2009 College Basketball Preview
There are currently only two programs nationally that have clear talent advantages over all but 1-3 teams nationally every 2 to 3 seasons. Carolina and Connecticut. Over the last 5 years or so, I doubt you'll find any other schools close in high NBA draft picks or total NBA draft picks. The next tier recruiting-wise for the next 5 yrs or so would probably be Texas, Louisville, Duke, UCLA, Kansas, Memphis, Florida, Georgetown, OSU, Syracuse, West Virginia. Those programs have (or will have in the next few seasons) years where the across-the-board quality of recruits they're bringing in (UConn + UNC's 4-5 first round draft picks) or one special recruit (Melo, Durant) is enough to put them on the doorstep of a Final Four. The rest will win it on coaching, experience, heart or some sort of crazy George Mason magical mystery tour.
This season there are three teams whose overall talent level separates them from the rest of the country as the top contenders for the NCAA crown. Carolina, Connecticut and Louisville have complete teams. Each has a quality inside presence, perimeter shooters and ballhandlers, and benches deep with McDonalds All-Americans. While all have "impact" recruits already being relied upon for key minutes (Ed Davis, Kemba Walker and Samardo Samuels), all three teams are so deep in similarly regarded talents that they won't be asked to shoulder more than they're capable of. UConn could use a bit more frontcourt depth, UNC could play better defense, and Louisville could use some health. One of these three teams should be cutting down the nets in Detroit next March.
Top 25
1. Connecticut
Jim Calhoun has his most talented squad since the NBA draft-pick laden 2006 Huskies became a side-note to George Mason's fairytale tourney run. UNC may be deeper in talent than any other team, but no team in the land can match the Huskies' first 5. Junior G A.J. Price returns from an ACL injury suffered in UConn's 2008 Tournament loss to San Diego. Price will slide to shooting guard to take advantage of his scoring abilities and make room for incoming freshman PG Kemba Walker. Walker has the speed to push the ball up the floor when Calhoun wants to outrun the opposition, and earning tournament MVP honors en route to leading the US team to a silver medal in the U18 World Championships indicates that the Bronx, N.Y. native might have the chops to helm a championship contender. Jerome Dyson, who lead the team in scoring as a Freshman, gives the Huskies a trio of guards who can handle and score.
As solid as the perimeter players are, it's 7'3" Tanzanian Hasheem Thabeet who will be the key player if Connecticut is to return to the NCAA mountaintop in Detroit this year. Thabeet, who has already broken numerous UConn shot-blocking marks, is a defensive game-changer who spent the offseason learning to attack the basket on offense. It's no mistake that Calhoun has built his team around Thabeet. For all the running in transition and pressing on defense we've seen out of UConn team's in the past, the one constant is ownership of the painted area. The Huskies have led the nation in blocked shots 6 years running, actively funneling opposing dribblers into the post to contend with the likes of Thabeet. On the offensive end, few teams are better at consistently attacking the basket and drawing contact using superior size.
Connecticut's ability to match UNC's talent and minimize their depth advantage by creating contact gives them as good as chance as any to take down the preseason favorites. For the Huskies to win it all, they'll need Thabeet to improve his offensive game around the rim, and for Jeff Adrien to continue to do yeoman's work with nightly double-doubles. The return of F Stanley Robinson in December, and the possible addition of freshman big man Ater Majok, could give UConn the depth they need to compete with the likes of Carolina. It's the presence of Thabeet (perhaps the one player who can contain Hansbrough) and the personnel to give opposing teams multiple looks offensively (big, small, fastbreak, etc.) that makes them my choice this year as the country's #1 team.
2. North Carolina
Carolina has a team deeper in talent and experience than any other vying for the NCAA crown this season. The Tar Heels return their top six scorers, including national player of the year Tyler Hansbrough. Ty Lawson, Wayne Ellington and Danny Green tested NBA draft waters before returning for another shot at a championship alongside Hansbrough, Marcus Ginyard, and Deon Thompson. Highly touted 6-10 freshman PF Ed Davis will need to quickly assume a larger rebounding and interior defensive role with 7-0 fellow freshman Tyler Zeller on the shelf due to injury.
Lawson runs the break as well or better than any point in the nation, and he has the perimeter shooters to kick out to when defenses collapse on him or Hansbrough. Ginyard, Ellington, Lawson and Green are all threats from the outside at better than .360 3PT pct (Ellington and Ginyard each connected on exactly 40% of their triples last year). Hanbrough is truly an unstoppable force in the post. I tried desperately to hate the guy because of his goofy baby face, giant eyeballs, and frat-boy demeanor, but you watch this guy once, and you wish all post players could play that way. He is ALWAYS attacking the basket. The weight of his body is almost always going towards the rim, and because he doesn't hesitate, defenders have to catch up and either foul him or watch him bank one in. Who knows how technique, footwork and tenacity will make up for athletic deficiencies in the NBA, so catch a UNC game before he's sitting next to Adam Morrison on the Bobcats bench and wondering why Larry Brown keeps scowling at him.
As evidenced by their being the first unanimous preseason No. 1 in the history of the ESPN/USA Today Coaches Poll - nobody will be surprised if UNC takes home the hardware and cuts down the nets in Detroit. However, if they want to avoid an exit like last year's disappointment against eventual champion Kansas, they'll need to improve defensively. Hansbrough is proving himself one of the best players in recent college basketball history, and Roy has the tools again this year to help take him to the top.
3. Louisville
Okay, I know I put Louisville in my Final Four every year, but that just speaks to how many talented players Rick Pitino has amassed over the last few seasons. Last year's Cardinals team struggled with health and "Caracter" issues. They seemed to click near the end of the season, but perhaps too late. After blowing out their first few tourney opponents (Boise, Oklahoma, Tennessee) they lost at the hands of Carolina in the Elite 8. In the offseason, troubled Derrick Caracter was told to sit out this year (he will have a chance to return for next season) after he had become a distraction to the team. The summer wasn't all about addition by subtraction, though.
Pitino landed a potentially game-changing recruit in C Samardo Samuels, who is expected to contribute immediately. Terrence Williams and Earl Clark considered jumping to the NBA, but decided they could help their draft status with another year in college. While Louisville lost team leader and skilled post passer David Padgett, Samuels should fit better into Pitino's agressive defensive style and provide a more intimidating defensive presence than Padgett. Padgett was also in and out of the lineup with knee problems, making it difficult for the Cardinals to get into a rhythm over a stretch of games.
The multi-talented Terrence Williams should be Louisville's best player this season, capable of filling up the stat sheet in a point-forward type role. The Cardinals return 4 of 5 starters from last season's team. Andre McGee and Edgar Sosa are both guards who can score, distribute and have tournament experience. Jerry Smith can fill it up from long range, allowing Pitino to stretch out defenses and open up opportunities for his very talented frontline of Samuels and Earl Clark.
Deep and talented with versatile players who create matchup problems for opponents, Louisville will once again be a superlative defensive team that uses athleticism and ball pressure to create turnovers. If they can stay healthy and have another player or two step up with Williams to carry some of the offensive load, Pitino's Louisville squad has all the tools to reach Detroit.
4. Gonzaga
Mark Few is a terrific coach who finally has some size (6'11" Austin Daye) to go with an excellent PG (Jeremy Pargo). If ever there were a year for the Zags to bust into the Final Four, this is it with many of the major conferences in down cycles
5. Notre Dame
Returning Big East POY Luke Harangody teams with sharpshooting Kyle McAlarney to form one of the most dangerous inside-outside combos in the college game. Is this the year Mike Brey gets off the tourney schnide and takes a team past the Sweet 16?
6. Michigan State
Tom Izzo is too good of a coach not to get back to the Final Four soon. Though the BigTen won't be particularly strong this year, Izzo might have the horses in star Raymar Morgan, solid center Goran Suton, and highly touted freshman forward Delvon Roe.
7. Duke
Loaded with quality recruits and returning starters, Duke lurks as the lone threat to UNC in the ACC. Kyle Singler becomes the focus of a solid offense, but the Blue Devils don't have a true rebounding center to control the paint and could struggle against bigger opponents if Singler isn't hitting from outside and drawing interior defenders to the perimeter to open up the middle of the defense.
8. Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh has talented frontcourt players in Sam Young and DeJuan Blair, as well as savvy upperclassmen Levance Fields at guard. They should be a tough out.
9. UCLA
The Bruins add G Jrue Holiday (considered the #1 recruit alternatively at PG and SG by different recruiting publications) to their backcourt to form an excellent trio of perimeter players (with Darren Collison and Josh Shipp). UCLA might lack the muscle inside to compete for a Final Four spot, especially if Alfred Aboya misses significant time.
10. Texas
Every year it seems Rick Barnes watches one of his talented youngsters jump ship for NBA riches. Two seasons ago it was Kevin Durant, and last year it was D.J. Augustin, one of the country's best PG. Barnes just keeps restocking. PG A.J. Abrams needs to protect the basketball and create opportunities for SF Damion James and C Connor Atchely for UT to make a deep tournament run.
11. Syracuse
Andy Rautins and Eric Devendorf return from a season lost to injury to join a talented 'Cuse squad steered by sophomore PG Johnny Flynn. They have size in the post with Alinze Onuaku, and Paul Harris is strong enough to battle with taller players in the painted area. Flynn was one of the best PG in the league as a freshman last season, and he should thrive with some of the scoring burden removed and placed on the returning players.
12. Oklahoma
Blake Griffin is probably one of the 5 best players in the country. With a senior PG and a dynamic freshman SG in Willie Warren, coach Jeff Capel may take his talented Sooners team deep into March.
13. Memphis
Calipari always has a gross amount of athletic talent. Losing Derrick Rose hurts any team, but Coach Cal didn't take long to find a replacement in freshman phenom Tyreke Evans. Evans' adjustment to the college game will go a long way towards determining how far Memphis makes it this season.
14. Georgetown
The Hoyas lost two players who had been program stalwarts and team leaders in Jonathan Wallace and Roy Hibbert. Sophomore Chris Wright has shown he can be more of a playmaking distributor than Wallace was, and top recruit Greg Monroe has been better than anticipated and Georgetown's best player in the early going. Monroe's athleticism (allowing him to get back quickly in transition) and ball movement skills might make him a better fit for JTIII's offense than Hibbert was. A dangerous team that could become a serious contender if Jr. DaJuan Summers finally makes the "leap" to stardom that Hoya fans hoped he would make last year, after Jeff Green's departure.
15. Florida
Billy D's Gators missed the tourney last year, but in a weak SEC don't expect it to happen again. Nick Calathes, Jai Lucas and Walter Hodge are good enough to get them back. Oh, and Billy can coach 'em up pretty good too.
16. Purdue
17. Villanova
18. Davidson
19. Arizona State
20. Kansas
21. UNLV
22. Marquette
23. Xavier
24. Tennessee
25. UAB
Coming up, Big East preview...