Rangers did not make the field of 256

by Steve Dunford

The field has been set by the IHSA around an hour ago.   The cutoff was at 39 playoff points to receive a postseason bid at 5-4.  The Rangers were at 36.

Even if the West Frankfort Redbirds or the Harrisburg Bulldogs were not upset last night, it would have taken an upset win by Murphysboro, Pinckneyville. or Sparta for the Rangers to have 39 points.

Parings will be announced shortly after 8:00 p.m.

 

Teams that will be going south in 3A

by Steve Dunford 

I have made a lot of chicken scratches over the last few days trying to figure out who is in let alone where.  That will come to pass in the next few hours.

With West Frankfort and Harrisburg being upset last night,  created a lot of shifts in the playoff map.

I just talked to Kyle Peach, the voice of the Mt. Carmel Golden Aces, as well at the voice of the Evansville Purple Aces on ESPN- 3.  Mt. Carmel was already out.  The playoffs started in Indiana last night.  I was wondering what the formula was since they play in the Big 8, and all Indiana conference.

For future reference, Mt. Carmel gets playoff points one week before the season starts, as they start a week earlier in the Hoosier State.

There will be a lot riding on the Vienna-Goreville vs. Carmi White County game this afternoon.  If the Eagles win, it could mean another Southern Illinois team in.  They are also riding the fence as being the largest 3A school with a 548 football enrollment.  If they win they might be 4A.  However, with the number crunching I feel they will be 3A.

It will be known tonight where the SVWW Devils will be placed. (Red Devil Booster Club Photo)

With the S-V-W-W Red Devils definitely in,  I went down and broke down 3A.  The teams listed use the I-72 corridor as the dividing line.  There could be teams sent south, that could be around I-74, with a 309 zip code.

The following are the teams that I feel that are definitely in the southern bracket in 3A.  There are 14.  If V-G wins today it will be 15.

In a Black Diamond note, it looks like Chester will be bumped to 2A.

The list will be by seed, record, playoff points, conference they play in, last night’s game, and a few comments.

1.  Fairfield– (9-0) 36 points, Black Diamond, Defeated Sesser-Valier-Waltonville-Woodlawn 18-6.  The Mules are a classic Justin Townsend coached team.  They pound it on the ground and hit very hard.  It would awesome to see them and A-J meet in the semi finals

2.  Anna-Jonesboro (9-0) 31 points, Southern Illinois River to River, Mississippi Division, Defeated Benton 62-28.  The explosiveness of Hart and Turner has been well documented throughout this season.

3.  Decatur St. Teresa (8-1) 43 points, Central Illinois Conference, Defeated Shelbyville 28-20.  The Bulldogs have played a basically 1A schedule.  I don’t know much about the area, but it could be a soft high seed.

4.  Sesser-Valier-Waltonville-Woodlawn (8-1) 37 points, Black Diamond, Lost to Fairfield 18-6.  There will be a game at Carroll Kelly Field next Satudray.  Who?  We will know in a few hours.

4.   Carlinville (8-1) 37 points, South Central.  Lost to Greenville 35-28.  The South Central is a conference that runs the I-55 corridor between St. Louis and Springfield.  The conference will be well represented in 2A.

6.  Newton (8-1) 35 points, Little Illini.  Beat Jeremy Clodfelter’s Paris Tigers, 45-35.  The Little Illini was a closed conference until Edwards County joined the Black Diamond.  It is a 1A to a 4A conference.

7.  Alton Marquette (8-1) 33 points, Prairie State.  Defeated Kinkaid South Fork 42-0  The Prairie State is a 2A-3A conference that follows the same corridor of the South Central.

8.  Greenville (7-2) 38 points, South Central, Defeated Carlinville 35-28.  The Comets have been a perennial powerhouse across the South Central Illinois region for years.

9.  DuQuoin (7-2) 35 points, Southern Illinios River-to-River, Mississippi Division.  Defeated Muprhysboro, 41-21.  The Indians have been bumped up to 3A in the last couple of outlooks by the IHSA.  There still could be a small chance they make the 14 mile trip to Sesser.

10 East Alton-Wood River (7-2) 34 points,  Prairie State.  Defeated Bunker Hill 32-14.  There will be a lot of 7-2 teams that will be on the road during Week 1.  They could also be a potential first round opponent for the Devils.

11.  Marshall (6-3) 39 points, Little Illini.  Defeated Lawrenceville 53-6.  Marshall, near Terre Haute, IN is one of those teams that are always in the playoffs.  They could go north, but I do not see it.

11.  Hillsboro (6-3)  39 Points.  South Central.  Defeated Litchfield 48-0.  This time of year, it seems like Hillsboro either comes south or someone heads up there to face them.

11.  Vandalia (6-3) 39 Points.  South Central.  Lost in a basketball game to Pana. 63-55.  It seems like it is going to be the the South Central Conference Tournament.  Even though I am showing them even, the Vandals get the tie breaker defeating Hillsboro in Week 12.

11.  Pleasant Plains  (6-3)  Sangamo, Defeated Petersburg PORTA 42-12.  This is a Springfield area conference.  I definitely see them going south.

On the bubble between North and South.  I believe there will be one 8-1 team that will be in the 3A bracket down here.  If Tolono Unity is 4A, the IHSA will send Monticello this way.  If both are 3A there will be one of the teams sent this way.  Prairie Central 5-4 could be sent out of this conference.  Beardstown 7-2 could also be sent.

We will all know at 8:00 p.m.

 

 

 

 

 

 

West Frankfort will not make the playoffs, Benton has a very slim chance of getting in

by Steve Dunford 

I was holding the antenna out the window to pick up WFRX in the last few minutes of the game tonight.  I was heartbroken.  I might get ran out of West Frankfort for saying this, I am,  heartbroken for whom the late Bruce A. Fasol used to refer to as, the team six miles to the north.”

The Redbirds picked up playoff points from Nashville, A-J, and Herrin, which has them at 33.  It was known they had to pick up a win to get in.

The Rangers are sitting at 36 points.  They picked up three points as well from Carterville, Herrin, and AJ.  They needed a lot of help.  I was looking good in the “early returns.”   Murphy was hanging around with DuQuoin.  Harrisburg was beating Carbondale, and the Redbirds lost a heart-breaker.

Of all places, it was looking possible that both Benton and WF might get a point from Pinckneyville.  The Panthers were tied with Carlyle at halftime.

One win between Pinckneyville and Sparta really hurt both the Redbirds and the Rangers getting at large bids at 5-4.

I will be writing two stories in the morning.  I will be writing a season in review for the Redbirds, as well as the C-Z-R Bearcats.

I will also be writing an extensive breakdown for what could take place around 8:00 p.m. when the playoff parings are announced.  I will mainly focus on Class 3A.  There is one team that is for sure alive, the S-V-W-W Red Devils, who suffered their first loss tonight to the Fairfield Mules.

For what was supposed to be a rebuilding year in West Frankfort, the Redbirds were 15 seconds away from making the playoffs.  Even though the results were not what we wanted tonight, it is a great day to be a Redbird.

 

 

 

 

High School Football Final Regular Season Scoreboard

Black Diamond

(9-0) Fairfield 18  Sesser-Valier-Waltonville-Woodlawn 6 (8-1)

(1-8)  Hamilton County 62  Christopher-Zeigler-Royalton 14 (0-9) 

(5-4)  Chester 47  Edwards County 35 (3-6)

(7-2)  Eldorado 30 Johnston City 6 (2-7)

Carmi-White County (5-3) at Vienna (4-4)

 

Southern Illinois River to River

(4-5)  Nashville 42   West Frankfort 38 (5-4) 

(9-0)  Anna-Jonesboro 62   Benton 28  (5-4)  

(3-6)  Carbondale 32  Harrisburg 22 (4-5)

(7-2) DuQuoin  47  Muphysboro  21 (2-7)

(6-3)  Carlyle  38 Pinckneyville 14 (0-9)

(8-1)  Herrin 49 Breese Central 0 (4-5)

(7-2)  Carterville 47  Massac County 21 (0-9)

 

South Seven 

(5-4) Mt. Carmel 33 Mt. Vernon 28 (0-9)

(7-2)  Centralia 42 Mascoutah 14 (3-6)

(6-3)  Marion 56  Mattoon 0 (2-7)

 

 

 

WEEK 9 PREVIEW: West Frankfort (5-3) at Nashville (3-5)

by Steve Dunford 

In a do or die situation, the West Frankfort Redbirds travel to Washington County to take on the Nashville Hornets this evening.

Here are the common opponents between the two teams:

ANNA-JONESBORO:

West Frankfort lost 43-18 Week 1

Nashville lost 71-41 Week 4

PINCKNEYVILLE:

West Frankfort won 36-14 Week 2

Nashville won 34-7 Week 7

SPARTA:

West Frankfort won 33-16 Week 3

Nashville won 35-14 Week 5

MASSAC COUNTY:

West Frankfort won 49-8 Week 8

Nashville won 17-12 Week 2.

West Frankfort Coach Brian Beery had this to say about tonight’s matchup. “Nashville has a tall dual threat QB that can run and pass, as well as several talented receivers. Furthermore, their offensive line is big and physical. They have a good downhill running game to compliment their passing game. Thus, I expect a very physical game in terms of the run, but at the same time our defensive backs will have to do a good job of covering their receivers.”

“Offensively we will have to take care of the football, and compliment our run game with more balance in the passing game. They have two very big defensive ends, backed up by quick linebackers.”

I asked Nashville Coach Stephen Kozuszek to give some background information on the Hornets.  He said, “We are a young team, with only 3 seniors on the roster. Our QB is senior Cameron Parker, who was an all-conference WR last year. He is a dual threat player, who has been solid for us all year (1,333 Passing Yds, 8 TD, 7 Int / 572 Rushing Yds, 10 TD). Our leading rusher is sophomore Jullian Metcalf (805 Rushing Yds, 9 TD). Our receptions have been spread out between 3 primary WR’s, all of which are juniors: Tanner Bergmann (19 Rec, 329 Yds, 3 TD), Tabor Kozuszek (33 Rec, 365 Yds, 3 TD), and Dalton Novak (38 Rec, 456 Yds, 2 TD).”

“We dropped a couple close games early on to Carlyle and Wesclin (both playoff qualifiers), which made things tough on us going into conference play, as we then needed to steal a game from Carterville, A-J, or DuQuoin to give us a shot at a playoff berth going into Friday.”

I asked him what his thoughts were about coming into tonight’s game with the Redbirds.  West Frankfort appears to be a physical team, whose running game is the strength of their offense. We need to be able to limit their big plays on the ground and try and force them into passing situations. Both their QB and RB are good looking players, and their offense creates confusion with all of their different formations and motions.  

I am going out on a blind date with this one.  Last years Hornet squad was loaded with seniors.  Other than a few highlights on MaxPreps, I have not watched them play.

I had a few conversations this week with some individuals that are familiar with both programs.  They said that Nashville could put up some points in a hurry as well as give up some in a hurry as well too.

In their opinions, the Redbirds would be the definite favorite.  I am going with West Frankfort by 14.

 

 

 

 

 

 

WEEK 9 PREVIEW: Benton (5-3) at Anna Jonesboro (8-0)

by Steve Dunford 

The Benton Rangers are playing to keep their season alive tonight as they face off against the undefeated Anna Jonesboro Wildcats.  Here are the common opponents between the two:

CARTERVILLE:

Benton lost 28-15 Week 1

A-J won 41-7 Week 5

SPARTA: 

Benton won 29-13 Week 2

A-J won 46-14 Week 8

PINCKNEYVILLE:

Benton won 41-0 Week 3

A-J won 34-0 Week 6

WEST FRANKFORT: 

Benton won 47-14 Week 5

A-J won 43-18 Week 1

MASSAC COUNTY: 

Benton won 53-13  Week

A-J won 40-7 Week 3

MURPHYSBORO:

Benton lost 19-14  Week 8

A-J won 43-14  Week

With last Friday night’s upset loss at Murphysboro, the Rangers has put themselves in a must win position.  This is what Benton Coach Bob Pankey has to say coming into tonight’s game.  “Obviously we’ve put ourselves in a much tougher situation now with the loss to Murphy. In that game, we could never really get our offense clicking and it hurt us. Now we have a tough match up with A-J this week. But as was proven last Friday night, upsets can and do happen.”

“A-J has one of the better running games in Southern Illinois with a great RB in Jayce Turner and a great wing/slot in Arieh Hart. Both have the potential to make big plays. Our goal will be to try to contain the run game well enough to get our offense on the field. And then we have to be able to establish momentum with our offense”

Benton WR Cade Thomas

This is what Anna Jonesboro coach Brett Dietering had to say about tonight’s matchup with the Rangers.  “I expect the same thing as in the past three years, a heavy dose of Hamilton Page.  It all comes down to the ability to attack the run and pass game. If Page is not hooking up with Cade Thomas, you then have to worry about stopping Blaine Pankey running the ball.”

I’ve had the opportunity to watch both teams a few times on film, and once live.  I think that Page is the best QB in Southern Illinois.  I think Turner is the best RB.  Turner and Pankey would probably go in as the number three and four linebackers in Southern Illinois.  I think they are about even, with Luke Ford being Number 1, and Jordan Bartok #2.

Yes the Rangers are coming in the underdogs.  I might get ran out of Franklin County but I have to go with A-J in this one, especially at home.  If the Rangers get defeated, they can still get in with a lot of help from their “friends.”

It is also a game that I would not be surprised if the Rangers would win, especially if Hamilton Page has a big passing night.

This is the second best game of the night in all of Southern Illinois.  Leave early, stop at Giant City Lodge for supper, grab some apples and enjoy a great night of high school football.

 

 

 

 

Playoff probabilities for S-V-W-W, West Frankfort, and Benton

by Steve Dunford 

First of all we need to continue prayers for Zeigler-Royalton head basketball coach Matt Morgan, who suffered a heart attack this evening.  He is resting comfortably in an area hospital.  Lets pray for a speedy recovery and that he will be back on the sidelines at the Christopher Turkey Tournament.

In something that I have been looking at being a possibility since week three,  The Sesser-Valier-Waltonville-Woodlawn Red Devils and the Fairfield Mules will be facing off against each other at the Train Yard, undefeated, with a conference title on the line.

For 3A, I was looking at the possibility of quadrants.  I found out today they were a thing of the past.  So the south will be seeded 1-16.

Going into tomorrow night’s game there are four undefeated teams in 3A from Springfield, south.  Along with the Devils and The Mules, the Anna-Jonesboro Wildcats and Carlinville.

If Carlinville beats Greenville (6-2) tomorrow night, there will be a tie for the Number one and Two seed for the south half of the bracket between the winner of the Train Yard Showdown.

The Number one seed will then have the possibility of drawing Vienna-Goreville, Mt. Carmel or Harrisburg, all with 4-4 records.  If the Eagles beat Carmi-White County on Saturday, they will be in the best playoff point shape with 40.  Harrisburg is sitting at 36, as they face Carbondale.  Mt. Carmel has 33 and they face win less Mt. Vernon tomorrow night.

There is a chance that Harrisburg and V-G could be bumped up to 4A, as the cutoff line has been dropped  to 548 which is the Eagles enrollment.  Harrisburg is six below the cutoff at 542.

For West Frankfort it is as simple as this, they have to beat Nashville to get in. They are sitting at 30 playoff points, which if they beat the Hornets tomorrow night, would be the lowest 6-3 seeded team in the south.   If all the 4-4 teams do not get in and the Devils win tomorrow night, there is a very good possibility you could see the Redbirds and the Devils match up at Carroll Kelly field a week from Saturday.

I have had a gut feeling for a couple weeks that however things turn out, the Redbirds would end up facing the winner of the Train Yard battle.

If S-V-W-W would lose and the teams on the bubble at 4-4 would get in, West Frankfort still could be a possibility.  There is also an outside chance they could end up with the DuQuoin Indians.  They have been bumped up to 3A, and that could be whether they win or lose to Murphysboro.

I went local with this.  There are numerous possibilities from the Metro East.  We can start breaking them down more around 9:00 p.m.

Now onto the Rangers.  They have a task of facing an undefeated team in A-J on the road.  They are in similar but better shape than their arch enemy’s the West Frankfort Redbirds.  Win or lose the Rangers will be Redbird fans tomorrow night, for one thing, playoff points.  They will get one if WF leaves Washington County with a win.

They will be rooting for the Harrisburg Bulldogs to beat Carbondale.  They will be rooting for Murphysboro to beat DuQuoin.  Carterville vs. Massac they will get a playoff point either way.  They will also be rooting for Pinckneyville and Sparta to pull major upsets.

If they go down to A-J and lose they will be at a lot of teams mercy.  The Rangers will be in a unfamiliar role, being underdogs. However, it is a very winnable game for Benton.  It would be well worth taking the drive to Union County tomorrow night, enjoy the scenery on the way down, and watch what I would believe to be a whale of a football game.

 

 

 

 

 

High School Football Week 9 Schedule

Black Diamond

Sesser-Valier-Waltonville-Woodlawn (8-0) at Fairfield (8-0)

Christopher-Zeigler-Royalton (0-8) at Hamilton County (0-8)

Eldorado (6-2) at Johnston City (2-6)

Edwards County (3-5) at Chester (4-4)

Carmi-White County (5-3) at Vienna-Goreville (4-4)

Southern Illinois River to River

Benton (5-3) at Anna-Jonesboro (8-0)

West Frankfort (5-3) at Nashville (3-5) 

Harrisburg (4-4) at Carbondale (2-6)

Herrin (7-1) at Breese Central (4-4)

Carterville (5-3) at Massac County (0-8)

Murphysboro  (2-6) at DuQuoin (6-2)

Carlyle (5-3) at Pinckeyville (0-8)

Sparta (1-7) at Red Bud (5-3)

South Seven

Belleville Altoff (7-1) at Houston TX Christian (2-4)

Cahokia (3-5) at Crete Monee (7-1)

Mascoutah (3-5) at Centralia (6-2)

Mattoon (2-6) at Marion (5-3)

Mt. Carmel (4-4) at Mt. Vernon (0-8)

Saluki Men’s Basketball in the spotlight at annual Media Day

by Tom Weber siusalukis.com

CARBONDALE, IL-Entering his sixth season at the helm of Southern Illinois, men’s basketball head coach Barry Hinson met with the media on Tuesday to preview the 2017-18 season at the team’s annual Media Day in the Cook Club of SIU Arena.

PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT

Welcome to our 2017-18 season. I am as excited today as I am when I first started coaching junior high basketball at the age of 20. I’m starting my 36th season of basketball coaching. I always said that the year that I’m not excited is the year that I get out. I couldn’t be anymore excited to start a season than this year.  

What excites you about this team?

SIU Basketball Coach Barry Hinson

What excites me is that we have a group of young men that just had the best finish that we’ve had in eight years. The majority of those guys are back. We have four great additions to this program that I don’t think people outside of Carbondale and even some people inside of Carbondale remember that they’re a part of the program. Tyler Smithpeters hurt his knee in the first game of last year. He is absolutely one of our best perimeter shooters. As evident, last year we were the worst 3-point shooting team in the league. We wouldn’t have been had Tyler been healthy. We’ve added a point guard in Marcus Bartley, who started at the University of St. Louis. He’s a 6’4” point guard. We’ve added a man named Kavion Pippen who gives us size and depth in a center positon. We’ve added Eric McGill from Panola Junior College but he also played Division I basketball at Southeast Missouri State. Those are four people that I don’t think people remember. Then you also throw in Brendon Gooch who was a redshirt freshman last year. There’s five people who people don’t really know about. With the guys that we have coming back, I think that’s one of the reasons we’re so excited.

What will be different about this team compared to last year?

I think there’s going to be some different things that we do offensively. I’m not going to go into those specifically at this time. When you see our team walk out on the floor or walk through the airport, no one’s going to ask us at the airport anymore if we’re the SIU soccer team. We actually look like a basketball team. We have length and size also coming off the bench. If we were to throw out a starting lineup, we have an opportunity right now to throw out 6’4″, 6’4″, 6’6″, 6’8″, and 6’9″. That’s a pretty good line up. As I’ve looked over the years past, specifically with Wichita State and Illinois State, when you look at their size on the floor, that was such a dominant factor. Mike asked me, as a matter of fact, after every game with Illinois State and Wichita State, ‘was length the factor?‘ My answer was always, yes. I think someone else’s radio broadcast can ask that question about our guys and hopefully it will be.

What excites you about Marcus Bartley?

I was excited about Marcus when he was a sophomore in high school because we recruited him. We had just gotten beaten by SLU when we started recruiting this man. I think the first thing that excites me is that we have a point guard that can see over ball screens. Aaron Cook can see over ball screens. That is no disrespect to Michael (Rodriguez). Michael could do things that those guys couldn’t do, he could get to the paint. The problem was that he was 5’8″. I know that, I understand the 5’8” struggles that we have in life. I can relate to those things. But now we’ve got Aaron CookMarcus Bartley and even Eric McGill — those guys can finish inside. I think the athleticism and the size, that makes me really really excited. I think the thing is that I challenged Marcus on is I’ve told him, ‘you’ve got to get 30 points a game’. Now, don’t go crazy on me, I’m not asking him to do that, but he’s got to get a collection of 30 points with assists and points. All of our point guards can go out and get assists for us. There’s no question in my mind. I make a bold statement every year, I made one last year about Tyler and then he got hurt so I’m not going to make bold statements about individuals. We will shoot the 3-point ball a lot better than we have in the past. We will probably take more threes than we have in the past. I think for the first time in a long time, we don’t have just shooters, we have makers. I think there’s a big difference

What does McGill bring to the table?

I just think he’s a good player, I think he’s a really good player. I’m excited about him. He’s got length, he’s athletic, he can shoot. This is the kid, I think you’ll have to correct me if I’m wrong, who had seven 3’s and 23 points against Murray State as a freshman when he was a guard at SEMO. I think this kid can help us and he can adapt to what we’re doing. There’s been a change, a switch-over, from junior college to Division I. I think it’s a little bit more difficult that what he thought, which is a good thing. I think he’ll adapt. I think Kavion Pippen is another good example. You’re just going to see this man grow and grow and get better as we go. Somebody watched practice the other day after coming to the first practice and said ‘by gosh, how much better has he gotten’. I think he’s just a sponge. He’s a kid who comes in our office everyday, he wants to watch film, same goes for Eric. These guys just want to learn. You’re talking about adding guys two our program who make a difference and I think we’ve added two guys who will help make a difference for us.

Talk about your depth.

That’s a good problem to have. Now you have a guy who gets in foul trouble or hurt, you have a guy who can help. That was our number one priority. We kept telling Kavion, every time we went to Three Rivers, ‘you’re our number one priority’. We have to have another big guy, you guys reminded me of that all the time, asking me if I was going to sign a big guy. The little lady in Schnucks would be remind me, asking if I was going to sign a big guy. Yes! We did! We got one and we’re excited about him. WEelove him! That’s not even to say the improvement that Thik Bol‘s made. That guy’s gained 18 pounds, he’s not been hanging out out at the Golden Corral, he’s been eating and lifting. I think you can tell in my voice that I’m a little giddy.  We’ve played those two in practice together and we saw some great things but we also saw some things that we need to work on. If we really wanted to go big we could go big. When you have a guy who is 6’8” out there and a guy on the wing who is 6’7”, that’s pretty good length right there. The problem that that gives us right now is defensively. In the Valley, almost everyone you run into has a 4-man. You don’t see that many teams who play two big guys like that. One thing that Thik’s done that he’s improved on is his defense. We feel that he can get out there and guard some guys.

How has Thik Bol‘s offensive game expanded?

Right now, we’re telling Thik, when you get the ball on the perimeter, go score. I think our fans were pleasantly surprised last year at shooting the ball from the short corner and shooting free throws. I remember vividly Loyola trying to foul him, put him on the line, and he just steps up there and makes them, right there with the crowd all over him. The one thing we’ve added to Thik’s arsenal, and you can talk to him about this later, is that he can put the ball on the floor. He’s got a two-dribble rule, but he can put the ball on the floor, away from the basket. Matter of fact, we would rather him put the ball on the floor right now and attack the basket because he’s a lot better at going right or left.

Armon has continued to improve the past few years and now he comes in as your leading scorer from last year. What do you expect to see from him this year?

I expect to see Armon a completely different player this year. I have never held back on my expectations on Armon Fletcher, never have and never will. I think he has a high ceiling. Armon needs to do a better job defensively; he’s got to get a little bit of Dennis Rodman in his blood. I’m not talking about off the floor, I’m talking about on the floor. He’s got to become that type of rebounder that every time that shot goes up, you’ve got to worry about him getting on that offense glass. He’s got to eat glass for us to be successful. He also needs to shoot the ball better. I mean he was our leading scorer last year, he was one of our worst 3-point shooters. He’s got to shoot the ball a lot better and he has so far. I think Armon was on his way to a really phenomenal sophomore year last year, until he got hurt. And when he got hurt, I think that took him out of sync. I think he’s going to have a really good year for us. I think another guy that’s gonna be good for us is Sean Lloyd. Ray Giacolleti came in the other day and watched this practice and pointed at that guy and said ‘He is one tough sucker.’ Sean Lloyd, if you want to get right down to it, instilled the past of Floorburn U. I don’t mind telling you, in the first five years that we were here, I didn’t feel like we had the right to call this program Floorburn U. Bruce (Weber), Matt (Painter) and Chris (Lowery) established that and sustained it for the most part and I didn’t think we had a right to do that until the very end of the season last year. Much to do with Sean Lloyd, we were able to get that back. I wish you could see, in fact I’ll get Coach Clancy and you guys can take a picture of it, on the back of our practice gear, inside our locker room, and outside our locker room we put the logo of Floorburn U. This program is going back to the old days of Floorburn U. I feel confident about that. Our guys have shown it in practice and we expect to show it in games.

In the past you’ve said you can’t play that way any more. With what the rules are, can you really play that way?

We are going to try. We’ve got depth now, Todd. We are going to play that way and Floorburn U does not have anything to do with fouling. Floorburn U in our interpretation means we’re going to dive on the floor and we’re going to take charges.

You said you’re going to shoot more threes and make more threes. Is that where a majority of your points are going to be coming from?

No, this program is going to play inside-outside like it always has been. Our leading shot takers are Kavion, Thik, and Marcus. As long as our big guys are taking a majority of our shots, that means that we’re gonna do good. Let me rephrase that, I said we’re going to do that. I want to shoot more threes and make more threes. I won’t be so bold to say we will do that, I want to do that and I think we can. Statistically, right now we’ve gone 11 practices and as a team we are shooting 48 percent from the three. If we shoot 48 percent from the three, we will be in here in April talking about where we’re going in the NCAA Tournament and I’d like to be able to do that.

Do you see breaking up Aaron (Cook) and Marcus (Bartley)?

No question. I want to have Aaron Cook on the floor as much as possible because he is so athletic and he has slowed down now and is much more mature. He’s playing within a speed he can play, he’s making smart decisions, and he’s definitely not a freshman anymore. You can have him imitate me today; he can imitate me as well as anyone about getting onto him. He’ll tell you about that, but he’s gotten a lot better.

From watching you the other day, it looks like it starts with you bring the ball in first to Kaivon. Then onto passing, shooting, or throwing it out to a three. Is that about it?

Yeah, I think you’ve given our offensive scouting report, but we like to play inside-outside. The best part of what you said is that they have the ability to throw the ball out. Thik and Kavion have been great passers. I think that the most improved player from throughout the spring and summer is Jonathon Wiley. Everyone has been asking me ‘What are we gonna do with the absence of Sean O’Brien?’ Jonathon is a different player than Sean and he can do things that Sean couldn’t do and Sean did things that he couldn’t do. He’s improved tremendously. I’m excited about Rudy Stradnieks. Rudy’s coming of age and he’s in his junior year. I expect the same thing of him and Austin (Weiher); the bottle of wine has been marinating for two years, let’s pop the cork, let’s drink, and let’s be merry and happy. I think Rudy and Austin have an opportunity to do that for us.

How close do you think Aaron has been to what you expected?

I don’t think he’s been close to; I think he’s been exactly what we think and what we expected of him. He’s a great kid. He’s just a good person. All our guys are. I am so fired up about our guys. Knock on wood, we’ve had no issues and our guys come ready. We’ve had 11 practices and we’ve had one bad practice. It was number 8 and last year we were at number 5 before our first bad practice. Our guys have done a pretty good job.

Brendon is a redshirt freshman, do you expect him to get a lot of time?

No, I don’t. Not a lot, but I think he is going to get time. He is going to play. That’s what I tell all our guys. We’ve got 12 guys, you’re all gonna play. It’s like telling your kids at Christmas, even if you get coal, everyone is going to get a gift. Everybody’s happy right now; everybody gets to play. We’ve got 12 guys. We’ve got 10 right now, two are out hurt, we don’t have any subs in practice. We’re running around like a Labrador Retriever chasing geese all day. Our tongue is out, we’re worn out, but I think it will pay off. I really do. It’s a pretty good analogy.

How long do you think Austin is going to be out?

Well, let’s ask Austin. What do you got? One and a half more weeks? I like the way Austin thinks. I like that he’s optimistic. Austin’s injury is not something that is going to keep him out for the rest of the season. He’s going to be okay.

You’re a guard-heavy team, do you think that’s reflective of the Valley in general?

Well yeah, but I don’t think we’re guard heavy now. You’re looking in the past buddy. Come on, look in the crystal ball and to the future. We’ve got some size now. I don’t consider Austin, Rudy, Kavion, and Thik guards. There’s four out of our twelve and that’s not bad. 33% of our team is not guards. In the past, it’s been 90% of our team is guards, so we feel like we’ve got some size.

This FBI investigation that came out a couple weeks ago, what do you make of that and what effect do you think it will have on mid-major basketball?

I don’t know the effect it will have on mid-major basketball. I mean, I really don’t. I think what has the most effect on mid-major basketball that we need to get taken care of is the transfer, until those guys have to sit out a year. 351 Division I coaching staffs had a conference call yesterday, and that’s the first thing they said. Change is coming. Reggie did a great job and he said I understand change is coming. Tell us what change is coming. We’re sitting here talking about all the stuff that has gone on with the FBI and that hasn’t affected us. There have been no shoe companies that have come to me and asked me about doing that stuff. Not even a barbecue company has come to me asking about that stuff. But we do have our guys being plucked by the power 5 all the time, coming in and actively recruiting our guys.

What’s your take on the Valley race?

I think it’s the Wild Wild West. As soon as Wichita said they were leaving, all 10 head coaches got their teams together and said we got a chance to win the Missouri Valley Conference. All 10 teams are working every day to be Missouri Valley champions. I have no idea where we’ll be picked, I don’t care where we’re picked. Our goal is to win a Missouri Valley championship. That’s what we start off every day of practice. That’s our expectation. We expect to win a Valley championship. That’s what we’re training to do every single day.

 

Former HOF Cardinal Manager Tony LaRussa leaving D-Backs

http://www.azcentral.com/story/sports/mlb/diamondbacks/2017/10/18/tony-larussa-arizona-diamondbacks-chief-baseball-operations/776968001/

Diamondbacks Chief Baseball Officer Tony La Russa speaks to the media at Chase Field in Phoenix, Ariz. on Wednesday, June 28, 2017.
(Photo: Loren Townsley/azcentral sports)

PHOENIX, AZ – (Greg Moore, Arizona Republic.  Please Click on link to read the full story.  Here is an excerpt below)

Tony La Russa said Wednesday that it was his decision to leave the Arizona Diamondbacks because the ballclub’s operations from the front office to the field would function just fine without him.

“It’s not that I can’t contribute,” he said. “It’s that they don’t need it. These guys are sharp.”

“I was really impressed,” he said. “They’re very smart. … They understand all the formulas, but they totally believe in the balance of the hearts beating and how you blend the reality of the dynamic of playing a game that can change inning to inning with the preparation that the metrics provide you.”

He was equally complimentary of Manager Torey Lovullo and the Diamondbacks coaching staff.

Benton, West Frankfort, Illinois News | Franklin County News