Bob Williams – Fansmanship https://www.fansmanship.com For the fans by the fans Fri, 12 Mar 2021 03:58:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.7.29 For the fans by the fans Bob Williams – Fansmanship fansmanship.com For the fans by the fans Bob Williams – Fansmanship http://www.fansmanship.com/wp-content/uploads/powerpress/Favicon1400x1400-1.jpg https://www.fansmanship.com San Luis Obispo, CA Weekly-ish Real Quick – Kenny picks the Big West Tournament https://www.fansmanship.com/real-quick-kenny-picks-the-big-west-tournament/ https://www.fansmanship.com/real-quick-kenny-picks-the-big-west-tournament/#respond Thu, 10 Mar 2016 16:38:58 +0000 http://www.fansmanship.com/?p=18285 Hi, So the Big West Tournament starts in about four hours, and I am hoping to give my daily picks as to who is going to win each game, and I have a hunch, each game is going to be chosen for some insane reason, because I am a crazy person (which I have said […]]]>

Hi,

So the Big West Tournament starts in about four hours, and I am hoping to give my daily picks as to who is going to win each game, and I have a hunch, each game is going to be chosen for some insane reason, because I am a crazy person (which I have said several times in my posts).  Okay, no time like the present, so let’s get to some picks.

The longest-tenured Big West head coach, Bob Williams looks to avoid an upset at the hands of his former team. By Owen Main

The longest-tenured Big West head coach, Bob Williams looks to avoid an upset at the hands of his former team. By Owen Main

Game #1: #4 U.C. Santa Barbara vs. #5 U.C. Davis

The Bob Williams Bowl!  Yes, Bob Williams used to coach at UC Davis, and led them to the (Division II) National Championship in 1998 as you can read about here A guy I played with in high school actually started on that team.  That means nothing to what I am currently writing, just felt like saying it.

This was like twenty years ago now, and I am sure there is almost no bad blood between the two teams, so this one is kind of a toss-up.  That being said I have to pick someone, so I am going to say the Aggies get revenge on the man who created them a la Kylo Ren killing Han Solo (this is no longer a spoiler when the film makes billions of dollars).

pick: UC Davis

Game #2: #1 Hawaii vs. #8 Cal State Fullerton

This doesn’t need to take long.

pick: Hawaii

Game #3: #2 UC Irvine vs. #7 Cal Poly

Now, as a “journalist” (that just sounds weird when talking about myself), I need to be unbiased here, and call this game the way I see it, but as a Cal Poly alumnus, it’s really hard to go against the Mustangs.  In reality, UC Irvine is the pick here.  They have a legit argument for making the tournament if they don’t win the conference tournament, and they will be playing post-season basketball regardless.  They have NBA talent on their team, and the Mustangs really don’t have anyone who can match up with their big three.

pick: Cal Poly

Game #4: #3 Long Beach State vs. UC Riverside

The nightcap, which features probably the greatest mascot match up, which is saying a lot based on the other match ups, but I mean 49ers vs. Higlanders (seriously why have I not written a post about the Highlander mascot and the Highlander movies.  That’s coming). That being said, Pound State (LBS) would be the top team in the conference if UC Irvine or Hawaii didn’t exist, so…

pick: Strong Beach

Those are my picks for today!  Check back tomorrow for the next round.  Now as my homegirl Heidi Klum says: Let’s start the show!

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Mustangs shock Gauchos in first round of Big West Tournament https://www.fansmanship.com/mustangs-shock-gauchos-in-first-round-of-big-west-tournament/ https://www.fansmanship.com/mustangs-shock-gauchos-in-first-round-of-big-west-tournament/#respond Fri, 14 Mar 2014 03:01:17 +0000 http://www.fansmanship.com/?p=12589 It was just the first game, and already strange things are afoot at the Honda Center. In what amounted to a huge upset, seventh-seeded Cal Poly withstood a 7-0 run from UC Santa Barbara to begin the game, led by as many as 30 points, and downed the Gauchos 69-38. The Mustangs, who scored more […]]]>

It was just the first game, and already strange things are afoot at the Honda Center.

In what amounted to a huge upset, seventh-seeded Cal Poly withstood a 7-0 run from UC Santa Barbara to begin the game, led by as many as 30 points, and downed the Gauchos 69-38. The Mustangs, who scored more points in the first half (41) than UCSB scored all game, were paced by freshman point guard Ridge Shipley, who came off the bench to score a team-high 15 points.

For some reason, UCSB was a good matchup for Joel Awich this season. By Owen Main

For some reason, UCSB was a good matchup for Joel Awich this season. By Owen Main

“This is clearly a very special team and a very special game,” said Cal Poly head coach Joe Callero. “We didn’t do one thing. It is a testament to just be better, the game of basketball is a fair game. If you do everything well, magical things can happen.”

Four other Mustangs scored at least nine points and senior forward Chris Eversley, the team’s scoring leader all season, was held to just five points. Ten Cal Poly players scored in the game — nine in the first half. Cal Poly scored 41 points in the first half. The Gauchos managed just 38 the whole game.

“They punked us offensively and defensively the entire game,” said UCSB’s Michael Bryson, who led the Gauchos with 19 points.

Cal Poly’s offense looked like it was on a different level early in the afternoon, starting the game 6-8 from three-point range. Three-pointers and open shots were coming off of crisp ball-movement and rotation and the Mustangs seemed to have an extra gear, contesting shots and getting rebounds.

Defensively, Cal Poly gave Alan Williams and co. all they could handle. Kyle Odister was scrambling, all over on a stress-fractured foot and David Nwaba was using all his athleticism to clean-up rebounds or keep them alive for teammates.

Sophomore wing, David Nwaba, played with a ridiculous amount of sustained energy vs. UCSB. Can he do it again against UC Irvine tomorrow night? By Owen Main

Sophomore wing, David Nwaba, played with a ridiculous amount of sustained energy vs. UCSB. Can he do it again against UC Irvine tomorrow night? By Owen Main

“I thought the difference was our defense around the perimeter,” said Callero. “Last week we played them, we allowed the reversal of the ball too freely so we stepped up and took about three or four feet of space… . Guarding Williams is physical and emotional. It’s not easy, I thought these guys did a great job implementing. We had enough significant tweaks that gave us the advantage the second, third time around. We did a really good job pressuring them, but we gave them those looks at home. We knew if we could pressure just a little bit more… that’s what made the difference.”

After beating the second-seeded Gauchos, the Mustangs will face top-seeded UC Irvine on Friday night. Unlike UCSB, Cal Poly has had no success against the Anteaters this season. The game may seem like a home game for the Anteaters — UC Irvine is just 13.5 miles away from the Honda Center.

“We were the underdogs,” said Cal Poly’s Joel Awich, who started and scored 11 points and grabbed five rebounds. “Nobody thought we could do it, but as long as we have each other’s backs we can beat anybody.”

The 6:30 game will be live on ESPN3 and tape-delayed on ESPNU. The championship game is scheduled for Saturday night at 7:30 pm on ESPN2.

Photos by Will Parris

[See image gallery at www.fansmanship.com]

 

 

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Updated Big West Conference men’s basketball preview and power rankings https://www.fansmanship.com/updated-big-west-conference-mens-basketball-preview-and-predictions/ https://www.fansmanship.com/updated-big-west-conference-mens-basketball-preview-and-predictions/#respond Sun, 05 Jan 2014 22:40:54 +0000 http://www.fansmanship.com/?p=11605 All of college basketball is starting conference play over the next week or so. In the Big West, that means that it’s time to re-evaluate and update predictions on the season’s outcomes. Here are a few updated notes about the Big West Updated Power Rankings 1)UCSB 2)Hawai’i 3) UC Irvine 4) Long Beach State 5) […]]]>

All of college basketball is starting conference play over the next week or so. In the Big West, that means that it’s time to re-evaluate and update predictions on the season’s outcomes. Here are a few updated notes about the Big West

Fansmanship Preseason Predictions

1) Long Beach State

2) UCSB

3) Cal Poly

4) UC Irvine

5) Hawai’i

6) Cal State Northridge

7) UC Davis

8) Cal State Fullerton

9) UC Riverside

Updated Power Rankings

1)UCSB

2)Hawai’i

3) UC Irvine

4) Long Beach State

5) Cal State Northridge

6) Cal Poly

7) UC Davis

8) Cal State Fullerton

9) UC Riverside

 

Stock Rising

UCSB – With a win over Cal at the Thunderdome, UCSB showed why they are still a favorite. With the retirement of Bob Thomason, the Gauchos have the longest tenured coach in the conference (Bob Williams), and the frontrunner for conference player of the year (Alan Williams). During a pretty impressive preseason, UCSB knocked off Cal at home and beat UNLV, Utah State, and Seattle on the road (among others) during a 9-4 preseason. They walked the line between scheduling tough (playing 3 Pac 12 teams) and getting solid Division 1 wins (the above teams plus San Diego, Western Illinios and Troy). If they can stay healthy, UCSB gives me no reason to think they won’t remain a contender during the conference season.

Hawai’i – Hawai’i may have had the most impressive preseason of anyone in the conference. They go into conference play with a Big West-best 11-3 record. They have very skilled players, including Player of the Year contender Christian Standhardinger and forward Isaac Fotu. The Warriors have only played one true road game in the preseason, beating Northern Arizona in Flagstaff. Look for Hawai’i to defend the Stan Sherriff Center well this season and also to win more conference road games. In their second season in the Big West, Hawai’i will also know what to expect in Anaheim come March.

Dan Monson's addition of transfer Tyler Lamb makes Long Beach State a viable candidate for the Big West Championship despite a tough 4-10 preseason. By Owen Main

Dan Monson’s addition of transfer Tyler Lamb makes Long Beach State a viable candidate for the Big West Championship despite a tough 4-10 preseason. By Owen Main

Something to Prove

Cal Poly – Cal Poly scheduled tough this season, and paid the price in terms of their record, losing four games to (1) Arizona, Stanford, Washington, and Pitt. Both Washington and Pitt got votes in the latest AP top-25 poll. The big disappointment in the Mustangs season came in blowout losses at Fresno State, at Delaware and at Loyola Marymount. They also lost winnable games against Pacific at a neutral site and blew a late lead at home against Nevada. Maybe head coach Joe Callero and the Mustangs will find a lineup that can play more consistently on both ends of the floor, but as long as they remain 289th out of 351 teams in the country in fouls per game (committing over 21 as a team), they’ll probably not see much success in the conference. It doesn’t help that they’ve shot 29 percent from 3-point range and have only shot about 2/3 as many free throws as their opponent. This is still a team with a lot to prove, and they have accordingly moved down the above power rankings. They’ll have the chance to move quickly, too, with a home game against Hawai’i and a Saturday night matchup vs. UCSB at the Thunderdome during the opening week of conference play.

Long Beach State – The 49ers were my preseason pick to win the conference, and since they added Tyler Lamb, we have seen why. In the four games Lamb has played, the Long Beach State has gone 3-1, including a win at USC. That record is all the more remarkable considering that the 49ers didn’t have a Division 1 win before the junior transfer from UCLA was able to play. That’s understandable considering their powerhouse preseason schedule, which has included Arizona, Missouri, Washington, Michigan, VCU, Kansas State, Creighton, and North Carolina State. Lamb is averaging 20.8 points per game and gives the 49ers the focal point they need to make a run in conference play. While they only have three Division 1 wins, look for Long Beach to quickly move back up the charts.

By many rankings, Long Beach State has either had the toughest strength of schedule in the country or is in the top-five. Cal Poly has had somewhere between the 8th and 22nd toughest schedule, and UCSB is well in the top-25. It will be very interesting to see how and whether the tough schedules many Big West coaches have created pay-off once conference play begins this week.

Big West January schedule

Big West Preseason Media poll

Pomeroy Strength of Schedule Rankings

 

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Fansmanship 2013-14 Big West Men’s Basketball Preview https://www.fansmanship.com/fansmanship-2013-14-big-west-mens-basketball-preview/ https://www.fansmanship.com/fansmanship-2013-14-big-west-mens-basketball-preview/#comments Fri, 08 Nov 2013 05:01:46 +0000 http://www.fansmanship.com/?p=11116 In the 2013 Big West Tournament, the Pacific Tigers and coach Bob Thomason went out with a bang, winning the conference tournament in the program’s final season in the conference and Thomason’s 25th and final season coaching at Pacific. The 2013-14 year promises to be an exciting one with new faces seeking to make an […]]]>

In the 2013 Big West Tournament, the Pacific Tigers and coach Bob Thomason went out with a bang, winning the conference tournament in the program’s final season in the conference and Thomason’s 25th and final season coaching at Pacific.

The 2013-14 year promises to be an exciting one with new faces seeking to make an impact and several stars returning on teams that will compete.

Last season, four Big West teams went undefeated in conference play at home (Cal Poly, Long Beach State, UC Irvine, and Pacific). It’s no surprise that the media picked the three remaining teams of this group to finish in the top-four this season.

As has been the case for the past few years, many teams will be contenders for the conference tournament title at the end of the year. Here is a team by team breakdown, in the order I believe the teams will finish the regular season.

MIke Caffey will be the catalyst for the defending regular season champs. By Will Parris

Mike Caffey will be the catalyst for the defending regular season champs. By Will Parris

1. Long Beach State

Despite winning an astounding 43 Big West regular season games over the past three years, Long Beach State has won the Big West Tournament only once during that time. Junior guard Mike Caffey returns to lead a group that lost last season’s conference player of the year, James Ennis.

This year’s 49ers team only has two seniors, but they aren’t young — eight juniors are featured on this year’s roster. With Caffey at guard and with the addition of UCLA transfer Tyler Lamb on the wing, coach Monson will have his team at or near the top of the conference going into the Big West Tournament at the Honda Center in March.

Why? Because, it seems, he always does.

2. UC Santa Barbara

UCSB had a down season last year, as is apt to happen when a conference Player of the Year candidate goes down with injuries during conference play. Junior Alan Williams is a beast for UCSB. Williams averaged 17 points and 11 rebounds last season, becoming the first Gaucho in 23 years to average a double-double. If he can stay healthy, UCSB can never be counted out.

If you thought they were young last year, the Gauchos sport 11 players on their roster who are listed as freshmen or sophomores. Seven are sophomores, including Michael Bryson, whose production and efficiency may determine whether Williams is consistently double-teamed. Kyle Boswell, one of only two seniors on the roster, will also have to make teams pay for double-teaming Williams. UCSB is a young team with a coach who knows how to get the most out of his players and parts that make sense. They will be a contender.

Cal Poly's Chris Eversley is a returning All-Big West first team selection. By Owen Main

Cal Poly’s Chris Eversley is a returning All-Big West first team selection. By Owen Main

3. Cal Poly

Cal Poly head coach Joe Callero has a thing about consistency and defense. Last season, the Mustangs beat UCLA in the Bruins’ first game at the new Pauley Pavilion on the way to a third-place finish in the Big West’s regular season with a 12-6 conference record.

Senior Chris Eversley was an All-Big West first team selection last year, averaging 15 points and 7 rebounds per game. Other returners include two senior guards — sharpshooter Kyle Odister and point guard Jamal Johnson, Junior guard Maliik Love comes back from an injury that caused him to miss all of last season and sophomore center Brian Bennett (6′ 9″) will try to build on a solid freshman campaign during which he was one of only two Mustangs who started all 32 games.

Cal Poly also got much more athletic on the wing with junior college transfers. Sophomore David Nwaba and junior Michael Bolden provide length and athleticism to guard a variety of players and assist Eversley and Bennett on the glass. In his fifth season at Cal Poly, this might be Callero’s most athletic and physically talented group. Whether they can maintain their signature defense and make long shots late in the shot clock will determine whether they stay knocking on the door of a conference championship or break it down.

Will Davis II might be the most explosive finisher in the Big West this season. By Will Parris

UC Irvine’s Will Davis II might be the most explosive finisher in the Big West this season. By Will Parris

4. UC Irvine

The media’s choice to finish first in the conference, UC Irvine might be the most interesting team in the Big West. Head coach Russell Turner, who came into the job with NBA experience, is now in his fourth year. The Anteaters were last year’s conference tournament runner-up and are poised to make another run..

Irvine’s size will be the first thing you notice — seven players on the roster are listed at 6′ 7” or greater, including freshman Mamadou Ndiaye, who is 7′ 6″. Junior forward Will Davis II is one of my favorite players to watch in the Big West. He had the best dunk I saw all of last season in the Anteaters’ semifinal win over Long Beach State in the Big West Tournament.

This team only has one senior and five upper-classmen, losing notable seniors Adam Folker, Michael Wilder and Daman Starring last year. They won’t have any problem defending in the paint, but how well guards and wing players perform will be the difference between a very good team and a potentially dominant one. However they finish in the regular season, this will be a dangerous team in the tournament, when the pace of play can slow down and half-court defense can have more of an impact.

5. Hawai’i

The Hawai’i trip is one that Big West coaches probably circle on their calendar — and not because they are thinking about snorkeling. The trip to Hawai’i can be a tough travel assignment, especailly if there is only a one-day break between another game either before or after the plane ride. This season, Cal Poly drew the long straw in conference scheduling, with the game at Hawai’i the only one of that particular week.

Christian Standhardinger and Isaac Fotu are active, skilled 6′ 8″ forwards who will patrol the paint at the Stan Sheriff Center. With seven players over 6′ 7″, coach Gib Arnold may be the only coach who can try to match UC Irvine’s height. Brandon Spearman and Brandon Jawato are the returning guards who scored the most last season.

While all other programs in the Big West have to go to Hawai’i once, the Rainbow Warriors have to make the trip at least four times during conference play and again for the conference tournament. Because of the travel, I’m picking them fifth in the regular season. In their second year in the conference, though, they aren’t a bad preseason dark horse pick in the conference tournament.

6. Cal State Northridge

The Cal State Northridge program has had its share of controversy since they won the conference tournament in 2009. Last year, the school named alumnus and former basketball player Dr. Brandon Martin the new athletic director. Martin fired Bobby Braswell, his former coach, and made a splash hiring former New Mexico State and Sacramento Kings head coach Reggie Theus. Theus has a lot of work to do with a team that went 14-17 overall (5-13 in Big West Conference play) a year ago.

Despite the disappointing finish to last season, Theus’ talent cupboard isn’t totally dry. Stephen Maxwell, a 6′ 7″ forward, averaged 15 points and 8 rebounds per game last season.  Josh Greene and Stephan Hicks also proved they can score, averaging 15 and 16 points per game respectively in 2012-13.

Theus will absolutely have an instant effect, but there will be ups and downs while the team adjusts to a new coach and a new style. Look for the Matadors to improve as conference play progresses and finish strong.

7. UC Davis

Jim Les seems like a coach who knows what he wants. In his third season, Les (a former NBA sharpshooter) brings back an experienced and talented team. Last season, they finished 9-9 in conference and earned the 6-seed in the conference tournament.

Corey Hawkins (20.3 ppg and 40% 3-point shooting in 2012-13) and Ryan Sypkens (14.1 ppg and 46% 3-point shooting in 2012-13) will be the most offensively potent pair of wings in the conference. Sypkens shot better last season from three-point range than two-point range and is probably the most dangerous shooter in the conference. J.T. Adenrele, the team’s best post player, suffered a season-ending knee injury in the preseason and will be lost for the year.

This is a team with lots of very good individual players and in his third season, look for coach Les’ team to start to gel into something closer and closer to Les’ vision. The team is set on the wing, but their point guard play and ability to play consistent defense will be the difference between UC Davis taking the step into the realm of contender in the conference.

8. Cal State Fullerton

Cal State Fullerton is a team that is rebuilding. Dedrique Taylor is in his first season at the helm for the Titans and he will have some work to do.

Fullerton’s guard play can be good at times, which will be well-suited to an uptempo style that Taylor wants to play.  This team has nine players who are either freshmen or seniors. Look for Fullerton to knock-off a few of the teams above them during conference play, but they are my pick to finish eighth.

9. UC Riverside

UC Riverside finished last in the conference last season and were once again picked to finish in last place by the media in 2013-14. Two seasons ago, the program was suspended from postseason play because of failure to meet the Academic Progress Rate (APR) requirements set-forth by the NCAA.

The Highlanders start the season led by Interim Head Coach Dennis Cutts. Cutts took over for former head coach Jim Woolridge, who moved into the position of Athletic Director in the offseason. While they’ll win at least some conference games, the loss of a head coach with Woolridge’s pedigree will not help this season.

________________________________________

Until someone other than UCSB or Long Beach State wins the regular season title, I’ll continue to pick them at the top. Admittedly, college basketball is cyclical, so there are always opportunities for other teams. I think any of the top five or six teams on my list are great candidates to be the conference tournament winners in March and I could even see Corey Hawkins and Ryan Sypkens of UC Davis doing something really special in the tournament.

The Big West is a conference will be competitive this season. I don’t think anyone will “run away and hide” like Long Beach State has managed to do over the past few years.

There are three first-year head coaches and only Bob Williams (UCSB, 16th season), Dan Monson (Long Beach State, 7th season) and Joe Callero (Cal Poly, 5th season) have been at their current schools for more than four years. What that means — I’m not sure.

What do you think? Which team is your  favorite to win the Big West this season?

 

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Cal Poly, UCSB, and the Shot Clock https://www.fansmanship.com/cal-poly-ucsb-and-the-shot-clock/ https://www.fansmanship.com/cal-poly-ucsb-and-the-shot-clock/#comments Sun, 20 Jan 2013 15:57:33 +0000 http://www.fansmanship.com/?p=8721 I woke up at 3:00 AM this morning with a start. Amongst a rogue fire alarm and a heated contest between Cal Poly and UCSB, I thought I had missed something during last night’s game. It turned out the chants of the UCSB student section at the Thunderdome had me barking up the wrong tree. […]]]>
Reese Morgan dropped 26 points in his first career start for Cal Poly. By Owen Main

Reese Morgan dropped 26 points in his first career start for Cal Poly. By Owen Main

I woke up at 3:00 AM this morning with a start. Amongst a rogue fire alarm and a heated contest between Cal Poly and UCSB, I thought I had missed something during last night’s game.

It turned out the chants of the UCSB student section at the Thunderdome had me barking up the wrong tree.

Twice last night the officials stopped the game because of the clock not moving on an in-bound play. Both times were when Cal Poly had possession. The first time it happened, it looked like the scorer’s table reset the clock and scoreboard, both of which went blank and turned back on. The mishap was noticed 3 seconds into the 35 second clock and it seemed that no harm was done.

The second time, however, elicited a much different reaction from Cal Poly head coach Joe Callero. With the Mustangs taking the ball out at their own baseline and 6 seconds remaining on the 35-second clock, the ball came in bounds. About a second before Chris Eversley caught and drained a 17-footer off a designed in-bound play, an official noticed that neither clock wasn’t running and blew his whistle. And Callero snapped.

If it had been the first time, it might have just been dubious. The second time, in a game like this though didn’t sit well with the Mustangs coach. Instead of putting the shot clock back to 6 seconds and running the play over, they only put two seconds on the shot clock and gave the Mustangs the ball back out of bounds. What resulted was a contested in-bounds pass, an air ball and a shot clock violation. Two possessions and a whistle later, Callero’s riding of the UCSB shot clock official caused Gaucho head coach Bob Williams to come running at Callero to tell him “that was enough” according to Williams.

In the middle of this fracas, I thought I had missed something very important. See, I thought the game clock had run when the shot clock was stuck. I was wrong about that part. Neither clock had moved.

As a high school assistant coach, I’ve run a shot clock before. Lots of times. And when you run the shot clock, you have one button to push. It’s labeled “reset.” The clock itself, I think, should be running when the scoreboard operator runs the game clock. So, I see two scenarios here:

1) Human error. The shot clock operator did not flip the switch or press the button. It happens, I suppose. In the middle of a heated, loud rivalry game would be a time that it’s probably most likely and least acceptable to happen. I’m pretty sure this was the case, and that’s why Joe Callero was fuming at the scorer’s table.

2) It was an electronic error. Electronic errors don’t usually just happen. I don’t know the answers, but I’ll be interested to know whether these things have happened with the shot clock in the past at the Thunderdome and whether they happen at all for the rest of the year. I can’t imagine that the clock wouldn’t run if the switch was flipped, but stranger things have happened.

OK, there is one other explanation. It’s a loose/not tied-down cable somewhere. On the opposite side of the court, below the student section, sat ESPN Radio 1280’s Tom Barket and Mike Wozniak, along with a number of other media, including myself. While things ran smoothly for the entire game, a few students jumped over and around the table after the game. An unsecured cord that powered the entire table, including the Mustangs’ radio broadcast, was inadvertently unplugged for about 5 minutes. So maybe there’s a loose cord somewhere that they just didn’t find the first time.

If someone can give me another possibility, I’d sure be happy to hear it. Perhaps I’m misinformed about what the real issue was. I guess it doesn’t matter now. As Joe Callero said after the game, there were 60 other possessions for Cal Poly to make a difference, and the Mustangs didn’t do enough to earn the victory.

No matter the reason, this game will go down in Blue-Green rivalry lore as another one that got away from Cal Poly, who is now 1-11 over the past 12 games against their Central Coast rivals.

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Former UCSB Star Orlando Johnson Drafted 36th to Kings Then Traded to Pacers https://www.fansmanship.com/former-ucsb-star-orlando-johnson-drafted-36th-to-kings-then-traded-to-pacers/ https://www.fansmanship.com/former-ucsb-star-orlando-johnson-drafted-36th-to-kings-then-traded-to-pacers/#respond Tue, 03 Jul 2012 14:36:52 +0000 http://www.fansmanship.com/?p=5827 I feel like I know Orlando Johnson personally. Covering a game last year the star hit a winner against my beloved Cal Poly Mustangs.  

//www.youtube.com/watch?v=HtRYIoMYN1A

This was nothing new.

The reigning Big West Player of the Year averaged 19.8 points per game as a senior, finished as the Gauchos’ all-time leading scorer, sixth all-time in three point field goals and as the only player in school history to score 500 points three straight years. 

He entered his senior season on the James Naismith Award Watch List after showing well on last Summer’s U.S. National team during the World University Games. By mid-season he was on the watch list for the John R. Wooden award and projected as high as a mid to late first round draft pick. All three accomplishments drove his name through the ranks of NBA officials and placed a stamp of approval on the 23 year-old’s future as an NBA player.

Johnson’s 6’5″ frame is bound with tremendous hops and an NBA-ready pull up game. He can get himself open with his speed and for a player of his size, rebounds well off the miss.    

//www.youtube.com/watch?v=XWB9PLHdduo

The guard’s NBA dreams came to fruition last week drafted 36th to the Kings. After he was traded to the Indiana Pacers five minutes later, Johnson wasn’t phased.

According to this article by Adena Andrews of ESPN.com, Johnson said of the Pacers, “I got a chance to meet with their representatives. I really liked their style. I just want to get into the rotation.”

And I’m certain he will.

Considering the guards ahead of him: former Bearcat Lance Stephenson, Duke star Dahntay Jones and veteran Leandro Barbosa, that’s more than a realistic expectation. I expect the gifted scorer to make wavelengths in the Pacers’ sometimes offensively parched system. 

Johnson’s comparison to former Big West star, Lucious Harris, is encouraging. Harris spent eleven years in the NBA with four different teams. He was a catalyst off the bench as a rugged role player with an ability to hit a 15 to 20-foot jump shot. The Long Beach product’s best season came in 2002-2003 with the Jason Kidd-led New Jersey Nets, when he started 25 games and averaged 10.3 points per game. 

OJ just hopes to excel; suffering loss more than most people by the age of 13, losing his mother as an infant and then four family members the following year to a house fire. The next year after that he lost his grandmother. Basketball has been a safe haven for the Seaside, California guard, who according to UCSB coach Bob Williams, is “the hardest worker,” “coachable,” and “all about winning.”

At the euphonious center of everything are his four brothers, who according to the guard “took care of everything for me and the only job for me to do was to get my high school and college diploma.” That commitment to family is what makes Johnson’s progression into the NBA ranks so special. 

“When he’s selected,” said Johnson’s oldest brother Damon Sr,”I will look up and thank my mother and grandmother for ordering his steps, protecting and guiding him this far and letting them know that we finally made it.”    

   

 

      

 

 

 

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