A View from the Cheap Seats

If there’s ever been a year we’ve needed a fresh basketball season – and soon – this is it.

But let’s not get ahead of ourselves just yet.

Atsur is gone, leaving us without a tested point guard, much less a proven one. The freshman Gonzalez is hurt while the sophomore Johnson isn’t eligible until December; until then, it’s up to the red shirt sophomore Degand. Basically, we have to replace a four-year starting point guard on a team that last season was for the most part not very good and all too often just downright terrible.

Sure, we manhandled Virginia Tech twice and executed a near-flawless performance in the unforgettable win over Carolina, but we still finished the regular season just slightly above abysmal at 5-11. We finished ninth in scoring offense and tenth in scoring defense, ninth in three-point field goal percentage and eleventh in three-point field goal percentage defense, eleventh in offensive rebounding and eighth in defensive rebounding, and dead last in turnover margin. Without even looking at the stats, too often we just downright seemed bad; we were vastly unprepared against Duke and Virginia, just flat out let the game get away from us against Boston College, and woefully lacked poise in a late match up against Maryland.

So let’s all just calm down. There’s no good reason to get overly excited or confident about this season. Right?

Forget that. Check your cautious optimism at the door: we’re going to be really good this season.

We might have been lethargic and overmatched for much of the regular season last year, but there was marked improvement across the board by March. That team at the end was, without question, a good team. And without making light of the task of replacing Atsur – we can only hope that finding a point guard isn’t as hard as finding a quarterback – we’re putting an improved version of that good team on the floor this season.

Last year’s tournament team will always be remembered most for its unyielding heart and unflinching intensity, but the statistics really drive home the fact that a better team was on the floor in March while giving us a brief glimpse of what we can expect this season.

Over four consecutive days, against four NCAA tournament teams, we shot an average of 56%, seven percentage points above our season average of 49%. Against Duke, we shot 61% from the field and 40% behind the arc; Virginia, 53% and 42%; Virginia Tech, 53% and 46%; and Carolina, 55% and 43%.

During that run, Costner racked up 90 points on 52% shooting; Grant, 59 on 53%; Fells, 51 on 58%; and McCauley, 47 on a scorching 67%. Off the bench, the fearless Horner chipped in a much-needed nine against Virginia Tech and eight against Carolina to lessen the impact of the early foul trouble that both Costner and McCauley got into those games.

On defense, we held Virginia to 40% and Virginia Tech to 42% from the field; only Carolina, at 58%, bettered us in field goal percentage. And after finishing the regular season near the bottom of the standings in total rebounding, only Virginia Tech out-rebounded us, 33-28.

And this wasn’t a fluke weekend where a few guys found their rhythm during a March run, rather an invariable precursor of where we were headed. State had become a well-coached, well-prepared, hard-fighting team capable of making noise on the nation’s premier stage, the ACC tournament.

Now that same team is poised this season to do more than just make some noise.

Costner (16.8 points per game), Grant (14.7), and McCauley (14.4) were not only our top three scorers last season, but they are also three of the top 10 returning scorers in the ACC this season. Costner is second in returning rebounding (7.3 per game), while McCauley is fourth (6.9).

By all indications, if Degand, and eventually Johnson and/or Gonzalez, can transition seamlessly into the point, then how can you not be excited about what this team will do?

Grant plays his more natural position on the wing, where he creates scoring opportunities by attacking the basket, while Fells provides a strong compliment with his range. The addition of the freshmen Hickson and Smith not only relieves both Costner and McCauley of tiring minutes (34 each last season), but this dynamic provides for Costner to play further out, creating a nightmarish mismatch for many opposing coaches.

Meanwhile, Lowe has shown a proven, intriguing knack for quickly identifying mismatches and exploiting them to create scoring opportunities. Evidenced by the comments players have been making since March, it’s apparent this team has bought wholeheartedly into their coach and his philosophy. They listened and improved, and by March they had also proved they could win.

But enough about last year; last year was our feel good story – Lowe’s first team made a lot us believe again. But no one will be surprised by our success this season. And to be honest, feel good stories usually end in nothing more than moral victories. Last year we needed that moral victory; after over a decade of discontent and underachieving, followed by a humbling coaching search, many of us needed that win over Carolina and that remarkable March run to help us heal.

Personally, a feel good story doesn’t make me feel good anymore – let someone else be Cinderella. I’m ready to hang a banner. And that’s exactly what this team is capable of doing.

So yeah, I’m pretty excited.

About LRM

Charter member of the Lunatic Fringe and a fan, loyal to a fault.

07-08 Basketball General NCS Basketball

68 Responses to A View from the Cheap Seats

  1. TampaPack 10/11/2007 at 1:33 PM #

    4 losses would pretty much be unparalled in the game today. However, just the fact that the players believe it means a great deal. You have to believe you are championship material in order to be able to play like it.

  2. packgrad93 10/11/2007 at 1:34 PM #

    “Just the fact that players (and fans) are talking about National Championships is a stark contrast over the past decade of mediocre expectations.”

    players & fans were talking about Nat’l Championships in fbal not too long ago.

  3. TampaPack 10/11/2007 at 1:37 PM #

    ^ Look what TOB left behind at BC. We may not be that far away after he can get his type of players in the system…

  4. wolfman 10/11/2007 at 1:45 PM #

    All the optimism and talk is great, and while I’m excited about the potential for this year’s team, and for Sidney Lowe as our coach, it takes more than words to win championships. Just ask Chuck Amato. But its good to see that our players are hungry to win and restore NC State to its former greatness, and it appears that we have the caliber of coach and talent to make it happen. They’ve made me a believer. I certainly expect to make the second weekend of the NCAAs.

  5. noah 10/11/2007 at 1:50 PM #

    “if the players beleive it, i believe it too.”

    I remember Anthony Grundy telling me that we’d make it to two Final Fours during his time here “easily” and win won of them.

    Color me skeptical.

  6. PamlicoPack 10/11/2007 at 2:12 PM #

    I think 9-7 in the ACC would be a fine season, particularly since we play Duke and UNC twice this year for the first time since the unbalanced schedule. 10-6 would be overachieving. 11-5, and Lowe gets the nod for ACC Coach of the Year. I think JJ Hickson might just stay two years, which would make next year the year for Lowe and our program to make the big move onto the national scene.

  7. TampaPack 10/11/2007 at 2:44 PM #

    Without sounding too confident, sure Duke and UNX will be tough games against great teams, but outside of those two, who else in the league scares anyone? Seems to me at first glance, third in the conference should be easily there for the taking, and if the PG situation works out and a couple of games here or there turn out the right way, who knows going up from there.

  8. packgrad93 10/11/2007 at 2:51 PM #

    JJ staying for 2 years would be a dream come true.

  9. LRM 10/11/2007 at 2:52 PM #

    Dudley, McRoberts, Dowdell, Ibekwe, Visser, Thornton, Strawberry, and Marshall are all gone this year.

    Just by virtue of this, you have to like what this means for our chances.

  10. zahadum 10/11/2007 at 2:54 PM #

    My main concern at this point is a little different than most. Most everybody else seems to be focused on the point guard situation, and I can certainly understand why. But my main issue is can we rebound with any consistency? That’s something we were not at all good at last year, and its key because so many other things feed off of it. Such as less opponents off. rebounds and kickouts for 3’s, being able to run and get easy baskets ourselves, especially when (I predict) we’ll see a lot of zone this year, being able to use our new depth to wear down opponents, being less vulnerable to being pressed, etc.

    Now there are certainly reasons we all know of to think that we will rebound better this year, perhaps even much better. But I want to actually see it happen on the court before I get too comfortable.

  11. RickJ 10/11/2007 at 3:01 PM #

    TampaPack – Oliver Purnell seems to think it might be Clemson. Here’s a couple of quotes from him:

    “Our goal, as we start the season, is the win the National Championship. And I couldn’t have realistically stated that goal until now.”

    “My view is this year it’s North Carolina and then the rest of us. And I think we’re in the top of the rest of us, but not by much.”

  12. Trout 10/11/2007 at 3:03 PM #

    “We might have been lethargic and overmatched for much of the regular season last year, but there was marked improvement across the board by March. That team at the end was, without question, a good team. ”

    In the last 10 games, there were 2 game where the team did not show up – a 78-52 drilling at FSU on 2/24 and a 79-59 beating at Maryland on 3/3. I’m hoping another year in Lowe’s system will avoid roadkills like those 2.

    We are going to have a good team. A great team, still too early, IMO, to predict. Gavin says no more than 4 losses. I say at least 8, but I think we have a shot to stay under double digit losses.

  13. Trout 10/11/2007 at 3:13 PM #

    ^ I think 9-7 in the ACC, 13-2 OOC for a record of 22-9 heading into the ACCT.

  14. ChuckAllYall 10/11/2007 at 3:50 PM #

    “Just the fact that players (and fans) are talking about National Championships is a stark contrast over the past decade of mediocre expectations.”

    players & fans were talking about Nat’l Championships in fbal not too long ago.

    PackGrad93-I do see your point in regards to a parallel in the excitement with Chuck’s arrival in football and our current anticipation toward basketball. I think the difference with basketball is that Sid can actually coach kids once they get here and put them in the best position to be successful. His staff really seems to like him, which should also mean greater stability and cohesiveness. And as one astute poster mentioned in another post, basketball teams can turn it around a lot quicker than football teams. One great recruiting year can have a much more immediate impact in basketball as opposed to football. I agree that talk is cheap, and just because you say you want to win a national championship doesn’t make it any more realistic. I do however think we can all agree we’d rather hear these kids setting lofty goals that include four-loss seasons and national championship runs rather than being content as a perrenial middle-tier ACC team. Dream big, but make sure you are willing to put in the necessary hard work and sacrifice that comes with accomplishing such goals. It will be fun to see how this years team develops and the season plays out, and I for one love being able to be optimistic about basketball again. Remember, a wise man once said “Nothing can happen if not first a dream”.

  15. packgrad93 10/11/2007 at 4:06 PM #

    “I do however think we can all agree we’d rather hear these kids setting lofty goals that include four-loss seasons and national championship runs rather than being content as a perrenial middle-tier ACC team. ”

    I doubt any past or present player was content with being a middle-tier team or a upper-tier team for that matter without a championship.

  16. Sw0rdf1sh 10/11/2007 at 4:07 PM #

    “Forget that. Check your cautious optimism at the door: we’re going to be really good this season.”

    Giggidy Giggidy! I feel better already!

  17. wolfpack n da house 10/11/2007 at 4:16 PM #

    All these years has led to people overlooking the pack. We are just the “other” team in the triangle. Heels fans barely see us as a rivalry and show us no respect. I dont know bout you but that grinds my gears. This year could redefine the rivalry and establish NC State as a national power for years to come. the next two years for the program will make or break the program under sidney lowe

  18. PamlicoPack 10/11/2007 at 4:36 PM #

    ^
    when we can pull off a win against UNC somewhere other than the friendly confines of the RBC Center (i.e. the Dean Dome or the ACC tournament), then this rivalry will start to grow again. If I were a Heel fan, I would dismiss last season’s loss as a fluke until the Pack shows me otherwise. The Holy Grail for a Pack fan in the UNC rivalry? the nine straight wins Norm Sloan pulled off over the Heels from 1973 to 1975…

  19. PamlicoPack 10/11/2007 at 4:37 PM #

    That said, there is nothing I would like to see more than JJ Hickson fouling out Tyler Hansborough twice this year…

  20. Cosmo96 10/11/2007 at 4:52 PM #

    As I’ve said before, being an NC State fan is like being Charlie Brown trying to kick a football. He keeps trying and trying, each time thinking that this will finally be his day…but the end result is always the same.

    I very much want to be wrong, but I’m just going to keep my enthusiasm in check, enjoying whatever exciting moments this season offers before life delivers its inevitable punch to the collective crotch of Wolfpack nation.

  21. lush 10/11/2007 at 4:53 PM #

    noah,

    no offense to grundy, but the talent on that team and this team are not compareable. and lets not even get into the upgrade in coaching…

    nice family guy reference wp in da house

  22. Rick 10/11/2007 at 5:02 PM #

    “I doubt any past or present player was content with being a middle-tier team or a upper-tier team for that matter without a championship.”

    It was just the coach that was content with it.

  23. ChuckAllYall 10/11/2007 at 5:07 PM #

    Thanks Rick–That’s what I was implying. The players are starting to believe because the coach has them believing.

  24. haze 10/11/2007 at 5:13 PM #

    Dukies reference HWSNBN. Oh, the memories…

    http://www.dukebasketballreport.com/articles/?p=23562

  25. PackGirl 10/11/2007 at 5:18 PM #

    In case anyone isn’t hyped up enough about the upcoming season, go listen to JJ’s interview that’s on gopack today. He’s got the right attitude already…our coaching staff is definitely doing their job. Sounds like a great kid.

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