"My rule was I wouldn't recruit a kid if he had grass in front of his house. That's not my world. My world was a cracked sidewalk."
—Al McGuire
Marquette's Premier Basketball Blog
Monday, January 29, 2018
It was a rough, but not unexpected week for #mubb
Well, it wasn't the week we were hoping for (especially against Xavier) but it also did nothing to damage #mubb tournament chances. We start with the most recent game against Villanova (most because neither one of really wanted to talk about the Xavier boondoggle). We talk about what the performance against Villanova and whether the loss is the fault of the officiating (spoiler alert, they didn't help but they weren't to blame). We also discuss why we can't get the Tres Amigios to play well at the same time. To cleanse the palate a little we highlight the continuing improvement from Harry Froling and Sacar Amin, who both had an excellent game. To wrap up the podcast we spend some time analyzing the up coming week with critical home games against Butler and Providence. We give predictions, one us thinks the team goes 2-0 and it's not who you think. As always, enjoy!
Download this episode (right click and save)
Tuesday, January 23, 2018
Break is over, time to get back to the grind for #mubb
It was a seemingly very long 9 day break from Marquette basketball, but they're back this week and so is the podcast. For having 9 days off we sure have a lot to talk about. First, we have the pleasant surprise of Joey Hauser (you may know his brother) 2018 commit actually enrolling in school this semester and taking a voluntary red shirt so he'll have 4 years of eligibility starting in the fall. We spend talking about that and whether it's a good or great thing. We then spend as little time as possible reviewing the actual DePaul game which may have been the worst game #mubb played all season. Then we talk about the tough upcoming week with a road trip to Xavier and a big home clash with national #1 Villanova. We discuss what we expect to be different in these repeat match-ups and look ahead to the rest of the schedule to determine just how important this week is. We close out by giving our predictions and highlighting the need for one of Marquette's own Tori McCoy. As detailed by Anonymous Eagle() Tori needs a kidney transplant and Marquette has started a GoFundMe(GoFundMe) to support her. If you can please support Tori in her time of need. On that note, let's go out and one at least one of these games and start the second half of the conference season off on a great note. Enjoy!
Download this episode (right click and save)
Sunday, January 14, 2018
We got what we needed out of the past week, let's beat DePaul and rest up
#mubb went 1-1 this week and looked great against Seton Hall while reverting to defensive form against Butler so we're going to declare that a successful but not spectacular week. We're going to start with the good and discuss they shockingly great defensive effort against the top team in the Big East(at the time) Seton Hall. We try to understand what changed and how it can be carried into future games. What is clear is that #mubb would not carry it into the next game against Butler where the interior defense was more useless than the Maginot line (yes that's a WWII joke, whatever). We discuss the Butler game and what went wrong and what positives we can take away from it. A positive we can take away from that game and the season really, has been the play of Sam Hauser. Seemingly lost in the flashy play of the lead guards for Marquette, Sam has managed to put together a strong offensive game while also being our best interior defender if not best defender period. So we talk about how efficient his offense has been. We also have a shotout for Matt Heldt, most efficient man in the NCAA. We wrap up the podcast with a discussion of the DePaul(just don't lose to them) and some odds and ends. As always, enjoy!
Download this episode (right click and save)
Monday, January 08, 2018
So we should probably spend some time talking about Markus Howard
So the week turned out exactly how we thought it would, #mubb went 1 and 1 with a win over Providence and a tough loss to Villanova, ho hum not much to talk about. Just kidding, of course we are going to carry on for 25 minutes about Markus Howard's historic 52 point performance and his equally impressive 37 points and 8 assists against Villanova. In fact, we spend time talking about where the performance against Providence ranks in modern MU single player performance pantheon. Once even we've had enough of talking about Markus, we do breakdown the Providence and Villanova games to talk about what we liked and didn't like from the games. Finally, we turn ahead to this week, which is another must go 1 and 1 week, previewing the Seton Hall and Butler games. I'd take another 89 points from Markus this week, but let's hope we don't have to for at least one win. Enjoy!
Download this episode (right click and save)
Tuesday, January 02, 2018
Happy New Year and mostly happy start to Big East play
Happy New Year! Hope everyone has recovered from the holidays and is ready to talk #mubb basketball. First we discuss the old year, and the mixed results of the first two games of conference play. We break down the Xavier and Georgetown games including is the defense getting better and how worried should we be about Markus Howard's slump. We then transition to the new year and the brutal next 7 games on Marquette's schedule and what our expectations should be. We then get into a conversation about the next two games, @Providence and @Villanova and our expectations for those games. We close out the pod with a brief remembrance of broadcast legend, Dick Enberg, who had multiple connections to Marquette. Enjoy!
Download this episode (right click and save)
Monday, January 01, 2018
If Bids Went to Players Instead of Teams: Rowsey v. Bridges and Hauser v. UCLA's Welsh
As I ran the Value Add Basketball Numbers to finish out the 2017 calendar year, one thing became apparent - if the season ended today Oklahoma's Trae Young would be the best college player OF THE CENTURY, which clearly gives Oklahoma the best athletic duo of the century since Baker Mayfield takes the field against Georgia today as one of the top five football players of the century.
Last season I insisted Sindarius Thornwell of South Carolina was the best player in the country and then Marquette drew him in the opening round - but Young is much better than him and after going into #10 TCU and upsetting them 90-89 with a 39 point, 14 assist game, these guy edges out even Anthony Davis and Kevin Durant for the most dominant college player of the century based on the history Value Add rankings.
This made me think about just how prohibitive a favorite Young would be if the NCAA bids were for a one-on-one tournament and you could somehow factor in his assists, which obviously necessitate playing on a team.
I went ahead and sent out bids to both the NIT and NCAA based on the new Value Add numbers, but also giving the best player in each conference an automatic bid, and ended up with great match-ups for Marquette's two top 100 players (with the streaky Markus Howard out of the top 100 for the moment.
Of course, Michigan State fans will cry foul that Value Add ratings would currently place Andrew Rowsey as the slighly favored No. 4 seed in the NIT Western bracket against their National Player of the Year hopeful. However, Rowsey has been worth an extra 7.33 points per game to Marquette this year to an almost identical 7.27 for Miles Bridges. Great players tend to rank lower earlier in a season of blowouts since the minutes are spread.
A Georgetown fan texted me after Saturday's game to ask, "Who is Andrew Rowsey and give me one good reason I should not hate him." While his defense is not great (note he gets a "D" for defensive rebounding, C for a few blocked shots, and B for steals) he and the rest of the team have improved enough that he is currently the 67th most valuable player in the country, and therefore would be in an at-large "player" March Madness except that we gave the smaller conferences one team each. Bridges will shoot up now facing tougher Big Ten opponents, but when www.kenpom.com says Bridges has only been the best player in 1 of 15 games so far, and Value Add adjusts for strength of opponents (the Spartans last six opponents have been ranked 310, 106, 295, 238, 302, 330).
OK, so I cheated a little and created one NIT play-in match-up since Hauser technically missed the last NIT spot as the 87 best player in basketball. This would put him up against Shannon Evans of the amazing Arizona State team of Bobby Hurley, for the right to play the top seed in the NIT West in big man Thomas Welsh of UCLA. As good as Hauser's all-around offense is every day, completely in the flow of the game, I also wanted to point out that he is one of the few that has a strong ranking in all three defensive categories, getting a "B" (top 40%) in Defensive Rebounding, Blocked Shots and Steals.
Fair to note that Ethan Happ had an All-American ranking until Matt Heldt slowed him down, and he has slipped a bit and would place as an NIT player at this stage. Max Strus of DePaul is looking strong after the incredible scare they put into Xavier.
Finally these would be our NIT bids to the south.
Shifting to the top 68 players in the hypothetical NCAA one-on-one tournament, Villanova continues to have two of the top eight players in the country, and with no undefeated teams remaining they still look like the best in the country - not just the Big East. St. John's and Shamorie Ponds have slipped a little after an extremely hot start.
No freshman ever had a Value Add rating more than two points better than anyone else in the country. It is still a long season, but if Trae Young keeps this pace up he is the best college player of the century.
West Virginia's Jevon Carter is second best partly due to being an incredible defender.
I am not sure if it is really allowed to have three of the four play-in games feed one bracket, but just having fun. DJ Hogg teams up with our old friend Duane Wilson, so the best of luck to them on an incredible start. We saw Georgia's Yante Maten, who couldn't quite win at Kentucky to help our RPI, and we will see Seton Hall and Desi Rodriguez of course.
And that's how it would play out if we were selecting the bids of the best player. Obviously you can sort the best of the Big East or anything else among the 4000-plus players at www.valueaddbasketball.com.
Last season I insisted Sindarius Thornwell of South Carolina was the best player in the country and then Marquette drew him in the opening round - but Young is much better than him and after going into #10 TCU and upsetting them 90-89 with a 39 point, 14 assist game, these guy edges out even Anthony Davis and Kevin Durant for the most dominant college player of the century based on the history Value Add rankings.
This made me think about just how prohibitive a favorite Young would be if the NCAA bids were for a one-on-one tournament and you could somehow factor in his assists, which obviously necessitate playing on a team.
I went ahead and sent out bids to both the NIT and NCAA based on the new Value Add numbers, but also giving the best player in each conference an automatic bid, and ended up with great match-ups for Marquette's two top 100 players (with the streaky Markus Howard out of the top 100 for the moment.
Of course, Michigan State fans will cry foul that Value Add ratings would currently place Andrew Rowsey as the slighly favored No. 4 seed in the NIT Western bracket against their National Player of the Year hopeful. However, Rowsey has been worth an extra 7.33 points per game to Marquette this year to an almost identical 7.27 for Miles Bridges. Great players tend to rank lower earlier in a season of blowouts since the minutes are spread.
A Georgetown fan texted me after Saturday's game to ask, "Who is Andrew Rowsey and give me one good reason I should not hate him." While his defense is not great (note he gets a "D" for defensive rebounding, C for a few blocked shots, and B for steals) he and the rest of the team have improved enough that he is currently the 67th most valuable player in the country, and therefore would be in an at-large "player" March Madness except that we gave the smaller conferences one team each. Bridges will shoot up now facing tougher Big Ten opponents, but when www.kenpom.com says Bridges has only been the best player in 1 of 15 games so far, and Value Add adjusts for strength of opponents (the Spartans last six opponents have been ranked 310, 106, 295, 238, 302, 330).
Seed | NIT Midwest Seeds | Team | Value Add v5.0 Pts/Game | Def Grades |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Jaylen Barford #0 | Arkansas | 7.53 | Reb Blk Stl=C C B |
2 | Trevon Bluiett #5 | Xavier | 7.48 | Reb Blk Stl=B C D |
3 | Udoka Azubuike #35 | Kansas | 7.44 | Reb Blk Stl=A A D |
4 | Andrew Rowsey #30 | Marquette | 7.33 | Reb Blk Stl=D C B |
5 | Miles Bridges #22 | Michigan St. | 7.27 | Reb Blk Stl=A A D |
6 | Jessie Govan #15 | Georgetown | 7.13 | Reb Blk Stl=A A C |
7 | Nick Ward #44 | Michigan St. | 7.04 | Reb Blk Stl=A A F |
8 | Zhaire Smith #2 | Texas Tech | 7.01 | Reb Blk Stl=C A A |
OK, so I cheated a little and created one NIT play-in match-up since Hauser technically missed the last NIT spot as the 87 best player in basketball. This would put him up against Shannon Evans of the amazing Arizona State team of Bobby Hurley, for the right to play the top seed in the NIT West in big man Thomas Welsh of UCLA. As good as Hauser's all-around offense is every day, completely in the flow of the game, I also wanted to point out that he is one of the few that has a strong ranking in all three defensive categories, getting a "B" (top 40%) in Defensive Rebounding, Blocked Shots and Steals.
Seed | NIT West Seeds | Team | Value Add v5.0 Pts/Game | Def Grades |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Thomas Welsh #40 | UCLA | 7.54 | Reb Blk Stl=A A C |
2 | Elijah Bryant #3 | Brigham Young | 7.49 | Reb Blk Stl=A B A |
3 | Shake Milton #1 | Southern Methodist | 7.47 | Reb Blk Stl=C B A |
4 | Caleb Martin #10 | Nevada | 7.37 | Reb Blk Stl=B C B |
5 | Justin Bibbins #1 | Utah | 7.23 | Reb Blk Stl=D D B |
6 | Rob Gray #32 | Houston | 7.18 | Reb Blk Stl=D D C |
7 | Chimezie Metu #4 | Southern California | 7.02 | Reb Blk Stl=A A D |
8-playin | Shannon Evans #11 | Arizona St. | 6.97 | Reb Blk Stl=D D B |
8-playin | Sam Hauser #10 | Marquette | 6.95 | Reb Blk Stl=B B B |
Fair to note that Ethan Happ had an All-American ranking until Matt Heldt slowed him down, and he has slipped a bit and would place as an NIT player at this stage. Max Strus of DePaul is looking strong after the incredible scare they put into Xavier.
Seed | NIT East Seeds | Team | Value Add v5.0 Pts/Game | Def Grades |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Donte Grantham #32 | Clemson | 7.5 | Reb Blk Stl=B B D |
2 | Shai Gilgeous-Alexander #22 | Kentucky | 7.48 | Reb Blk Stl=D C A |
3 | Ethan Happ #22 | Wisconsin | 7.42 | Reb Blk Stl=A B B |
4 | Tyus Battle #25 | Syracuse | 7.34 | Reb Blk Stl=F C A |
5 | Max Strus #31 | DePaul | 7.24 | Reb Blk Stl=D B A |
6 | Jared Terrell #32 | Rhode Island | 7.13 | Reb Blk Stl=D F A |
7 | Tony Carr #10 | Penn St. | 7.07 | Reb Blk Stl=C D B |
8 | Kevin Huerter #4 | Maryland | 7 | Reb Blk Stl=C B D |
Finally these would be our NIT bids to the south.
Seed | NIT South Seeds | Team | Value Add v5.0 Pts/Game | Def Grades |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Jeremiah Martin #3 | Memphis | 7.56 | Reb Blk Stl=C B A |
2 | Jordan McLaughlin #11 | Southern California | 7.49 | Reb Blk Stl=D C A |
3 | Matt Rafferty #32 | Furman | 7.41 | Reb Blk Stl=A B A |
4 | Melvin Frazier #35 | Tulane | 7.29 | Reb Blk Stl=B B A |
5 | Wendell Carter #34 | Duke | 7.26 | Reb Blk Stl=A A D |
6 | Terance Mann #14 | Florida St. | 7.11 | Reb Blk Stl=C C B |
7 | Tyler Rawson #21 | Utah | 7.01 | Reb Blk Stl=A A C |
8 | Marcquise Reed #2 | Clemson | 7 | Reb Blk Stl=B F A |
Shifting to the top 68 players in the hypothetical NCAA one-on-one tournament, Villanova continues to have two of the top eight players in the country, and with no undefeated teams remaining they still look like the best in the country - not just the Big East. St. John's and Shamorie Ponds have slipped a little after an extremely hot start.
Seed | NCAA East Seeds | Team | Value Add v5.0 Pts/Game | Def Grades |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Jalen Brunson #1 | Villanova | 10.44 | Reb Blk Stl=D F B |
2 | Mikal Bridges #25 | Villanova | 9.83 | Reb Blk Stl=B A A |
3 | Nick King #5 | Middle Tennessee | 9.61 | Reb Blk Stl=A D D |
4 | Tookie Brown #4 | Georgia Southern | 9.29 | Reb Blk Stl=C B A |
5 | Ajdin Penava #11 | Marshall | 8.9 | Reb Blk Stl=A A A |
6 | Landry Shamet #11 | Wichita St. | 8.49 | Reb Blk Stl=D C C |
7 | Fletcher Magee #3 | Wofford | 8.37 | Reb Blk Stl=F D C |
8 | Zach Thomas #23 | Bucknell | 8.18 | Reb Blk Stl=A B C |
9 | Shamorie Ponds #2 | St. John's | 8.06 | Reb Blk Stl=B D A |
10 | Kevin Hervey #25 | Texas Arlington | 7.9 | Reb Blk Stl=A B A |
11 | CJ Massinburg #5 | Buffalo | 7.85 | Reb Blk Stl=B B C |
12 | Josh Reaves #23 | Penn St. | 7.74 | Reb Blk Stl=D B A |
13 | Garrison Mathews #24 | Lipscomb | 7.51 | Reb Blk Stl=C C B |
14 | Devin Cannady #3 | Princeton | 6.88 | Reb Blk Stl=B D D |
15 | Joe Cremo #24 | Albany | 6.45 | Reb Blk Stl=C D C |
16 | Isaiah Reese #13 | Canisius | 6.11 | Reb Blk Stl=A F A |
No freshman ever had a Value Add rating more than two points better than anyone else in the country. It is still a long season, but if Trae Young keeps this pace up he is the best college player of the century.
Seed | NCAA MWSeeds | Team | Value Add | Def Grades |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Trae Young #11 | Oklahoma | 13.17 | Reb Blk Stl=D C A |
2 | Bonzie Colson #35 | Notre Dame | 10.14 | Reb Blk Stl=A A A |
3 | Gary Clark #11 | Cincinnati | 9.61 | Reb Blk Stl=A A A |
4 | Devonte' Graham #4 | Kansas | 9.31 | Reb Blk Stl=D D A |
5 | Justinian Jessup #3 | Boise St. | 8.7 | Reb Blk Stl=B B B |
6 | Keita Bates-Diop #33 | Ohio St. | 8.53 | Reb Blk Stl=A A B |
7 | Jordan Murphy #3 | Minnesota | 8.43 | Reb Blk Stl=A A C |
8 | Anthony Cowan #1 | Maryland | 8.31 | Reb Blk Stl=C D B |
9 | Josh Cunningham #0 | Dayton | 8 | Reb Blk Stl=A B C |
10 | Dakota Mathias #31 | Purdue | 7.9 | Reb Blk Stl=C C B |
11 | Cassius Winston #5 | Michigan St. | 7.85 | Reb Blk Stl=C F B |
12 | James Thompson #2 | Eastern Michigan | 7.75 | Reb Blk Stl=A A C |
13 | Blake Francis #3 | Wagner | 7.33 | Reb Blk Stl=F D B |
14 | Scottie James #31 | Liberty | 6.71 | Reb Blk Stl=A B B |
15 | Reed Timmer #12 | Drake | 6.45 | Reb Blk Stl=D D D |
16-playin | Femi Olujobi #25 | North Carolina A&T | 5.94 | Reb Blk Stl=A B D |
16-playin | Gary Blackston #3 | Prairie View A&M | 4.53 | Reb Blk Stl=B C A |
West Virginia's Jevon Carter is second best partly due to being an incredible defender.
Seed | NCAA South Seeds | Team | Value Add v5.0 | Def Grades |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Jevon Carter #2 | West Virginia | 11.03 | Reb Blk Stl=B B A |
2 | Dean Wade #32 | Kansas St. | 9.88 | Reb Blk Stl=A B A |
3 | Marvin Bagley #35 | Duke | 9.69 | Reb Blk Stl=A B D |
4 | Luke Maye #32 | North Carolina | 9.37 | Reb Blk Stl=A A D |
5 | Isaiah Wilkins #21 | Virginia | 8.96 | Reb Blk Stl=A A A |
6 | Ria'n Holland #10 | Mercer | 8.57 | Reb Blk Stl=D F A |
7 | Dewan Huell #20 | Miami FL | 8.47 | Reb Blk Stl=A A C |
8 | Collin Sexton #2 | Alabama | 8.12 | Reb Blk Stl=F F B |
9 | Kenrich Williams #34 | Texas Christian | 7.98 | Reb Blk Stl=A C A |
10 | Chris Silva #30 | South Carolina | 7.89 | Reb Blk Stl=A A C |
11 | Grayson Allen #3 | Duke | 7.8 | Reb Blk Stl=F D B |
12 | Chris Chiozza #11 | Florida | 7.62 | Reb Blk Stl=B F A |
13 | Dylan Windler #3 | Belmont | 7.26 | Reb Blk Stl=A A D |
14 | Zach Lofton #23 | New Mexico St. | 6.59 | Reb Blk Stl=B D C |
15 | Drew McDonald #34 | Northern Kentucky | 6.33 | Reb Blk Stl=A C D |
16 | Devontae Cacok #15 | North Carolina Wilmington | 5.96 | Reb Blk Stl=A B D |
I am not sure if it is really allowed to have three of the four play-in games feed one bracket, but just having fun. DJ Hogg teams up with our old friend Duane Wilson, so the best of luck to them on an incredible start. We saw Georgia's Yante Maten, who couldn't quite win at Kentucky to help our RPI, and we will see Seton Hall and Desi Rodriguez of course.
Seed | NCAA West Seeds | Team | Value Add | Def Grades |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Deandre Ayton #13 | Arizona | 10.96 | Reb Blk Stl=A A D |
2 | Jock Landale #34 | St. Mary's | 10.29 | Reb Blk Stl=A B F |
3 | Yante Maten #1 | Georgia | 9.58 | Reb Blk Stl=B A D |
4 | Tra Holder #0 | Arizona St. | 9.18 | Reb Blk Stl=C F A |
5 | Allonzo Trier #35 | Arizona | 8.61 | Reb Blk Stl=F B D |
6 | Keenan Evans #12 | Texas Tech | 8.54 | Reb Blk Stl=D B A |
7 | Lagerald Vick #2 | Kansas | 8.47 | Reb Blk Stl=B C B |
8 | Juwan Morgan #13 | Indiana | 8.14 | Reb Blk Stl=B A B |
9 | DJ Hogg #1 | Texas A&M | 8 | Reb Blk Stl=B B B |
10 | Mohamed Bamba #4 | Texas | 7.94 | Reb Blk Stl=A A C |
11 | Desi Rodriguez #20 | Seton Hall | 7.79 | Reb Blk Stl=B B B |
12-playin | Jeff Roberson #11 | Vanderbilt | 7.6 | Reb Blk Stl=A C C |
12-playin | Justin Tillman #4 | Virginia Commonwealth | 7.57 | Reb Blk Stl=A B D |
13-playin | Hayden Dalton #20 | Wyoming | 7.59 | Reb Blk Stl=A B C |
13-playin | Donta Hall #0 | Alabama | 7.58 | Reb Blk Stl=A A D |
14 | Chima Moneke #11 | UC Davis | 6.8 | Reb Blk Stl=A B B |
15 | Mike Daum #24 | South Dakota St. | 6.54 | Reb Blk Stl=A B C |
16-playin | Ahmaad Rorie #14 | Montana | 5.92 | Reb Blk Stl=C D B |
16-playin | Kevon Harris #1 | Stephen F. Austin | 5.44 | Reb Blk Stl=B D C |
And that's how it would play out if we were selecting the bids of the best player. Obviously you can sort the best of the Big East or anything else among the 4000-plus players at www.valueaddbasketball.com.