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| Thursday, February 17 | |||||||||
ESPN.com | ||||||||||
Kenyon Martin is the big man's barometer this season. Match Cincinnati's imposing shot blocker at the defensive end or his finishing skills in the lane at the other and a team might have a chance to beat the
Bearcats over the six-game run to the NCAA title.
Forget about a perimeter game -- Cincinnati has a big man who can
make a rather large statement in the paint when the game is slowed to a halfcourt pace.
Pete Newell, who teaches a summer big-man camp in Hawaii every year, has seen Martin's development from afar and marvels at his strength in the post. Martin will likely end up playing power forward in the NBA, but he's creating his own area in the college lane. "He's got a ton of possibility," Newell said of Martin. "He's so strong and active and they use him well. He's a physically gifted center and has good lateral movement."
Buzzing a rule change "We want the calls made correctly," said Air Force coach Reggie Minton, who chairs a rules committee with members Stanford coach Mike Montgomery and Kansas coach Roy Williams. "The technology is such that with all the games being televised now, you're sure to get it right," Minton told ESPN.com. "We'll check with the NCAA and the women's group to see if they want to be on the call, but if the women aren't interested, we'll go alone. We perceive it as a problem." Conference officiating directors told ESPN.com that officials are only allowed to look at the monitor to check scoring (such as if a player's foot was over the 3-point line), clock issues (if a clock goes dead, or accidentally kept running during a stoppage) or see who was involved in a fight. However, they cannot review whether a ball left the hands before a buzzer because that's a judgment call. Officials also go by the sound of the horn for the end of a game, which they wouldn't be able to determine on a slow-motion replay. They are allowed to check a judgment call with the official timer, but usually don't for fear of getting a biased opinion (most timers are from the community where the game is being played). But the endings of the Miami-Villanova game and the Texas Tech-Texas A&M game have prompted the need for change. The officials made the right call at the conclusion of the Miami-Villanova game when they didn't review a judgment call. While it looked obvious to television viewers that Miami's Johnny Hemsley had the ball in his hands when the clock in the lower right corner of the screen was at zero, officials cannot go to a TV monitor for replays.That was the mistake made in the Texas Tech-Texas A&M game, when an official went to the replay to review a winning basket by the Aggies. Official Charles Range was subsequently suspended by the Big 12 for waffling and spending 45 minutes reviewing the call.
Flag flap won't be resolved soon Craig Thompson, the committee chair, told ESPN.com that the most appropriate time to discuss moving the first- and second-round games would be in May when the NABC board meets with the committee. That may be too late for the NABC, which called earlier this week for the regional to be moved from Greenville unless the state lowers the Confederate flag from the state capital. Civil Rights organizations called for the removal of the flag during marches Monday, which was Martin Luther King Day. The basketball selection committee has a 36-hour meeting Feb. 1-2 in Indianapolis for new members before it meets to select the field of 64 in mid-March. The next time it meets would be in May. "It's a serious matter to us, but we don't know when we can discuss it," Thompson said. "We don't want to tackle this in a haphazard manner or act with too much haste." The NCAA has concern over legal action if it pulls the regional, planned for the South Milo Center in Greenville, where the Southern Conference will act as the host. Thompson said there would be time to find an alternative site in the South. The selection committee usually picks sites four years in advance and is reviewing hosts for the 2004 and '05 regionals."Sooner is better," NABC executive director Jim Haney said. "But Craig told me the same thing about having the time to have a discussion at some length. Personally, I would prefer them discussing it in February. We obviously we're not in a position to force their agenda. We expect them to make a decision soon."
Summer changes inevitable The models range from Southeastern Conference commissioner Roy Kramer's call to shut down the summer, to the Northeast Conference's call for 20 days on the road, to the Pac-10 submitting proposals for 14, 16 and 18 days. "Our coaches wanted a break in the middle to go home," Pac-10 commissioner Tom Hansen said. Kramer's analogy at the meeting was that limiting the days in the summer was like rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. He said it's still a sinking ship. "The question is what is Division I," NABC executive director Jim Haney said. "The vast majority of Division I need summer recruiting. They don't need to look at the top 100 players. There will be summer recruiting and the issue will be the number of days. It will fall between 14 and 20. It won't stay at 24. A year ago, 14 was proposed and that was rejected." Coaches were out last year from July 8-31, but the complaints have been submitted that summer coaches have too much control over recruiting. Investigations into former AAU coach Myron Piggie and subsequent suspensions of three players (UCLA's JaRon Rush, Missouri's Kareem Rush and Oklahoma State's Andre Williams) because of extra benefits related to their AAU team will likely speed up the call for change. But lost in the rash decisions to abolish the summer are the kinds of abuses committed by high school coaches who take their sneaker-sponsored players to tournaments across the country. While abuses occur at the elite level, a number of mid- to low-major colleges need centralized summer recruiting to find talent.Meanwhile, UCLA sophomore forward JaRon Rush continues to meet with Bruins' athletics director Pete Dalis in their attempt to speed up the investigation into his acceptance of extra benefits prior to enrolling at UCLA (from Piggie) and during college (from agent Jerome Stanley, although he denies the charge). The NCAA will likely request interviewing the same people UCLA did before giving a final ruling. Rush, who was indefinitely suspended on Dec. 11, is practicing with the Bruins.
Weekly chatter "We had a minor disagreement on the physical nature of the game," said Samuels, who was the last coach to shake Donovan's hand. "It wasn't the right time for him or me to discuss how physical the game was. We would have been better served to call each other and say how we saw it. We should have just said good luck for the next game." Samuels has known Donovan since Samuels was the coach at Hampton and Donovan coached Marshall.
The WAC doesn't have an automatic berth this season because the departure of eight teams to the Mountain West Conference left it in violation of the requirement of having six member teams together for five years before earning an automatic spot. The WAC will get it back in 2001. "There are no automatics but our league should get at least two teams," Self said. "Our league is better from top to bottom than we thought it would be. San Jose State, Hawaii and UTEP have been pleasant surprises. Even TCU is better than its record. They'll be dangerous." Robinson, if you remember, was the scoring forward who quit the team in December and promptly declared for the NBA draft. He changed his mind and realized, after being ill-advised by former Bulldog Dominick Young, that he needed to stay in college basketball. He has enrolled at Barton County and is once again a recruitable athlete. Robinson originally signed with Missouri out of Mt. Zion (N.C.) Christian Academy, but his test scores were questioned and he was ineligible as a freshman. The good news doesn't end there. The Bulldogs got point guard Germayne Forbes back on the practice floor when he was declared a partial qualifier. Forbes was ruled ineligible after academic questions were raised by the NCAA Clearinghouse. The Bulldogs are still trying to get the London, England, native's full year of eligibility back, but at least have a sparring partner for point guard Matt Santangelo in practice.
If Garrett does join the team, few people will know in San Jose. The Spartans are averaging a bleak 783 fans at the Event Center. They're not much of a draw away from home, either, with only two games drawing more than 1,100 fans. But the Spartans are competitive, joining Auburn, Stanford and Ohio State as the only four teams to be in the top 10 in both scoring defense and field-goal percentage defense.
Brey may get the starting five -- forwards Mike Pegues (17 games), Darryl Presley (10), John Gordon (six) and guards Kestutis Marciulionis (17) and Billy Wells (17) -- together again if Presley's latest knee injury heals in time for Saturday's game with Towson.
Andy Katz is a senior writer at ESPN.com. His Weekly Word on college
basketball runs Thursdays throughout the season.
| ALSO SEE South: Magloire's maturity Statistical breakdown of top 25 centers The Word's Answer Man Missed the Word? Have a question for the Weekly Word? AUDIO/VIDEO Kenyon Martin "dominates" for Cincy. avi: 623 k RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1 Kenyon Martin drives through the lane and lays it off the glass. avi: 368 k RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1 Kenyon Martin prevents the shot attempt in the lane. avi: 408 k RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1 Kenyon Martin flexes his muscle in the paint. avi: 680 k RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1 Kenyon Martin cleans up in the paint. avi: 689 k RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1 Kenyon Martin throws down the monster slam. avi: 502 k RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1 |