Gameday Headlines — Wolves vs. Turkeys

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March 4, 2012

JP GIGLIO (N&O)
N.C. State’s postseason hopes are on the brink

The phrases “last four in” and the “first four out” were not part of C.J. Williams’ lexicon until about a month ago.

With N.C. State’s tenuous postseason prospects squarely on the NCAA tournament bubble, the Wolfpack’s senior guard has been a quick learner.

“People are talking about us, and that’s better than the alternative,” Williams said. “But we’d rather just finish strong and let the committee worry about the bubble.”

[snip]

Expansion changed the equation in the ACC. Since the league expanded before the 2004-05 season, 30 of the 35 teams team that finished the regular season with a winning conference record, made the tournament.

Since expansion, ACC teams with a 9-7 conference record have basically had a 50-50 chance of making the NCAA field. Since the 2004-05 season, nine teams have finished at 9-7 in conference play, only five made the tournament.

JP GIGLIO (N&O)
Preview: N.C. State at Virginia Tech

Observations: The Hokies have lost nine ACC games by five points or less, including the past three. “They’re a whole lot better than their record shows,” N.C. State coach Mark Gottfried said. … Since winning six straight from 2005 to ’08, N.C. State has lost four straight to the Hokies, including its last two trips to Blacksburg, Va.

Brett Friedlander (starnewsonline.com)
Five questions to ponder before tipoff

5. Can N.C. State play with the same kind of urgency at Virginia Tech on Sunday as it did against Miami on Wednesday?

Regardless of whether it’s still in the running for the No. 4 ACC tournament seed or not by the time it plays Sunday evening, the Wolfpack still has a lot at stake against the Hokies. A would will keep coach Mark Gottfried’s team on the NCAA tournament bubble and send it into the postseason with some momentum and confidence. The key for State is whether it can play with the effort and energy it showed during the second half of Wednesday’s must-win against Miami. Point guard Lorenzo Brown and forward C.J. Leslie set the tone early in that game and it carried over to the rest of their teammates. Even slumping sharpshooter Scott Wood regained his touch by making five 3-pointers – one more than he had in his four previous games combined. Now the trick is finding a way to sustain that energy without the benefit of a home crowd off which to feed.

Akula Wolf (BackingThePack.com)
Previewing The Virginia Tech Hokies

If you think NC State has had some hard luck this season, hold on a second and let flabbergasted Seth Greenberg state his case: the Hokies have lost eight conference games by five points or fewer. And none of their four league wins have come by more than two points, so basically it’s a miracle that nobody on the coaching staff has died yet.

Virginia Tech doesn’t deserved to be lumped in with the bottom three in the ACC, though that’s where this team is in terms of wins and losses. The Hokies have been much more competitive than the results suggest, and it’s probably a good idea to expect another solid effort from them on Sunday.

In conference play, the Hokies offense is struggling because their two-point accuracy is dead last and they aren’t grabbing a lot of those misses. They are taking decent care of the ball, however, and this is the league’s best three-point shooting team. We all know what that could mean for this game.

Bret Strelow (FayObserver.com)
Layup Lines: An all-access look at Duke-North Carolina and the rest of the ACC finales

“Jock Jams, Volume 1” will suffice for:

N.C. State at Virginia Tech

N.C. State could be seeded as high as fourth and as low as seventh in next week’s ACC tournament. The Wolfpack is currently in a four-way tie for fourth place with Virginia, Miami and Clemson.

Joe Lunardi ranks N.C. State fourth on his “First Four Out” list, and a victory against the Hokies is essential to keep slim NCAA tournament hopes alive. If C.J. Leslie keeps up his torrid pace and continues to make plays like this, the Wolfpack might just get there:

Keep an eye on:

Virginia at Maryland

This one is for N.C. State fans. If the Wolfpack can take care of business, the game earlier Sunday in College Park, Md., likely has the biggest impact on whether or not N.C. State receives a first-round bye. That’d require Maryland winning at home against Virginia (and Clemson losing at FSU, which seems more likely).

Sunday’s games
Clemson at Florida State, Noon (ESPN2)
Virginia at Maryland, 2 p.m. (ACC Network)
N.C. State at Virginia Tech, 6 p.m. (ESPNU)

GoPack.com
Wolfpack Close Out Regular Season at Virginia Tech

The Wolfpack looks to close out the regular season on a high note when it travels to Blacksburg, Va., to face Virginia Tech in the regular-season finale for both teams. On the line for NC State is ACC Tournament seeding. The Pack can finish as high as fourth and as low as seventh with a combination of wins and losses by NC State, Clemson, Miami and Virginia, which are all tied with identical 8-7 conference marks.

In addition to finishing the season on the positive side at Virginia Tech, a Wolfpack win can snap a four-game slide against the Hokies. State’s last victory in the series came on Feb. 5, 2008, when it posted a 73-63 home win over Virginia Tech. A triumph on Sunday would give the Wolfpack its first 20-win regular season and its first winnning conference record since the 2005-06 season when it finished the year with 21 victories in the regular season and a 10-6 ACC record.

GoPack.com
All-Access with State Basketball

Get an inside look at the State men’s basketball program and go behind the scenes with head basketball coach Mark Gottfried.

Jacey Zembal (TheWolfpacker.com)
Trip to Blacksburg could define season (AUDIO)

The politicking and analyzation of whether the NC State men’s basketball team is worthy of being picked to the NCAA Tournament will mean nothing if the Wolfpack don’t win at Virginia Tech on Sunday.

NC State coach Mark Gottfried reiterated that point countless times during his weekly press conference Friday. The Hokies are 4-10 in the ACC, but seven of the losses are by five points or less. Virginia Tech also suffered close non-conference losses to Brigham Young and Minnesota.

Gottfried was also full of praise for the recent play of sophomore power forward C.J. Leslie, but said any discussion about Leslie’s future will take place after the season is over. Leslie is a strong candidate to make one of the ACC’s postseason teams.

The Wolfpack are also still learning on how to put teams away. Gottfried sees room for improvement in how to stretch a five-to-seven-point lead to double figures.

PackPride.com
Gottfried: “It’s A Big Week For Us”

“This becomes a topic if we win Sunday, but if you look at the nonconference strength of schedule, Virginia sits at 223, Clemson is 182, I think Miami is 110, and NC State is 23. The difference in what we chose to do in November and December can help you. Now, we’ve got to take care of our business Sunday or it’s a moot point.”

“Calvin has played at a high level, his last six games have been terrific. You need your best weapons to play at a high level, which he has done.”

“I think Lorenzo has been playing good… I thought earlier in the year he really had great confidence… I think he’s done a pretty good job of being the quarterback of our team. I have such a high level of expectation for him that it’s hard for me, I’m probably too hard on Lorenzo because I want him to be perfect at that position.”

The Sports Xchange (PackPride.com)
Previewing Virginia Tech

STRATEGY AND PERSONNEL
THIS WEEK’S GAMES:
–vs. N.C. State, March 4
KEY MATCHUPS:
In their only meeting this season with the Wolfpack, the Hokies will have to display good attention to detail on the defensive end. If their rotations aren’t precise, N.C. State has the inside-outside mix to make for a long night in Cassell Coliseum. A winning season and potential postseason tournament bid could be on the line for Tech.

FUTURES MARKET: F Marshall Wood of Rustburg, Va., could offer help in a spot role next year, although he might need to add strength to a 6-foot-8, 200-pound frame. Wood averaged 24 points, 12.7 rebounds and 3.2 blocked shots during the regular season, scoring 49 points in one game and enjoying a 31-point, 12-rebound, 10-blocked shot triple double in another. He projects as a taller version of A.D. Vassallo, a Hokies wing from 2005-09.

PLAYER NOTES
— Senior C Victor Davila (groin) sat out his fifth straight game at Clemson and may have played his final game for the Hokies. Coach Seth Greenberg doesn’t think that Davila will be ready to play on March 4 against N.C. State. Davila’s absence continues to hurt this team inside, where his experience and defense aren’t easily replaced. Without Davila patrolling the lane, Clemson earned a 36-30 edge on the boards March 1, permitting just six offensive boards.

The Sports Xchange (PackPride.com)
Pack Must Keep Winning

STRATEGY AND PERSONNEL
THIS WEEK’S GAMES:
–at Virginia Tech, March 4
KEY MATCHUPS:
The Wolfpack could take advantage in the lane with F C.J. Leslie’s athleticism depending on the health of Virginia Tech’s post players. There are potentially good matchups in the backcourt (N.C. State’s G Lorenzo Brown or G C.J Williams vs. Virginia Tech’s G Erick Green), but depth issues across the board will be important on both sides.

ON THE SPOT: Coach Mark Gottfried has largely been lauded for helping turn the Wolfpack around in his first season on the bench. But a February slide in the form of a four-game losing streak caused reason for concerns and it’s something he wants to correct because it’s bound to impact the team’s postseason destination. The Wolfpack would covet a return to the NCAA Tournament, but at the very least it wants to be in position for a bid to the NIT.

A chance at an above-.500 ACC record exists and how Gottfried steers this team during the last weekend of the regular season and through the ACC Tournament largely will determine how his first-year job performance is evaluated.

FUTURES MARKET: The Wolfpack’s goal of 11 ACC victories has gone by the wayside and now there’s simply the issue of finishing above .500 in ACC play. The Wolfpack is 7-7 with two games left and its hopes for an NCAA Tournament bid have dimmed considerable the past couple of weeks. Certainly these are times when leadership is vital and it would seem that senior G C.J. Williams would be the best candidate to provide that. He has had a breakthrough season and he can’t afford anything except a strong finishing kick in order to help put the Wolfpack back on track.

TechHoops.com
SENIOR DAY Preview | nc state (8-7) @ HOKIES (4-11) | Sunday, 6 PM | espnU

nc state: The pack-backers are trying to forget the last 5 years under Sidney Lowe, their ricky stokes. They won just 25 regular season ACC games in that time, never more than 6 in a season. Mark Gottfried has already led them to 2 more win they they ever had under Lowe (8), and can lock up their first winning season since they ran Sendek out of town.

state started out 7-3 in ACC play and led at duke by 20. But then the pack reverted back to their Lowe ways, blowing that lead, the game, and losing 4 in a row to drop to 7-7 in the ACC. But they swept miami, winning on Leap Day over the canes, and find themselves in a 4-way tie with uva, miami, and clemson. To get the #4 seed and a bye in the ACC Tourney, state would need to beat VT, and have uva and clemson lose. uva needs to win and not finish in a 2-way tie with clemson.

Things are looking up for state, though. They are bringing in perhaps the top recruiting class in the nation for next year. Gottfried does have a history of shadiness, though (where there’s smoke…???).

BourbonStreet (TechSideline.com)
A.c.c. basketball preview: NC.State @ Virginia Tech:

NC.State Frontcourt:

N.B.A. pros= 1 (C.J. Leslie, a power-forward trapped in a small-forwards body)
Injuries=none

The best player on this years Wolfpac hoops team you ask? Most likely his name is C.J. Leslie. He wears #5 and he is first in points at 14.2 ppg and second in rebounding at 7 rebounds per contest does not suck, and neither does leading the ‘Pac in FTA’s at 144 on the year and in blocks at 1.8 swats per game. The 61.8% FT shooting however could stand some work from the 6`8“ 209 lb. sophomore string-bean small-forward. So could his political correctness as his anti-Gay tweets clearly demonstrate. Be that right or ‘rong, nothing short of conflict and controversy follows that in today’s highly sensitive now; and short on forgiving later “fascinating modern world”. Ditto the fact that this member of the Wolpac has friends with benefits. $410 worth of benefits if you are keeping score at home and such costs C.J. a three game suspension this season. Nevertheless, $410 for a car and a months rent in today’s economic downturn is pretty savvy if you ask me, so +1 credit hour for C.J. in Macro Economics is hereby awarded. C.J. is one of the top recruits to ink with the Wolfpac in years, as he was the #4 ranked power-forward and McDonald’s all-American this time two seasons ago. That said, C.J. has indeed showcased improvement across the board this year as his shooting is up 7% from the floor, 8% from beyond the arc, and 7% from the FT-stripe. Not many Atlantic Coast kids can say that year-after-year and that does hint at a enthusiastic work ethos and we all know that the only place winning comes before working is the dictionary.

Tim Crothers (Charlotte Observer)
At 5-11 N.C. State recruit Tyler Lewis towers over his doubters

Love for Tar Heels

Ever since he’d gone to his first basketball camp as a 4-year-old and fell hard for the game, Lewis was a true blue North Carolina fan. He learned how to play basketball by watching Tar Heel games on television. When Tyler and his older brother Colby played one-on-one in the driveway, Colby was Vince Carter and Tyler was Ed Cota. Tyler collected UNC jerseys, including Joseph Forte, Jason Capel, Julius Peppers, Raymond Felton and Rashad McCants.

As a kid, he begged his parents for tickets to one or two games every year at the Smith Center and among his most precious childhood possessions was the photo he once took with Ty Lawson.

“I just have had a love for the Tar Heels because my whole family are Carolina fans,” Lewis says. “Shooting in my driveway I won the national championship for Carolina hundreds of times.”

Current Tar Heels P.J. Hairston and Jackson Simmons were Lewis’ AAU teammates for three seasons each. He has known Tar Heels point guard Kendall Marshall since the two met at basketball camp in the fifth grade. Lewis speaks to Marshall about twice a month on the phone and they exchange regular texts.

So naturally it stung Lewis when at the beginning of his sophomore year, Tar Heels coach Roy Williams informed him that he ranked third behind L.J. Rose and Marcus Paige on the Tar Heels’ wish list of point guards for the recruiting class of 2012.

Williams offered scholarships to Rose and Paige, but not to Lewis. Meanwhile at N.C. State, Lewis was the only point guard in his class to receive a scholarship offer from coach Sidney Lowe. The way Lewis saw it, he could add Williams to his long list of doubters.

Paige, who eventually overtook Rose to become the top-rated point guard in the class, later committed to UNC.

“Throughout the whole recruiting process, I had to put my feelings for Carolina aside,” Lewis says. “I had to go where I was needed and wanted. It was definitely hard picking another school that’s going to play Carolina, but that’s going to be my favorite game to play because they didn’t give me a scholarship. I was their third option and now I’ve just got to show them they made a mistake.”

As an N.C. State signee, Lewis has been reunited with Lutz, who was fired at Charlotte in 2010 and became an assistant coach with the Wolfpack when Mark Gottfried was hired last April.

Gottfried had never heard of Tyler Lewis when he accepted the N.C. State job. “We need this Lewis kid,” Lutz told his new boss. “He is better than people think. He’s small and everybody’s going to try to tell you he can’t do this, can’t do that, can’t guard anybody, but what he can do is pretty special and they have to guard him, too.”

Three days after taking the Wolfpack job, Gottfried told Lewis he would honor the school’s scholarship offer despite never seeing him play. When Gottfried finally did watch Lewis in a game for the first time at an AAU tournament in July, he was relieved.

“When you first look at Tyler, he doesn’t impress you with his physique, but the more you watch him, you fall in love with his toughness, his court awareness, his passing, his shooting,” Gottfried says. “Since then I’ve sat down for Tyler’s games with people who have never watched him before and I can tell during warm-ups that they’re looking at me thinking, ‘You signed that guy?’ Then by halftime he’s won them over.”

About 1.21 Jigawatts

Class of '98, Mechanical Engineer, State fan since arriving on campus and it's been a painful ride ever since. I live by the Law of NC State Fandom, "For every Elation there is an equal and opposite Frustration."

11-12 Basketball College Basketball

100 Responses to Gameday Headlines — Wolves vs. Turkeys

  1. WeAreCured 03/04/2012 at 4:55 PM #

    That was an embarrassing defensive breakdown by the Twerps. Dude could have walked it in for a layup.

  2. 1.21 Jigawatts 03/04/2012 at 4:57 PM #

    With the Clemson loss and UVA win, a NCSU win and it’s a 5 seed. A NCSU loss and it’s 7th.

    For the #5 Seed: UVA/NCSU/Miami Win & Clemson Loss:
    ….(4) Virginia (2-0)
    ….(5) NCSU (2-1)
    ….(6) Miami (0-3)

    For the #7 Seed: UVA/Miami Win & Clemson/NCSU Loss

  3. BJD95 03/04/2012 at 4:59 PM #

    Has anyone run the scenarios for the 9-12 seeds??

  4. BJD95 03/04/2012 at 5:00 PM #

    Illinois State sure has some fight in ’em.

  5. WeAreCured 03/04/2012 at 5:00 PM #

    I know no one has ever won the ACC tournament playing on day 1, but a warm up game against BC isn’t the worst thing in the world. They’ll still get a match up with UVA.

  6. WeAreCured 03/04/2012 at 5:02 PM #

    I heard Elmore say that BC was the 12, but it wouldn’t be the first time he was wrong. He also said that if UVA wins, Miami would be the 5 seed and they’d just end up playing each other either way…

  7. StateFans 03/04/2012 at 5:04 PM #

    Here is how the Tournament shapes up right now —

    Here’s how the tournament shakes down:

    No. 8 Maryland vs. No. 9 VIrginia Tech / Wake Forest — noon
    No. 5 Miami / N.C. State vs. No. 12 Boston College — 2:30 PM
    No. 7 Clemson / N.C. State vs. No. 10 Virginia Tech / Wake Forest — 7 PM
    No. 6 Clemson / Miami vs. No. 11 Georgia Tech — 9:30 PM

    No. 1 North Carolina vs. 8/9 winner
    No. 2 Duke vs. 7/10 winner
    No. 3 Florida State vs. 6/11 winner
    No. 4 Virginia vs. 5/12 winner

  8. 1.21 Jigawatts 03/04/2012 at 5:05 PM #

    Give me a few minutes and I’ll run them. I know if VT wins they are the 9 seed. Let me see what the tiebreakers are if there is a 4 way tie.

  9. WeAreCured 03/04/2012 at 5:07 PM #

    If VT loses:

    9) WF (4-1)
    10) VT (2-2)
    11) GT (2-3)
    12) BC (2-4)

    If VT wins:

    9) VT
    10) WF
    11) GT
    12) BC

  10. TheAliasTroll 03/04/2012 at 5:11 PM #

    On a side note, Herb Sendek giving Sean Miller all he can handle right now out in the desert.

  11. BJD95 03/04/2012 at 5:11 PM #

    So either way, the Thursday game is a gimme (Wake if we lose, BC if we win). Problem is, that win is totally inconsequential for committee purposes, because the opponents are so very bad.

    I hope we get DeThaey and Harris some Thursday minutes! 🙂

  12. WeAreCured 03/04/2012 at 5:15 PM #

    Does the RPI adjust for wins/losses during conference tournaments? It does, right?

  13. BJD95 03/04/2012 at 5:17 PM #

    Yup, it does. So losing to UNC would still help a bit.

  14. tuckerdorm1983 03/04/2012 at 5:24 PM #

    You know, for this team and what we have been through the last 5 years, making a solid run in the NIT and maybe winning it all is more than I expected after the end of the season last year.

  15. BJD95 03/04/2012 at 5:25 PM #

    The question is thus – what would our RPI be after beating VPI, BC, UVA, then losing to UNC? I have to think 50-55 is the likely range. That’s borderline.

    Wins over VPI and BC, with a loss to UVA equals 60-65 and no shot.

  16. BJD95 03/04/2012 at 5:27 PM #

    I am pleased just if we make the NIT and go out early. Think we get a 1 or 2 seed regardless, so doubt we lose 1st round.

  17. TheAliasTroll 03/04/2012 at 5:42 PM #

    Arizona State looking real good today against the AZHats

    Herb about to get another extension

  18. 61Packer 03/04/2012 at 5:42 PM #

    If State loses tonight and then loses the ACCT opener, they’re NIT road kill. If we lose at VT and then win one in the ACCT, we’re still NIT and 50-50 for road in my opinion.

    Tonight’s game, even though 4th place is gone, is of utmost importance. I still don’t feel good about this one.

    If we’d won our way into the NIT, that would be ok, but we’ve lost our way into the NIT if we don’t get into the Dance.

  19. TLeo 03/04/2012 at 5:44 PM #

    After all the past seasons of finishing last or near last in the conference it really is nice to just be talking about tournament chances at this point. This season has definitely been an improvement over the past, even with it’s WTF down moments, so NCAA tourney or not coach and team deserve recognition. Even if it’s a NIT berth, it’s improvement from where this program has been so don’t be too disappointed.

  20. JeremyH 03/04/2012 at 5:49 PM #

    If you think about it, an NCAA tournament caliber team *should* beat VT away, BC, and UVA at least one out of two. All these scenarios have been super fun to read but if they don’t win tonight, the party is over for NCAA hopes, short of winning the ACC tournament.

  21. BJD95 03/04/2012 at 5:49 PM #

    Game thread is up. See you there!

  22. Wulfpack 03/04/2012 at 6:07 PM #

    Tony Bennett is absolutely a good coach. Look at UVA’s roster. I challenge you to find a host of coaches that can whip up 9 league wins with that bunch. They are short on talent, but make the most of it. UVA’s win also makes them a virtual lock for the NCAAs, giving the ACC four expected bids. Miami and State are bubble material. Any one that thinks we’re just going to waltz into Blacksburg and get an easy win doesn’t watch a lot of basketball. We should win but it will be hard fought – just like the Miami game.

  23. choppack1 03/04/2012 at 6:44 PM #

    If your school is a “major”…nit is major suckage. People forget, we were in nit 2 years ago.

  24. Wulfpack 03/04/2012 at 8:11 PM #

    Yes, but there is a BIG difference in going to the NIT in year 1 of the Gott era. Making the NIT was Sid’s ceiling. Let’s hope it is Gott’s floor (well, let’s HOPE for an NCAA bid).

  25. vtpackfan 03/04/2012 at 8:21 PM #

    Been better looking with this zone, perimeter players being aggressors on D.

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