The Broncos are a case study in both seasonal evaluations that go into selection and the larger college hoops landscape that determines who gets a seat at the table. The school is a private Jesuit university located down the road from the San Francisco Bay area and California’s oldest institution of higher learning. It’s a charter member of the West Coast Conference, founded in 1952, and its notable conference hoops rivals are Gonzaga and St. Mary’s. The Broncos are No. 41 in current NCAA Net rankings, which the committee uses to separate teams, No. 38 in Ken Pomeroy’s ratings, and No. 51 in ESPN’s Basketball Power Index (BPI). Herb Sendek – yes, *that* Herb Sendek, formerly of Arizona State and N.C. State – is in his 10th season as head coach.
Let’s give them a look:
Recent history: At least 20 wins the past five seasons, including this year. NIT appearances three of the past four seasons. A pretty fair historical footprint, with seven NCAA appearances, including the 1952 Final Four, and four other NIT trips. The Broncos have had only seven coaches since 1935, and all but one of them had career winning records.
Mascot/nickname profile: Broncos and a mascot named Bucky, of which there appears to blessedly little history. The student section is referred to as “Ruff Riders.”
Home arena: Leavey Center (cap. 4,500) in Santa Clara, named for alum Thomas E. Leavey (Class of 1922), the founder of Farmers Insurance (cue J.K. Simmons and the TV commercial theme).
Notable hoops alumni: Steve Nash, who led the Broncos to the NCAAs in 1993, ’95 and ’96 and was a two-time NBA MVP; Kurt Rambis; Jalen Williams (Oklahoma City Thunder), Brandin Podziemski (Golden State Warriors); John Bryant (WCC Player of Year, fixture in German professional league to present day); Dennis Awtrey; Ken Sears (1950s All-American and first college hoops player to appear on cover of Sports Illustrated).
Current season: Santa Clara (21-5, 12-1) is currently in first place in the WCC, a half-game ahead of Gonzaga and a game-and-a-half up on St. Mary’s in a top-heavy league in which the top three have separated from the pack. Redshirt sophomore guard Christian Hammond (16.4 ppg) is one of three double-figure scorers, along with 6-7 senior Elijah Mahi (14 ppg) and 6-9 redshirt freshman Allen Graves (11.2 ppg, 7.1 rpg). The Broncos have won eight in a row and 12 of 13, their only loss a respectable effort against the Zags.
Reasons to believe: Depth, quality, shooting ability, unselfishness. Nine players average between five and 16 points per game and between 12 and 30 minutes per game. They have seven capable 3-point shooters and five players with at least 60 assists. They shoot 47.6 percent as a team and are outscoring opponents by 12 points per game. They beat St. Mary’s in their first meeting, and they get another crack at both the Gaels and Zags in coming weeks. A solid 7-4 record against Quad 1 and 2 competition.
Reasons to fade them: Here’s where we get into the effects of one’s neighborhood. The West Coast Conference is a middlin’ 11th in league RPI ratings. Gonzaga is near the top of the heap in many metrics, and St. Mary’s is actually several spots ahead of Santa Clara despite the head-to-head loss. This has led to hoopologists wondering if the WCC is worthy of a third team getting into the field, i.e., a second at-large bid. The Big Ten is projected to get nine and perhaps ten at-large bids, the SEC eight and the ACC and Big 12 seven. The eighth- or ninth-place team in a conference no more deserves a spot in the NCAAs, unless it wins the automatic bid, than you or me (Dead Horse and Club alert).
Shouldn’t matter if the league is deep and difficult, but in an era of consolidation and mega-conferences, it does because the power conferences dictate terms.
Selectors use metrics and available statistical tools to justify inclusion among the Power 4 conferences and the swells, and to exclude mid-majors who did everything asked of them, but whose numbers "just didn’t add up." That’s why we’re in a season where Miami of Ohio is still undefeated and could win 30 games, but if the RedHawks lose in the MAC Tournament, there’s a very real chance they’ll be denied because of their strength of schedule or predictive metrics or league ranking or whatever. In a just and fair world, teams such as Miami-O and Santa Clara should be locks for the field if they get to 26 or 28 wins. Alas, boys and girls, we do not live in such a world.



I came here for the college basketball content, but stayed for the Darby O’Gill reference.
ReplyDeleteNot many webblogs using the old Darby O'Gill references these days.
ReplyDeleteam i supposed to know who darby o'gill is? and aren't more college basketball team good now because of NIL and the consequent dispersion of good players? meaning there's no rhyme or reason to what teams get selected and who wins games . . .
ReplyDeleteDave, NIL and transfer portal have dispersed talent more in football than hoops. Don't know that there are "more" good hoops teams now than 10-20 years ago. Power conference programs now routinely poach best players from mid- and low-major conference.s, often because they have more money to pay kids and they'd rather have a player with a year or two of college experience than all but primo HS recruits. Consolidation and mega-conferences mean that even meh P4 teams have better statistical resume's than many of best mid-major programs, hence it's gonna be increasingly difficult for mid-majors to receive at-large bids without exceptionally gaudy records.
ReplyDeleteTirico and snoop is not a good tv pairing, in case you were wondering.
ReplyDeleteall very cool and normal that the el paso airport and airspace is completely closed for the next 10 days with no explanation from the federal government. has anyone seen will smith and jeff goldblum?
ReplyDeletegheorghies... I threw this out on the radio show last night (and got some nice well wishes in return), but my 11yo stepdaughter Lucy is having a bad go of it.
ReplyDeleteHer eye started swelling and she started running a fever Sunday evening. (Flu has been as rampant in this town over the last 3 weeks as I have ever seen it.) She stayed home from school and went to the doc Monday, they prescribed some antibiotics.
ER 3am yesterday morning, admitted into the children's hospital yesterday morning. The issue is an infection on the back of her eyeball. Different antibiotics being tried, what they did not emphasize to her mom but what became apparent late yesterday is that the concern is keeping the infection from spreading to her brain or her spine, god forbid. Apparently it likely started as a sinus infection, and that shit can travel.
She's likely hospitalized for at least a few more days, but we're hoping for some good results soon and indications that she is getting better. Any good vibes sent this way for Lucy are appreciated!
Big vibes up for Lucy, and all of you who are looking out for her! That's some serious stuff for an 11 year old.
ReplyDeleteOh Whitney. I'm so very sorry. Sending good thoughts and lots of prayers. If y'all would like someone to stop by for support, tell me. I know that place well. Hoping she's as comfortable as possible, sounds pretty awful and scary.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Rootsy, and thank you, Donna. CHKD is an amazing place, she’s in good hands.
ReplyDeleteJeez, Whit. Sorry to hear. Let Lucy know there's a dipshit dunebilly sending good thoughts her way.
ReplyDeletequick chkd story to illustrate the latter. many years ago (maybe 2012?), my kids and i were in norfolk to visit whit and his girls. whit lived in a cool old apartment really close to chkd (fortunately, as it turns out). he and i were prepping stuff to go to the beach and the kids were tearing around the apartment.
ReplyDeletethe three oldest girls navigated a sharp turn into a bedroom successfully. the fourth - my youngest, around 7 at the time - did not. she collided forehead first with the ornate crown molding around the door frame. that's a place that bleeds a lot, friends. and bleed it did.
at the time, whit's father was the president of eastern virginia medical school, which is affiliated with chkd. whit called his pop and told him we were en route. i carried my daughter and whit led the parade of the other kids to the emergency room.
we checked in and were taken for observation. the attending physician was really attentive (perhaps overly so). the young resident who stitched my kid up was a bit perplexed. eventually, he turned to me and said, "who do you know?" at which point i told him.
"glad i have a lot of experience doing this", he said.
and today, that kid is almost 22 and has just the slightest shadow of a scar at her hairline. i'm quite sure lucy's getting treatment every bit as good. as do all the kids that wind up at chkd.
and that's...one to grow on.
CHKD is where our daughter had her posterior spinal fusion surgery. The ortho practice of CHKD are her ortho docs. And the neurologist who specializes in chronic migraine for kids - he's CHKD - and is doc for her also. We LOVE CHKD! And as a pastor, I've been there many times with kids who would've died if this region did not have them. We are super lucky for them. Here's to all the good care for your kiddo, Whit!
ReplyDeleteThanks, dune buddy. And D, we are both lucky to have this asset here. You never know how good it is until you need it.
ReplyDeleteI just dropped off some Shake Shack milkshakes in Lucy’s room. She still looks like she lost a prize fight against Kid Dynamite, but big smiles right now.
And Rob, I retold that story last night. That was 2009 or 2010. Glad her scar isn’t what it could’ve been.
ReplyDeleteIn the realm of "less serious kid's medical issues", our oldest went to visit friends in Maryland a few weekends ago. They went ice skating, and on the way off the ice, our kid slipped and fell.
ReplyDeleteHe hopped up to skate off and quickly realized that he was bleeding heavily. Skate center staff called 911 and applied pressure to his wound, which was just to the left of his upper ass crack. The EMTs arrived and got the bleeding stopped (his pants were completely soaked with blood at this point) and took him to the ER, where they put a few stitches in his backside and sent him off.
We rented a car so my wife could drive up and bring him home in his car, since he couldn't sit comfortably. He was lucky that people at the facility (staff and guests) acted quickly.
We also learned that a young adult still needs parental assistance when they give themselves an extra butthole with the back of a skate blade.
I'm sending Lucy vibes like I'm Lionel Hampton.
ReplyDeleteIt sounds like Lucy is in good hands....Danimal sending Irish luck vibes to VA nevertheless. Keep us posted pls.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Z and D-Train. Preesh.
ReplyDeleteDamn Whit, that is some crazy scary shit. All the love coming to Lucy, you, and the whole squad from Casa de Teej
ReplyDeleteThanks, Tejus
ReplyDeleteScary stuff, glad Lucy is on the mend. We're familiar with Children's DC, top outfit. Positive healing vibes sent!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Ken, appreciate it.
ReplyDeleteBig news, everyone -- Lucy's getting sprung today!!!!
Yesterday the docs were not encouraged but what a difference 24 hours can make...
I want to thank the gheorghies for being the warm, wonderful friends I know you are and letting me lean on you.
nbtyrsd
ReplyDeletehere's one from the "pep guardiola doesn't have to deal with this shit" file. rising sophomore keeper, little badass, has decided (or been pushed by her dickhead club coach) that she can't do both high school and club soccer this season - wants to focus on club because that's the path to college recruitment. the college part is accurate, but plenty of kids do both - just some club coaches look down their noses at the high school game, and because they wield a lot of power in terms of playing time and exposure, kids don't have much choice but to listen to them.
ReplyDeleteKICK HIS ASS, SEABASS
ReplyDelete