It's been really relaxing now that I've outsourced Wrenball to an actual professional. Herewith, a look at the CAA from our man at the beach:
The Tribe sits in the muddied middle of a league in the middle of the Division I landscape – 18th out of 32 conferences, ahead of the Mid-American, Southern and Patriot leagues, behind the Ivy, Sun Belt and Missouri Valley. Preseason expectations have mostly played out, though it’s worth noting that league records are unequal in a 13-team conference playing an 18-game schedule.
Some schedules are pricklier than others, depending on time, travel and the scheduling algorithm’s sadism level.
College of Charleston has had the best season so far and sits atop the league, though just a game ahead of Towson and Hofstra, and two games up on UNC Wilmington in what appears to be a three-tiered setup. The Tribe is among a pigpile that includes Drexel, North Carolina A&T, Delaware, Northeastern and Stony Brook. Elon and newbies Hampton and Monmouth are at the bottom.
The Wrens (9-14, 4-6) already matched last season’s conference win total and nearly doubled their total wins, so progress? That said, they have played mostly to type. They’ve beaten only two teams currently with winning records (Army and UNCW) and have been bounced regularly by teams higher up the food chain, as well as folks at their own trough. They shoot reasonably well (third in the league in FG percentage, first in 3-point percentage), though curiously not from the foul line (11th of 13 teams). They defend poorly (11th in FG percentage defense) and commit more turnovers than they generate.
Some of it may be due to roster churn, as the program incorporated nine new players. The one-year lease of guard Anders Nelson has been a positive experiment. The former D3 All-American from St. Thomas in Minnesota is the leading scorer (11.9 ppg) and leads the conference in assists (104). He’s a 48.5-percent shooter and would lead the league in 3-point shooting (.465) if he had enough attempts. He's totaled 49 on 15-for-16 shooting in the past two games. Forward Gabe Dorsey, a 6-6 soph who began his career at Vanderbilt, is the No. 2 scorer and a capable shooter himself (45 percent overall and from 3). Junior forward Noah Collier (Pittsburgh) is the league’s No. 2 rebounder. In fact, the transfer portal appears to have been a benefit, as four of the top five scorers are imports.
The remaining schedule sets up favorably, as they face only two teams above .500 in the league, Towson and the Dubs - both at home. Eight or nine wins are not an unreasonable goal. However, that doesn’t sniff the top of the conference.
Charleston (21-2, 9-1) is an interesting study. The Cougars were unbeaten in the league, ranked and sporting a 20-game win streak until a loss to Hofstra last weekend. Coach Pat Kelsey obviously knows what he’s doing, having averaged 20 wins over nine seasons at Winthrop before relocating to the Town That Sparked Sedition. He overhauled the roster with transfers and recruits, and has taken off in year two. They space the floor, launch a ton of 3-pointers, rebound enthusiastically, and still get to the free throw line. They’re top 25 in scoring nationally (80.1 ppg). Five guys average between 10 and 13 points per game. They lead the nation in 3-point attempts, are 10th in made 3-pointers per game, and 48 percent of their shots are from behind the arc. Seven guys have made at least 17 treys. Yet they also have made more free throws (344) than their opponents have attempted (313).
Hofstra didn’t so much provide a blueprint for how to beat the Cougars as demonstrate how such a game likely must play out. First, it didn’t hurt to have defending Player of the Year Aaron Estrada and his vitals. The Pride made half of its 3-point shots, which helped offset Charleston’s 31-8 advantage in free throw attempts, and the Cougars made just 5 of 31 shots from 3, half of their per game average. If they had shot poorly instead of miserably, they would have won.
Peculiar result aside, going undefeated in the conference wasn’t going to happen. No CAA team has done so, and only three teams have finished with one loss: two of David Robinson’s Navy teams and a late ‘80s Richmond squad under Dick Tarrant.
CofC also presents an intriguing possibility for the CAA getting two teams into the NCAA Tournament. The league last had multiple teams in the NCAAs in 2011, with Old Dominion, George Mason and VCU, and the Rams went to the Final Four.
Say the Cougars go 7-1 down the stretch, which would make them 16-2 in the league, 28-3 overall. If they lose in the CAA tournament semifinal or final, that would make them 29 or 30-4, with an NCAA NET ranking in the 40s or 50s (they’re currently 61) and an attractive at-large candidate. Could happen.
The Cougs are good, but hardly unbeatable, as Hofstra demonstrated. Towson carried them to overtime, and they edged UNCW by two.
Towson, the preseason favorite, is the league’s hottest team, winners of six in a row. The Tigers (16-7, 8-2) are seasoned, balanced and physical, led by the trio of all-conference wing Nicolas Timberlake, Cam Holden and 6-7, 245-pound Charles Thompson, who combine for 42 points and 18 rebounds per game. Like Towson teams from way back, they'll bounce you around like a cement mixer.
Hofstra (15-8, 8-2) has won three in a row and eight of 10 and is the league’s best shooting team. They’re fueled by the 6-3 Estrada, who leads the league in scoring (21.3 ppg), fellow senior guard Tyler Thomas and mellifluously named 6-8 forward Darlinstone Dubar. UNCW (17-6, 7-3) has an abundance of guards and wings, led by 6-6 soph Trazarien White (13.4 ppg, 5.7 rpg). Seven Seahawks average between five and 14 points per game, and they’re the league’s most statistically effective defense.
Quality players capable of heating up for a game or two are sprinkled throughout the league, but if at least three of the current top four teams don’t make the conference tournament semifinals, the train has jumped the track. Wager accordingly.
[So you're saying the Tribe doesn't have a chance. Tough but fair.]
I feel like "The Town that Sparked Sedition" should have a little superscript TM over it, no?
ReplyDeletePlease pour one out for Lou Campanelli, or "Sweet Lou" as some used to call him. I'm guessing OBX Dave is more familiar than most. Fairly certain I've referenced Lou in the past, as his son and I were pretty tight during my early teens and living in Hburg while his old man was bringing JMU to the promised land in men's hoops. After leaving JMU, he went on to Cal where he did the same, only to get shit canned by way of a semi-coup which his then Asst, and future disgrace, Todd Bozeman and a couple of players including (and allegedly) Jason Kidd, led. If he was angry about it, he never showed it. Class act. Lou had a pretty serious stroke a few years ago, otherwise I do believe he would have been around another 10-15 years. Hopefully he's got a whistle around his neck again.
ReplyDeleteWay to rub in the "promised land in men's hoops" to the Tribers here, Danimal!
ReplyDeleteI said in this space a week ago that the Tribe would finish with a 9-9 record in conference play. Betting on Tribe men's hoops is bad biz, but anyone want to wager against me?
ReplyDeleteMarla does love a meximelt
ReplyDeleteI'll be your huckleberry, Whit. After a quick perusal of remaining schedule, it will be close, but I'll say 8-10 for grins and giggles...will give me something to pay attention to. What's the wager skippy?
ReplyDelete$20? Or something not tied to the feenances?
ReplyDeleteif the tribe goes 9-9 in the league (which would make them 14-17 overall), that'd have to go down as a qualified success. coaches picked them 8th in the preseason poll - 9-9 would likely get them to 6th/7th. it'd probably buy dane one more season. but i think it's a bit of fool's gold. four of the top five scorers are graduate student seniors, as are four of the top seven rebounders and the top two in assists (by some margin). next year's yet another start from scratch project.
ReplyDeleteDanimal, we will figure this out. Rob, who cares about the future. Live in the now. You in with Dan and me on a bet?
ReplyDeleteFools Gold!
ReplyDeleteyes, z! love me some roses.
ReplyDeletetribe in a battle late at hampton. a loss there puts 9-9 in real jeopardy. and it an indication that we are what we thought we were.
blew a seven-point halftime lead. lost 62-57 to a baaad hampton team. is that bet still on offer, whit?
ReplyDeleteI guess you shoulda nailed that down when the dream was still alive. Tribe is terrible.
ReplyDeleteIn fact, you can’t spell terrible without T, R, I, B, and E
ReplyDeleteWhit, I'll let you out of the bet for $10. Kidding of course. You're in and my goons are on the clock. Am guessing you were counting that game as one of your lay-ups and that lay-up was clanked off the bottom of the rim. You're going to need a Jaguar-esque finish to your season to do this...is it in them?
ReplyDeleteThis is where I lure you in for more damage. How about another wager for for item to be determined, that they don't finish with more than 6 wins...we'll call 6 a push, on that bet.
If they only win 5 you have storm the court at next season's opener in your Abe Lincoln outfit at halftime.
Deal, Dan!
ReplyDeleteIt's on like Donkey Kong.
ReplyDeleteFor most of this group, have yet to listen to it but your man Todd Boehly and Chelsea is a subject on today's "Nothing Personal" Podcast with David Samson. Now ya know.
Thanks for the heads up, Danimal. I generally prefer to hear Boehly roasted by proper english football analysts than smug former MLB execs, but I'll give it a listen.
ReplyDeletestarting to see some english commentators giving boehly grudging props about the cleverness with which they've engineered the financials of the deals the team has done recently. says nothing about the quality of the players, but at least folks seem to think there's a commercial rationale at play.
ReplyDelete