Timeliness does not appear to be a strong suit of this blog, so I doubt many
of you are surprised by a week’s delay in my second-round report. The benefit,
though, is some perspective on Virginia Tech’s first NCAA appearance in eleven
years.
Sunday was a long day. I was up by eight, had my
Timmy’s by 10, and was checked out of the
hotel for good by 11:30 for what turned out to be over five hours of
basketball, thanks to a rather extended UVa-Tennessee match; I didn’t hit
Interstate 670 post-game until 5:30, and it was 10 minutes to midnight by the
time I got home. Five hours in an arena was brain-numbing, Interstate 70
through eastern Ohio wasn’t any better, and then it got dark. I was
ridiculously happy to see traffic and the occasional streetlight by the time I
rejoined 70 from 68 in Hancock, MD. Conclusion: don’t do this kind of thing
solo again. (Of course, that wasn’t the original plan anyway — thanks,
Southwest!)
In retrospect, all that talk about us being a different team and more capable
of beating Southern Illinois than we had been in November would have been
applicable in early February, but not March. SIU followed the same basic
pattern we saw over and over in the last month of the season: guard Zabian
Dowdell very tight, keep Deron Washington from penetrating (and thereby
posterizing your interior defense) at all costs, and work the shot clock until
the open 3-pointer appears with 2-3 seconds left. (For that matter, so did
Illinois; their refusal to finish off the 3 was what eventually killed them.)
Compounding the problems, A.D. Vassallo went ice-cold, and Seth Greenberg left
him in the game far, far too long; with A.D.’s confidence went the team’s
chances of pulling back into the game after SIU’s take-charge run at the end
of the first half.
Read More »
26 March 2007
/ Comment
/ Tags: travel, basketball
So I arrived in Columbus a little bit before noon yesterday. I ran over to Cooper Stadium to pick up a Clippers hat, as they’re the Nats’ new AAA affiliate, expecting to head to Nationwide after and get a cheap Session 1 ticket from a desperate scalper shortly after tip. By the time the Clips’ staffers found a size 7-3/4 hat, UVa was up 19-4 and the game wasn’t even worth the $20 I was willing to pay. Thanks, Clips! You saved me $20 and an afternoon of tolerating deliriously happy Hoo fans. I appreciate it.
The evening session was something else entirely.
- Scalpers outside were getting absolutely destroyed, even though the arena was mostly full by game time. Lesson: unless you’re going to a North Carolina site featuring UNC, a Southern California site featuring UCLA, or somewhere similar where a highly crazed basketball fan base has a less than 3-hour drive to the arena, don’t buy in advance for the NCAA tournament unless you’re getting a great ticket for face value.
- Nationwide Arena is a beautiful hockey arena — shame the Blue Jackets are so bad. They took several design cues in the bowl from the Air Canada Centre; outside the bowl, the concourses are wide, with lots of food options, lots of hockey displays, and even a built-in practice rink. If I ever have a reason to be back here when the Jackets are in town, I’m definitely seeing a game.
- Ohio State fans made up a significant percentage of the crowd. Of the participating schools’ fans, Illinois dominated, and SIU came up behind. Holy Cross probably trailed us by a little bit, but their fans were great — lots of students, loud, excited, and had some class despite quite a bit of baiting from the SIU folks.
- We need to work on this whole basketball traveling thing, and we need to get out of our regional comfort zone. Columbus is no farther a drive for most Hokie fans than is Atlanta, but we don’t know much about the Midwest at all (we try to ignore West Virginia — states beyond it are completely lost), and I think that suppressed turnout somewhat.
- I had expected the Ohio State fans to lean Illinois’s way as a fellow Big 10 school, and I think they wanted to. But the way Illinois was playing, they just couldn’t; for most of the game, the OSU fans around me just rode both teams for the awful basketball they were witnessing. Tech played badly out of its usual Jekyll-and-Hyde incompetence (it was the N.C. State/Marshall/Western Michigan Hokies on display for 35 minutes); the Illini were deliberately making the game unwatchable, with sleep-inducing offensive sets and not a player on the court that wanted to shoot the ball. If Illinois had tried, they could have been up 18 at the half rather than 8; they left the door open all night long. The result: when Tech decided it wanted to win after all and pulled within one possession on the eventual game-winning run, the arena flipped over to our side.
- Second game quickie evaluation: neither team shot well (from the floor or the line). Holy Cross played hard, but SIU had probably the four best athletes on the floor, and that counts.
- Band rankings: SIU, Illinois, VT, Holy Cross. The Saluki band was a genuine highlight of the second game, playing everything from Hey Ya to Georgia On My Mind and a rather advanced mockery of Carry On My Wayward Son.
When it looked like the game was over midway through the second half, I was working on my Zen, and to some extent my conclusion holds even though we won: this basketball thing is only going to happen at Tech bit by bit. I’m nearly as proud of this Tech team as I was of the ‘04 football team, but it’s all baby steps, from the team (composure on the big stages) to the fans (get your leave requests in early, folks; worst case, you take two days off to watch wall-to-wall basketball on TV, and what’s so bad about that?) to the band (instrument distribution needed some rework for the sound to carry better from the floor).
But we’ll be here on Sunday, and that’s all that matters right now.
17 March 2007
/ Comment
/ Tags: travel, basketball
The definitive quote on blog disappearances has to go to Evan Kirchhoff of 101-280, from the title of his post last Wednesday:
I Never Quit, I Just Made 124 Unrelated Daily Decisions To Not Post Something
Well said. I only got into the twenties, but that’s long enough. Let’s review the past month.
- Toronto: quality trip, if too short. There’s nothing that beats going to see the Stanley Cup as a fan of the champs. Also notable was the dress code of the lower level at the Air Canada Centre during the Maple Leafs-Lightning game I attended: a truly shocking number of men in suit and tie. I recognize that (a) Leafs games are the gold standard of sporting event tickets in Canada, requiring both fantastic seniority and fantastic amounts of money to purchase season seats, and (b) Canadian business dress standards are rather more conservative than those in America. But even given that data, I would have expected some of the denizens of the yellow seats to have changed to team attire for the game, as I’ve seen in Montreal at the Canes-Habs games I’ve attended there. Nope — there were more ties there than in the Hoo student section for a football game these days.
- Holidays: fun, if a lot of driving. We did at least two hours of driving every day of Christmas week save Christmas itself and Saturday in Atlanta.
- Oh yeah, Atlanta: well, it was fun other than the fourth quarter! The QB position needs to be open in spring practice, but I think we underestimated how much of a road game this was. Glennon only played in two challenging road environments all season, Boston College and Miami, and his performance in this game showed it. He’s a sophomore, though. He’ll get better — or he’ll get benched.
Read More »
8 January 2007
/ Comment
/ Tags: travel, football, photo
Thanks to David, I managed a ticket to last night’s sold-out NHL season opener in Raleigh, where the Carolina Hurricanes raised their 2005-06 Stanley Cup banner before falling 3-2 to the Buffalo Sabres in a shootout. Doing ten hours of driving in a twenty-four hour span becomes a worse idea every time I try it, but some things are worth the misery afterwards.
It’s the beginning of the season, and both teams’ play reflected that. Carolina was moving pretty quickly at the beginning of the first, and registered an 11-1 shot disparity early, but didn’t have many good chances out of that flurry; when they did, Sabres goaltender Ryan Miller stood tall. Though neither team was in midseason technical form, the competitive level picked up where the Eastern Conference finals left off just four months ago.
Of Carolina’s new acquisitions:
- Tim Gleason earned the second star, and justifiably so. He was all over the ice with speed and didn’t look out-of-sync with this teammates even on four days’ practice. I’m still hesitant on the Jack Johnson trade, but if Gleason becomes a key to this team making another deep playoff run, Jim Rutherford will look pretty smart again.
- Eric Belanger will take more time to evaluate. Fast forwards tend to look bad early in their tenure with a new team, because their excess speed puts them further out of position before they understand what their teammates are doing; Justin Williams had this problem for several months in 2003-04. Style-wise, he fits this club, but he needs to find a steady line and learn his wingers’ tendencies.
- Scott Walker came advertised as a heart-and-soul guy, and two high-defensive-zone blocks did nothing to shake that reputation.
- Trevor Letowski looked like the generic third-line forward he is. I suspect either he or Walker will be trade bait when Cory Stillman returns in December.
- David Tanabe has been a polarizing figure on the message boards, and Wednesday night won’t change that. Positionally he was OK, but I counted at least three times in his zone when he dodged contact. I’m going to pay close attention to him on Saturday night in Washington against a harder-hitting team; how he handles the Caps will help me decide whether, like David, I’d rather give Anton Babchuk the slot.
Read More »
5 October 2006
/ Comment
/ Tags: hockey, travel
Tuesday night, I made my first try at attending a weeknight Baltimore Orioles home game as a Northern Virginia resident. According to O’s owner Peter Angelos, this has always been an easy, convenient and reasonable thing to do, and therefore it was completely unnecessary for Washington to have its own team.
So let’s look at the timeline for a 1905 (7:05 pm) start at Camden Yards.
Read More »
24 August 2006
/ Comment
/ Tags: baseball, travel, nova