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Final Four and NCAA Title Game Thread

Discussion in 'Sports and News' started by Flying Headbutt, Apr 4, 2009.

  1. zagoshe

    zagoshe Well-Known Member

    Really? Kansas-Memphis was a terrible game last year? UConn-Mich State was not a close game this year? Villanova-Pitt? There are plenty of good games.

    And the blowouts -- imagine how awful it would have been had it been a few cinderellas, as opposed to chalk teams, playing in those games.....

    And how did George Mason do against Florida in the Final Four? That game was horse shit as well.

    The bottom line is the best teams were the best teams and they handled their business the way they are supposed to. That is a good thing.

    And now it is the mid-majors and the middle of the road BCS teams to raise their bar and get better so that they are more competitive in the tournament.

    For too many years the middle dragged the top down and that produced a lot of mediocrity, now the top is starting to pull up and it will only be a good thing down the road.
     
  2. Oz

    Oz Well-Known Member

    First, you might want to read my post a closer than you did -- I said KU-Memphis and Villanova-Pitt were good games. Unfortunately, they were among the exceptions to the rule the past two years. UConn-Michigan State was good for a while, got out of hand late.

    Re: George Mason-Florida, the score was 73-58. In the championship game, the Gators beat UCLA 73-57. In other words, George Mason actually played Florida a point better than UCLA did. Of course, you would never mention that game because it doesn't agree with your theory that power-conference schools play close games against each other, while Cinderallas can't hold their own.

    It's like Davidson nearly beating KU (59-57), which annihilated North Carolina (84-66, but led 40-12 to start) in the Final Four -- power teams playing deep in the tournament are no lock to provide good games.
     
  3. zagoshe

    zagoshe Well-Known Member

    No, my point about George Mason was they didn't provide a good game when they got to the Final Four, either.

    And most of the worst games occur in the rounds after major upsets because the really good teams pound the shit out of the teams who pulled the upsets.
     
  4. Oz

    Oz Well-Known Member

    Right, and neither did LSU (lost 59-45). George Mason didn't have a weak path (Michigan State, UNC, UConn).

    Most of the worst games the past two years didn't happen after upsets. They happened after one power-conference team smacked another. Davidson didn't get run off the court by Kansas. Western Kentucky didn't get run off the court by UCLA.

    Basically, the only team the past three years (I'm not going to all-out research this) you can make that argument about is George Mason, which actually played the Gators a point better at the Final Four than UCLA.
     
  5. zagoshe

    zagoshe Well-Known Member

    I'm too tired to research it as well but I will because I am sick like that.

    The bottom line is this -- would you really rather watch Davidson or Western Kentucky play Kansas than North Carolina?

    Yeah, that one time produced a horrible game.

    Do you really think ten games between Kansas and North Carolina - two programs with long history, great tradition and NBA talent -- wouldn't and hasn't produced far better results than ten games between North Carolina and Davidson?

    There will be shit games sometimes, but I'd be willing to bet the chances of shit games being produced over a significant sample are more often than not games in which "cinderella", or whatever you want to call them, teams pulled an upset.

    And the problem I have with some people is they always want to wax poetic about these great upsets by little guys over the years, as if there have been so many that are really that memorable, when meanwhile the majority of the best games and most memorable games over the long haul have been produced by two power conference teams or two teams with a lot of talent going head to head.

    And before you pull out Villanova and NC State from the 1980's -- I don't consider them to be cinderella's as they were both from major conferences and NC State was a much better team than its record.
     
  6. Oz

    Oz Well-Known Member

    First, your KU-UNC-Davidson argument is a little slanted. KU and UNC are in the tournament basically every season, Davidson is not, so of course KU-UNC has the greater chance to produce the better game. But when Davidson (or a team like it) does produce a memorable team, you can bet that sense of urgency to do something with that one chance will end with a great game, more often than not.

    And what's so wrong with rooting for mid-majors to provide some flavor that second weekend? Most of the time, they win a game or two, then the BCS-conference schools dominate the latter rounds. Why can't there be room for mid-major upsets and your top-heavy teams all in the same tournament? After all, didn't we have that a year ago with the four No. 1 seeds and Davidson? That, to me, is a great tournament.

    The past three weeks? Not so much.
     
  7. KYSportsWriter

    KYSportsWriter Well-Known Member

    Sam, you don't think Lawson or Ellington had heart in that game?
     
  8. Sam Mills 51

    Sam Mills 51 Well-Known Member

    No, especially not Ellington. Great shooter, but still entirely too worried about looking pretty and not doing much of anything else.

    Lawson has speed, but will he dive on the floor after a loose ball? Will he do those other little things that separate the good ones from the greats? He's capable but I haven't seen it yet.
     
  9. zagoshe

    zagoshe Well-Known Member

    No, he'll just play with a bad toe and try and fight through an injury that many athletes fear could end their careers........
     
  10. PeteyPirate

    PeteyPirate Guest

    As far as I could tell, Lawson was fast enough so that he didn't have to dive for anything. I'm not sure anyone worked harder on defense than Ellington on that team. The "no heart" argument you put forth about them, Sam, does not seem to have any merit based on my observation. I will not go so far as to call it bitter, although I think there is more evidence to support that than there is to support your argument.
     
  11. zagoshe

    zagoshe Well-Known Member

    You are getting caught up in names, Davidson happens to be the last one we can think of -- a better way to say it is this -- I'd be willing to be major conference power vs major conference power over the long haul will produce better games overall than mid-major cinderella versus major conference powerhouse.

    And I have no problem with a few cinderella teams winnning a few games and making a little run -- I just get tired of people acting as if the tournament -- which is still to decide a national championship, by the way -- has to be defined by upsets and cinderellas or else it is somehow lame.

    I enjoy watching the best teams with the best players play against each other.
     
  12. Pancamo

    Pancamo Active Member

    What will separate Lawson from the great ones will be his jump shot. Nothing to do with heart.
     
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