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The Morning After: Staying positive

by in Morning After | January 14th, 2009

There are only so many things to say from game to game about the way IU is playing. For example, what was there to say after Illinois? The Hoosiers were destroyed by a far superior (and still underrated) team. Michigan was the real disappointment — a game the Hoosiers should have had, even if most of us suspected a second-half letdown — but one that was ultimately caused by the same systemic flaws that caused IU to lose to Illinois. Youth. Inexperience. Lack of depth. Lack of athleticism. Poor defense. And so on. It gets repetitive listing out these things every third day of the week; what’s worse, it gets depressing.

In the interest of staving off those existential demons, let’s get positive for a few paragraphs here, shall we? Cool. As there is no Shon Morris to take any rage out on this week, it’ll hopefully be a little easier.

(First, let’s do a musical interlude, something to help the mood:

WHOA OH OH. WHOA OH OH. Man, I’m ready now. Let’s do this.)

Ryan touched on much of “The Good” last night, but at least one of his points deserves to be hammered home: Verdell Jones is an improving basketball player. The freshman was set behind by an early season injury, but he seems fully recovered. What’s more, he seems to be learning. His direction of the offense (which at times against Ohio State’s matchup zone stretched the good-faith use of the term “offense”; standing overloading one side of the court doesn’t work if the overloading duo are standing right next to each other) was, as Ryan wrote, competent. His ability to get to the rim is a welcome sight. Jones isn’t a conventionally quick player. He glides, swoops to the lane, takes long jump stops before settling in to his mid-range jumper. He’s far from a perfect player — his defense is a long way away, among other things — but having someone who can both distribute the ball and command the team and also, you know, shoot the ball from time to time (cough Daniel Moore cough) is big.

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Good, Bad and Ugly: Ohio State

by in Good Bad Ugly | January 13th, 2009

THE GOOD:

THE GOOD, CONTINUED:

Verdell Jones looked incredibly competent in the point guard role tonight (I feel like this was the first time all year we didn’t get a lot of Daniel Moore dribbling all over the place, which was somewhat comforting), and it was nice to see Devan Dumes on the court, even if he was still a little hobbled by his ankle injury. For as feast or famine as he can be, we need him on the court. Tom Pritchard hit up another double-double with 16 points and 11 boards, though half those points came in the final five minutes.

IU came out somewhat strong to start the second half and held onto the pace for a bit, but the levee eventually broke for good.

Fifteen offensive boards ain’t too shabby, either.

THE BAD AND UGLY:

Defending the three. A trend is starting to develop early on in Big Ten season here, one in which IU is giving up wide-open 3-pointers all over the place. Michigan just happened to miss a ton in the first half of Indiana’s game against them, and that’s how the Hoosiers were able to amass such a lead — only to see it all come crumbling down. Illinois hit a million against us, and tonight it was more of the same. Ohio State tallied their season high IN THE FIRST HALF ALONE tonight, as they knocked down 11-of-16 in the first frame. Yeesh. When the three wasn’t the go-to shot in the second half, Ohio State continued to make the extra pass, and starting hitting layups and dunks.

Oh, also: We’ve now lost seven straight, the first time since the 1963-64 season, according to ESPN. Raise your hand if you were even born then. Sigh.

Live Blog: Indiana @ Ohio State

by in Game Threads | January 13th, 2009



Crean: Dumes is a “game-time decision at best”

by in Media | January 12th, 2009

In today’s Big Ten coaches teleconference, Indiana coach Tom Crean said that Devan Dumes is “day-to-day to a game-time decision at the very best” for Tuesday’s game at Ohio State. You can listen to Crean’s teleconference below, courtesy of the Big Ten Network:

Related:

Carlino putting up big numbers for No. 1 Highland

by in Recruiting | January 12th, 2009

Throughout the season, Inside the Hall will keep you posted on how the six Indiana signees and 2011 commitment Matt Carlino are performing at their respective schools. Here’s our latest update.

+ Matt Carlino: The No. 17 player in the 2011 class, according to ESPN, scored 16 points in a 72-58 Highland win over Dobson on Tuesday and 31 points in a 73-68 win over Cesar Chavez on Friday. Highland is 8-0 and No. 1 in the power rankings on azcentral.com.

+ Christian Watford: Watford poured in 36 points and 15 rebounds in 65-56 win over Huffman on Friday and then had 20 points and nine rebounds in 45-43 win over Erwin on Saturday. Shades Valley is 16-3.

+ Jordan Hulls: Hulls scored seven points in 74-55 victory on Friday over rival Bloomington North. Earlier in the week, he scored 26, including six straight 3-pointers, in a 99-52 rout of Center Grove. Bloomington South is 9-0 and No. 11 in the USA Today Super 25 Poll.

+ Bobby Capobianco: The 6-9 Capobianco had 22 points, seven rebounds and three blocks in a 77-61 Loveland win over Winton Woods on Friday.

+ Maurice Creek: Hargrave moved to 13-1 with a 96-77 win over Averett on Friday. No individual numbers for Creek were available.

+ Derek Elston: Elston and the Tipton Blue Devils, now No. 2 in Class 2-A, bounced back from a loss in the Hall of Fame Classic with a 50-40 win over West Lafayette. Elston scored 15 points and grabbed 12 rebounds.

+ Bawa Muniru: No individual stats are available; Mt. Zion Academy is 12-4.

The Morning After: Illinois open thread

by in Morning After | January 12th, 2009

After the massive disappointment last week against Michigan, I didn’t expect much out of Saturday’s game at Illinois — that’s a tough place to play, and Illinois has sneakily been really good this year. Their tempo-free numbers belie a team better than their win-loss record, and their win-loss record is good. Let’s just say I didn’t have my hopes up. And still, somehow, the game was a gigantic letdown.

As R, Alex, and my friends yesterday could attest, I racked my brain for a while thinking of things to say about this game, and I really don’t have much. Some blowouts you can analyze; some are deceptive. There was nothing deceptive happening Saturday. Illinois was just so much better in every facet of basketball it was simultaneously boring and engaging. That doesn’t happen often.

In any case, this is your Monday open thread. Discuss whatever you’d like, whether it’s Saturday’s game, or when you predict IU will win its first Big Ten contest, or whatever. It’s all you.

I have one thought to hopefully get the discussion going. Not only was IU bad on Saturday — just skillwise, in matchups, that sort of thing — but it was the first time this year that it seemed like they weren’t even trying. Transition defense was unusually slow; Illinois was able to get into their secondary break, make one pass, and have a wide open jumper waiting for them before IU even matched up man-to-man or picked up the nearest player. I understand being drained after the Michigan game. That’s fine. But the one positive constant about the Hoosiers this year has been their energy and commitment to their coach, and Saturday was the first time I didn’t see it.

Also, one more: Did Illinois fans even enjoy that? Wasn’t that sort of like working out all summer, getting big, hoping to fight the bully that terrorized you last year only to see the bully come back to school in a wheelchair? I mean, you can punch the kid in the face if you want … but it’s not going to be nearly as satisfying.

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