Posts Tagged ‘Virginia Tech’

March 16th, 2008 | 06:40 pm

Breaking down the brackets

Columnist Mark Selig, deputy sports editor Adi Joseph and I were chatting online as the 2008 NCAA Tournament bracket was revealed tonight. We were most surprised by not seeing “Maryland” pop up on the screen … err, nevermind, too easy.

Anyway, some quick thoughts amongst the three of us:

-UNC got hosed and has the toughest road of the No. 1 seeds to the Final Four. Indiana, Notre Dame, Washington State, Louisville and Tennessee in that bracket is brutal. We don’t understand how Tennessee has the top RPI in the country and is considered the worst No. 2? “East is so much stronger than the other brackets,” Adi says, “despite the No. 1 overall team being in it. Very unusual.”

-Butler as a 7 is ridiculous. The Bulldogs had just three losses and won the Horizon Conference (season and tourney). Why so low this season compared to a 5 last season?

-South Alabama a 10 seed playing in Birmingham? What is this, the women’s tournament?

-Wisconsin, Big Ten regular season and tourney champs, gets a 3 seed… Xavier, A-10 regular season but not tourney champs gets a 3 seed. What does that say about those two conferences? “I dont think they’re great, but what more could they have done?” Mark asks of the Badgers.

-All three of us agree Virginia Tech did not deserve to get in.

-I think Arizona State deserved to get in over Villanova, but other than that, I actually think the committee got it right with the bubble teams.

-Adi thinks Arizona as a 10 is “absurd” and Miami is “overseeded.”

-Mark says Georgetown got “too much love” and UCLA has “an absolute cakewalk.” I agree and would expect most of the country will pick UCLA to win it all because of its road to the Final Four.

zuckermandbk@gmail.com, ajosephdbk@gmail.com, mseligdbk@gmail.com

February 7th, 2008 | 01:20 am

Women’s basketball reacts to Virginia Tech scare

This afternoon at the Terrapin women’s basketball team’s first full practice after its too-close-for-comfort overtime win at Virginia Tech on Monday, I separately asked Crystal Langhorne and Kristi Toliver if they had any further comment on Monday’s game after letting it sink in for a couple of days.

Toliver decided to take the “We got a win and that’s all that matters” road, and did so with a straight face, but Langhorne gave a response that was closer to what I was expecting.

“It was just an ugly game,” Langhorne said, shaking her head. “For us to play so bad and still win speaks a lot about our team, but it was very disappointing how we came out and played.”

I half-jokingly told coach Brenda Frese that she missed an exciting game Monday, but the pregnant coach didn’t seem to appreciate my humor.

“I watched it on TV,” Frese said. “That was enough.”

It’s hard to blame the usually-jovial Frese for being a bit irritated today. Frese stopped traveling to all road games more than a month ago, and during home games and practices she is mostly confined to her large computer chair that is brought down from her office. After standing up to give two short interviews after practice today, she decided it would be best to sit down again for a third.

While Frese’s due date is officially March 11, the unofficial word around the team is that labor may be induced by the end of February if she has not delivered by then.

schimmeldbk@gmail.com

February 4th, 2008 | 08:03 pm

The long and winding road… to Virginia Tech

Blacksburg, Va. (5:45 PM) — I don’t know if I could think of a worse place to write my first blog post than Blacksburg, Va.

Driving four hours and twenty minutes to the southwest corner of Virginia for tonight’s Terrapin women’s basketball game against Virginia Tech was similar to what it must feel like to drive backward in time.

Aside from the campus — which is admittedly very nice — there isn’t much civilization in this area.

The top three exciting/memorable moments from the drive down (in chronological order) were:

1. Getting a small amount of gasoline on my right hand at an Exxon pump on Route 1.
2. Trying (unsuccessfully) to take my winter coat off while driving on the Beltway
3. Passing a sign for the Luray Caverns–“The Largest and Most Popular Caverns in the East”– about nine miles north of New Market, Va. on I-81. Too bad I didn’t have time to stop.

But I made it to Blacksburg and I’m seriously happy to be here. As for tonight’s game, the Terps and Hokies are just starting to filter onto the court for their first pregame shootarounds. Junior guard Kristi Toliver and freshman guard Marah Strickland were the first Terps to make an appearance.

schimmeldbk@gmail.com