Preseason NIT Final 4: (#24)Tennessee Preview

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Here's the link for the front-page article: http://www.vcuramnation.com/2010/11/pre ... e-preview/

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When: November 24th, 2010 at 7 p.m.
Where: Madison Square Garden, New York City
TV: ESPN2, ESPN3.com

There is something about Madison Square Garden that provokes sheer awe in all who enter. The Garden is cavernous yet endearing. It is here that the legends of basketball past whisper in the deafening silence. Wilt Chamberlain, Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, Reggie Miller and a who’s who of the greatest to ever play the game walked this floor. Through 4 incarnations of the arena, it has become a symbol of the city of New York and synonymous with big-time basketball. For years this was the site of the national championship of NCAA men’s basketball. The history in the air is so thick you can almost breathe it in. 4 teams have earned the right to play on this floor next week; VCU is one of them.

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It is here, on this hallowed ground that VCU will take on its greatest challenge of the season to date. The Rams will take on SEC-power Tennessee led by Coach Bruce Pearl whose Vols are ranked #24 (AP) in the nation. This Preseason NIT Tip-Off Semifinal game will be played on national television under the bright lights of MSG with a shot at the championship game at stake.

Questions have swirled about VCU from fans both within the program and outside of it. Will the Rams be worse off without first-round NBA draft pick Larry Sanders? Does VCU have the frontcourt depth to truly compete with the best in the land? Can these seniors win the big one without Eric Maynor? Those Rams have the opportunity to prove itself to the nation on the biggest of basketball stages with some of the most recognizable programs in college basketball. The first test comes in the form of the Vols.

The Tennessee Tradition:

This is your perpetual David vs. Goliath matchup as far as name recognition and history of success goes. Tennessee has twice as many NCAA appearances (18 to VCU’s 9) and 16 wins in those appearances (to VCU’s 5), including a head-to-head 2nd-round victory in 1981. The Vols prevailed in overtime by a 58-56 score, a nail-biter that many older Ram fans still remember. The 2009-2010 Vols advanced to the Elite 8 last year, losing by 1 point to Michigan State on a foul shot with 1.8 seconds remaining and a spot in the Final Four on the line. In comparison the Rams missed out on both the NCAA’s and the NIT, winning the 3rd -tier CBI postseason tournament. Tennessee has also produced a number of NBA players including Ernie Grunfield, Bernard King, Dale Ellis, Larry Robinson, and Allan Houston, who ironically enough dazzled crowds on the very floor the Rams and Vols will be facing off on in a couple of days.

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Allan Houston

The 2010-2011 Vols:

Head Coach Bruce Pearl did a remarkable job building the Tennessee program from mediocrity under Coach Buzz Peterson (who now subsequently coaches in the same conference as VCU at UNC Wilmington) to a team that was within a basket of the Final Four last year. In the last 5 seasons the Vols have made the Big Dance and made the Sweet Sixteen 3 of those years. The program has made great strides since 2005 when Pearl took the reins in Knoxville.

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Head Coach Bruce Pearl

The program has recently been rocked by allegations of NCAA violations by Coach Pearl and a subsequent NCAA investigation into the Tennessee program is being conducted. To exacerbate matters it appears that Pearl lied to NCAA investigators. The school came down hard on Pearl in hopes of lightening any punishment from the NCAA, taking 1.5 million dollars of Coach Pearl’s salary away over the next 5 years. He has also been banned from off-campus recruiting for one year. His contract has been voided and he and Tennessee are in negotiations on a new one. SEC Commissioner Mike Slive also gave the SEC’s punishment on the matter by suspending him from taking part in the first 8 conference games of the season. The NCAA has yet to release their findings and any possible sanctions/punishments that may result from it. Regardless of the NCAA’s eventual ruling, Tennessee’s image in the college basketball world has taken a little bit of a hit and Pearl’s future at the school is somewhat in question. It appears for the time being that the school will keep Pearl as it’s head coach, but both Pearl and the program will be the source of swirling controversy this season.

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Tobias Harris

While the distraction looms over this season, the Vols still have a pretty good team. They lost 3 starters off their Elite 8 team from a year ago but are still a top 25 team to start the 2010-2011 season. Their biggest loss is probably forward Wayne Chism who was the leading rebounder and averaged a team-best 12.6 ppg last season. He was one of the better defenders on the 2009-2010 squad. While they lost a very good player, they bring in a pretty skilled McDonald’s All-American in Tobias Harris to help fill the void made by Chism’s departure. The tough 6’8 forward will be making a homecoming to New York next week and is a very skilled and versatile player who has shown great ability in the last couple of games. Coach Pearl has stated that he will be trying to get the freshman more touches in the games to come. He is a match-up problem with his impressive speed and strength and his ability to spread the floor with his jumper.

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Brian Williams

6’10, 290-pound behemoth Brian Williams is the only true center on the squad and is expected to step up in Chism’s absence as well. So far he has not been stellar (3.7 ppg, 6.3 rpg), but that is probably attributable to the fast pace at which the Vols play. It’s tough for a 290-pound big man to run the floor as much as the Vols do and still be able to contribute significantly. With the pace both teams want to play, I doubt Williams plays much of a factor in the game. The depth for Tennessee in the front-court is impressive as Reynaldo Woolridge, Marquette-transfer Jeronne Maymon, Steven Pearl, and John Fields (formerly of UNCW) all come off of the bench. While VCU has depth as far as numbers, it is inexperienced. Juvonte Reddic and DJ Haley will have to grow up a little and play beyond their experience to help out Jamie Skeen and Toby Veal in the front-court.

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Melvin Goins

In the backcourt, the Vols lost JP Prince and Bobby Maze and have asked backup point guard Melvin Goins (5.3 ppg and 1.8 apg in’09-’10, pictured left) to step up this year. The 5’11 San Diego-native has answered the call and is averaging 7 points and 2 assists per game so far this season. Those stats are somewhat skewed since he went out with a bruise injury in the middle of Tennessee’s first Preseason NIT game against Belmont. He did not play against Missouri State (true freshman Trae Golden performed duties at the 1 for that game), but should be ready to go for next week’s tilt with the Rams. He’s quite quick and loves to get out in transition, a statement that can be generalized to include most of Tennessee’s roster. They run, run, and run. The Vols have impressive athleticism and speed and they use those tools to overwhelm their opponents.

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Cameron Tatum

The team’s designated sharp-shooter (if you had to choose one) is probably Cameron Tatum. He was a 39% 3-point shooter and 48% overall from the field. He will be asked to step up his scoring this season and with his smooth stroke, he will be depended on to hit some big shots for the Vols before the season is over. Another McDonald’s All-American is explosive junior wing Scotty Hopson. Along with Tobias Harris they form a deadly combination that will pose serious problems for a lot of opponents this year. Hopson averaged 12.2 ppg last season but has somewhat disappointed Vols fans who were hoping he might be more productive coming out of high school. He is still a very dangerous player and a tough defensive assignment slashing to the rim. Turnovers are an issue for Hopson, another issue which can be generalized to describe much of the Tennessee squad this early in the season.

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Scotty Hopson

The Vols do not take care of the basketball and turn it over far more than Bruce Pearl would probably like to see. In 3 games Tennessee already has 51 turnovers (to just 37 assists). This is something that the Rams will have to exploit if they want to pull off the upset. Playing 40 minutes of full-court pressure every game helps the Rams in this regard. Since the Rams employ 4 different presses (including the diamond press that was so effective in the 2nd half of the Wake Forest game), you can bet a big part of the plan is to pressure Goins and Golden from the tip. The Rams boast 66 assists to just 37 turnovers and Shaka Smart will need Joey Rodriguez and Darius Theus to continue their strong play from the point guard spot in running the offense and creating opportunities for their teammates to get good shots. The Rams’ real weakness so far has been their free-throw shooting. If their 3-point shot doesn’t fall as it has been for the last 3 games and they are not able to establish a viable post game with Jamie Skeen and Toby Veal, it may come down to free throws. The Rams will have to improve in that regard.

Tennessee usually likes to out-run their opponents, but they may have been matched up with a team that relishes the opportunity to run just as much. Both teams weaker points revolve around their half-court defense. With both teams running, this game is sure to be a shootout with a scores probably in the 80′s-90′s if not higher. Tennessee relies on the 3-pointer as well although they don’t shoot it quite as well as the Rams do at this point of the season. It will be interesting to see who wins the battle of the running teams. If anything the game should be a very entertaining, high-scoring affair. The team who shoots better from 3 and takes care of the ball will likely win.

Prediction:

This is a young Tennessee team chock full of talent but still trying to find its identity. The Vols have shown vulnerability against 2 mid-major opponents in the first two games of the Tip-Off, winning by single digits against both Belmont and Missouri State. The third time will be the charm as VCU takes advantage of the Vols’ propensity to turn the ball over. The Rams will ride the hot 3-point shooting of guards Brandon Rozzell, Joey Rodriguez, and Brad Burgess. VCU crashes the BCS party in NYC and advances to the finals with a 94-89 victory.

GO RAMS!
 
Is this available in paperback? I'll have to read this one later. Thank you as always though.
 
VCU Finance 2008 said:
Is this available in paperback? I'll have to read this one later. Thank you as always though.

Unfortunately not. You're welcome though. :lol:
 
ViCtorioUs said:
RRR said:
This preview is so much better than the one at Volnation. :D

Odd, because DB did them both.

No Vol Wise made the other one. Unless DB sent that preview to him. Vol Wise claimed VCU's starters would play against UT's back ups the first half because we suck so much and then the starters would play the second half and murder us.
 
Solid preview. I'd say your only inaccurate statement would be the part where Tennessee likes to run a lot. We have pressed very rarely in the last 3+ years under Pearl after doing it almost exclusively in his first two seasons. Our lateral quickness and "hustle" is lacking since our athletes have improved, and it hurts our ability to pressure opponents in the full court. Pearl has scrapped the idea of pressing almost completely. Our halfcourt inbounds pressure is probably the nation's best traditionally (something like 150 turnovers forced on inbounds alone plays under Pearl which leads the nation by a considerable margin in the time period.)

I don't recall a single team successfully pressing us for 40 minutes other than the 2007-08 Louisville team in the Sweet 16, as it simply hasn't worked at all for teams who have tried. This team could be different, however, as other than Goins and Tobias Harris, we have no reliable ball handlers.

Speeding things up has pro and cons for each team, as Tennessee is exponentially better offensively in the full court game than they are in the half court. The halfcourt offense under Pearl has always been lacking, as it generally consists of tossing the ball around the perimeter for 20 seconds and then trying to beat your man off the dribble or throwing up a wild 3. In the full court Tennessee is much more difficult to stop, as Goins and Harris can break the press and get it up to Hopson and Tatum who are special around the rim.

Half court defensive improvement single handedly allowed Tennessee to make the Elite 8 last year and has looked solid again this year. "NCAA Tournament Slow it down and grind it out ball" gave Pearl fits when he pressed, pressed, and pressed some more, but last year with the lack of depth after an off the court incident, he was forced to focus soley on halfcourt defense. Tennessee responded and finished ninth nationally in defensive efficiency from Jan. 1st on. This is the style that Pearl seems to have settled on.

Player by player quick rundown:
Starting PG Melvin Goins: Explosive both defensively and offensively, unknown what he can do over 25-30 mins. Solid FT shooter and capable 3 pt shooter. Very good ball handler but gets out of control at times.

Starting SG Scotty Hopson: Jekyll and Hyde. Is the most physically gifted athlete on Tennessee's roster. At 6'7, Hopson has the frame and body to be elite, but his ball-handling and temperament hold him back significantly. He is a decent 3 pt shooter and streaky in the mid range game. He has a dynamite first step but is hesitant to use it for fear of dribbling it off of his knee or foot. If he gets around the rim he will usually dunk it or get fouled. If he gets on a roll offensively, he plays with much more energy defensively. Calling a timeout when he gets on even a mini roll will deflate him. Missouri State played that perfectly.

Starting SF Cameron Tatum: Extremely similar to Hopson. He is a better shooter and less dynamic athlete due to some nagging knee injuries. He is the best turnover creater due to his length and ability to get in the passing lanes. Likes to shoot the ball and won't stop if he gets on a roll. Average at best at staying in front of his man.

Starting PF Tobias Harris: Most skilled basketball player Tennessee has had since Dale Ellis, even as a true frosh. He is easily the smoothest player on the squad, and is not easily rattled. He has an extremely smooth mid range game and back to the basket game. If he's left open outside he'll knock down three too. He is the best offensive player on the roster and it isn't close. Defensively is where he looks more like a freshman, but even with his minor defensive deficiencies he remains Tennessee's best player and will be an NBA player sooner rather than later.

Starting C Brian Williams: He plays up and down to his level of competition. Simple as that. In the Elite 8 run he was dominant in the post and looked poised for a breakout senior season. He has struggled a bit early on and has gotten in some foul trouble. I have no idea what to expect from him in his return to the Big Apple.

6th Man: C John Fields: Dominant defensively as a shot blocker. Limited to put backs mainly on the offensive end. Solid rebounder.

7th Man: PG Trae Golden: True frosh who is a very good passer and slasher. He still has a ways to go in dealing with the press and playing well defensively.

8th Man: SG Skylar McBee: Almost strictly a shooter, he also hustles and scraps more like a player off one of Pearl's first two teams. Not too good at all defensively or offensively when he isn't shooting it.

9th Man: PF Steven Pearl: Coach's son, fifth year senior who is the strongest player on the team. Does little stuff like drawing charges and getting tough rebounds. Undersized, but plays very hard. Shouldn't be playing on this team talent wise and is not too good at all offensively.

10th Man: SF Renaldo Woolridge: Has grown too much since arriving on campus for his own good. The son of former Bull and Laker Orlando Woolridge. He is 6'9 as a Junior and is still playing on the wing. Not a great shot or terribly skilled or strong in the post. Gets some rebounds and makes an occasional shot, but looks extremely awkward on the court.

11th Man: SF Jordan McRae: True frosh who has struggled immensely defensively. Is more skilled than Woolridge and is probably the best athlete other than Hopson on the team. Gets 2-3 first half minutes a game. He is similar to Tatum, with a higher ceiling and less developed.

12th Man: C Kenny Hall: Will play if Williams or Fields gets in foul trouble. About 6'9. Great leaper and rebounder. Good FT shooter, awful offensively other than that. Redshirt candidate if he doesn't play any more this season.

Injured: SG Josh Bone: A better defensive version of McBee. Very good at guarding the opposing PG in the half court and played a pivotal role on the bench of Elite 8 squad.

Ineligible: PF Jeronne Maymon: Marquette transfer who is a far better version of Pearl. Will likely take Pearl's minutes when he becomes eligible for the December tilt @ Pitt.

All in all, the team's exceptionally poor ball handling will probably be our undoing. I like VCU to win.

We're playing way too many people as well. We were slightly above average prior to cutting our rotation to 9 last year and then we began playing much better, and I feel the same will be true this year. Playing 11-13 guys is just way too many.
 
7th Man: PG Trae Golden: True frosh who is a very good passer and slasher. He still has a ways to go in dealing with the press and playing well defensively.

Wrong. He is probably UT's best on ball defender after Mel Go.
 
OUVolFan said:
7th Man: PG Trae Golden: True frosh who is a very good passer and slasher. He still has a ways to go in dealing with the press and playing well defensively.

Wrong. He is probably UT's best on ball defender after Mel Go.

He is solid on the ball. His off ball defense is much worse than MelGo. He had trouble staying with his man off the ball vs. Belmont especially.
 
I think the Vols are in for an asswhoopin'. The youth and leadership of the coaching staff of the Vols. will seriously be tested. And I'm pretty sure that Sunshine will be known by the nonhicks in Knoxville on T-Day.

VCU 86
UT 69
 
BaNgMyPrOgRaM said:
I think the Vols are in for an asswhoopin'. The youth and leadership of the coaching staff of the Vols. will seriously be tested. And I'm pretty sure that Sunshine will be known by the nonhicks in Knoxville on T-Day.

VCU 86
UT 69

I wouldn't be surprised. Last year we were crushed by So. Cal early in the season, who was absolutely awful. We also almost lost to DePaul and just didn't look good. Once we cut the rotation down to 9 we beat Kansas, Kentucky, Florida, and Ohio State. This coaching staff insists on playing 12 guys in November and December and hopes things comes together by January.
 
Re: Preseason NIT Final 4: (#24)Tennessee Preview
by BaNgMyPrOgRaM on Fri Nov 19, 2010 9:48 pm

I think the Vols are in for an asswhoopin'. The youth and leadership of the coaching staff of the Vols. will seriously be tested. And I'm pretty sure that Sunshine will be known by the nonhicks in Knoxville on T-Day.

VCU 86
UT 69

While neither team appears to revolve exclusively around one player it seems to me VCU will be hard pressed to come out on top without a solid [double-double] type performance from our PG Joey Rodriguez. He does have the ability to have double digit scoring/assists, which will be needed. While he' has never played at MSG, he spends many summers in NYC and has a lot of family in the area...many who will be in attendance. I've seen those things go both ways, with college players being too hyped and pressing in front of family, etc. He will need to push tempo while not pressing his game. This year as Joey goes so go the Rams.
 
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