Author Archives: Thomas Cunningham

Ducks Surprising in Pac-10 Play

Filed under: , , ,

Two months ago, the Oregon men’s basketball team wasn’t so concerned about standings or play-in games or how many games it would take to weave through the Pac-10 Tournament.

No, two months ago the Ducks simply were not very good, paling in comparison to the national championship-bound football team and wondering whether they might be able to live up to the shiny, new arena that was about to open.

Oregon, picked to finish last in the first season under head coach Dana Altman, lived down to that expectation with an 0-4 start in conference play and were 1-5 after the following weekend against the L.A. schools.

But since then, the Ducks have become the surprise team of the Pac-10.

Oregon is 7-7 (14-12 overall) heading into this weekend’s home games against Cal and Stanford. The Ducks, who completed a season-sweep of rival Oregon State last weekend, are fourth in the Pac-10 standings behind Arizona, UCLA and Washington and with four games to go, they are in great shape to earn a top six finish.

A top six finish in the Pac-10 is a big deal. The bottom four teams in the conference standings will participate in a play-in round at the 10-team tournament in two weeks at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. Any team in the play-in round would need to win four games in four days to win the tournament title and an automatic NCAA berth.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

‘False Positive’ Vindicates Diana Taurasi

Filed under:

Diana Taurasi didn’t come off as bitter or angry. But she’s both wiser and warier and a little wounded for her experience over the past few months.

Taurasi was cleared Wednesday when a Turkish lab retracted results that showed the women’s basketball star had tested positive for the banned substance modafinil in a drug test following a Turkish league game in mid-November.

Taurasi got the news early Wednesday morning at her home in California.

“It was definitely the greatest sigh of relief,” Taurasi said Thursday on a media conference call. “I do feel vindicated. The facts came out, all the information is on the table. Like I said before, that was a road I never crossed and I’m glad it came out.”

Taurasi has been staunch in proclaiming her innocence.

The Associated Press reported Thursday that the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) will conduct an independent review and could suspend the Turkish lab that reported the results, which are now being characterized as a “false positive.” Another American player in Turkey, former Old Dominion standout Monique Coker tested positive for modafinil and was cleared this week as well.

But damage has been done.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Gonzaga Dips, but West Coast Conference Is Rising

Filed under: ,

Take a minute and look up the basketball standings in the West Coast Conference and what do you notice right away?

Gonzaga, the conference standard-bearer, the program that has arguably put the WCC on the map, is the third name down, even in league record with San Francisco, who beat the Bulldogs earlier in the year. The first place team in the WCC is No. 23 Saint Mary‘s.

The guard has changed.

Randy Bennett’s team isn’t so much an upstart program anymore as an established one. USF, the school with Bill Russell and Bill Cartwright’s jerseys hanging in the rafters, is tied with Gonzaga in second place in conference play.

Just below the Zags are Santa Clara and Portland.

Four WCC teams have at least 16 wins heading into the final two weeks before the conference tournament. With an ESPN deal, some of the best small college atmospheres in the nation and No. 7 BYU on the way in next season, these are the salad days in the WCC.

“I think a lot of the credit belongs to the people at Gonzaga,” said USF coach Rex Walters, the former Kansas star who is in his third season as the Dons’ head coach. “They were firmly committed to raising the bar for their program. What it led to was a team that got into the tournament ever year, and some national buzz. They got the whole conference on ESPN and because of the exposure, now we can raise our own bars.”

If the Zags’ are the third-place team in the conference, this must be a down year in Spokane. At least, a little. The Bulldogs have a three-point loss to San Diego State in November, wins over Marquette and Baylor and losses to Illinois, Washington State and Notre Dame.

The stretch that has defined the WCC season thus far was Gonzaga’s three straight losses, on the road at Santa Clara and USF (in overtime) and at home to St. Mary’s, the Gaels first win in Spokane since 1995. It was Gonzaga’s first three-game conference losing streak since 1997.

St. Mary’s has been able to match Gonzaga’s pace over the past few years. The Gaels reached the Sweet 16 for the first time in program history last season, have reached the NCAA Tournament twice in the last three years.

Walters’ program at USF is finally sitting on a solid foundation.

“We are getting there,” Walters said. “We’ve gone through some lean years here, but if you get the foundation right, you can really start to build something. Mark and Randy, these guys are seeing the fruits of their labor. We are still in our formative years.”

WCC commisioner Jamie Zaninovich credits consistency in coaching. It is the perhaps even the thing that separates the WCC from the Pac-10 at this point.

Few remains at Gonzaga despite overtures from Washington, Indiana and Oregon

Bennett’s name has been linked to openings at USC, Oregon, Arizona and Cal.

Both have stayed put.

Walters is in his third season at USF. Eric Reveno is in his fifth season at Portland, Kerry Keating is in his fourth season at Santa Clara.

“I think the leadership at these schools were thoughtful about the people they hired,” Zaninovich said. “Our schools did not go for big, splashy, win-the-press-conference hires. They recognize the type of people who will be successful in this conference and they have hired to that.”

BYU’s addition to the conference next season will add another strong program into the mix. Zaninovich said the expectation is not that the Cougars will dominate, but raise the competitive bar even further.

“They are having a great year, but to be fair, they haven’t been a traditional top 10 program, and we have a program that is a traditional top 20 program (in Gonzaga),” Zaninovich said. “That’s why they are a good competitive fit.”

Zaninovich, meanwhile, said it’s a little frustrating that perceptions outside the league seem to equate parity with weakness.

“It’s being positioned that Gonzaga is so bad that they lost to USF, and I don’t think that’s fair. Gonzaga has gone on the road and lost some games that it might have won before, but it’s tough to play on the road in this conference,” Zaninovich said. “We understand that having parity in the league and turning that into multiple (NCAA) bids are two different things. But I’ve really enjoying getting out to the venues and seeing the heightened intensity and seeing how great the quality of play is.”

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

What’s Wrong With Washington?

Filed under: , , ,

When you’re the pick to win the Pac-10, this isn’t a good look.

When you’re considered the class of your conference – and not a great conference at that – losing three in a row and falling into third place is going to prompt the question: What’s wrong with the Washington Huskies?

“I think it’s definitely a fair criticism. You lose three in a row and people are going to ask ‘What’s wrong with the Huskies?’” said Washington coach Lorenzo Romar. “I think it’s unfair to say that we should end the season right now because we’re not any good. But I think it’s fair to question what’s wrong with the Huskies.”

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Steve Lavin Returns to UCLA to Sound of Silence

Filed under: ,

LOS ANGELES — It’s not like Steve Lavin hasn’t been back to Pauley Pavilion in the last eight years. He just hasn’t done it as the opposing coach.

The man who could never quite do it right when he was the UCLA coach from 1996-2003 returned to the scene of his alleged crimes against Bruin basketball Saturday morning.

But apparently, at 10 a.m on a sunny California morning seven years after Lavin left, everybody in Westwood played it cool. The boos did not rain, the jeers weren’t even close to deafening.

Is it possible that UCLA fans are, dare we say, over it?

The hostility never showed up, but after a slow start, UCLA finally did.

The Bruins beat the visiting Red Storm on the boards, had a huge advantage at the free-throw line and rallied from a slow start to defeat St. John‘s 66-59.

Reeves Nelson hit a fall-away 3-pointer with 34 seconds to go to close out what is a respectable non-conference win for a Bruins team looking to solidify its NCAA prospects. UCLA improved to 16-7.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Pac-10 at Halfway Point: Improving, Still Far From Great

Filed under: , , , , , , , , ,

Derrick WilliamsHalfway through the Pac-10 season and it’s fair and accurate to say that this is a better conference than last year’s dismal downer of a campaign.

Arizona and UCLA have done considerable work improving on last year’s uncharacteristic win-loss records. There are players in this league — such as Washington‘s Isaiah Thomas, Washington State‘s Klay Thompson and Arizona’s Derrick Williams — who are standouts of national caliber.

Two teams, Washington and Arizona, are ranked.

Still, strides are relative. The Pac-10 is No. 7 in the Sagarin Power Rankings, two spots behind the suddenly mighty Mountain West. And some of the most exciting hoops on the West Coast is being played in the West Coast Conference.

But for the Pac-10, better is better than the alternative.

The barometer: Arizona is better. When one of the stalwart programs in the Pac-10 went astray last year it impacted the perception of the entire conference. Now that the Wildcats are on the way back to the NCAA Tournament — at 18-4 and tied for first with Washington at 7-2 — people can begin to think better of the conference. It’s much better to have two ranked teams than merely one. When the Wildcats joined the ranks of the ranked a few weeks back, that was a big deal for conference watchers.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Pac-10 at Halfway Point: Improving, Still Far From Great

Filed under: , , , , , , , , ,

Derrick WilliamsHalfway through the Pac-10 season and it’s fair and accurate to say that this is a better conference than last year’s dismal downer of a campaign.

Arizona and UCLA have done considerable work improving on last year’s uncharacteristic win-loss records. There are players in this league — such as Washington‘s Isaiah Thomas, Washington State‘s Klay Thompson and Arizona’s Derrick Williams — who are standouts of national caliber.

Two teams, Washington and Arizona, are ranked.

Still, strides are relative. The Pac-10 is No. 7 in the Sagarin Power Rankings, two spots behind the suddenly mighty Mountain West. And some of the most exciting hoops on the West Coast is being played in the West Coast Conference.

But for the Pac-10, better is better than the alternative.

The barometer: Arizona is better. When one of the stalwart programs in the Pac-10 went astray last year it impacted the perception of the entire conference. Now that the Wildcats are on the way back to the NCAA Tournament — at 18-4 and tied for first with Washington at 7-2 — people can begin to think better of the conference. It’s much better to have two ranked teams than merely one. When the Wildcats joined the ranks of the ranked a few weeks back, that was a big deal for conference watchers.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Pac-10 at Halfway Point: Improving, Still Far From Great

Filed under: , , , , , , , , ,

Derrick WilliamsHalfway through the Pac-10 season and it’s fair and accurate to say that this is a better conference than last year’s dismal downer of a campaign.

Arizona and UCLA have done considerable work improving on last year’s uncharacteristic win-loss records. There are players in this league — such as Washington‘s Isaiah Thomas, Washington State‘s Klay Thompson and Arizona’s Derrick Williams — who are standouts of national caliber.

Two teams, Washington and Arizona, are ranked.

Still, strides are relative. The Pac-10 is No. 7 in the Sagarin Power Rankings, two spots behind the suddenly mighty Mountain West. And some of the most exciting hoops on the West Coast is being played in the West Coast Conference.

But for the Pac-10, better is better than the alternative.

The barometer: Arizona is better. When one of the stalwart programs in the Pac-10 went astray last year it impacted the perception of the entire conference. Now that the Wildcats are on the way back to the NCAA Tournament — at 18-4 and tied for first with Washington at 7-2 — people can begin to think better of the conference. It’s much better to have two ranked teams than merely one. When the Wildcats joined the ranks of the ranked a few weeks back, that was a big deal for conference watchers.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

For Klay Thompson, Success Is in NBA Genes, Dreams

Filed under: , ,


Klay Thompson
has pedigree and good genes on his side.

The rest, the talent, the hard-work, the results are up to him.

Thompson, the junior guard at Washington State, heads into Sunday night’s rivalry matchup against No. 17 Washington as one of the top offensive players in the nation. He leads the Pac-10 in scoring at 22.2 points a game and is ranked ninth nationally.

Graceful and agile and with a definite scorer’s mentality, Thompson looks bound to follow his father’s footsteps into the NBA.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Cal Coach Jeff Tedford Rooting for Aaron Rodgers in Super Bowl

Filed under: ,

How fitting that Cal football coach Jeff Tedford was on the two-lane road heading into Chico for a recruiting trip Wednesday — just days after his last success story from the same small California college town earned a ticket to the biggest show in sports.

Tedford watched his former quarterback, Aaron Rodgers, lead the Green Bay Packers to Super Bowl XLV by winning the NFC Championship Game on Sunday. He watched as a fan, cheering for Rodgers and another former Cal player and Packers linebacker Desmond Bishop. And he watched as a coach.

“I’ll break it down, watch tendencies, that kind of thing,” Tedford said. “But mostly, I was rooting for him and Des. I was watching both sides of the ball.”

Tedford is the coach who discovered Rodgers. Rodgers had not been offered a Division I scholarship and he was playing at Butte College in Chico when Tedford spotted him while there to recruit another player.

Tedford, who had previously mentored Trent Dilfer, Kyle Boller and David Carr, turned Rodgers from an under-regarded passer into a star college quarterback. Rodgers was named the starting quarterback by the fifth game of his debut season at Cal. He led Cal to bowl games at the end of the 2003 and 2004 seasons, finishing 10-1 in 2004, including a loss at USC in which Rodgers tied an NCAA record with 23 consecutive passes completed in one game.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Powered by WordPress | Designed by: suv | Thanks to toyota suv, infiniti suv and lexus suv