Mikan Drill – 17 March 2011

  1. Corey “Homicide” Williams.  Think you know?  2004 EBC MVP… and again in 2005.  Kills NBA guards on a regular in NY.  Signed to K1X…
  2. We’re SO HAPPY that it’s Tourney season in the NCAA.  We love the fairytale stories, the drama, the passion, the intensity… and how many times the 12th seeds upset the 5th seeds
  3. Kemba Walker is a beast… but UConn has work to do.
  4. Easy to de-humanise our basketball stars.  Beckley brings it back; Wade is playing better because he has his kids home
  5. Speaking of Hoopspeak, of which we were just speaking, let’s speak of this great article about Wilt.
  6. Do you know who won the Russian Cup?  WHY NOT?
  7. A while ago we talked about the FIBA 3×3 Tourney.  This article says they want to make it an international competition FOREVER.  Thoughts?  Also, why are we yelling so much today?
  8. It’s always heartbreaking to see great players taken out of the game through injury.  Redd doesn’t want to be in that discussion.
  9. McCallum argues March Madness is not better than the NBA… it’s a conversation as old as the sky-hook, but every now and again someone gets serious about it...
    “Enjoy it. Celebrate it. But at the same time don’t stare at the glorious mosh pit that is March Madness and pretend you’re watching the ballet.”
  10. Ever wondered whether the referees effect a team’s style of play?  As in, do the types of calls they make change how a team deals with situations?  The NCAA thinks so.
  11. “That” Fab Five documentary has been a huge success in terms of revitalising the discussion over one of the most influential teams in basketball history.  To this day we still remember the way those players challenged the status quo and seemingly changed the conventions of the game and the institutions around them.  This documentary did however come with some heat; by now you will have seen the clip of Jalen and the team basically trash Duke and its “Uncle Toms”.  If you’re not American, google that term… it’s not nice.  Grant Hill comes back with the classiest response we’ve ever seen.  EVER.  In the NY Times no less.  Owners, GMs, Coaches, Players, take note.  Well done Mr Hill.

Mikan Drill – 1 December 2010

  1. It makes us happy to know we’re not the only ones hyped about NCAA basketball before the season starts.  Go Blue Devils.
  2. Speaking of which, nice ACC preview.  If you’re in the US, and can make it there, check out the Missouri/Georgetown game… that will be a barnburner.
  3. HoopSpeak has a sexy new banner, and a great post on Andre Miller.  Can you name which team Miller won a championship with?
  4. If you’re a passionate fan, you usually love not only your team but the organisation around it.  So it must SUCK if you’re a Knicks fan to hear that your cross-town rivals are dissing your management… granted, this is the same organisation that managed to annihilate their last Finals team (Spree, Camby, Grandmama), trade for a million point guards, sexually assault their female staff and basically turn the Mecca of Hoops into a sad footnote… and they traded away Lee.  Sigh.
  5. We all know that one player that manages to sneak in the extra step on drives to the bucket.  While we curse and flout our knowledge of the NBA and FIBA rulebooks, the simple truth is that we all wish we had that extra step… behold D-Wade.
  6. Can Dwight become MVP this season?
  7. 2K11.  Now in real life.
  8. Get on with the game, Stephen Jackson.
    “Charlotte Bobcats coach Larry Brown needs Stephen Jackson to stop getting himself tossed from basketball games… Seventeen games into the season Jackson has committed six technical fouls, tying him with Orlando’s Dwight Howard for most in the league. If he reaches 16, he’ll serve an automatic one-game suspension, but it might not take that long.”
  9. Reason #647 why the NBL is just plain strange.
  10. Does LBJ need to just grow up?
    “The fundamental problem for Spoelstra isn’t that James doesn’t respect coaches – he doesn’t respect people. Give LeBron this, though: He’s learned to live one way with the television light on, and another with it off. He treats everyone like a servant, because that’s what the system taught him as a teenage prodigy. To James, the coach isn’t there to mold him into the team dynamic. He’s there to serve him. Wade was one of the Team USA players who’d watch incredulously as James would throw a bowl of fries back at a renowned chef and bark, ‘They’re cold!’ Or throw his sweaty practice jersey across the court and command a team administrator to go pick it up.”
  11. On that note, James wants his jersey retired in Cleveland?  Really?
  12. Home sweet home… sort of.
    “The novelty of Oklahoma City serving as the New Orleans Hornets’ temporary home from 2005-07 seems to have all but disappeared. Crowd reaction during pre-game introductions drew only polite applause for Chris Paul and David West.”
  13. Texas on top in SI’s NBA power rankings.
  14. The Spurs are taking it back to their ABA roots, playing up-tempo and making magic happen on the court.  Just sayin.

Mikan Drill – 15 November 2010

  1. Patty Mills leaves no doubt as to where he’s from… only an Aussie…
  2. NBA Mate with their predictions for this year… bye-bye Bobcats?
  3. Another solid Forward in Utah.  Some trends are worth repeating.
  4. NBA Style(?)…
  5. How Ray-Ray torched the Heat, from HoopSpeak.
  6. You know those new wristbands everyone seems to be wearing?  We’re not passing any judgement on them, but Dejuan Blair just got a double-double (finally) while wearing one.  Just sayin.  PS Jefferson threw in the word Placebo.  Just sayin.
  7. So the SuperFriends are awesome… against bad teams.  This is why TrueHoop rocks.
  8. Why the Wizards are the NBA League Pass faves.
  9. We’re not fans of the Nash trade rumours.  Neither are the guys at Valley of the Suns.
  10. Rondo and Allen now have their flows figured out. Everyone else better be scared.
  11. Huge win for CSKA Moscow.
  12. We’re starting a fund to purchase Dr Naismith’s original rules of basketball.  Anyone care to chip in?
  13. Is it too early to think of the 2011 NCAA March Madness?  In the meantime, reminisce about the current champs, Duke.
  14. After routing MIA, Paul Pierce tweeted “It’s been a pleasure bringing my talents to South Beach.  Now on to Memphis.”  Excellent.
  15. Come on Greg Oden, stay healthy
  16. Hasn’t happened since ’82… show ‘em how to do it, Kevin Love.

Fast Break – NCAA Basketball Violations

There is something beautiful about sport.  Something poetic.  Something noble.

To so many, love for their sport stems from the elegance in simplicity that it offers.  Of course this is just a more verbose way of saying “I just love to play.”

My chosen sport, basketball, has taken me through so many highs and lows in life.  It has been as good a friend as any other I have had the privilege to meet, and has been as consistent a presence as my own family.

Our game has also shown an incredible ability to do good beyond the court.  Organisations like the Big Bangs and Peace Players are two great examples of that.

There are times, however, when the sport is dishonored in such blatant, brazen, unjustifiable fashion that one wonders whether as a community we are losing sight of what is really important about basketball, about sport.

From A Stern Warning:

“It has been a disastrous week for powerhouse basketball schools throughout the NCAA. Kansas was the first to fall with details emerging about a ticket scalping scam orchestrated by a pair of brokers.

Connecticut came next, once the Nate Miles saga came to a predictable end.

Now the one that everyone has been waiting for, Coach Cal, and his University of Kentucky Wildcats are under investigation for the recruiting practices surrounding star freshman guard Eric Bledsoe. Word is that Bledsoe received improper benefits by having his high school apartment paid for by Kentucky, in an attempt to render him geographically eligible to play for powerhouse Alabama high school, and eventual 5A champions, Parker High School. Bledsoe’s high school head coach also supposedly demanded large sums of cash as part of his recruitment.”

The NCAA was created especially to protect the amateur nature of collegiate sports in the United States, taking it upon itself as an integral part of its charter the promotion of student-athletics, rather than just athletics for a student fan-base.  At its very core is the principle of athletics being a secondary, though no less important, part of colleges around the country.

And yet as the sponsorship, prize, advertising and merchandising incomes continuously rose throughout the years, the allure of athletic “business” became too great.  Facilities became world class, rooms and classes created especially and exclusively for athletes, more investment was made on students as players rather than as “mere” students, and the entire concept of “amateur” was discarded, along with any morals, it seems.

Of course this is not an all-encompassing statement.  There are many, many colleges and programs who have kept their reputations clean in spite of all the money floating around (we salute you, Duke and Texas).

Yet even 1 program in disgrace brings dishonor to the entire game.

Some dis-honorable mentions in NCAA Basketball history:

  • University of Georgia, 2004
    “The National Collegiate Athletics Association Division I Committee on Infractions on Aug. 5 placed the University of Georgia on probation for four years, retroactive to April 17, 2004, for violations of NCAA bylaws regarding recruiting inducements, unethical conduct, academic fraud and extra benefits in the men’s basketball program. ”
  • University of Michigan, 1996
    Fab Five, Fab Mistakes
  • University of California at Los Angelas, 1964-75
    Booster Sam Gilbert funneled so much money to players that NCAA probationary poster boy Jerry Tarkanian quipped, “The only team with a higher payroll was the Lakers.” The NCAA didn’t take action until 1981, by which point Wooden and his ten titles had been retired for six years.
  • University of Massachusetts, 1996
    No 1. Team in the country, Final Four participant… and payments to players…  fail.
  • Boston College, 1978
    A game of gangsters
  • Special mentions: Oklahoma, Villanova, Memphis

While the NCAA has levied fines, stripped competition points and even removed teams from competitions, the mere fact that such grave infractions continue to happen means that more must be done to dissuade programs from even thinking of pushing the boundaries.  I would love to see punishments extended to the entire school, such as a year’s ban on receiving alumni contributions, for example, however in the meantime, it is up to the fans, supporters and alumni to enforce our high expectations of our teams’ not just on the court, but off of it as well.

It’s not good enough to pass it off as being “part of the game”.

We fell in love with this game for a very different set of reasons from those with which we now use to justify or excuse the continued violations of some programs.

Get your teams in order, gentlemen, before you’re no longer seen as student-athletes, but pawns.  I hope it’s not too late.