Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Michigan Basketball is Back

It was 1998. Stu Douglass was seven years old. Richmond pulled of an upset over 3rd seeded South Carolina in the first round of the NCAA Basketball Tournament. John Beilein coached Richmond. Michigan lost a heartbreaker to UCLA in the second round. Michigan has not been in the tournament since. Eleven years later, John Beilein and Michigan are both in the tournament again—together.

Growing up a Michigan fan, words can’t truly express my excitement upon hearing Greg Gumbel’s words: “Coming out of Ann Arbor…the seventh Big Ten team… the Michigan Wolverines!” My initial reaction was disbelief. Sure, I felt like Michigan was a lock to get into the tournament. But, after eleven years of absence and at least two years of heartbreak, Michigan fans had to be anxious. Especially after being skipped over in the first three regions. But, once Michigan’s name was called the anxiety, the heartbreak, and the dispair was all replaced with joy.

After last year’s 10-22 showing, no one expected Michigan to make the NCAA Tournament. I, for one, was hoping for above .500 basketball. As a result, John Beilein, Manny Harris, and DeShawn Sims are going to get all of the credit. They deserve a lot of it. They coached and played inspired basketball all year. But, this tournament bid is about so much more than three people.

The long and winding road began on February 17, 1996. Prized recruit Mateen Cleaves was on his official visit to Michigan when the car he was riding in crashed… and changed everything. Upon investigation, it was found that Cleaves and his host players had made it to Michigan booster Ed Martin’s house that night. Cleaves went to Michigan State, Michigan went on probation, and Michigan’s basketball program went into a downward spiral.

The on-the-court trouble all started with Brian Ellerbe. Taking over for Steve Fisher, Ellerbe stepped into an impossible situation. Still, watching Brian Ellerbe coach basketball is something that no one should have to endure. Despite a terrible coaches and impending sanctions, Michigan brought in a great recruiting class for the 1999-2000 basketball season. Jamal Crawford stayed for a year and went to the NBA. Kevin Gaines played for a year and was eventually kicked off the team. Only LaVell Blanchard lasted all four years. He didn’t take Michigan to the tournament, but LaVell proved himself to be a true Michigan Man when Michigan needed it the most. Other players in the Ellerbe era that Michigan fans will remember include Avery Queen, Bernard Robinson Jr., Gavin Groninger, and Josh Asselin.

In 2001, many thought that Michigan was ready to go to the next level. Up-and-coming Seton Hall coach Tommy Amaker was hired. Like Ellerbe, the start of Amaker’s time at Michigan was sparked by a great recruiting class. Daniel Horton, Lester Abram, and Chris Hunter gave Michigan fans something to get excited about. The following year, Dion Harris became the first Mr. Basketball in the state of Michigan to choose Michigan in nine years. Tommy Amaker’s teams consistently got close, but never close enough to get into the tournament. In fact, the one year that Michigan was likely “in,” they were serving their one year self-imposed probation for the actions of Ed Martin. Names that Michigan fans may remember from the TA era include Graham Brown, Amadou Ba, Ron Coleman, Courtney Sims, Brent Petway, Reed Baker, and Jerret Smith.

And, as much as I hated Tommy Amaker as a coach, I must say… he deserves a lot of credit for what happened yesterday. Amaker walked into Michigan the year before they went on probation. The Michigan basketball program desperately needed stability as well as a clean-run program. Tommy Amaker provided that. He brought Michigan back into respectability. He wasn’t a great coach. He probably would not have this year’s team into the tournament. But, he served the University of Michigan to the best of his ability for six years. He loved the players, the school, the fans. Tommy Amaker is a true Michigan Man. His efforts will not be forgotten anytime soon. Thanks TA, hope you were cheering along yesterday, you deserve a lot of credit for what has happened.

Thanks to Amaker’s efforts, Michigan was able to get a high-profile coach like John Beilein. Beilein has done more in less time than can possibly be expected of him. And, to his credit, he has not lost sight of the significance of yesterday’s events. Before and after the selection show, Beilein was consistent in his appreciation of one group—the fans. More than anything, Greg Gumbel’s words yesterday justified the actions of those of us Michigan Basketball fans who have been with the team for the last eleven years. We have seen bad and worse. Yet, we have stuck with the team, the program, the school. It wasn’t always easy, but it was necessary. I, for one, had chills yesterday following the announcement. It’s a feeling that I will never forget. Finally, the time has come. The last eleven years have been worth it. Michigan Basketball is back.

Hitting the Lottery

If you missed it, an Ohio University offensive lineman won the lottery for $250,000 earlier this week. Michael Eynon is hardly the first person in sports to hit the jackpot. The following teams and players hit the proverbial jackpot, and it changed some of their careers. In other cases, it brought championships.


10. 2007 Seattle Supersonics
Reminiscent of the draft 23 years before it. A center injured in college taken ahead of a "do everything" guard/forward. In the case of the 2007 NBA Draft, there were two players clearly better than the rest. Picking first could prove a huge blunder. Picking seconds, like the Sonics did, is a no-brainer.

9. Eric Gagne
Traded at the 2007 trade deadline, Gagne pitched poorly in the twenty games he saw the mound in a Red Sox uniform. But, he managed to win a World Series in the process.

8. Jim Sorgi
Jim Sorgi's 2007 salary: $850,000. Jim Sorgi's career touchdown passes: 6. Sorgi has been fortunate enough to be Peyton Manning's backup for his entire four year career. And, he has yet to play in a meaningful game. Instead, he's getting paid nearly a million dollars to stay in shape and play the last two games of the year after the Colts have clinched the division title. I'd take it.

7. Steve Fisher
The day before the 1989 NCAA Tournament, Bill Frieder was fired as Michigan basketball coach. Steve Fisher was named interim coach and most assumed that he would be replaced following the tournament. Glen Rice scored a record 184 points in the tournament, making Fisher's job pretty easy. Fisher signed a contract following the tournament and hit the jackpot again two years later with the Fab Five.

6. Sam Cassell
Sam Cassell signed with the Celtics in March to provide them with a veteran point guard to help the young Celtic players not named Pierce, Allen, and Garnett. Instead, he averaged 12 minutes per game in the playoffs, proving to be a great, veteran cheerleader.

5. Christian Laettner
Christian Laettner was a wonderful college basketball player. His basketball IQ was through the roof. But, he wasn't a Dream Teamer. Except he was. He sat the bench in the 1992 Olympics and watched the greatest basketball team ever dominate like no one has ever seen before. And he gets to call himself a part of that team. Not a bad distinction.

4. Phil Jackson
One of the most successful coaches in NBA history sure has run into some great help. If Michael and Scottie weren't enough, Kobe and Shaq should have been. Sure, nine championships as a coach is tough to argue with. But, I'm pretty sure I could've had at least six with those four playing for me.

3. 2005 Illinois basketball
The only list member not to take full advantage of hitting the jackpot. Illinois played in Indianapolis, Rosemont, and St. Louis in their six tournament games. These three cities: a combined 1062 miles from Champaign. Rumor has it they walked to all three sites as a warm-up. Unfortunately, home court advantage at a neutral site tournament wasn't enough. Illinois lost to UNC in the Finals.

2. Larry Coker
The 2001 Miami team that Larry Coker inherited consisted of the following: Willis McGahee, Andre Johnson, Antrel Rolle, Ken Dorsey, Ed Reed, Sean Taylor, Clinton Portis, Frank Gore, Jon Vilma, Bryant McKinnie, Kellen Winslow, Jeremy Shockey. That's not even all of the NFL talent on the roster at the time. Maybe the most talented college football team of all-time, Coker would have had to try not to win a National Championship. Apparently he did in 2002. Following the loss to Ohio State in the National Championship game, the talent left along with Coker's career.

1. 1984 Chicago Bulls
The Blazers picked Sam Bowie with the #2 pick. The Bulls had a no-brainer for a pick at #3. After establishing himself as the greatest player of all-time, Michael Jordan seems like even more of a no-brainer 24 years later.

The Return- SEC Academics

For the past year or so, I've been writing for one of my friends at theangryt.com. I recommend reading it daily. He's really got some great stuff there, and it gets a ton of traffic. In the past few weeks, I've decided to start writing in here again, and I'm going to start by posting some of my favorite articles that I've written for The Angry T.

This is probably my favorite-- talking about how poor academics actually helps SEC in recruiting.


Bigger... Faster... Dumber?


The SEC is the dominant conference. We've heard it for years. The last 2-3 years it is very possibly true. But why? They're faster, people say. Apparently the deep South breeds differently than the rest of the country.

Is it possible, though, that SEC schools are just able to take more athletes than other schools? Lower academic standards certainly make it a possibility. When looking at the academic reputations of the four major college football conferences (SEC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac Ten), it is clear that the SEC fails miserably.

Of the SEC's twelve schools, only Vanderbilt (18) and Florida (49) make the top 50 of US News and World's 2009 rankings. Only Georgia (58), Alabama (83), and Auburn (96) join them in the top 100. Two schools, Mississippi and Mississippi State, fall under the Tier 3 category. Even when those two sub-par schools are excluded, the average ranking among the other 10 SEC schools is a below-average 89.1.

By comparison, the two worst Big Ten schools (Michigan State and Indiana) are both ranked 71st. That's right, the worst Big Ten schools are ranked significantly ahead of the SEC's average. In perhaps the most staggering statistic, the SEC only has three schools that rank ahead of the two worst Big Ten schools. The Big Ten ranks at the top of the four conferences with a 50.1 average ranking and all eleven of their schools in the top 100.

The Pac Ten ranks second with an average ranking of 62.1 and only one Tier 3 school (Oregon State). The Big 12 falls slightly ahead of the SEC with an average ranking of 86.4 and two Tier 3 schools (Oklahoma State, Texas Tech).

So what does all of this mean? In short, the SEC has a recruiting advantage. Anyone who follows recruiting even a little bit realizes that there are a lot of kids coming out of high school with poor grades, test scores, etc, that are extremely talented athletes. It's not a stereotype. Different kids have different reasons for their academic shortcomings, many of which are beyond their control. When a school has lower academic standards, they can (in general) accept more recruits than schools with higher standards. Even if their entrance standards are decent, an easy trip to college appeals more to kids that are dead set on going to the NFL. Let's face it, student-athletes are not student-athletes anymore. If that were the case, kids would be flocking to the Big Ten. Or, recruits would be lining up to go to Vanderbilt, by far the best school in the SEC. Oh... but there's this little thing called reality. So are SEC players faster? Maybe. But it sure sounds like they're getting an easier ride.

This might not be as humorous as you expect from an article on the Angry T. But, well... the truth is funny enough.