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Tuesday: NCAA 6* "Watch and Win"
We have to admit our NBA mistake on Wednesday, trying to follow our own advice (see the current
"Rim Shots" column for more) by going slow, but also believing that Phoenix would not be one of the teams that would start the All Star break early. Wrong. But the NCAA board helped to make up for that, and now the full Thursday goes to the College ranks, with multiple plays on the way, including a 6* (368-256-12) that will play out in front of the national television cameras.
Its sad to see when someone loses it. ( like two days ) It just goes to show that these guys are not monitored at all at these sights they can post whatever they want and no one checks it out.
Todays SWISHES later...
January 2010 Minus 98.4 Units
February 2010 PLUS 14.8 Units
NBA Minus 91.2 Units YTD
CBB Minus 51.4 Units YTD
6* #538 CALIFORNIA over WASHINGTON
On Saturday we turned a 6* behind Mike Montgomery and his Bears in a
prime revenge setting against an opponent that they could exploit,
and the result was an easy 72-58 win over U.C.L.A. at Pauley
Pavilion. This is more of the same, as we back the best team in the
Pac 10 at a bargain price range when they bring a serious chip on
their shoulder.
The Pac 10 standings do not have Cal front and center, of course,
because the Bears have suffered three point blank losses in their 7-4
league tally. But in those 11 games they have out-scored the
opposition by 74 points, and the have done it across the board ?
higher shooting percentage, higher 3-point percentage, higher FT
percentage, more rebounds, more assists, and fewer turnovers. Now a
savvy veteran group reaches back for something special off of the
most embarrassing moment in the Pac 10 season, that earlier 84-69
loss vs. these Huskies in Seattle, and it brings us our favorite
revenge setting ? not just when the better team brings the special
focus, but when the key cogs in particular are the ones leading the
way.
The Golden Bears are led on the court by those four SR?s in the
starting lineup, with Jerome Randle, Patrick Christopher and Theo
Robertson all averaging at least 14 points per game, while Jamal
Boykin provides the physical presence on defense and on the boards.
How did that savvy veteran group fare in Seattle? How about an awful
11-35 from the field with 13 turnovers. When that quartet has more
TO?s than FG?s it means a special level of intensity the second time
around, as well as some swinging pendulums. But also note that the
result did not necessarily tell us anything about the matchup ? in
cashing a 4* ticket behind Washington that day our focus was all
about the energy of the matchup. It was a quick turnaround for Cal,
playing early on a Saturday afternoon after a Thursday night win at
Washington State in which the starters scored 91 of the 93 points,
and they were without Jorge Gutierrez, and with Randle nursing a sore
knee. The Huskies did what they do best ? use their athleticism to
wear down a team that could not bring their ?A? game.
Now we get Lorenzo Romar?s team at their worst. They have raw
athleticism but not a lot of polish, and as a result are an awful 0-4
SU and ATS on the Pac 10 road, falling to the spread by a significant
62 points in those games. They could not cope with Cal when all hands
were on deck in an 86-71 loss on this court LY, and in their first
road game since January 23rd they are even more subject to the kind
of issues that have haunted them in previous treks ? when they are
not getting easy points in transition the offense simply bogs down,
and that focused Randle/Christopher back-court is not going to give
the ball up often tonight. This will be the third time we have been
able to elevate Cal to a 6* rating in Pac 10 play, with the first two
cashing by 23 points, and the timing is right again.
4* #541 UTAH STATE over BOISE STATE
Because of the complexity of Stew Morrill?s playbook every once in a
while we will see a Utah State team get out of the gate slowly, and
that was the case when the Aggies fell at New Mexico State and
Louisiana Tech to open W.A.C. play. But talk about a slap in the face
kick starting the Aggies ? since then it has been an 8-0 SU and ATS
roll, with seven of the wins coming in double figures, and the level
of basketball being played is special. In this stretch they are
shooting 50.8 percent from the field, including 48.5 percent from
3-point range, while holding the opposition to 38.6 and 31.0 in those
same categories, and they have won the battle of the boards by 8.3.
They have also hit 76.4 percent of their free throws, a great way to
extend margins. And extending a margin is exactly where we expect to
see them in the latter stages tonight against a Boise State squad
that lacks the tools and confidence to slow the onrushing train.
Utah State is more than forewarned about this setting. While the
Aggies dominated the Broncos in that earlier 81-59 home win, when
Morrill did not have any starter on the court longer than 28 minutes
(12 different players saw at least four minutes of action), they have
made public comments all week about the embarrassment they suffered
on this court LY, a 66-56 defeat that ended their school record
19-game win streak. It was a night in which they shot a season low
36.5 percent, while turning the ball over 19 times. That bitter
memory provides just the spark that is needed to dominate an opponent
that simply does not get in the way.
Boise State has allowed half of the 10 W.A.C. opponents to shoot
better than 50 percent from the field, a simply awful count. It shows
a lack of heart and desire on defense, and if that is your particular
fault February can be a long month, regardless of how few calendar
days there are. The Broncos tried to make a big deal out of their
last home game against Idaho, coming in with a full week to prepare
in a setting that could have turned the momentum of their season
around, but they were whipped by much more than even the abysmal
79-55 final score can show, trailing by a shocking 45-19 at halftime.
An anemic Idaho offense dented them for 56 percent shooting. Now they
have to step way up in class, and we will call for the Aggie roll to
continue in style here, consistently breaking this defense down for
easy shots with their outstanding floor balance (six different
players are averaging at least 9.5 per game in their 8-0 run), and
building this margin easily into double figures.
4* #558 PORTLAND over SAN DIEGO
When a key veteran floor leader is lost from a weak team having a bad
season, the fear is that they will crash without that savvy presence
on the court, resorting into the kind of unfocused play that leads to
ugly results. So what happened to San Diego vs. Santa Clara without
De?Jon Jackson, whose Torrero career is over after he had made 81
appearances in the starting lineup? They crashed and burned with the
kind of unfocused play that created an ugly result, a hideous 59-43
home loss to a team that had entered the game at 9-16. It is not
going to get any better here.
Bill Grier could not have been more blunt about how his team played
on Saturday, but you can see that is was also not just about losing
Jackson ? it is something that apparently has been brewing all
season. So after he started his press conference alluding to <i>?Too
many guys worried about their own deal and not enough about the
team.?</i> he followed up with - <i>?But when we actually hit some
adversity in the game, we became pretty selfish and no one was
accountable. That?s the thing I?ve been fighting with this group all
season long.?</i> The stretch drive is going to be a long one for a
team that brought little to the table, even when Jackson was on the
court.
It is a much different story for Portland tonight. With several
quality wins under their belts the Pilots have a major focus on
making it to a post-season tournament, and at 14-8 the resume gives
them the potential if they can take care of business in settings such
as this one. It gets magnified tonight because of the presence of the
ESPNU cameras (yes, it is only ESPNU, but on this campus that is a
big deal), and also through the physical freshness that they can
bring in playing for only the second time in February, and the first
home game since January 23rd. And while they will be without Nik
Raivio again, note that they have gone 4-0 SU and 3-0-1 ATS as
favorites without him, beating Loyola-Marymount by 40 and Pepperdine
by 16 on this court, and San Francisco by 16 and Santa Clara by 22 on
the road. The fact that they were KO?d early at Gonzaga last week is
not a negative at all; if anything that only establishes a greater
sense of urgency for the task at hand, with a full week to prepare
helping Eric Reveno to put a game plan together. The Pilots are
playing with tremendous precision on offense, shooting 47.8 percent
from the field in conference play, including 39.7 beyond the arc, and
they have only turned the ball over 91 times in those eight games.
With the physical energy there to bring that precision fully into
play they can grind out a weak San Diego team that does not bring the
tools, confidence or the spirit to compete.