Sunday, November 04, 2007

College of Charleston to leave Southern Conference?

Here's an interesting quote from a young man named Matt Sundberg. Matt has committed to play for the College of Charleston:

"They have a good coach and a good staff. I know I'm going to be comfortable there," he said. "They are moving to a new conference in a couple of years and it's going to be for competition. Plus, I love their campus there. I visited earlier in the summer."

I wonder what the coaches are telling those kids. Is CofC planning to leave the SoCon?

Interesting...

Bushido: What's up with this? What's the word down there in Charleston?

Oh, how the mighty are falling (in exhibition, anyway)

The College of Charleston falls to Division II Augusta State in exhibition, 65-63.

Also, #8 Michigan State falls to Division II Grand Valley State in exhibition, 85-82 in 2OT.

New email contact

I've changed email addresses....(not that many of you email anyway).

The yahoo address was completely disabled by spam. So, I got a gmail account.

I've somewhat disguised the email address in the sidebar (and here, too), in hopes of keeping the spam from getting bad on this address.

The email is davidsonbasketball "at" gmail "dot" com. Sorry for having to type it that way to disguise it, but it would otherwise get picked up and put on spam lists.

Note: This is not my normal email account; it's for stuff related to this blog. I don't check it frequently. Don't be offended if it takes a bit to get a response.

A classmate of mine has tied the knot with a celebrity...

A classmate of mine recently married Steve Martin.
"What's that?" you say.

Yes...THAT Steve Martin.

I won't post her name on here, as this is not a tabloid blog. I mention it because of the Davidson connection. Plus, I just found this to be....well....pretty cool. Steve Martin rocks!

To the nameless lucky lady from Davidson Class of '94: Congratulations on the wedding, and get Steve to visit Davidson!


(By the way, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels is one of the best movies ever.)

Saturday, November 03, 2007

From The Observer


Strength from tragedy
Forward Meno copes with brother's on-court death
KEVIN CARY

DAVIDSON --Boris Meno's quiet confidence has been built through an inner peace.

Meno's brother, Yannick, died after collapsing on the basketball court in his home country of France six years ago. Yannick, three years younger than Boris, had an undetected heart condition that led to his death, his brother said.

Few in the Davidson community know about Yannick's death. They only know Boris Meno for his basketball improvement.

The senior forward has boosted his scoring and rebounding each season, yet that progress hasn't come just from long hours in the weight room and practice court.

It has come after being able to cope.

"Boris and I will talk about our siblings because we have sisters the same age," said sophomore forward Max Paulhus Gosselin. "And eventually, his brother will come up. It was hard for him for a while, but at least now he can talk about him without tearing up."

It took a while for Meno, 23, to adjust to the loss of his brother, and the new culture he came to at Davidson.

He became homesick at times, and the skinny, 6-foot-8 forward struggled to match up against bigger opponents for his first two seasons.

"You can see (Yannick's death) impact Boris every time he's out here," coach Bob McKillop said. "His brother died on the court, and everyday he goes out and is reminded of that. It has been so hard for him and his family."

Meno carries a quiet, reserved nature and doesn't talk about his brother's death often.

He still visits home when he can -- Meno missed a photo shoot last week to make a quick trip to France -- but slowly, he's learned how to adapt.

He's become more outgoing with teammates, and isn't afraid to joke around at times.

He's become one of the Wildcats' best inside scorers and rebounders, and averaged 11 points and eight rebounds a game last season. And, he's done more than value his time on the court.

"You can tell he really values the relationships he has with his teammates now," assistant coach Matt Matheny said. "Every time we are in the locker room or in a pregame meal he's one of the last to come out because he savors the time he has with them. I think his brother's death has something to do with that."

Meno said his brother's death was a jolt, but said he has learned to appreciate what he has now.

"I think about him everyday," Meno said. "He still motivates me to do well."

From The Observer's "Above The Rim" blog

Shhh! Davidson's playing Sunday, but it's a secret
--Kevin Cary

Davidson's schedule actually includes five nationally ranked teams, but that's supposed to be a secret.

Wildcats fans already know about games scheduled with North Carolina, Duke, UCLA, and N.C. State, which all are ranked in the Associated Press Top 25. But Sunday, the Wildcats will have a scrimmage at Texas, which is ranked 15th

But don't try to hop on a plane to Austin to see it. The scrimmage isn't open to the media or public, in accordance with NCAA rules. Davidson has played Clemson in similar scrimmages in recent years, and it shouldn't be a surprise that the Wildcats and Longhorns are getting together Sunday.

Davidson coach Bob McKillop and Texas coach Rick Barnes were both assistants at Davidson in the 1978-79 season.

Davidson guard Stephen Curry will be wearing an accessory Sunday that might give Wildcats fans pause. He has had his left wrist wrapped the past two weeks to help a sprain heal. He might still have it in the team's opening game Friday against Emory, but the appendage hasn't affected his shot. Curry made his first four 3-pointers at Friday's practice.

TV Scheduling info from The Observer


Davidson guaranteed 13 TV games
KEVIN CARY

More than half of Davidson's games could be televised this season either on regional or national networks, thanks to additions announced by the school and other games that could await.

The school is now guaranteed to have 13 of its 29 regular season games on regional or national networks, after four more games were picked up by the Mid-Atlantic Sports Network.

That channel is not yet available on Time Warner, but is available on DirecTV and Dish network.
MASN will show the Nov. 26 game at Appalachian State, the Jan. 9 game at Elon, the Feb. 6 home game with Elon and the Feb. 13 game at UNC Greensboro.

Davidson's Feb. 27 home game with Appalachian State has been moved from MASN to SportSouth.

For a complete list of Davidson games on TV, go to www.charlotte.com/hoops.

Sports Illustrated article

Curry-led Davidson has the ingredients to be the next mid-major surprise

DAVIDSON, N.C. (AP) -Bob McKillop walked into the locker room moments after Davidson's loss to Maryland in the NCAA tournament and saw his dejected players trying to figure out how they let a second-half lead slip away.

As heartbroken as McKillop was, the coach was struck by the image. They didn't look like the usual mid-major conference champion, just happy to be first-round fodder.

"They had an extraordinary season, but there was no sense of contentment with having been there and playing well,'' McKillop said. "To me, that ignited a new flame within them to become even better than they were last year.''

All five starters from that tear-filled locker room are back, including Stephen Curry, the high-scoring shooting guard who keeps getting taller, and Jason Richards, his golfing buddy and the point guard who always seems to get him the ball at the right time.

The anticipation of a breakthrough season has left this small private school 20 miles north of Charlotte buzzing about basketball at a level that hasn't been seen since the 1960s, when Lefty Driesell twice led the Wildcats to the Elite Eight. And with a schedule that includes North Carolina, UCLA, Duke and North Carolina State, Davidson isn't shying away from anybody.

In an era when the small schools are knocking off the big boys with great regularity, the Wildcats think it's their turn.

"I think we're very talented,'' Curry said. "We're going to play like we deserve that kind of credit.''

Davidson went 29-5 last season behind Curry, the son of former NBA 3-point specialist Dell Curry. The shooting guard averaged 21.5 points and made an NCAA Division I freshman record 122 3-pointers.

Yet Curry wouldn't be at Davidson if Virginia Tech, his father's alma mater, offered him a scholarship. The Hokies were among the big schools that passed on Curry because of his size.

McKillop could only smile as Curry continued to grow. He was 5-foot-11 when he signed with Davidson. He sprouted to 6-1 by the time practice started last year. He was recently measured at 6-3 and his doctor told him he's got another two inches to go.

"He walks into the office sometimes and he just looks bigger,'' McKillop said.

Needing only an instant to get off his shot, Curry scored 32 points in his first college game, at Michigan. He finished the season with 30 in the loss to Maryland, but got tired down the stretch and missed five of his last six shots.

He spent the summer working on his strength and conditioning, and gained experience as a member of the U.S. under-19 team that finished second to host Serbia in world championships.

"I know I can compete with whoever is guarding me and whoever we're playing against,'' Curry said.

Curry has become inseparable from Richards. The senior, who was second in the nation with 249 assists last season, started watching Curry when he was still playing high school basketball. Competitive golfers who shoot in the low 80s, Richards has won five of their past six stroke-play matches.

"As soon as he stepped on campus, we kind of had a special bond, on the court and off,'' Richards said.

The entire frontcourt returns from a team that won 25 of its last 27 games. But at 6-8, leading rebounder Boris Meno is the tallest of a group that includes Thomas Sander and Max Paulhus Gosselin. Maryland eventually exploited that lack of height in the tournament when they rallied from an eight-point second-half deficit.

It remains a concern, with North Carolina's Tyler Hansbrough one of the many big men they'll face with their brutal schedule.

McKillop, entering his 19th season, wanted to challenge his players. He's also been demanding in preseason practices as the up-tempo Wildcats try to become the next breakthrough team, the goal of every school at their level since George Mason's run to the Final Four in 2006.

McKillop has eyed Gonzaga, Southern Illinois and Butler as the programs to emulate.

"They've proved consistently that they've been able to keep their head above water,'' he said. "The margin for error is ever so slight at the mid-major and low-major level.''

Students recently camped out for North Carolina tickets, reminiscent of the days when Driesell built the Wildcats into one of the nation's best programs.

"You know about the history. It's talked about a lot,'' Richards said. "It's different because they were one of the powerhouses back in the '60s. But we think we can play with anybody.''

The air of confidence and determination has been around this team since that heartbreaking day last March, when the No. 13 seed came so close to advancing in the NCAA tournament.

"We see that it's possible,'' Richards said. "Other teams have done it before. Why can't it be us this year?''

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Can you feel it?

After learning to use more of the features on my movie editing program, I've re-edited the video with some minor changes. This is the new version. I think it's a little better now.

USA Today features 4 Davidson articles (yes, 4 articles)

At Davidson, hoops and books coexist
By Reid Cherner, USA TODAY

DAVIDSON, N.C. — Taking Exit 30 off I-77, you don't find Davidson College as much as come upon it.

The 450-acre campus has an Ivy League air, or perhaps a whiff of the '50s, from its location on Main Street to The Soda Shop across the road.

Davidson is where the basketball coach lives next-door to the English professor and both are down the street from the athletics director.

It has its own honor code and students take their tests in the location of their choosing with no supervision. Stories are told of money found on the ground tacked to a tree or a bulletin board for the owner to retrieve.

Davidson is certainly not alone among colleges. Others offer academics, atmosphere and a picturesque campus.

What's different here is with just 1,700 students, the school — listed by U.S. News & World Report among the USA's top liberal-arts colleges — also has a winning basketball program at the Division I level.

This is a school in a peer group with Williams, Amherst and Swarthmore; a school with more Rhodes Scholars (23) than NBA All-Stars (none); one that accepts less than 35% of its applicants. It does not evoke visions of the Final Four.

What also is different from the modern-day college basketball program of taking in junior-college transfers and watching underclassmen leave for the pros and other schools: Not only are 11 players returning but also the five starters from last year's team that won 29 games and went 17-1 in the Southern Conference en route to its second NCAA tournament in a row.

A team with confidence enough to have an out-of-conference schedule that includes North Carolina, Duke, UCLA and N.C. State, which combined have won at least one national championship in every decade for the past half-century.

"People expect a lot more of us," 6-8 senior forward Thomas Sander says.

Among the reasons why:

•A backcourt of 6-2 Stephen (STEFF-in) Curry, one of the nation's top freshmen last season who averaged 21.5 points, and 6-2 senior point guard Jason Richards, second in the nation in assists (7.3 a game) and a nominee this season for the Bob Cousy Award, which goes to the nation's top men's point guard.

•A frontcourt of Sander and 6-8 senior Boris Meno, who combined for nearly 15 rebounds a game.

•A defensive specialist, 6-6 junior Max Paulhus Gosselin.

"Each year there is that one or two mid-major teams that when you look at them on paper and what they've accomplished in recent years you say, 'Watch out for this team come tournament time,' " ESPN basketball analyst Fran Fraschilla says. "And Davidson certainly fits that mold this year."

Ignoring expectations

Bob McKillop's peers certainly agree, even if the Davidson coach is not buying into the hype.

In the USA TODAY/ESPN Top 25 Coaches' preseason poll, Davidson came in 32nd. The Wildcats were ahead of two-time defending champion Florida and perennial playoff teams Wisconsin, Illinois, Washington, Virginia, Notre Dame and even Maryland, which defeated Davidson in the first round of the 2007 NCAA tournament.

McKillop is not ignorant of the projections and the difficult out-of-conference schedule. It is just that "we have never looked at a season and said we should have 15 wins or 20 wins or 25 wins," he says.

Having said that, he is not blind to the projections: "We let the chips fall where they may when it comes to expectations. But we do understand that the expectations are a statement about what we've accomplished in the past."

McKillop does appreciate the value of having players who have experienced success, of seniors who could win more games than any class in school history.

"That experience can mitigate the temptation to become fat-headed or content," he says. "That is very good for me as a coach because in some ways it lightens the burden for me to hammer home that message. That message is being carried in the locker room by the three senior leaders."

Richards, who averaged 13.5 points last year, agrees.

"There is so much tradition in this program from what other guys have left. As a senior, I just want to leave a mark on Davidson basketball for the guys to learn from what we've done."

Seeking student-athletes

In McKillop, Davidson has someone who began as one kind of coach and ended up as another, finding his place here while traveling the world to find players.

He has graduated all 62 of his seniors in 19 years and has, in the most recent six-year period, a 92% graduation rate compared with the national average of 63.6% of men's basketball players.

McKillop demands team play and that his players become one unit, then revels in their differences.

"Players are not just basketball players here," says McKillop, who has six foreign players on the team. "They are discussing and they are analyzing the war in Iraq, the economic situation of the country, the 'Jena Six' or what is going on in Africa. They are just as much in touch with that reality as they are of the reality of the campus social environment, where they are constantly under a microscope because they are in a small-town college environment.

"I understand who we can recruit to fit that dynamic," McKillop says. "Usually if they fit that dynamic they are generally going to be guys who are team-oriented."

It is a philosophy McKillop developed over two decades, not the philosophy he brought to Davidson.

Once an assistant at the school, McKillop returned as head coach after a successful high school coaching career. Looking to use Davidson as a steppingstone, he lost 60 games his first three years.

"I would never want to be considered a mercenary in the world of college athletics," he says. "When I first came here, that was the attitude I had. Succeed at this job and then seize the first opportunity at one of the bigger conferences.

"When you get humbled like I was humbled … you start questioning, 'Did you make the wrong decision? Should you have stayed in high school? Are you a good enough coach? Are you worth anything?'… And the decision I made was to invest my total being in the job I was currently in.

"I feel like I'm an incredibly involved piece of the Davidson College community," he adds. "And when that happens it is the whole purpose of why you play to win. When a banner is in the rafters, everyone owns a piece of that banner. When you drive down (I-77) and you see a Davidson sticker on the back of someone's car, I'm a part of that experience.

"So when Davidson wins," McKillop says, "in whatever arena that is in, I win. Your goal as a coach is to give your players that way to think about the team."

Basketball attracts scholars

The success of the basketball program is boosted by the buy-in from the school's administration. Books and victories are presented as part of the Davidson experience. Fifty percent of the student body plays Division I or club sports.

"It is one of the great universities in the country academically and … that they have been able to sustain their basketball success in an environment where basketball takes a back seat to the academic rigors of the campus is, I think, quite an accomplishment," Fraschilla says.

Athletics director Jim Murphy, a '78 Davidson graduate, would disagree that sports plays a secondary role. "I really believe that the athletics at Davidson needs to support the goals and objectives of the college. And by that I mean the purpose of athletics has to be bringing great leaders to Davidson College and putting great kids in the classroom," Murphy says.

Davidson president Tom Ross, a '72 graduate, believes a demand of academic excellence and an expectation of athletic success is a perfect blend. "Frankly, that can be an advantage for us in recruiting students, not just student-athletes," Ross says of winning teams.

He believes the approach has worked advantageously "as we try to get the best and the brightest young folks here. I won't say we are unique, because there are other places that could argue the same thing. But I know that we are in great shape and I suspect we are in a position that others might envy."

What might not be envied is the competition the Wildcats will face in trying to get to the NCAA tournament and winning 20 games for the fourth consecutive season.

On Nov. 14 they play preseason No. 1 North Carolina at Charlotte's Bobcats Arena on ESPN. Before New Year's they'll play No. 11 Duke (Dec. 1, also in Charlotte), No. 2 UCLA (on Dec. 8, in Anaheim) and at No. 24 N.C. State (on Dec. 21).

"When I was a kid growing up you went to the park where the action was," says McKillop, born in Queens, N.Y., and who retains his accent despite decades living in the South. "You didn't go to the park where you could dominate the court. … You went where all the great college players were, the future NBA players were."

McKillop thinks his teams earn that same respect.

"For us to have the opportunity to get on the national stage with anybody is an extraordinary opportunity," he says. "You play, you practice, you dream and work to have that opportunity."

The players relish the challenge.

"It is kind of a given that since we have the whole team back, people were going to expect a lot of us. I think the coaching staff does, too, with those schedules they gave us," says Curry, whose dad, Dell, was an NBA star. "In order to be the best you have to beat the best, and we have an opportunity to do that."

**********************************

TEAMWORK IS SOUL OF SQUAD
Reid Cherner

DAVIDSON, N.C. -- When asked what makes "a Davidson player," men's basketball coach Bob McKillop will bring up some of the greatest soul singers to explain his answer.

"You know we used to have the Supremes and the Miracles and we used to have the Four Seasons," he says. "And all of the sudden it became Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons, Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, Diana Ross and the Supremes.

"The group that has teamwork warms my heart. I love great teamwork. You watch the top teams historically in America and the teams that we are playing, UCLA, Duke, North Carolina, N.C. State and teamwork has been the fabric that created those national championships for them.

"The kind of player that we have here," McKillop says, "the kind of style that we use here is based on … five guys (who) have to function together."

Matt McKillop, who played for his dad from 2003-2006 and is an assistant at Emory, seconds that assessment.

"I think there is such a thing as a 'Davidson player,' and I think it comes from the system and style of play," he writes in an e-mail. "A Davidson player is smart, tough, physical, skilled and able to buy into the team mentality.

"Now, is each player on the team like that? No. They need a few wrinkles and players who bring different abilities and skills to the table. But if you look down their roster, you will see more players who fit the mold than don't."

**********************************

CURRY FINDS A GOOD MATCH
Reid Cherner

DAVIDSON, N.C. -- Based on body type, geography and familiarity, Davidson got a five-star player. Stephen Curry, whose father, Dell, was an NBA star, might have gone to the Atlantic Coast Conference, but no one asked for him.

"I think coming out of high school it was my physical stature. I was kind of a skinny kid," says Curry, a two-time all-state player at Charlotte (N.C.) Christian. "Virginia Tech (his father's alma mater) was the most serious about that, but in the end they kind of backed off. Davidson was the choice of the schools I narrowed it down to."

Curry has known and was comfortable with coach Bob McKillop. "I've known Coach McKillop since I was 10. I played on Brendan's baseball team back in the day," Curry says of McKillop's youngest son, now a freshman for the Wildcats. "We had that bond. … I came up here and visited a lot. I liked all the teammates. It's close to home so my family gets to come watch. So it's a great fit for me."

Davidson got a player who, as a freshman, averaged 21.5 points and shot 41% from three-point range and 86% from the line. He also bought into McKillop's team-oriented concept.

"His whole life he's been involved in the world of the NBA and that has given him fearlessness, that has given him confidence, but has never at all allowed him to abdicate his sense of humility and teamwork, which is such a part of who he is," McKillop says. "That is what makes him so special."

**********************************

Davidson adopts global approach
By Reid Cherner, USA TODAY

DAVIDSON, N.C. — Some coaches recruit using a city map. Others search the USA. Bob McKillop of Davidson needs a world atlas.

This year's Davidson team includes forward Boris Meno, born in the Congo before moving to France; guard Can Civi, Turkey; swingmen Max Paulhus Gosselin and William Archambault, Canada; forward Andrew Lovedale, Nigeria; and forward Ben Allison, England.

"I had absolutely no idea what Davidson was before they started to recruit me," says Gosselin, who considered the Ivy League. "I was looking to go to the best academic and best basketball school."

McKillop, a former high school history teacher, is looking for talent, of course, but raves about the ancillary benefits.

"First of all you have young men who come here with no sense of entitlement," he says. "They are living the dream that too many of us in America have lost sight of. They think they have died and gone to heaven when they walk into an arena and there are people cheering for them."

Although the players are appreciative of what they get, McKillop is appreciative of what they give.

"They present the idiosyncrasies that are part of their cultural heritage that are absorbed by our players in the locker room, on the practice court, in their conversation at meals," he says.

"We have Andrew Lovedale, who speaks of the Nigerian system of politics. …Boris Meno brings us a Congolese influence. Then you have the Cameroonians arguing the tribes of Cameroon are tougher than the tribes of Nigeria and the Congo. You can't buy that experience in a classroom, in a textbook."

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Curry preseason POY; Three Wildcats make preseason All-SoCon Team; Cats picked to win SoCon South Division


Preseason Player of the Year
Stephen Curry, Davidson


Preseason Coaches All-SoCon Team

Stephen Curry (Davidson)
Kyle Hines (UNC Greensboro)
Nick Aldridge (Western Carolina)
Louis Graham (Georgia Southern)
Jason Richards (Davidson)
Donte Minter (Appalachian State)
Jermaine Johnson (College of Charleston)
Thomas Sander (Davidson)
Shane Nichols (Wofford)
Drew Gibson (Wofford)





Note: Davidson picked by coaches to win SoCon South Division.

Southern Conference Coaches Predicted Order of Finish
(Coaches were not permitted to vote for their own teams)

North Division
Team (First Place Votes) - Total Votes
UNC Greensboro (10) - 60
Appalachian State (1) - 47
Western Carolina - 42
Chattanooga - 35
Elon - 26

South Division
Team (First Place Votes) - Total Votes
Davidson (10) - 60
Georgia Southern - 48
College of Charleston (1) - 43
Wofford - 35
Furman - 24
The Citadel - 15

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Davidson #4 in Pre-Season Mid-Major Top 25


The CollegeInsider.com Mid-Major Top 25 poll, with number of first place votes in parentheses:

1. Gonzaga (15)
2. Southern Illinois (9)
3. Butler (2)
4. Davidson (4)
5. VCU (1)
6. Western Kentucky
7. Missouri State
8. Bradley
9. George Mason
10. Old Dominion
11. Saint Mary's
12. Austin Peay
13. Winthrop
14. Akron
15. Kent State
16. Holy Cross
17. Miami
18. Creighton
19. Belmont
20. UC Santa Barbara
21. Wichita State
22. Siena
23. Western Michigan
24. Central Michigan
25. Drexel

Click here to go to the web page.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Friday, October 12, 2007

A Night With the Cats - Tonight on ESPN-U at 7:00 p.m.


Last night's event, "A Night With the Cats", will be broadcast on ESPN-U tonight (Friday) at 7:00 p.m. Be sure to tune in to catch all of last night's festivities. If you don't have ESPN-U (which many don't - I do, luckily), well...try to find somewhere that does.

(Sidenote: I've been told that the "U" in ESPN-U stands for "unavailable".)

Go Cats!

A Night With the Cats - From the Charlotte Observer

OBSERVATIONS FROM DAVIDSON - KEVIN CARY

• Davidson didn't have a dunk contest during its "Night with the Cats" Thursday, but dunking is another area where Stephen Curry improved over the offseason. Curry -- who missed a dunk in the Southern Conference tournament championship last season -- made a reverse double-pump dunk in the team's warm-ups.

• Curry is known for his 3-point shooting, and he didn't disappoint Thursday. He hit seven straight at one point.

• Curry is the star, but point guard Jason Richards showed his value in a scrimmage. His team scored the first 10 points of a 15-minute scrimmage and won 29-15, thanks to his ability to run the offense.

• Freshman Brendan McKillop showed he can hit outside shots -- finishing second in the 3-point contest -- but Richards showed McKillop has work to do defensively. Freshman BenAllison might be one of the most athletic Wildcats. The third freshman -- AaronBond -- did not play in the scrimmage because of a sore shoulder.

• Davidson's men's and women's basketball players did dance routines -- separated by class -- to open the show. The sophomores and seniors had some panache in their prancing, and we'll give the freshmen the benefit of the doubt. As for the juniors -- some of the men's players should have kept on the masks they wore for part of their routine.

• Forward Thomas Sander said he lost 20 pounds between the beginning and end of last season, and weighed only 205 pounds when the Wildcats faced Maryland in the NCAA Tournament. He's bulked up quite a bit over the summer -- something Davidson will need when it faces teams such as North Carolina, Duke and UCLA.

• One way Davidson has already improved: better scoreboards. The new scoreboards at Belk Arena continually flash player fouls and points, so fans at the game don't have to keep their own score to see Stephen Curry's point total.

• Davidson coach Bob McKillop gave a passionate speech before his team took the court, telling fans to "Embrace the Bullseye." But the most poignant moment came when the coach nearly cried, telling fans that in 35 years of coaching, the thing he enjoys most is working with his players.

• The Davidson women's team won a school-record 23 games last season, but the Wildcats will enter this season hobbled. Leading scorer Katie Hamilton has been bothered by a nagging knee injury and freshman guard Chloe Woodington is out for the season with a torn ACL. But help could be on the way -- freshman Ashley Lax showed a nice outside touch during a 3-point shootout.

--Kevin Cary
Photo Credit: Dana Romanoff

Wednesday, October 03, 2007

Coach Dick Cooke named to 2007 USA Baseball World Cup team

2007 USA Baseball World Cup team announced

DURHAM, N.C. -- USA Baseball announced today the 24 players who will represent the United States at the 2007 International BAseball Federation (IBAF) World Cup in Chinese Taipei from Nov. 6-18, 2007. The roster is made up of professional, non-25-man roster players of the 30 Major League-affiliated (MLB) organizations. This is the eighth time USA Baseball has utilized Major League-affiliated professional players for international competition, including the 1999 Pan Am Games, the 2000 Olympic Games, the 2001 World Cup, the 2003 Olympic Qualifier, the 2005 IBAF World Cup, and the 2006 COPABE Olympic Qualifying Tournament.

...Davey Johnson will return to the organization as the field manager and lead an experienced staff that will include Reggie Smith (Hitting Coach), Marcel Lachemann (Pitching Coach) and Rick Eckstein (Bench Coach). USA Baseball also named Dick Cooke (Davidson College) and Rolando de Armas (Philadelphia Phillies) as Auxiliary Coaches for the team. Additionally, John Fierro will serve as the Head Athletic Trainer while Dr. Fred Dicke and Dr. Angelo Mattalino will serve as the Team Physicians.

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Full schedule released

The full, official Davidson Basketball schedule is now available. It is published to the right in the sidebar for your convenience. It is also available on the Davidson Basketball official website.

2007-08 Davidson Schedule
Nov. 7 Lenoir-Rhyne (Exh.) 7:00
Nov. 9 Emory 8:00
Nov. 14 UNC 7:00 **
Nov. 21 at W Michigan 7:00
Nov. 24 NCCU 2:00
Nov. 26 at App State 7:00
Dec. 1 Duke 12:00 **
Dec. 5 at Charlotte 7:30
Dec. 8 at UCLA 5:30 ##
Dec. 13 The Citadel 7:00
Dec. 21 at NC State 7:00
Jan. 3 Ga Southern 7:00
Jan. 5 W Carolina 7:00
Jan. 9 at Elon 7:00
Jan. 12 at Wofford 7:00
Jan. 16 at Furman 7:00
Jan. 19 UT-Chatt 2:00
Jan. 21 at W Carolina 7:00
Jan. 24 at The Citadel 7:05
Jan. 26 at Coll Charleston 5:00
Jan. 30 Wofford 7:00
Feb. 2 at UT-Chatt 7:00
Feb. 6 Elon 7:00
Feb. 9 Coll Charleston 3:00
Feb. 13 at UNCG 7:00
Feb. 16 Furman 3:00
Feb. 19 UNCG 7:00
Feb. 22 at ESPN Bracketbuster %%
Feb. 27 App State 7:00
Mar. 1 at Ga Southern 7:30

Mar. 7-10 at SoCon Tourn, Chas, SC

** games at Bobcats Arena
## John R. Wooden Classic
%% Bracketbuster opponent TBD

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

More info on A Night With the Cats on ESPN-U


Posted by "catsfan" on DavidsonCats.com -

From email sent from Men's Basketball office today:

The Wildcats will tip off the 2007-08 Basketball season when they host A Night with the Cats on Thursday, October 11th, at 7:30 PM.

The ESPN Networks will be taping the event to be featured on ESPNU the following night. This is a FANTASTIC honor for the basketball program and the perfect way to start a season in which we will appear on the national stage several times!

We encourage all of our fans to be in attendance – AND BRING FRIENDS!

We need Belk Arena to be PACKED for ESPN!!!

Important Information:

- ADMISSION IS FREE!

- Basketball teams will hold dances and skits, a 3-point contest, and scrimmages by both the men’s and women’s teams

- Autograph session for everyone following the men’s scrimmage

- One lucky fan will have a chance to win $10,000 in the Allstate Good Hands Shootout.

- Get a chance to meet and mingle with Davidson Basketball Players and Coaches

- “A Night with the Cats” will start at 7:30 PM or immediately following the women’s volleyball game at 5:30. Come early, enjoy some volleyball, and get good seats.

WE CAN'T WAIT TO SEE YOU ON OCTOBER 11TH FOR A NIGHT WITH THE CATS!

Friday, September 21, 2007

TV games


Davidson gains more TV games
KEVIN CARY

The Davidson men's basketball team earned national attention after giving Maryland a scare in the NCAA tournament's first round in March. This season, the Wildcats will have plenty of chances to maintain that high profile.

Davidson is guaranteed to have seven regular-season games on national or regional television. The team could have 12 or more games televised if the Wildcats repeat as Southern Conference tournament champions.

The Wildcats are scheduled to have three games televised on national networks -- including games in Charlotte against North Carolina and Duke -- and four more on regional sports channels. Davidson didn't have a nationally televised regular-season game last season and only three were televised on regional channels.

"Last year's team created a buzz and quite a bit of excitement," Davidson coach Bob McKillop said. "But this is a chance for us to get on a bigger stage, a broader audience. ... The players aren't running from that. They have a great attitude about this -- they want to move the program forward."

Davidson isn't losing a scholarship player from a team that went 29-5, including 20-1 against Southern Conference teams. Sophomore guard Stephen Curry has been mentioned as an All-America candidate, and the Wildcats have been ranked in some preseason polls.

Davidson could add more televised games this season. Its game against UCLA Dec. 8 in the Wooden Classic could be picked up by CBS, and the Wildcats' BracketBuster game Feb. 23 against an opponent to be determined could air on an ESPN network.

The semifinals of the Southern Conference tournament will be on SportSouth on March 9, and the final will be on ESPN2 on March 10. Davidson also would be nationally televised if it advanced to the NCAA tournament.

Wildcats' Television Schedule

Davidson will have seven games on regional or national television; the number could jump to 12 or more if the Wildcats repeat as Southern Conference tournament champions:

Nov. 14 North Carolina (at Bobcats Arena) ESPN
Dec. 1 Duke (at Bobcats Arena) ESPNU
Dec. 21 at N.C. State Fox SS
Jan. 26 at College of Charleston SportSouth
Feb. 9 College of Charleston SportSouth
Feb. 16 Furman SportSouth
Feb. 19 UNC Greensboro ESPN2

Construction of the Davidson "Empire" continues...




Wildcats' warm-up to be on national TV
`Night with the Cats' to air on ESPNU on tape delay Oct. 12
KEVIN CARY

Davidson's quest for a third straight Southern Conference championship will open in front of a national audience.

Athletics director Jim Murphy told the Observer the school expects ESPNU to televise the Wildcats' "Night with the Cats" Oct. 12.

Murphy said the school likely would host the opening basketball event Oct. 11, after the Davidson volleyball team hosts Appalachian State. The event, likely to include a scrimmage, 3-point contests or dunk contests, would be broadcast on tape delay on ESPNU the following day.

Murphy said the event likely would start around 9 p.m., because the volleyball game is scheduled for 7. But Murphy said the basketball event could move up if the volleyball match is played earlier in the day.

ESPNU officials could not be reached for comment.

Davidson is considered an attractive option because it returns every scholarship player from a 29-5 team that reached the NCAA Tournament. Jason Richards is a nominee for the Bob Cousy Award, given to the top point guard in the country, and shooting guard Stephen Curry has been mentioned on preseason All-America lists.

Official practices can't start until Oct. 12, but Davidson coaches said teams can have two hours of individual workouts -- or essentially one two-hour team practice -- each week starting Sept. 15.

Davidson coach Bob McKillop said the Wildcats would not have those workouts the week of the event, allowing Davidson to have scrimmages, 3-point contests or dunk contests that night.

"When you have opportunities like this presented to you, you have to grab it," McKillop said. "This is very consistent with what we are trying to do to get us on the national stage."

Davidson has scheduled three nationally televised games and four others on regional sports networks.

Jason Zimmerman & Matt McKillop together at Emory

This is old news, but Jason Zimmerman is the new head coach at Emory. Matt McKillop is an assistant coach for Jason.I came across their profiles and thought I would post the links here. I am also posting a link to a pretty lengthy interview with Jason:



Best of luck to Jason, Matt & Emory Basketball this season!

More buzz around DC hoops



Excitement builds for Davidson season
Students snatch up tickets for high-profile games in Charlotte
KEVIN CARY

DAVIDSON --The Davidson men's basketball team won't have its first official practice for another three weeks, but a buzz is already developing around campus.

That excitement showed last week, when tickets for games against North Carolina and Duke at Charlotte Bobcats Arena went on sale. Davidson plays North Carolina on Nov. 14 on ESPN, and Duke on Dec. 1 on ESPNU.

Students started showing up at 4 p.m. Sept. 11, more than 15 hours before the tickets went on sale.

The original allotment of 800 student tickets sold out in an hour Sept. 12, and the school took orders for 400 more.

That means Davidson sold more than 1,200 student tickets. The school only has 1,700 students on campus.

"The momentum of excitement has started so much earlier this year," Davidson athletic director Jim Murphy said. "We have a good television schedule, a lot of national exposure in magazines. It's an exciting time for people here. Everybody can puff their chest out a little bit, at least through the preseason."

Students pay $10 a ticket for games at the Bobcats Arena; regular tickets are $25. The line outside the ticket office became a small community in itself last week. Fans brought mattresses to sleep on overnight, reminiscent of the tents Duke students erect to camp out for tickets.

"Welcome to McKillopville," one sign said, referring to Davidson coach Bob McKillop.

McKillop, other Davidson coaches and a handful of players handed out doughnuts to fans waiting for tickets in appreciation for the students' dedication.

"That's as gratifying to me as when they sing `Sweet Caroline' (during games)," coach Bob McKillop said. "These students have always sent a consistent message of support. We know that when anyone at Davidson wins, whether it's the basketball team or an academic award, everyone here wins because we have such a sense of community."

Students do not have to line up to buy tickets for games at Belk Arena -- their tickets there are free. Murphy said the school might have capacity crowds for on-campus games for the first time. The arena can accommodate more than 5,700 fans.

Photo credit: Will Bryan

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Vouyoukas commits to Davidson, and Seth Curry commits to Liberty

Scout.com profile: Alex Vouyoukas 6-9 Forward commits to Davidson
KEVIN CARY

DAVIDSON --Davidson has a verbal commitment for one of its three available scholarships for the 2008-09 season, and might already have another spoken for on its roster.

But a player some expected to attend Davidson won't be heading to the Wildcats.

Seth Curry, the brother of Davidson star Stephen Curry, has verbally committed to Liberty. The younger Curry averaged 12 points last season at Charlotte Christian.

"He just really liked the coaching staff there and thought he could make an impact early," Charlotte Christian coach Shonn Brown said.

Curry also considered Virginia Tech, William and Mary and Davidson, but the Wildcats received another commitment Wednesday .

Davidson received a commitment from Alex Vouyoukas, a 6-foot-9 forward from Blair Academy (N.J.), which also produced former Duke star Luol Deng. Blair assistant coach Terrell Ivory played and graduated from Davidson in 2004.

Vouyoukas hasn't played in the United States yet. He played for a Greek club team last season.

"Alex is a Euro forward," Blair coach Joe Mantegna said. "He can pass and shoot and has good perimeter skills. He's a good fit for them."

Vouyoukas (pronounced Voo-YOU-kas) is the brother of former Saint Louis center Ian Vouyoukas. He said he also considered Illinois State, Fordham and Marist.

"I know the Davidson basketball program is on the rise," Vouyoukas said. "Coach McKillop is really well-respected throughout the U.S. They have a great academic reputation, too."

Davidson coach Bob McKillop can't comment on Vouyoukas because of NCAA rules.

McKillop said earlier this month the school also might use a scholarship on Ben Allison, who is with the Wildcats this season as a walk-on. Allison, a 6-foot-8 small forward, played on England's U20 team this summer.

Hello, Australia!

Someone in Australia is checking out the blog. I believe it may be our own beloved Wildcat, Paul Rybiski ('92), who is supposedly in Sydney. Paul, is that you, by chance?

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Preseason magazine features Davidson

(Ignore the Tar Heel's head above.)
Click the image to enlarge it.

In case you missed it...

Davidson was on the front page of ESPN's college basketball section a few weeks ago. If you missed it, here's the screenshot. (Click the image for a larger view.)
..Yet another stage in the construction of the Davidson empire.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

MCKILLOPVILLE
Photo credits: Will Bryan

Another part of the Davidson empire has been constructed: McKillopville

Students camped out (literally) at Belk Arena to get tickets to the Duke game and the UNC game. I NEVER saw anything like this when I was at Davidson (Class of '94). I remember being able to go to a game and easily sit in your choice of lower bowl (red) seats in Belk Arena (yeah I sound old, I know). That possibility just does not exist anymore. There is a buzz around Davidson hoops that we've not seen in a long, long time.

Student tickets for the Davidson men's basketball games against North Carolina and Duke at Bobcats Arena went on sale at 7 a.m. Wednesday morning, and all 800 paper tickets were sold out in about an hour and 15 minutes.

The ticket office continued to take orders and sold 1,100 student tickets by 10:15 a.m. Students began lining up at around 4 p.m. Tuesday afternoon and by the time the ticket staff arrived at the Baker Sports Complex Wednesday morning, the line was wrapped around the Knobloch Tennis Center and heading down the sidewalk.

Coach Bob McKillop and sophomore guard Stephen Curry were handing out Krispy Kreme doughnuts. One group in line had a sign that read "Welcome to McKillopville." Below are some pictures of the camp out with more to come.

Another Top 25

Lindy's College Basketball Top 25

1. UCLA … These Bruins win the hardware
2. NORTH CAROLINA … Another Final Four fave in Chapel Hill
3. TENNESSEE … A Final Four hit parade
4. MEMPHIS … C-USA toughie has April aspirations
5. LOUISVILLE … Loaded with talent, but can they shoot straight?
6. GEORGETOWN … Another Final Four with Hibbert
7. WASHINGTON STATE … Bennett's built a monster
8. KANSAS … Ready for San Antone?
9. MICHIGAN STATE … Seven-year itch? Not for Spartans
10. INDIANA … Sampson's Hoosiers play tough, thinking big
11. GONZAGA … Mushroom jokes coming, plenty of wins, too
12. STANFORD … Some big fellas on the farm
13. MARQUETTE … Far too low, like their shooting percentage
14. TEXAS A&M … Billy left the fridge full
15. ARIZONA … To get back on top, it's back to basics
16. DUKE … Lots of 'Ifs,' but lots of talent
17. PITTSBURGH … Putting the 'Big' in Big East
18. DAVIDSON … Looking for a bracket sweetheart?
19. SOUTHERN ILLINOIS … Still the MVC's big dog
20. TEXAS … More than Kevin's cronies
21. KENTUCKY … 'Welcome to Kentucky, Billy, now win'
22. OREGON … Little man needs to come up big
23. BUTLER … Bulldog power goes beyond Horizon
24. NORTH CAROLINA STATE … Pack in ACC Contention
25. VIRGINIA COMMONWEALTH … Rams are for real

Click here for the Davidson preview from Lindy's.

MPG captures Bronze medal for Team Canada

Paulhus Gosselin and Canada Claim Bronze with 20-Point Comeback Victory Over Japan
BANGKOK, Thailand (CIS) - Canada used a 17-0 run late in the third quarter to gain momentum and come back from a 20-point deficit, defeating Japan 90-84 in the bronze medal game at the 24th Summer Universiade.

Updates

The 2007-08 roster is now updated in the right-hand sidebar, with links to the players' profiles.

New additions are Brendan McKillop, Aaron Bond & Ben Allison. Welcome to Davidson, guys. We look forward to 4 great years with you.

Also, check out the new Davidson Athletics website. They've done an excellent job with it.

I'll get the new schedule posted in the sidebar once the school posts it on their site.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Observer website

The Charlotte Observer has finally given the Davidson Wildcats a dedicated page on their website, Charlotte.com. (I have added the link in the sidebar to the right.)

This is well deserved - and overdue. It is good to see that the Observer is finally including Davidson with the other Charlotte area schools/teams.

Thanks to Kevin Cary, who does a great job covering Davidson for the Observer. I do not know this for a fact, but I imagine that Kevin was instrumental in getting this done.
Thank you, Observer....and thank you, Kevin!

Friday, August 10, 2007

Yet another ESPN.com article

Davidson taking on the big boys this season

By Kyle Whelliston
Special to ESPN.com


The great American banking center of Charlotte, N.C., lies at the tender, barbecue-basted heart of ACC country. It's the home of the 2008 ACC men's basketball tourney, and the Observer is widely regarded as the conference's newspaper of record. The only thing the city doesn't have is an actual member school within an hour's drive, but all that will change this winter with the addition of the ACC's honorary and temporary 13th member.

Davidson College.

The local Wildcats of the Southern Conference, fresh off a school-record 29-5 regular-season mark and a valiant loss to Maryland in the NCAA Tournament's first round, have set forth a path that boldly takes aim at the traditional titans of the country's most prestigious hoops league. Davidson's 2007-08 schedule includes a Nov. 14 contest against North Carolina, a Dec. 1 date with Duke and a Dec. 21 excursion to NC State.

"When you have players who have shown their commitment by how hard they have worked, not only during the season but in the offseason, you want to reward them," said 19th-year Davidson head coach Bob McKillop. "You reward them by giving them the greatest stage to play on that they can play on. To play the kind of schedule that we're playing this year puts us on that stage … gives our players significant motivation, excitement and opportunity to play against the best."

"It's real exciting," said sophomore guard Stephen Curry, who led the Wildcats with 21.5 ppg in his freshman campaign. "I grew up right here in Charlotte and I followed the ACC as a kid, so getting to take the court against those teams is a real thrill."

Most upwardly mobile mid-majors often have considerable trouble luring ACC schools from their cozy homes, but most of those thrills will come in Davidson's own backyard. The Duke and North Carolina games won't be played in front of the Cameron Crazies and Tar Heels faithful, but instead at a neutral court in Charlotte: the new NBA-capacity Bobcats Arena. That's a cross-state trek for UNC or Duke supporters, but a quick 20-minute drive south from Davidson's leafy, exurban campus.

"The ACC conference tournament is there this year," McKillop explained. "Teams like Carolina and Duke, they want to get an opportunity to play on that floor, in that venue. They've all got a lot of fans in Charlotte. It's going to give those schools an opportunity to play in front of their fans, in an arena they're going to have to become accustomed to playing in."

NC State and Davidson haven't met on the court since the 1995-96 season. Most of the 71-game series with UNC predates baggy shorts. But McKillop's relationship with Duke goes way back. The yearly trip to Durham has been a traditional staple of the Davidson schedule, nearly always televised by ESPN.

"When you play college basketball, you want to play in the finest arenas in the country, against the finest teams in the country," McKillop said. "We certainly accomplish that task by playing in that series with Duke."

Davidson hasn't beaten Duke since 1981. And last season's matchup ended in a 75-47 drubbing at Cameron, easily the Wildcats' worst loss of the season.

"Yeah, things didn't go so well at Cameron last year," Curry remembered. "Hopefully we'll be more ready for them this time."

But that type of negative result was expected all last season for a squad that had lost seven seniors from its 2005-06 SoCon championship team, one that came within eight points of a 15-over-2 upset of Ohio State in the NCAAs. In 2006-07, a team featuring eight underclassmen was due for a surefire rebuilding season. But led by the baby-faced Curry, who matured with lightning quickness from November to March, the Wildcats repeated as league winners.

Scheduling played a vital role in the early development of last season's young Wildcats. Last summer, McKillop signed up his team for two faraway preseason tournaments: two games at the season-opening John Thompson Foundation Classic at Michigan and three at the Arizona State Holiday Classic in late December.

"We were able to get three true neutral-court games out of the five," McKillop said of the trips to Ann Arbor and Tempe. "I thought that might give us a little bit of confidence in playing on the road. And playing in front of Michigan's crowd, Arizona State's crowd … it's not like a Cameron Indoor Stadium crowd, at least not at that point of the year. But it would put us on the home courts of big-time, BCS conference teams. It gave us a chance to sequester ourselves as a young team in an environment where we could grow. And I think we really grew from the experience."
Surprisingly, it was Davidson's win total that grew the most. The Wildcats won four of five games at the two tournaments, the only loss a 78-68 championship-game defeat against host Michigan at the John Thompson. As Curry blossomed into a shooting star over the course of the season, Davidson compiled win streaks of 12 and 13 games on its way to a second straight NCAA appearance.

But that was last season.

"There's a quote from the late, great Joe Lapchick," McKillop said, referring to the legendary St. John's head coach. "He said, 'Proud peacock today, feather duster tomorrow.' And that has resonated in our locker room, in our team room, and in the hallways of our arena. Our players realize that what was accomplished last year is in the past, and they have responded to that by showing me a work ethic that has been extraordinary."

Indeed, the Wildcats need every ounce of sweat equity to avoid becoming household cleaning tools themselves. If Davidson's attempts to slingshot the goliaths of the ACC weren't enough, the team will travel to the Pacific Coast on Dec. 8 for a matchup with UCLA, a veteran of the last two Final Fours, at the John Wooden Classic in Anaheim.

"We jumped on it right away," McKillop said. "Normally, the time around Dec. 8 is a period when we're in exams, but it's a strange year in our academic calendar and exams are starting several days later. So the timing of it was perfect from the standpoint of academics."

So there won't be any excuses, calendar-related or otherwise. The 2007-08 Wildcats are ready to take on all comers, no matter what conference they're from. It's a spirit that echoes that of the Davidson squads of the 1960s, which under Lefty Driesell played in four NCAA Tournaments in five years (including two Elite Eights), accumulated six straight 20-win seasons and spawned three All-Americans. With a current string of three 20-win seasons and postseason appearances, could Wildcats basketball be on the brink of a second golden age?

"The parallels are difficult to draw," McKillop said. "You're talking about a coach who was far ahead of his time in terms of taking a small school like Davidson and taking it into national rankings. What Lefty and his players accomplished was one of the truly great stories in college basketball history. There were 11,600 people every home game at the Charlotte Arena, there were NBA draft picks with Dick Snyder and Fred Hetzel. There are a significant, very significant number of steps to take before we can even be mentioned in the same breath as the glory days."

A breakthrough victory against one of college basketball's elite would certainly be a step in that direction. But that it's even possible -- maybe even expected in some circles -- doesn't faze those in the Davidson camp.

"There are great expectations of us and that's a lot to carry around," McKillop said. "But expectations only come when people respect you. When people respect you, that builds confidence. So we're embracing those expectations, and we're wearing them not with contentment but with a degree of understanding that these expectations have come because of our accomplishments. And that we hope to accomplish much more."

"Nobody expected us to do much of anything last year, but by the Maryland game everyone knew who we were," echoed Curry. "We'll go into those [ACC and UCLA] games prepared, confident, thinking in our heads that we can win, and we'll play hard."

But should the Wildcats go 0-4 in their trial by fire and lose out on the chance to build a solid at-large résumé, there's always the other way into the Big Dance: win the Southern Conference tournament for the third straight year.

"No matter what happens, those games are going to prepare us for what's going to be a real tough league," Curry said. "Either way, we're going to have to take care of business in the SoCon.

"And then we'd get another shot at the big boys."

Thursday, August 09, 2007

ESPN.com article

Memphis, UCLA and Kansas will take on tough nonconference slates
Andy Katz


A few scheduling reflections of the nonconference schedules and games we know so far. The full schedules should be released by early September.

• Give UCLA some credit for playing Davidson in the Wooden Classic on Dec. 8. The Bruins are giving Davidson a West Coast/national platform. This will be one of the top games for the Bruins outside of the Pac-10. The Bruins do play in the CBE Classic in Kansas City with Michigan State, Missouri and Maryland. They will also host George Washington and Texas as well as take a road trip to Michigan. When John Beilein was coaching West Virginia the last two seasons, he beat UCLA twice. Now he's at Michigan.
Davidson is stepping up to play a schedule that could earn the Wildcats an at-large berth. Coach Bob McKillop has his team playing UCLA, North Carolina, Duke and N.C. State.
(Andy Katz sure does love Davidson. He's been all over our team since last season ended. Gotta love the publicity.)

Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Another Top 25 ranking

**From the CollegeHoops.net blog:
Mid-Summer Top 25

1. Memphis
2. North Carolina
3. UCLA
4. Kansas
5. Georgetown
6. Tennessee
7. Louisville
8. Michigan State
9. Washington State
10. Marquette
11. Indiana
12. Stanford
13. Duke
14. Arkansas
15. Texas A&M
16. Oregon
17. Texas
18. North Carolina State
19. USC
20. Mississippi State
21. Villanova
22. Davidson
23. Alabama
24. Kentucky
25. Gonzaga

Others considered:
- Pittsburgh
- Arizona
- Southern Illinois
- Washington
- Clemson
- Ohio State
- Butler
- Wisconsin
- Xavier
- Syracuse

**(Found by wildcat12546 on DavidsonCats.com)

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Max Paulhus-Gosselin on Team Canada

Canada Basketball Announces 2007 Roster

(Toronto, Ontario) Canada Basketball has officially announced the roster for the development men’s national team that will be competing at the FISU Games in Bangkok, Thailand. The FISU Games are the second largest multi-sport games in the world after the Olympic Games. Competition begins on August 7 and ends on August 19.

City of Davidson makes list

Sporting News: Best Sports Cities
#119 Davidson, NC
How we arrive at our rankings
We take a 12-month snapshot, roughly July to July, of each city's sports, putting a heavy premium on regular-season won-lost records (from the most recently completed season); playoff berths, bowl appearances and tournament bids; championships; applicable power ratings; quality of competition; overall fan fervor as measured in part by attendance as percentage of venue capacity; abundance of teams, though we reward quality over quantity; stadium and arena quality; ticket availability and prices; franchise ownership; and marquee appeal of athletes.
1. Detroit + Ann Arbor, Ypsilanti
2. New York
3. Dallas-Fort Worth
4. Chicago + Evanston
5. Los Angeles
---------
37. Charlotte
38. Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill, N.C.
---------
69. Winston-Salem, N.C.
---------
72. Clemson, S.C.
---------
78. Columbia, S.C.
---------
119. Davidson, NC