Slumping Kirilenko

Slumping Kirilenko

By Marty Gitlin
WagerWeb.com Contributing Writer

Is Andrei Kirilenko lost in Utah or have his skills suddenly and inexplicably deteriorated?

That is the question being asked both inside and outside the organization. In fact, it’s a question he’s asking himself.

The heretofore productive forward is no longer, partly because he is not utilized extensively in the offense. He’s scoring just 9.1 points a game compared to an average of about 16 over the past three years.

Yet he’s shooting a respectable 45 percent from the field, indicating he’s either become gun-shy or the emergence of Carlos Boozer, Deron Williams and Mehmet Okur as significant offensive threats has decreased his role in the offense.

Kirilenko, who missed five games with a sprained ankle early in the season, is pulling down just 5.2 rebounds a game compared to 8.1 a year ago. His blocked shots and assists have also markedly decreased.

Jazz owner Larry Miller told radio station 1280 AM that Kirilenko is “putting himself on thin ice” with his inconsistency and complaints about his role on the team.

“I’d almost like to call his bluff, say ‘OK, automatically we’re going to leave you out there. You’re going to take 20 shots a night five games in a row. And then we’ll see,’ ” Miller said. “That would resolve the issue. He’s either going to make them or he’s not.”

Kirilenko, who took just six shots in a 102-94 win Friday night at Toronto, expressed his frustrations on the court after meeting with coaches this week.

“I just go back and forth, back and forth, back and forth and I go to sleep,” he said.

The saga will continue for Kirilenko and the Jazz Saturday night in Chicago, where they are 6.5-point underdogs, according to WagerWeb.com.

MAGIC MAGIC GONE: Remember when Orlando was 13-4? That has become a more distant memory by the day.

The Magic are 9-14 since despite a five-game winning streak during that stretch. They have dropped their last four, including an alarmingly lopsided 114-93 home defeat Friday night to Washington that shoved them 1 ½-games behind the first-place Wizards in the Southeast Division.

Orlando is fine in the backcourt with Jameer Nelson and Grant Hill, and Dwight Howard is established as one of the finest centers in the NBA. But one major reason for Orlando’s struggles is starting forwards Tony Battie and Hedo Turkoglu. The pair combine to average just 16.6 points and 8.8 rebounds a game. They were outscored, 52-14, and outrebounded, 23-9, by Washington starting forwards Caron Butler and Antawn Jamison Friday night.

WagerWeb.com lists the Magic as 3.5-point underdogs Saturday night in New Jersey, which will attempt to become the first Atlantic Division team to reach .500 since it was 5-5 on Nov. 20.

DRIBBLES: Charlotte forward Gerald Wallace played his first game in nearly a month and erupted for 18 points and 15 rebounds in a 96-75 win Friday night in Atlanta. The surging Bobcats, who have won six of 10, are 2-point favorites at home Saturday night against the Hawks, whose three-game winning streak was snapped. … Chris Webber made his first start Friday night for Detroit, registering 18 points and seven rebounds in a 104-98 overtime victory at Minnesota. The Pistons could take over first place in the Central Division with a home victory Saturday night against Sacramento and a Cleveland loss in Golden State. WagerWeb.com lists Detroit as a 6-point favorite and the slumping Cavaliers as 3-point underdogs. Chicago can also forge a first-place tie by defeating the Jazz. … Boston forward Paul Pierce hopes to return from a left foot injury by the first week of February. The Celtics have collapsed without the all-star. They have lost six in a row and are likely to make it seven Saturday night in Washington, where they are 11-point underdogs, according to WagerWeb.com.

SEC Basketball Notebook

SEC Basketball Notebook

By Randy Rosetta
WagerWeb.com Contributing Writer

South Carolina’s hopes of a third consecutive postseason bid of any kind are quickly unraveling, and things don’t get any easier as the Gamecocks hit the road for four of the next six games.

The Gamecocks (10-6, 0-3 SEC) have dropped by consecutive games to then-No. 2 Florida and Kentucky by a combined 82 points. In fact, over the last four games, USC has been outscored by 112 points. The losses to the Gators and Wildcats are the Gamecocks’ worst since 1915.

Tennessee is also struggling with three straight losses after stubbing a toe at Auburn Wednesday. The No. 22 Volunteers seemed to have the game with the Tigers in control before AU hit an 18-0 surge to turn the tide.

UT coach Bruce Pearl picked up a costly technical foul in the closing minute, in part due to a timeout granted Auburn. But Peal was also miffed by the fact that the Tigers shot 23 second-half free throws (making 18) to three for the Vols.

South Carolina’s struggles are across the board. The Gamecocks rank 12th in the SEC in scoring offense (62.6 points a game), field-goal shooting (41.7 percent), 3-point shooting (31.1 percent), rebounding margin (-1.7), assists (11.1 per game) and steals (4.4 per game).

Tennessee is in much better shape, topping the SEC in scoring offense at 84.2 points a game. Junior sharpshooter Chris Lofton leads the SEC with 22.5 points and 3.4 3-pointers a game with freshman JaJuan Smith also providing a boost with 14.2 points and 35.5 percent shooting (44 of 124) from outside the arc.

Tre’ Kelley has been the only consistent scoring threat for South Carolina, despite an ongoing battle with a knee injury. Kelley is the Gamecocks’ leader in scoring with 16.5 points a game (third in the SEC) and 4.5 assists a contest.

The Volunteers swept the season series with USC last year, but the Gamecocks knocked off UT in the SEC tournament quarterfinals. UT is a 15-point favorite tonight.

GEORGIA at No. 10 ALABAMA (1:30 p.m. EST): The Crimson Tide get back home where they should be safe from another blowout. Alabama has lost seven of its last eight SEC road games dating back to last season, including blowouts at Arkansas and Vanderbilt this year. At Coleman Coliseum, though, the Tide (14-3, 1-2) is 9-0 this season and has rattled off 16 wins in a row. Alabama coach will celebrate his 42nd birthday against the Bulldogs, who stunned Arkansas 67-64 on Wednesday. Georgia (11-5, 3-1) trailed the Razorbacks 62-55 and 64-58 in the closing moments but scored nine unanswered points on 3-pointers – the last on Steve Newman’s 26-footer as time expired. The Bulldogs knocked off ’Bama 88-79 last season despite Tide guard Ronald Steele’s career-high 26 points, but haven’t won in Tuscaloosa since 2003. Alabama’s frontcourt of Jermareo Davidson (14.2 points, 9.3 rebounds per game) and Richard Hendrix (14.9, 8.8) should be too much for Georgia. The Tide are 5-point favorites on WagerWeb.com.

AUBURN at MISSISSIPPI STATE (3 p.m. EST): The Tigers broke through for an 83-80 triumph against 22nd-ranked Tennessee Wednesday, Auburn’s first victory against a ranked foe since 2004. Junior Frank Tolbert led AU (12-7, 2-2) with a career-best 24 points and provided the exclamation point with a fast-break slam dunk. Quan Prowell added 21 points for the Tigers, 21 in the second half when Auburn uncorked an 18-0 blitz to stagger the Volunteers. The Tigers are off to their best SEC start since 2003. Mississippi State (10-6, 1-2) is back in action after a week off following a tough-to-swallow 64-60 loss at Kentucky last weekend. The Bulldogs have been one of the tougher defenses to shoot against, limiting opponents to 37.3 percent overall shooting (second in SEC) and 27 percent from 3-point range (first in SEC). Freshman guard Barry Stewart is coming on for State with 21 points in the last two games and is shooting 40.4 percent (36 of 89) from 3-point land.

No. 16 LSU at ARKANSAS (3:45 p.m. EST): The Tigers struggled to get past Auburn and Ole Miss at home, but stand in first place in the SEC West as they enter the first of their two annual grudge matches with the Razorbacks. LSU (13-4, 2-1) is averaging only 62.7 points a game in league play, but has offset that by beating foes on the backboards by an average of 7 rebounds a game. Sophomore swingmen Tasmin Mitchell and Terry Martin have emerged as the Tigers’ secondary scoring options behind Glen Davis (18.7 ppg). Mitchell is producing 16.7 points a game in SEC play (14.6 overall), while Martin overcame a goose egg in his SEC debut vs. Alabama with a career-best 23 points against Auburn and 15 against Ole Miss. Martin has hit 9-of-18 3-pointers in SEC play. Arkansas is reeling with three losses in a row by a total of 12 points. The Hogs (12-6, 1-3) have led in the final 35 seconds in three their losses by four points or less. Junior center Steven Hill notched a career-high 15 points against Georgia and has connected on his last 12 field goals. LSU swept the Razorbacks last season and has won seven of the last eight games with Arkansas. The last four games of the series have been settled by a total of 12 points. The Hogs are 2.5-point favorites on WagerWeb.com.

No Name Pats Defense

No-Name Pats D

By Tim Sullivan
WagerWeb.com contributing writer

Every year, right around this time, stories start popping up about the anonymity of the New England Patriots.

The annual rite is easy to figure. First of all, the Patriots are usually still alive in late January. And, because of that, media types worldwide struggle to find story angles. Typically, they all come to this simple conclusion: There just aren’t any.

That’s the way New England likes it. Take away Tom Brady and this is a team without stars. They are a team in every sense of the word, mind you. And the Pats protect that identity better than any other team in NFL history. But, in the eyes of the media, for the most part, they are boring, nameless and faceless. And no unit personifies that more than this year’s defense.

“Sunday’s game is going to be about who executes the best, who plays the hardest and who makes the most plays.”

That was a generic quote from defensive back Artrell Hawkins, regarding the AFC title game against the Colts Sunday. Quick, how many of you know who Hawkins is? That’s the point.

This unit is filled with Hawkins-types. On the other side of the defensive backfield, there’s Asante Samuel. At linebacker, there’s Mike Vrabel. In the middle of the line, there’s Vince Wilfork.

Sure, there are die-hards out there who know who these guys are. But as the postseason wears on, and more and more casual fans start tuning in, these guys become more and more anonymous.

“We have to be clicking on all cylinders to have a chance.”

Another canned quote, this one from linebacker Tully Banta-Cain. Most people can’t even pronounce his name, much less know who he is.

“We’re not going in with the mentality that we can stop every play. However, when we do get our opportunities we need to make them worthwhile.”

That offering was from Ellis Hobbs. He plays cornerback, as well, by the way.

So you get the idea. The “Who Are These Guys” idea.

But the funny thing, is they don’t care. That’s the Bill Belichick way. Prepare the right way, work harder than anyone else and win at all costs. Style points mean nothing. Headlines mean nothing. Names mean nothing.

And you have to admit, it works. The Chargers and Jets sure were befuddled by the Patriots’ defensive schemes. And surely, Belichick will have another airtight plan for Peyton Manning and Co.

“Throwing the ball before they are even in their break, getting the ball out of his hands fast, changing and adapting to the routes, and knowing where the receivers are going if he has to scramble,” Hobbs said of the way Manning handles his offense. “All those little things are what makes them so good.”

We’ll find out just how good on Sunday. Indianapolis is -3 on WagerWeb.com.

FIRST-YEAR HONORS: The NFL 101, a national media committee which features 101 sportswriters and broadcasters, honored two rookie coaches this week. The group named the Jets’ Eric Mangini and the Saints’ Sean Payton the AFC and NFC Coach of the Year, respectively.

The Jets, under Mangini, went 10-6 and lost to the Patriots, 37-16, in the wild-card round. The Saints, under Payton, won the NFC South, defeated the Eagles, 27-24, in the divisional round, and will meet the Bears in the conference championship game Sunday. Chicago is -2.5 on WagerWeb.com.

EXTRA POINTS: The Giants officially promoted Kevin Gilbride to the offensive coordinator position vacated by John Hufnagel this week. … Patriots wide receiver Troy Brown has been battling the flu, but has returned to practice and will play against the Colts Sunday.

Man U Arsenal

Man U-Arsenal

By Tim Robertson
WagerWeb.com Contributing Writer

They are no longer head-to-head battles for the title, but there is still something special about meetings between Arsenal and Manchester United.

The Premiership’s relatively short history is dominated by these two clubs, and so many times in the past has this fixture determined whether the trophy went north or south.

Given Arsenal’s position, fourth in the table 15 points adrift of United, that will not be the case on Sunday, but there is no less anticipation.

This could be a decisive weekend in the Premiership. Twenty-seven hours before Arsenal and United kick off at the Emirates Stadium, Chelsea face a tough task at Liverpool .

Conceivably by Sunday evening, Chelsea could be nine points adrift of United in the title race. Just as likely, the gap could be down to three.

Like Chelsea’s opponents Liverpool, Arsenal knocked themselves out of the title race with poor results early in the season, but the points difference to the top hides the fact that they have closed the quality gap in recent weeks.

They are surely out of the title race, but Manager Arsene Wenger, never one to give up until the fat lady has sung, isn’t so sure.

“I can understand that even if we win people still think we have no chance, but we see things differently,” he said.
“I believe that for a team which is young like my team, it is important that they get the belief that they can win the big games — game after game. They win one, they win two, they win three and suddenly that can transform a team.

“Then you say: ‘nobody can stop us’ and they can strengthen that belief.

“They have done it already — but they can strengthen that belief by beating Manchester United on Sunday.

“We want to reduce the gap on Manchester United as quickly as possible and we want to continue our run because we are in good form.

“We are involved in nearly every competition, even the championship, and you never know.”

Arsenal inflicted United’s only home defeat of the season so far, winning 1-0 at Old Trafford in September through Emmanuel Adebayor’s late goal.

The Gunners remain unbeaten in the league at home in their new stadium, but have dropped too many points in drawing five of 11 at the Emirates while they settle in.

“It is a big frustration because we dropped points at the beginning of the season through lack of experience and lack of form,” Wenger added.

“When you play a young player at the start of the season you know you will pay for his education with points. That is what happened to us a little bit.”

There is every chance it will happen again this weekend. Although Thierry Henry is back, the loss of the suspended Gilberto Silva in midfield leaves Arsenal looking weak as a defensive unit, and United surely have too many weapons not to expose such a weakness.

That is despite the fact that United manager Sir Alex Ferguson has admitted they are not firing on all cylinders.

The form of Wayne Rooney is a concern, with the 20-year-old star having scored just once in the last 13 games as his teammates have run riot around him.

“Wayne just needs a break,” said Ferguson. “I am not concerned at all.

“It will come. What he needs to do is get into that one goal a game rhythm that strikers can do for you.

“If he does that it will make a big difference to our run-in.

“He is a big-game player.

“Wayne is a great example of a great player. He is prepared to work as hard as anyone.

“He is working his socks off and has a terrific attitude.”

Ferguson’s other strikers — Louis Saha, Ole Gunnar Solksjaer and Henrik Larsson — have more than covered for Rooney’s shortcomings of late, and with them in form, United pose Arsenal’s toughest test at the Emirates yet.
WagerWeb.com does not split the two teams, offering both at +150 with a draw at +200.

Given Arsenal’s problems at the back, it’s tough not to see yet another United win as they attempt to wrest the Premiership crown back from Chelsea .

But United-Arsenal games are never as straightforward as that.

Monday News and Notes

Monday, January 22,
2006

 

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St. Mary’s-San Diego

Press Notes

The Gaels entered week 11 of the season with a 10-9
overall record following wins over Portland
(73-57) and Gonzaga (80-75) last week. Saint Mary’s opened this week with a
71-64 overtime win over San Francisco to move to 11-9 overall and 3-1 in West
Coast Conference play. The win over the Dons marked the first road win of the
season for SMC and moved the Gaels into a four-way tie for first place in the WCC standings with Santa Clara,
Gonzaga and San Francisco. San
Diego enters Monday’s game with a 12-7 overall record following a 61-67 loss to
Santa Clara on Saturday night The loss to the Broncos dropped the Toreros to
2-2 in West Coast Conference play USD is currently
tied for fifth place in the WCC standings. As a team,
the Toreros 72.7 points per game while allowing their opponents 69.5 points per
contest. USD is shooting 44.4 percent from the floor,
32.9 percent from 3-point land, and 69.0 percent from the free throw line. San
Diego
opponents are shooting 44.0 percent from the
floor, 33.4 percent from three and 78.8 percent from the foul line.

Gonzaga-Portland

Press Notes

Gonzaga University,
coming off its first West Coast Conference loss in nearly two years, will try
to get back on the winning track Monday. The Bulldogs find themselves at 3-1 in
the WCC trailing undefeated University
of San Francisco
, which entered the
weekend with a 3-0 WCC slate. The Pilots dropped both
games last weekend in the Bay Area to even their WCC
record to 2-2. Seven teams on the Bulldogs schedule were ranked heading into
the weekend in one of the two major polls (new rankings are due out Monday).
The University of North
Carolina
was ranked fourth in both polls after
dropping from the top rung. Other ranked teams were Duke
University
, University
of Nevada
, University
of Memphis
, Butler
University
, Washington
State
University and the University of Texas.
The seven teams had a combined record of 106-18 through games of Jan. 18. In
addition, Stanford University
and the University of Washington
were also receiving votes in at least one of the two major polls.

Spokesman Review

Darren Cooper, a sixth-year senior guard and UP’s leading
returning scorer, has missed nine games with an assortment of injuries ranging
from knee problems to a strained hamstring, and is listed as questionable for
tonight’s WCC game against Gonzaga (12-7, 3-1) in the
Chiles Center because of turf toe. In addition, freshman point guard Taishi Ito has missed seven games while dealing with family
health problems; two promising sophomores, point guard Brian McTear and forward Alex Tiefenthaler,
have left the team because of academic and disciplinary issues, and freshman
forward Robin Smeulders has been ruled ineligible for
the 2006-07 season because of his previous association with a German club team
that reportedly compensated some of its players with money. All of which leaves
the Pilots dreadfully short of able bodies heading into tonight’s nationally
televised matchup (on ESPN) against a Gonzaga team that is still looking to
establish an identity, particularly on the road, where the Bulldogs are 1-3.
Still, GU coach Mark Few is well aware of the dangers that await
in another sold-out, hostile arena where Portland
has posted all six of its wins. Few also suggested the Pilots’ record is a bit
deceiving, considering the prolonged absences of Cooper, a returning WCC honorable mention selection, who is averaging a
team-high 12.2 points per game since overcoming his early season health
problems, and Ito, a bug-quick perimeter sniper, who is averaging 5.2 points
and 3.2 assists despite making only five starts.

Connecticut-Louisville

Associated Press

Injuries to guards Brandon Jenkins and Andre McGee and
forward Juan Palacios have prevented the Cardinals (13-6, 3-2 Big East) from
developing any real sense of rhythm. Throw in the ongoing saga of freshman
center Derrick Caracter – who will sit out a second
straight game for undisclosed violation of team rules – and chemistry has been
an issue too. “I think it’s probably been the most difficult year that I’ve had
as a coach,” Pitino admitted. Yet the Cardinals enter Monday’s game against Connecticut
(13-5, 2-3) the healthiest they’ve been all season. Palacios, who was limited
the last three weeks with a neck and shoulder injury, poured in a season-high
21 points against DePaul and McGee came off the bench in the final minutes to
provide a steadying influence when the Cardinals needed it most. McGee knocked
down four free throws in the last five minutes and helped Louisville
withstand constant pressure by the Blue Demons as the Cardinals finished the
game with a season-low tying eight turnovers. The Cardinals have never beaten
the Huskies, and Connecticut
swept the season series last year on the strength of their inside play. But
like the Cardinals, the Huskies are young. And like the Cardinals, they’ve been
plagued by inconsistent play. Connecticut
won its first 11 games to start the season, but have dropped five of seven and are just 1-3 on the road.

Oklahoma-Oklahoma State

Press Notes

The Cowboys are 16-3 overall and 2-2 in Big 12 Conference
action after falling at Texas A&M 67-49 on
Saturday night. Okahoma is 11-6 overall and 3-2 in
league play following a 91-51 win over Baylor Saturday in Norman.

Tulsa World

Oklahoma State
is on a continuing mission to re-establish Gallagher-Iba
Arena as a place where opponents leave without smiles on their faces. OSU lost five home games last season. The last time the
Cowboys lost more home games was during the 1972-73 season, when they were
dealt seven home defeats. OSU was 4-4 in Big 12 games
at Gallagher-Iba last season. It marked the first
time since the 1987-88 season that the Cowboys failed
to muster a winning record in league home games. Players apparently got tired
of watching opponents celebrate at Gallagher-Iba
Arena and decided to do something about it. OSU, 11-0
at home this season, has won 14 consecutive home games dating to last year.
Eaton also said OU players were “talking noise” when
they won at Gallagher-Iba last season. “So when they
come in here Monday, it’s like, man, it’s revenge and
it’s like the battle of Oklahoma.
It’s like a whole bunch of things together that we’ve got to do just to win.” OU beat OSU 73-65 in Gallagher-Iba Arena last season, winning in Stillwater
for the first time since 2000. Afterward, Sutton accused the Cowboys of being
soft.

 




Avanced News and Notes For Saturday

Saturday, January 20,
2007

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Miami-Florida State

Press Notes

Florida State has won 10 of its first 11 home games of the
2006-07 season and has won 18 of its last 22 (.818 winning percentage) since
defeating Virginia Tech at the Donald L. Tucker Center on Jan. 7, 2006. The
Seminoles won seven of their last eight homes games of the 05-06 season with their only loss coming to South
Carolina
in the second round of the NIT.

Bowling Green-Kent State

Press Notes

The Falcons are in a stretch where they will have played
eight of their last 11 away from home since December 16. The Falcons fell at Miami,
66-60, on Wednesday night. Kent State
is coming off a 78-68 loss at Akron.
BGSU has won three of the last four meetings in Kent
capturing a 79-74 contest a year ago. BGSU also won
at KSU, 77-73, in 2005 and 78-74, in 2003. The Golden
Flashes are 5-1 at home this season.

Rice-Central Florida

Press Notes

The UCF men’s basketball team
will be seeking its 11th-straight win at home. The Golden Knights
have won two-straight contests and are 13-4 overall. The squad is off to a 2-1
start in league play. Rice is 3-0 in C-USA action and 9-7 on the year. UCF and Rice will be meeting for the third time overall and
for the first time in Orlando. The
all-time series is tied, 1-1. Last year, the teams played once as Conference USA
rivals and the Golden Knights claimed a 77-64 victory in Houston
on Feb. 25, 2006. UCF has won 10-straight contests at home and is 9-0 at the UCF Arena this season. In their nine games in Orlando,
the Golden Knights are averaging 81.2 points and have a +22.2 scoring margin
and a +12.7 rebound margin. UCF has outrebounded all nine of its
opponents at the UCF Arena. Last season, UCF scored more than 70 points in a contest only five
times. In 2006-07, the Golden Knights have already eclipsed the 70-point mark
12 times in 17 games. After averaging just 63.3 points per game last season,
the Golden Knights are scoring 76.4 points per contest this year. The squad
eclipsed the 80-point mark only once a year ago, but has already scored more
than 80 points in a game on seven occasions this season. UCF
owns a +11.2 scoring margin.

UW Green Bay-Butler

Press Notes

Butler, ranked
in the “Top 25” for eight consecutive weeks and looking to reclaim a share of
first place in the Horizon League, will wrap up a three-game homestand against one of the league’s hottest teams when it
hosts UW-Green Bay.
The Bulldogs (16-2, 4-1 Horizon League), successful in the first two games of
the current homestand including a 67-39 decison over Youngstown State on Wednesday (Jan. 17), trail
Wright State by one-half game in the league standings. The Raiders (12-7, 5-1
HL), who won at Cleveland State
on Thursday (Jan. 18), play at UW-Milwaukee on Sunday (Jan. 21). UW-Green
Bay
(10-8, 2-3 HL), boasting wins
in eight of its last 11 outings, is ending a seven-day layoff when it visits
Hinkle Fieldhouse. Butler
has won 18 consecutive games in Hinkle Fieldhouse,
including eight wins this season. The Bulldogs have won 89 of the past 100
games played in the Fieldhouse, and Butler’s
home record over the past decade (1996-present) is 128-17. The Bulldogs’
homecourt winning streak is the ninth-longest active homecourt streak in the
NCAA Division I. The Bulldogs have held eight opponents to an average of just
51.9 points in Hinkle Fieldhouse. Butler
limited its last three home foes – Youngstown
State
(39), South
Dakota
State
(47)
and Wright State
(42) to season-low scoring totals and kept both Cleveland
State
and Ball
State
below 50 points at home. Butler’s
foes are shooting just .386 from the field and .323 from the three-point arc in
the Fieldhouse.

Charlotte-George Washington

Press Notes

Charlotte
dropped both meetings last year as GW went 16-0 in
A-10 play. At GW in the regular-seaon
finale, Mar. 4, Charlotte led in OT
in the closing seconds, but GW’s Carl Elliott
followed up a miss with a put back at the buzzer to snag the win. The Charlotte
49ers (8-8; 2-2) head to George Washington (12-4; 3-1) in search of their third
straight win, after posting back-to-back A-10 victories over Richmond
and Dayton. In four A-10 games, Charlotte
is shoting 46% from the floor and 42% from
three-point land. Charlotte’s improving defense has held opponents to less than
70 points in six of the last eight games, with Richmond (51) and Dayton (59)
being held to the fewest points allowed by the 49ers this year. Only one
opponent was held to less than 70 in the first eight games.

Marshall-Tulane

Press Notes

Marshall
(6-11, 1-2) and Tulane (8-7, 1-2) will meet for the third time Saturday
evening. The Green Wave lead the all-time series, 2-0,
after claiming both games in 2006-07. Tulane enters the game with an 8-7
record, 1-2 in league play. Like the Herd, the Green Wave claimed its first
conference win of the season Wednesday when it defeated East
Carolina
. Marshall won its first Conference USA game of the
2006-07 season with a 65-53 win over Tulsa in its last time out Wednesday night
at Henderson Center and ended a three-game losing skid in the process.

Arizona State-USC

Press Notes

A young Arizona State University basketball team (6-12;
0-7 in Pac-10) under first-year coach Herb Sendek has
a 5 p.m. PT/6 p.m. MST tip-off at USC ASU is giving
up just 63.7 points per game, currently the fourth-best mark in ASU history and the lowest since the 1949-50 squad gave up
59.8, but is trying to replace the points of late summer departures Kevin
Kruger (transferred to UNLV in July) and Bryson
Krueger (dismissed from team in August). Kevin Kruger took advantage of a NCAA
rule that lasted six months which allowed him to transfer to UNLV to play for his father since he had finished his
degree work. With all the changes, four true freshmen are combining to average
87.5 minutes, including three at or above the 26-minute mark.

USC leads the ASU series 43-29
but ASU has won two of the past three in Los
Angeles
ASU has posted two
100-point outings in its past 134 games, both against USC.

Baylor-Oklahoma

Press Notes

Baylor is 2-31 in its last 33 true road games (dating to ‘02-03)
and has lost 19 straight since a 73-72 win at Purdue 12-30-04.
BU has lost 19 straight Big 12 road games dating to a 67-61 win over TAMU 2-25-04.
Baylor is 4-36 in its last 40 away games (dating to ‘02-03). Baylor has lost 24
straight games to Oklahoma
(dating back to a 75-67 win Dec. 6,
1977
), including all 20 since the inception of the Big 12
Conference. BU is 2-14 all-time vs. Oklahoma
in Norman. Baylor is scoring 77.3
ppg, 14.1 ppg more than last season (4th in 12 rankings), the school’s
highest scoring average since the ‘94-95 squad averaged 81.2 ppg. Oklahoma is
10-6, 2-2 under first-year head coach Jeff Capel The
Sooners returned two starters from last season’s 20-9 squad. OU is 8-1 this season at home in the Lloyd
Noble Center

Richmond-Dayton

Press Notes

The youthful Spiders continue to struggle with maintaining
consistency. Over its last five games, the Spiders have played well for the
first 30 minutes of the game, but in their last four losses the Spiders have
faltered a bit in the game’s final 10 minutes. In three of Richmond’s
last four losses the Spiders have trailed by two with less than three minutes
to play. That comes with having a young team, and while that reason may be
getting old, the Spiders do rely on five freshmen who play at least 13.5
minutes per game. Richmond has
started four freshmen in six games and at least three freshmen in 15 of 17
games.

Now the Spiders will try to win for the first time at UD Arena, where Richmond
is 0-6. The Spiders do play well at UD Arena. In Richmond’s
last three trips to Dayton, the
Spiders have lost in overtime by five, by two points and by one, 63-62 in their
last visit in 2005. Richmond is
fourth in the Atlantic 10 in field goal percentage at 46.4 percent. The Spiders
have shot over 40 percent from the floor in all but four of their 17 games this
season, including four of the last five. Richmond
has shot over 50 percent from the field in five games and over 45 percent in 10
games. The Spiders are fifth in the Atlantic 10 in 3-point percentage at 37.1
percent and fifth in 3s made at 7.18 per game. Richmond
has made at least eight 3-pointers in a game eight times this season and at
least five treys in all but three of their 17 games. Dayton
is 12-5 and 2-2 in the Atlantic 10, coming off an 80-59 loss at Charlotte
on Jan. 20. Dayont is a perfect 11-0 at home in UD Arena, where the Spiders have not one in six chances.

California-Oregon

Press Notes

Winner of four of its last five games, including three in
a row on the road, California
next visits No. 9 Oregon Saturday at 5 p.m.
Since opening Pac-10 action with a 94-85 loss at Arizona,
the Golden Bears have defeated Arizona
State
(66-62), Stanford (67-63) and
Oregon State
(77-74) in succession away from home. Going back to last season, Cal
has won six of its last eight Pac-10 road games. This year, the Bears are 6-4
in road/neutral contests, which includes a 3-0 run to win the Great Alaska
Shootout in November.

 


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1-19-07

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Get at least the 3 day pick pack for pro football. The Great One has the Non Conference GAME of
the YEAR and the Friday Night O/U of the YEAR. It is $40 per day and less for
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and even less for longer term pick packs.

PRO BASKETBALL

>>>LEVEL 4 PLAY is
on CHARLOTTE over Atlanta

Forensic ATS information on this game: Charlotte 18-3 off
consecutive ATS losses, 11-5 opponent winning % below .400, 8-1 opponent losing
home record, Atlanta 10-26 off double
digit win, 1-6 to East,

 


NFC Championship Preview

NFC Championship Preview

By Chris Cluff
WagerWeb.com Contributing Writer

Saints (11-6) at Bears (14-3), 3 p.m. ET Sunday (Fox)

WagerWeb.com line: Bears -2.5 (43)

The NFC is about to have a different Super Bowl representative for the seventh straight year.

Thanks to the Bears’ overtime win over the Seattle Seahawks last Sunday and the Saints’ well-grounded win over the Philadelphia Eagles, the NFC held to regular-season form, and the top two seeds will play for the right to represent the conference in the Super Bowl in Miami on Feb. 4. The Bears will be trying to get back for the first time since winning the title in January 1986, while the Saints are seeking their first trip to the championship game.

One of those teams will become the latest champ in a revolving-door NFC that has seen six different teams go to the Super Bowl in the past six seasons: Seattle, Philadelphia, Carolina, Tampa Bay, St. Louis and the New York Giants.

This NFC title game pits two rising powers — Lovie Smith’s defense-driven Bears, who are 24-8 in Smith’s two seasons, and first-year coach Sean Payton’s upstart Saints, who have made it this far for the first time in the team’s 40 seasons of existence.

The Saints have become the feel-good fairy tale of the 2006 season, representing the rebirth of New Orleans a year after the city was devastated by Hurricane Katrina. Led by Drew Brees, Deuce McAllister and Reggie Bush, Payton’s team won 10 games and then beat the Philadelphia Eagles 27-24 last weekend, making New Orleans the first team in NFL history to reach a conference championship game after losing 13 games the previous season.

The Saints had the league’s No. 1 offense this season, and McAllister showed against the Eagles that he is completely back from a torn ACL that cost him 10 games last season. He ran all over the Eagles, gaining 143 yards and scoring two touchdowns.

“Our No. 1 concern is stopping Deuce McAllister,” Bears linebacker Brian Urlacher said. “We want to stop the run every week. So he is our main concern right now, especially after what he did last week. When they throw the ball, we’ll rally to it and hopefully make the tackles. We have got to stop the run. Reggie is an explosive guy. He catches the ball well, and he’s pretty good in the open field. So we’ve just got to try and get 11 guys to the football and make some plays.

“It’s a big challenge for us, the things they do on offense,” Urlacher said. “They move the ball around a lot. They have a great quarterback, pretty good running backs, good receivers and a good offensive line. It’s a huge challenge for us.”

The Bears survived their first challenge against the Seahawks, escaping with a 27-24 win when Robbie Gould nailed a 49-yard field goal in overtime. The win was Chicago’s first in its past three home playoff games, including a 29-21 loss to Carolina last postseason.

Embattled quarterback Rex Grossman played well enough against Seattle, hitting Bernard Berrian with a 68-yard touchdown pass and throwing for 282 yards on 21-of-38 passing.

Many Chicago fans had been concerned about his uneven performance during the season and were worried he might hurt the Bears in the postseason. He did turn the ball over twice against Seattle, throwing an interception and fumbling, but he made big throws when he had to, like the third-down, 31-yard strike to Rashied Davis in overtime that set up Gould’s field goal.

Smith has defended Grossman and stuck by him all season, and Urlacher did the same this week.

“Rex was 14-3 at the start of this year. I don’t know how many guys in the NFL can say that this season,” the All-Pro linebacker said. “I don’t care what his numbers are, what people write about him. He’s 14-3. That’s enough said for me. I’m just tired of people talking about him, especially our media around here. The dude has won 14 games at the start of this year. That’s pretty good if you ask me.”

So is Grossman’s supporting cast, which includes a strong running game. Thomas Jones ran for two touchdowns against the Seahawks, and he and Cedric Benson will need to play well against the Saints to take pressure off Grossman.

The Saints have played well on the road, going 6-2, but their defense has been prone to surrendering big plays; the Eagles struck with a 75-yard touchdown pass from Jeff Garcia to Donte’ Stallworth and a 62-yard scoring run by Brian Westbrook. With that in mind, this shapes up as a similarly offensive game.

“This is the matchup we wanted,” Chicago cornerback Nathan Vasher said. “It’s great for us, great for TV, everything. We wanted to see the highest-seeded team and beat the best.”

SAINTS AT A GLANCE
Offense: 391.5 yards per game (first in NFL). Passing: 281.4 (first). Rushing: 110.1 (19th).
Defense: 307.3 (11th). Passing: 178.4 (third). Rushing: 128.9 (23rd).
Individual leaders
QB Drew Brees: 64.3 percent, 4,418 yards, 26 touchdowns, 11 interceptions.
RB Deuce McAllister: 1,057 yards, 4.3 average, 10 touchdowns.
RB Reggie Bush: 565 yards, 3.6 average, six TDs; 88 receptions, 742 yards, two TDs.
WR Marques Colston: 70 receptions, 1,038 yards, eight TDs.
WR Devery Henderson: 32 receptions, 745 yards, five TDs.
K John Carney: 115 points, 23 of 25 field goals.
KR Michael Lewis: 24.7 average.
PR Reggie Bush: 7.7 average, one touchdown.
LB Scott Shanle: 98 tackles, four sacks.
LB Scott Fujita: 96 tackles, 3.5 sacks, two interceptions, seven passes defensed.
DE Will Smith: 10.5 sacks.
DE Charles Grant: Six sacks.
CB Mike McKenzie: Two interceptions, 10 passes defensed.
Injury report: TE Mark Campbell (knee), WR Joe Horn (groin) and SS Omar Stoutmire (hip) are questionable.

BEARS AT A GLANCE
Offense: 325.0 (15th). Passing: 205.1 (14th). Rushing: 119.1 (15th).
Defense: 294.1 (fifth). Passing: 194.8 (11th). Rushing: 99.4 (sixth).
Individual leaders
QB Rex Grossman: 54.6 percent, 3,193 yards, 23 touchdowns, 20 interceptions.
RB Thomas Jones: 1,210 yards, 4.1 average, six TDs.
RB Cedric Benson: 647 yards, 4.1 average, six TDs.
WR Muhsin Muhammad: 60 receptions, 863 yards, five TDs.
WR Bernard Berrian: 51 receptions, 775 yards, six TDs.
TE Desmond Clark: 45 receptions, 626 yards, six TDs.
K Robbie Gould: 143 points, 32 of 36 field goals.
RS Devin Hester: 26.4 on kickoffs with two TDs, 12.8 on punts with three TDs.
LB Brian Urlacher: 142 tackles, three interceptions.
LB Lance Briggs: 134 tackles, four forced fumbles, two interceptions.
CB Charles Tillman: 81 tackles, five interceptions, 14 passes defensed.
CB Ricky Manning Jr.: 53 tackles, two sacks, five interceptions, 10 passes defensed.
DE Alex Brown: Seven sacks, two interceptions.
DE Mark Anderson: 12 sacks.
Injury report: WR Mark Bradley (ankle) is questionable and DE Adewale Ogunleye (quadricep) is probable.

Best bet: The Seahawks gashed the Bears on the ground, and the Saints will follow suit while also forcing Grossman into key errors. New Orleans, 31-24.

Up and Down Newcastle

Up-And-Down Newcastle

By Tim Robertson
WagerWeb.com Contributing Writer

On Tuesday, everything was looking up for Newcastle.

They were over the worst of a savage injury list which robbed them of virtually the entire first team for several months.

They were riding high after coming from behind to beat Tottenham away over the weekend, thanks in part to a stunning goal from Obafemi Martins.

And they were looking forward to an FA Cup third-round replay at home to Birmingham — a game they were overwhelming favourites for.

Fast forward to Wednesday evening, and it all came crashing down as Newcastle were torn to shreds in a 5-1 defeat to their Championship opponents.

Birmingham was ahead in the opening five minutes, and Newcastle never offered a hint that they were going to turn it around.

Magpies boss Glenn Roeder, so glowing in his praise of his squad in the days leading up to the game, was as stunned as anyone after the game.

“I apologize to the fans,” he said. “I think apologies are due after such a lack of performance from everybody. I certainly had no indication there was going to be a performance like that — this was the same 11 players who beat Tottenham on Sunday.

“We never got going all night and in the end we have been badly punished. It was just a rank bad performance and a humiliating defeat at home.”

The rapid change in fortunes summarizes Newcastle’s inconsistent season so far.

Whenever things have seemed at their worst — such as their grim run of results in October — something has come along like the impressive 1-0 UEFA Cup win at Palermo to lift the gloom.

Whenever things are going well — see the rapid rise up the table in December — the balloon has been just as quickly burst, as happened in the 3-0 loss to Everton.

Roeder, an unlikely man to fill the Newcastle hot seat — few chairmen are as trigger happy as Freddy Shepherd — has done well to keep on an even keel through the chaos, and he won’t panic after this defeat — which may even help his small squad in the long run by reducing the fixture congestion.

But he knows there is much work still to be done.

Inept defending cost Newcastle dear on Wednesday, as has so often been the case in the league. It is the area where the injury problems still run the deepest and where the squad is too short on quality even when fully fit.
Roeder said after the Spurs game that he would not swap goalkeeper Shay Given for any other custodian in the Premiership, but that sentiment is of no use to anyone if the Irish international is not afforded some basic protection.

Given would probably swap his defense for anyone but equally inept West Ham right now.

Good news then that it is the hapless Hammers who are due at St. James¢ Park on Saturday.

Even coming off the humiliating loss, Newcastle should be backed to beat Alan Curbishley’s side.

The manager will demand a response from his team and should get it against his former team.

West Ham remains one of three teams — the bottom three, in fact — yet to win away, which is the quickest explanation as to why WagerWeb.com offers them as outsiders at +333.

It will be all doom and gloom in Newcastle on Thursday morning on the back of a stunning defeat, but Saturday is a whole new day. What a difference one of those can make.

Watford’s Woes

Watford’s Woes

By Tim Robertson
WagerWeb.com Contributing Writer

It’s tough trying to sign new players when you appear to be on a one-way street to relegation, but Watford are having problems persuading their best player to go.

The Hornets are 10 points adrift of safety, with just 12 from 21 games this season, and while Aidy Boothroyd’s side has shown plenty of spirit and endeavour, there has been none of the quality needed to survive in the Premiership.

That, you would think, would give star striker Ashley Young every excuse he needed to leave Vicarage Road.
Yet the 21-year-old has rejected the chance to even talk to West Ham after Watford accepted a £9.65 million offer for the youth international on Monday.

The fact that West Ham are themselves embroiled in a relegation battle perhaps made Young’s decision a little easier, but the Hammers’ resources mean they have every chance of pulling clear. Watford do not.

It may be that Young is waiting for the likes of Tottenham or Aston Villa to make good on their reported interest, but as welcome as it might appear at first, his decision to snub West Ham does Watford no favours.

Boothroyd has repeatedly said he would not sell Young until the player told him he wanted to go.

Only last week he said: “There are players out there who have gone for £8m-plus who do not have what he has.
shley is the trump card in the Premiership. There are not many players outside the top four clubs who are better than him.”

Yet the young manager would gladly have swapped Young for a fat cheque from Upton Park.

Young has scored only four goals in 23 appearances this season. For a club which has lost Marlon King to a season-ending injury, that is not enough.

Young’s value is all in his potential, and that is a luxury a club like Watford cannot afford to invest in right now.

The nearly £10 million West Ham were offering would be of far more use spent on three or four players who could strengthen their squad and help them build, if not for a survival battle, then for another promotion campaign next season.

Whether Watford get another offer to match West Ham’s is in doubt.

Tottenham are believed to have made an approach, but offered only a fraction of the sum West Ham were ready to spend, instead including defender Calum Davenport and winger Wayne Routledge – who is on loan at Fulham – as part-exchange.

But that deal was a non-starter as neither Davenport nor Routledge were willing to climb aboard Watford’s sinking ship.

Aston Villa has Randy Lerner’s millions to spend, but Manager Martin O’Neill has insisted he will not be duped into paying over the odds just because selling clubs know of the financial backing he has.

O’Neill can get another look at Young on Saturday when Watford visit Villa Park. Young will no doubt be in the starting 11, but he will struggle to make much impact with quality support, and that is why WagerWeb.com has Watford as +450 outsiders to grab all three points.

The odds on Watford having added any of that much-needed quality by Saturday also lengthened on Monday when it was confirmed that Fulham striker Collins John has joined the list of players to reject a move to the Hertfordshire club.

The Cottagers accepted a £3.25 million bid for the striker, but the Dutchman promptly rejected the move even though he has been told he has no future at Craven Cottage.

Boothroyd said: “I’ve spoken to his representatives, and he said at this point in time it’s a no.

“I think there is still some hope but I’m looking at other options.”

Life isn’t easy at the wrong end of the table.