Posts Tagged ‘Wake Forest Demon Deacons’

Football Season Is Here…My ACC Picks/All-ACC Teams – Brandon Rink, ACC Blogger

Monday, July 26th, 2010

This weekend’s ACC Football Kickoff really brings football that much closer and the media did their ACC picks and All-ACC teams. Over at ACC Blogger, I did my own projections and here exclusively are my projected All-ACC and awards.

Projected ACC Standings

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Atlantic

Florida State Seminoles 7-1 (10-2 overall)
Boston College Eagles 6-2 (10-2 overall)
Clemson Tigers 6-2 (9-3 overall)
Maryland Terrapins 3-5 (5-7 overall)
NC State Wolfpack 2-6 (6-6 overall)
Wake Forest Demon Deacons 1-7 (3-9 overall)

Coastal

Virginia Tech Hokies 6-2 (9-3 overall)
Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets 5-3 (9-3 overall)
Miami Hurricanes 5-3 (8-4 overall)
North Carolina Tar Heels 4-4 (8-4 overall)
Duke Blue Devils 2-6 (4-8 overall)
Virginia Cavaliers 1-7 (4-8 overall)

Championship Game (Charlotte, NC): Florida State Seminoles vs. the Virginia Tech Hokies, 7:45 ET, ESPN.

ACC Championship Pick: Florida State

  • The Why: Two of the better offenses of the ACC will faceoff in the Queen City’s first shot at the ACC Championship Game. In the battle of QBs, I’ll take FSU with Ponder, but by far, the Hokies have the advantage at running back. The determining factor in this one will be which defense can make the big stop to win the ACC. And I have little confidence in either at this point, but give me the team with the top-flight QB and solid scheme to win the ACC.
  • Score: 27-24 Noles

First Team All-ACC

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QB: Christian Ponder (FSU)
RB: Ryan Williams (VT)
RB: Montel Harris (BC)
WR: Bert Reed (FSU)
WR: Jarrett Boykin (VT)
TE: George Bryan (NCSU)
OT: Andrew Datko (FSU)
OT: Anthony Castonzo (BC)
OG: B.J. Cabbell (UVA)
OG: Thomas Clairborne (BC)
C: Sean Bedford (GT)
PK: Matt Bosher (Mia)

Defense

DE: Robert Quinn (UNC)
DE: Allen Bailey (Mia)
DT: Jarvis Jenkins (Clemson)
DT: Damik Scafe (BC)
LB: Quan Sturdivant (UNC)
LB: Luke Kuechly (BC)
LB: Alex Wujciak (MD)
CB: Kendric Burney (UNC)
CB: Ras-I Dowling (UVa)
S: DeAndre McDaniel (Clemson)
S: Deunta Williams (UNC)
P: Travis Baltz (MD)
Specialist: Torrey Smith (MD)

Player of the Year: Christian Ponder (FSU)

Coach of the Year: Jimbo Fisher (FSU)

Rookie of the Year: RB Josh Snead (Duke)

Breakdown

Coastal players All-ACC: 11
Atlantic players All-ACC: 14

Per Team

BC: 5
Clemson: 2
Duke: 0
FSU: 3
GT: 1
MD: 3
Mia: 2
NC State: 1
UNC: 4
UVa: 2
Wake: 0

The ACC will be full of strong teams in 2010 – who do you think will take it all this season? Who did I leave off the All-ACC team that’s a must-have? Let me know what you think in the comments…

Thinking Out Loud: 2010 ACC Football Preview-Wake Forest

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

It’s that time of year–football season speculation time, and I’m going through the ACC team by team with an outlook for the 2010 season.

Let’s go to the replay(2009 season): 5-7(3-5 ACC)

Expectations weren’t high last season, but with the ACC Championship-winning senior QB Riley Skinner at the helm of the offense, the Deacs were looking for a bowl berth at least–didn’t happen. After a 4-2 start, Wake Forest went on a 5 game slide with 38-3, 13-10, 28-27, 30-27, and 41-28 defeats (3 of 5 on road). The Demon Deacons did finish off the season with a 45-34 win over the Duke Blue Devils to end the long losing streak. Jim Grobe set a high standard in 2006 with the ACC Championship, and this season was not representative of Grobe Deacs football.

But in 2010…

Skinner is gone, and many of the guys in the trenches, on both sides of the ball — there has been so much change that Grobe is going to a whole new offensive system. In the past, he has employed an option-esque misdirection, seen often in the 2006 ACC Championship season, but it appears the Deacs are going to a complete system based on option football like Coastal Division counterpart Georgia Tech. The move makes sense with a number of skill players returning outside of the QB on offense. My concern is with the offensive line to anchor the system. All the misdirection in the world can’t stop a defense from over-powering a lost or inexperienced offensive line.

On the schedule…

2010 Schedule
DATE OPPONENT
9/02 Presbyterian
9/11 Duke
9/18 @ Stanford
9/25 @ Florida State
10/02 Georgia Tech
10/09 Navy
10/16 @ Virginia Tech
10/30 @ Maryland
11/06 Boston College
11/13 @ North Carolina State
11/20 Clemson
11/27 @ Vanderbilt

That matchup with Duke in week two is the determining factor between bowl or no bowl for Wake Forest. It’s a tough schedule with the Coastal’s best in Georgia Tech and Virginia Tech, road trips to FSU and NC State, and the Stanford/Vandy road trips. The offense better come together quickly or Wake Forest fans will be suffering through blowout loss after blowout loss in 2010.

Fun with (record) scenarios…

Best Case: 7-5(4-4 ACC)

This is generous with the Deacs taking 3 of its 4 OOC games and drawing even in the ACC.

Worst Case: 2-10(1-7 ACC)

Wake Forest’s ACC schedule could be a gauntlet, and the road games at Vandy and Stanford–they have struggled with Navy a bunch lately to boot.

Realistic-like case: 4-8(2-6 ACC)

Color me conservative on my pick for the Deacs based on the info at this point, but the change in offense is a positive sign. If Grobe can find the right mix for the offense, and the defensive play solid, Wake Forest can surprise in the Atlantic with a winning campaign.

Can the Deacs breakthrough this season and surprise the ACC? Or will Wake Forest dwell in the cellar of the Atlantic with losses left and right?

Early, Early Picks for ACC Basketball–2010-11

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

Here’s a simulcast with my daily ACC blog at On The B. Rink

Last couple weeks, we looked at the early entrants and the grads–but how about the ACC players coming back and how the ACC dominoes fall next season?

The News & Observer puts together an early projected starting lineup yearly with early entrants/graduation/new recruits factored in and here’s my early picks based off how the ACC is looking at this point.

1. Duke Blue Devils

2009-10: 13-3, first
G Kyrie Irving, fr.
G Seth Curry, soph. (20.2 ppg @ Liberty)
G Nolan Smith, sr. (17.4 ppg)
F Kyle Singler, sr. (17.7 ppg)
F Mason Plumlee, soph. (3.7 ppg)
Bench: G Andre Dawkins, F Miles Plumlee, F Ryan Kelly, F Josh Hairston

Outlook: Loooooooooooooooaded. They will be a unanimous choice for the ACC and one of the top teams in the country.

2. Florida State Seminoles

2009-10: 10-6, third
G Derwin Kitchen, sr. (8.1 ppg)
G Deividas Dulkys, jr. (8.7 ppg)
G Michael Snaer, soph. (8.8 ppg)
F Chris Singleton, jr. (10.2 ppg)
F Xavier Gibson, jr. (5.5 ppg)
Bench: G Luke Loucks, F Terrance Shannon, PG Ian Miller, F Okaro White, F Jon Kreft

Outlook: No Alabi, no problem? That’s what I’m saying–the cupboard isn’t bare at FSU and if there’s a year that Hamilton’s Noles make a run–it has to be this season.

3. Virginia Tech Hokies

2009-10: 10-6, fourth
G Malcolm Delaney, sr. (20.2 ppg)
G Dorenzo Hudson, sr. (12.0 ppg)
F Terrell Bell, sr. (6.1 ppg)
F Victor Davila, jr. (5.3 ppg)
F Jeff Allen, sr. (15.2 ppg)
Bench: F J.T. Thompson, G Erick Green, F Jarell Eddie, F Allan Chaney, F Cadarian Raines, F Manny Atkins, G Ben Boggs

Outlook: The time is now in Blacksburg as they return everybody. Greenberg needs to advance past simply making the ever-elusive NCAA Tourney, but win some games in said tourney.

4. North Carolina Tar Heels

2009-10: 5-11, 10th
G Larry Drew II, jr. (8.5 ppg)
G Reggie Bullock, fr.
F Harrison Barnes, fr.
F John Henson, soph. (5.7 ppg)
F Tyler Zeller, jr. (9.3 ppg)
Bench: F Will Graves, G Dexter Strickland, PG Kendall Marshall, G Leslie McDonald

Outlook: The Tar Heels are an interesting squad to watch this season because they had such a fall from grace last season. Heels are still young and Williams will have quite a coaching job to do to get UNC back to the top.

5. Maryland Terrapins

2009-10: 13-3, second
G Adrian Bowie, sr. (4.8 ppg)
G Sean Mosley, jr. (10.1 ppg)
G Cliff Tucker, sr. (5.7 ppg)
F Dino Gregory, sr. (4.2 ppg)
F Jordan Williams, soph. (9.6 ppg)
Bench: F James Padgett, G Terrell Stoglin, F Mychal Parker, PG Pe’Shon Howard

Outlook: Terps lose three of their biggest starters from last season with Vasquez, Hayes, and Milbourne, but they have a talented group coming back. Sean Mosley has to step into the go-to-guy role and Jordan Williams has to expand his role in the paint for the Terps to stay here.

6. Clemson Tigers

2009-10: 9-7, sixth
G Demontez Stitt, sr. (11.4 ppg)
G Tanner Smith, jr. (8.7 ppg)
F Milton Jennings, soph. (3.2 ppg)
F Devin Booker, soph. (4.5 ppg)
F Jerai Grant, sr. (7.2 ppg)
Bench: G Noel Johnson, G Andre Young, G Donte Hill, F Bryan Narcisse

Outlook: The Tigers are in transition between philosophies with a new coach in Brownell and lose star forward Trevor Booker, but this team still has the guns to compete in a wide-open(past Duke) ACC.

7. N.C. State Wolfpack

2009-10: 5-11, 11th
G Javier Gonzalez, sr. (9.5 ppg)
G Lorenzo Brown, fr.
F C.J. Leslie, fr.
F Richard Howell, soph. (4.9 ppg)
F Tracy Smith, sr. (16.5 ppg)
Bench: PG Ryan Harrow, G Scott Wood, G C.J. Williams, F DeShawn Painter, F Jordan Vandenberg

Outlook: Expectations should be high in Raleigh with a talented crew coming in and back. If Lowe can capture the magic of the ACC Tourney run to the semis, the Pack can go far, but I’m staying a bit skeptical on them.

8. Miami Hurricanes

2009-10: 4-12, 12th
G Durand Scott, soph. (10.3 ppg)
G Malcolm Grant, jr. (9.6 ppg)
G DeQuan Jones, jr. (5.7 ppg)
F Julian Gamble, jr. (3.5 ppg)
F Reggie Johnson, soph. (6.4 ppg)
Bench: G Rion Brown, G Garrius Adams, G Antoine Allen, F Donnavan Kirk

Outlook: Miami will be a trendy pick this season, but I’m on the fence with them. I  like Scott and Johnson, but Miami has a lot to prove right now.

9. Virginia Cavaliers

2009-10: 5-11, ninth
G Jontel Evans, soph. (2.4 ppg)
G Sammy Zeglinski, jr. (8.9 ppg)
G K.T. Harrell, fr.
F Mike Scott, sr. (12.0 ppg)
F James Johnson, fr.
Bench: PG Billy Baron, F Will Regan, F Assane Sene, G Joe Harris, G Mustapha Farrakhan, F Will Sherrill

Outlook: I had the ‘Hoos at ninth in my early, early picks last season and that’s where they finished–completely new team coming to play next season with Bennett cleaning house, but they have some talent.

10. Boston College Eagles

2009-10: 6-10, eighth
G Reggie Jackson, jr. (12.9 ppg)
G Dallas Elmore, jr. (3.9 ppg)
F Corey Raji, sr. (11.4 ppg)
F Joe Trapani, sr. (14.1 ppg)
F Josh Southern, sr. (4.4 ppg)
Bench: PG Biko Paris, F Courtney Dunn

Outlook: New system, several transfers, and a squad of mostly unproven, consistently, players at this level–hard to get behind the Eagles at this point.

11. Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets

2009-10: 7-9, seventh
G Moe Miller, sr. (3.9 ppg)
G Iman Shumpert, jr. (10.0 ppg)
G Glen Rice Jr., soph. (5.4 ppg)
F Kammeon Holsey, r-fr.
F Brad Sheehan, sr. (1.2 ppg)
Bench: G Brian Oliver, PG Mfon Udofia, F Daniel Miller

Outlook: The Jackets return all of their primary guards, but the problem falls with losing the three best players off last year’s team with Favors, Lawal, and Peacock in the paint. I will stay cautious on Georgia Tech because I’m not sure the Jackets’ guards can carry them.

12. Wake Forest Demon Deacons

2009-10: 9-7, fifth
G Tony Chennault, fr.
G C.J. Harris, soph. (9.9 ppg)
F Ari Stewart, soph. (7.3 ppg)
F Tony Woods, jr. (4.6 ppg)
F Carson Derosiers, fr.
Bench: F Travis McKie, F Melvin Tabb, G J.T. Terrell, F Ty Walker, G Gary Clark

Outlook: New coach Jeff Bzdelik has a project on his hands, but the cupboard isn’t totally bare. If he can get the Deacs back to the NCAA Tourney, Bzdelik did a great coaching job.

Who’s too high? Who’s underrated? Can anyone knock off Duke? Early NCAA Tourney bid predictions?

Graduation Time in ACC Basketball – Brandon Rink of On the B.Rink

Thursday, May 6th, 2010

It’s May, and college students all across the country are graduating–where does this time of year leave ACC basketball for the 2010-11 season?

We looked at early entrants last week. By team, here’s the ACC seniors gone to graduation…

BC-N/A(but losing G Rakim Sanders and G Brady Heslip to transfer)

Clemson-F Trevor Booker, F David Potter.

Here’s your “no duh” analysis here–losing Booker will be big for Clemson.

Duke-G Jon Scheyer, F Lance Thomas, C Brian Zoubek.

These guys were huge in the title run last season, but the Blue Devils aren’t losing any on the NBA Draft front–they can be replaced for another run.

Florida State-F Ryan Reid.

The ‘Noles will be fine post-Reid, but he brought energy to FSU.

Georgia Tech-F Zachery Peacock, G D’Andre Bell

Losing Peacock to graduation may be just as big as losing Lawal and Favors to the draft as Georgia Tech’s frontline has been decimated this offseason.

Maryland-G Greivis Vasquez, G Eric Hayes, F Landon Milbourne

The two big guards and a key forward are gone for the Terps–makes you wonder where the scoring will come from next season.

Miami-C Cyrus McGowan, C Dwayne Collins, G James Dews, F Adrian Thomas

Hurricanes are tied with Wake for losing the most key seniors in the ACC, and the going could very well be tough again for Miami.

NC State-G Farnold Degand, F Dennis Horner

Horner and Degand came on during the ACC Tourney, but are replaceable with the talent coming in for the ‘Pack.

North Carolina-F Deon Thompson, G Marcus Ginyard

Ginyard and Thompson had disappointing senior seasons and UNC will see a better team next year coming from rock bottom.

Virginia-G Calvin Baker, C Jerome Meyinsse, F Solomon Tat

The ‘Hoos are a team in transition with Bennett over-hauling the squad–these seniors had some impact, but UVA will move on just fine.

Virginia Tech-N/A

Wake Forest-G Ish Smith, C Chas McFarland, F L.D. Williams, F David Weaver

I don’t envy Bzdelik in year one without all of that experience and Aminu gone to the NBA.

Analysis: On the whole, the ACC loses a ton in experience and talent. Virginia Tech is the only team not replacing key starters and the time is just about now for a strong run to the NCAAs. Duke loses one ‘S’ from the crew with Scheyer, but they are loaded. Wake Forest, Maryland, and Georgia Tech are three solid NCAA Tourney teams from 2010 that could all be on the bubble due to their losses. Clemson will have to adjust to a new system with Trevor Booker under Brownell. BC has a new coach and not many players as of yet due to transfers. FSU returns a number of players, but can they find an offense in the offseason? Virginia and Miami hope to climb out of ACC cellar doldrums–Miami has a better shot. If there’s a year that Lowe’s NC State is going to rise in the rankings, the Wolfpack should expect something from the 2010-11 season with most of the ACC rebuilding. UNC is another interesting case as they are bringing in the talented recruits, but they had a number of issues last season. The ACC is going to be wide-open next season with a number of fresh faces.

Who’s your extra-early favorite in the ACC?

ACC Notes in the Dead Period: Vol. 1 – Brandon Rink of On the B.Rink

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

We’re musing on a couple ACC topics today…

The true “Dead Period” of college sports is when college baseball ends, but since we cover football/basketball here, it started after Duke took the title. What’s happening?

* Hope springing eternal at spring games. Every ACC team thinks they will improve, but who do I think will be looking good going into the fall?

In the Coastal, I’m a fan of the two Techs to stay at the top with the Hokies having a slight edge. With UNC, their defense will be out of this world, but it is the same old story, the offense. I still do not see a great QB emerging or a number of skill position stars. They shouldn’t need much offense to win games this season, but having a consistently bad O can wear down the defense physically and mentally. I’m not a big fan of Miami going into the season, but they have the talent. Duke and UVA both have reason to be optimistic, but obviously nowhere near the top of the ACC.

Atlantic-wise, we have a bit more of a log-jam with the returning division leader Clemson with key players coming back, FSU rounding into form on offense and trying to fix the defense, and the oft-forgotten BC Eagles who will have a stout defense and a great player in Montel Harris to lead the O. Among NC State, Wake Forest, and Maryland, I see quite possibly three of the worst teams coming into 2010.

But it’s spring, and it is a long way to the summer/fall and football, way too long.

* ACC basketball will have a completely different look with seniors and early entries in the NBA Draft. We’ll look at the possible early entrants right now.

By team at this point, the ACC could/will lose…

BC-N/A

Clemson-N/A

Duke-N/A(even after a championship!)

Florida State-Solomon Alabi(Center)

NBADraft.net says Alabi goes late first to second round. ESPN has him at 19th in the draft.

Georgia Tech-Derrick Favors(Forward), Gani Lawal(Forward)

ESPN has Favors at third on their board. NBADraft.net says Favors in top five; Lawal goes late first.

Maryland-N/A

Miami-N/A

NC State-Tracy Smith(Forward)

This one is hot off the presses so we’re not sure where he’s going as of yet. He hasn’t hired an agent so there’s good possibility he comes back.

North Carolina-Ed Davis(Forward)

NBADraft.net again says in early to mid first round. ESPN still has Davis at 7th.

Virginia-Sylven Landesberg(Forward)

Looking like Landesberg will have an issue even being drafted, but could land in the second round–either way, he’s not coming back to UVA.

Virginia Tech-Malcolm Delaney(Guard)

Delaney should being coming back based on draft projections.

Wake Forest-Al-Farouq Aminu(Forward)

ESPN has Al-Farouq at sixth in their draft rankings. Aminu’s top ten status echoed by NBADraft.net.

Analysis: The biggest sting, pardon the pun, is felt by the Yellow Jackets as their primary scorers and rebounders are gone. Coming in second is Wake Forest as Al-Farouq Aminu was a double-double machine for the Deacs. NC State losing Smith would be big for them even with the recent recruiting success, but seems like he will be back. Other than that, I think the biggest impact for most of these teams will be more from seniors going than early entries. FSU would be better with Alabi, but they can manage without him. UNC won’t lose much with Davis gone. Virginia Tech should get Delaney back, and the ‘Hoos and Landesberg weren’t getting along anyway apparently. Duke returning both Smith and Singler is not good news for the rest of the ACC with the other talent returning and recruits coming in. We’ll analyze the impact of seniors leaving in another post and where that leaves the ACC with the early entries that are coming back.

Who’s your favorite in the ACC divisions in football here in spring? What early entries are going early in the draft? Who should be coming back?

It’s Spring…Time for Expansion Talk to Be in the Air – Brandon Rink of On the B.Rink

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

More teams=better for the ACC? Not opposed to it, but it’s not necessary if the ACC can hang on to what they’ve got.

When expansion came to the ACC back in the mid-2000s, football was key to the deal for 12 teams to an ACC Championship Game. With the Big Ten looking to become the Big 14 or 16 now, the domino effect will most likely be a divide and conquer of the Big East mega-conference if the right teams leave. What does the ACC do with all of this?

Right now, I don’t think the ACC needs to expand, but–if they do, basketball should be in mind this time. I don’t think there are any “can’t miss” football rich teams out on the market like a Virginia Tech/BC/Miami(but then again, we didn’t know they were on the market back then).  Teams thrown around include Syracuse which would be an excellent addition to the conference for another basketball-rich team. If you look at the Big East on the basketball side, they are the best overall conference despite the back-to-back titles for the ACC. Add a couple basketball powers from the Big East and the conference becomes that much better.

Maryland blog Testudo Times has West Virginia, Louisville, South Florida, Cincinnati, and East Carolina as possibilities in the case that the Big Ten goes 16 teams. They go on to discuss the geographic and academic fit-issues with each school which are valid points. I personally would love to add West Virginia and another one of those schools or more, but I blog and do not have the call on such decisions.

Will expansion further break up the Tobacco Road rivalries? Possibly, but I think it could be structured where they don’t lose much in the deal. But they are only four of 12 teams in the conference and money comes with each NCAA Tourney win and TV markets. With NC State’s struggles in the last few years, there are only three consistently competitive squads in NC(granted, two of the better programs in college basketball history included there). Adding a Syracuse can cooperate with BC for blanketing that Northern market and add a deadly, tradition-rich team for the NCAA Tourney.

On the other side, if the SEC/Big Ten come calling for ACC squads–can the ACC hold them off? Clemson and Florida State are two of the more likely SEC candidates. I’m not sure any ACC team would fit with the Big Ten geographically. With the money the SEC is bringing in, you have to think they would be listening. Clemson is an original member of the ACC, and with a stronger emphasis on academics now–that might stave off any other conference’s advances. For Florida State, coach Fisher obviously has experience with SEC football so that would be interesting. For the ACC, keeping these squads is paramount for a respectable football conference which may be why a proactive expansion could be in the cards.

In the case of the ACC’s big expansion of BC/VT/Miami, the ACC went with a delayed reaction to the SEC’s move in the 90s. I will argue until my face is as blue as the ACC logo that the expansion was a positive for the conference as a whole. If they move quickly like the Big Ten, they could be at or ahead of the curve, but I don’t think they will expand with their emphasis on keeping tradition and strong academics. The most likely scenario is that another conference comes calling for an ACC team and the conference works hard to keep everyone intact.

To expand or not to expand, that is my question to you.

What Do the Wake Forest and Clemson Hires Mean for the ACC? – Brandon Rink of On the B.Rink

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

Wake Forest goes out West to Colorado to snag Jeff Bzdelik. Clemson gets another coach from Dayton, Ohio in Wright State’s Brad Brownell.

They are not the “big” names.

Bzdelik and Brownell have no NCAA Tournament wins between them.

No one besides the two schools involved were really beating down the respective schools’ doors to get them, but I think both squads have reason to be optimistic about the hires.

First, for Clemson, Brownell is known as a X’s and O’s guy that can get the most out of the talent in place. He is a young guy who, right now, is inexpensive for the Tigers and has potential to build Clemson in the future. What Brownell has to come in and do is win over the players first–who are a bit jilted after what Purnell did, and secondly, the fans who so want a winner, but are not used to being a part of a basketball-centered school.

As for Wake Forest, Bzdelik had a solid run at Air Force before ending up with the Denver Nuggets and then Colorado. Bzdelik has coached at the NBA level–not successfully, but he can sell that he knows what it takes to be in the NBA. He also has a reputation for being a X and O’s guy with a bit of an unorthodox style.

Brownell and Bzdelik will bring a different edge to the ACC as they will both be hungry to bring their new schools to prominence with dramatically different styles from their predecessors. I’m most interested in seeing what Brownell does with Clemson’s defensive scheme as to if they will zone more and abandon the full court press. For Wake Forest, Bzdelik will have to maximize his talent as they lose so much next season–he could very well have an in year one for rebuilding, which could be why he was brought in now for Gaudio.

The most important factor at both schools is a little bit of patience of the fanbase–that very well might not come with how off-the-wall each hire seems to be. Wake Forest and Clemson won’t be Final Four material in a year, but if each one is the right hire, the fans can expect incremental success until they reach the promise land. Both Clemson and Wake Forest fans should expect Duke/UNC-like success at least once in a while if they really want to be among the best, and that does not come in a day–or with the wrong hire. Now, the fun really begins for both schools and the fans should be excited one way or the other.

Deacs/Tigers excited about your hires? Other ten teams’ fans, do either coach strike fear or at least respect?

Eventful Post-Championship Week in ACC Basketball – Brandon Rink of On the B.Rink

Thursday, April 8th, 2010

Duke wins an NCAA Title–and the dominoes fall in the ACC.

Duke Wins NCAA Championship

First off, Duke/Butler–what a game! I’ll admit that I thought it would be a blowout for the Blue Devils, but the Bulldogs hung tough and had a good shot at the upset. Duke really surprised me all season as the questions were out there as to if this team full of talent could put it all together for a championship-run–I wondered if they were a contender in the ACC this season, but behind the top level play of Nolan Smith, Jon Scheyer, and Kyle Singler with the improved role play of Brian Zoubek, Lance Thomas, and the Plumlees–Coach K molded this team into a winner, and they will be right back on top next season if they can get Smith to return with all of the talented recruits coming in.

Coaching Changes-A-Plenty

>We’ll start with the shocker of Oliver Purnell leaving for Depaul. I wrote on my site:

The move by Purnell concerns me on a few different fronts. I feel for the players as I’m sure they could never have imagined that Purnell would leave them–I mean, it’s an ACC school, the conference that just one back-to-back championships–this had to have completely blindsided them. It makes me wonder about Purnell quite frankly. He started something–something good, and wasn’t willing to finish–it’s absolutely a strike against him and his career as he did not stick with the program to see them to a NCAA Tourney win and more success in the ACC.

I was blindsided by the move and it still stuns me that Purnell would forsake a program he put so much into for another rebuilding project–Clemson is better off without him if he was not willing to finish the job which appears to be the case. The Tigers, like Wake Forest now, will be looking all over the college basketball landscape for a hire. This next hire is crucial to the future of Clemson basketball as they could easily slip back into the depths of the ACC of the pre-Purnell days with the wrong hire.

>Gaudio getting the axe was surprising also as he had regular season success at Wake, but as I have noted here and on my site, there seemed to be a mental block going into the postseason and late stretches of the regular season for Gaudio. Still, he got the big win over Texas in the NCAA Tourney–the move puzzles me. I don’t hate the move as the jury was still out on Gaudio, but it seems like he should have had at least one more year to show his worth with his players. Something besides on-court performance has to be behind the move whether its recruiting going bad or a poor relationship with boosters/administration. Like with Clemson, Wake Forest is not all that bad off without Gaudio and the next hire is huge.

>As always, BCs move to do something goes under the radar of news events in the ACC after they hired Cornell’s Steve Donahue this week. Donahue coached a decade at Cornell and made the NCAA Tourney three years in a row including the Sweet 16 run this March. Looks like a good move right now as he will bring a more up-tempo offense and should be able to recruit better talent to make BC a more flashy team when the season goes into March. After this season’s success at Cornell, Donahue should be able to parlay that into recruiting top-flight offensive-minded players.

I open the floor to Duke exultation, predictions on next year, who the must-get candidates for Wake Forest/Clemson are, and BC hire thoughts…a lot happening in the ACC right now…

How Far Does the ACC Go in the NCAAs? – Brandon Rink of On the B.Rink

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

With four ACC teams facing potential matchups with 1 or 2 seeds, a lot of pressure rides on the two top seeds of Duke and Maryland for conference prominence late into the tournament…

We’re looking at you, Duke and Maryland.

The ACC indeed has six teams in the NCAA Tournament, but the committee, and mostly the teams themselves throughout the season, did them no favors with a road to the Sweet 16.

Essentially, four ACC teams face tough matchups not only in round one, but with one seed and one seed-caliber teams in the second as the 7-seeded Tigers have a rough potential matchup with West Virginia, Big East Tournament Champs. Georgia Tech, after the long run in the ACC Tournament, face a tough Oklahoma State squad before a matchup with Ohio State and one of the nation’s best in Evan Turner. The Deacs rode their second half slide right into a matchup with a similarly struggling Texas squad–and John Wall and Kentucky loom in round two. The ‘Noles face the tournament veteran Gonzaga who would have had a much higher seed with a West Coast Tourney Championship–and oh, a Syracuse team that had a run at the number one overall seed dashed in round one of the Big East Tourney.

I’m all for surprises, but Duke and Maryland have the hopes of the conference in their hands.

Duke, as well publicized, received a favorable seed for their excellent run down the stretch–only losses in final 16 games being at high-seeded Maryland and Georgetown. The Blue Devils face the play-in game winner, Louisville-California winner for their Sweet 16 shot–the Cardinals of Louisville could be a stiff challenge, but Duke has beat better teams this season. I expect the Blue Devils to breeze to the round of 16–in that round, you have a weakened 4 seed with Purdue who lost one of their best players in Hummel a few weeks ago. The Aggies are the five seed and I expect them to play the Blue Devils in the Sweet 16–TAMU beat Clemson earlier this season out at the 76 Classic, but they don’t have the guns to run with Duke for an entire game with Singler/Scheyer/Smith on. Baylor and Villanova are top-seed in the bottom of the bracket and I see the Blue Devils making it through to the Final Four against either team. Duke making it to the Final Four, after a few years of disappointment now, would be a tremendous boost to the conference. Prognosticating the other side of the bracket is tough, but Kansas will be tough opponent if they make it through–Syracuse, Kansas State, and Ohio State too. I think the Championship Game is as far as the Blue Devils go, but they have to make it past a Kentucky or West Virginia first which will be tough. Right now, I’ll take the Blue Devils to the regional semifinals and loss.

The Terps, our second conference savior, were given a tall task as the nation’s best team in Kansas, Ohio State with the best player, and last year’s runner-up for the title with Michigan State in the second round. First round, I like the Terps to roll Houston–second round, the Spartans have been up/down this season–anything could happen, but if Vasquez shows out, Terps win. Kansas is the matchup nightmare with quality size, experienced guards, and depth against the Terps–I have Maryland making it to the Elite 8 in a few of my brackets where the Jayhawks are upset in round two, but Maryland can’t run with the KU–Terps make it to the Sweet 16 and fall.

Of just first round survivors, I have Clemson and Wake Forest making it through to round two, but falling to West Virginia and Kentucky respectively.

Quick trips back to Atlanta and Tallahassee for Georgia Tech and Florida State await as I don’t trust either team to make sustained runs–though they have the talent to do so.

Who do you see making it far in the NCAAs? Of Clemson, Georgia Tech, Florida State, and Wake Forest–who can make  run to the Sweet 16(farther)? Can Duke or Maryland win it all?

ACC Quarterfinal Friday Wrap-Up/Looking Ahead to the NCAAs – Brandon Rink of On the B.Rink

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

Was in Greensboro all day on Friday and what a day it was!

Friday at the ACC Tournament was not exactly what I expected–or anybody else.

Virginia, without a couple of key guards, started off the madness with a close, well-played game with Duke–with the dynamics of tournament seating, each team has a 1/12 of the seating assigned and it was 11/12 pro-UVA, 1/12 Duke–and well attended for a noon, weekday game. Duke prevailed as expected, but Virginia fans should be proud of their team’s effort.

The Hokies were stunned in game two as the Canes kept rolling from the blowout win over the Deacs. Miami guard Durand Scott won over the hearts of all the non-Hokies(and it was mostly Hokies there) with an excellently played game.

After a couple hour break, the games resumed and the intensity ratcheted up another level. The Terps and Jackets played a hard-fought game, and Georgia Tech came up big at every key moment. Vasquez had an up-and-down game as he got the Terps back into striking distance for the lead, but faltered on two shots that would have had the Terps back in it.

The best, in atmosphere, was saved for the last game as NC State fans packed out the coliseum with red and cheered their team on to a second half come-back to the upset.

After two days at the ACC Tourney, four probable NCAA Tournament teams in Clemson, Florida State, Maryland, and Wake Forest were knocked out–though Virginia Tech is living on the edge right now. Miami and NC State proved that while their seasons were not quite what they wanted–they hung tough to regroup for the ACC Tournament–and a shot to earn their way in by four wins in four days.

For a more in-depth look, here’s what I wrote up on my site at OnTheB-Rink.com/blog

Game One–Duke/UVA

Under seven minutes to go, ACC Quarterfinal Friday and the under-manned, over-acheiving ‘Hoos cut the Duke lead to 2—the crowd erupts.

The Greensboro Coliseum was about 75% full—75% of that crowd rooting for Virginia(whether ‘Hoos fan or not—actually saw a Hokies’ fan demonstratively rooting against Duke/for UVA)—and the other 25% for Duke.

But Duke responded—boy, did they respond. Devils went on a 6-0 run to start—and by the 2:32 mark, Duke put it out of reach with a 56-44 lead and Scheyer leading the charge.

Duke was lethargic at times—and Virginia played every whistle like it was there last—a great way to open up Quarterfinal Friday.

Random Notes…

  • *Mike Scott for UVA and Kyle Singler for Duke had solid games in the frontcourt. Meyinsse did well too.
  • *Sad to not see Sammy Z perform in person—was looking forward to seeing him.
  • *Jones had a big game among the UVA guards.
  • *Nolan Smith out-performed Scheyer the entire game as the ‘Hoos played great defense on him until he broke out in the final 5.

Game Two–Miami/Virginia Tech

Delaney missed it—the potential game-winner—he missed it—he missed a lot—he wasn’t there.

The Hokies were picked up by Dorenzo Hudson and Jeff Allen, but MVP MD23 only missed shots—uncharacteristically missed free throws too—and his 7 points only made a dent in a great game where the Hurricanes as a 12 seed advanced to the ACC Semis.

Miami guard Durand Scott put the team on his back in front of a mostly pro-Hokies crowd and scored key buckets including free throws to salt the game away.

Random Notes…

  • *Miami’s frontcourt did not show in the box score offensively, but were effective and stealing rebounds away and causing enough ruckus to throw off the Hokies.
  • *Lots of Hokies went home disappointed—they had a strong representation and their team didn’t pick them up.
  • *The Canes’ guards are all on fire—Dews, Scott, Thomas, Jones, Grant—everybody is confident.
  • *Hokies, like Clemson and Wake, stumble into the NCAAs—we’ll see which one, two, three, or none respond in the tournament.

Game Three–Maryland/Georgia Tech

It was the 17:52 mark of the first half—Maryland had a 4-2 lead, but it seemed like 100-2 with the way Georgia Tech was playing.

Coach Hewitt rallied the troops.

By the last media timeout of the second half, Georgia Tech had a 15 point lead and went into the half up 42-25. Grievis Vasquez only scored 2 points that.

Maryland came out on fire in the second half and cut the lead down to 2 with 11:39 to go as Vasquez started hitting shots—but his game-tying attempt with under 30 seconds to go air-balled and another 3-point attempt went straight up in the air. There aren’t many games where when Vasquez has the opportunity to lead his team to victory—he misses, but the Quarterfinal Friday was one of them.

The Jackets effort was balanced as whenever they needed a basket—somebody stepped up—just impressive. They now face the ‘Pack with a strong chance with the way they are playing to win an ACC Championship.

Random Notes…

  • *Crowd was mostly for the Jackets at the end as most of the crowd gave a standing ovation to the Georgia Tech win.
  • *The second half was madness with one rugby-esque scrum with bodies flying and the refs called a jump-ball.
  • *Georgia Tech hit from the perimeter like I haven’t seen all season.
  • *The Terps are a better team than they played Friday—I expect them to turn it around in the postseason.
  • *The Jackets have all the momentum in the world going into the NCAAs—we’ll see how they handle it.

Game Four–NC State/Florida State

Scott Wood—Nole slayer—the guy was on fire with his 18 points in the 58-52 win. FSU’s lack of offensive prowess showed down the stretch as NC State got the baskets when they needed them while the Noles floundered.

Gonzalez’s play at the point guard was huge as he hassled the FSU guards and notched several key steals and assists. Tracy Smith was neutralized for much of the game, but found a way to come up big in the final minutes with a soul-crushing dunk with 1:58 to go to put the Wolfpack up 6.

The crowd was ecstatic as it was a thoroughly pro-Wolfpack coliseum—the FSU warchant was quickly drowned out by all NC State chants every time.

FSU’s problem will always be a lack of a go-to guy—they don’t have a Smith, Booker, or Scheyer—they have some solid players, but no one great and that will hurt them in March.

Random Notes…

  • *The place was painted red—after the game the walk to the parking lot was all chants and eager Pack fans buying up tickets. Great atmosphere for a tournament.
  • *FSU fouled a bunch—didn’t really get one guy in foul trouble, but they were fouling left and right.
  • *Smith handled Alabi—makes no sense with the height disparity, but Alabi doesn’t appear to be strong enough to deal with a guy like Smith.
  • *I kept waiting for Singleton or Reid to really step up and it never happened.
  • *FSU led at the half, but by the first media break, NC State already had this one in their grasp—37-33 Pack at that point and they would have 48-41, 51-46, and 52-48 leads the rest of the breaks in the second.

Thanks for reading and we’ll be breaking down the NCAA Tournament that is coming up right around the corner!