Showing posts with label Five pre-game thoughts: UNC Wilmington. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Five pre-game thoughts: UNC Wilmington. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Five pregame thoughts: UNC Wilmington

Pregame thought no. 6: Exploit Dave Krieg's tendency to fumble! Oh wait. Wrong Seahawks, wrong sport.

1.) UNC Wilmington is always a tough place to play midweek during the school year, but the task gets doubly difficult tonight as the Flying Dutchmen take on the Seahawks during their Senior Night. The Seahawks’ three seniors—sound familiar?—have been through a ton the last year, including multiple coaching changes—sound familiar?—and have helped UNCW enjoy a surprisingly competitive season—sound familiar?—so they will be particularly ready to go and ready to exit Trask Coliseum with a win.

2.) Expect a great duel between our Charles Jenkins and their Charles Jenkins, i.e. Brett Tomko. The two players, who had little choice but to stick with their schools and their new coaches, have taken their already impressive games to unforeseen levels as seniors and have been responsible for lifting Hofstra and UNCW far higher than anybody expected this year. Check out this excellent feature on the relationship between Jenkins and Tomko, who have enjoyed some good battles and become friendly over the course of their eight-year careers (OK it just seems as if both guys have been in the CAA for eight years) by our good friend Brian Mull.

3.) Unless Buzz Peterson doesn’t have cable, expect UNC Wilmington to borrow liberally from the Wright State game plan of quintuple-teaming Jenkins (OK that’s impossible). Expect, too, for the Dutchmen to have a better answer for the Seahawks’ emphasis on Jenkins than they did for Wright State Saturday. The Dutchmen won’t be caught surprised tonight and Brad Kelleher and Mike Moore will be far more involved than they were against Wright State.

4.) David Imes seemed to take the loss to Wright State worse than anyone, so my guess is the burgeoning leader will have a big game against the Seahawks. The Dutchmen will need Imes to do what he did in the first meeting of the season between the teams (14 points and 10 rebounds in a career-high 39 minutes) to negate the impact of fellow sophomore Keith Rendelman, who is averaging almost a double-double (10.6 points, 7.9 rebounds).

5.) The Dutchmen have specialized in the bottom-line win this season—who cares about style points, just win—and that’s got to be the focus again in the final week of the regular season. Two wins and a loss by either VCU or ODU allows the Dutchmen to escape fourth place and a possible semifinal game with George Mason. But, of course, one loss pretty much locks up fourth for the Dutchmen, who will lose tiebreakers to any of the top three teams. Neither of the final two games will be easy for the Dutchmen, who won’t get back to Long Island until tomorrow morning and will be playing after the emotional Senior Day festivities for Jenkins, Kelleher and Greg Washington, and you can be sure Mo Cassara has stressed the importance of grinding out wins and enjoying the opportunity to rest from Sunday through Friday next week.

Email Jerry at defiantlydutch@yahoo.com or follow Defiantly Dutch at http://twitter.com/defiantlydutch.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Five pre-game thoughts: UNC Wilmington

1.) This is one of those games sportswriters love because it features storylines that, in the end, don’t really impact the game. That’s not some smarmy, holier-than-thou knock—I eat up stuff like this, even if it is mostly irrelevant to what happens on the court tonight. The last time Hofstra hosted UNC Wilmington, the Flying Dutchmen destroyed the Seahawks 93-54 in a game highlighted by the first eight-point play in the history of humanity. As outstanding UNCW beat writer Brian Mull writes here, that embarrassing loss set into motion a chain of events that may have saved UNCW basketball. Coach Benny Moss was fired the next day, but the Seahawks didn’t really begin turning themselves around until Buzz Peterson was hired as head coach following a tumultuous and often borderline amateurish search and oft-maligned athletic director Kelly Mehrtens “resigned” on Sept. 27.

Like UNC Wilmington, Hofstra endured an embarrassing off-season in which it appeared to be losing relevancy by the day, especially in a conference in which the power seems to be shifting towards the schools that play football and/or are located within Virginia. But the third head coach in a matter of weeks also proved to be the charm for Hofstra, and Mo Cassara has done for the Dutchmen what Peterson has done for the Seahawks—bury the past and put into place a rebuilding/reconstruction (Mull’s wording) plan that is moving far faster and turning out much better than anyone could have anticipated. While the Dutchmen are, of course, tied for first place at 5-1, the Seahawks—a consensus pick to finish at or near the bottom of the CAA—are 3-3 and nowhere near a pushover.

2.) There is at least one similarity between the schools that will factor into tonight’s game. Like Hofstra, UNC Wilmington lost multiple players to transfers during the hiccup-filled coaching search, including their best big man. As a result, both teams are led by star senior guards who had little choice but to weather the storm and have vastly improved their already impressive games in order to shoulder the burden as seniors. You, of course, know about Charles Jenkins, who better be referred to as a power guard multiple times tonight by Mull. But Chad Tomko (honest to God, I wrote Brett the first time—I watch too much baseball) has been tremendous in sparking the Seahawks’ surprise run. In five games leading up to last Saturday’s loss to JMU, Tomko averaged 20.2 points and 7.8 rebounds per game while fashioning an assist-to-turnover ratio of 2.25. While sophomore big man Keith Rendelman (9.8 ppg, 7.4 rpg) has been their David Imes (hey! another similarity!) the Seahawks will only go as far as Tomko can take them.

3.) Speaking of Jenkins, he’s going to have a big game. The power guard loves facing the Seahawks, against whom he is averaging 24.9 points per game in seven career contests. Plus, he’s due: Jenkins has “only” scored 19 points in each of the Dutchmen’s last two games and had one of his quieter efforts of the season in the loss to Old Dominion Saturday. He doesn’t have back-to-back bad games.

4.) This game will be decided beyond the 3-point arc. UNCW is shooting 40.7 percent from 3-point land and the Dutchmen are hitting their 3-pointers at a 37.6 percent clip. The Dutchmen have been ice cold from deep in their last two games, shooting just 23 percent (9-of-39) in the win over Towson and the loss to Old Dominion. The Dutchmen have also been a bit lax defensively in allowing three of their last six opponents to shoot at least 37.5 percent from 3-point land. Either Shemiye McLendon or Brad Kelleher will have to step up and hit a handful of treys and expect to see plenty of defensive specialist Yves Jules as Cassara tries to limit the damage done by the Seahawks.

4b.) Your good friend and mine Mike Litos beat us to the punch in predicting a big game from Imes. Getting a double-double from Imes—or another near triple-double from Greg Washington, who had 14 points, 10 blocked shots and eight rebounds in the rout of Wilmington at Hofstra last year—will go a long way towards locking up a victory against a Seahawks squad that is even leaner in the frontcourt than the Dutchmen.

5.) My (ample) gut tells me Cassara is not terribly disappointed the Dutchmen failed to carry a perfect CAA record into this tilt. As awesome as the 5-0 start—and the accompanying publicity—was, the truth is the Dutchmen have much less margin for error than the rest of their brethren near or at the top of the CAA. I firmly believe Cassara, Jenkins and Washington would never allow the Dutchmen to believe their press clippings, so to speak, but allowing the buzz to subside a little bit after the ODU loss surely helped the Dutchmen refocus on the tasks at hand and reinforce the belief that they must work harder than everyone else in order to stay in the race. Four practice days between games is a rarity during the CAA season so I imagine you’ll see a determined and well-rested team tonight ready to resume the grunt work that got them this far.

Email Jerry at defiantlydutch@yahoo.com or follow Defiantly Dutch at http://twitter.com/defiantlydutch.