Thursday, March 31, 2005

The Wizard of Notre Dame | by Pat

Today marks the 74th anniversary of the passing of Notre Dame's greatest coach, Knute Rockne. The small memorial located in the middle of a field in Bazaar, Kansas has served as a pilgrimage of sorts for Notre Dame family and friends for close to three-quarters of a century. With the upcoming 75th anniversary next year I suspect even more will visit and pay their respects to the man credited with transforming a small Catholic school, tucked in northwest Indiana, into a national spectacle and source of inspiration for countless Americans. If you do go, keep an eye out for Easter Heathman, a witness to the crash who still takes visitors out to the nondescript landmark.

In the end, perhaps Will Rogers summed up Rockne's passing the best:
"It takes a big calamity to shock a country all at once, but Knute, you did it. You died one of our national heroes. Notre Dame was your address, but every gridiron in America was your home."

Wednesday, March 30, 2005

Opportunity Knocks | by Jay

Irish Eyes has a few great videos from yesterday's post-practice session: a Q&A with Charlie, a short discussion with Mike Haywood, and a visit with Darius Walker. (The videos are paysite-only, but if Mike Frank is going to be offering this level of access and material going forward, then now is the time to pony up for IE. It's going to be well worth it).

Charlie was pretty sober about the first practice: he saw a couple of good things, but there's a hell of a lot of work to do. In particular, he had a strong message for the guys further down on the depth chart:
The biggest -- I wouldn't say, problem -- but the biggest thing we're going to have to do here in this training session...is try and find some more guys from the backups who can step up and be dependable players. The biggest problem I had with today was not seeing enough people, people that I don't know that much about, making a statement for themselves. If I'm going try and have this open-door policy, where everyone gets a fair chance and a fair opportunity to make a name for themselves, then I'd like some people to stand out and do some things.
Message received? We'll see as the spring session continues.

Tuesday, March 29, 2005

Spring Roster | by Pat



The updated spring roster was released today and while there isn't much to glean from it, that won't stop me from trying...

Number Changes

It seems that changing numbers is the in thing to do for defensive backs. They are the only position players to change their number from last semester (outside of Darrin Bragg that is).

Anthony Vernalgia changed from 42 to 4 while Junior Jabbie went from 37 to 8. Tregg Duerson changed his number from 28 to 24, and Leo Ferrine went from 38 to 15 (haven't they burned that jersey yet?). Darrin Bragg went from 18 to 7 and Terrail Lambert has switched from 34 to 20.

Moving On

This has been reported previously on various recruiting websites, but the 5th-year eligible players who opted not to return to the team are Marcus Wilson, Darrin Mitchell, Jeff Thompson, Lionel Bolen, and Zachary Giles.

Position Changes

For the most part the listed positions are the exact same as last semester. That makes sense since Weis and Co. haven't actually seen the players on the practice field yet. I still expect guys to move around once spring practice gets going, but for now Brandon Nicolas is still a defensive end, Vernaglia and Ndukwe are both still safeties and Brady Quinn is still a quarterback.

Bulking Up

Gone are the Davie days where players were bulked up as much as possible during the offseason. In fact, a quick comparsion between the new roster and the one from last spring shows that most of the players are reporting at a lower weight than before. One exception to that is the wide receiver position where nearly all of the players have gained weight. Most notable in this group is Chris Vaughn who bulked up from 205 to 221. Other big gainers on the team include defensive end Justin Brown who went from 225 to 243 and Mark LeVoir who is up from 310 to 325. Man, I really hope that the 245lb DE from Pitt who was ordered to drop weight lines up across from Mark. Those hoping that weight gain by Vernaglia and Nduwke would tip position changes are out of luck as both are listed at just about the same weight as before.

Shooting Gallery

UND.com already has a bunch of photos up from today's first practice. Among the various coaches' and players' action shots, notice the masking-tape name tags on every helmet. Probably a necessity, but it still made me laugh.

"Smoke and Mirrors" | by Jay

Lou Holtz got some rough treatment over the weekend by Ron Morris and Joe Person in South Carolina's The State newspaper, which ran a couple of less-than-complimentary postmortems on the Holtz era at Gamecock U. In an article entitled "Blame Game", Person writes:

In the four months since Holtz retired, nine of his former players have been arrested, including five who face felony charges related to theft or burglary. A 10th player, 2004 leading rusher Demetris Summers, was dismissed from the team after a second failed drug test.

Spurrier has not blamed Holtz or his staff for the off-the-field problems, saying Holtz’s players became “my guys” when he took over. But in interviews with more than a dozen USC players and coaches from the Holtz Era, many of them said Holtz is accountable for the environment in which a spate of criminal activity has taken place since he left.

According to Person's article, the problems seemed to be twofold: one, that Holtz recruited some unsavory characters to the program -- lots of Jucos with lots of problems -- and two, that Holtz showed preferential treatment to his star players.

“Toward the end, especially the last two years I was there, it was very obvious because he just kind of let a lot of guys get away with a lot of different things that he never did before,” said former offensive guard Jonathan Alston, a captain on the 2004 team.

“A lot of times it wasn’t big things, it was small things. But small things lead to big things, which are coming out now.”

The police blotter's pretty ugly, as the article documents. Ron Morris follows up Person's imputation with a sanguine look to the future and the dawning of a more disciplined, more respectable Steve Spurrier era:
Lou Holtz talked about changing the culture of South Carolina football as if the problem was some sort of gnat that kept buzzing around his head. Holtz waved at it, swatted at it and generally hoped it would just go away.

Steve Spurrier is taking a different approach. In four months on the job, Spurrier has brandished the fly swatter and insect repellent in an effort to change the atmosphere around USC football. By all accounts, it is working.

...An old friend told me once of the time Holtz performed a magic trick during a dinner gathering in North Carolina. You might have seen the trick. Holtz would rip a newspaper apart then magically piece it back together. On this night, Holtz failed to realize he was performing in front of a mirror and the audience saw him produce a pieced-together newspaper from his back pocket.

That is the way it was with Holtz, a lot of smoke and mirrors.
Now, I was at ND during the Holtz years, and although Lou definitely recruited some high-risk, high-reward guys during his tenure (we've all heard stories), he seemed to be able to keep a firm grip on the wheel of discipline, meting out punishment whenever necessary (and to whomever necessary). As far as we know, he didn't play favorites. During the championship '88 season, he famously sent his leading runningback Tony Brooks and his leading receiver Ricky Watters home from Los Angeles the morning of the USC game for violating team rules the night before. He knowingly gambled with some of his recruits, taking chances on some questionable characters, and although the results sometimes frayed at the edges, Holtz was able to keep the fabric of the program more or less whole.

I'm not sure exactly why the wheels fell off at South Carolina for Lou. He certainly started off his USC career with an iron fist: before his first year in 1999, he dismissed leading runningback Troy Hambrick for a violation of team policy (and followed that up with a couple of other high-profile suspensions). Perhaps the looser strictures on recruiting and the heavy reliance on academically-questionable junior college transfers -- his 2003 class had seven JUCOs and two more guys who needed an extra year of prep school to qualify -- led to a influx of rascals. And it's clear that in trying to keep the team together, Lou relaxed the rules for some guys once they were in the door. Former USC fullback Brandon Schweitzer took a stab at analyzing the mess:

“But I think where he failed — and I hate to talk about Lou Holtz, legend, like this — is he tried to make too many exceptions for too many people. I think he realized there were people in his program that he needed on his team, but at the same time he knew that within his system of values they weren’t going to make it.

“In order to keep them there, he had to adjust what he believed in. He made exceptions for those guys, and I think that was the starting point for the downward spiral.”

The most likely explanation for Lou's slide is probably the simplest: he got tired. It takes a tremendous amount of energy to corral a bunch of college kids, keep them in line, and try and make them into a winning football team (especially in the SEC); at 67, he probably got sick of chasing the chickens around the yard.

Last November, as the college football season was winding down, South Carolina played Clemson, and an ugly brawl between the two teams erupted in the fourth quarter. (It was quite the weekend for fisticuffs; the night before, Ron Artest leapt into the crowd and touched off the insane melee in Detroit). Holtz was seen diving into the pile, grabbing facemasks, and trying to peel guys off of each other. He said it was the most embarrassed he's ever been as a football coach.

Two days later, he announced his retirement as the head coach at South Carolina, no doubt tired of the chicken run.

Monday, March 28, 2005

Spring Practice Roundup | by Pat

Tomorrow is the first day of spring practice for the Fighting Irish and a chance for Irish fans to put the tumultuous offseason and disappointing men's hoops season behind us and begin the first look to next season under Coach Weis. Hopefully we'll see answers to some of the more obvious questions as news trickles out from the spring practice sessions. (Fishing for comments alert: Feel free to supply your opinions or add more questions.)

In the meantime, here's a quick look at some spring practice updates from next year's opponents...

Pittsburgh

One of the five opponents that will also be breaking in a new head coach, Pitt started the spring with Coach Wannstedt reinforcing the need to improve on last season's 105th ranked rushing attack.
"I know what my vision is: we're going to be a tough team," Wannstedt said. "This is when you learn to run the football. This is when you make a commitment to running the football."
His other apparent goal for the spring was to upgrade the speed of his football team, especially on defense. Perhaps coming from the NFL he wasn't prepared for the slower college game, but Wannstedt seems dead set on getting his team faster.
"We've given up a lot of size to add speed," Wannstedt said. "But from a philosophical standpoint, that's what we're looking at. That's what spring practice is for."
He isn't kidding about giving up size. Wannstedt is moving linebackers to defensive end and defensive ends to defensive tackle and he even told 245lb defensive end Azzie Beagnyam to drop more weight. Sounds like a perfect chance to work the kinks out of ND's running game. I'll put Darius Walker's number of carries around 25 right now.

Michigan

The big news in Ann Arbor is injuries. With seven players out for the spring and four more limited, Lloyd Carr has already called off their traditional spring game and replaced it with a standard practice.

One of the players who is out for most of the spring is QB Chad Henne. He looked pretty good last year as the season progressed, but he's still a freshman and could have used the extra practice as the Wolverines look for a replacement for go-to receiver Braylon Edwards. Carr's biggest worry is probably about how to plug in the holes in his defense that lost All-Americans Marlin Jackson and Ernest Shazor. Stanford transfer Grant Mason, who briefly considered transferring to Notre Dame, looks like he might get the starting nod at one cornerback spot.

Michigan State

The Spartans will head into the spring with some new faces after losing three assistant coaches to three rival Big Ten schools. Starting QB Drew Stanton is healthy, but the big question is a defense that has to replace six starters. They just had their first practice on Friday, so there really isn't much news out of East Lansing yet.

Washington

Washington hasn't started spring practice yet, but Irish fans can pretty much guess what they will experience under "Paint Dry Ty". I'm sure there will be stories about incredibly organized practices, pushups after miscues, running the ball to the endzone on every reception, and players running stadium steps to instill discipline. Of course, to a team that went 1-10 last season, organization and discipline probably sound too good to be true.

Purdue

Obviously, Purdue's biggest task this spring is to replace Heisman winning QB Kyle Orton. Wait, he didn't win the Heisman? Are you sure? But I watched the ND/Purdue game last year and I thought he... No? Well, ok.

Anyway, Orton's still gone and Brandon Kirsch looks like the best candidate to be the starter in the fall. Purdue hasn't started spring practice either so not too much to report here either. Actually, there is one interesting fact that might interest ND fans. Recent recruit Ryan Baker who pulled a last minute switch from Notre Dame to Purdue (because he wanted to play TE in Tiller's offense) is apparently listed as defensive tackle on the Boilermakers spring roster. Notre Dame was recruiting him a defensive end, but I'll admit that I'm surprised he's ended up at tackle so soon.

USC

USC's biggest task this offseason will be to replace offensive guru Norm Chow and fiery defensive coach Ed Orgeron. Another (minor) obstacle for the Trojans is the fact that Matt Lienart, Reggie Bush, LenDale White, and a host of others will be unavailabe for some or all of the spring practices. That gives QB John David Booty a chance to show that he didn't skip his senior year of high school for nothing before all-everything recruit Mark Sanchez shows up in the fall. So far the star of practice appears to be running back Chauncey Washington, who has ripped off 50+ yard TD runs in every practice. I'm sure a third stud Trojan tailback is just what Irish fans were hoping for, but keep in mind the spring practice axiom: whenever your offense looks good, keep in mind it is going against your defense. Replacing four All-Americans on defense will be a tall task, even for the loaded Trojans. Possible legal trouble for one of their starting cornerbacks can't help matters either.

BYU

New BYU coach Bronco Mendenhall seems to have his work cut out for him. A recent Matt Hayes article offered this blurb on the task facing Mendenhall.
Why has BYU fallen so far? Here's an anecdote: The team--including the coaches--recently ran up Y Mountain on the campus as part of a unifying exercise. LB Kelly Poppinga, a Utah State transfer, finished the 1-mile trail first. Quarterbacks coach Brandon Doman finished second, and head coach Bronco Mendenhall was third. LB Justin Luettgerodt was fourth. What's more disconcerting--that two coaches finished in the top four or that no skill players finished in that group?
And while he's getting the team into better shape, the number one priority is to decide on a starting quarterback from the three returning veterans; Matt Berry, Jason Beck, and John Beck.

Tennessee

Finding a starting quarterback is also the plan for the Volunteers spring practices as Coach Fulmer sorts through a finally healthy roster of Erik Ainge, Brent Schaeffer, and Rick Claussen. All three started last season so Fulmer wants to be able to pick one and go with him this spring.
"Right now it's just amazing how much difference a year makes and the understanding those kids have for our offense and how easy it is to flow through practice with veteran quarterbacks," Fulmer said. "Personally, I'd like to have a starter or at least a guy who would start the first practice of two-a-days."
For all those armchair coaches who want to see what Fulmer has to work with, here's a video of a recent UT spring practice.

Navy

The Naval Academy start spring practice today and will have to find replacements for QB Aaron Polanco and star FB Kyle Eckel. Hopefully whoever they find won't really matter much come November 12th. Still, Paul Johnson has taken the Midshipmen to two straight bowl games and is a very good coach.

Syracuse

New head coach Greg Robinson is looking to bring the West Coast offense to Syracuse as the Orangemen start practice today. He's also the defensive coordinator and despite returning 10 starters, wants to work on the tackling skills of last season's 101st ranked defense. A shift to a 4-3 defense is also something that will need plenty of practice time this spring.

Stanford

Stanford now has Pitt's old coach and will probably pass even more than they did last season against the Irish. QB Trent Edwards should be a good one next year under Walt Harris, but it's up in the air how the other 21 starters will look. Spring practice for the Cardinal starts April 3rd so not much in the way of Stanford football news yet.

Saturday, March 26, 2005

Director's Cup Update | by Pat

As you may or may not know, Notre Dame ended the fall semester ranked #1 in the NACDA Director's Cup standing for the first time in the school's history. The preliminary winter update was released Thursday and Notre Dame lost the lead, but is still holding on to 3rd place behind Michigan and Stanford.

For those unfamiliar with the rules, a school is awarded points in a maximum of 20 sports. In Division I, those twenty sports are split evenly; ten male sports and ten female sports. Sports like fencing count as a men's sport, but can be moved to the women's category if they don't have ten scoring women's sports. As it stands now, Notre Dame competes in twenty-five of the thirty-six qualifying sports. Perennial Director's Cup favorite Stanford fields thirty-three.

Yet, a quick look at Director Cup recent history shows that ND has never maxed out the twenty team scoring. In 2001/2002, ND scored in ten women's sports and eight men's sports. In 2002/2003, eight women's teams scored and seven men's teams did likewise. Last year, the number was ten for the women and six for the men. Ironically, the year among this very limited sample set that ND had the fewest scoring teams (02/03), ND had it's best finish, placing 13th overall. Both in 01/02 and 03/04, Notre Dame finished in 19th place.

Obviously, the return of the football program to Top 10 contention would help out the standings as would an increase in the performance of the men's basketball team. Also, an interesting change to the scoring setup seems to have a negative effect on the Irish score. The total number of points given for fencing was cut in half so Notre Dame's national championship in fencing awarded the school 50 points towards the Directors Cup, rather than the usual 100. As a point of contrast, Penn State's 23rd place in men's wrestling awarded them 51 points. Even Stanford got 37 points for their 37th place in wrestling.

The recent creation of the Rockne Hertiage Foundation and fully funded scholarships for all Olympic sports prove that Notre Dame and Kevin White are serious about improving the performance of all Notre Dame sports. But the fact of the matter is that it will be hard for Notre Dame to compete year in and year out for the Director's Cup without adding some sports to the mix. The problem is that the school is not going to be able to spend more money on so-called non-revenue earning sports. This is due to not only the lack of football bowl money in recent years, but also the fact that a significant amount of money has been directed towards buying out the contracts of the two men primarily responsible for the lack of bowl money.

The optimistic take is that in the near future Notre Dame will have reaped the bounty of numerous bowl appearances including several lucrative BCS showings and will have enough cash to resurrect the historically strong men's wrestling program as well as adding a women's hockey team. It would be a bold step and admittedly is a best case scenario, but one Notre Dame might have to take to have a serious chance at bringing home the Director's Cup more than once.

As an aside, unlike fans of most universities, the high standing in the Director's Cup isn't exactly a source of pride among Irish fans, and at times is even the butt of a few stale jokes. Most of this blame lies in the fact that that Fr. Malloy and Kevin White used Notre Dame's standings in the Director's Cup as a sign that all was well during the past eight years of mediocre Irish football. To many Notre Dame diehards this was the equivalent of pointing out the beauty of a new deck while the roof was springing leaks and ruining the interior of the house. But I think it's pretty clear that those days are over and while Weis still has to prove himself on the football field, all indications are that Notre Dame has people in charge who not only know what they are doing, but won't need to fall back on distractions and excuses to cover up shortcomings.

Thursday, March 24, 2005

Media Blitz | by Jay

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A bunch of stuff in the wake of the Football Media Day that ND threw on Tuesday, and you've probably read most of the official releases. In case you haven't, here are the links from UND.com:

Spring football outlook. The basic team rundown, position by position.

Weis inherits an experienced team that returns 36 lettermen, 13 position starters and three starters in the kicking game. The Irish are particularly well-stocked with experience on the offensive side of the ball. Ten starters and 20 lettermen are back on offense while the defense returns three starters and 14 lettermen. The kicking game welcomes back kicker/punter D.J. Fitzpatrick.

Based on the returning experience, the offense would seem primed to be the standard bearer for the Irish in `05. While toughness and consistency in the running game will be focal points of spring preparation, a passing game that averaged 281 yards per game in `04 will only benefit from Weis's offensive expertise.

Weis presser. Lots of good stuff here, from his philosophy on installing the offensive schemes ("Put a whole bunch in...throw it on the wall and see what sticks") to getting a geographically-diverse recruiting brain trust ("I'm not stupid") to this heartwarming announcement:
I am going to name today a couple of names that will sound familiar to you all who will work as honorary coaches for the Blue and Gold game. For the Blue Team, the names are Montana and Zorich. The Gold Team, there will be two names helping out called Theismann and Brown. It was one of my aims to try to get some of our alums back in the program.

They are dogging each other pretty good right now. They are talking unofficial trash back and forth...I would like to give those guys somewhat of an active role so it isn't just a 'show up and here we are.' I think it will be a good experience for them and it will be a great experience for our players.
Player quotes. Offseason workouts, installing the new schemes, the new spirit in the program, the new coaches...
BQ on the playbook: "It's thicker. It's just one of those situations where you have a little more to learn and a little different style too. I compare it to learning a different language almost. It's a tough task at times but I think once we get out there on the field and work some of the kinks out that we'll be pretty well situated."

Abiamiri on the staff: "I like them a lot. They know their football. They know a lot of football. I'm really excited to go out there and have them teach us what they know."

Fasano on the offense: "It's definitely a very complex system. I think we are learning it the right way, slowly but surely. We have a lot of stuff in already. I was pretty excited with the creativity that it has in it. I think everyone is pretty excited about it."

Stevenson on experience: "I think everyone on the offense is really excited about that. We return 10 starters and you can almost say 11 with Darius. It's huge. Experience is something you can't practice and you can't work on it except for playing in a game. I think this can definitely be a breakout year for the offense. This could be a year that the offense could really carry the team and that's what we are looking forward to."
Assistants quotes. Haywood, Oliver, Lewis, Minter, Parmalee and even Powlus all weigh in, describing the challenges, sizing up players, and laying out the road map to success. Jappy sums up the staff chemistry:
"So far I think we've gelled and mixed well together. From an offensive standpoint those guys really seem to work well together. We actually got a chance to go against the Ole Miss crew so we know firsthand what we are getting over there. And from a defensive standpoint, the fact that I've worked with Rick (Minter) before and I've known coach (Bill) Lewis for awhile and down to Brian Polian I think we work well together and it's a strong staff."
Blue and Gold Festival. The official announcement, the day's itinerary, ticket info, etc. Sponsored by Chick-Fil-A, among others.

Photo gallery from the day.



A few random thoughts on all this.

• One theme that reverberates over and over: we've got "smart" players, and we've got "experienced" players. Weis: "They are very smart...when you have a bunch of intelligent guys who really want to win, you have a chance." Haywood: "The experience is invaluable." Lewis: "We have an intelligent group of players here. We will throw a lot at them in the spring." Weis, again: “We’ve set a very aggressive installation for spring ball and we figure we can always tone it back if it is too much. But that is the way we are going to approach it.”

Did you hear any excuses about lack of depth, the complexities of installing the WCO, or the challenges of a too-demanding schedule? Neither did I.

• All the players wearing the same shirt. All the coaches wearing the same ND sweater. The "team" mentality is already well-inculcated.

• Parmalee looks like he could still suit up.

• Charlie and ND are really making a big deal out of the Spring Game this year. He wants it to be a real competition, and he wants the celebrity coaches to take an active role in the coaching. They've also renamed it to the Blue & Gold Festival, and expanded the even to not just be about the game itself, but a whole day's worth of activities. In years past, this game was a bit of a snoozer, with the coaches trying out various configurations and tinkering with the lineups, but this year it could actually resemble a real game. Imagine that.

• The Irish legends coming back to coach the spring game is fantastic. I guess the Blue team got first pick, because the Gold got stuck with Theismann. Smart money is on Montana/Zorich. They're just more balanced.

• Chick-Fil-A. Love Chick-Fil-A. Easily the best chicken-sandwich based fast food chain around. It's a pain that they're closed on Sundays.

• Powlus, believe it or not, looks like a real find, and a fine addition to the staff. Powlus' career has always been sort of Flick Webb-ish, standing tall among the idiot pumps, the expectations too great and the potential never realized. Ask any Irish fan what they think of when they envision Ron Powlus, and chances are you'll hear two things: his electrifying debut against Northwestern, four touchdown passes and Beano Cook conferring the double Heisman; and second, a wobbly Powlus happy-footing an option play down the line, awkward and jittery. Still, whenever Holtz dialed up the option (all too frequently), he plugged away and did his best. Somehow Powlus was able to grab some passing records during his tenure (although as Pat points out, QB records at ND up until then hadn't exactly been stellar, relatively speaking. Quinn will probably break Powlus' records at this rate, and then a Weis QB will probably break those.) Still, his teams were marked by underachievement, and I think it's safe to say that most Irish fans exhaled a sigh of relief when he finally graduated.

Happily, though, the curtain didn't come down on the Powlus-ND story when he stepped off the playing field. After a foray into business sales, Powlus is back on campus, having impressed Weis over a number of other potential hirees for the role of Director of Football Operations. Powlus is personable and self-effacing, traits perfects suited to the task at hand, which requires quite a ton of organization, communication, and logistical coordination. He'll also be available to current players as a sounding board for dealing with the ups and downs of Irish football (Quinn, for one, plans to lean on him heavily: "I think he is someone who is going to be a great utility to vent and easy to talk to and get advice from. He's someone I think this program needs to have.") It's a great opportunity for one of the Irish's biggest enigmas, and he'll have a chance to reinvent himself and finally buck the saddle of his patchy playing days in the eyes of the fans. (As I'm writing this, I notice IE just put up a new interview with Powlus. It's a pay article, but it's a good read. Powlus on his new job responsibilities: “A lot of what I’m doing is recruiting, and this is a busy recruiting season right now...But at the same time I think coach wants me to be available to the current players as a resource that’s not a coach--just somebody that knows what they’re going through and what it’s like.”)

• On a more sober note, Weis announced that assistant coach Cutcliffe won't take part in spring practice, which begins Tuesday, after recently undergoing triple bypass surgery. Weis visited Cutcliffe at his home in Mississippi shortly after he was released from the hospital Sunday. ''He looked surprisingly well and in good spirits,'' Weis said. ''I told him I don't want to see him anywhere near here any time soon.''

• It might just be me, but it seems like the Sports Information Department is putting out a lot more stuff on UND.com than they have in years past. Is this directly attributable to Charlie? Who knows. In any case, it's long overdue. You should see the glut of articles and multimedia the other big-time football homepages offer.

• Gotta lose the wrinkled yellow bedsheet for the pressers. What are we, a backyard puppet show? Somebody get the FTT stagecraft department on the horn and have them cook up a backdrop worthy of the best college football program in the land.

Tuesday, March 22, 2005

Not Invited or Not Interested? | by Mike

Most Notre Dame fans had probably never heard of Assistant Provost for Enrollment Dan Saracino prior to a May 1, 2000 Sports Illustrated article focusing on Notre Dame's admission standards and their relationship to the football team's success (or lack thereof). Between Ted Duckett's (father of current Atlanta Falcons running back T.J. Duckett) harsh words and an unflattering "gatekeeper" photograph, Saracino was portrayed as the villain of the article.

However, in a series of interviews with The Observer, Saracino has sought to provide a more accurate picture of the relationship between the admissions department and the football program.

In an article from last spring, Saracino argued that Notre Dame's biggest recruiting hurdle was not recruits' inability to meet entrance requirements, but rather recruits' skepticism of the coaching acumen of the Davie and Willingham regimes. Saracino specifically disclaims any significant increase in admissions standards for the football team:
But University officials insist admissions standards have remained constant and are not tied to grade point averages or standardized test scores. And the school's director of admissions says that Notre Dame will overlook below-average numbers as long as it believes a potential recruit can survive in Notre Dame's rigorous academic environment.

"I've seen the profiles of the athletes over the 40-plus years," director of admissions Dan Saracino said, "and the academic profiles of the classes of football players has not changed. ... The 1984 recruits [who were seniors during the 1988 championship season] were no different as a class than any other year."
The Observer's own research indicated a slight increase, though one cannot be sure of the accuracy of the numbers to which the Observer had access.
But statistics show that the average SAT scores for athletes have risen at almost the same rate as the scores of the regular student. The SAT scores for football players jumped roughly 6.3 percent from 1993 to 2004, while the scores of the average student rose 6.7 percent over the same period of time. Saracino, however, maintains that standards for football players have not toughened as the standards for regular students have risen.
Finally, Saracino points to several "difference-makers" who had less interest in Notre Dame's previous coaching staff than the admissions office had in them.
"We get beat, and have gotten beat [in football] over recent years by young men who we clearly wanted to come here," Saracino said. "Reggie Bush was cleared by admissions, Allen Smith was and so was Lorenzo Booker."

Top running backs Bush and Booker went to USC and Florida State, respectively, in recent years. Smith committed this winter to Stanford, also a school with a prestigious academic reputation.

So why are these players choosing schools, even a school like Stanford that has rigorous academic standards, over Notre Dame?

"I don't really know, but I am frustrated that we seem to be having less success in recruiting [top players] compared to the past," Saracino said. "It could be that our current coaches just don't understand Notre Dame and its "positives" well enough to convince these young men that Notre Dame is the place for them."
Note that this surprisingly candid last statement was made in April 2004, during the previous coaching staff's tenure. Based on his comments in a recent Observer article, it appears Saracino believes this situation has changed.
"One of the benefits of having a Notre Dame alumnus in that position is he understands Notre Dame," Saracino said.
Saracino also reiterated that academic requirements had not kept Notre Dame from getting its top targets in recent years.
"It wasn't bad before," Saracino said of his relationship with former Notre Dame head coach Tyrone Willingham. "If we were having some difficulty in recruiting the student-athletes that we wanted, it wasn't because they were trying to get young men admitted who could not do the work. It was just that they weren't getting them."

Monday, March 21, 2005

Morning Latte | by Jay

Guy with neck-support: I'll have a decaf coffee.
Trudi: I'll have a decaf espresso.
Movie critic: I'll have a double decaf cappuccino.
Policeman: Give me decaffeinated coffee ice cream.
Harris: I'll have a half double decaffeinated half-caf, with a twist of lemon.
Trudi: I'll have a twist of lemon.
Guy with neck-support: I'll have a twist of lemon.
Movie critic: I'll have a twist of lemon.
Cynthia: I'll have a twist of lemon.

How about a little bit of everything?



Tom Noie on the Irish hoops collapse:

Late Tuesday, in a quiet locker room interrupted by the sobs of seniors Jordan Cornette and Chris Thomas, the Irish were asked how the season had turned so sour after that afternoon in Providence. Nobody had an answer.

"If we knew, we would have changed it," said sophomore shooting guard Colin Falls. "Some things just didn't work out. I thought we were playing really well."

"The coaches can only do so much," said senior Dennis Latimore. "We had to get it done. It's on us. We had to go out there and just make it happen."

In the end, the Irish did not have the mental makeup needed to handle expectations, many of which were self-induced. Thomas had talked since last summer of how excited he was to play with such a talented group, the deepest collection of contributors in his four seasons. He believed greatness -- 30 wins, an NCAA Final Four -- was possible for a bunch of guys that truly cared for one another. All that talk about talent and togetherness never did translate into team.

"A lot of people questioned our toughness and I think it got to a point where we questioned our own," Thomas said. "When you don't have tough players or tough leaders, you can have all the confidence in the world, but if guys are out-hustling you and out-toughing you, you can't do nothing about it."



Next year?

...tough questions likely need to be answered by Brey and his staff. Like can Torin Francis have any sort of a low-post presence? How about Rick Cornett? Does Russell Carter have a prominent place in the program? Omari Isreal? Will Dennis Latimore even be asked back for a fifth-year of eligibility after a season where he never did fit in? How much can Rob Kurz offer after his 11-point, seven-rebound showing against Holy Cross?

Did the collective commitment of this team slide late in the year, and if so, why? Soft senior leadership? Focus? Outside distractions?

Though the core returns from a team that lacked a toughness where all the expected talent never did come together, the future may arrive sooner than anyone expected for incoming freshmen Ryan Ayers, Zach Hillesland, Kyle McAlarney and Luke Zeller.

"They will all get a chance to play," said Brey, who plans to hit the road and to recruit this week. "We could be a little of a youth movement next year. That's something we'll analyze."



Irish win a National Championship
Notre Dame's six entrants in the women's portion of the NCAA Fencing Championships lived up to their top-ranked billing in Sunday's final rounds of bouts, blitzing their competition for a 44-10 record that lifted Notre Dame past Ohio State, 173-171, and delivered the program's seventh national title.

Three-time NCAA foil champion Alicja Kryczalo -- who would lose later in the title bout -- fittingly fenced Notre Dame's final bout of the tournament and won to clinch at least a share of the team title.



Rockne Statue dedicated at the College Football Hall of Fame.

Yet another monument to the Coach, joining the ones in Voss, Norway; the Flint Hills of Kansas; and south quad. And here's a bit more on the statue's sculptor, Jerry McKenna.



Jamie Ryan hangs up the cleats; Zach Giles transfers to Northeastern. The strain on the OL depth chart becomes a concern. Ryan wants to stay and help out:
"I want to be around the team in some aspect, then maybe get a graduate assistant job somewhere," Ryan said. "I have to meet with coach (Charlie Weis) and see what I can do, and what he wants me to do, and take it from there."



Michigan football goes PSL.

Not only will fans pay $50 a ticket for each of the Wolverines' seven home games this fall, but under a preferred seating program, season ticket holders whose seats are not in the end zone must make a per-seat donation of $250, $190, $125 or $60 depending upon location.

This is the first phase of the seat license program.

Next year at Michigan Stadium, season ticket holders near the 50-yard line must annually donate $500 per ticket, while others must donate $375, $250 and $125 depending on seat location.

"I don't like it, but they've got to raise money," said Bob Blamer, 49, who has been a season ticket holder since the 1970s.

"I'm going to pay it regardless, and there are 100,000 other people who will pay it, too."



Cutcliffe on the mend.



Observer on Football Recruiting, part one, two, and three.
"I have a passion for recruiting, as much as I like to coach," Weis said. "Now, that confuses some people [who ask] 'How can somebody who's been in the NFL for the last 15 years and hasn't had to recruit be a guy that has a passion for recruiting?' "It's because I look at recruiting like a game with wins and losses and setbacks and small steps."



College Park busted on St. Pat's (again).



This is worth a laugh. Spot the chuckle.



College Football's Top 100 Finishes, according to CFN.
31 to 30 checks in at #5. Texas over Irish in 1970 ranks 17th.
With just under seven minutes to play, ND QB Theismann hit Jim Yoder for a 24-yard TD pass to put the Irish up 17-14 and in position to upset the Longhorns. Then it was up to the play of QB James Street and the daring play calling of UT head coach Darrell Royal. Street converted two fourth down plays on a 17-play drive including 44-yard completion on fourth and three. Billy Dale took a Street pitch with 1:08 to play to take the lead. A Texas interception squashed the final Irish drive and won the national title.



And finally, a twist of lemon...

May I Have Your Attention Please?

Saturday, March 19, 2005

Questions Abound | by Pat

The start of spring practice is right around the corner and the only sure thing is that chesterlep will be there to photograph it. The defense will have to replace eight starters and while the offense returns all eleven starters from last year (counting Walker as a co-starter), no one really knows what the new coaching staff will end up doing with players and positions. Here's an early stab at some of the major questions going into spring practice.

1. Will a definite second string QB emerge?

Brady Quinn is the starting quarterback. That's pretty obvious. But after him the depth chart is both shallow and full of inexperience. Will Quinn's eventual backup solidify his position this spring or will this debate continue into the fall when Evan Sharpley and Dan Gorski show up?

Dillingham is moving on with his post-college career so that only leaves two scholarship quarterbacks on the roster this spring. David Wolke has the playing time advantage over fellow sophomore Darrin Bragg with a whopping 2 minutes of game experience last season, but who knows what Weis and Cutcliffe (who's first priority this spring is to recuperate from his recent heart surgery) will see in each player.

My guess is that the 2nd string debate will wage on into fall practice as the bulk of the limited spring practice time will be dedicated to tutoring Quinn on the new offensive system. Getting a solid backup some quality reps would be ideal, but the reality is that you need to make sure your starting quarterback is comfortable before you move further down the depth chart.

2. Where will Justin Hoskins end up?

Ever since Hoskins hurdled a tackler during his first career kick return against Washington, fans have been hoping #33 would see more and more playing time. Injuries and questionable special teams coaching decisions kept him off the field for much of the season, but he did start at running back in the Insight.com bowl (where in true Diedrickian fashion he threw a pass on a fake play to open up the game). As one of the more athletic players on the team, Hoskins appears to be able to contribute at multiple positions. So, aside from fielding more punts and kickoffs, where will he end up?

While he finished the season at running back, according to many he might have the ability to play cornerback next year. He also could be moved to wide receiver if the coaches feel they need more speed at that position. Obviously the secondary needs some help and Hoskins might be the answer, but I'm betting the offensive coaches would like to keep Hoskins with the ball in his hands. Then again, with Darius Walker the assumed starter at running back, Hoskins may be moved just to get on him on the field more.

In the end, his move to the secondary will probably be dependent on if other young players like Terrail Lambert, Ambrose Wooden, Junior Jabbie, and Leo Ferrine make solid improvement this spring. The optimistic take on Hoskins' future is that the secondary will improve on its own and that his speed will help out a running back position that has talent but no other true "burners". Of course, it's also possible that he will end up playing both ways. Weis himself mentioned at a coaching clinic that it's possible one player on the team will play on both sides of the ball. Perhaps this spring we'll find out if Coach Lewis was able to convince Weis to share one of the team's best athletes.

3. Who is going to start in the secondary?

In all honesty, this is probably Question #1 for the spring. The play of our secondary was ND's achilles heal last year as multiple quarterbacks bolstered their Heisman chances against the Irish secondary. The hiring of Coach Bill Lewis from the Dolphins is reassuring, but he has his work cut out for him as the roster is filled with youth and inexperience. And even the lone returning starter, Tom Zbikowski, might not stay at the same position. Coach Lewis has mentioned that "the slate is clean" in terms of the past and everything will start anew in the secondary this spring. Sounds like some of the fiercest competition in the spring will be found in the defensive backfield.

Mike Richardson has the leg up on other cornerbacks in terms of playing experience and seniority so he might see the field at corner first. His main competition will most likely come from Terrail Lambert, one of the fastest players on the team. Knowing that Lambert was named top performer at the 2003 Army National Combine, ND fans have been impatiently waiting for him to claim a starting corner spot since he stepped foot on campus. One of the other names that many Irish fans hope will emerge this spring is Ambrose Wooden. Wooden seemed much improved in the Insight.com bowl and I wouldn't be surprised to see him start out as the other corner. At safety Zibby is a good bet for one of the safety positions. My guess is that he will slide over to strong safety as he was impressive against the run last season, but struggled at times in coverage.

After that, the roster is filled with plenty of unproven speed and talent that could fit in at multiple positions. Finding slots for Freddie Parish (my pick for starting free safety), Junior Jabbie (dark horse starting free safety candidate), Anthony Vernaglia, Jake Carney, Leo Ferrine, Tregg Duerson, and Chinedum Ndukwe will keep Coach Lewis and Coach Polian very busy this spring.

4. Who will end up switching positions?

Hoskins has already been mentioned here as a candidate for switching positions and with a new coaching staff, I'm sure he won't be the only one moving around. With the end of Jamie Ryan's playing career, the offensive depth chart is extremely thin after the five returning starters. (anyone else getting tired of reading "depth chart" and "thin" in the same sentence? But I digress...) Looking at the roster, Brandon Nicolas appears to be a prime candidate to make the move to the offensive line. He was considered one of the best offensive lineman in the L.A. area in high school and still has four years of eligibility. Considering there are no current offensive guards on the roster who will be juniors, sophomores, or freshman next year, someone is going to have to move this spring and Nicolas seems like a good bet.

Another player who is a prime candidate for a move is Anthony Vernaglia. Thankfully the reasons are his versatility and not the need to plug another depth chart leak. Currently he is still listed as a safety, but many armchair coaches think he could also be very effective at outside linebacker, tight end, or wide receiver. He should stay on defense as tight end and wide receiver are our deepest returning positions and keeping Vernaglia at safety would add size to a position that only has one other player over six feet tall. However, I think he will be moved to outside linebacker this spring. Specifically, I'd look for him to push Mitchell Thomas for playing time at the strongside linebacker position. It's possible that Vernaglia could shuffle between the safety and linebacker position, but I suspect linebacker is his future home. Coach Minter is going to want to put as much speed on the field as possible while not sacrificing too much size. That seems to fit Vernaglia's description. And while I'm at it, you can replace Vernaglia's name with Chinedum Ndukwe and everything else stays the same. These are two extremely versatile guys and it will be very interesting to see how the staff utilizes their mix of size and speed this spring.

5. Who is going to be the big surprise this spring?

This is the annual spring question as every year Irish fans love to look at the younger players and try to find the potential All-American just waiting to make his move, or the upperclassman player who finally puts it all together. And while the results in the spring don't always translate to production in the fall, it's still fun to speculate which players will announce their presence during the March and April practices. With all of the openings on the defensive side of the ball and a new coaching staff claiming that everyone is going to have to earn a starting spot, the field is wide open at this point.

This spring, the convential wisdom is that Terrail Lambert and Justin Hoskins are two players to watch. But I'm looking for a bit less obvious choice here, so I'm going to offer up two names that I feel might surprise people this spring: Travis Thomas and Maurice Crum, Jr.

Thomas has to be ecstatic that his position coach has changed from Buzz Preston to Michael Haywood. I could do the crappy car to sports car analogy here, but I think the coaching upgrade is rather obvious. Now, Thomas is not exactly a surprise as he had a great fall camp last year, but ill-timed fumbles last season and the rise of Darius Walker might have caused some fans to write Thomas off. However, Thomas' fumblitis problems last season appeared to be mental and I fully expect the new staff to get him back on the track that earned him a starting spot in last year's BYU game. Walker will probably remain the starter, but I think Travis Thomas is going to give him some serious competition this spring and become a dependable power back for the Irish next fall.

On the defensive side of the ball, Coach Rick Minter loves to have his defenses play fast, aggressive, attacking football. I wouldn't be surprised to see Crum make a push to be the starting weakside linebacker with current weakside starter Brandon Hoyte moving to middle linebacker. Hoyte is a team leader and one of the best hitters on the team, but playing against the pass is not his strong suit. A starting linebacker group of Crum and Mitchell Thomas on the outside and Hoyte in the middle would be a definite increase in speed over last year's excellent linebacker trio while still stout enough to stop the run.

Depth Chart

Ok then, as long as I'm making predictions for the spring, I might as well take a crack at a two-deep depth chart for the end of spring practice. Here's what I think it might look like. Be sure to clip and save for future mocking purposes.

QB
Brady Quinn
David Wolke
SDE
Victor Abiamiri
Travis Leitko
RB
Darius Walker
Travis Thomas
DT
Trevor Laws
Brian Beidatsch
FB
Rashon Powers-Neal
Ashley McConnell
NT
Derek Landri
Brian Beidatsch
SE
Maurice Stovall
Jeff Samardzija
WDE
Chris Frome
Dwight Stephenson, Jr.
FL
Rhema McKnight
Matt Shelton
SAM
Mitchell Thomas
Anthony Vernaglia
TE
Anthony Fasano
Marcus Freeman
MIKE
Brandon Hoyte
Corey Mays
LT
Ryan Harris
John Kadous
WILL
Maurice Crum, Jr.
Joe Brockington
LG
Bob Morton
Dan Santucci
CB
Terrail Lambert
Mike Richardson
C
John Sullivan
Bob Morton
CB
Ambrose Wooden
Leo Ferrine
RG
Dan Stevenson
Brandon Nicolas
SS
Tom Zbikowski
Chinedum Ndukwe
RT
Mark LeVoir
Brian Mattes
FS
Freddie Parish
Junior Jabbie

Thursday, March 17, 2005

Taking Inventory | by Teds

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Notre Dame's season in Big East play lived up to the adage about the madness-inducing month that everyone points toward in this sport: "in like a lion, and out like a lamb". Obviously, the team controlled its own destiny over the final two weeks of the season and failed to grab that one extra, elusive win that would have made it nearly impossible for Bob Bowlsby and his crack tournament committee to ignore the Irish. The infighting has been hot and heavy among ND fans between those who see black helicopters hovering over NCAA headquarters in Indianapolis and those who will only be satisfied once the new, force-fed team motto ("We have no one to blame but ourselves") is stitched to the front of next season's jerseys in scarlet lettering.

The dust-up is understandable, because expectations at the beginning of the season were as lofty as they've been during Brey's tenure. But with the NCAA dreams now dead, does the reality of what Brey was working with render the season a huge disappointment or merely the predictable conclusion for an outfit with warts that went unnoticed back in October? A review of the main players from the 2004-05 team is probably in order, as well as a peek at what the future might hold for those who will continue to fight the good fight next season.

Any discussion of the Irish team has to begin with Chris Thomas, the heart of the team and de facto posterboy for Brey's squad over the past four seasons. To say that Thomas has been a credit to this program would be an understatement, and he will go down in history as one of the best point guards and most memorable players to ever wear a Notre Dame jersey. That being said, the past two seasons of his career have been marred with health problems and poor performances in critical games. Here are Thomas' season-by-season averages:


YearPointsAssistsStealsRebounds
2001-0215.67.62.23.5
2002-0318.76.91.84.0
2003-0419.74.71.64.2
2004-0514.06.62.14.9


The data shows that Thomas' averages have jumped around somewhat based on what Brey required of him within the framework of the team. His assist totals were highest during his freshman year with a solid, experienced supporting cast, then dipping the next two seasons as he assumed the role as primary scorer (as noted by the increase in points per game, as well as shots attempted), before leaning back toward his freshman effort this year with Quinn and Falls taking up some of his perimeter scoring slack. Thomas also became a more active rebounder as his career progressed, and that part of his game will be sorely missed next season on a team that couldn't ever seem to get enough of those boards. But the numbers that tell the greater story of Thomas' stagnation are his shooting percentages:


YearFG%3PT%
2001-02.387.369
2002-03.403.385
2003-04.385.351
2004-05.341.340


We can see that Thomas was progressing nicely going into his junior season, shooting well in general and becoming a more consistent threat from behind the arc. However, his percentages took a turn for the worse last year before practically cratering into the realm of self-flaggelation in the season just concluded. It's possible that failures on the part of Brey's coaching staff could have played a role in Thomas' erosion as an offensive threat, but his knee problems have obviously been a significant factor, as well. Watching Thomas struggle as his college career comes to a close, I'm reminded less of an "undeveloped player" than I am of a once-great NBA performer who can no longer force his body to regularly do the things it did when he was at the top of his game. It's a shame that his career has to end on such an underwhelming note, and the variety of his contributions will undoubtedly be missed. However, his departure represents an opportunity for Brey and his team to step out from underneath Thomas' formidable shadow, and the turning of this particular page can't come soon enough for the program.

Perhaps the most critical component in the team's life-to-be without Thomas is Chris Quinn. Quinn is not an imposing physical specimen, nor is he the sort of player who gets noticed much by the average fan on a court full of Big East-caliber performers. But a review of his statistics this season points to a player who was more effective and efficient than Syracuse's Gerry MacNamara, an oft-celebrated peer who strongly considered ND during the recruiting process and is sometimes compared to Quinn as his better.



PointsAssistsFG%3-PT%Assist/Turn
Quinn12.63.10.4490.4552.8
MacNamara16.05.00.3760.3441.7


Based solely on the statistics, Quinn appears to be the stronger player of the two, especially in terms of shooting. Of course, to put the numbers in proper context, one has to recognize that Thomas' play has supported Quinn's performance and taken lead-dog pressure off him. Next season, Quinn will be charged with the primary responsibility for handling the ball and running the offense. It's an open question as to how well he'll fare in the transition, but his experience and performance record to this point puts him in a good position to succeed. Quinn's absence over the last three games (only 33 minutes and 5 points in total) was an underrated factor in those losses. I believe that having a healthy Quinn finally manning his proper role next season will be a boon for this team, and I expect him to have a very productive final season as the baton is cleanly passed over to incoming freshman Kyle McAlarney.

Colin Falls lived up to the glimpses that he showed during his freshman season as a sharpshooter in the making, doubling his minutes (15.6 to 30.8) and nearly tripling his scoring average (4.6 to 12.4) this year. He led the team in three-point field goals made (second in the Big East behind McNamara), as well as free throw percentage (first in Big East). However, though his legitimacy as a long-range bomber is not in doubt, he has yet to establish that he's much more than a one-trick pony. His three-point shooting percentage (.414) actually propped up his overall shooting (.390), so absent was his offensive game within the arc. Falls' discomfort inside the circle was obvious based on his two-point shooting (.235) and the lack of attempts of such shots (just 34, compared to 215 attempted threes). He played almost 100 total minutes and into his sixth game this season before even attempting his first two-point shot against DePaul. And any hint of a game on that portion of the court completely disappeared once conference play started, as Falls shot only .148 (4-27) inside the arc during the Big East season.

To a certain extent, this is an unfair dismissal of Falls. Brey put him on the floor and in the offense for the express purpose of hitting those threes, which he did at a laudable clip (fifth in the Big East -- minimum 75 attempts). But as the season progressed and Falls reputation grew, so did the attention paid to him by opposing teams on the perimeter. Without an effective dribble drive, Falls could be taken out of the game, and this happened on numerous occassions, leading to something of a rollercoaster ride in output on a team already saturated with such performers. So while Falls was an effective and valuable player for ND, he was also one that needed to be shooting well to outweigh other parts of his game that weren't suited to play wing in the Big East.

It's likely that the departure of Thomas will mean a shift to shooting guard for Falls, which should be helpful to him on the whole. At 6'5", he possesses the size to take advantage of some of his peers, but he needs to improve his strength during the offseason in order to make the most of it. His defense improved last season, but he was still exposed by great athletes like UConn's Rudy Gay. He'll be tested by the quickness of opposing guards, and it's no guarantee that he'll ever be anything more than a tweener -- not strong enough to handle wings, nor quick enough to stone smaller guards -- on that end of the floor. Most importantly, Falls needs to work during the offseason to develop and hone his skills with the ball and creating shots off the dribble. Given some marked improvement in this respect, the potential is there for Falls to emulate former Irish star Matt Carroll down the road. However, there's also the possibility that his career could end up more closely resembling that of Keith Friel or Ryan Hoover. In the latter case, the 30+ minutes per game that Falls contributed this past year may not be asked of him again in future campaigns.

Along the frontcourt, no player more accurately illustrated the maddening, mercurial tendencies of the Irish team this season than Torin Francis. A former McDonald's All-American, Francis has shown flashes of greatness over his three seasons that made him look like an NBA lottery-pick-to-be while offering on other occassions the sort of handiwork that would make a first-time observer wonder if he'd ever played a day of college basketball in his life. Francis was sidelined for the final month of his sophomore year with back problems, and subsequent surgery to correct the ailment left him laid up for much of last summer and slow in getting a jump on the new season. This, in turn, precipitated both predictable and frustrating peaks and valleys in his performance over the first part of the year..

Connecticut and Syrcause are the two most recent national champions and probably also the two strongest teams in the Big East as the NCAA tournament opens this week. Both teams feature strong and athletic frontcourts, and one would surmise that lesser performers would tend to look worse in direct competition against them. So it's a bit of a surprise to discover that Francis averaged 16 points (shooting 53% from the field) and 8 rebounds in Notre Dame's 4 games against those teams this season. He also chipped in with a double-double -- 19 points and 13 rebounds -- in a tightly-contested loss at Villanova, another talented conference opponent with Final Four aspirations. At times such as those, he appeared to be assured and aggressive, a worthy adversary for his acclaimed opponents. But in other games, Francis was almost completely lost -- hesitant, clumsy and strangely invisible for a young man of his dimensions.

As a card-carrying member of the Ty Willingham Memorial "Coaching Begat Talent" club, I understand that I risk exposing myself as a hypocrite, but I feel quite strongly on the subject. What's holding back Torin Francis more than anything else is Torin Francis. I recognize that his recovery from offseason surgery set back his timetable, but it doesn't explain why he was capable of contributing three double-doubles over the first month of Big East play but performed so poorly against Providence in a key game in late February that he was benched for the entire second half. Anyone capable of "player of the game"-type impact when matched up against the best teams in the best conference in the nation should also possess the ability to perform at least adequately against average-or-worse opponents, and Francis was too often unable to contribute in such a manner. There seems to be such an inconsistency in his focus and level of intensity that it's difficult to suggest an appropriate remedy for the coaching staff.

There's a lot of talk about Francis attending the Pete Newell Big Man Camp duirng the upcoming offseason, which would probably be beneficial in terms of both instruction and experience against other quality players of his stature. Additionally, Francis' forays into ballhandling have graded out anywhere between "unorthodox" and "abominable", and I believe that he stands to benefit greatly from some isolated training on hand-eye coodination. Still, I think that the most important factor in his further development resides in his basic mindset and approach to his growing role on the team. If Francis could somehow channel Harold Swanagan just before tip-off of each game, he has the makings of an All-American sort of performer. Otherwise, it might be a matter of bringing Vince Vaughn in for a pep talk about bears, bunnies, fangs, sharp (bleeping) claws and the like.

The image “http://graphics.fansonly.com/photos/schools/nd/galleries/a-mbb120804/fansonly_INDC101_787486708122004.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.Dennis Latimore was something of a poor man's version of Francis. He rode the performance rollercoaster just as his teammate did, but his highs weren't as uplifting and his lows not quite so traumatic. Greatness had been predicted for Latimore coming into the season, and his infusion was one of the primary reasons that expectations for the Irish team had been so promising. In retrospect, he was a talented but almost completely unproven player who wasn't ready for the Big East meatgrinder. The projections for him should have been tempered. Here are per-game averages for Latimore this season, both prior to the Big East season and from the conference opener (Seton Hall) forward:


Time Frame
MinutesPointsRebounds
Pre-Big East27.610.75.9
Seton Hall to BET17.65.33.6


Admittedly, Latimore's minutes being cut hampered his scoring and rebounding totals, but anyone who tracked him as the season progressed couldn't help but notice that he wasn't the same player in conference competiton that he had been in earlier contests against the likes of Michigan and Indiana. Coming from a part-time role in a less challenging conference with a different and less physical style of play, competing in the Big East was the sort of shock to Latimore's system that a full year of in-team scrimmages against Francis, Rick Cornett and Tom Timmermans couldn't adequately prepare him for.

Looking back, Ryan Humphrey was not only a fantastic athlete but also an experienced player and proven commodity during his two seasons at Oklahoma before arriving at Notre Dame. However, even he had to fight his way through the growth curve and was a significantly more effective player during the second half of his senior (second) year at ND than he had been previously. For a more contemporary example, Ed Nelson, former ACC Freshman of the Year and a major contributor on the interior for Georgia Tech two seasons ago, was little more than an afterthought (9.6 mins pg, 2.8 ppg, 2.1 rpg) in his first Big East campaign after transferring to Connecticut. But Jim Calhoun and the Huskies had the luxury of a strong, deep frontcourt and weren't dependent on Nelson's contribution. The pitfalls for Mike Brey and ND were greater. My guess is that Latimore will be a distinctly more effective and valuable player for the Irish next season, although his imprimateur as a former All-American blue-chip recruit remains somewhat in doubt.

Jordan Cornette was the best defender in the Irish frontcourt and primarily responsible for hindering Craig Smith, Hakim Warrick and other nationally-recognized opposing players. On the other end of the floor, he didn't have the consistent shot or slashing ability necessary to make him a dangerous wing, nor the power and presence required in this conference to qualify as a threat in the paint. On a different team, Cornette would have been an extremely valuable role player and a fan favorite, contributing 10-15 minutes of hardnosed, enthusiastic play and a couple of rejections every night. But on this team, Cornette was required to take on a regular position and was simply stretched too thin, his shortcomings exposed over the course of 26 minutes per game. His loss will be felt next year just as Torrian Jones' was this season, but the hope is that the Irish can cultivate another player or two who might attach a wider array of skills to the fiery attitude that served Cornette and ND well throughout his college career.

If Irish fans decided to hand out a Jere Macura Memorial Award this year for the ND player most inappropriately (in their minds, anyway) relegated to the bench, it would have to go to Rick Cornett. Cornett ran a bit hot-and-cold in his performance, but he once again displayed some worthwhile offensive skills and an uncanny knack for collecting loose balls and rebounds. He almost singlehandedly won an important game for the Irish at Providence late in the season, coming off the bench in Montanaesque fashion to log career-highs in points (14) and rebounds (14). His free throw shooting was execrable (41%), and he seemed lost on occassion. But considering the disparity in minutes between Cornett (9.4 per game) and those soaked up by Francis (26.4) and Latimore (20.6), it's a wonder that he wasn't hip-deep in hibernation mode when finally summoned from the bench. Here are the 2004-05 averages for the three players, extrapolated to illustrate their projected performances over 30 minutes per game:

Player
PointsReboundsBlocksTurnovers
Francis10.68.91.32
Latimore10.26.30.72.2
Cornett11.88.31.33.5


Based on the numbers, Cornett is a player with the potential to score and hit the boards every bit as well as Francis and Latimore, although these figures also note that he suffers from the same shortcomings in ball skills that plague Francis. Overall, it's a mystery that Brey turned to the tough and athletic Cornett as little as he did this season, especially given the coach's public declarations about the shortage of tough and athletic players on the interior. If there was any reason to second-guess Brey's handling of the team this year, the continued ignorance of Cornett as a viable option on the frontline was Exhibit A. Looking toward next season, it would be nice to think that Cornett will finally get the opportunity to shine in extended duty. However, given the return of Francis and Latimore along with the expected contributions of freshman Rob Kurz and incoming freshman and McDonald's All-American Luke Zeller, it seems more likely that Cornett will be squeezed further, barring an unforseen injury or departure.

Among other minor contributors, Russell Carter and Omari Isreal showed flashes of potential, the former mostly on offense and the latter on the other end of the court. These two represent the sort of athletic wings that the Irish suffered without a major contribution from this year, and the accelerated development of one or both players over the upcoming offseason could mean a world of difference to next season's team. I'd stop just short of calling it imperative that one of the two proves to be an effective regular performer in 2005-06. Rob Kurz enjoyed his most extensive court time of the season last night against Holy Cross and offered Notre Dame fans a glimpse of his promising future. Kurz appears to have the makings of an effective inside/outside game, which should help Brey and the Irish offense thwart opponents packing in down low against the team's less mobile bigs.

Notre Dame finished the season 9-7 in the Big East, good enough for sixth place in the nation's most competitive conference. Given a review of the team's major contributors this season, what I see is essentially a sixth-place squad. Any expectations fans or analysts might have had back in October for a 25-win season or a trip to the Final Four for this team were couched solely in a best-case-scenario sort of wishcasting. That's no knock on the players who were part of this year's ND squad, as the sudden blossoming of particular performers or a team in general can't be scheduled like a dinner reservation. Many people expected great things from Jay Wright's Villanova squad the past two years (both ending in trips to the NIT), but it took them until this season to finally flourish into an outfit capable of winning big games in bunches and making a deep tournament run. Things in this sport don't often go according to plan, and anyone who wishes to put a particular coach or team on a regimented, year-by-year timetable is likely to end up disappointed, if not suicidal.

None of this is to say that Mike Brey and his coaching staff get a free pass for the disappointment of the current campaign. As unfit as this unit might have been to trade body blows with Connecticut, Syracuse and other national powers over the long haul, it's a team that had no excuse not to return to the NCAA tournament after a one-year hiatus. They started the Big East season with some close and headache-inducing wins but appeared to be on track to play meaningful basketball in March. Unfortunately, the proverbial pit of quicksand the team mysteriously slipped into over the final weeks of the season proved its undoing, and the more Brey and his charges struggled to escape, the deeper they sank into the muck. Everyone connected to this team will most assuredly limp into the offseason with a sour taste in their mouth, and the hope is that Brey and others will use the frustration of this lost season as fuel to regroup, retool and hit the ground running come October.

There is still sufficient time for Brey to prove that he's a coach capable of taking Notre Dame basketball to another level, but for the first time in his tenure, there is some well-deserved urgency in the short-term fortunes of the team. With the Big East expanding to include Louisville, Marquette and Cincinnati next season, the timing is especially poor for Irish basketball to be moving in the wrong direction. Righting the ship over the course of the next year -- and perception of this matters even bit as much as reality -- may ultimately make or break Brey's tenure at Notre Dame. As I've stated previously, I believe him to be capable of leading this program to the promised land, but some amount of change is in order. Good coaches adjust, and Brey needs to act accordingly and prove he is exactly that.

I still see good things ahead for Notre Dame basketball, but there's some heavy lifting to be done by coaches and players alike in the meantime.

Beannachtai na Feile Padraig | by Dylan

I have met them at close of day
Coming with vivid faces
From counter or desk among grey
Eighteenth-century houses.
I have passed with a nod of the head
Or polite meaningless words,
Or have lingered awhile and said
Polite meaningless words,
And thought before I had done
Of a mocking tale or a gibe
To please a companion
Around the fire at the club,
Being certain that they and I
But lived where motley is worn:
All changed, changed utterly:
A terrible beauty is born.

That woman's days were spent
In ignorant good will,
Her nights in argument
Until her voice grew shrill.
What voice more sweet than hers
When young and beautiful,
She rode to harriers?
This man had kept a school
And rode our winged horse.
This other his helper and friend
Was coming into his force;
He might have won fame in the end,
So sensitive his nature seemed,
So daring and sweet his thought.
This other man I had dreamed
A drunken, vain-glorious lout.
He had done most bitter wrong
To some who are near my heart,
Yet I number him in the song;
He, too, has resigned his part
In the casual comedy;
He, too, has been changed in his turn,
Transformed utterly:
A terrible beauty is born.

Hearts with one purpose alone
Through summer and winter seem
Enchanted to a stone
To trouble the living stream.
The horse that comes from the road.
The rider, the birds that range
From cloud to tumbling cloud,
Minute by minute change;
A shadow of cloud on the stream
Changes minute by minute;
A horse-hoof slides on the brim,
And a horse plashes within it
Where long-legged moor-hens dive,
And hens to moor-cocks call.
Minute by minute they live:
The stone's in the midst of all.

Too long a sacrifice
Can make a stone of the heart.
O when may it suffice?
That is heaven's part, our part
To murmur name upon name,
As a mother names her child
When sleep at last has come
On limbs that had run wild.
What is it but nightfall?
No, no, not night but death;
Was it needless death after all?
For England may keep faith
For all that is done and said.
We know their dream; enough
To know they dreamed and are dead.
And what if excess of love
Bewildered them till they died?
I write it out in a verse --
MacDonagh and MacBride
And Connolly and Pearse
Now and in time to be,
Wherever green is worn,
Are changed, changed utterly:
A terrible beauty is born.

-- William Butler Yeats

Monday, March 14, 2005

Bracketeering | by Jay

While you're cruising along filling out your Irish-less NCAA bracket over the next couple of days, you might want to try to summon the spirit of Warren Buffet to help guide your pencil.

Why Buffet, you ask? Most people know Buffet as a legendary investor, the founder of Berkshire Hathaway, and one of the richest men on earth. But the renowned success of "the Oracle of Omaha" was all derived from a very simple maxim:
“Be brave when others are afraid and afraid when others are brave.”
Stock experts call Buffet's magic touch contrarianism. While conventional, conservative investors play it safe, stay with the flock and only take supposedly "safe" positions, a true Contrarian bucks the trend and goes against the conventional wisdom. When the market's bombed out and confidence is in the dirt, the Contrarian's in there buying everything in sight; and when prices soar into the stratosphere, they're dumping, looking for their next position. Warren Buffet's probably the most famous contrarian in the history of the stock market, consistently turning the herd mentality on its head, and reaping a windfall in the process.

Of course, it isn't as simple as just doing the opposite of what everyone else is doing. It takes a laser-like precision and keen insight to figure out when to swing the Contrarian's sword, and Buffet has a knack for it like no one else. His sixth sense about when it's right to go against the grain is uncanny. (It also helps that he's got a pair the size of cannonballs.)

So how would Buffet approach his NCAA bracket? First, he'd probably try and figure out which way the wind is blowing. ESPN's running a fairly large NCAA challenge on their website, and they're updating a master bracket with the stats from all the individual entries. The result is a fairly good snapshot of the conventional wisdom -- and it reveals a couple of opportunities for some sharp Buffetology.

North Carolina running almost as hot as Illinois for the NC? 3-seed Louisville a 3-2 favorite over top seed Washington in the sweet sixteen? Wake Forest to the Final Four? What would Warren think of these popular picks?

Here's a nice site to give you a little assist. Chris Wheeland's got a seed-by-seed historical analysis on his NCAA Tournament site going back to 1985, and unearths some fascinating tournament minutiae. You probably know that a #1 seed has never lost to a #16, but did you know...

...the tournament has never seen all four #1 seeds advance to the Final Four?

...only five times in 19 tournaments have all four #4 seeds advanced to the second round?

...#8 seeds actually have a losing record to #9 seeds over the past 20 years?

...more #10, #11, and #12 seeds have reached the Sweet Sixteen than have #8 & #9 seeds?

(Lots more revealing analysis from Chris, and his whole site is worth exploring.)

So do your best contrarian impersonation, hold your breath, strap on a pair and buck that trend. Remember, if everyone else in your pool is picking Illinois, that doesn't mean they're right -- just conventional. Be like Buffet, and you might reap the windfall.

Recruiting, Admissions, and the new SAT | by Pat

This past Saturday, the SAT debuted with a long-anticipated change as a new writing section was added to the test and the maximum point total rose from the familiar 1600 to 2400. In addition to the new essay section, the math section was altered to include more difficult math topics usually covered in 3rd year high school math classes.

Will this change affect football recruiting this season? The easy answer: probably not. SAT scores are just one component of a recruit's academic transcript, and the usual sticking point between football recruits and Notre Dame is the number of high school "core" courses.

However, this recruiting season for Notre Dame is not going to be like previous recruiting seasons and the SAT change could have a large impact. How so? Well, that depends on how ND admissions react to the change both at the head coaching position and University presidency.

During the coaching search and brief flirtation with Urban Meyer, the term “academic concessions” was tossed around in a few articles. Given all the rumors flying around at the time it is unclear whether Meyer was asking for the concessions as part of his contract or if Notre Dame was offering them up as an enticement. To be honest I still don't know. (I don't have enough message board award points to reach "insider" status yet. I'm still suck on "semi-knowledgeable alumnus".)

Some members of the media and other schools claimed that concessions were granted by the University in a win-at-all cost mentality. Others, Irish fans mostly, claim that Meyer demanded the concessions, and Notre Dame stuck to its guns and refused. Still others insist that Willingham was already granted similar concessions, but for whatever reasons did not feel the need to use them. Regardless of what really happened, it seems an adjustment of academic standards was definitely a topic of conversation when the Irish hit parade arrived in Salt Lake City, and it's not hard to imagine that Father Jenkins might have a different take on the recruiting policies that Monk instituted. Pure speculation on my part, of course, but there's a lot of smoke.

This is where the SAT changes come in. The old historical averages and percentages are gone. Sure, the College Board has done some studies, and of course they insist there's a strong correlation between old test scores and the new ones. But there is definitely going to be some uncertainty on what constitutes a baseline score, at least until we get a few years worth of hard testing results under our belts. For now, a coach at a school that gives a passing interest in academics isn't going to know if a 1350 is more Mensa, or Katzenmoyer.

So, there's an opportunity here to maybe look at modifying the way Notre Dame qualifies student-athletes. Now just to be clear, I'm not suggesting that "modify" means "obliterate". I'm not taking a Paul Hornung stand here. I'm just wondering if we might see some changes from the ways things have been done in seasons past.

For example, here's one concrete step that could be taken in light of the new scoring system: softening the current practice of refusing official visits to recruits who are not fully qualified academically. The original idea behind the rule is sound; the University should not waste time and money wining and dining recruits with no shot of making through Freshman Year of Studies. But changing this rule can be done in a way to benefit the recruit, the football program, and the academic integrity of Notre Dame.

Perhaps an example might help explain. This past recruiting season a major recruiting prospect, linebacker Ray Maualuga, had early interest in the Fighting Irish. However, he had a low SAT score and Notre Dame couldn't initially offer him a scholarship. (The online recruiting sites have him listed as scoring 800) According to an old IrishEyes article, this caused some complications when it came time to schedule an official visit to Notre Dame,
”I was supposed to go up there this weekend,” said Maualuga. “They called me and said my SAT scores didn’t meet their standards. They said they can’t bring me out due to the scores. I’m just studying for the test and I’ll take it again.”
Now, this case is not unique in Notre Dame recruiting and I'm sure happens with plenty of players every year. So here is how changing the official visit limitations can benefit all involved. Say a highly-recruited prospect takes the new SAT this March or May and ends up with a score that appears to correlate to something in the 800-900 range on the current SAT. Under last year's system, he wouldn't be allowed to make an official visit. But this year, only a percentage of the nation's high school seniors-to-be would have taken the revamped SAT. Obviously, the students who took it as early as possible are academically strong students who didn't need extra prep time and were perhaps planning on applying for early admission. Furthermore, the new essay section will be a challenging obstacle for recruits from high schools that consider one semester cram sessions to be adequate SAT prep. Then for good measure throw in the fact that less academically inclined recruits are sometimes steered towards the ACT, which is shorter, essay-optional, and unlike the SAT doesn't penalize for incorrect answers. Can you trust the percentages and breakdown of scores from those first few tests and make a firm decision on the recruit's ability to succeed at Notre Dame?

This year we should allow recruits with borderline acceptable SAT scores to make official visits. Notre Dame can continue to legitimately recruit the player, and the player will get a chance to come and see campus without having to pay for it himself. (On official visits, the school pays transportation/lodging costs. On unofficial visits, the recruit/family pays.) Since ND recruits nationally, this is a big issue for us -- many families lack the money to fly all over the country on unofficial visits. And history shows that top recruits who do not visit Notre Dame rarely end up signing with Notre Dame.

The benefit for the admissions departments is that they can schedule an interview with the recruit to get a much better grasp on the recruit's ability to handle legitimate college coursework. Things like attitude, work ethic, and other "extenuating circumstances" (difficult family situations, for example) are always easier to glean from an interview as opposed to a faxed transcript and a revamped SAT score.

This isn't a call for a system-wide overhaul. I have no problem with limiting this official visit exemption to only 2-4 recruits a year. But this mofication can maintain our current academic standards, keep the focus on academically-solid recruits, while at the same time still allow the coach some leeway with top recruits he feels might have a shot at becoming eligible down the road.

ND Admissions Standards are always good fodder for a barroom debate among Irish fans, typically breaking down into into the "we have to loosen the restrictions to compete" vs. "we shouldn't sacrifice our academic integrity" camps. With the SAT revamp, there might be an oppotunity here for ND to revisit some of its long-held practices, and as recruiting heats up this summer, it will be interesting to note what, if any, changes are made.

(P.S. As an aside, for those who read Ray Maualuga's 800 SAT score and wondered why we are even debating admitting such a low score, keep in mind that last year Seattle area running back Jonathan Stewart scored a reported 860 and was offered a scholarship, that is to say, admitted to the University. [Perhaps Willingham did have and use some of those reported concessions.] As for Maualuga, Irish fans will get a chance to watch him play as he ended up signing with the USC Trojans.)

Sunday, March 13, 2005

Pop Goes the Weasel | by Pat

Notre Dame's ride on the NCAA Tournament bubble popped this evening as the Irish were passed over for UAB and Northern Iowa. So now the NIT-bound Fighting Irish will take on Holy Cross at the JACC this Tuesday at 7pm on ESPN2. Holy Cross has only lost twice in 2005, but the Patriot League isn't exactly a loaded conference. They did take Boston College to overtime early in the season so they won't be a small conference pushover. It will be interesting to see if the Irish team is able to get up for the game and put away a team with lesser talent.

As a side note, Chris Thomas is 3 three-pointers short of passing Matt Carroll's record of 301 made three-pointers made in a career. And yes, he already does have the record for most three-pointers attempted, but it is still a major achievement, especially for someone who also holds the all-time assist record. But if Chris Thomas does break Matt Carroll's career record, it may not last for long. Sophomore Colin Falls already has 126 career three-pointers and is currently 11 three-pointers away from breaking Matt Carroll's single season made three-pointers record of 99. Perhaps Falls will be able to claim the record as his own before he leaves ND.

Saturday, March 12, 2005

Bubble Watch II: Return of Bubble Watch | by Pat

Yesterday's ten games to watch yielded six games that fell in Notre Dame's favor and four that did not. What that means is that ND is still firmly on the bubble and Irish fans are going to have to sweat out the results of today's conference championship games. Some are more important than others, but the outcome of the first and last games of the day are the ones that might decide ND's fate. Here are today's 10 key games that will impact Notre Dame's bubble chances:

11:30 - Louisville v. Memphis - Louisville win

With a 28-4 record and #6 national ranking, Louisville is a lock for the tournament. A Memphis upset in the Conference USA Championship means both teams will get in and ND's chances will be close to zero.

11:30 - Northeastern v. Vermont - Vermont win

Despite an RPI of 22, Vermont isn't a lock if they lose today. Still, future NBA draft pick Taylor Coppenrath and retiring popular coach Tom Brennan might give the Selection Committee two reasons to squeeze them in. It's best just to hope that they take care of business against Northeastern and don't pollute the at-large pool.

4:00 - NC State v. Duke - NC State loss

NC State is a fellow bubble team but their chances are a little better than ours. The win over Wake Forest yesterday probably earned them a ticket to the Dance, even though Wake was playing without star guard Chris Paul. It's possible that their win yesterday could give them the 5th ACC slot that many wondered/hoped current ND bubble foe Maryland might get. The outcome of this game isn't a killer for the Irish, but let's hope the Blue Devils take this one.

4:05 - Iowa v. Wisconsin - Iowa loss

Like NC State, some media bracketologists have Iowa in, some have them out. Their 7-9 conference record should keep them out, but they do have a decent out of conference record. A loss here just makes it easier for the Selection Committee to leave them out.

6:00 GWU v. St. Joseph's - GWU win

The A-10 should only get one bid and GWU has a slightly better resume so Irish fans should pull for the Colonials to get the automatic bid.

7:00 Buffalo v. Ohio - Buffalo win

The Mid-American Conference is a mess with Buffalo, Ohio, and Miami(Oh) all possesing some claim to bubble status. It's doubtful that the MAC will get more than one team in, so it's best for ND's chances if the team with the strongest tourney resume, Buffalo, wins the automatic bid in the conference championship.

8:00 West Virginia v. Syracuse - West Virginia win

This one won't have much of an impact on ND's chances, but a WVU win will make ND's victory over them slightly more impressive and well, it's never a bad thing to see Syracuse lose a game. Besides, Gerry McNamara in a recent Sports Illustrated on Campus feature offered up Van Wilder as his generation's Animal House, a movie he claims he's never seen. That's reason enough to hope they lose.

9:00 Boise State v. UTEP - UTEP win

UTEP has a 26-7 record and a 44 RPI ranking. A win here in the WAC championship will give them the automatic NCAA bid and keep those at-large bids available for the Irish. They aren't a lock with a loss like Louisville and Pacific, but no sense in making things harder on the Selection Committee.

10:00 New Mexico v. Utah - New Mexico loss

New Mexico has a decent tournament resume except for an awful 312th strength of schedule ranking. As of right now they are probably along with us on the last four in/last four out bubble, so let's hope #15 ranked Utah gives them one extra loss and keeps that automatic bid for themselves.

12:00 Pacific v. Utah State - Pacific win

Along with the Louisville/Memphis game, this is probably the most important game of the day for Irish fans. Pacific is going to make the tournament win or lose. But if they lose and Utah State gets the Big West automatic bid, Notre Dame fans might have to settle for another NIT berth.

Friday, March 11, 2005

A Big Day for Bubbles | by Mike

On Tuesday, Notre Dame appeared firmly camped on the good side of the NCAA Tournament bubble, needing only a win against Rutgers to move to "lock" status. After Wednesday's implosion, Irish fans are left to hope for favorable outcomes in other conference tournaments. Here is my take on how Irish fans should hope today's games unfold:

2:00 - Georgia Tech v. Virginia Tech - Virginia Tech loss

Based solely on on-the-court resumes, one would think that Georgia Tech (8-8 in conference) is squarely on the bubble and Virginia Tech (also 8-8 in conference) is on the outside looking in. Somehow, Georgia Tech's finals run last year coupled with the certainty that the Selection Committee will give the ACC at least four bids has transformed Georgia Tech into a lock. Virginia Tech combines a truly horrendous out-of-conference schedule (losing to VMI, among other bottom-feeders) with a .500 conference record. Yet their win over Duke and ACC bias has placed them on the bubble. Nonetheless, a loss today should seal Virginia Tech's fate.

2:30 - Minnesota v. Indiana - Indiana loss
Minnesota is generally regarded as a lock. Indiana, despite a 15-12 record, somehow finds themselves on the bubble. IU is getting a lot of mileage out of their 10-6 conference record. However, the Big Ten has just been awful this year. A loss here should burst IU's bubble.

6:40 - Michigan State v. Iowa - Iowa loss
Michigan State has been a lock for a while. One would think Iowa's NIT fate was cemented long ago, given their 7-9 record in a piteous conference and the loss of their best player (Pierre Pierce). Yet many consider Iowa to be on the bubble. Perhaps this has something to do with Iowa AD Bob Bowlsby's position as Selection Committee Chairman. One should not forget the end run Bowlsby tried to pull on the BCS to secure Iowa's Orange Bowl berth a few years ago. That said, an Iowa loss here would remove all doubt.

7:00 - Wake Forest v. NC State - NC State loss
NC State is yet another of those 7-9 ACC teams that find themselves mentioned as on the bubble. NC State actually has a great opportunity here, in that Wake Forest is playing without star point guard Chris Paul, who is suspended from the game for his nut-shot to Julius Hodge in the season closer. Paul's absence and NC State's desire for revenge give NC State a good shot at the win. Hope that they lose and remove themselves from contention.

8:45 - George Washington v. Temple - GWU win

Even with a loss in the A-10 tourney, GWU may be able to get in as an at-large bid. So hope that they win the tournament, leaving another at-large bid available.

9:00 - Pacific v. CS Northridge - Pacific win
Pacific is in regardless of how they do in their conference tournament, so a Pacific loss means one less at-large spot is available for bubble teams like Notre Dame.

9:00 - Utah v. UNLV - Utah win
See GWU and Pacific.

9:00 - UTEP v. Rice - UTEP win

A UTEP loss tonight might not be entirely bad for Notre Dame, as it might knock them off the bubble. However, it might not, so it's probably better if UTEP just wins their conference tournament.

9:15 - Buffalo v. Western Michigan - Buffalo loss
A loss would end Buffalo's hopes of an at-large bid.

Midnight - New Mexico v. SD State - New Mexico loss
It would be hard to see New Mexico garnering an at large bid with a loss to an 11-17 San Diego State team.

One final note. If the ND message boards provide an accurate reading of the pulse of Irish fans, it appears that many don't care whether Notre Dame makes the tournament at this point. There are several reasons why Irish fans should want the team to make the tournament, but the most important are:

1. Recruiting - the appearance of stability is absolutely essential to Brey's recruiting. When the Big East conference was in a state of flux, our recruiting suffered considerably. As El Kabong has said over on The Pit, "Rob Kurz was supposed to have classmates." Other coaches used the conference instability to scare recruits away from Notre Dame. We don't want these coaches to have further ammunition, painting ND as an NIT regular. Based on David McClure's comments, we could expect as much from Krzyzewski.

2. Chris Thomas - Thomas has given far too much to this program for Irish fans to be ambivalent about how his career ends. He has been the face of the program, played through pain, and been a lightning rod for criticism - both from Irish fans and opponents' fans. The frustration of Irish fans and other fans' resentment of Notre Dame have both unleashed themselves on Thomas. Through all this, Thomas has conducted himself with class and dignity, while rewriting the Notre Dame record books. If you care about Irish basketball, you should care about how Thomas's career at Notre Dame ends.

Thursday, March 10, 2005

In or Out? | by Jay

As of Thursday afternoon...

Bilas: in.

Kelly: out.

Lunardi: out.

Mandel: in.

Vitale: in.

Elmore (cackling with glee): out.

Glockner: sort of in.

Katz: in. No, out.

Mejia: out.

Lazarus: out.

Cohen: out.

BGS readers (yesterday): in.

BGS readers (today): out.

Brey: I don't want to talk about it.



The Future. Meanwhile, some food for thought from Ty Webb over on NDN.

Yeah, I am already thinking about next year. Hopefully, God smiles on us and by some miracle we get an NCAA bid, but I think that chance is slim to none. And I am certainly no expert, but these are just my opinions looking forward.

A lot has been made about the "pieces" not fitting together. Igor has made comments about we don't have a good mix of skill sets on this current team. I agree with that somewhat. I think the team would have been much better if we'd had a more consistent inside scoring threat in Francis. Without that consistent threat, some teams would just ignore him and concentrate on our perimeter guys. On the flipside, when that happened, our guards could not get past the defenders off the dribble (although Quinn started to show a bit of that later in the season). So suddenly we were in games were Francis was ineffective, our guards couldn't drive past defenders and we were stuck with our three point shooters having the defenders in their jocks. The result? Scrambled, offensive crap. Also, what didn't help was that amongst all our bigs - Cornett, Cornette, Francis, Latimore - we had no one that could step out and hit a mid or long range jumper. That skill set would have freed up the paint area. Instead, at times, the lane was clogged with defenders because we had two post guys who when they stepped outside, other teams would just ignore them.

Think back to our first few seasons under Brey. The "bigs" mix was much better. In 2001-02, Swanagan was our pure post guy - the post defender, the rebounder, decent post moves. Then you had Humphrey who was a guy that could play a bit outside as well as in. He could hit that 10 footer but he also could put the ball on the floor a bit. Then you had Murphy who was a guy who could play inside or out. The flexibility of Hump and Murphy helped immensely in the style that Brey wanted to play. Even in our Sweet 16 year, we had a better mix of bigs.

In looking to next year, I think the pieces might fit together better. However, that largely depends on how two guys develop IMO and what we can get out of Zeller. The two guys in question are Isreal and Kurz.

We all know what we are going to get from Quinn. I suspect he will be a heady PG for us. And while he doesn't have the physical skill set Thomas has, I think the gap between the two has shrunk due to Thomas' knee. Quinn showed a little bit of ability to put the ball on the floor late in the year and take defenders off the dribble. I also think Quinn is a better man defender than Thomas. If Falls continues to work on his game, he should be a better player next year. Sure, we still have a bit of one dimensionalism in our projected starting backcourt but I think with the right mix, that can be mitigated some.

And that is why I mentioned Kurz and Isreal, and to a lesser extent I think you add Carter into the mix. For me, and this is just my opinion, those three could dictate the 2005-06 season more than Quinn, Falls, Francis. And what I mean by that is that those three will bring certain skill sets that I think this team really lacked.

Take Kurz for example. I have seen Kurz play in high school and he could be a poor man's Murphy. Which I think would be a very good thing for this team. Kurz is a guy who can mix it up inside, but possesses a great touch from the outside. People have compared him to Novak or even Dunleavy in terms of his style of play. That is not too far off, but I think Kurz is a slightly better interior player. But it is Kurz's ability to shoot from the outside that could help this team.

Pairing him with Francis would be a big help because his ability to step outside doesn't clog the lane. Right now, when Latimore or Cornette stepped outside, their guy would usually crash down on Francis because no one feared their perimeter game. Every three Cornette took this year was essentially wide open. Why? Because no one cared he was shooting it. But if ND has an effective Kurz in the game, a guy who can hit a 12-20 foot jumper, teams have to respect him. But it comes down to development and Brey's willingness to get him into the rotation. A lot has been made about Francis going to a big man's camp to find consistency, but I would not be opposed to Kurz going as well although he isn't a pure big man.

Isreal takes a lot of heat. And in some cases it is justified. He does play out of control. But you are fooling yourself if you can't see the raw physical skills this kid has. He is quick, runs the floor very well for a guy his size, has long arms, can put the ball on the floor, can jump. Again, he is another guy I have seen play in high school against very good competition in DC. But he is raw, very raw. He is not a consistent shooter and needs work on his defense. However, he has a skill set that no one on this team has. Who is our 6-8ish guy that can run the floor like a deer, handle the ball, etc? We don't have one. And that's not to say Isreal will become a good player. Again it comes back to development. But if he can learn some control and polish his game, his skill set would be a big boost to this team.

Finally there is Carter. Like Isreal, he is raw. But much moreso than Isreal you can see he can score. He can shoot the three, can put the ball on the floor, get in the paint, etc. Defensively he needs work. However, like Isreal, if he could develop and mature he gives ND a guy who can play the 2 or the 3 that possesses a skill set we haven't seen at ND much. A rough comparison might be Miller. Miller could stroke the three but also put the ball on the floor a bit. Granted Miller was taller and Carter is quicker, but it is a decent rough comparison.

That is why I think that the success of next year could fall more on their laps than some of the more seasoned players on this team. Plus anything we get from Ayers, Zeller and Mac might be gravy.

And note, I am not suggesting Kurz, Isreal or Carter will become studs. But if one or two could become effective in their roles, I think the mix of players is much better next year.

Then again, I could just be drunk.

-- Ty Webb

PS - I think it would behoove Brey to spend a bit more time on zone for next year. Defensive foot speed is going to be a problem with our guards although I think Quinn is a better defender than Thomas. I think one reason why we saw less zone from Brey was because we just weren't very good in it. It might be helpful to work on it a lot more next year so as we have something to fall back on.

Wednesday, March 09, 2005

Pulse Check | by Jay

The postseason for ND basketball begins tonight with the first round of the Big East tournament, so with that in mind we thought we'd take a moment to check your pulse. From our vantage point, the opinions on this year's team (and Mike Brey, in general) are all over the map, so let's try and get a handle on the conventional wisdom, and see if there's any sort of consensus out there.

UPDATE: Polling's closed, but click here to take a look at the results.

Tuesday, March 08, 2005

Bracketmasters | by Jay

Seth Davis at SI.com has an interesting peek at the process the NCAA selection committee will be using to fill out its own bracket come Sunday, and being a rock-solid bubble team, ND garners a few mentions.

I found the entire article quite illuminating, so I thought I'd reprint it, wholesale:

Behind closed doors
Tournament selection process has a few surprises

Embracing the revolutionary logic that the best way to counter misinformation is to provide better information, the NCAA's Greg Shaheen visited the Sports Illustrated offices last week to give a presentation on the tournament selection process. Even for those of us who have already read the fine print on how the committee does its work, there were a few surprises, as well as some intriguing nuances that will face this year's group when it convenes in Indianapolis this weekend. Herewith, then, are a few things Shaheen revealed that you might not have realized about the selection:

1. The RPI matters a lot. Just not in the way you think it does.

I keep hearing all these fulminating bloviators in the media skewering the new RPI, which gives extra weight to road games. The RPI is fun to bash, but unlike that other computerized formula that really does deserve bashing -- the BCS -- the RPI makes sense and is used properly.

The bottom line is, a team's ranking in the RPI means next to nothing. Just because Miami of Ohio is 28 and Notre Dame is 75 doesn't necessarily mean Miami's chances of getting in are better. When the committee evaluates a team, it is shown a "team sheet" listing a school's schedule according to opponents' RPI rankings. The results are divided into five groups: 1-25 in the RPI, 26-50, 51-75, 76-100 and 101-plus. Shaheen showed UConn's team sheet from last season. The Huskies' non-conference games were highlighted in turquoise, so we could see what kind of effort Jim Calhoun made to play a respectable schedule. I'm not sure if UConn's RPI was on that sheet -- if it was I didn't notice.

I'm sorry to break this bad news to my fellow medianiks out there, but the reality is, the RPI is a smart organizational tool used in exactly the right fashion. But hey, don't despair. College football season is only six months away. There's plenty of BCS bashing on the horizon.

2. Margin of victory does count. Sort of.

The selection committee discerns the difference between a good loss and a bad loss, and Shaheen conceded that margin of victory plays a part. Thus, Vermont's seven-point loss at Kansas on Nov. 19 is a good loss.

This is a tricky game to play, but at least the committee has not incorporated victory margins into RPI. The Sagarin ratings, however, do factor in margin of victory. That's why the Sagarin rankings are different, and in my opinion, far less reliable.

3. You can expect at least one No. 1 seed to face a homecourt disadvantage in a regional.

This is always a bone of contention among coaches, but the fact is, you can't make everyone happy. This year's regionals are Chicago, Austin, Syracuse and Albuquerque. Right now, you have two ACC teams, North Carolina and Wake Forest, in good position to be No. 1 seeds. You also have two Big East teams, UConn and Boston College, looking like No. 2 seeds. There's a good chance one of those Big East teams will end up in Syracuse, where they'll have a perceived homecourt advantage. Likewise, there's a good chance that Oklahoma, Oklahoma State or Texas Tech could end up in Austin.

When I raised this point to Shaheen, he said the committee's responsibility is to place teams as close to their home base as possible -- but only for the first two rounds. If one of the above scenarios comes to pass, you can bet it will be a topic of conversation.

4. The so-called S curve is not set in stone.

You may not realize this, but the committee ranks the entire field 1 through 65. (The NCAA does not reveal these rankings, which I think is silly.) After the first four seeds are placed in a line, the team ranked No. 5 overall is placed as the No. 2 seed alongside the fourth No. 1. No. 6 gets paired with No. 3, and right on down the line. This S curve continues until the bracket is filled.

However, there are so many other variables involved, the committee needs some flexibility. The most important thing is to keep the four regions as balanced as possible, so each team can be moved up or down one seed-line if need be. So because a team is a No. 5 seed in its region and another team is a No. 6, doesn't mean that the five was ranked ahead of the six in the overall seeding. All the more reason why the committee should release its full rankings so an accurate evaluation can be made.

5. Head-to-head matchups mean something.

If the committee is trying to decide between, say, West Virginia and Notre Dame, it can ask for a "head-to-head report." This shows not only how the teams did when they played each other (Notre Dame beat the Mountaineers 70-57 in Morgantown in their only regular-season meeting), but also how they did against common opponents. I would have thought this type of information would only be necessary when filling out the final spot in the bracket, but there are plenty of times during the selection and seeding process where that kind of information would come in handy. Score this a victory for plain logic!

6. The committee members and NCAA staff are free to do their own investigating.

A common refrain among non-major schools is that it's hard to upgrade schedules because power conferences won't play them. Shaheen said the NCAA urges teams to "tell their story," but that doesn't mean those stories are taken at face value. The NCAA can ask a team who it tried to schedule, but will call up the teams named by that school to verify that claim.

7. It's unlikely that more than one ACC team will be sent to Charlotte for the first two rounds.

Among Duke, North Carolina and Wake Forest, at least one team will be a No. 1 seed, and none should be lower than a No. 2 seed. Shaheen said the committee would be highly unlikely to place two No. 1 seeds at the same first-round site. It would have no problem placing a No. 1 and a No. 2 at the same site, but you can imagine the uproar if, say, Duke got to play in Charlotte as a No. 2 but Wake Forest didn't as a No. 1. Assuming Duke stays on the two line, you can expect the Blue Devils to be sent to another locale, probably Indianapolis.

8. The committee spends "zero time" setting up intriguing matchups.

If you see, say, Texas Tech and Indiana set up to play each other in the second round, it's not because the committee wanted to see Bob Knight take on his erstwhile employer. Not only is setting up matchups not in the selection guidelines, but according to Shaheen, the group is so pressed for time to get its work done it can't afford to waste precious minutes looking for subplots.

9. Technically speaking, the number of teams per conference means nothing.

If, say, the committee is trying to decide between Georgetown and UCLA, it is not supposed to take into account whether selecting the Hoyas would give eight teams to the Big East and leave the Pac-10 with three. I use hedge words like "technically" and "supposedly," because I asked a former committee member last week whether he ever factored into his mind how many teams were getting bids from the power conferences. "You bet your ass," he replied.

10. The committee is constantly tweaking its process to find improvements and smooth out rough edges.

I never knew this, but the morning of the national championship game, the committee holds an "alumni breakfast," where people who have served in the past join the current group to discuss the process and ways to improve it. Shaheen said during this breakfast the idea was first broached to use a "pod" system that gives the committee the flexibility to keep more teams close to home. That idea came after Maryland was sent to Boise for its first-round games, and then after flying home had to fly back west for a Sweet 16 game.

(nod to BostonDomah over on NDN for the link)

Sunday, March 06, 2005

The Future | by Dylan

About a year ago, in some forum or another, I made an outrageous claim about the Notre Dame basketball team. At least it seemed outrageous at the time to those who heard me say it (and, no, it had nothing to do with inventing the question mark). I said, toward the end of the 2003-04 season, that Colin Falls was the best NBA prospect on the squad. After yesterday's NCAA-killing loss to Pittsburgh (maybe not "killing," but it's definitely no longer an even-money bet) I feel that, not only is the point no longer controversial, it's self-evident.

Falls' first-half barrage was a glimpse into Notre Dame's hoops future. We all knew that Falls was a deadly shooter, but what happened yesterday was more than a shooting clinic. It was the emergence of the next great Irish star.

Falls showed a level of confidence and desire that I hadn't seen from him before yesterday. In his 39 (!) minutes, he seemed to grow into the role that is destined for him; that of a first-option scorer. He moved through the lane with determination, scrubbing defenders even on the less-than-emphatic screens of Francis and Latimore. He may not have needed them at all. Falls' release is blinding. Someone should take a stopwatch to the catch-and-shoot threes he made in the first half. I've never seen anything like it. He also seems, at the end of the season, to understand the game better. He's not content to float and chuck. He moves with purpose. His ball-fakes are smooth and effective (the three from the left wing was a thing of beauty). If he learns to get his legs under him more consistently and channel the energy from his legs up and through the ball, raising his release point another six inches or so, he will be a first-team All American. Then again, he may get there without changing a thing. A two-inch vertical never hurt Chris Mullin.

As I did last year at this time, I'm going to allow myself some heady optimism. While the losses of Chris Thomas and Jordan Cornette are going to hurt (you don't just move on after losing the third ever 2,000-800-800 man), next year could be a breakthrough season for the Irish. Chris Quinn will be solid at the point, and Falls will only get better. What gets me really excited is the potential starting frontcourt of Francis, Latimore, and Zeller. Granted, it's a bit like betting on an inside straight, but if those three guys can settle into a reliable 4, 3, 5 (respectively) combination, we could be looking at a wonderfully balanced offense, with the ball working from the inside out, and presenting defenses with a nightmare scenario. Of course, this requires that Francis come back in perfect health, willing to accept his Dale Davis destiny, that Latimore refines his face-up skills to the point where he's a legitimate weapon on the wing, and that Zeller is able to play center in the Big East as a freshman. All three are 50-50 propositions, I think.

Imagine the stress that lineup could put on opposing defenses, even if Latimore and Francis don't improve, but consistently play as well as we already know they can. With shooters like Quinn and Falls keeping the defenses from collapsing, and Francis working against forwards instead of centers, we could achieve something resembling an offense rather than a 3-point fire drill. Colin Falls, in that kind of offense, will have the chance to play himself into a ten-year NBA career.

Tuesday, March 01, 2005

Report Card | by Jay

The image “http://www2.ncaa.org/images/logo_ncaa_home.gif” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors. Yesterday the NCAA released its academic report for 2003-04, with the Academic Progress Rate (or APR) scores for all of Division 1. The magic number under the new scoring system is 925, a cut line which is the rough equivalent of a 50 percent graduation rate over a five-year period, and teams that stay on the acceptable side of 925 will not be at risk.

If programs don't hit the magic 925 over time, they will be docked up to 10 percent of their scholarships. Chronic violators could get postseason bans and, further, lose NCAA membership.

How did Division 1 stack up? From the report:

The data project that about 7 percent of all teams will be subject to contemporaneous penalties (financial aid restrictions) beginning in 2005-06. About 51 percent of all Division I institutions would have at least one team that would be subject to penalty, and most of those teams are concentrated in football, baseball and men's basketball.

Sixty institutions have at least three teams that would be subject to penalty, and of those, 16 have five or more.

No contemporaneous penalties will be assessed based on the 2003-04 APR data, however. The penalty phase won't be implemented until next year, when two years of APR data are available.

For informational purposes, though, the 2003-04 reports do indicate the number of contemporaneous financial aid penalties institutions would have incurred had the penalty phase been in effect this year. The Committee on Academic Performance (CAP) and the Board of Directors, the primary drivers of the academic-reform initiative, believe that action in effect puts institutions "on notice" as to the kinds of academic outcomes that will subject teams to penalty in subsequent years.

Contemporaneous penalties are those that prevent programs from replacing the grant-in-aid for one year of a student-athlete who leaves the institution and would not have been academically eligible had he or she returned. They have been called "the shot across the bow" designed to change behavior as more years of APR data are collected. If a team's academic performance still lags after four years of APR data, harsher penalties will be applied.

Here's the the full academic report for ND (in a .pdf file), and in case you're wondering, here's the NCAA to explain how APR scores are calculated. The gist of the scoring system: for every player in a sport, count one point per semester if he or she remains academically eligible, and count one point per semester if he or she returns for the next term (or graduates). For some good examples of how this works, take a look at this helpful breakdown.

The Chicago Trib has the highlights for Irish football:
Notre Dame's football score was only 934, but associate athletic directors John Heisler and Mike Karwoski said the score was hurt by fifth-year seniors, who are often not technically eligible in the second semester of their fifth year because they're not taking enough credits.
By the way, ND men's hoops scored 957; women's hoops 977.

The ten schools with the top scores across all sports are pretty familiar (save one): Navy - 990, Miami (Ohio)- 986, Duke - 984, Ball State - 983, Rice - 981, Northwestern - 980, Stanford - 979, Wake Forest - 979, Notre Dame - 979, Boston College - 979.

And, a few lowlights:

  • More than half of the schools in Division I — 183 of 326 — had at least one sport with a subpar APR. Football, baseball and men's basketball were the biggest problem areas.
  • Forty-two percent of Division I football programs (113 out of 233) and 47 percent of Division I men's basketball programs (154 of 326) fell below 925.
  • Last football season, nearly half of the squads in bowl games failed to meet the 925 standard. Of the eight teams in the prestigious Bowl Championship Series, only three — USC, Michigan and Virginia Tech — had graduation rates of 50% or higher.
  • Of the SEC's 12 member schools, only Vanderbilt achieved passing scores for both its football and men's basketball programs. Alabama football was particularly egregious (880 APR).
  • Six of the 10 Pac-10 football programs are way below 925. Oregon has the worst APR of any BCS program, 849. In addition, Oregon State, Arizona State, Washington, Arizona and UCLA are all at 892 or worse. No other major conference is as bad in football.
  • In the Big 12, only 19 of 34 teams in the "big 3" sports (football, baseball, men's hoops) made the cut (about 56%). In contrast, 30 of 32 teams in the Big 10 qualified.
  • At least eight schools seem to be in danger if they don't improve significantly in both football and basketball. These Division I programs are no better than 898 in both football and basketball: Arizona State, UNLV, Texas A&M, Temple, Louisiana-Monroe, New Mexico State, Louisiana-Lafayette and San Jose State.
It's worth noting that the NCAA relies on data provided by the schools, so it's sort of a self-reporting situation. The excellent Jason Kelly of the South Bend Tribune, interviewing NCAA VP Kevin Lennon, has an interesting take :

That previous system, which really was no system at all, received the tacit support of the university presidents spurring this reform. They played along, holding their noses perhaps, but covering their eyes too.

For that reason, this new arithmetic should be regarded as voodoo reform until it starts to have a practical impact.

It will be just a blur of numbers for a while, and the evolution from its current teething phase to a remedy with real bite will be gradual at best.

An appeals process will allow schools to make their mitigating cases, and every individual could have good explanation in their personal lives. Imagining how penalties will be implemented under those circumstances strains the brain as much the math problem meant to tabulate them.

Give them credit for creativity, but if the presidents could not wield their influence on individual campuses, consolidating their agenda under the bureaucratic auspices of the NCAA just promises more red tape.

From their perspective, it creates a framework to enact standards that would be detrimental without their competitors playing by the same rules.

"I think there is something about collective action that is good for the business overall of intercollegiate athletics," Lennon said. "That, I think, is a catalyst for why you do things at a national level. It speaks to your priorities."

Pooling their power within the NCAA, university presidents have added action to their spoken priorities. Whether that will equate to meaningful academic reform in college sports depends on the strength in their numbers.

The LA Times has a very good overview of the report and its various implications and consequences, and echoes some of Kelly's concerns.

Ellen Staurowsky, a professor of sport management and media at Ithaca College in New York, says that as long as college sports equate to big money — with multimillion-dollar television contracts and corporate sponsorships — coaches and their athletic departments will be pressured to cut corners, if not cheat, to win.

"I don't have a lot of confidence [the APR] will have a meaningful impact," said Staurowsky, who belongs to an academic group that has pushed for athletic reform. "The NCAA needs to take a very hard look at the entire nature of college sports. Until such time as those kinds of things get cleaned up, if they can be cleaned up, than these other measures are what I would call public relations moves designed to protect the NCAA brand."
Will the new system be a kick in the pants for deficient schools to get their acts together, or will it be simply another case of lip service, with no real teeth? It's too early to say. However, as noted before on this site, it's good the NCAA is at least trying, and an attempt at a minimum-standards measuring stick like the APR is an excellent first step towards reclaiming the quaint notion of the "student-athlete".