Archive | Featured

Barnett Flexes Muscle, But So Does Xavier

Tags: , , ,

Barnett Flexes Muscle, But So Does Xavier

Posted on 30 January 2012 by cpip

Following what happened Wednesday night, the 49ers had the challenge of attempting to rebound against the Atlantic 10′s flagship program, Xavier. Javarris Barnett had a career night, but it wasn’t enough as Charlotte (10-10, 2-5) came up short to Xavier (14-7, 5-3) and lost, 74-70.

Barnett got the game started with a three-pointer from the top of the key, but Charlotte’s next four shots were all missed threes. Xavier did not get off to a great start and some attempts from inside the paint earlier might have made a difference later. After a few minutes of back-and-forth scoring, the Musketeers were able to put some distance between themselves and Charlotte. Xavier found themselves up 30-20 with 3:44 remaining in the first-half. Charlotte then went on a 13-7 run, aided by three-point field goals from Barnett, DeMario Mayfield and Derrio Green. Two free throws from Terrence Williams got Charlotte within four at the break, trailing Xavier 33-37.

Charlotte came out of the break aggressive, and chipped away at Xavier’s lead slowly but surely. Barnett’s third three-pointer got Charlotte within one, 47-46, with 14:17 left in the contest. Minutes later he would tie the score on his fifth three-pointer, the score knotted at 52 all. Xavier answered as we all expected a team like Xavier to do. A three-pointer from Brad Redford broke the tie and began a 19-10 run by the Musketeers that would put Xavier on top 71-62 with 2:34 remaining.

With Xavier having just scored seven straight, the 49ers found the strength to make one last run, just like against Saint Louis two weeks earlier. Having gotten within three points on a Chris Braswell jumper, Xavier was able to burn 33 seconds off the clock before Tu Holloway bricked an attempted dagger. DeMario Mayfield was sent to the line with 12.8 seconds and after having made the first, the second rolled out of bounds, and in possession of Xavier. Holloway then got himself two daggers in the form of free throws getting the score to its final margin.

Beating Xavier is and always will be a a tough task, but after the disaster that happened against Temple the performance of the Niners was respectable. Had Pierria Henry been healthy he could have very well been the difference in the outcome. Henry not only brings his own defensive spark to the court, but the team reflects his intensity on defense. With him in the game, Redford doesn’t find himself wide open as easily as he did.

Barnett scored 27 points on 9-15 shooting, including a near perfect 7-8 from behind the arc. Without Barnett, the rest of the team shot 31%, we can’t expect Barnett to catch fire like that every night.  The guys on the court have to figure out how to make their shots. DeMario Mayfield got another double-double, 13 points and 10 rebounds. He made six of his eight free throw attempts and his improvement in this aspect of the game is appreciated. Braswell scored 12 points on 4/7 shooting, but the Niners will continue to lose games if he is only getting seven shots a game.

Comments (1)

Niners Look to Keep Owls Winless in Halton

Niners Look to Keep Owls Winless in Halton

Posted on 25 January 2012 by cpip

Three straight conferences losses have deflated the momentum created by the Niners’ hot start to conference play. Looking to reverse that backwards momentum, Charlotte (10-8, 2-3) welcomes Temple (13-5, 2-2) to Halton Arena tonight for the 12th all-time meeting between the schools (Temple leads 6-5).

The Niners are looking to regain some of their fire

Temple, as most are #aware, is a quality program. They score a lot of points, shoot really well from the field and have a winning record on the road (5-3), coming into this game having won two straight (both at home) against La Salle and the rebuilding Maryland Terrapins (LOL). Last season, when things seemed their bleakest Temple was only able to beat Charlotte by nine in Philadelphia. However, Temple converts on greater than 46% of their shots from the field, so it will take a defensive intensity unseen before and an offensive fire to keep Charlotte in this game.

Temple has an offense oriented towards the perimeter being lead in scoring by two guards, Ramon Moore (17.2 PPG) and Khalif Wyatt (16.6 PPG). Moore is shooting 41.1% from the field, while Wyatt is converting 47.7% of his shots which is astounding from the guard position. Should the 49ers overbear on these two players, the third leading scorer, Juan Fernandez (11.6 PPG), will probably be wide open with a hunger to make a basket. Moore, Wyatt, and Fernandez all shoot above 35% from behind the arc, with Wyatt and Fernandez shooting over 40% from three-point range. Making matters worse is the overall size of Temple’s backcourt, which is amongst the largest the Niners will face this season. Working in Charlotte’s favor, especially if Pierria Henry gets his usual share of minutes, is that Temple’s three guards account for 7.3 turnovers a game. Henry will need help from Deuce Brisco, Derrio Green, and Terrence Williams to help force these turnovers. More importantly the fastbreaks can’t end with missed lay-ups, fastbreaks only seem to work when DeMario Mayfield has the ball because he finishes strong every time he can.

Inside, the Owls have had to turn to the 6’10″ Anthony Lee and 6’6″ Rahlir Hollis-Jefferson while Michael Eric has been injured for most of the season. Eric (6’10″) might be seeing his first extended action (logged 7 minutes versus Maryland and looked rusty) since his injury tomorrow and Charlotte’s Chris Braswell needs to be ready to pounce if there is vulnerability in Eric’s game. The team only gets four blocks a game so if Braswell, or even Sherrill, can get their post game working for them their shots that start so low have a good chance of getting up and over the basket. Anthony and Hollis-Jefferson have only accounted for 15PPG to this point of the season, Temple doesn’t run an inside-out offense which will help our frontcourt stay out of foul trouble.

Charlotte has to play almost, if not entirely, like a good basketball team to beat Temple. Braswell needs to make his buckets and pass out of double-teams without throwing the ball out of bounds or to an Owl. The Niners have to, as stated earlier, stay composed on fastbreaks and focus on getting the ball through the hoop. When a wing penetrates the lane they need to play through the foul, unless the foul shooting improves the Niners would be better off coming out empty handed on an and-one situation than bricking two from the charity stripe.

This season’s team is nerve-racking and they do not make it easy on [The] Niner Nation. If they can put together 40 Minutes of well-composed basketball they may find themselves with a win over Temple.

Predictions:


J_Felt: I believe that we will win, I believe that we will win, I believe… oh Henry is still hurt?…that we will lose, I believe that we will lose. Charlotte 67, Temple 79.
C-Pip: The Niners are back! Charlotte squeeks one out over the Owls, 75-73
McFly:  I’d bet against us in this one even if Henry was 100%, if he’s not I’d bet the house.  Charlotte 52, Temple 68.
2k: Niners look to remain undefeated at Halton vs Temple.  If PH can play, Niners win 71-68.  If no PH, Temple 76-64.
Geep:  Niners bow down in front of Temple. Owls 82, Charlotte 77.
NLP:  F*** you guys. Niners 74 Temple 68

 

Comments (0)

Niners survive scare from Kennesaw State

Niners survive scare from Kennesaw State

Posted on 19 January 2012 by NLP

Well that was a little unexpected. Or maybe it wasn’t? Whatever your feelings were ahead of Wednesday’s non-conference contest against Kennesaw State, the outcome left much to be desired. While the shooting was there for the Niners, who improved to 10-7 on the season (2-2 in league play), sharp outside shooting by the visiting Owls (3-16) and a rebounding advantage (through most of the game) kept KSU in the game much longer than the sparse crowd in attendance would have liked.

Despite the relatively close score, the Niners did well to limit Markeith Cummings, the explosive F who typically leads KSU in scoring.  Cummings managed 14 points; however, it took him 13 shots to get there. What kept the Owls close was the inside play of Aaron Anderson and the outside marksmanship of Delbert Love, who obviously had a sense of agape for the 3 point shot which was certainly reciprocated (unlike any of cpip’s advances). Anderson, though he managed just 6 points, collected a whopping 17 rebounds including 5 on the offensive glass. Anderson’s pigmentally-

Braswell works inside against Aaron Anderson in the first half.

challenged frame (you know what we mean) stood at a mere 6’7″, his technique was unremarkable (wasn’t boxing out) and his athleticism was nothing to write home about (see the previous note on melanocyte content); however, he was literally everywhere on the defensive glass. What’s left was effort and Anderson certainly displayed that as he and his teammates routinely beat the Niners to loose balls and rebound opportunities. It was a lethargic effort for the men in green and Kennesaw State seized upon that indifference to make a game that shouldn’t have been close way too close for comfort.

Matching the degree of Anderson’s rebounding accomplishments on offense was the shooting of Delbert Love. Cupid’s arrows were connecting from long range as Love connected on 6-12 from outside the arc on his way to a game-high 26 points. Love also had several layups that were not as strongly contested as they should have been and routinely engaged in trash-talk with Pierria’ Henry.  But who can blame him?  He was getting the better end of it on offense and was almost single-handily keeping his team in the game offensively. Spencer Davis, er Dixon gave the Owls a little lovin’ as well with 13 points, the only other Owl in double figures in scoring; however, it took him 16 shots to get there. Kobe Bryant is probably nodding somewhere in approval.

The Niners were led in their efforts by So. DeMario Mayfield who finished with a team high, and career high, 25 points. The athletic G/F from Georgia showed a resurgence in his jump shot, connecting on 3-6 from outside. Add to that, an array of nice finishes at the rim, including two thunderous first half dunks that left us thinking his eye appointment last Friday may have served his shooting well. The only surprising aspect of his performance was the relative lack of rebounds (3) and assists (1) he finished with. The later was mostly the result of being the recipient of some nice passing (Pierria’ Henry with 7 assists), as the Niners finished with 18 assisted shots for 21 FGs, an outstanding ratio.

Javarris Barnett finished with 13 points on 4-7 shooting from outside and Chris Braswell was the only other Niner in double figures finishing with a quiet 13 points on 4-6 shooting from the field. Though Braswell did not receive as many touches or even shot attempts as one would normally like, he made up for it with selectivity and some of his best passing of the season, adding a pair of assists to go with only 1 turnover.

One player who stood out for the Niners was local Fr. Terrence Williams.  Williams played 20 minutes and collected 7 points and 9 rebounds.  Those numbers would have been better if he managed to convert his free throws though, as he missed 5-10 from the charity stripe.  Still it was a good all-around performance for Williams, particularly with his rebounding as he helped turn what was once a game-long rebounding disadvantage to a +7 margin by the end of the game.

Reading this column, one might get the sense that despite the close score, there was a number of good individual performances.  That would be true.  What kept the game close though was a collective lack of effort/urgency from the Niners, particularly on the defensive end. Delbert Love got free way too many times for open shots, which he hit most of. Many loose balls ended up in the hands of Kennesaw State players, most often it seemed to be Aaron Anderson’s hands. Though the Niners only turned the ball over 10 times, fans couldn’t help but feel those turnovers were sloopy, disinterested turnovers which came from our own errors, not anything Kennesaw State was doing.

The path turns much more difficult this Saturday with a trip to Foggy Bottom to face the George Washington Colonials. Despite the 7-11 record, GW is already 2-2 in conference play with a thorough 18 point win over Richmond at home. If the Niners take Saturday’s game as lightly as the Kennesaw State game, expect a loss.

Comments (0)

Kennesaw State flaps their nocturnal wings into town to face Niners

Kennesaw State flaps their nocturnal wings into town to face Niners

Posted on 17 January 2012 by NLP

With a two-game losing streak, the Charlotte 49ers (9-7, 2-2) look to get back to winning with a Wednesday evening tilt against the Kennesaw State Owls (3-15, 0-7). Normally we refuse to include victories against non-DI teams; however, when your level of futility is approaching Wisselian proportions… well we just feel bad.

KSU is one of those surprisingly large universities (enrollment of > 24,000 students) you haven’t heard a lot about.  Kennesaw State is located just outside Atlanta up I-75 and is named after former MLB Commissioner Kennesaw Mountain Landis, who not-so-coincidentally also served as the inspiration behind the Owls’ mascot.

Kennesaw State, led by first year head coach and double first-namer Lewis Preston, enters the game losers of 6 straight and 13 of their last 14. Most recently the Owls fell to Mercer on the road 81-51

Banisher of Black Sox and inspiration for KSU Owls logo. Eat your heart out, Jerry West.

in a game which saw the Bears shoot a wh0pping 62% in Macon. Despite KSU’s woes this season, given the Niners own predilection for turnovers and a mere 4 point loss to East Tennessee State University, the Owls are certainly worth our attention and best effort.

The Owls are led by Jr. F Markeith Cummings. Cummings is good for a team-leading 15.8 ppg and a solid 5.4 rpg and has the ability to extend out to the three-point line where he connects on 35.3% of his attempts from long range. Consistent with his scoring output, Cummings was tapped as the ASUN preseason POY; however despite the lofty expectations things haven’t been so peachy for the Kennesaw State forward. Cummings served a one-game suspension in November for conduct detrimental to the team. It was probably just a case of HC Lewis Preston lowering expectations in his first season by providing a scapegoat for the teams’ struggles – straight out of the Alan Major/Judy Rose playbook. Joining Cummings in the post (we swear that isn’t dirty) is another Jr. F in Aaron Anderson.  The alliterative post is the team’s leading rebounding at just over 8 rpg. and coincidently also scores around 8 ppg. (someone likes symmetry).

In the backcourt Kennesaw State pairs two perimeter threats in Sr. G Spencer Dixon and Fr. G Delbert Love. Dixon averages 13.5 ppg. and Love is good for 10.8 ppg. Neither shoot a superior percentage overall; however, their 35 and 32% success from beyond the 3 point arc would seem stellar compared to the Niner normal. Splitting time at the wing forward position are Brandon Dawson and Romain “Lettuce” Henry. Neither are particularly productive on the court and unfortunately for the Owls, there is little to turn to after these 6 on the Kennesaw State bench though Mirza Sabic, a JUCO transfer, went for 10 points in the loss to Mercer.

Keys to victory:

  • Don’t let the rest of the Owls beat us: Markeith Cummings is an explosive forward, much like Dominique Sutton from NC Central.  He’ll get his points but the Niners need to keep the rest of the squad in check, particularly the Owl backcourt
  • Limit turnovers: This should come as a shock to no one. With a stretch of 75 turnovers in 76 possessions, it’s obvious the Niners tend to get a little ahead of themselves, particularly on the fast break. Pierria’ Henry in particular needs to fight the urge to press when the team is struggling and instead slow things down a little to calm the team and execute on offense.
  • Bench production: The Niners have struggled mightily to get any semblance of regular bench scoring. Deuce Briscoe needs to step up and provide that lift from the bench while E Victor Nickerson and Terrence Williams, for all their ability to get to the rim, need to finish plays.
Predictions: 
2k: Niners take a step in the right direction.  Niners 83 Owls 55
Charlene: The Georgia Boys get run out by the Georgia Men. Charlotte 80, KSU 60
McFly: Niners send the Owls back to the great state of Kennesaw with an L. Charlotte 74, Kennesaw 56
NLP: E Vic Nickerson and Terrence Williams figure out the object is to put the ball through the rim, just off it. Niners 85 Kennesaw 55
J Felt: Colby jacks up three straight 30-ft threes to end the game in style. Charlotte 87, Kennesaw State 60.
Gill: Charlotte maybe starting another small win streak that will undoubtedly end in heartbreak with this win over KSU 85-62

Comments (0)

Turnovers Secure Charlotte’s Demise to Saint Louis

Turnovers Secure Charlotte’s Demise to Saint Louis

Posted on 16 January 2012 by cpip

A fast start to Atlantic 10 play came to a grinding to a halt when Charlotte (9-7, 2-2 A10) dropped its second straight to Saint Louis (13-4, 2-2 A10).

The Niners jumped out to a 10-2 lead three and a half minutes into the game. Charlotte was hitting its shots and keeping the Billikens from running their offense. Everyone in Halton Arena was feeling good. Saint Louis never got within five points of Charlotte in the first half, but the Niners armor showed cracks when a 31-18 lead shrunk to 31-24 on a six point Billiken run over a two minute stretch. A Pierria Henry 3-point shot put Charlotte back up by ten, but Kyle Cassity converted a fastbreak lay-up immediately after, with the clock running out, to keep the Billikens within single digits going into the break.

Charlotte kept a safe distance for a few minutes of the 2nd-half, leading 40-31 on a Pierria Henry lay-up with 16:19 remaining. The Niners then found a way to turn the ball over on seven of the next eight possessions, the remaining possession resulting in a missed 3-point attempt by Chris Braswell. Pierria Henry accounted for four of those turnovers, which were all thoughtless passes into the hands of the Billikens. Henry finished with 8 turnovers in what we hope was just his freshman status showing itself, and only momentarily. Henry may have been battling illness as their was some question beforehand to whether or not he’d play, although he still scored 10 points and registered 10 steals.

Saint Louis capitalized on those turnovers by going on a 12-0 run to take a 43-40 lead before Deuce Briscoe tied it with a three (Briscoe then failed to convert the and-one free throw). The Niners were able to keep up for a few more minutes, holding a 47-46 lead momentarily before a Saint Louis answered. With Charlotte trailing 49-51 an 11-0 run by the Billikens ultimately put the game out of reach with a 62-49 lead with 4:15 remaining.

Then a funny thing happened, an 8-0 run by Charlotte, including five from Derrio Green, closed the gap down to 62-57 and brought some life back to Halton Arena with 1:33 remaining. Charlotte fouled on its defensive possessions the rest of the way, sending Saint Louis to the line while they proceeded to knock in six of eight free throw attempts down the stretch. DeMario Mayfield scored a 3-pointer each along with lay-ups by Barnett and Braswell to shrink the gap in the waning moments. Javarris Barnett hit an NBA-range 3-pointer with three seconds left to bring the Niners within one, 67-68. Mike McCall Jr then missed his two free throws, the second intentionally, giving the Niners a live ball with 1.8 seconds left and no timeouts. Barnett’s desperation heave was after the buzzer and fell short.

Javarris Barnett led Charlotte in scoring, putting up 23 points on 9/14 shooting (3/6 on 3PA), while pulling down seven rebounds. DeMario Mayfield had good offensive numbers, scoring 10 points of 4/5 from the field and also getting seven rebounds. This loss went through the fingertips of Pierria Henry and Chris Braswell, who combined for 13 of the teams 22 turnovers. Braswell followed up his 31 point, 10 rebound game at UMass with 10 points (4/10 FG%) and two rebounds. Charlotte managed to shoot 54.3% in the losing effort, which is a product of the turnovers.

This teams youth manifests itself in inconsistency, whether it be from game to game or possession to possession. There is improvement but there is still a lot of work to do by Alan Major and the staff to turn this program around. Charlotte sits in the heap that is the middle of the A10 at 2-2, a .500 conference record would be one anyone would have taken after walking out of the Saint Joseph’s game last season. Charlotte hosts Kennesaw State in its final non-conference game Wednesday night. The Atlantic Sun team is 2-15 against Division I this season and provide a great chance for the Niners to match their win total from last season.

We can’t win them all, but we sure as hell can’t lose them all either.

Comments (0)

GAMEDAY: Niners set to take on Bilikens

GAMEDAY: Niners set to take on Bilikens

Posted on 14 January 2012 by NLP

Normally we open with some sort of snark about eviscerating our opposition; however, the GTG staff apparently has a case of the #badfans and some are predicting defeat.  As usual, McFly and 2k are being Negative Nancys. Pish tosh, says NLP, the Niners are going to empty the Saint Louis chances for victory like liposuction would empty Rick Majerus of his abundant accumulation of adipocytes. Really, Majerus should consider a career as a luxury liner. With yet another cruise ship tragedy, one would think that someone as buoyant as the Boy Beluga would be in high demand as an unsinkable vessel. It would certainly be better than hearing his annual grips about wanting to move SLU to the MVC so that his abundant waistband doesn’t have to log so many miles.

Predictions:

NLP (the best):  Charlotte put the Saint Louis offensive attack on a crash course weight loss plan. Niners 72 – Bilikens 63

J Felt:  Niners win, Majerus leaves with 4 minutes to get good seat at Olive Garden. Charlotte 70, SLU 65

McFly:  Billikens return to their early season form, Niners still search for some semblance of consistency. SLU 73, Charlotte 60

Gill: Biliken doesn’t bring luck to SLU. Charlotte 77-71

Cpip: Braswell stays in beast mode, leading Niners to victory. Charlotte 62 – Saint Louis 58

2k: Not ice under Halton, but will feel like it… SLU 63 Charlotte 57

Comments (0)

Preview:  What is a Billiken?

Tags: , , ,

Preview: What is a Billiken?

Posted on 13 January 2012 by McFly

Saturday, the Saint Louis Billikens (13-4, 1-2 A-10) come to Halton to renew their tepid rivalry with your Charlotte 49ers (9-6, 2-1 A-10). Of course, that means it is the time of year where we ask ourselves, “What exactly is a Billiken?”  Most would comment that it is a troll, or a small person, and even Google isn’t sure.  When I typed in “Billiken” the all powerful search engine asked me if I meant to search “Black Men”.  Obviously, this wasn’t satisfactory for the GTG.net archivists so they tirelessly worked to not only find us answers, but earn their high level pay, and they were able to provide us with an answer. They found that a Billiken was a charm doll created by Florence Pretz, an art teacher, from St. Louis, Missouri (our crack team of researchers have told us that there may be a coincidence to her place of residence and creation, and the university’s location and use of said mascot, but it cannot be confirmed).  Apparently, the elf-like figure came to Ms. Pretz in a dream, down to the pointy ears, little patch of hair on its head, slightly mangled, stout body, and that shit-eating grin you’re so used to seeing.

I think it’s pooping…

Speaking of visions coming to people in dreams, many Saint Louis fans had similar dreams when Rick Majerus was hired to take over the program, but while it hasn’t quite been a nightmare, it’s been much more like pergatory then a dream scenario.  Two seasons ago, Majerus directed the Billikens to a CBI Championship game appearance (GTG.net does not acknowledge the existence or the importance of pay-to-play post season tournaments), where they lost to VCU in a best of three championship series.  However, the good showing at the end of the season raised expectations for the following season, but Saint Louis would battle injuries, suspensions, and overall poor play to finish 12-19 (6-10 A-10).  Heading into this season, the Billikens returned a few players from injury as well as not loosing many to graduation, and were pegged as somewhat of a darkhorse, being picked third by all of us here at GTG.net in the Atlantic Ten preseason poll (As well as being rated highly by numerous, less prestigious polls).  This season the Billikens started off strong beating Big Six conference foes such as Washington, Boston College, Villanova, and Oklahoma, and racing out to a 12-1 start.  Recently, Saint Louis has gone 1-3 in their last four, with losses versus Dayton, Temple, and New Mexico (sandwiching a win versus George Washington in there).  Depending on your outlook, it could be a good thing they are in a slump, or a bad thing as they may be motivated to get out of it.

Offensively, Saint Louis is a fairly balanced team, shooting 47% from the field and 39% from the three point line (both a higher percentage then Charlotte, 40% FG, 31.3% 3FG), and are led by senior forward Brian Conklin (6’6″, 230 lbs) at 14.5 PPG.  Conklin is strictly an inside the arc player, and he is very good at it, shooting 60% from the field (only one three point attempt all year, but he made it).  He is also the anti-DeMario Mayfield, and should not be fouled as he converts on 86% of his attempts.  Conklin is flanked by Kwamain Mitchell and Cody Ellis, who both average just north of 11 PPG, but do it in different ways.  Mitchell, the junior point guard, is more adept at driving to the basket, but also shoots 36% from the three point line.  Ellis, the junior forward, is more of a face up four-man (he’s Australian, what do you expect?) and converts on nearly 41% of his three point attempts. So, all in all, Saint Louis, as always, is highly efficient on the offensive end, and now they actually score above 56 PPG (They average 70.1 PPG as a team).

Defensively, the Billikens are just like the Billikens of old.  They hold their opponents to a 55.8 PPG average, which is fairly remarkable considering Charlotte only holds their opponents to a 67 PPG average, but holds the opponents to a lesser shooting percentage both from inside and outside the arc.  Saint Louis is not exactly a strong rebounding team, only averaging 32 RPG, but when you are as efficient as they are, there shouldn’t be too many balls to chase down at the end of possessions.  The Billikens also turn their opponents over at a solid rate of 15 turnovers per game, which is plus-five to their own turnover rate.

This game will largely come down to who can keep their composure the most.  Both teams thrive in that regard in different ways, Saint Louis with their efficiency, and Charlotte in with their lack of consistency (largely on the offensive end).  Either way, it should make for a good game, with an old rival in Halton Arena.

Keys to the Game:

  • Pressure the ball and contest every shot.  Saint Louis operates at a highly efficient rate, and barely turn the ball (10 turnover per game).  This will need to change to get them out of their rhythm.
  • Limit second chance opportunities.  Saint Louis is not an overly strong rebounding team, so multiple opportunities need to be limited for a team that operates at a high percentage.
  • Avoid the droughts.  The Forty-Niners have struggled to start games and halves strong.  They finish fairly well, and handle the inbetween, but have been cold in many games coming out of the gates.  Saint Louis, with their defense, is not a team you can battle back against when you’re down double digits.

Comments (0)

Niners comeback falls just short against UMass, fall 85-75.

Niners comeback falls just short against UMass, fall 85-75.

Posted on 11 January 2012 by NLP

As poorly as the Niners (9-6, 2-1) shot against the UMass Minutemen (13-4, 2-1), they nearly pulled off the monumental comeback Wednesday.  In the end, the comeback ran out of gas, as so many often do when coming from way behind, as the Niners fell 85-75 in Amherst. In the loss Jr. PF/C Chris Braswell posted a career high 31 points on 9-15 shooting (3-5 from outside) and 10-11 at the foul line.

Early on it looked like the Niners were going to be run out of the Mullins Center, as UMass sprinted out to a 18-4 lead in the opening 5 minutes of the game. Raphiael Putney, who finished with a career high 19 points, helped key the early surge with help from Chaz Williams (19 points) and former Charlotte recruiting target Terrell Vinson (18 points). As hot as UMass was, the Niners were equally cold with Chris Braswell (who scored 8 of the team’s first 10 points) providing the only consistent response.

The Niners would eventually crawl back into the game as the Minutemen cooled off, and would close to within 7 points at 28-35 following a pair of three-pointers by Derrio Green and Javarris Barnett and a made FT by Chris Braswell.  UMass would rebuild the lead to 11 points at the end of the half with a painful 3 pointer by Putney which immediately followed an ugly missed 3 point attempt by Green.

The 2nd half opened up with UMass extending the lead they built late in the first half as the Niners went over 3 minutes between scores.  A Sean Carter layup would push the lead to 37-57 with 16:22 to go in the 2nd half, leaving most to think the game was out of reach. Fortunately some inspired play on both ends of the court, highlighted by Chris Braswell’s career night scoring the ball, broke the UMass stranglehold on the lead and allowed the Niners to roar back into the game. At one point Braswell hit 3 straight 3-pointers, bringing the Niners within 7 points and 10:36 to play in the game.

Charlotte would finally take the lead on a difficult layup by Braswell (replays showed he was very, very clearly fouled) with 4:47 remaining to give the Niners a tenuous 69-68 lead. Unfortunately that would be the last basket until the 1:24 mark, allowing UMass to retake the lead and push that margin out to 10 by the final whistle.

Throughout the game the Niners attacked the rim without abandon. For some (Braswell mostly, DeMario Mayfield as well) that meant success.  For the rest of the team, it meant missed layups (Niner bench had only 5 points for the game). What is most stunning is UMass shot 31 foul shots to the Niners’ 13 – Braswell accounting for 11 of those attempts.  Yes, you are reading those stats correctly. Remarkably, the Minutemen announcers noticed a number of missed calls as well.  That’s not to say the referees were biased, but it makes one wonder if the poor start subconsciously altered the manner in which fouls were called.

To paint a picture that the Niners lost because of officiating would be absolutely wrong. To the credit of the Minutemen, they controlled the glass as they collected 11 more rebounds (38-27).  However, on the opposite end of the spectrum the Niners committed only 12 turnovers to UMass’ 20 turnovers, a definite positive trend that continues to improve from earlier this season.

What needs to improve though:

  • Bench scoring.  Deuce Briscoe needs to be that consistent scorer off the bench but struggles to do so.  Some nights he’s terrific, others (like tonight) he’s not-so terrific.  Tonight in particular he was bad selfish (yes, there’s such a thing as good selfish) and forced his shots in a number of spots
  • Playing with composure.  At times E Victor Nickerson and Terrence Williams were out of control and it lead to the ball quickly going the other way or a cheap foul.  The aggressiveness is certainly laudable but it needs to come with patience.

In hindsight, this writer sees the loss as more of what UMass did well (shooting early, foul shots late) on offense and their willingness to actively defend the fast break on defense as the reason the Niners lost.  Sure Charlotte struggled at times from the field but many of the shots were well contested and unfortunately UMass is a strong home team. There is no shame in this defeat and the comeback is something the team can build on.

We can absolutely beat Saint Louis on Saturday.  The end, good night.

Comments (0)

Gameday:  Outlast the 60 Secondmen!

Gameday: Outlast the 60 Secondmen!

Posted on 11 January 2012 by McFly

It’s gameday Niners, and for the time being, spirits are high in Ninerland with Charlotte sporting a 9-5 (2-0 A-10) record, and sitting tied atop the Atlantic Ten standings.  So tonight the Forty-Niners put that impeccable 2-0 conference record on the line against the University of Massachusetts Amherst Minutemen (12-4, 1-1 A-10) in Amherst, Massachusetts (not Boston).  If you don’t know much about the competition for tonight’s game check out the preview here, along with the injury update here to get caught up.  Don’t feel bad though, at least you have the excuse of being out of the loop because you’re not a Massachusetts resident, likely because you enjoy warm weather, accent free douchebags, and pretty women.  Also, you would likely prefer to pay attention to more worthwhile sports teams in the area such as the New England Patriots (perennial Super Bowl contenders) with Tom Brady’s glorious locks and chin, the Boston Bruins (Stanley Cup Champs), and the Boston Red Sox (perennially buying World Series contenders).  Not a soul would blame you…  No one.  I cannot stand one Massachusetts team, and even I understand.  It probably doesn’t help matters when you have one Final Four appearance technically, but not technically thanks to the car salesman that is John Calipari.  We should probably really hate these guys, but they can’t even garner applause in their own region.  Either way, we really need to beat these guys, and give the people of Massachusetts another reason not to cheer for them.

Predictions:

J Fart: Charlotte 67, UMass 64. The dance team, tired of dealing with minute men, have their hearts stolen by Pierria.

McFly: UMass goes cold as a winters bone. Charlotte 65, UMass 59

NLP: Niners show UMass what it’s like to be 40 Minutemen.  Niners 73 UMass 62

2k: Niners escape Amherst with another road win:  Niners 64 UMass 60

Ginger: The offense shows up for this one, Charlotte 74 UMass 63

Gill: Niners can’t keep step with the Minutemen and fall 66-72.

Comments (0)

Niners Take Conference Lead to Massachusetts

Tags: , , , , , , ,

Niners Take Conference Lead to Massachusetts

Posted on 10 January 2012 by cpip

The Niners find themselves in unfamiliar territory going into their third A10 game of the season: 1st-place. But unfamiliar territory has been a theme for Charlotte (9-5, 2-0 A10) this season as they have played nine of 15 games away from Halton Arena with the next stop being the Mullins Center, home-court of Massachusetts (12-4, 1-1 A10). The Minutemen are 8-0 at home this season, but only one of those victories (Davidson, 73-65) is against a team in the RPI Top 175. Charlotte is arguably (even if solely because I am arguing it) the best team to visit UMass this season.

Charlotte and UMass have an interesting history since the 49ers joined the A10, they were there for our peak and our rock bottom. It only seems fitting that the Minutemen stand between the Niners and their assertion in the 2012 Atlantic 10 race.

Look at you.. scoring on Fordham

The Minutemen boast a high scoring offense, putting away 77.2 points a game. Their offense runs through point guard Chaz Williams (5’9″ 175 lbs) who scores 15.7 PPG while dishing out 6.9 APG. Williams transferred from Hofstra after his freshman year and sat out last season. He is a volume scorer and even though he shoots better than 40% from long range he only averages four 3-point attempts a game. He shoots only 39% from inside the arc, but will take most of his shots there. It will be interesting to see what Pierria’s Henry’s tactics are to shut him down and force him into bad shots. Williams also boasts 3.3 turnovers a game, which will have his defender, Henry, wide-eyed from the tip.

UMass gets 9.1 PPG from PF Raphiael Putney and another 8.6 PPG from his help off the bench, Sampson Carter. Neither of the two break the two-hundred pound barrier and are in for a rude awakening when they try to take their game against Javarris Barnett. They both get a lot of their points inside but will step out for the occasional long shot, still in Barnett’s comfort zone. When Javarris has the ball on offense he should find about as much resistance as he did against Richmond. Chris Braswell will be posted up by Sean Carter (6’9″ 225 lbs), who is 9th in scoring for the Minutemen at 6.2 PPG. Carter only takes 4.5 shots a game, but might have to take more with the rest of the front court at a size disadvantage.

Barnett matches up well with UMass' frontcourt.

The Minutemen perimeter is patrolled by Freddie Riley (very streaky), Terrell Vinson and Jesse Morgan, who all score between eight and nine points a game. These three players are all 6’5″ or taller which could cause trouble if they can pass and/or shoot over Deuce Briscoe and Derrio Green. If either of these players get hot Major should look to match their length with E. Victor Nickerson and Terrence Williams, along with starter DeMario Mayfield.

Charlotte will have to play smothering defense and force turnovers, much like the last two games, to find themselves in this game. If Charlotte’s offense can find points like it did against Richmond the Niners will be in control of the game well before it’s over. The Mullins Center is where Derrio Green’s best game as a Niner took place, when he scored 34 points (8/16 3pt FG) while Charlotte won by double-digits; he may once again find that swagger.

With Dayton (2-0 A10) going to the hostile confines of St. Bonaventure tomorrow before hosting La Salle (Also 2-0 A10, playing Penn tonight) the Niners could get lonely at the top by taking care of their next two. But first things first, if Charlotte wants this time on top to last more than a minute then Massachusetts has to fall.

Comments (0)

Poll

What are your thoughts on Charlotte moving to Conference USA?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...
View in: Mobile | Standard