Friday, March 12, 2010

USC, UCLA advance to semifinals with wins Friday

USC capitalized on a few key Oregon turnovers to narrowly beat them, 80-76 last night. It was disappointing, but it was a good game.

The UCLA-Oregon State game almost put me to sleep. UCLA is good enough where they had a bit of a breakdown at the end of the game and let OSU catch up, but they still whooped them 60-44.

UCLA coaches watched the first game, and Stanford coaches watched both games. Lisa Leslie, who looks to be ready to give birth any second, and her husband were also in press row. So were a few other basketball celebrities, the Sparks executive staff and some spare ESPN reporters.

I will be back in the house for the championship game Sunday. I hope it's a good matchup.



First-half action during the Oregon-USC game.



Duck Micaela Cocks take the free throw in the second half.



UCLA supastah Jasmine Dixon puts one up in the first half of the UCLA-Oregon State game.



Bruin Moniquee Alexander is actually trying to do something under the basket (!)



Cool things 1: the Oregon band was spirited in a way that I'm used to from the great bands, i.e. some low-key heckling of the USC team. "If this is your home court, where are all your fans?" one yelled. Audience members were chuckling.



Cool things 2: OOO, UCLA players have some cool custom-made shoes.



Very uncool thing: the Oregon State band. Their attempts at heckling went way across the line. When UCLA forward Christina Nzekwe went to the free throw line in the first half, one of the OSU band members shouted at her: "You look like a man!"

No audience members laughed. I was stunned. And so glad Christina was all the way across the court, so that maybe she didn't hear that.

I know Christina, and she's one of the nicest kids you're going to meet. I wonder why people don't stop to think, when they say things like that, that the player's family, friends and former coaches could be sitting there.

I'm an Oregon graduate and never liked OSU. I hate them now.


Someone I know is covering the event for the website for which they write, and asked UCLA Coach Nikki Caldwell how she motivates her team. The LA Times got the exchange partially right in this write up. The moderator ended it after Caldwell said that days off are a motivator for the players too, and the reporter nodded and acknowledged that she knew that, as she followed the coaching staff and players on twitter. Caldwell found that amusing, and the moderator then said "let's wrap it up."

Some of the media in the room didn't seem to know whether or not Caldwell was serious in her comments, and I know it's because they don't understand the Tennessee Way. They're learning, though. And as Caldwell and the Bruins keep ascending the basketball ladder, they'll figure it out even more.

Here are two write-ups on the games:

USC capitalized on a crucial Oregon turnover in the waning seconds of Friday night's quarterfinal matchup to top the Ducks, 80-76, and advance to the next round.

The neck-and-neck game, which saw the two teams exchange leads eight times in the first half alone, went down to the last minute. Oregon had built a five point lead - 64-59 - with more than nine minutes to go, when USC went on an 11-3 run. The Trojan's defense also disrupted the Ducks, causing them to turn the ball over five times in the next four minutes.

Dueling free throws made it a 73-71 USC lead with just under a minute to play. But Trojan point guard Ashley Corral hit a long-range three-point shot at the 24-second mark to put her team up by five. Duck sophomore guard Nia Jackson then calmly drove to the hoop, put it in and was fouled. She nailed the free shot to put her team within two points with 16 seconds to go.

Oregon then fouled Jacki Gemelos, who hit both free throws. But on the Ducks' next possession, senior guard Taylor Lilley lost the ball out of bounds with 10 seconds to go. Oregon had no choice but to foul, and Gemelos again made both free throws, putting the game out of reach for the Ducks.

Lilley lead all scorers with 22 points. Briana Gilbreath had 19 for the Trojans, including 15 in the second half. Jackson and Oregon forward Victoria Kenyon each had 18, and Corral put up 16 for USC.

Oregon Coach Paul Westhead said that while his players' efforts were laudable, their opponents had more at the end.

"SC made some big shots in the last minute, and that was the difference in the game," he said.

USC Coach Michael Cooper acknowledged that Oregon's up-tempo game style kept the Trojans on their toes.

"They were running and running and running, and that took a toll on us in the first half," he said. "You know when you play Oregon that you've got to put on your track shoes and run with them."

Cooper claimed that when USC was behind, he "wasn't fearful." At the same time, he recognized that the game could have gone either way.

"(This victory) means that our team was better on this particular night," he said.

Both coaches are in their first years at their respective schools, and both teams have shown notable improvements under them: USC's, most notably in its standings, finishing third in the Pac-10; Oregon's, in its players.

Jackson and Lilley, who spoke after the game, are probably the players who seem to have improved the most under Westhead. Lilley, a senior, didn't make any all- Pac-10 Tournament last year, but seems destined to make one this weekend. Jackson has played all season with a passion that Oregon fans haven't seen before. She acknowledged that her game has "changed a lot" in playing for her new coach.

"He has given me a lot of confidence," Jackson said of Westhead. "He's given a lot of confidence to the entire team."

________________________________________________

UCLA routed Oregon State Friday in the Pac 10 Tournament quarterfinals, 60-44.

The Bruins, who were never seriously challenged by the tenth-seeded Beavers, jumped out to a quick 7-0 lead to begin the game before their opponents were finally able to respond at the 17:01 mark. UCLA lead 37-18 at the half, and were ahead by as many as 21 points in the second period.

With 5:11 to go, OSU went on a small run and cut the lead to where it eventually was at game's end. This lack of response, coupled with the Bruins' 23 turnovers on the night, was cause for concern for Coach Nikki Caldwell, who said after the game that she was disappointed in her team's effort.

"We worked hard all week, but we didn't play together as a unit (tonight)," she said. "There was a lot of individual play out there, and that's not who we are. We got away from the little things."

Caldwell, whos main refrain is for the Bruins to play a full 40-minute game, acknowledged her team is still working on that. And she noted that sophomore forward Jasmine Dixon, who had 14 points on the night, and freshman forward Markel Walker, who added 10, were two of the strongest players on the squad. But Caldwell also noted that UCLA needs more.

"We have two very good players in Walker and Dixon, and they will be among the best in the country," she said. "But we still need to find that leader who's going to step up and lead this team."

The Bruins will face cross-town rival USC in today's semifinal matchup. The flame on the traditional rivalry was turned up several degrees in January, when Trojan Coach Michael Cooper cursed UCLA in a press conference following a game. The Bruins responded a few weeks later by routing the Trojans.

Both coach and players acknowledged that today's game would probably be intense.

"We understand that SC is a team that's very good at home, and we need to adapt to that because they'll be very competitive here," Caldwell said. "It's about what we put on the floor tomorrow."

Senior guard Erica Tukiainen added, "We have to execute our game plan and play Bruin basketball."

Asked how she motivates her team, Caldwell said it begins with self-discipline.

"They won't cheat each other by cheating practices," she said. "They run their own practices, they do their own scouting reports, they watch film. It's on them."

"I tell them, 'we coaches are done with our college careers. This is about you having your best career.'"

Caldwell said she makes practices competitive, with every drill having winners and losers. This increases player intensity. She also adds fun to the end of some sessions.

"They like it when we play dodgeball - they really do," Caldwell said. "Days off are a motivation too."

Conference tournaments in full effect

Every tourney has a preview story and a results story, so it seems.

In the Big 12, today was Brittney Griner's first game back for Baylor since punching an opponent last week. But it didn't seem to do much good, as Oklahoma beat the Bears, 59-54.

Then there was the fact that Oregon Coach Paul Westhead and USC Coach Michael Cooper apparently have history. But it was the Trojans who prevailed tonight, and they advance to the Pac-10 Tournament semifinals tomorrow.

Stanford does have goals in the Pac-10 tourney. Because they don't need to make it a goal to kick the asses of the other teams - that's a given. They did beat Arizona, 72-52 today in the quarterfinals.

Cal beat Arizona State today by 10.

In the meantime, the NCAA continues to assign tournament locations to cities that don't have a team in the mix. What a bunch of knuckleheads.

Hoopfeed asked today: wanna create a bracket?

And Cal State Northridge fired Coach Staci Schulz today after five seasons.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Thursday night's second-round California results

From the LA Times:

GIRLS
DIVISION I
Long Beach Poly 81, Bakersfield Stockdale 50
Summit 63, Corona Santiago 58
Santa Monica 59, Canyon Springs 56 (OT)
Fresno Clovis West 65, San Diego 59

DIVISION II
Brea Olinda 68, Diamond Ranch 41
Oakhurst Yosemite 76, Edison 75
Hanford 80, Beverly Hills 39
Mater Dei 74, Villa Park 35

DIVISION III
Santa Margarita 42, Buena 39
Bishop Amat 70, Agoura 61
Inglewood 46, Muir 41
Spring Valley Mount Miguel 64, Barstow 40

DIVISION IV
Harvard-Westlake 61, Bell-Jeff 59
Santa Maria St. Joseph 70, Los Angeles CES 48
Bishop Montgomery 69, La Jolla Bishop's 65
La Jolla Country Day 71, Gardena Serra 58

DIVISION V
St. Anthony 62, Visalia Central Valley Christian 42
St. Bernard 60, Escondido Christian Life Academy 45
Montclair Prep 61, Fresno Christian 37
View Park 69, Calexico Vincent Memorial 30

Third round Saturday, when the competition only gets tougher.

Caldwell, Griner, multi-tasking

UCLA Coach Nikki Caldwell got more love from the LA Times today. Nothing we haven't read or known before, but it's nice to see the Pac-10 Coach of the Year getting ink.

In light of the recent Brittney Griner punching incident, the Oklahoma asks: is the women's game getting more physical? Duh. It starts at the high school level. See summer 2008 discussion on this blog, or talk to any girls basketball coach.

Meghan Gardler of UConn was efficient enough to fix her hair in time to shoot a three in her team's recent win over West Virginia in the Big East championship. I see that kind of multi-tasking so much at the high school level. I guess college women do it too.

Rate Candace Parker's new shoe

I like the basic design, and I would buy this style, because I've always liked black and blue together.

But this design is wack. Heyuullll naw. But I'm not a girly girl.

What do you all think?

Gatorade/ESPN Rise high school players of the year

I love these awards because they name a top player for every state:

• Alabama: Kaneisha Horn, F, Ramsay (Birmingham, Ala.)

• Alaska: Keiahnna Engel, G, Dimond (Anchorage, Alaska)

• Arizona: Rebecca Woodberry, F, Tolleson (Tolleson, Ariz.)

• Arkansas: Morgan Hook, PG, Rogers, (Rogers, Ark.)

• California: Chelsea Gray, G, St. Mary's (Stockton, Calif.): Read More

• Colorado: Quincey Noonan, G, Legacy (Broomfield, Colo.)

• Connecticut: Kastine Evans, G, Norwich Free Academy (Norwich, Conn.)

• Delaware: Betnijah Laney, F, Smyrna (Smyrna, Del.)

• District of Columbia: Nicola Zimmer, PG, St. John's College (Washington, D.C.)

• Florida: Dawnn Maye, PG, Dillard (Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.): Read More

• Georgia: Kayla Lewis, G/F, Southwest DeKalb (Decatur, Ga.)

• Hawaii: Maiki Viela, G, Lahainaluna (Lahaina, Hawaii)

• Idaho: Katelyn Loper, G, Post Falls (Post Falls, Idaho)

• Illinois: Tricia Liston, G/F, Fenwick (Oak Park, Ill.)

• Indiana: Courtney Moses, G, Oak Hill (Converse, Ind.)

• Iowa: Kiah Stokes, C, Linn-Mar (Marion, Iowa)

• Kansas: Tiffany Bias, PG, Andover Central (Andover, Kan.)

• Kentucky: Sarah Beth Barnette, F, Lexington Christian Academy (Lexington, Ky.)

• Louisiana: Theresa Plaisance, C, Vandebilt Catholic (Houma, La.)

• Maine: Nicole Taylor, C, York (York, Maine)

• Maryland: Kelsey Wolfe, G, Seneca Valley (Germantown, Md.)

• Massachusetts: Lauren Battista, G/F, Oliver Ames (North Easton, Mass.)

• Michigan: Madison Williams, C, Detroit Country Day School (Beverly Hills, Mich.)

• Minnesota: Sari Noga, G, Parkers Prairie (Parkers Prairie, Minn.)

• Mississippi: Valencia McFarland, PG, Raymond (Raymond, Miss.)

• Missouri: Jazmin Hitchens, F, Incarnate Word Academy (St. Louis, Mo.)

• Montana: Lexie Nelson, G, Butte (Butte, Mont.)

• Nebraska: Jordan Hooper, F, Alliance (Alliance, Neb.)

• Nevada: Alexis Byrd, G, Centennial (Las Vegas, Nev.)

• New Hampshire: Tiffany Ruffin, PG, Winnacunnet (Hampton, N.H.)

• New Jersey: Haley Peters, F, Peddie School (Hightstown, N.J.)

• New Mexico: Kya DeGarmo, PG, Eldorado (Albuquerque, N.M.)

• New York: Bria Hartley, PG, North Babylon (North Babylon, N.Y.): Read More

• North Carolina: Cierra Burdick, G/F, Butler (Matthews, N.C.)

• North Dakota: Meghan Roehrich, G, Fargo South (Fargo, N.D.)

• Ohio: Amy Scullion, G/F, Salem (Salem, Ohio): Read More

• Oklahoma: Richa Jackson, G/F, Midwest City (Midwest City, Okla.)

• Oregon: Jen Reese, F, Clackamas (Clackamas, Ore.)

• Pennsylvania: Kayla McBride, G, Villa Maria Academy (Erie, Pa.)

• Rhode Island: Allie Jones, C, South Kingstown (Wakefield, R.I.)

• South Carolina: Kayla Jenerette, G, Travelers Rest (Travelers Rest, S.C.)

• South Dakota: Shaunteva Ashley, G, Roosevelt (Sioux Falls, S.D.)

• Tennessee: Taylor Hall, F, Morristown-Hamblen High School West (Morristown, Tenn.)

• Texas: Chiney Ogwumike, F, Cy-Fair (Cypress, Texas): Read More

• Utah: Lexi Eaton, G, Springville (Springville, Utah)

• Vermont: Allison Gannon, F, Champlain Valley Union (Hinesburg, Vt.)

• Virginia: Elizabeth Williams, C, Princess Anne (Virginia Beach, Va.)

• Washington: Mercedes Wetmore, PG, Auburn Riverside (Auburn, Wash.)

• West Virginia: Mariah Byard, G, North Marion (Farmington, W.Va.)

• Wisconsin: Nicole Griffin, C, Milwaukee Vincent (Milwaukee, Wis.)

• Wyoming: Jordan Kelley, PG, Campbell County (Gillette, Wyo.)

Surprise! California's is not Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis and Oregon's isn't Shoni Schimmel. Fun stuff.

No last-minute head games this year for Lauren Jackson

She just re-signed with the Seattle Storm. It's nice to see her acknowledge her connection with Storm fans.

In other WNBA news, the Silver Stars have acquired Michelle Snow. Q has an awesome analysis on it.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Last night's first-round results; tomorrow's schedule

Last night's state playoff scores:

DIVISION I
Long Beach Poly 71, Washington 27
Bakersfield Stockdale 78, Carson 72
Summit 65, Ayala 52
Corona Santiago 68, Poway 55
Santa Monica 54, Narbonne 39
Canyon Springs 72, Etiwanda 62
San Diego 43, Troy 42
Fresno Clovis West 84, Taft 53

DIVISION II
Diamond Ranch 57, San Diego Westview 33
Oakhurst Yosemite 73, Granada Hills 49
Edison 71, Santee West Hills 52
Hanford 59, Ventura 46
Beverly Hills 77, Woodbridge 64
Villa Park 62, El Camino Real 48

DIVISION III
Santa Margarita 71, Monroe 46
Buena 67, Birmingham 46
Bishop Amat 72, San Diego Our Lady of Peace 57
Agoura 83, Fresno Clovis North 40
Inglewood 70, Tulare Western 19
Muir 52, Bakersfield Frontier 38
Barstow 73, Bakersfield Ridgeview 62
Spring Valley Mount Miguel 47, Orange Lutheran 46

DIVISION IV
Bell-Jeff 76, Corcoran 55
Santa Maria St. Joseph 59, San Luis Obispo Mission Prep 28
Los Angeles CES 70, Tollhouse Sierra 26
Bishop Montgomery 79, Oaks Christian 58
La Jolla Bishop's 79, Cerritos Valley Christian 54
Gardena Serra 62, Windward 43

DIVISION V
Visalia Central Valley Christian 69, North County Christian 38
St. Bernard 60, Chula Vista Calvary Christian 19
Escondido Christian Life Academy 57, Chadwick 52
Montclair Prep 68, Escondido Calvin Christian 23
Fresno Christian 53, Pasadena Poly 49
Calexico Vincent Memorial 37, Granada Hills Hillcrest Christian 26
View Park 79, Calvary Baptist 13

Tomorrow night's pairings:

DIVISION I
Bakersfield Stockdale (28-4) at #1 Long Beach Poly (28-2)
Summit (25-6) at #4 Corona Santiago (30-3)
Canyon Springs (27-3) at #3 Santa Monica (26-6)
San Diego (29-5) at #2 Fresno Clovis West (25-4)

DIVISION II
Diamond Ranch (27-2) at #1 Brea Olinda (30-2)
Edison (23-5) at Oakhurst Yosemite (29-3)
Beverly Hills (21-12) at #3 Hanford (29-3)
Villa Park (25-7) at #2 Mater Dei (28-1), 6 p.m.

DIVISION III
Buena (22-9) at #1 Santa Margarita (24-6), 6 p.m.
Bishop Amat (24-7) at #4 Agoura (30-1)
Muir (22-8) at #3 Inglewood (27-5)
Barstow (24-3) at #2 Spring Valley Mount Miguel (31-2), 6 p.m.

DIVISION IV
Bell-Jeff (25-6) at #1 Harvard-Westlake (30-1)
Santa Maria St. Joseph (26-4) at #4 Los Angeles CES (30-5)
La Jolla Bishop's (26-7) at #3 Bishop Montgomery (27-7)
Gardena Serra (25-7) at #2 La Jolla Country Day (25-3), 6:30 p.m.

DIVISION V
Visalia Central Valley Christian (21-7) at #1 St. Anthony (22-9), 6 p.m.
St. Bernard (19-14) vs. #4 Escondido Christian Life Academy (25-3) at San Diego Jewish Academy
Fresno Christian (22-7) at #3 Montclair Prep (22-7)
Calexico Vincent Memorial (20-6) vs. #2 View Park (28-6) at Crenshaw

Note: Regional semifinals, Saturday at school sites. Regional finals, Mar.20 at USC (Div. I-III) and Colony (Div. IV-V). State championships, Mar. 26-27 at Rabobank Arena (Bakersfield).

(Link at LA Times)

Sometime soon, when I get enough energy back, I'm going to muse about the CIF selections and seedings. No one understands them but the CIF.

What it takes to win a state title

Great advice from ESPN's Joy Hollingsworth to teams in the running for a state title. Five key ingredients to that achievement:

1. Teamwork
It takes a team to win the "ship" and not just the MVP. Don't be a ball hog with a "get mine" attitude. Play for the name on the front on your jersey. Riding the bench is tough, but you're just as important as a player scoring the points. Go crazy on the sidelines. You have the best seat in the house and the team needs your energy.

2. Mental Toughness
You have to be mentally tough to play back-to-back games at a high level in a short period of time. One has to visualize themselves throwing a dime, shooting lights out, or setting a solid screen. Don't get frustrated and show your emotions. A missed layup or bad pass can make the ultimate goal look a little blurry but you have to stay focused.

3. Heart
It's not about who has the most hops, tightest handles or killer crossovers. The question is who has the biggest heart? State champions leave their heart on the floor every night from the 3-point line, middle of the key or on the bench. A burning desire and deep passion is essential to finish on top. Make the beat of your heart felt by every team you play.

4. Swagger
Your game swagger should be set to "high" at all times. Don't be a cocky team which looks lazy -- like walking all through warm-ups. Keep your head in the sky but your feet on the ground. A certain level of confidence, with a dose of humility is needed to win games. Your team should thrive under pressure and embrace different challenges.

5. Leadership
The final and most important component is leadership. A commander-in-chief is needed to lead the troops in battle. One of the great characteristics of a leader is knowing when to lead and when to follow. Sometimes you have to ride the coattail of a teammate instead of putting the team on your back.

Tulsa Shock will sign Marion Jones today

Whatever.