
2010 OOC Opp. Average Win %: 0.494
Predicted 2010 OOC RPI: 93

I get the idea behind playing an easier schedule because more than half the roster is in flux, but Pastner made some rookie mistakes on this one. Houston Baptist, Arkansas St, and SEMO are all serious RPI anchors and 11 out of 15 games at FedEx Forum means they’ll get no favors from the home/road adjustment. By my numbers, they could go 14-1 losing only to Kansas and still only be around 30 in the RPI. That’s in pretty stark contrast to years past.

Coogs' schedule upgrade could equal postseason (And I'm not talking CBI)

Houston
2009 OOC Record: 9-4
2009 OOC Opp. Average Win %: 0.436
2009 OOC RPI: 136

Predicted 2010 OOC Record: 10-4
2010 OOC Opp. Average Win %: 0.583 (Assumes Nicholls St. in the 3rd place game in Alaska)
Predicted 2010 OOC RPI: 33

After years of underscheduling and leading 20-win teams to the CBI, Penders either wisened up or got lucky because this is a 180-degree turn. The worst team on their schedule went 13-17 last year and yet I was more than fair with their record predicting losses to OU, @Nevada, @Iowa State, and @Western Kentucky. An increase of nearly 15 percentage points in their opponent winning percentage equals a huge jump in RPI for the Coogs this year. If they can snag that marquee win early in Alaska along with a top 40 predicted RPI, then Houston could put themselves in excellent position early for a NCAA tournament bid.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Grading the '09-'10 Schedule

Florida International (12-19, 217 RPI)
From a PR perspective this game appears to be a home run for a home opener, but it’s hard to tell whether or not FIU will help or hurt the SOS this year. Thomas sold out on the jucos for this season to win right away grabbing the 2 Redlands kids plus another from Connors State that all put up ridiculous numbers last year (According to the NJCAA website, Watson made 54 of 75 three-point attempts last year to go along with 99 steals. That’s pretty ridiculous if it’s true). It will hurt that they lose Sun Belt freshman of the year Freddy Asprilla, who transferred to Miami Dade. The good news is that if all 3 of the juco recruits are cleared to play then they’ll team up with 3 returning double-digit scorers from last year to make a half-decent team, but FIU does play in the more difficult East division of the Sun Belt and who knows if Isiah will actually be able to win games.
Grade: B. FIU could be improved if things shake out and there should be some hype around Isiah if nothing else.


UALR (23-8, 91 RPI)
We should probably pay a little more attention to what’s going on in Little Rock if we plan on scheduling these guys more often. After finishing 79 in the RPI in 04-05, we played a home-and-home with UALR in 06-07 and 07-08 when they finished both seasons below 150 before bouncing back to 91 last year. Unfortunately, this year looks to be more similar to the lean years’ teams than to last year’s team. They lose their top 3 scorers from ’08-‘09 after Steven Moore was kicked off the team and 4 of their 5 starters. In fact, their highest returning scorer was a walk-on until last month. I think Steve Shields is a solid coach and if their juco-heavy recruiting pans out then it could lead to a 3rd place finish in the SB West, but I think we once again screwed up the timing on this series.
Grade: C. It’s a nice regional series, but we picked the wrong year.

South Alabama (19-13, 145 RPI)
I could just about copy the write-up on UALR for this one. USA loses 4 starters from last year’s team and attempts to replace them with jucos. The good news is that they’ve won 20 games for 4 straight seasons (if you fudge like we do and count non-D1 wins) so history is on their side, but it’s an inexperienced squad this year trying to keep that streak alive this year and I’d be surprised if it happened. Oh, and don’t tell head coach Ronnie Arrow about the A/V problems we’ve been having lately because he doesn’t handle those problems very well (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZyLRLADclUI).
Grade: C. Historically a good program, but this could be a tough year.

Loyola-Marymount (3-27, 320 RPI)
Well, the good news is that Loyola can’t be much worse than last year. I get that we signed up for this series so that Reese could play in front of his friends and family and I get that this year’s game is a return game for free, but we would’ve had to try pretty hard to find a basketball program that was a bigger mess last year than this one. They do return 3 freshman starters along with transfer Larry Davis (7.5ppg as a freshman at Seton Hall), but this is still largely the same cast that nearly shot the same percentage from the field (35.1%) as we shot on just 3-pointers (33.9%).
Grade: F. Unless we scheduled this series 20 years in advance when Paul Westhead was still there, then it was a bad idea that got even worse when Bayno quit.

@Missouri State (11-20, 211 RPI)
This appeared to be a decent win last year when it happened, but Missouri St really collapsed down the stretch losing 16 of their last 20 games including a season sweep by MVC bottom-dweller Indiana State. They lose 3 of their top 4 scorers and had to have been disappointed when their top 2009 recruit in Lane Adams chose baseball over college basketball. Weems is a good player and I think Edison grad Will Creekmore could develop into a nice college center, but unless something changes I think their fans will be longing for the Barry Hinson days starting this year.
Grade: B. It’s a winnable road game against an old MVC rival.


Oklahoma State (22-11, 19 RPI)
There’s no such thing as a must-win game in December, but it’s hard to imagine many scenarios where we get an at-large bid if we lose at home in our best shot at a top 50 win. For obvious reasons, it’s also a huge game for Wojcik. I think they’ll miss Eaton more than they want to admit, but this should be a tournament team for next year on the backs of Anderson and Muonelo despite virtually no depth in the frontcourt (I’m not sold on Moses/Pilgrim and that’s most likely their starting 4/5).
Grade: A. In-state rival and a top 50 shot at home.

Ohio (15-17, 184 RPI)
I really think the problem with this game last year was that we sandwiched the game between the South Padre final and the OU game. It didn’t help that they had one of the longest non-conference home win streaks in the country at the time. Tillman was their workhorse last year and I can’t imagine this team is better without him. They had an odd run where they beat some of the best MAC teams (Kent, Miami, Akron) around losing to some of the worst (CMU, Ball St, WMU). Hopefully they can revert back to the team that was consistently winning 20 games a year before we scheduled them last year.
Grade: C. Not really regional and not a marquee win.


Las Vegas Classic Field
The upside of these tournaments is that you get a chance to play good teams on a neutral floor that you might not have otherwise had a chance to schedule. The downside has been that you’re forced to play a couple dogs on the way to those games. Last year it was NC Central who rallied to win 2 of their last 3 games to finish 3-26 and A&M-Corpus Christi who performed well enough in the Southland to finish 15-15. Those games were worth it in the end for the chance to play A&M and Illinois, games which provided us with our best win of the season and a narrow miss at another big win. I’d say this year’s tournament is better on the bad side of things, but slightly worse at the top.

Jackson State (18-15, 183 RPI)
I’ve said many times before that I’m a fan of scheduling a couple games against the best teams from the worst conferences and Jackson St. is consistently one of the best examples of this type of team. They’re the best program in the SWAC and even when they don’t win the conference they always finish with at least 12 D1 wins avoiding that RPI anchor effect. This year’s team returns 3 starters from a 2nd place finish including their leading scorer Grant Maxey (16.4 ppg, 6.7 rpg) and should be the preseason favorites in the SWAC. This should be an easy win against a team that may win 20 games this year.
Grade: A. Should be an easy game against an 18-20 win team.

Chicago State (17-13, 234 RPI)
This game is a little trickier because Chicago St is coming off their first winning season in 23 years. They’ll also be playing their first season in what has to be the weirdest conference in all of college basketball (Great West) stretching all the way from North Dakota down to South Padre and from Utah to New Jersey. Losing two 19+ ppg scorers could be serious trouble, but home games against some of the worst teams in D1 should help them gather a few wins. These guys will lose a ton of games early in the season so we’ll just have to cross our fingers that they’re the best of the worst in January and February.
Grade: Probably a D. They may win some games against a bad schedule, but they could be bad enough to lose in bunches.

Nebraska (18-12, 76 RPI)
I wasn’t looking forward to playing against Cookie Miller with all the turnover problems we have, but his loss probably takes this team from a bubble year to the NIT bubble because they also lose 2 good players in Harley and Dagundoro. They had a decent recruiting class, but noone who can replace what they lost.
Grade: B. It’s a neutral court game against a team that has a bit of a name.

BYU (24-7, 29 RPI)
They lose Cummard, but that’s about it and I think it makes them the favorite in the Mountain West. This isn’t a guaranteed game, but it would be nice to have a shot at revenge for one of the more painful losses from last year.
Grade: A if we play it. Could be our 2nd best shot at a top 50 win.

Nevada (20-12, 83 RPI)
I’m sure Wolfpack fans are disappointed in back-to-back 1st round CBI losses at home to CUSA teams, but this really should be the year where they’re back fighting for an NCAA berth with 4 starters returning. If this game materializes, then it will be fun to see Babbitt match up against Jordan.
Grade: B+ if we play it. Would likely be a shot at a top 100 win.

Colorado (8-22, 235 RPI)
I wish it was our football team scheduling this game instead of our basketball team. Regardless, it’s a name team that does return 4 starters and could pull some upsets this year. The win in Boulder alone was worth signing up for the series.
Grade: C. Maybe the name draws a few fans out for the game.

@ORU (15-15, 142 RPI)
I think most of us can agree that we should play this game every year. It’s always tough to play in the Mabee Center and they’ll compete for the Summit title now that ND State graduated like all 13 of their scholarship players, but this version of ORU still doesn’t look like the Tutt/Green era to me and they’ll miss Jarvis bailing them out in games this year. It should be a slightly better SOS game because they didn’t repeat last year’s horrible death march scheduling mistake, but @Wake, @Stanford, @UVa, @Louisville is still quite a non-conference workout.
Grade: B. It should always be played, but it’s once again a very losable game against a team that isn’t likely to be near the top 50.

@Duke (28-6, 1 RPI)
Contrary to Canester’s prediction, I actually think this is a good game for us to play. If there’s ever a time to schedule a game at Cameron Indoor it’s (a) when your best players are seniors, (b) when you consider yourself a tournament team and (c) late in the season when Duke is in the middle of ACC play and when Wojcik’s teams play their best ball. This is a game where a bubble team could show their worth on national television even without winning the game if they play well.
Grade: A-. If only because there’s always a chance that any team could get run out of the gym playing @Duke.


Overall thoughts: First off, I’m a big fan of starting the season with a string of home games (8 of the first 9 games at home). Wojcik’s teams have been terrible on the road in November and December (4-15 away from the RenCen) and so it’s no surprise that the only season where we’ve had fewer than 4 losses by January was actually 2006-07 when we only played 2 games away from the Reynolds Center before New Year’s. There are also few trap games like @MSU right before the OkState game and @ECU right after Duke. I like that we went with mostly regional opponents, although it’s hard to believe we scheduled half the Sun Belt without getting North Texas (who I think will easily win the SB West this year along with 20+ games) or Western Kentucky. I also think we should’ve stuck with at least one Southland team (Nicholls St or Sam Houston St, in particular) because they don’t seem to have a problem playing buy games. As it is, we have a number of teams who won lots of games last year, but appear to be on the downswing for this year.
Overall Grade: B-. Only a couple shots at a big win in the non-conference and some missed opportunities with regional teams.

RPI effects
Last year’s average opponent win%: 0.5020
This year’s average opponent win% (from ’08-’09): 0.5278

That’s a pretty significant jump in opponent win% from last year to this year and appears to be evidence for an improved schedule, but you still have to win games against that schedule. We also have a similar breakdown in Home/Road/Neutral games as last year except that 1 road game is a home game this year.


From my perspective, there appear to be more teams clearly trending down (Chicago St, South Alabama, UALR, Nebraska, Ohio) than trending up this season (ORU, Jackson St, FIU) so I’ll also crunch the numbers based on my best guess of what the OOC Win% will look like at the end of the season and call it “Adjusted RPI”.

My guess at average opponent win%: 0.515

There are too many permutations to be worth including, so I’ll just look at a couple that I think are interesting. The rank is based on last year’s distribution of RPIs to give an idea of the range we’d be looking at.

Scenarios

Dream Season (14-0 in the non-conference)
RPI: 0.6389; Rank = 9th
Adjusted RPI: 0.6325; Rank = 9th

Home Cooked (9-5 with wins at home and losses away)
RPI: 0.5357; Rank = 101st
Adjusted RPI: 0.5292; Rank = 110th

Par for the course (11-3 with losses to the 3 top 50 teams on the schedule)
RPI: 0.5844; Rank = 45th
Adjusted RPI: 0.5780; Rank = 51st

My expectations (12-2 with losses in 2 of the 3 road games)
RPI: 0.6089; Rank = 24th
Adjusted RPI: 0.6025; Rank = 30th

The last scenario would probably be the best of what I considers realistic scenarios because it assumes at least 2 top 50 wins (OSU and BYU), puts us in the RPI top 30, and sets us up where even a repeat of last year’s conference record (12-4) adds up to a 24-6 record headed into the conference tourney. That’s the right side of the bubble if you ask me, especially if one of those wins is against another top 50 team in the conference.

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Battle Dismissal Leaves Tulsa/Wojcik on Thin Ice


Last week, redshirt freshman Armond Battle was dismissed from the Tulsa basketball team for breaking team rules. The rumors are that Battle just couldn't put it together in the classroom. Wojcik can't be blamed for a player who won't study, but this is just the latest disappointment in the disaster that was the recruiting class of 2008. Battle is now the 4th player from that recruiting class to leave Tulsa just one year after they all arrived on campus and outside of Joe Richard miraculously developing an offensive game outside of 5 feet, that class was a complete waste.

The bigger travesty is that this leaves Tulsa with just 9 scholarship players to start the season, 3 of whom are true freshmen, which is a precarious situation for a team with the aspirations that Tulsa has for this season. Wojcik is on tenuous ground as it is with the Tulsa faithful thanks to his ill-advised criticism of the fanbase and blowout losses in big games. A coach can be excused for these transgressions if he's winning at an acceptable level, but 4 years without a trip to the dance is too long at Tulsa. As it stands, anything outside an NCAA tournament bid is a failure in 2010. The consensus right now is that Tulsa is a real bubble team for this year, but they're skating on thin ice and one injury could pop that bubble well before Selection Sunday. If that's the case, then Wojcik will have failed to make the tournament despite having 4 years with the best center in Tulsa history and for many Tulsa fans that would really be the last straw.

'Tis Better to have a Final Four Vacated than to Have Never Been At All


As a Tulsa fan, I should hate Memphis with a passion greater than almost any program in the country. They routinely embarrass our team on the court, they complain daily about leaving their worthless conference behind, and even when it looks like we might catch a bone, Antonio Anderson just rips it right back at the buzzer. (youtube)

And yet, I constantly find myself not hating Memphis in the least and even (gasp) rooting for them at times. Mostly I hate that Tulsa isn't even the same ballpark as Memphis in recruiting, on the floor, in the stands. Not since that 2000 season has Tulsa even come close to a level like that and that year is a speck that gets smaller and smaller in the rearview mirror every day. It's all a sobering reminder that maybe Tulsa does indeed deserve that nasty label of "mid-major".

But there's hope for a Tulsa fan watching Memphis roll through the NCAA tournament every year and it lies in the fact that deep down Memphis doesn't really look all that different. In spite of the conference, in spite of the tv contract, lacking access to the BCS fountain of youth, with at-large bids dwindling and selection criteria geared towards getting more 12-loss BCS teams in the tournament than ever before, Memphis ran roughshod over the traditional powers for a 4-year stretch on the court and on the recruiting trail. In one season, they destroyed UConn, Oklahoma, Georgetown, Arizona, UCLA, Michigan St, and Texas before bowing out in overtime of the national championship against Kansas. And that's in a single season! And through it all, the good old boys couldn't steal their coaches or their recruits or their fans. The death of the "if you can't beat 'em, just steal their coach" era was upon us! And then, just days after an uncharacteristic beating at the hands of Missouri in the sweet 16, it all started to crumble...

5 months later, here we are. Calipari is waxing poetic about his "dream job", the 2008 season and all of its glorious records are vacated, and the smug air that lies behind the reporting of all these incidents is stifling.

"What does this have to do with Tulsa?" you ask. "Isn't this a good thing? Doesn't it mean Tulsa is now the team to beat in conference USA?" Maybe we are, but only for this season and it's not the way it was supposed to happen. See, no true Tulsa fan ever wanted to drag Memphis down to our level. Sure, we took our fair share of shots, but deep down we knew that our program could get to that level as well and what would the pundits say when 2 Conference USA teams were playing in the Final 4!

In the end, I believe Memphis will recover. You can't change the fact that one of the best young point guards in the NBA went to the University of Memphis, you can't change the fact that a country full of players spent their impressionable years watching an athletic Memphis team play NBA ball for the last 5 years. In fact, from all indications, their recruiting won't suffer at all from the changes. (Rivals) The new beginning with Josh Pastner may be just what the doctor ordered. But it won't change the fact that our big brother, the one we looked up to for all those years, the one we hoped to emulate some day, was cheating all along and we're left looking into the darkness for another path, a clean path to the promise land hoping along the way that it's our program that's the next hero for the cause.

Monday, August 17, 2009

Tim Peete (2010) Interview

Thanks to the guys over at MemphisRoar.com for posting an interview with 2010 Tulsa commit Tim Peete.

“If it comes down to hitting that game winning shot against Memphis, I’m hitting that shot. To me, it’s all about winning, whatever it takes.”

MemphisRoar.com

Friday, August 14, 2009

Tim Peete (2010) commits to Tulsa


SG Tim Peete from Memphis Central High School committed to Tulsa last week becoming the second commitment in the 2010 class for Doug Wojcik. Peete averaged 13.5 ppg last year to lead his team to a 24-5 record falling to White Station in the Region 8-AAA semifinals. He becomes the first Memphis prep player to head to Tulsa since Willie Biles joined the Golden Hurricane in 1971.

By all accounts, Peete has a good mid-range game and is a creative scorer, but he's just average right now as a 3-point shooter. As is the case with many of Wojcik's recruits, Peete is considered a high-character guy with no problems in the classroom. He's rated as a 3-star prospect by Rivals and was drawing interest from Memphis, Missouri, and a slew of SEC teams. Tulsa has 2 scholarships remaining for this class and PG Jordan Clarkson (Converse Wagner) appears to be the top remaining target at this time.

Saturday, August 1, 2009

Blondy Baruti (2010) commits to Tulsa


During the best years of Tulsa basketball the program was known for its superior guard play and many Tulsa fans believed that the only missing piece was a true center who could dominate the middle. Well, thanks in large part to the impressive development of Jerome Jordan who entered Tulsa as an unknown project and will leave as a first round draft choice, Tulsa continues to bring in promising center prospects with relative ease. 6'9" Blondy Baruti from Mesa, Arizona who played last year with Tulsa freshman Donte Medder, becomes the latest big man to join the Golden Hurricane and the first commit of the 2010 class for Doug Wojcik.

Baruti was named MVP of the "For the Love of the Game" tournament on July 4th averaging 13 points, 12 rebounds, and 6 blocks per game. His team most recently was 4-1 at the Adidas Super 64 in Las Vegas where Blondy put up 11 points, 13 rebounds, and 4 blocks against the Dallas Mustangs, hit a game-winning 15-footer in the next game, and then put up 8 blocks in the 1st half of his final game. Joel Francisco of Scouts, Inc. had this to say about himi: "Baruti is a physical specimen that is raw and explosive at both ends."

Baruti was declared ineligible in January of his junior season at Mesa High School due to transfer rules, but despite rumors that he would head to prep school for his senior season, Blondy has decided to return to Mesa High and hopes to be reinstated for his senior season. He was drawing interest from Missouri, Georgia Tech, and a number of Pac-10 schools before committing to Tulsa.

Highlights

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Nine Months of Buzz Peterson

Robert "Buzz" Peterson, aka "the Buzzard", was hired on June 20, 2000, to replace Bill Self as the 27th head coach in Tulsa basketball history. Stacked with a team that returned 3 of the top 5 scorers from an elite 8 squad that finished the season ranked #9 in the AP poll, Buzz underwhelmed all season to the tune of a 21-11 record and a conference championship loss on his home floor to Hawaii. Driven by the disappointment of a season mired in disorganized leadership, the Tulsa players banded together and senior Marcus Hill carried the team to an NIT championship, defeating Memphis then Alabama in Madison Square Garden.

Clearly impressed by his 9.5 inept months as Tulsa head coach where Peterson ran a club with clear sweet 16 talent into the NIT ground, Tennessee tapped Buzz to replace Jerry Green on April 4, 2001. In a cruel twist of fate Tennessee never made the NCAA tournament under Buzz in 4 years after 4 consecutive trips to the tourney under Green, but the damage to the Tulsa program had already been done.

Stung by the ever accelerating carousel of basketball coaches that was spinning out of control, Tulsa AD Judy McLeod moved quickly to name Peterson's successor and decided upon long-time Tulsa assistant and TU alum John Phillips. Phillips was woefully under-qualified to lead a program with the history of Tulsa, but he promised stability and loyalty that coaches like Nolan Richardson, Tubby Smith, Steve Robinson, and Bill Self hadn't provided. With 2 years remaining of Self's last recruiting class to work with, Phillips led the team to consecutive 2nd round losses in the NCAA tournament, but the cupboard was running bare and Phillips' inability to coach would rear its ugly head one last time before his lack of recruiting truly caught up with him. Leading 4th-seeded Wisconsin 58-45 with 4:07 on the clock, Tulsa appeared to be headed to yet another sweet 16, but the lead melted quickly and with 2 seconds left on the clock Devin Harris dished to an injured Freddie Owens in the corner and...

Wisconsin 60 - Tulsa 59 (March 22, 2003)

It was the end of an era.

Tulsa would go on to post 3 straight 9-win seasons in the midst of a coaching change and despite a slow resurgence under Doug Wojcik, the program has yet to return to the Big Dance in 6 seasons.

The purpose of this blog is to provide analysis on the University of Tulsa basketball team that you can't get from the Tulsa World, ESPN, or anywhere else for that matter. We'll also take a look at the college basketball landscape through a pair of Tulsa sunglasses to provide our perspective throughout the year. We'll probably spend a good amount of time on other CUSA programs as well as the OOC opponents for Tulsa. There might also be a college football post thrown in every once in a while, but we want to talk basketball first and foremost (even in July!). Thanks for visiting and please add your thoughts in the comment section to any and all posts.