Monday, March 8, 2021

I'll Be Quirky: Elon

Not that Simon, who likes to make drawings.

The championship defense continued Sunday morning and early afternoon when Jalen Ray had a classic senior moment by scoring a career-high 34 points as the Dutchmen came back from their three-week pause to pull away late from Delaware, 83-75. The Dutchmen will look to once again advance to the championship game tonight, when they face eighth-seeded Elon — yup, that happened — in the first semifinal. Here’s a look back at the win over the Blue Hens and a hopeful look ahead to the Phoenix.


THE MOST RECENT GAME SUMMARIZED IN ONE PARAGRAPH

Jalen Ray went all JWF as he scored 22 points in the second half to lift the Dutchmen past Delaware in a game far tighter than the final score indicated. There were 13 ties and 20 lead changes and neither team led by more than seven points before Ray (who else?) drained a tie-breaking jumper with 6:39 left to begin a game-ending 22-14 run. Ray and fellow senior Tareq Coburn scored the first 11 points in the run. Caleb Burgess (11 points, nine rebounds, eight assists) nearly had a triple-double while Issac Kante (14 points, 13 rebounds) posted a double-double. Coburn was limited to just 22 minutes due to four fouls but scored 12 points. 


3 STARS OF THE GAME (vs. Delaware 3/7)

3: Jalen Ray

2: Caleb Burgess

1: Isaac Kante


SEASON STANDINGS

Jalen Ray 42

Isaac Kante 31

Tareq Coburn 24

Caleb Burgess 18

KVonn Cramer 13

Omar Silverio 3

Kevin Schutte 1


WAS THIS A UNICORN SCORE?

No but considering it’d been three weeks since the Dutchmen played and four weeks since they won a game, we’re not complaining about the lack of unicorn scores anymore. The Dutchmen previously beat Iona 83-75 on Dec. 29, 2011. 


As you no doubt know by now, the Dutchmen have yet to record a unicorn score this season. The Dutchmen recorded 13 unicorn score victories last season, three more than in 2018-19, which was when we first started tracking unicorn scores. The term unicorn score was coined by Mets superfan, historian and blogger Greg Prince to describe a score by which the Mets had never previously won


THE FLYING DUTCHMEN AFTER TWENTY-TWO GAMES

With Sunday’s win, the Dutchmen improved to 13-9, which is tied for the 30th-best start in school history. Just two other teams have opened 13-9, most recently the 2017-18 squad. Here is how some notable Hofstra teams have fared through 22 games.


NCAA DIVISION I TOURNAMENT TEAMS

1975-76: 12-10 (ended a season-long pattern of never being more than one game over or under .500)

1976-77: 16-6 (win in 22nd game marked second win of nine-game winning streak that carried Dutchmen into the NCAAs)

1999-2000: 17-5 (most recent 17-5 start, win in 22nd game marked final win of 10-game winning streak)

2000-01: 18-4 (win in 22nd game marked 10th win in program-record 18-game winning streak)

2019-20 (IT COUNTS TO US): 15-7


NIT TEAMS

1998-99: 15-7

2004-05: 15-7

2005-06: 18-4 (most recent 18-4 start)

2006-07: 16-6 

2015-16: 16-6 (most recent 16-6 start)

2018-19: 19-3 (win in 22nd game marked final win in the 16-game winning streak)


NCAA DIVISION II TOURNAMENT TEAMS

1958-59: 17-5

1961-62: 19-3 

1962-63: 16-6 (fifth win of 11-game winning streak)

1963-64: 18-4


Some other notable 22-game records:


2016-17: 10-12 (most recent 10-12 start)

2014-15: 14-8 (most recent 14-8 start)

2013-14: 7-15 (most recent 7-15 start, Joe Mihalich’s first team)

2012-13: 5-17 (most recent 5-17 start, tied for worst 22-game record in school history)

1995-96: 7-15 (loss in 22nd game marked eighth loss of Jay Wright-era record nine-game losing streak)

1994-95: 7-15 (Jay Wright’s first year)

1993-94: 5-17 (wins in games 21-22 were the first back-to-back wins all season; VBK’s last year)

1992-93: 6-16 (most recent 6-16 start)

1991-92: 14-8 (win in 22nd game was third in nine-game winning streak that ended in ECC title game)

1990-91: 12-10 (most recent 12-10 start)

1988-89: 9-13 (most recent 9-13 start)

1987-88: 5-17 (win in 22nd game snapped program-record 12-game losing streak)

1986-87: 8-14 (most reent 8-14 start)

1985-86: 13-9 (first and only other 13-9 start)

1984-85: 11-11 (most recent 11-11 start)

1981-82: 11-11 (at .500 for the last time, fourth loss of eight-game losing streak)

1978-79: 8-14 (last win of season and last win of Roger Gaeckler’s tenure)

1974-75: 8-13 (last loss of season)

1973-74: 6-16 (last win of season)

1972-73: 8-13 (last win of season)

1971-72: 11-11 (at .500 for the last time, first loss of season-ending four-game losing streak)

1970-71: 14-8 (first win of season-ending five-game winning streak)

1959-60: 21-1 (only 21-1 start & Hofstra’s winningest team, percentage-wise; win in 22nd game was 11th win of season-ending 13-game winning streak)

1955-56: 20-2 (only 20-2 start)

1946-47: 16-6 (last loss of season)


Hofstra has never been 22-0, 4-18, 4-19, 1-21 or 0-22 through 22 games. 


The following seasons were completed in fewer than 22 games: 1947-48 (13-6), 1945-46 (12-7), 1943-44 (7-12), 1944-45 (8-13), 1943-44 (7-12), 1942-43 (15-6), 1941-42 (15-6), 1940-41 (13-7), 1939-40 (12-9), 1938-39 (10-8), 1937-38 (10-4), 1936-37 (10-7).


Full records not available for the following seasons: 1936-37, 1941-42, 1942-43, 1945-46, 1948-49, 1951-52, 1954-55, 1957-58.


This feature is inspired by Greg Prince, who measures how the current Mets compare, record-wise, to previous teams through the same point in the season.


THIRD TIME CHARMED

The Dutchmen beat Delaware in the CAA Tournament for the third straight season after earning semifinal wins in 2019 and 2020. It’s the first time one team has beaten the same foe in three straight CAA Tournaments since UNC Wilmington beat Charleston in the quarterfinals in 2015 and 2016 and the championship game in 2017. It’s also the first time Hofstra has beaten the same foe in three consecutive conference tournaments.


RED-HOT RAY

Jalen Ray’s career-high 34 points were the most scored in a CAA Tournament game since — and you will be surprised to see this — Justin Wright-Foreman scored a tournament record 42 points in the 78-74 overtime win over Delaware in the 2019 semifinals. He is the fifth Hofstra player with at least one 34-point game since Joe Mihalich arrived prior to the 2013-14 season. In addition to Wright-Foreman, Desure Buie had two games in which he scored at least 34 points and Eli Pemberton and the late great Zeke Upshaw had one apiece.


RAY’S CLIMB CONTINUES

Jalen Ray responded to not gaining any ground on the Hofstra all-time scoring list in the Dutchmen’s previous game Feb. 14 by racking up 34 points and leapfrogging THREE players Sunday, when he surged past Mike Tilley, Kenny Adeleke and former teammate Desure Buie to move into 18th place. He enters tonight needing 17 points to surpass Dave Bell for 17th place.


16.) Barry White 1,344

17.) Dave Bell 1,330

18.) JALEN RAY 1,314

19.) Desure Buie 1,310

20.) Kenny Adeleke 1,296

21.) Mike Tilley 1,286

22.) Roberto Gittens 1,240

23.) Carlos Rivera 1,225

24t.) Demetrius Dudley 1,220

24t.) John Mills 1,220

26t.) Juan’ya Green 1,186

26t.) Brian Bernardi 1,186

28.) Rokas Gustys 1,184

29.) Ted Jackson 1,159

30.) Nathaniel Lester 1,139

31.) Wandy Williams 1,132

32.) Mike Moore 1,128

33.) Richie Swartz 1,107

34.) Ameen Tanksley 1,090

35.) Derrick Flowers 1,069

36.) Darius Burton 1,060

37.) Percy Johnson 1,045

38.) James Shaffer, 1,022

39.) John Irving 1,018


Prior to Feb. 14, Ray had gained at least a half-spot on the all-time scoring list in every game since joining the 1,000-point club on Dec. 22.


Dec. 22: Tied for 38th place

Jan. 2: 38th place

Jan. 3: 37th place

Jan. 7: 36th place

Jan. 9: 35th place

Jan. 15: 34th place

Jan. 17: 33rd place

Jan. 23: 29th place

Jan. 24: Tied for 28th place

Jan. 30: 28th place

Jan. 31: 25th place

Feb. 6: 23rd place

Feb. 7: 22nd place

Feb. 13: 21st place

Feb. 14: 21st place

Mar. 7: 18th place


CALEB A BURGEONING STAR

Sophomore point guard Caleb Burgess almost joined some select company Sunday, when he finished with 11 points, nine rebounds and eight assists. The nine rebounds were a career-high for Burgess, who closer than any Hofstra player to a triple-double since Juan’ya Green recorded the only one in program history on Dec. 28, 2014, when Green had 15 points, 10 rebounds and 10 assists against Long Island University. It was also the closest a player has come to a triple-double in the CAA Tournament since Mar. 12, 2019, when Northeastern’s Bolden Brace had 10 points, 10 rebounds and nine assists in the Huskies’ 82-74 win over Hofstra in the championship game.


KAN DO

Isaac Kante recorded his seventh double-double of the season Sunday, when he had  14 points and 13 rebounds. Kante had eight double-doubles last season.


THE FRESHMAN 200

Kvonn Cramer scored five points Sunday to increase his season total to 201 points. He is the 10th Hofstra freshman in the CAA era to score at least 200 points in his debut season as well as the first Hofstra freshman to score at least 100 points since Eli Pemberton scored 397 points in 2016-17.


1.) Antoine Agudio, 452 (2004-05)

2.) Charles Jenkins, 436 (2007-08)

3.) Kenny Adeleke, 433 (2001-02)

4.) Eli Pemberton, 297 (2016-17)

5.) Loren Stokes, 374 (2003-04)

6.) Chaz Williams, 325 (2009-10)

7.) Jamall Robinson, 312 (2013-14)

8.) Halil Kanacevic, 294 (2009-10)

9.) Carlos Rivera, 226 (2003-04)

10.) KVONN CRAMER, 201 (2020-21)

11.) Nathaniel Lester, 189 (2007-08)

12.) Shemiye McLendon, 178 (2010-11)

13.) Wendell Gibson, 153 (2001-02)

14.) Jordan Allen, 152 (2012-13)

15.) Chris Jenkins, 151 (2013-14)

16.) Rokas Gustys, 140 (2014-15)

17.) Mike Radziejewski, 138 (2001-02)

18.) Aurimas Kieza, 126 (2002-03)

19.) Woody Souffrant, 110 (2001-02)

20.) Moussa Kone, 100 (2011-12)


OVER THE AIR

Tonight’s game will be aired live on CBS Sports Network. That’s channel 214 if you have Cablevision or Optimum or Altice or whatever the hell our local overlords are called now. Hofstra will also provide audio and live stats at the Pride Productions hub.


BACK IN THE SEMIS

The Dutchmen are in the CAA semifinals for the third straight season and the ninth time since joining the league prior to the 2001-02 season. Hofstra fell in the semifinals in 2002, 2005, 2011 and 2015, reached the title game before losing in 2006, 2016 and 2019 and, of course, won it all in 2020.


This is the Dutchmen’s 14th trip to the conference semifinals dating back to 1994. Hofstra fell in the America East semifinals in 1998 and 1999 and won it all in the ECC in 1994 and in the America East in 2000 and 2001. This marks the first time the Dutchmen have made the conference semifinals in at least three straight seasons since the four-year run to end their America East tenure.


MIDNIGHT HASN’T STRUCK YET FOR CINDERELLA

For the second straight year, Elon threw the CAA Tournament into chaos with a big quarterfinal upset — this one the biggest the CAA’s seen in 30 years. The eighth-seeded Phoenix came back from a 15-point second-half deficit to stun top-seeded James Madison, 72-71. It was the first time the CAA’s top seed has lost its first tournament game since eighth-seeded Navy beat James Madison, 85-82, in overtime in 1991. In addition, it’s the first time the top seed I Hofstra’s conference tournament has lost its opener since 1994, when the fifth-seeded Dutchmen beat top-seeded Troy State, 90-89, in overtime in the ECC semifinals. That really happened, Litos!


Last season, Elon advanced to the semifinals as the seventh seed by beating 10th-seeded James Madison and second-seeded William & Mary before falling to Northeastern. The Phoenix are the first team in CAA history to make back-to-back trips to the semifinals while being seeded sixth or lower.


With second-seeded Northeastern and sixth-seeded Drexel also winning Sunday, the CAA semifinals will feature the second, fourth, sixth and eighth seeds for the first time ever. Someone should write a song about that! The sum of the seeds (20) is the highest in CAA history, breaking the previous mark of 19 set last year (first, fifth, sixth and seventh) and in 2002 (first, third, fifth and 10th).


SCOUTING ELON

The Phoenix, under second-year head coach Mike Schrage, made their second straight surprise trip to the semifinals with the aforementioned win over James Madison. It was the sixth straight win for Elon, which started out 0-7 in CAA play but is now 9-8 overall. 


Because this is 2021, the Dutchmen and Phoenix didn’t play each other but had six common opponents in CAA regular season play. Both teams swept William & Mary while being swept by Northeastern and James Madison. Hofstra split with Delaware, which swept Elon. The Dutchmen also swept Towson and UNC Wilmington, whom Elon beat in their lone games against each team.


The Dutchmen, who were picked first in the CAA preseason poll, are ranked 176th at KenPom.com. The Phoenix, who were picked fifth, are ranked 217th.


According to KenPom.com, the Dutchmen rank first in the CAA in offensive efficiency (107.3) and seventh in defensive efficiency (107.0). The Phoenix are ninth in the CAA in offensive efficiency (97.4) and second in defensive efficiency (101.4).


Sophomore guard Hunter McIntosh, who was named to the all-CAA second team, leads Elon with 15.8 ppg while ranking second with 2.3 assists per game. Graduate transfer Ikenna Ndugba ranks second on the Phoenix with 9.4 ppg and 4.8 rebounds per game while averaging a team-high 2.9 apg. Sophomore guard Hunter Woods leads the Phoenix with 6.9 rpg while freshman Darius Buford, who was named to the all-rookie team, is averaging 8.7 ppg.


KenPom.com predicts a 72-69 win for the Dutchmen. Per the wise guys in Vegas, for entertainment purposes only, the Dutchmen are 3.5-point favorites. The Dutchmen are 10-12 against the spread this season.


ALL-TIME VS. ELON

Hofstra is 10-3 against Elon, which joined the CAA prior to the 2014-15 season. The Dutchmen have won the last five games against the Phoenix and swept the season series way back in the normal times of the 2019-20 regular season, when they earned a 102-75 win at home on Jan. 4 before hitting the road to record an 86-63 victory on Jan. 30. Hofstra and Elon first opposed each other on Nov. 23, 2009, when the Dutchmen cruised past the Phoenix, 70-46, in a preseason NIT game at the Arena.


THINGS YOU CAN SHOUT ON TWITTER IF CALLS GO DO NOT GO HOFSTRA’S WAY

Cheeky monkey bias! (I know I am not the only one who sees Elon forward Simon Wright and thinks of Mike Myers’ SNL skit “Simon”)

Not that Simon Wright bias! (There’s a hard rock drummer named Simon Wright)

Not that Christopher Knight bias! (Per Wikipedia, which is never wrong, YouTube personality Christopher Knight went to Elon)

Let’s play Galaga bias! (Because the classics never go out of style)

Sunday, March 7, 2021

I'll Be Quirky: Delaware


Looks like Billy, Amanda and Allison are in disagreement over who to root for this morning.


The regular season ended without the Flying Dutchmen even realizing it three weeks ago today, when a second-half comeback against the Matt Lewis-less James Madison fell short in a 74-70 loss that completed a sweep at the hands of the Dukes. The next day, Hofstra went on pause due to a positive coronavirus case within its Tier 1 personnel. The pause forced the cancelation of the final two weekends and left the Dutchmen idle until, they hope, today, when they are scheduled to face fifth-seeded Delaware in the CAA quarterfinals at the very 2021-esque time of 11 AM. The only thing weirder than coming off a three-week pause to play in a single-elimination conference tournament? Doing so coming off a five-week pause, which is what Delaware is trying to do. Let us never experience a season like this ever again. Here’s a look back at the loss to James Madison and a hopeful look ahead to the Blue Hens.


THE MOST RECENT GAME SUMMARIZED IN ONE PARAGRAPH

Jalen Ray scored 18 of his game-high 25 points in the second half but the Dutchmen, who trailed for the final 32-plus minutes and got no closer than four points in the second half. Kvonn Cramer (13 points, 10 rebounds) posted his fourth double-double while Isaac Kante (eight points, 12 rebounds) flirted with the double-double. Tareq Coburn had 12 points and David Green tied a career-high by scoring eight points off the bench.


3 STARS OF THE GAME (vs. James Madison 2/14)

3: Jalen Ray

2: Kvonn Cramer

1: Isaac Kante


SEASON STANDINGS

Jalen Ray 39

Isaac Kante 30

Tareq Coburn 24

Caleb Burgess 16

KVonn Cramer 13

Omar Silverio 3

Kevin Schutte 1


THE FLYING DUTCHMEN AFTER TWENTY-ONE GAMES

With the loss three weeks ago today (what a weird thing to type), the Dutchmen fell to 12-9, which is tied for the 32nd-best start in school history. Six other teams have opened 12-9, most recently the 2017-18 squad. Here is how some notable Hofstra teams have fared through 21 games.


NCAA DIVISION I TOURNAMENT TEAMS

1975-76: 11-10 (over .500 for good)

1976-77: 15-6 (win in 21st game marked first win of nine-game winning streak that carried Dutchmen into the NCAAs)

1999-2000: 16-5 (win in 21st game marked ninth win of 10-game winning streak)

2000-01: 17-4 (win in 21st game marked ninth win in program-record 18-game winning streak)

2019-20 (IT COUNTS TO US): 14-7


NIT TEAMS

1998-99: 14-7

2004-05: 14-7

2005-06: 17-4 (most recent 17-4 start)

2006-07: 16-5 (most recent 16-5 start)

2015-16: 15-6 

2018-19: 18-3 (win in 21st game marked 15th win in the 16-game winning streak)


NCAA DIVISION II TOURNAMENT TEAMS

1958-59: 16-5

1961-62: 18-3 (only other 18-3 start)

1962-63: 15-6 (fourth win of 11-game winning streak)

1963-64: 17-4


Some other notable 21-game records:


2016-17: 10-11 (most recent 10-11 start; win in 21st game snapped Mihalich-era record six-game losing streak)

2013-14: 7-14 (most recent 7-14 start, Joe Mihalich’s first team)

2012-13: 5-16 (most recent 5-16 start)

2009-10: 9-12 (most recent 9-12 start, season-low three games under .500)

1988-89: 8-13 (most recent 8-13 start)

2001-02: 10-11 (last time within one win of .500, Tom Pecora’s first team)

1997-98: 13-8 (most recent 13-8 start)

1996-97: 10-11 (under .500 for good)

1995-96: 7-14 (loss in 21st game marked seventh loss of Jay Wright-era record nine-game losing streak)

1994-95: 6-15 (most recent 6-15 start, Jay Wright’s first year)

1993-94: 4-17 (most recent 4-17 start, VBK’s last year)

1991-92: 13-8 (win in 21st game was second in nine-game winning streak that ended in ECC title game)

1987-88: 4-17 (loss in 21st game was 11th loss of program-record 12-game losing streak)

1984-95: 11-10 (most recent 11-10 start)

1974-75: 8-13 (last loss of season)

1972-73: 8-13 (last win of season)

1971-72: 11-10 (over .500 for the last time, last win of season)

1970-71: 13-8 (last loss of season)

1959-60: 20–1 (most recent 20-1 start & Hofstra’s winningest team, percentage-wise; win in 21st game was 10th win of season-ending 13-game winning streak)

1944-45: 8-13 (lost season finale)

1939-40: 12-9 (won season finale)


Hofstra has never been 21-0, 3-18, 2-19, 1-20 or 0-21 through 21 games. 


The following seasons were completed in fewer than 21 games: 1947-48 (13-6), 1945-46 (12-7), 1943-44 (7-12), 1940-41 (13-7), 1938-39 (10-8), 1937-38 (10-4), 1936-37 (10-7)


Full records not available for the following seasons: 1936-37, 1941-42, 1942-43, 1945-46, 1948-49, 1951-52, 1954-55, 1957-58.


This feature is inspired by Greg Prince, who measures how the current Mets compare, record-wise, to previous teams through the same point in the season.


HARDWARE FOR HOFSTRA

The Dutchmen were well-represented in the CAA’s postseason awards, which were announced Friday. Senior guard Jalen Ray was named first-team all-CAA while junior center Isaac Kante and senior guard Tareq Coburn earned second- and third-team all-CAA honors, respectively. Hofstra was the only school with a player on all three teams and the only school with more than two players named to the top three teams. This is the third straight year Hofstra had a player on each of the three all-CAA teams.


In addition, Kvonn Cramer was also selected to the all-rookie team. Most impressively, Coburn won both the Dean Ehlers Leadership Award and the Scholar-Athlete of the Year award. It is the second straight Scholar-Athlete of the Year award for Coburn, who is the second consecutive Hofstra player to win the Dean Ehlers Leadership Award. Desure Buie won it last year 


RAY HOLDS ON 21

Despite scoring a game-high 25 points three weeks ago today, Jalen Ray’s streak of gaining ground on the Hofstra all-time scoring list ended as he remained in 21st place. He enters today needing seven points to move past Mike Tilley into 20th place and 17 points to surpass Kenny Adeleke for 19th place.


18.) Desure Buie 1,310

19.) Kenny Adeleke 1,296

20.) Mike Tilley 1,286

21.) JALEN RAY 1,280

21.) Roberto Gittens 1,240

23.) Carlos Rivera 1,225

24t.) Demetrius Dudley 1,220

24t.) John Mills 1,220

26t.) Juan’ya Green 1,186

26t.) Brian Bernardi 1,186

28.) Rokas Gustys 1,184

29.) Ted Jackson 1,159

30.) Nathaniel Lester 1,139

31.) Wandy Williams 1,132

32.) Mike Moore 1,128

33.) Richie Swartz 1,107

34.) Ameen Tanksley 1,090

35.) Derrick Flowers 1,069

36.) Darius Burton 1,060

37.) Percy Johnson 1,045

38.) James Shaffer, 1,022

39.) John Irving 1,018


Prior to Feb. 14, Ray had gained at least a half-spot on the all-time scoring list in every game since joining the 1,000-point club on Dec. 22.


Dec. 22: Tied for 38th place

Jan. 2: 38th place

Jan. 3: 37th place

Jan. 7: 36th place

Jan. 9: 35th place

Jan. 15: 34th place

Jan. 17: 33rd place

Jan. 23: 29th place

Jan. 24: Tied for 28th place

Jan. 30: 28th place

Jan. 31: 25th place

Feb. 6: 23rd place

Feb. 7: 22nd place

Feb. 13: 21st place

Feb. 14: 21st place


CRAMER’S A TOP TEN HIT

With his 13 points on Feb. 14, Kvonn Cramer moved past Nathaniel Lester and into 10th place on the Hofstra freshman CAA-era scoring list. Cramer is the first Hofstra freshman to score at least 100 points since Eli Pemberton scored 397 points in 2016-17.


1.) Antoine Agudio, 452 (2004-05)

2.) Charles Jenkins, 436 (2007-08)

3.) Kenny Adeleke, 433 (2001-02)

4.) Eli Pemberton, 297 (2016-17)

5.) Loren Stokes, 374 (2003-04)

6.) Chaz Williams, 325 (2009-10)

7.) Jamall Robinson, 312 (2013-14)

8.) Halil Kanacevic, 294 (2009-10)

9.) Carlos Rivera, 226 (2003-04)

10.) KVONN CRAMER, 196 (2020-21)

11.) Nathaniel Lester, 189 (2007-08)

12.) Shemiye McLendon, 178 (2010-11)

13.) Wendell Gibson, 153 (2001-02)

14.) Jordan Allen, 152 (2012-13)

15.) Chris Jenkins, 151 (2013-14)

16.) Rokas Gustys, 140 (2014-15)

17.) Mike Radziejewski, 138 (2001-02)

18.) Aurimas Kieza, 126 (2002-03)

19.) Woody Souffrant, 110 (2001-02)

20.) Moussa Kone, 100 (2011-12)


OVER THE AIR

Today’s game will be aired on FloHoops.com (subscription required). Hofstra will provide a radio feed and live stats at the Pride Productions hub.


THIS WEIRD SEASON

Before they went on pause Feb. 15, the Dutchmen were the only CAA team to play all its league games as scheduled. Even with the final two weekends canceled, the Dutchmen still ended up leading the league in games played with 14, two more than Towson and seven more than UNC Wilmington, which played the fewest games. Again: Let us never experience a season this weird ever again.


THE DUTCHMEN AS DEFENDING CHAMPIONS

Let’s hope it’s thrice as nice. The Dutchmen repeated as conference tournament champions following each of their first championships in the ECC, where they won it all in 1976 and 1977 as well as the conference’s final season in 1994, and the America East, where they earned championships in their final two seasons in the league in 2000 and 2001. The only time the Dutchmen did not successfully defend a championship was in 1978, when they went 8-19 and lost their ECC tournament opener to American, 97-77.


THE DUTCHMEN IN CONFERENCE TOURNAMENT PLAY

The defending CAA champion Dutchmen enter today 18-18 in CAA Tournament play since 2002, 27-23 in conference tournament play in the NAC/America East/CAA era (1994-present) and 30-23 in conference tournament play in the Defiantly Dutch era (1993-present), which, let’s face it, is the only era that matters because it includes the ECC. Hello Litos.


In the CAA, the Dutchmen finally broke through and won it all last year by beating Northeastern 70-61 in the title game on March 10, fewer than 48 hours before the NCAA Tournament was canceled. The Dutchmen are trying to become the CAA’s first repeat champion since UNC Wilmington in 2016-17 (grrr) and the XXth one overall.


In the CAA, the Dutchmen previously lost three times in the championship game and have fallen in the semifinals four times, been eliminated in the quarterfinals eight times and lost on Pillowfight Friday four times. Dating back to 1994, the Dutchmen have won four championships (1994 ECC, 2000 America East, 2001 America East, 2020 CAA), fallen in the title game three times, lost in the semifinals six times, fallen in the quarterfinals nine times and been eliminated in an outbracket game five times (we didn’t call it Pillowfight Friday back in the NAC).


GO FOURTH YOUNG MEN

The Dutchmen are the fourth seed in the CAA Tournament for the first time and the fourth seed in a conference tournament for the first time since 1997, when they fell to fifth-seeded Delaware, 86-73, in the America East quarterfinals. Eep. Since Hofstra joined the CAA prior to the 2001-02 season, the fourth seed has gone 8-11 in its opening game. Double eep.


Just two teams have won the CAA Tournament as the no. 4 seed: Old Dominion in 1992 and UNC Wilmington. Three no. 4 seeds have reached the title game and lost: UNC Wilmington in 1989, George Mason in 1991 and VCU in 2011. And then what happened, VCU?


HELLO OUR FRIENDS WE MEET AGAIN

The Dutchmen will be facing Delaware in conference tournament play for the third straight season and the ninth time — all since 1994-95, when the Dutchmen joined the North Atlantic Conference. The nine conference tournament games are the most for Hofstra against any opponent in the NAC/America East/CAA era. The Dutchmen improved to 4-5 in conference tournament games against Delaware with the 75-61 win in last year’s semifinals.


1997 America East QFs: Delaware 86-73

1998 America East SFs: Delaware 60-51

2000 America East championship: Hofstra 76-69***

2001 America East championship: Hofstra 68-54***

2013 CAA QFs: Delaware 62-57

2014 CAA QFs: Delaware 87-76

2017 CAA PFF: Delaware 81-76

2019 CAA SFs: Hofstra 78-74 (overtime)

2020 CAA SFs: Hofstra 75-61


SCOUTING DELAWARE

The Blue Hens, under fifth-year head coach Martin Inglesby, earned the fifth seed in the CAA Tournament by finishing 5-4 in league play. They went 7-7 overall in the regular season. Delaware hasn’t played since way back on Jan. 31, when it completed a sweep of Elon with a 75-70 win. What a season. 


The Dutchmen and Blue Hens ha just two common opponents in CAA play. The Dutchmen swept William & Mary, which beat Delaware 67-62 in the only meeting between the teams Jan. 9, and UNC Wilmington, which split a weekend series with the Blue Hens Jan. 23-24.


The Dutchmen, who were picked first in the CAA preseason poll, are ranked 179th at KenPom.com. The Blue Hens, who were picked second, are ranked 218th.


According to KenPom.com, the Dutchmen rank first in the CAA in offensive efficiency (106.6) and seventh in defensive efficiency (106.7). The Blue Hens are eighth in the CAA in offensive efficiency (97.6) and third in defensive efficiency (102.0).


Senior forward Dylan Painter, who was named to the all-CAA first team, is averaging a double-double with 13.4 points and 11.6 rebounds per game. Senior guard Ryan Allen is scoring a team-high 15.4 ppg while senior guard Kevin Anderson is averaging 11.4 ppg and a team-high 2.8 assists per game. (Allen is at 2.79 apg)


KenPom.com predicts a 71-68 win for the Dutchmen. Per the wise guys in Vegas, for entertainment purposes only, the Dutchmen are 3.5-point underdogs. The Dutchmen are 9-12 against the spread this season.


ALL-TIME VS. DELAWARE

Hofstra is 62-34 against Delaware in a series that began during the 1954-55 season.    The Blue Hens are Hofstra’s most common foe. The Dutchmen and Delaware were rivals in the East Coast Conference and the North Atlantic Conference/America East before heading to the CAA, along with Drexel and Towson, for the 2001-02 season.


The teams split two games this season, both in New-ARK the weekend of Jan . 15-17. Delaware scored the final 14 points in a 74-56 win on Jan. 15 before the Dutchmen never trailed yet needed a last-second defensive stand to escape with a 68-67 win two days later. 


THINGS YOU CAN SHOUT ON TWITTER IF CALLS GO DO NOT GO HOFSTRA’S WAY

Andrew Shue bias! (Like his sister Elisabeth, the guy who played Billy Campbell on Melrose Place was born in Delaware)

Cal Ripken Jr. bias! (Baseball’s iron man received an honorary degree form Delaware in 2008)

Taylor Swift’s Dad bias! (Scott Swift graduated from Delaware)

Stone Balloon bias! (Gotta go old school once in a while)