Latest Big East Stories
Posted: Apr 9th 2009 4:05PM ET by Chas Rich (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Big East

When it comes to predicting the early favorites for next season, the usual approach is to look at which teams appear to be coming back loaded with talent and ended the season playing well. Syracuse seemed to fit that bill.
They were poised to bring back their entire starting line-up, one of their top recruits from last year -- Mookie Jones -- was injured so he will be able to help, plus another top-20 recruiting class. Of course that depended on no one leaving early. With the encouragement of coach
Jim Boeheim, point guard
Jonny Flynn will be checking his status in the NBA draft -- without hiring an agent.
Paul Harris and
Eric Devendorf, at first blush,
appear to just be leaving.
Posted: Apr 8th 2009 12:51PM ET by Chas Rich (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Big East

Pitt sophomore forward,
DeJuan Blair was at the very least going to test the NBA draft waters. Most mock drafts have Blair being drafted mid-way in the first round despite being a 6-7 power forward.
Blair has decided that he will not even pretend that there is a chance that he will come back to Pitt. He has
retained an attorney to help him, though he has not hired an NBA-certified agent as of yet. The hiring of an attorney, though, means that Blair has surrendered his remaining eligibility. He has a press conference scheduled for later this afternoon to make an official statement.
Posted: Apr 5th 2009 12:00PM ET by Ray Holloman (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Big East, Big Ten

Somewhere in Michigan State's middle-class brand of Michigan hope and mixed martial basketball, and North Carolina's mechanized cavalry of an offensive attack, there may be a similarity or two lurking somewhere.
But you've got about as good a chance of finding it as you do spotting an opposing fan in Ford Field's South Pacific of Spartan green.
These two teams couldn't be more different if one of them came out in shoulder pads.
And, with
Tom Izzo, who invited Vikings' offensive line coach Pat Morris speak to his team before Saturday night's win, and whose teams always play like it's fourth-and-goal from the one, that could very well be the case.
Posted: Apr 4th 2009 11:43PM ET by Chas Rich (RSS feed)
Filed Under: ACC, Big East, South Region, East Region

Whether it was an off night, the size and length of North Carolina's defense bothering the smaller Villanova guards, it all added up to the same thing: a crate load of bricks. When the Wildcats shoot a hideous 5-of-27 on 3-pointers (18.5 percent), they do not have much of a chance. There is not much to decipher.
Villanova gave up size all over the court, so they needed to hit some of their jump shots to have a chance, to open up lanes for penetration to the basket and to give
Dante Cunningham a little space inside to work.
It never happened.
Posted: Apr 4th 2009 11:34PM ET by Jay Mariotti (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Big East, Big Ten

DETROIT -- On command, when a local kid named
Durrell Summers lifted off and nearly decapitated
Stanley Robinson with a vicious dunk, a moving wave of green-swept humanity rose and rocked. Yes, your honor, this was a ridiculous homecourt advantage, a home-FIELD advantage of about 45,000 local crazies in a 72,500-seat football stadium, an advantage in ways freakishly unprecedented in the fiercely neutral extravaganza known as the Final Four.
Ford Field is guilty as charged.
And not a soul with a conscience should complain about it.
Posted: Apr 4th 2009 11:33PM ET by Dan Graziano (RSS feed)
Filed Under: ACC, Big East

As discussed
here earlier in the week, there was a way for
Villanova to beat
North Carolina. They had to do it on the perimeter, where they were supposedly strong and the Tar Heels were supposedly weak. They had to do it by exploiting Carolina's suspect three-point shooting defense and driving against the Heels' weak help-side interior defense.
This was all feasible. Anybody who's watched Carolina play for the past couple of years has seen the Heels go through scoring droughts and fritter away leads while they ignored defense entirely for large chunks of the game.
But a funny thing happened on the way to Ford Field. It looks as if North Carolina doesn't do that anymore. In fact, with a healthy
Ty Lawson and an improved 40-minute focus, it looks as if North Carolina might not have any flaws in its game at all.
Posted: Apr 4th 2009 9:09PM ET by Chas Rich (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Big East, Big Ten, Midwest Region, West Region

Specifically, the Huskies' own guards killed them against Michigan State. In one of those nights where the stats do not lie,
A.J. Price,
Kemba Walker and
Craig Austrie were every bit as miserable as their numbers suggested. They took 29 of the Huskies 59 shot attempts, but only scored 26 of
UConn's 73 points.
Sadly that includes points from free throws.
Credit Michigan State's defense.
Posted: Apr 4th 2009 8:43PM ET by Dan Graziano (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Big East, Big Ten

Here's a question to nibble on between games: Where would
Michigan State have finished in the Big East?
Remember the Big East? The monster conference of all-time? The beast? The 16-team behemoth that grabbed three of the four No. 1 seeds in this tournament? That just 10 days ago had a chance to have four teams in the
Final Four?
Well, the champions of the Big Ten have just taken out two of those No. 1 Big East seeds en route to the NCAA title game, in which they will play the winner of tonight's
Villanova-
North Carolina game Monday night. They've done it with grit and toughness and hard-core rebounding -- qualities we normally associate with the Big East but of which Michigan State has brought truckloads to this tournament.
Posted: Apr 4th 2009 7:17PM ET by Matt Snyder (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Big East, Big Ten

Late in the first half of an incredibly entertaining national semifinal game, players from
Connecticut and
Michigan State had to be separated by officials. The incident stemmed from a hard foul on Michigan State's
Travis Walton, where he got a good piece of
Jeff Adrien under the basket.
As Walton first fell to the ground, Adrian attempted to push him but whiffed. Walton took exception and swiped back at Adrian, and then an amoeba formed under the basket. Little more than pushing and shoving -- really, just grandstanding, but you can't blame them -- occurred before cooler heads prevailed and the players were separated. Of note,
Hasheem Thabeet really looked like he wanted to fight someone (pictured right with teammates restraining him).
Posted: Apr 4th 2009 7:10PM ET by Chas Rich (RSS feed)
Filed Under: ACC, Big East, Big Ten, Midwest Region, West Region, South Region, East Region

This is what we have been waiting all week for, through non-stories like Ty Lawson legally playing craps, through analysis beaten into the ground, through the cycling of the coaching carousel. Well, Michigan State and UConn tip off at 6:07 PM EST. We will start the live blog at
6 PM ET. Join us after the jump.