Tuesday Hoops Notebook: Is Texas Toast?
By JOHN P. WISE
One Great Season
With all that talent, I really want to like Texas, but there is something seriously wrong with Rick Barnes' bunch.
I don't know why the Longhorns can't seem to put together a complete game the last few weeks. After starting 17-0 and earning their first-ever No. 1 ranking, a loss at Kansas State on Jan. 18 triggered the team's current 2-5 stretch.
Fortunately for the Horns, they can go 4-3 the rest of the way to finish 23-8 and 9-7 in the Big 12 heading into the conference tournament and probably earn a 5 seed in the NCAA Tournament. That's not too terrible.
+ REVIEW: Who's Saying What About Super Bowl XLVI?
+ LIST: Nine Things I Hate About The Super Bowl
+ VIDEO: Be ... A Nerd ... Be Be A Nerd
+ TELEVISION: 12 Must-See NCAA Games Down The Stretch
+ ARTICLE: The Sexiest T-Shirt In The World Lives Here
+ LIST: Top 10 Play-By-Play Men In College Basketball
+ LIST: Top 10 Analysts In College Basketball
Or, Barnes can get his team figured out somewhere along the way and Texas can get back to being the team we saw in the first two months of the season, the team many expected to reach the Final Four. A team that doesn't spend 11 straight scoreless minutes against the No. 1 team in the country, as it did against visiting Kansas Monday night. A team that doesn't commit 17 turnovers that lead to 27 points for the opposition.
Until I see such a turnaround, however, Texas looks like it will need to play near-perfect basketball just to advance past the second round.
Even to achieve that 4-3 finish, Texas needs to get back to playing physically, committing itself to the glass and earning better looks. The Longhorns seem to launch many contested shots. Maybe it's just a coincidence that they play teams who play their best defensive games. Or maybe there's just not enough movement in Texas' sets and therefore open looks are scarce.
Whatever the reason, Texas has some time -- not much, but some -- to get things figured out and get back on the winning track.
'NOVA LOOKING NICE: Guards and depth, guards and depth, guards and depth.
That's what will take Villanova back to the Final Four this year.
Even in their loss Saturday at Georgetown, during which the Hoyas built a 23-point lead, the Wildcats played hard the entire time and because of that, it seemed like Villanova was always within striking distance, even late in the game.
But Monday's impressive win at No. 4 West Virginia was another reminder that the Wildcats' backcourt is one of the best in the country, and that few teams can boast an 11-man rotation the way Villanova does sometimes.
FINAL FOUR PICKS: My projected Final Four sees one change this week, and it involves the two teams described above. I thought Texas might have turned the corner with a nice road win at Oklahoma State last week, but I'm obviously hurrying far away from that pick now. I had Villanova in the Elite Eight, but the Wildcats are now my pick to win the West.
+ EAST: Syracuse (West Virginia)
+ SOUTH: Kentucky (Duke)
+ MIDWEST: Kansas (Michigan State)
+ WEST: Villanova (Gonzaga)
+ SLEEPER: Siena
TUBE TIME: Keep your schedule open for the following games this week:
+ Tuesday: Tennessee at Vanderbilt (7 p.m. ET, ESPN)
+ Tuesday: Purdue at Michigan State (9 p.m. ET, ESPN)
+ Wednesday: Duke at North Carolina (9 p.m. ET, ESPN)
+ Thursday: Washington at California (9 p.m. ET, ESPN2)
+ Thursday: St. Mary's at Gonzaga (11 p.m. ET, ESPN2)
+ Friday: West Virginia at Pittsburgh (9 p.m. ET, ESPN)
+ Saturday: Tennessee at Kentucky (9 p.m. ET, ESPN)
Are you following me on Twitter? @onegreatseason | @johnpwise
Reader Comments (3)
The Big East is such a back-breaking conference that I fear whoever wins the conference tournament won't have enough left when the real tournament starts. If you're a team like Villanova or Syracuse, wouldn't it be in your best interest to just use the conference tournament to work on things and not worry too much about winning? Heck, I guess you could say that about any team in the top 5. You already have a high (if not #1) seed locked up, so don't sweat the conference tournament.
Loomis, that's a pretty revolutionary take, but not a bad one by any stretch. Remember when Syracuse was on the bubble heading into the Big East tournament a few years back? They had to win four games in four days ... and did it! Even beat the Bearcats along the way if I recall. Winning that tournamnet was a huge confidence builder, right? They ended up running out of gas and losing in the NCAA first round five days later.
You could also say that maybe they were able to win the conference tournament because some of the competition didn't need the win as badly. Not the Bearcats though. They just got beat by a better team.