I was reluctant to write this recap. How could I, as a George Mason fan, write about a Hofstra/Mason game, for a Hofstra fan's blog, without either annoying 75% of the audience of this blog, or annoying myself? I'm not sure I can, especially with Defiantly Dutch's simmering hatred for Mason undoubtedly hovering nearby. But I like playing with fire, so I'm going to try it anyway.
The first half was pretty much a rerun of so many other CAA rockfights from recent years. Erik Copes scored Mason's first field goal of the game. Hofstra went ahead 8-5 early on a Taran Buie three-pointer, helped out by 4 Mason turnovers in the first 4-plus minutes. But then, the Pride offense went into a funk, missing their next 13 shots and 3 of 5 free throws as the Patriots built a 21-10 advantage with 7:29 left in the half.
After a Hofstra time out, Daquan Brown made a layup, the visitors' fourth and final field goal of the first half. However, Mason's foul-prone defense conceded 11 free throws, and the Pride converted all 11, allowing them to keep pace with the Patriots offense.
At the half, the visitors only trailed 31-23, despite shooting a horrendous 4-25 from the field (compared to 11-25 for the hosts). The Pride made exactly one field goal in the final 14 minutes of the first half, but 14 (of 18) made three throws, compared to 7 (of 12) for the Patriots, kept them in the game.
The second half began just as many Patriots fans feared: Mason continued to look out of sync on offense, while the Pride looked energized, and began to attack the 8-point deficit. The home team had let the visitors hand around too long, and there was no way Hofstra was going to shoot 16% again in the second half.
Mason was held to one field goal in the first 5 minutes, while Stevie Mejia and Steven Nwankoni combined to score ten points, tying the game at 33 apiece at the under-16 media timeout. The Hofstra bench and the small band of Pride fans behind it were ecstatic, but Sherrod Wright had other ideas, scoring the next four to retake a lead that the Patriots would never relinquish.
The teams traded baskets for the next two minutes, but Mason began to settle in on defense, turning up the full court pressure and creating steals. Buie cut the lead to 4 at the ten minute mark, but Hofstra didn't score another field goal for eight minutes, giving up an 11-2 run that pretty much ended any hopes of a comeback.
In the late minutes, the Hofstra defense failed to get back in transition and were beaten several times, capped by a Sherrod Wright (who scored 21 points for his CAA-leading ninth 20-point game) scored on a breakaway dunk to make it 55-44 with 1:09 to play, and from there, the Patriots largely ran out the clock, winning 57-46.
The Pride only made 11 of 48 field goals for the game (including 1 of 13 three-point attempts), finishing with an astounding 22.9 shooting percentage. However, their 23 points from the field were augmented by an additional 23 from the free throw line, which served to keep the Pride in the game well into the second half, and the final score (somewhat) respectable. The Pride won't win if they can't shoot better than they did in this game, but their hustle and effort to tie the game early in the second half won my respect. It was evident before and during the game that Mo Cassara has done a lot to motivate and encourage his players in the face of what's been a very trying season.
One positive for George Mason continues to the the shooting of sophomore point guard Corey Edwards. He doesn't shoot a lot -- 3.1 attempts per game -- but he's shooting a team-leading 54.5% from the field (Wright is second at 50.5%) and an amazing 11 of 17 on three-point attempts. Edwards' prowess can be attributed to his patience. He almost never rushes or forces a jump shot, instead making sure he's squared to the basket and his feet are under him.
On the other hand, two areas seem to be the Patriots' constant sources of pain and frustration: finishing at the rim, and defending without fouling. Mason's starting big men, Johnny Williams and Erik Copes, finished 1 of 9 from the field, and both are shooting around 40% for the season. Copes has been slowed by his recovery from offseason hip surgery, but Mason fans expected much more from Williams in his return from a medical redshirt year. The Patriots need one or more of their post players to step up, whether it be Copes, Williams, Jonathan Arledge (who finished with 8 points and 7 boards on Saturday), Serbian freshman Marko Gujanicic (the reigning CAA rookie of the week), or even the rarely used Paris Bennett (hero of the ODU win).
Fouling, meanwhile, has been a team-wide problem. The quality of CAA referees isn't always very high, and some games in recent memory were clearly over-officiated, with even the whisper of contact called as a foul. That didn't seem to be the case on Saturday, at least in my eyes. The officials allowed quite a bit of contact under the basket, and they made their share of questionable calls in both directions, but the Patriots have no one but themselves for most of the 25 fouls they accumulated.
If Mason can cut down on their fouls while maintaining defensive intensity, their ability to hold teams' shooting percentages in check will start to pay off. If they continue to foul, there will be many more nights like Saturday, where a team hangs around solely because of the charity stripe.
Showing posts with label Steve Mejia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steve Mejia. Show all posts
Wednesday, January 23, 2013
Sunday, December 23, 2012
An Arena Grows in Brooklyn Part I (Recap of Tulane v. Hofstra)
“Look at everything always as though you were seeing it either for the first or last time: Thus is your time on earth filled with glory.” From A Tree Grows in Brooklyn
If community activists and local residents had their way, just like the doomed West Stadium project, the Barclays Center would never have been built. After numerous court battles and various rulings by the New York State Supreme Court, the New York Court of Appeals and Brooklyn Supreme Court, which allowed eminent domain for the project, construction started in March 2010.
By the way, whatever happened to the affordable Cablevision sponsored housing project that was supposed to take place instead of the West Side Stadium? Yeah, nothing ever happened.
The Barclays Center is right across from the Atlantic Terminal in Brooklyn. It's really easy to get to by train. Take the LIRR (whether from Penn Station or if you on Long Island) to Jamaica. Then take the train to Atlantic Terminal. Go outside and walk directly to Barclays Center. There is also the Atlantic Avenue – Barclays Center subway station which is accessible by the 2, 3, 4, 5, B, D, N, Q and R subway trains. You can't ask for a more conveniently accessible arena.
Barclays opened in March, 2012 to eight consecutive sold out shows by Jay-Z. The Nets have moved there and as a result, they finally have a true rivalry with the Knicks after all the years toiling at the Izod Center. Barclays Center also saved the Islanders from moving out of state. The hockey team will move there for the 2015 season, if the NHL is still in existence at that time. In the short time Barclays has been open, it has made a major impact in the city and financially for businesses in the area that sorely needs business.
Finally, the Barclays Center is making a name for itself in college basketball. Looking to get certified as a NCAA regional location, it already it is hosting the Atlantic 10 Tournament in March 2013 and already has been the home to several college basketball events, including a doubleheader last weekend with St John's and Michigan. Then yesterday, it hosted The Brooklyn Hoops Holiday Invitational tripleheader - Tulane vs. Hofstra, South Carolina vs. Manhattan and Seton Hall vs. LIU Brooklyn.
I took a 12:51 LIRR train from Bellmore and transferred at Jamaica for the Atlantic Terminal train. My friend Tieff was going to meet me at Barclays. After I sat down on the train, someone like him walked by me, followed by a taller guy wearing a jacket with "Britain" on the back. I figured they were so close walking together that it couldn't have been him.
But figuring what the heck, I called him on his cell. He answered and said he was on the train to Atlantic Terminal. I asked, was a guy in a "Britain" jacket following you. He said "Yes". I told him to come back because he had walked right by me. Sure enough, I see Tieff on his phone heading towards me. Small world.
We got to Atlantic Terminal an hour before game time. So we headed up to Atlantic Terminal Mall, conveniently located across from the Barclays Center. Though the mall was swamped with Christmas shoppers, there were actually open seats at the Buffalo Wild Wings. Tieff and I enjoyed our lunch watching Temple upset Syracuse at Madison Square Garden. When we left Buffalo Wild Wings, there was a huge wait for tables in the alcove area of the restaurant. Guess we beat the shoppers' break there.
As we headed outside and crossed the street, I was struck by the entrance to Barclays Center. It includes an Oculus, an opening to the building roof structure. If that didn't strike you, once you entered the arena, the giant scoreboard will strike you.
As told to me by Tieff, unlike the Michigan - St John's doubleheader, the upper level section of the arena was curtained off. It looked like the cousins of the Evil Black Curtain in Webster Arena adorned the upper level section of the arena. It made Ray Curren, my friend and writer for Mid Majority who was there for the tripleheader, and I feel at home.
Still there were more people there for the first game then Tieff and I had thought. Hofstra was wearing the home whites and Tulane wore the road green, as a team nicknamed the Green Wave should do. It turns out, as my friend Mike Brodsky, who was there for the game to root on South Carolina and meet up with a lot of our fellow northeast based CAA friends, noted that Tulane has a large alumni base in the New York region. That was affirmed when a chant of "GREEN...WAVE" occurred in the second half.
As most of you are aware, Hofstra has struggled since four of their players were suspended from the team after being arrested for stealing student laptops and other electronic items. Entering yesterday's game, the Pride had lost six straight, including four games after the incident. But you have to support your school through good times and in bad, and I was wearing my "Hofstra Basketball" sweatshirt.
And in the first half, my alma mater gave me hope that they might break the losing streak. Unlike their previous game against Wright State, Hofstra started out strong. The Pride's leading scorer on the season, sophomore guard Taran Buie scored eight of Hofstra's first twelve points giving the Pride a 12-8 lead over the Green Wave.
Hofstra extended the lead to seven, 25-18 on a Moussa Kone dunk with six and a half minutes left. But Tulane responded with an 8-0 run as the Green Wave's leading scorer on the season, Josh Davis hit a resounding dunk to put Tulane up 26-25 with a little under three and a half minutes left in the half. But Hofstra's Matt Grogan would hit a shot clock beating jumper to tie the game at thirty at the half.
During the game, it was a local CAAHoops/NYC metro hoops gathering in Section 26. You had Mike Brodsky, a Northeastern alum known as NUHF, you had Jaden Daly, from Daly Dose of Hoops, Alex Faust, play by play voice of the Staten Island Yankees and Merrimack College Athletics as well as a Northeastern grad and hockey expert, Victoria Rossi, a Hofstra grad/WRHU member and Northeastern graduate alum, who does web production work, Chris Heimall, another Hofstra grad who does play by play for Manhattan College now, the legendary Defiantly Dutch, Jerry Beach, Ray Curren, who might break the Mid Majority record for games covered in a season, Tieff and myself. It made the two basketball games we watched even more fun. And yes, Mike, we have it better.
I was glad that I was with such good company because within four minutes of the start of the second half , the game was basically over. That's because Tulane guard Ricky Tarrant became a one man wrecking crew. He scored the Green Wave's first thirteen points by himself. Tarrant nailed three consecutive three pointers, then added two free throws and a layup. It was part of a Tulane 20-0 run that turned a tie game into a blowout. With sixteen minutes still left in the game, the Green Wave were up 50-30 on Hofstra.
Unfortunately for the Pride fans in attendance, the Tulane lead actually expanded to thirty points, 67-37. No one who had seen the first half would have thought that Hofstra would have been outscored 37-7 in the span of basically eight minutes. Tarrant would score twenty one of his game high twenty eight points in the second half.
The Pride would eventually cut the lead down at the end to twenty one points before losing 83-62. Buie who had started out so strong with eight points in the first seven minutes of the game, only had seven more points the rest of the game, but still led Hofstra with fifteen points. Steve Mejia had nine points, eight rebounds and six assists. The Pride though shot only thirty eight percent. Mejia and Buie combined to shoot an ugly six of twenty six from the field.
Due to having only eight scholarship players, Hofstra has had two walkons, Matt Grogan and Adam Savion play significant minutes. The bright side was they combined to shoot five of seven from the field. Also, 6-10 forward Daquan Brown played his first game for the Pride after sitting out due to NCAA eligibility rules. In just seven minutes of play, he had three blocks.
Tulane was led by Tarrant's twenty eight points, eight rebounds and five steals. Davis had eighteen points, nine rebounds, four assists and three blocks. Jordan Callahan added fifteen points for the Green Wave. Coming into the game, Tulane was averaging only two blocks per game. They had six vs. Hofstra.
Adding insult to injury for Hofstra fans was the news that South Dakota State, behind Nate Wolters' twenty eight points, upset previously undefeated #16 New Mexico 70-65. This was the same Jackrabbbits' team the Pride beat at home 66-63 when they had their full team.
I feel for Hofstra Coach Mo Cassara. Those four kids that were arrested ruined their lives and potentially a very good basketball season. It's almost impossible to overcome the loss of two starters and two key reserves. Then on Friday, it was announced that Jamal Coombs McDaniel, who was counted on to be a key member of the Pride's team this season, was out for the year due to a knee injury. Things just can't get worse for Hofstra fans.
After the game, Tieff and I need a break before the second game and some consolation. It came in the form of custard ice cream at the Junior's Cheesecake concession stand right outside of our section. The custard was very good.
I still had one more game to watch, but it only took two hours for the Barclays Center to impress me. The sight lines for basketball were good, the arena is beautiful and the trip to get there was easy. You can't ask anything more for an arena. It's the biggest thing in Brooklyn sports since the Dodgers left.
And just think, this might not have all happened had a few "community" activists had their way. Glad common sense won out...this time.
Labels:
Adam Savion,
CAA,
CAAhoops,
Daquan Brown,
Ed Conroy,
Hofstra,
Josh Davis,
Matt Grogan,
Mo Cassara,
Ricky Tarrant,
Steve Mejia,
Taran Buie,
Tulane
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
When Bad Beats Worse (Recap of Wagner vs. Hofstra)
I have seen my share of ugly basketball games over the years, on TV and in person. In December of 2009, I witnessed in person Hofstra defeat Manhattan 44-39. It was two hours of my life that I wouldn't get back and I noted various painful statistics from that game in my recap of the game. It was one of those nights when bad beat worse.
Tonight was another one of those nights, though this was going to be a game I would be watching online 750 miles away in Columbia, South Carolina. It was clear early on that things were not going to go well. First, the Hofstra video feed was having issues. The video was working fine. The problem was no audio. After several minutes, which included losing the picture, the feed came back with audio. The problem was the audio was the WRHU feed, not the play by play feed which was on 1190 AM in New York. So instead of play by play, you heard actors playing out a scene from a play. After a few seconds, I had to mute the feed. Eventually that was fixed.
Unfortunately, the Hofstra AV crew couldn't fix the play of Wagner and Hofstra the first twenty minutes. There were long stretches of play where no points were scored. At the under sixteen minute media timeout, the score was 2-2. At the under twelve minute media timeout, the score was 8-6 Seahawks. With 3:23 left, the two teams combined for fifty four possessions and thirty four combined total points. Hofstra entered halftime up 24-19.
(Warning, the faint of heart should not read the next paragraph due to the gratuitous violent nature of bad first half stats).
Wagner was 8 of 27 from the field in the first half, including 1 of 7 from beyond the arc. The Seahawks also had ten turnovers compared to just two assists. Hofstra was 2 of 9 from the foul line. Taran Buie had an ugly first half trifecta - 1 of 7 from the field, 0 for 2 from beyond the arc and 0 for 3 from the foul line. Steve Mejia didn't do much better - 1 of 6 from the field, 0 for 2 from beyond the arc and 2 for 5 from the foul line.
The two teams didn't fare any better at the start of the second half. It took three minutes for Hofstra to hit their first field goal. At the under sixteen minute media timeout, the Pride were still up on the Seahawks at 26-23.
But Wagner was in the middle of a 12-2 run to go up 31-26 with 13:15 left. The Seahawks press was starting to bother the Pride as the Seahawks forced nine second half turnovers. Steve Mejia struggled to hold onto the ball on the night. He had seven assists but also six turnovers.
Wagner was still up five, 34-29 with about eleven and a half minutes left. The Seahawks then couldn't score for the next two minutes. The problem was neither could the Pride. After Eric Fanning made two free throws to give Wagner their largest lead of the game at that time, Buie scored the next six points to cut the Seahawks lead to one, 36-35.
However Hofstra never could tie the game or take the lead the rest of the way. This was due in large part to shooting eight of nineteen from the foul line. Mejia had an awful night. To go with his six turnovers, Mejia shot 1 of 11 from the field and 3 of 7 from the line.
Buie had a much better second half for the Pride, scoring fourteen points in the last twenty minutes. The problem was the rest of his teammates only scored six points in the second half. Hofstra shot 6 of 21 from the field in the second half with Buie making four of those shots.
Wagner didn't exactly the light the world on fire from the field in the second half, shooting 9 of 26 in the second half. But the Seahawks lit up the foul line, shooting 15 of 18 from the charity stripe in the second half. Wagner would go onto win 52-44.
Kenny Ortiz led Wagner with 15 points and Mario Moody added 12.points. The Seahawks had fourteen offensive rebounds which helped give them a 13-4 margin in second chance points. Wagner won despite missing their best player, Latif Rivers, who likely won't be back until January.
Buie led all scorers with 16 points, but no other Pride player was in double figures. Walk-on Matt Grogan had another nice night with seven points and Stephen Nwaukoni had eleven rebounds.
Hofstra has now lost four straight games after their three game sweep in the 2K Classic Subregional and will now play another NEC team, LIU on their home court in Brooklyn, Wagner has a home game against Coppin State.
Both teams had a chance to win tonight, but in the future they will need to play a lot better. You can win ugly, but not that often.
Tonight was another one of those nights, though this was going to be a game I would be watching online 750 miles away in Columbia, South Carolina. It was clear early on that things were not going to go well. First, the Hofstra video feed was having issues. The video was working fine. The problem was no audio. After several minutes, which included losing the picture, the feed came back with audio. The problem was the audio was the WRHU feed, not the play by play feed which was on 1190 AM in New York. So instead of play by play, you heard actors playing out a scene from a play. After a few seconds, I had to mute the feed. Eventually that was fixed.
Unfortunately, the Hofstra AV crew couldn't fix the play of Wagner and Hofstra the first twenty minutes. There were long stretches of play where no points were scored. At the under sixteen minute media timeout, the score was 2-2. At the under twelve minute media timeout, the score was 8-6 Seahawks. With 3:23 left, the two teams combined for fifty four possessions and thirty four combined total points. Hofstra entered halftime up 24-19.
(Warning, the faint of heart should not read the next paragraph due to the gratuitous violent nature of bad first half stats).
Wagner was 8 of 27 from the field in the first half, including 1 of 7 from beyond the arc. The Seahawks also had ten turnovers compared to just two assists. Hofstra was 2 of 9 from the foul line. Taran Buie had an ugly first half trifecta - 1 of 7 from the field, 0 for 2 from beyond the arc and 0 for 3 from the foul line. Steve Mejia didn't do much better - 1 of 6 from the field, 0 for 2 from beyond the arc and 2 for 5 from the foul line.
The two teams didn't fare any better at the start of the second half. It took three minutes for Hofstra to hit their first field goal. At the under sixteen minute media timeout, the Pride were still up on the Seahawks at 26-23.
But Wagner was in the middle of a 12-2 run to go up 31-26 with 13:15 left. The Seahawks press was starting to bother the Pride as the Seahawks forced nine second half turnovers. Steve Mejia struggled to hold onto the ball on the night. He had seven assists but also six turnovers.
Wagner was still up five, 34-29 with about eleven and a half minutes left. The Seahawks then couldn't score for the next two minutes. The problem was neither could the Pride. After Eric Fanning made two free throws to give Wagner their largest lead of the game at that time, Buie scored the next six points to cut the Seahawks lead to one, 36-35.
However Hofstra never could tie the game or take the lead the rest of the way. This was due in large part to shooting eight of nineteen from the foul line. Mejia had an awful night. To go with his six turnovers, Mejia shot 1 of 11 from the field and 3 of 7 from the line.
Buie had a much better second half for the Pride, scoring fourteen points in the last twenty minutes. The problem was the rest of his teammates only scored six points in the second half. Hofstra shot 6 of 21 from the field in the second half with Buie making four of those shots.
Wagner didn't exactly the light the world on fire from the field in the second half, shooting 9 of 26 in the second half. But the Seahawks lit up the foul line, shooting 15 of 18 from the charity stripe in the second half. Wagner would go onto win 52-44.
Kenny Ortiz led Wagner with 15 points and Mario Moody added 12.points. The Seahawks had fourteen offensive rebounds which helped give them a 13-4 margin in second chance points. Wagner won despite missing their best player, Latif Rivers, who likely won't be back until January.
Buie led all scorers with 16 points, but no other Pride player was in double figures. Walk-on Matt Grogan had another nice night with seven points and Stephen Nwaukoni had eleven rebounds.
Hofstra has now lost four straight games after their three game sweep in the 2K Classic Subregional and will now play another NEC team, LIU on their home court in Brooklyn, Wagner has a home game against Coppin State.
Both teams had a chance to win tonight, but in the future they will need to play a lot better. You can win ugly, but not that often.
Labels:
CAA,
Hofstra,
Kenny Ortiz,
Latif Rivers,
Mario Moody,
Mo Cassara,
NEC,
Steve Mejia,
Taran Buie,
Wagner
Sunday, December 2, 2012
Be True to Your School (Recap of SMU vs. Hofstra)
When it came to college, I didn't have much of a choice over twenty eight years ago. Though I was in the top ten percent of my class, I couldn't live out of state with my family situation. My parents were divorced and I lived with mom, my older sister, albeit briefly, and my little sister. We were struggling to get by on 81 Cherry Avenue in Bethpage. Thus Valparaiso, a school that sent me a lot of information because I was Lutheran (I guess you could say they "recruited" me), was out of the question, despite the knowledge that they played Notre Dame in basketball every year (that was their claim to fame at the time, long before the Drews).
My mom wanted me to be the first person in my family to go to school full time and graduate (my older sister and brother went part time and both graduated). I wanted to go to a good school and Stony Brook was too far of a commute, especially for someone who didn't have a car till his junior year of college. So Hofstra offered me a half scholarship. Other scholarships, TAP (NY State's Tuition Assistance Program) and federal loans helped me get by those four years. That and my mom driving me to and from Hofstra for the first two years.
Back then, I barely followed the men's basketball program. I concentrated on keeping my half scholarship and worked part time. But the Flying Dutchmen, as they were known then, were about to get a life long alum and friend.
It was at Hofstra that I met my dear friend Tony Terentieff, aka Tieff to the readers of this blog. Through Tieff, I got to know my dear friends Tony Bozzella and Mal Galletta, though neither went to Hofstra (both went to Glen Cove High School). I met other dear friends, directly and indirectly through Hofstra.
Then after I graduated in 1988, an IT position came open in the Axinn Library at Hofstra. Though I had many opportunities to work in New York City, the thought of being close to home was appealing. I accepted the position, gained a lot of knowledge and more lifelong friends.
Four years later, I accepted a position at Hofstra Law School. My first day there, I met my future wife. Over my nineteen years there, I became friends with a lot of faculty, administration, staff and students (now alums) there and at other places on campus. It was a wonderful twenty eight years that ended when I accepted my new position at the University of South Carolina in August.
Over the last thirteen years, I became a fan of the basketball program at Hofstra. I became a season ticket holder, went to many CAA Tournaments and Hofstra road games. My fondness for college basketball grew and in December 2005, I started this blog on college baskebtall.
Yes, this is the seven year anniversary of my blog. What started as a dare by two friends, as an offering to my love of college basketball, has become a deep seated passion for me, as well now for my seven year old son, Matthew. I have seen so many countless games as a result of this blog, so many memories.
All of this would not be possible without Hofstra. My wife, my sons, my dear friends and colleagues and even this new job/life in South Carolina would never have happened without that Dutch commuter school in Hempstead, New York.
Yesterday, I had a choice. I could have gone to Charlotte and covered the East Carolina - Charlotte game, which featured the only two undefeated schools left in North Carolina (won by Charlotte) or I could stay in my rented house here in Columbia and watch the SMU-Hofstra game online.
Considering the circumstances of Friday, people would have understood had I chosen the ECU-Charlotte game. I, along with many others including Jerry Beach, aka Defiantly Dutch, were frustrated, disgusted and exasperated by what four members of the men's basketball team did over the past few months. It would have been easy to say "I need a break from the Hofstra basketball team. Those four student athletes ruined the team". No one would have blamed me.
Except me. In a relationship, a life long relationship, like say marriage, you take the good with the bad. You know "in sickness and in health. Till death do you part". There are bumpy roads and to quote Sylvester Stallone from the most recent Rocky movie "The world ain't all sunshine and rainbows."
Yes, what those four kids did were wrong and I took them to task for it yesterday. But since I couldn't be there in person, to give the remaining kids on the team that did no wrong an ovation and support and for the coaching staff,who as Mo Cassara stated in press conference were "heartbroken", I had to show support in some way.
Thus I made my choice. I stayed home and watched the game online.
Larry Brown's SMU team came in to yesterday's game at 7-1 on the season. The nomadic Brown, who Cassara noted "Has forgotten more basketball than I know", basically plays seven players,several of whom came from other schools. Leading scorer Nick Russell was a transfer from Kansas State and was a key member off the bench for the Wildcats' 2010-11 Elite Eight team. Shawn Williams transferred from Texas. London Giles came by way of Nevada.
Unlike Matt Doherty, who was fired after an 8-20 season, Brown has got this team to mesh and playing tough defense. It was evident early on, as the Mustangs jumped out to a 10-0 lead. They packed their defense inside, limiting Hofstra to just six first half points in the paint and forcing the Pride to shoot from beyond the arc, much more than Hofstra had on the season.
The result was the Pride missed their first seven three point attempts. When David Imes finally hit Hofstra's first three pointer, Hofstra was down 26-10. Despite shooting 2 of 11 from beyond the arc, amazingly the Pride were only down twelve, 31-19 at the half. This was due in large part to Steve Mejia, who scored the Pride's final five points of the half and had eight at the half.
There was hope that Hofstra could make a game of it after ending the first half with a 12-5 run. And after Jordan Allen started the second half with a dunk to cut the lead to ten, 31-21, it seemed that the fans in the Mack Center might be treated to another exciting finish as they had in wins over South Dakota State and Marshall.
But SMU quickly dashed that with an 14-4 run over four minutes. Jalen Jones scored seven of those points including a three point play to put the Mustangs up 45-25. From there, the rout was on. Another Jones three point play put SMU up 55-28. Bryan Bernardi, who comes off the bench for the Mustangs and was heavily recruited by Hofstra, got into the act with a three pointer to put SMU up twenty eight. The lead got as much as thirty before the Mustangs eventually won 73-47.
SMU scorched Hofstra in the second half, shooting fifty nine percent and scoring twenty points in the paint. They outscored Hofstra 32-14 in the paint for the game. Jones scored all of fourteen points in the second half. Russell had ten second half points and finished with twenty points
The Mustangs keyed on Taran Buie all night and he was held to ten points on 3 of 13 shooting. Mejia led the way with eleven points, but only three came in the second half. There were bright spots for Hofstra as senior walk-on Matt Grogan had a career high seven points. Stephen Nwaukoni was back after missing a couple of games with four points and eight rebounds. Finally, Darren Payen, who originally was going to be redshirted for the season, came off the bench and scored two points and had five rebounds in twenty two minutes.
After the game, as you would have figured, Cassara faced a lot of questions from the media about the four players being arrested. He couldn't talk about the case itself, but he talked about how the coaches do evaluate their recruits, get to know their parents and their families. Cassara talked about how "heartbroken" he was over the situation. He also noted "Our guys are resilient. My staff is resilient. And most importantly, I'm resilient. And we're gonna just keep working as hard as we can."
Finally he noted how much he loves Hofstra. Hofstra hired him in 2010 after Tim Welsh resigned after a DWI incident. As Jerry Beach has noted and I have seen as well, Cassara has been an ambassador to Hofstra and has been at many events/functions/charities promoting the school in person and in social media In his first season, he took a team depleted by transfers and had not finished in the top four of the CAA in Charles Jenkins' first three seasons and that team finished third in the CAA and won twenty one games. Of course that was the season of #3BidsForCAA and the Final Four run of VCU.
He may not have graduated from Hofstra, but Cassara has been true to "his school", the one that gave him a chance to be a head coach on the Division I level for the first time. I know that there are many of us who either graduated from the school or work for the school and are disgusted, embarrassed and frustrated by what those four players did. It's understandable to feel that way. But we need to be true to our school right now just like we are in good times. The basketball program, with the good kids that are still there now and had nothing to do with those burglaries, needs our support.
This week my mom's house was officially sold, almost exactly three years after her death. I was there last Saturday morning picking up a final few things. Before I left, I looked around the house one last time. All the memories growing up there. I wondered about whether my mom is watching me from above and what she thinks of me.
I know that she is glad I went to Hofstra and got my degree. That much I am certain.
My mom wanted me to be the first person in my family to go to school full time and graduate (my older sister and brother went part time and both graduated). I wanted to go to a good school and Stony Brook was too far of a commute, especially for someone who didn't have a car till his junior year of college. So Hofstra offered me a half scholarship. Other scholarships, TAP (NY State's Tuition Assistance Program) and federal loans helped me get by those four years. That and my mom driving me to and from Hofstra for the first two years.
Back then, I barely followed the men's basketball program. I concentrated on keeping my half scholarship and worked part time. But the Flying Dutchmen, as they were known then, were about to get a life long alum and friend.
It was at Hofstra that I met my dear friend Tony Terentieff, aka Tieff to the readers of this blog. Through Tieff, I got to know my dear friends Tony Bozzella and Mal Galletta, though neither went to Hofstra (both went to Glen Cove High School). I met other dear friends, directly and indirectly through Hofstra.
Then after I graduated in 1988, an IT position came open in the Axinn Library at Hofstra. Though I had many opportunities to work in New York City, the thought of being close to home was appealing. I accepted the position, gained a lot of knowledge and more lifelong friends.
Four years later, I accepted a position at Hofstra Law School. My first day there, I met my future wife. Over my nineteen years there, I became friends with a lot of faculty, administration, staff and students (now alums) there and at other places on campus. It was a wonderful twenty eight years that ended when I accepted my new position at the University of South Carolina in August.
Over the last thirteen years, I became a fan of the basketball program at Hofstra. I became a season ticket holder, went to many CAA Tournaments and Hofstra road games. My fondness for college basketball grew and in December 2005, I started this blog on college baskebtall.
Yes, this is the seven year anniversary of my blog. What started as a dare by two friends, as an offering to my love of college basketball, has become a deep seated passion for me, as well now for my seven year old son, Matthew. I have seen so many countless games as a result of this blog, so many memories.
All of this would not be possible without Hofstra. My wife, my sons, my dear friends and colleagues and even this new job/life in South Carolina would never have happened without that Dutch commuter school in Hempstead, New York.
Yesterday, I had a choice. I could have gone to Charlotte and covered the East Carolina - Charlotte game, which featured the only two undefeated schools left in North Carolina (won by Charlotte) or I could stay in my rented house here in Columbia and watch the SMU-Hofstra game online.
Considering the circumstances of Friday, people would have understood had I chosen the ECU-Charlotte game. I, along with many others including Jerry Beach, aka Defiantly Dutch, were frustrated, disgusted and exasperated by what four members of the men's basketball team did over the past few months. It would have been easy to say "I need a break from the Hofstra basketball team. Those four student athletes ruined the team". No one would have blamed me.
Except me. In a relationship, a life long relationship, like say marriage, you take the good with the bad. You know "in sickness and in health. Till death do you part". There are bumpy roads and to quote Sylvester Stallone from the most recent Rocky movie "The world ain't all sunshine and rainbows."
Yes, what those four kids did were wrong and I took them to task for it yesterday. But since I couldn't be there in person, to give the remaining kids on the team that did no wrong an ovation and support and for the coaching staff,who as Mo Cassara stated in press conference were "heartbroken", I had to show support in some way.
Thus I made my choice. I stayed home and watched the game online.
Larry Brown's SMU team came in to yesterday's game at 7-1 on the season. The nomadic Brown, who Cassara noted "Has forgotten more basketball than I know", basically plays seven players,several of whom came from other schools. Leading scorer Nick Russell was a transfer from Kansas State and was a key member off the bench for the Wildcats' 2010-11 Elite Eight team. Shawn Williams transferred from Texas. London Giles came by way of Nevada.
Unlike Matt Doherty, who was fired after an 8-20 season, Brown has got this team to mesh and playing tough defense. It was evident early on, as the Mustangs jumped out to a 10-0 lead. They packed their defense inside, limiting Hofstra to just six first half points in the paint and forcing the Pride to shoot from beyond the arc, much more than Hofstra had on the season.
The result was the Pride missed their first seven three point attempts. When David Imes finally hit Hofstra's first three pointer, Hofstra was down 26-10. Despite shooting 2 of 11 from beyond the arc, amazingly the Pride were only down twelve, 31-19 at the half. This was due in large part to Steve Mejia, who scored the Pride's final five points of the half and had eight at the half.
There was hope that Hofstra could make a game of it after ending the first half with a 12-5 run. And after Jordan Allen started the second half with a dunk to cut the lead to ten, 31-21, it seemed that the fans in the Mack Center might be treated to another exciting finish as they had in wins over South Dakota State and Marshall.
But SMU quickly dashed that with an 14-4 run over four minutes. Jalen Jones scored seven of those points including a three point play to put the Mustangs up 45-25. From there, the rout was on. Another Jones three point play put SMU up 55-28. Bryan Bernardi, who comes off the bench for the Mustangs and was heavily recruited by Hofstra, got into the act with a three pointer to put SMU up twenty eight. The lead got as much as thirty before the Mustangs eventually won 73-47.
SMU scorched Hofstra in the second half, shooting fifty nine percent and scoring twenty points in the paint. They outscored Hofstra 32-14 in the paint for the game. Jones scored all of fourteen points in the second half. Russell had ten second half points and finished with twenty points
The Mustangs keyed on Taran Buie all night and he was held to ten points on 3 of 13 shooting. Mejia led the way with eleven points, but only three came in the second half. There were bright spots for Hofstra as senior walk-on Matt Grogan had a career high seven points. Stephen Nwaukoni was back after missing a couple of games with four points and eight rebounds. Finally, Darren Payen, who originally was going to be redshirted for the season, came off the bench and scored two points and had five rebounds in twenty two minutes.
After the game, as you would have figured, Cassara faced a lot of questions from the media about the four players being arrested. He couldn't talk about the case itself, but he talked about how the coaches do evaluate their recruits, get to know their parents and their families. Cassara talked about how "heartbroken" he was over the situation. He also noted "Our guys are resilient. My staff is resilient. And most importantly, I'm resilient. And we're gonna just keep working as hard as we can."
Finally he noted how much he loves Hofstra. Hofstra hired him in 2010 after Tim Welsh resigned after a DWI incident. As Jerry Beach has noted and I have seen as well, Cassara has been an ambassador to Hofstra and has been at many events/functions/charities promoting the school in person and in social media In his first season, he took a team depleted by transfers and had not finished in the top four of the CAA in Charles Jenkins' first three seasons and that team finished third in the CAA and won twenty one games. Of course that was the season of #3BidsForCAA and the Final Four run of VCU.
He may not have graduated from Hofstra, but Cassara has been true to "his school", the one that gave him a chance to be a head coach on the Division I level for the first time. I know that there are many of us who either graduated from the school or work for the school and are disgusted, embarrassed and frustrated by what those four players did. It's understandable to feel that way. But we need to be true to our school right now just like we are in good times. The basketball program, with the good kids that are still there now and had nothing to do with those burglaries, needs our support.
This week my mom's house was officially sold, almost exactly three years after her death. I was there last Saturday morning picking up a final few things. Before I left, I looked around the house one last time. All the memories growing up there. I wondered about whether my mom is watching me from above and what she thinks of me.
I know that she is glad I went to Hofstra and got my degree. That much I am certain.
Labels:
Adjehl Baru,
CAA,
Darren Payen,
Hofstra,
Jalen Jones,
Larry Brown,
Matt Grogan,
men's basketball,
Mo Cassara,
Nick Russell,
SMU,
Steve Mejia,
Taran Buie
Monday, November 19, 2012
Nice To Be Here (Recap of UDC vs Hofstra)
Pack all the good wins safe on the shelfShane Nicholson - "Nice to Be Here"
Stuck in an orbit around yourself
Hand over hand and keeping the score
It's just not music anymore
As my marines, aka the few, the proud, the readers of my site know, my life is in a state of flux. My new home base is Columbia, South Carolina, where I work for the University of South Carolina. It's down in Columbia, listening to 92.1, "The Palm" that I first heard Shane Nicholson's "Nice to Be Here". I have adopted that song title as my theme for my life now in Columbia.
Meanwhile, the rest of my immediate family is still up in North Bellmore, New York till the house closes. It makes for interesting travel plans and as well as basketball trips. Such was the case for this past weekend.
Several weeks ago, after I came back up to Long Island in late October to see my family, I had only been planning to just come home for Thanksgiving. Then as you know, Hurricane Sandy hit and I had come up in advance for that and stayed that entire week. But I had also decided to come up this past weekend as well, because it's my younger son Jonathan's fifth birthday this past Saturday. Turning five is an important milestone for a five year old boy and I wanted to be with him for that milestone.
So, strangely how things work out, instead of either being at the Charleston Classic or at VCU-Winthrop this past Saturday, it ended up being a perfect opportunity to come back to what was my long time home in Hempstead, New York. Hofstra and the Mack Center were hosting DC, Marshall and South Dakota State in the 2K Classic Subregional.
The Pride were not hospitable to the Jackrabbits on Friday night as Shaquille Stokes buried a three pointer with three seconds left to give Hofstra their first win, 66-63. It was even more impressive as a friend noted all the scouts that were at the game watching South Dakota State's Nate Wolters, who had led his team to a NCAA berth last season.
Thus I was looking forward in anticipation to the all the new Pride players/transfer such as Jimmy Hall, Taran Buie, Stokes and the development of returning players such as David Imes, Moussa Kone and Steve Mejia. I wanted to see how they all meshed together and how they would respond after an emotional win the night before over the Jackrabbits.
Before the game, we took Jonathan to Laser Bounce in Levittown, where we met up with my sister in law and her son, Michael, along with my in-laws. There was an open play time in the bounce area from 1:00 - 2:00 PM and it was packed, as we immediately found out from the parking lot, where my sister in law told me a near fist fight broke out over a parking space. I know that Jonathan and my older son, aka my color analyst, Matthew had a lot of fun. But as a parent, I personally think that hour of screaming kids throwing themselves onto inflatables was a form of torture to me. When one of the staff people said we had ten minutes left, I said aloud "Thank God!" And I meant it.
After Laser Bounce, we went back to my in-laws, where Jonathan opened his presents from his grandparents and his Aunt (he had already opened up our presents earlier in the morning). My younger son was very happy with his gifts, as most five year olds. Then we set down and had pizza, which is the preferred of choice for most five year olds. After pizza, Matthew and I left for the Hofstra game.
After I had left for South Carolina in August, I renewed only two of what was four Hofstra season tickets which are in Section 111, Row D, Seats 9-10. My friends Tieff and Mal sit in those seats now. So I had to purchase two tickets for the game. Fortunately for Matthew and I, the row behind my season tickets, 111 Row E was completely open.
We had actually got to the Mack Center for the start of the second half between Marshall and South Dakota State. As we walked into the arena and made our way down the Lions Den Student Section, I could see Tieff was sitting in his seat already taking in the action. Before I went to my seats, I ran into my old friend Mary Fair, who works for Hofstra Law School, but also works the basketball games on the weekends. She gave me a hug and asked how I was and how is South Carolina. Mary is one of the more engaging people I know and it was great to see her.
I said hi to Tieff and since no one else was in the row, he was kind enough to move over and let Matthew and I sit in our old familiar seats. Mal and his girlfriend Emily would join us shortly thereafter. There were no worries about sitting in anyone else's seats. The entire row was basically free as was the row in front of us. Non conference games at Hofstra in November have historically not been well attended. This was no exception.
In front of an attendance of maybe one hundred people, the Thundering Herd and the Jackrabbits put on an exciting last twenty minutes of basketball. Marshall's size gave them a dominant advantage on the boards. But South Dakota State, led by guard Nate Wolters, one of the best players in the country, moved the ball around on offense so well. It was your classic contrast of styles.
The teams went back and forth with several lead changes and ties. Finally D.D. Scarver buried a three to put the Thundering Herd up five, 77-72 with twenty seconds left. It looked like Marshall was going to win the game. But Brayden Carlson responded with a three of his own to cut the lead down to two, 77-75.
The Jackrabbits quickly fouled the Herd's Chris Martin. Martin missed the front end of an one and one and South Dakota State got the rebound. Wolters got the ball and Marshall focused on Wolters, perhaps too much. As Wolters drove the lane, the Herd left Jackrabbits' guard Chad White open at the top of the key. Wolters fed White, who calmly buried another three pointer to put the Jackrabbits up one. A desperation half court shot at the buzzer by the Herd's DeAndre Kane went off the back rim and South Dakota State escaped with a 78-77 win.
Between games, I met up with more old friends, like Mike Neely, Director of Ticket Sales at Hofstra and Executive Associate AD Danny McCabe. Finally I met up with my good friends Greg Sorensen, Defiantly Dutch, Jerry Beach, his much better half Michelle and their absolutely precious baby daughter Molly. It was good to see all of them, but especially Molly, who it was my first time meeting. Molly managed the impossible. She slept through the entire game, which allowed Jerry to tweet at normal pace.
One of the nice things Hofstra basketball does is that several minutes before a game, season ticket holders can meet in the Pride Lounge with an assistant coach who gives a scouting report of the game. Coach Pat Sellers gave the talk before the game discussing the Pride's opponent, UDC. The District of Columbia is a Division II school but they have several Division I transfers. They are also coached by Jeff Ruland, former NBA player and former coach of Iona. They gave Marshall a lot of trouble in the first half of their game yesterday before losing. Sellers clued in the audience that they could expect a lot of end to end action with the Firebirds.
After talking with a lot of familiar, friendly faces, we made our way back to our seats for the start of the game. The Pride came out strong from the gate scoring the first eleven points of the game. The freshman Hall quickly impressed me with his aggressive play and quickness. I had seen a few games of Hall's when he was a senior at St. Anthony's High School on ESPN and he seems to have improved by leaps and bounds. Stokes made an equally good impression with his confident play. Quickly I could see Hofstra has much more talent this season than last season.
UDC broke Hofstra's run and actually scored the next five points to cut the lead to six. But the Pride responded as another of the newcomers for Hofstra, Buie made his presence felt by burying a three pointer to put Hofstra back up nine. From there the Pride would stretch the lead out. The lead was as many as twenty after another Buie three pointer put Hofstra up 39-19.
It was during this time that Hofstra ran a promotion. If someone tweeted the hashtag #WeAreHofstra from their Twitter account with their current seat location, a winner would be chosen at random for a seat upgrade to a courtside seat. I figured what the hell and did exactly that. A few minutes later in what was a huge surprise for me, a couple of Hofstra Dance Team members came up to me and it was announced over the PA system that @gmoore21566 (my twitter account, which you should be following by the way) won the contest. They escorted Matthew and I to our court-side seat. Needless to say I got a lot of flack from my friends Mal and Defiantly Dutch.
I have to admit winning the contest was pretty funny. My season ticket seats have been for the last several years only four rows from the court. I always felt pretty fortunate to see Division I basketball games so close up on a regular basis without having to be on press row. But sitting court-side is a completely different experience and it kind of made Matthew feel uncomfortable. As there were already several plays right in front of us in the first minute, Matthew turned to me and said "This is too close".
Matthew was not the only one uncomfortable. Apparently Hofstra was uncomfortable with a twenty point lead. The Pride became sloppy on both of ends of the court. UDC started hitting some shots and the Hofstra lead at the half was only twelve, 43-31.
At the half, my first boss at Hofstra and long time friend Howard Graves came up to say hi and we talked for a while. He asked about the family and the move to South Carolina. I told him that everything was great in Columbia so far and that I couldn't wait for the family to be down there with me. I asked him about Hofstra and other things. It was good to see Howard. I learned a lot of things from him from a managerial standpoint that I still use today on a daily basis.
The second half picked up right where the first half left off. Hofstra struggled from the field and UDC continued to cut the lead and got it to down to seven points several times, the last being 60-53 with a little less than eight minutes left. But the Pride lead by Stephen Nwaukoni, who had a strong second half on his birthday, would not let them get any closer. Hofstra would eventually win 74-59. The Pride shot forty nine percent from the field on the game (fifty four percent in the first half) and dominated the glass, outrebounding the Firebirds 50-32.
After saying goodbye to Emily and Mal, Tieff, Matthew and I made our way to see Greg, Jerry, Michelle and a still sleeping Molly. We talked about how impressive the newcomers Hall, Stokes and Buie played for the Pride. We saw improvement in Kone, Nwaukoni and Mejia. The team basically gelled pretty well, though there were the expected scoring ruts and missed assignments a young team will have during a game.
There is a lot more talent and depth on this Hofstra team now than compared to last season's team. There is also much more scoring balance now, as six players scored in double figures in the win over the Firebirds. The Pride accomplished this despite Jamal McCombs-Daniel out due to injury and Daquan Brown not being eligible until after finals. The resiliency, talent and depth that Hofstra has showed up again on Sunday when the Pride outlasted Marshall in double overtime 103-100 to complete a three game sweep of the 2K Classic.
Eventually the UDC players came out from the locker room dressed along with Coach Ruland. A fan yelled "Hi, Coach Ruland, good to see you!" Ruland turned and waved with a look of grumpy disdain. All that was missing was Ruland saying "Get off my lawn!" Guess he didn't take the loss too well.
After letting Matthew run on the court for a few minutes, we said our goodbyes to Michelle and Greg. Jerry had already gone down to the locker room. Tieff and I said goodbye in the parking lot, but it would be a short goodbye with him. He would be picking me up at my house as we would both fly back to Charlotte, which would then take us to Durham to see an old friend at Cameron Indoor Stadium. That's for my next article. As I started my familiar drive out of the parking lot, I wondered how many times I would be back at the Mack Center in the future. I realized quickly that it won't be often.
Matthew and I went back to my in-laws house where we had birthday cake for Jonathan. I knew in the back of my mind that this was one of the last times we would be celebrating Jonathan's birthday at my wife's parents house. As I noted, hopefully in a few weeks, my immediate family would be down with me in Columbia.
The things I have taken for granted all these years; the countless number of games at Hofstra, seeing friends on a regular weekly basis for two hours in the winter months at the Mack Center and the time my boys have spent with their grandparents, all that has changed or will change being now seven hundred and fifty or so miles away from all that I have known.
But for one Saturday in November, it was all still the same. The packed Long Island kids' place, my wife's parents house, the Mack Center and all the familiar faces and friends, even if it was perhaps the last time for a long time. It was a familiar theme to me.
It was nice to be here.
Labels:
David Imes,
Hofstra,
Jeff Ruland,
Jerry Beach,
Jimmy Hall,
Mo Cassara,
Shaquille Stokes,
Steve Mejia,
Taran Buie,
UDC
Saturday, March 3, 2012
Panthers Make a Statement at the Expense of the Pride (Recap of Hofstra vs. Georgia State)
I always love this time of year. March Madness has been embedded in my soul for easily over twenty five years. My favorite part of March Madness is going to a conference tournament. In my younger college days and mid twenties, I went to the Big East Tournament. Now, it's the CAA Tournament that is near and dear to me. With the exception of 2009, I have been attending the Colonial Athletic Association conference tournament since 2003.
At about 2:00 AM yesterday morning, my good friend Jerry Beach, aka Defiantly Dutch, and I made the familiar drive down to Richmond, Virginia for what would be my ninth CAA Tournament. The reason we left at 2:00 AM, is based on my experience, you want to avoid getting caught in the Washington D.C. traffic.
Dutch and I talked about music, Hofstra basketball and life in general. I am glad he was able to go to the CAA Tournament as well. I was especially grateful that he was John Candy to my Steve Martin. His good natured company and his sense of humor kept me awake on the early morning drive. We made really great time and outside of a brief stop for cheap Jersey gas, we got to the outskirts of Richmond by 8:00 AM. Dutch and I stopped at an Aunt Sarah's Pancake House for breakfast.
After breakfast, I dropped off Dutch in downtown Richmond at the Hilton Garden Inn as he was staying with a friend. Afterwards, I took a nap in the hotel lobby, then made my way back to my car. Then I took a short drive to a parking garage across the street from the Richmond Coliseum.
This year's CAA Tournament was going to be special for me. It was the first time that I would have ever have media credentials for the tournament. For the previous six years, I had covered the CAA Tournament from sitting in my seats in the Richmond Coliseum, taking the perspective of a fan. This time I decided to sit on press row and thanks to the good folks at CAA Sports, who follow my blog and follow me on Twitter, I received media credentials.
So I entered the media entrance for the Richmond Coliseum and picked up my credentials for my site, CollegeHardwood.com. Rob Washburn, my contact at CAASports, greeted me inside the arena and showed me where my seat was on press row. Sure enough, my seat was next to Defiantly Dutch's seat. The CAA knows the #CAAHoops Twitter and blogosphere all too well.
The CAA Tournament consists of four days. The first round, otherwise known by Chris "VCUPav" Crowley as "Pillow Fight Friday", begins on Friday with four games, where seeds five through twelve play each other. There is an afternoon session of two games; eight plays nine, then five plays twelve. In the evening, seven plays ten and six plays eleven.
Hofstra, seeded eleventh, was playing Georgia State, seeded sixth. It was the second game of the evening session and the last game of the day. Neither Hofstra nor Georgia State brought a lot of fans, but there were enough other fans to make it a decent sized crowd, over 5200, for the last game at 8:30 on a Friday night.
The Pride entered the game with only three wins in conference on the season, but they had won two of their last three games, including a twenty nine point crushing of UNCW. The ninth seeded Seahawks had earlier won their first round game, defeating the Dukes of James Madison.
Meanwhile, Georgia State, who in the preseason had been picked at the bottom of the CAA, finished sixth in the Colonial with eleven wins. Ron Hunter, in his first year coaching the Panthers, took a team with the same talent that finished eleventh a season ago and made them a top tier team in the CAA. Many people, including me, thought Hunter should have been picked Coach of the Year, but Bruiser Flint won the award.
I saw the game the Pride played vs. the Panthers last month at the Mack Center. Georgia State jumped out a to a 16-5 lead with their aggressive zone defense. The Panthers controlled most of the game and won handily 59-43. If Hofstra was going to be successful, they would need to score in transition and not let Georgia State setup their zone defense.
And that was the philsophy of Coach Mo Cassara. The Pride quickly got out of the gate and took a slim early lead on a couple of layups as they didn't allow the Panthers to setup their zone before they scored. Hofstra was playing with a lot of energy early on in the game.
But Georgia State was equal to the task. Eric Buckner, who I believe was snubbed out of the CAA Defensive Player of the Year Award, was dominating offensively. Buckner had seven quick points. His emphatic dunk gave the Panthers a 15-13 lead right before the under twelve media timeout.
In the past two years of the CAA Tournament, the sixth seed had lost to the eleventh seed. Two years ago, James Madison knocked off Drexel. Last year, I watched Quinn McDowell set a CAA Tournament record with thirty five points as William and Mary stunned James Madison. After the first eight and half minutes, Hofstra was holding their own against Georgia State. Could the sixth seed knock off the eleventh seed for the third year in a row?
The Panthers answered that question in the next eleven and a half minutes with a resounding "NO".
Buckner's emphatic dunk started a monstrous 24-4 run over the next eight and a half minutes to take a 39-17 lead. Georgia State's swarming defense forced eight Hofstra turnovers in that span. When the Pride didn't turn the ball over, they struggled to get a good shot off, missing six of their seven shots in that period of time.
Meanwhile, the Panthers were scoring at will on the Pride defense. Georgia State scored forty five first half points, the most Hofstra had given up in the first half of a game during the season. Georgia State shot sixteen of twenty seven from the field and eleven of twelve from the line. The score was 45-24 at the half. With the Panthers' swarming defense, the game was basically over.
All you could hope for if you were a Hofstra fan was that your team would play hard in the second half and make the game respectable. Early in the second half, they did exactly that. A Steve Mejia three cut the Georgia State lead to sixteen, 50-34.
But as Hunter said in his post game press conference, Georgia State was playing "with a chip on its shoulder". They felt as if they had been not given the respect they deserved at the CAA Awards Banquet and they played inspired, even angry. They weren't going to allow Hofstra to get any closer.
The Panthers responded with a 23-6 run over the next nine minutes. At the under eight media timeout, Georgia State was up 73-40. In my nine years of watching/covering the CAA Tournament, I had never seen such a dominant performance.
There was a young boy sitting behind the Hofstra bench with a sign that said "Free Hugs". The Pride looked like they could use some hugs, because they had just been run over by a tractor trailer truck with a Georgia license plate. The Panthers would go onto win 85-40. It was the biggest margin of victory in CAA Tournament history.
Georgia State held Hofstra to thirty four percent shooting, twenty eight percent in the second half. Meanwhile, the Panthers scorched the Pride, shooting fifty nine percent in the game. Georgia State outscored Hofstra 48-18 in the paint.
Buckner was responsible for a lot of that damage, scoring twenty one points and grabbing eleven boards, four which came on the offensive end. He was a perfect seven for seven from the field. James Fields had fourteen points and Devonta White added thirteen for the Panthers.
Mike Moore, the leading scorer in the CAA had sixteen points for the Pride, but was only five of thirteen from the field. Mejia had fourteen points, including two of four from beyond the arc. Nathaniel Lester added eleven points.
Being a Hofstra fan at heart, it wasn't the ending I had envisioned. Then again, having the Pride endure a 10-22 season was not what I envisioned either. All you can do as a Hofstra fan is move on and hope for next season. There is a major influx of talent coming in for next season. Seasons may end, often in loss. But hope is always eternal. Right now, it needs to be.
At about 2:00 AM yesterday morning, my good friend Jerry Beach, aka Defiantly Dutch, and I made the familiar drive down to Richmond, Virginia for what would be my ninth CAA Tournament. The reason we left at 2:00 AM, is based on my experience, you want to avoid getting caught in the Washington D.C. traffic.
Dutch and I talked about music, Hofstra basketball and life in general. I am glad he was able to go to the CAA Tournament as well. I was especially grateful that he was John Candy to my Steve Martin. His good natured company and his sense of humor kept me awake on the early morning drive. We made really great time and outside of a brief stop for cheap Jersey gas, we got to the outskirts of Richmond by 8:00 AM. Dutch and I stopped at an Aunt Sarah's Pancake House for breakfast.
After breakfast, I dropped off Dutch in downtown Richmond at the Hilton Garden Inn as he was staying with a friend. Afterwards, I took a nap in the hotel lobby, then made my way back to my car. Then I took a short drive to a parking garage across the street from the Richmond Coliseum.
This year's CAA Tournament was going to be special for me. It was the first time that I would have ever have media credentials for the tournament. For the previous six years, I had covered the CAA Tournament from sitting in my seats in the Richmond Coliseum, taking the perspective of a fan. This time I decided to sit on press row and thanks to the good folks at CAA Sports, who follow my blog and follow me on Twitter, I received media credentials.
So I entered the media entrance for the Richmond Coliseum and picked up my credentials for my site, CollegeHardwood.com. Rob Washburn, my contact at CAASports, greeted me inside the arena and showed me where my seat was on press row. Sure enough, my seat was next to Defiantly Dutch's seat. The CAA knows the #CAAHoops Twitter and blogosphere all too well.
The CAA Tournament consists of four days. The first round, otherwise known by Chris "VCUPav" Crowley as "Pillow Fight Friday", begins on Friday with four games, where seeds five through twelve play each other. There is an afternoon session of two games; eight plays nine, then five plays twelve. In the evening, seven plays ten and six plays eleven.
Hofstra, seeded eleventh, was playing Georgia State, seeded sixth. It was the second game of the evening session and the last game of the day. Neither Hofstra nor Georgia State brought a lot of fans, but there were enough other fans to make it a decent sized crowd, over 5200, for the last game at 8:30 on a Friday night.
The Pride entered the game with only three wins in conference on the season, but they had won two of their last three games, including a twenty nine point crushing of UNCW. The ninth seeded Seahawks had earlier won their first round game, defeating the Dukes of James Madison.
Meanwhile, Georgia State, who in the preseason had been picked at the bottom of the CAA, finished sixth in the Colonial with eleven wins. Ron Hunter, in his first year coaching the Panthers, took a team with the same talent that finished eleventh a season ago and made them a top tier team in the CAA. Many people, including me, thought Hunter should have been picked Coach of the Year, but Bruiser Flint won the award.
I saw the game the Pride played vs. the Panthers last month at the Mack Center. Georgia State jumped out a to a 16-5 lead with their aggressive zone defense. The Panthers controlled most of the game and won handily 59-43. If Hofstra was going to be successful, they would need to score in transition and not let Georgia State setup their zone defense.
And that was the philsophy of Coach Mo Cassara. The Pride quickly got out of the gate and took a slim early lead on a couple of layups as they didn't allow the Panthers to setup their zone before they scored. Hofstra was playing with a lot of energy early on in the game.
But Georgia State was equal to the task. Eric Buckner, who I believe was snubbed out of the CAA Defensive Player of the Year Award, was dominating offensively. Buckner had seven quick points. His emphatic dunk gave the Panthers a 15-13 lead right before the under twelve media timeout.
In the past two years of the CAA Tournament, the sixth seed had lost to the eleventh seed. Two years ago, James Madison knocked off Drexel. Last year, I watched Quinn McDowell set a CAA Tournament record with thirty five points as William and Mary stunned James Madison. After the first eight and half minutes, Hofstra was holding their own against Georgia State. Could the sixth seed knock off the eleventh seed for the third year in a row?
The Panthers answered that question in the next eleven and a half minutes with a resounding "NO".
Buckner's emphatic dunk started a monstrous 24-4 run over the next eight and a half minutes to take a 39-17 lead. Georgia State's swarming defense forced eight Hofstra turnovers in that span. When the Pride didn't turn the ball over, they struggled to get a good shot off, missing six of their seven shots in that period of time.
Meanwhile, the Panthers were scoring at will on the Pride defense. Georgia State scored forty five first half points, the most Hofstra had given up in the first half of a game during the season. Georgia State shot sixteen of twenty seven from the field and eleven of twelve from the line. The score was 45-24 at the half. With the Panthers' swarming defense, the game was basically over.
All you could hope for if you were a Hofstra fan was that your team would play hard in the second half and make the game respectable. Early in the second half, they did exactly that. A Steve Mejia three cut the Georgia State lead to sixteen, 50-34.
But as Hunter said in his post game press conference, Georgia State was playing "with a chip on its shoulder". They felt as if they had been not given the respect they deserved at the CAA Awards Banquet and they played inspired, even angry. They weren't going to allow Hofstra to get any closer.
The Panthers responded with a 23-6 run over the next nine minutes. At the under eight media timeout, Georgia State was up 73-40. In my nine years of watching/covering the CAA Tournament, I had never seen such a dominant performance.
There was a young boy sitting behind the Hofstra bench with a sign that said "Free Hugs". The Pride looked like they could use some hugs, because they had just been run over by a tractor trailer truck with a Georgia license plate. The Panthers would go onto win 85-40. It was the biggest margin of victory in CAA Tournament history.
Georgia State held Hofstra to thirty four percent shooting, twenty eight percent in the second half. Meanwhile, the Panthers scorched the Pride, shooting fifty nine percent in the game. Georgia State outscored Hofstra 48-18 in the paint.
Buckner was responsible for a lot of that damage, scoring twenty one points and grabbing eleven boards, four which came on the offensive end. He was a perfect seven for seven from the field. James Fields had fourteen points and Devonta White added thirteen for the Panthers.
Mike Moore, the leading scorer in the CAA had sixteen points for the Pride, but was only five of thirteen from the field. Mejia had fourteen points, including two of four from beyond the arc. Nathaniel Lester added eleven points.
Being a Hofstra fan at heart, it wasn't the ending I had envisioned. Then again, having the Pride endure a 10-22 season was not what I envisioned either. All you can do as a Hofstra fan is move on and hope for next season. There is a major influx of talent coming in for next season. Seasons may end, often in loss. But hope is always eternal. Right now, it needs to be.
Labels:
CAA,
Eric Buckner,
Georgia State,
Hofstra,
Mike Moore,
Mo Cassara,
Nathaniel Lester,
Ron Hunter,
Steve Mejia
Sunday, February 26, 2012
A Senior Day to Remember (Recap of UNCW vs. Hofstra)
After watching Fordham rally to defeat LaSalle, my son Matthew and I were able to quickly make our way out of a back exit of Rose Hill gym. We made it to our car in the Fordham parking garage quite quickly before the rest of the Ram and Explorer fans. Our mission was to make it to Hempstead by 4:00 PM. We made it to Hofstra with time to spare for Senior Day at the Mack Center as Hofstra was hosting UNCW.
Senior starters Mike Moore, Nathaniel Lester and Dwan McMillan were all given a special ceremony by Hofstra University before their last home game as members of the Pride. All three have been significant contributors this season. Moore, the leading scorer in the CAA, and Lester, the eighth leading scorer in the CAA, both scored their 1000th career points for the Pride this season. McMillan, the CAA leader in assists per game, became the starting point guard after Steve Mejia struggled with injuries.
The three thousand plus fans in attendance gave all three a nice ovation, but nowhere near the ovation that last season's seniors Brad Kelleher, Greg Washington and Charles Jenkins received for Senior Day last season. Perhaps that might have been because a) the Pride had a sold out Mack Center on Senior Day last season and b) the Pride were 13-4 in conference on Senior Day last season as opposed to 2-15 this season. It just so happened that Washington and Jenkins were in attendance for the day's festivities.
The Pride came out very quickly as they have done on several occasions this season. Lester scored five quick points and Hofstra went out to a 9-0 lead. UNCW Head Coach Buzz Peterson was so upset with his team's play, he benched all five starters two minutes into the game.
As has occurred several times this season, the Pride would see their early lead evaporate. The Seahawks went on a 14-3 run over four minutes. Tanner Milson's second three pointer put the Seahawks up 14-11 with twelve and a half minutes left. The Hofstra fans had seen this act before and were afraid of the same result.
However, the Pride responded with a huge run. It started with what must have been forward Moussa Kone's longest jumper of the season, which was a ten foot bank shot. Then a Moore three pointer and a Lester layup put Hofstra back up 18-14. Those three baskets were part of the Pride outscoring the Seahawks 34-11 the rest of the half. Hofstra hit on nine of their last thirteen shots from the field and only missed two of their thirteen free throw attempts for the entire half.
The Pride led at halftime 45-25 in what was easily their best first half of the season. The team shot six of ten from beyond the arc, had thirteen assists and outrebounded the Seahawks 21-11 in the first twenty minutes. Moore and Lester had thirty two combined points. This didn't seem like the same Hofstra team that had lost to UNCW in Wilmington earlier in the season.
During the game, Jenkins, now of the Golden State Warriors, was honored with a special game ball by Coach Mo Cassara. It was for being the all time scoring leader in Hofstra history. The entire crowd gave Jenkins a well deserved standing ovation. Throughout the entire first half, kids came up to Jenkins for autographs and he more than obliged. Charles Jenkins is truly a class act.
If anyone thought that the first half was a fluke, they were quickly dissuaded in the first six minutes. Keith Rendleman tried his best (he had sixteen points and nine rebounds for the game), but the rest of the Seahawks were getting overwhelmed by the Pride. The lead ballooned to thirty, 60-30, with 14:25 left in the game. Moore and Lester had nailed two more three pointers and the rout was on.
Late in the second half, Hofstra had a lead of thirty seven points. Think about this. A team that came into the game with only two wins in conference and nine wins in total was beating their opponents 90-53 with a little over two minutes left. Cassara cleared what little he has of a bench (due to injuries, redshirts and dismissals), making sure all his seniors got a standing ovation as they left the court. The Pride would win their last regular season conference game in impressive fashion 93-64.
The final statistics were bewildering. Hofstra shot fifty six percent from the field, including twelve of nineteen from beyond the arc. What might have been more impressive was the Pride having twenty five assists and only eleven turnovers. Moore had thirty points, including shooting six of nine from beyond the arc. Lester added twenty points. Stephen Nwaukoni held his own against Rendleman with a double double, ten points and ten rebounds. Mejia and Shemiye McLendon each had ten points. But perhaps the most impressive stat was McMillan with fifteen assists and only four turnovers.
Hofstra ended their regular season on a high note. Hopefully it will give them momentum for next Friday night's first round game vs. Georgia State. But at least all three seniors had a truly memorable performance in their last home game for the Pride.
Senior starters Mike Moore, Nathaniel Lester and Dwan McMillan were all given a special ceremony by Hofstra University before their last home game as members of the Pride. All three have been significant contributors this season. Moore, the leading scorer in the CAA, and Lester, the eighth leading scorer in the CAA, both scored their 1000th career points for the Pride this season. McMillan, the CAA leader in assists per game, became the starting point guard after Steve Mejia struggled with injuries.
The three thousand plus fans in attendance gave all three a nice ovation, but nowhere near the ovation that last season's seniors Brad Kelleher, Greg Washington and Charles Jenkins received for Senior Day last season. Perhaps that might have been because a) the Pride had a sold out Mack Center on Senior Day last season and b) the Pride were 13-4 in conference on Senior Day last season as opposed to 2-15 this season. It just so happened that Washington and Jenkins were in attendance for the day's festivities.
The Pride came out very quickly as they have done on several occasions this season. Lester scored five quick points and Hofstra went out to a 9-0 lead. UNCW Head Coach Buzz Peterson was so upset with his team's play, he benched all five starters two minutes into the game.
As has occurred several times this season, the Pride would see their early lead evaporate. The Seahawks went on a 14-3 run over four minutes. Tanner Milson's second three pointer put the Seahawks up 14-11 with twelve and a half minutes left. The Hofstra fans had seen this act before and were afraid of the same result.
However, the Pride responded with a huge run. It started with what must have been forward Moussa Kone's longest jumper of the season, which was a ten foot bank shot. Then a Moore three pointer and a Lester layup put Hofstra back up 18-14. Those three baskets were part of the Pride outscoring the Seahawks 34-11 the rest of the half. Hofstra hit on nine of their last thirteen shots from the field and only missed two of their thirteen free throw attempts for the entire half.
The Pride led at halftime 45-25 in what was easily their best first half of the season. The team shot six of ten from beyond the arc, had thirteen assists and outrebounded the Seahawks 21-11 in the first twenty minutes. Moore and Lester had thirty two combined points. This didn't seem like the same Hofstra team that had lost to UNCW in Wilmington earlier in the season.
During the game, Jenkins, now of the Golden State Warriors, was honored with a special game ball by Coach Mo Cassara. It was for being the all time scoring leader in Hofstra history. The entire crowd gave Jenkins a well deserved standing ovation. Throughout the entire first half, kids came up to Jenkins for autographs and he more than obliged. Charles Jenkins is truly a class act.
If anyone thought that the first half was a fluke, they were quickly dissuaded in the first six minutes. Keith Rendleman tried his best (he had sixteen points and nine rebounds for the game), but the rest of the Seahawks were getting overwhelmed by the Pride. The lead ballooned to thirty, 60-30, with 14:25 left in the game. Moore and Lester had nailed two more three pointers and the rout was on.
Late in the second half, Hofstra had a lead of thirty seven points. Think about this. A team that came into the game with only two wins in conference and nine wins in total was beating their opponents 90-53 with a little over two minutes left. Cassara cleared what little he has of a bench (due to injuries, redshirts and dismissals), making sure all his seniors got a standing ovation as they left the court. The Pride would win their last regular season conference game in impressive fashion 93-64.
The final statistics were bewildering. Hofstra shot fifty six percent from the field, including twelve of nineteen from beyond the arc. What might have been more impressive was the Pride having twenty five assists and only eleven turnovers. Moore had thirty points, including shooting six of nine from beyond the arc. Lester added twenty points. Stephen Nwaukoni held his own against Rendleman with a double double, ten points and ten rebounds. Mejia and Shemiye McLendon each had ten points. But perhaps the most impressive stat was McMillan with fifteen assists and only four turnovers.
Hofstra ended their regular season on a high note. Hopefully it will give them momentum for next Friday night's first round game vs. Georgia State. But at least all three seniors had a truly memorable performance in their last home game for the Pride.
Sunday, February 19, 2012
BracketBuster Win Gives Hope for Hofstra (Recap of Siena vs. Hofstra)
The BracketBusters have also often been an important factor in helping mid major teams get to the NCAA Tournament. In certainly two cases, 2006 with George Mason and 2011 with VCU, without their BracketBuster wins at Wichita State (how ironic is that?), those teams probably don't make the NCAA Tournament, let alone get to the Final Four.
I have often thought the way ESPN does the home and away team pools for the BracketBusters takes away from having more meaningful games for more teams. Such was the case for this year's series. You had seemingly too many strong home teams and not enough good road teams.
But what ESPN did this season finally put me on the other side of the fence. They rewarded several teams television games based on their RPI and not their record or standing in conference. Northern Iowa, who was in seventh place in the Missouri Valley with a 4-7 conference record when they were picked and Missouri State, who was third place in the Missouri Valley with a 6-5 conference record and a 13-10 overall record when they were picked, are two teams that immediately come to mind (both teams lost their BracketBuster games yesterday).
Meanwhile, George Mason, Stony Brook and Loyola Maryland, three teams that were in first place in their respective conferences at the time of the BracketBuster selections, were denied television games. If you are not going to reward teams based on merit, why then have the BracketBuster series? By the way, George Mason and Stony Brook won their non-televised BracketBuster games, while Loyola Maryland plays theirs today.
Now let's get to the other over one hundred plus teams that are a part of the BracketBuster series due to their conference affiliations and don't get a sniff of a televised game. Based on ESPN's selections, those teams end up playing non conference home and home games with teams close to their regional area this season and next. In the case of Hofstra and Siena, the brilliant World Wide Leader folks decided to match these two teams for a SECOND time in the BracketBuster series.
I was at the Mack Center in 2006 EXACTLY six years ago to the day when Hofstra first hosted Siena in a BracketBuster game. Hofstra was snubbed out of a television game because AGAIN there were too many good home teams and not enough good road teams. The game was memorable for two reasons. One, Adrian Uter had probably his most dominant game with the Pride scoring a career high twenty seven points and added four blocks in a 76-62 win over the Saints. Second, Siena head coach Fran McCaffery AND his wife were both tossed from the game.
So here we were exactly six years later. The game had much less meaning than the game in 2006. Then, Hofstra was one of the best teams in the CAA, fighting for a bid to the NCAA Tournament. This season, Hofstra only has two conference wins. You could say Hofstra and Siena were battling for the best team to have beaten Iona, a team playing a featured televised game at home vs. Nevada at the same time.
Though there was a crowd of two thousand people, the arena atmosphere was very flat. The Hofstra Pep Band sounded worse than ever and that's saying something. You're not supposed to hear a xylophone as clear as day with a brass section. There also weren't that many students in the Lions' Den student section, which was disappointing to this Hofstra alum. In fact, there was only polite applause when Hofstra honored Mike Moore for scoring his 1000th career Hofstra point in not even two full seasons (he transferred to Hofstra from Fordham after his sophomore season).
And Siena decided to come out as flat as the atmosphere. The Saints had a turnover in each of their first four possessions, and nine turnovers in barely over five minutes. Siena coach Mitch Buonaguro had to call two timeouts in the first four minutes of the game. As a result, the Pride went up early 8-0.
But has been the case many times this season, Hofstra couldn't fully capitalize on all of Siena's mistakes. After taking the early eight point lead, the Pride missed four out of five shots and committed two turnovers. This allowed the Saints to go on a 10-2 run and tie the game at ten with a little less than twelve minutes left in the half.
From there, both teams shot the ball very well the remainder of the half. Siena shot sixty five percent from the field while Hofstra shot forty five percent. The teams scored in different ways. In the Saints' case, OD Anosike was unstoppable in the paint, hitting all five of his baskets and scoring twelve points. Meanwhile, Hofstra had five three pointers in the first half, which is more than they average for an entire game on the season. Mike Moore and Steve Mejia combined for those five three pointers.
The game was tied eight times in the first half. So it made perfect sense that the game was tied at thirty seven at the half. At halftime, my older son Matthew and I went over to say hi to Defiantly Dutch and his much better half, Michelle. It's become an annual game ritual to go over to see my two good friends at halftime and talk about the first half.
One of the things we talked about at halftime was the improved play of Mejia. In his previous three games, he scored twice in double figures and in the game against Drexel, Mejia had six steals. He was also starting to shoot the ball better and he had two three pointers against Delaware.
In this game, Mejia had a strong first half and he continued with an equally strong second half. He buried another two three pointers, giving him four on the game. He also had another two steals in the second half, also giving him four on the game.
The start of the second half was almost a repeat of the first half. The Pride scored twelve of the first fourteen points and went up by ten, 49-39. But the Saints rallied, scoring the next eight points to cut the lead to two, 49-47. Siena would eventually take the lead, 59-57 with eight and a half minutes left. It looked like another game where Hofstra would have a second half lead only to see the other team rally and win.
But this time, Hofstra would not be denied. The Pride would score their next twelve points on three shots beyond the arc, two by Mejia, and one old fashioned three point play by Stephen Nwaukoni. Hofstra would regain the lead, but it would only be two points, 71-69 after Anosike hit another layup with a little less than four minutes left.
In many of the Pride's close losses, they failed to make stops down the stretch. This time was different. Hofstra would outscore Siena 10-0 the rest of the way. The Pride forced two turnovers and held the Saints to four missed shots in the last several minutes. Siena didn't even try to put up a last second shot after Hofstra let the shot clock expire in the last few seconds. The fans gave the Pride a standing ovation at the end of their 81-69 win over the Saints.
Moore had even a better second half, scoring sixteen of his thirty points in the final twenty minutes to lead all scorers with thirty. Mejia had sixteen points while Nathaniel Lester added fifteen. Mejia and Dwan McMillan combined for thirteen of Hofstra's twenty one assists (with only ten turnovers).
Anosike had a double double with twenty two points and twelve rebounds. Kyle Downey added seventeen points. Siena shot fifty eight percent for the game and out-rebounded Hofstra 36-23. But the Pride forced twenty one Saints' turnovers and Hofstra shot eleven of twenty three from beyond the arc, easily their best three point shooting performance of the season. The bright side for Siena was neither Buonaguro, nor his wife were tossed from the game.
Hofstra was one of seven CAA teams to win a BracketBuster game yesterday and the only team in the bottom half of the Colonial standings to do so. With two games left in conference vs. tenth place William and Mary and eighth place UNCW, the Pride have a chance to finish the regular season on a high note before heading into the CAA Tournament.
In 2006, the BracketBuster win over Siena started a six game winning streak for Hofstra that lasted through the CAA Championship game when they lost to UNCW. If the Pride keeps shooting the three like they did yesterday, the 2012 BracketBuster win over Siena might just start another win streak.
Labels:
CAA,
Colonial,
Hofstra,
Kyle Downey,
MAAC,
Mike Moore,
Mo Cassara,
Nathaniel Lester,
OD Anosike,
Siena,
Steve Mejia
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