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re: Tide Hoops | 31-6 (16-2)
Posted on 12/11/22 at 2:02 pm to CrimsonFever
Posted on 12/11/22 at 2:02 pm to CrimsonFever
I just watched Auburn vs Memphis...
KD Johnson & Wendell Green straight up loss that game on their own. They were terrible!!
KD Johnson & Wendell Green straight up loss that game on their own. They were terrible!!
Posted on 12/11/22 at 2:14 pm to Bryant91092
quote:I’m in the same boat. I’ll be there but won’t get home until 11:45-12. Then I’ve gotta wake up at 4:50 the following morning for work
The 8 tip means I won’t get home until 11:45 at best. It sucks but I’m not letting my season tickets go to waste
Posted on 12/11/22 at 2:16 pm to Joka2kold
they have two #2 guards playing the point and neither is interested in giving it up
that won't work out well when you also can't also consistently shoot it.
They do seem to shoot it well against us.
They have these pretty good bigs and don't use them.
that won't work out well when you also can't also consistently shoot it.
They do seem to shoot it well against us.
They have these pretty good bigs and don't use them.
Posted on 12/11/22 at 2:32 pm to Joka2kold
Memphis scored 58 points in the paint vs Auburn, so trying to limit Kendric Davis' driving to the basket will be a main objective on D. ( He had 27 points, 6 assists, and 9 rebounds vs Auburn.)
Hopefully, we can lock him down like we did Sasser.
Hopefully, we can lock him down like we did Sasser.
This post was edited on 12/11/22 at 2:52 pm
Posted on 12/11/22 at 2:35 pm to CrimsonFever
2 min recap (with dramatic music)
quote:
Alabama Men’s Basketball@AlabamaMBB
Run it back: Win No. 8 at Houston
Posted on 12/11/22 at 3:14 pm to CrimsonFever
Posted on 12/11/22 at 3:19 pm to CCTider
LINK
There are a lot of unusual angles to this team and its recent handiwork. Here are 15 of them:
In beating the Tar Heels and Cougars, the Tide became the first team since Duke in 1965 to dispose of two No. 1 opponents before Jan 1. That’s so long ago, Mike Krzyzewski wasn’t even coaching the Blue Devils yet.
This victory at Houston’s Fertitta Center was Alabama’s first true road upset of a top-ranked team in nearly 40 years. It wasn’t the easiest place to do it, either. Houston’s all-time record in the Fertitta Center before Saturday was 66-4.
Down 15 points, the Tide blew past the Cougars with a 42-21 burst the final 16:17. To put that offensive surge in context, Houston had been allowing only 47.3 points a game.
With the score tied and two minutes to go, Alabama proceeded to go 6-for-6 from the free-throw line. Houston went 0-for-4. The Cougars finished 12-for-22 for the game.
Remember the famous Lorenzo Charles dunk that won the 1983 national championship for North Carolina State and sent Jim Valvano racing around the court in a celebration that will never die? That was the last time Houston lost as the Associated Press No. 1 team before Saturday.
Alabama came into the weekend No. 8, so this was its first game with both teams in the AP top 10 since 2002. The Tide won that matchup against Oklahoma, who was coached at the time by Kelvin Sampson. The same Kelvin Sampson coaching Houston Saturday.
The Cougars have now lost to every AP No. 8 team they have played — five of them — since 1984.
The last time Alabama was a top-10 team going against No. 1 was 1976. That was the NCAA Tournament and the opponent was Indiana, who eventually became the most recent unbeaten national champion. The Hoosiers defeated the Tide by five points, their closest call of the tournament.
Alabama leads the nation in rebound margin, at 12.9 a game. The Tide have not been unduly hampered by being 273rd in the nation in shooting, or 248th in assist-turnover ratio, or 340th in turnover margin.
The top six scorers for Alabama this season are all newcomers, including four freshmen and two transfers. That includes Brandon Miller, whose current 17.9 average is the highest in the nation for a freshman. Next is Ohio transfer Mark Sears at 14.4.
Miller went 0-for-8 against Houston. The Tide also had 10 turnovers on their first 23 possessions. Alabama won anyway. Another freshman, Noah Clowney, had 16 points and 11 rebounds.
Returnee Jahvon Quinerly was a preseason first-team all-SEC pick for Alabama. He is now seventh on the team in scoring. That’s one suggestion of the Tide’s depth. In the North Carolina and Houston games, they had a 74-24 gap in bench points.
The 8-1 Tide’s only loss this season was 82-67 to Connecticut when the Huskies forced 21 turnovers. There’s a reason UConn has been sprinting up the rankings.
In seven previous years at Buffalo and Alabama, Oats has taken five teams to the NCAA Tournament and been coach of the year in both the MAC and the SEC. Before that, he was a high school coach in Michigan for 11 years. Before that, he was a player at Maranatha Baptist, a Division III school in Wisconsin. Another Maranatha product is Indiana football coach Tom Allen.
Oats knows exactly where he’d love to take the Crimson Tide. There have been 83 NCAA Tournaments and 95 different schools have played in the Final Four. But never Alabama. Just one Elite Eight. But here is a young and talented and deep and confident team that might change that. “We have a high ceiling,” he said Saturday.
And clearly no fear of the opponent's ranking.
There are a lot of unusual angles to this team and its recent handiwork. Here are 15 of them:
In beating the Tar Heels and Cougars, the Tide became the first team since Duke in 1965 to dispose of two No. 1 opponents before Jan 1. That’s so long ago, Mike Krzyzewski wasn’t even coaching the Blue Devils yet.
This victory at Houston’s Fertitta Center was Alabama’s first true road upset of a top-ranked team in nearly 40 years. It wasn’t the easiest place to do it, either. Houston’s all-time record in the Fertitta Center before Saturday was 66-4.
Down 15 points, the Tide blew past the Cougars with a 42-21 burst the final 16:17. To put that offensive surge in context, Houston had been allowing only 47.3 points a game.
With the score tied and two minutes to go, Alabama proceeded to go 6-for-6 from the free-throw line. Houston went 0-for-4. The Cougars finished 12-for-22 for the game.
Remember the famous Lorenzo Charles dunk that won the 1983 national championship for North Carolina State and sent Jim Valvano racing around the court in a celebration that will never die? That was the last time Houston lost as the Associated Press No. 1 team before Saturday.
Alabama came into the weekend No. 8, so this was its first game with both teams in the AP top 10 since 2002. The Tide won that matchup against Oklahoma, who was coached at the time by Kelvin Sampson. The same Kelvin Sampson coaching Houston Saturday.
The Cougars have now lost to every AP No. 8 team they have played — five of them — since 1984.
The last time Alabama was a top-10 team going against No. 1 was 1976. That was the NCAA Tournament and the opponent was Indiana, who eventually became the most recent unbeaten national champion. The Hoosiers defeated the Tide by five points, their closest call of the tournament.
Alabama leads the nation in rebound margin, at 12.9 a game. The Tide have not been unduly hampered by being 273rd in the nation in shooting, or 248th in assist-turnover ratio, or 340th in turnover margin.
The top six scorers for Alabama this season are all newcomers, including four freshmen and two transfers. That includes Brandon Miller, whose current 17.9 average is the highest in the nation for a freshman. Next is Ohio transfer Mark Sears at 14.4.
Miller went 0-for-8 against Houston. The Tide also had 10 turnovers on their first 23 possessions. Alabama won anyway. Another freshman, Noah Clowney, had 16 points and 11 rebounds.
Returnee Jahvon Quinerly was a preseason first-team all-SEC pick for Alabama. He is now seventh on the team in scoring. That’s one suggestion of the Tide’s depth. In the North Carolina and Houston games, they had a 74-24 gap in bench points.
The 8-1 Tide’s only loss this season was 82-67 to Connecticut when the Huskies forced 21 turnovers. There’s a reason UConn has been sprinting up the rankings.
In seven previous years at Buffalo and Alabama, Oats has taken five teams to the NCAA Tournament and been coach of the year in both the MAC and the SEC. Before that, he was a high school coach in Michigan for 11 years. Before that, he was a player at Maranatha Baptist, a Division III school in Wisconsin. Another Maranatha product is Indiana football coach Tom Allen.
Oats knows exactly where he’d love to take the Crimson Tide. There have been 83 NCAA Tournaments and 95 different schools have played in the Final Four. But never Alabama. Just one Elite Eight. But here is a young and talented and deep and confident team that might change that. “We have a high ceiling,” he said Saturday.
And clearly no fear of the opponent's ranking.
Posted on 12/11/22 at 3:21 pm to Goombaw
quote:
I think I saw something that said they scored 52 points in the final 17 minutes, averaging nearly 2 points per possession
Sorry, that's wrong. That would be insane. We only scored 44 points in the 2nd half. It was 42 in the final 17 minutes averaging 1.2 points per possession. Which is still really damn good. 1.2 ppp will win you almost every game.
Posted on 12/11/22 at 3:24 pm to BFANLC
quote:
actually like him. He won't get many points (because he doesn't go back up as soon as he o rebounds) but Def he affects a lot of shots/shooters.
He would be really good in the B1G. I’d bet he probably hits the portal and goes to one of their schools where he fits their style of play better. I don’t think Oats will bring in another big like him and will be looking more for Bigs like Bruner and Clowney going forward
Posted on 12/11/22 at 3:41 pm to mistaken4193
Has anyone been keeping up with Langston Wilson's college career? He is averaging about 1 rebound and 1 point a game in his second year at Washington.
Posted on 12/11/22 at 3:44 pm to CrimsonFever
where is SoG? does he even care anymore?

This post was edited on 12/11/22 at 3:44 pm
Posted on 12/11/22 at 3:49 pm to Joka2kold
quote:
KD Johnson & Wendell Green
I think we successfully predicted that Auburn’s poor guard play would be their undoing in the NCAAT last season — and unfortunately (for them) these are the same guys.
Posted on 12/11/22 at 3:51 pm to McGregor
quote:
where is SoG? does he even care anymore?
He created a few spreadsheets, ran his analysis, and found that Jaden Bradley fricks.
What else would you need to know?
Posted on 12/11/22 at 4:08 pm to McGregor
The ladies with a W over in Hattiesburg

Posted on 12/11/22 at 4:29 pm to McGregor
quote:
Alabama came into the weekend No. 8, so this was its first game with both teams in the AP top 10 since 2002. The Tide won that matchup against Oklahoma, who was coached at the time by Kelvin Sampson. The same Kelvin Sampson coaching Houston Saturday.
Ha, weird.
Posted on 12/11/22 at 4:37 pm to Chadaristic
Posted on 12/11/22 at 5:12 pm to Alabama_Fan
Over the past few decades, the women's team has been at best, the middle of the pack in the SEC, and at worst, worse than Vanderbilt ever could be in football.
Posted on 12/11/22 at 5:29 pm to Allthatfades
Sorry but we will be lucky have 5,000 people at game on Tuesday. Last Friday was last day of finals. Saturday was Commencement. Others have listed additional reasons for poor attendance. I have had season tickets since 1975, been there seen that. It is what it is.
Posted on 12/11/22 at 5:31 pm to CmnRef
13,000 tickets sold tuesday I'd bet at minimum.
since we won, that 1st half dunk by them on our guy was something. Wow. He got all of that.
since we won, that 1st half dunk by them on our guy was something. Wow. He got all of that.
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