Friday, June 22, 2007

ESPN.com preseason: Davidson #23, projected #9 NCAA seed

Yeah, it's early, but this is fun stuff anyway. Here's what Andy Katz of ESPN.com has to say about the Wildcats in his preseason Top 25 poll:

23. Davidson
2006-07 Record: 29-5, 17-1

"Don't really care if you think this pick is crazy. Davidson has one of the hidden gems in Stephen Curry. Bob McKillop is one of the top coaches who gets zero pub. This team will win 28 to 29 games and be a tough out in the NCAAs. So deal with Davidson in the Top 25."

In the meantime, Joe Lunardi has put out his first preseason "Bracketology" on ESPN.com. He's got Davidson listed as #9 seed.

Monday, June 18, 2007

Another Davidson All-American

SACRAMENTO, CALIF. – Davidson’s freshman track standout Kristen Meister concluded her impressive rookie campaign with an 11th place finish in the high jump finals, earning All-America status at the 2007 NCAA Track and Field Championships on Friday evening in Sacramento, Calif.

Meister cleared 1.77 meters to finish tied for 11th place with Lacy Wilson of Texas Tech. Destinee Hooker was the event champion with a jump of 1.92 meters and no misses to best Alabama’s Miruna Mataoanu, who also cleared 1.92 meters with a pair of misses.

Levern Spencer (Georgia), Sharon Day (Cal Poly), Rhonda Watkins (UCLA), Inika McPherson (California), Peaches Roach (Iowa) and Kaylene Wagner (Kansas State) were the top eight in the event, earning All-America status.

Meister, who became just the second Davidson woman to qualify for the NCAA track championships, concludes an impressive rookie campaign with a pair of conference titles and conference and school records.

Meister also became the school's first track All-American with her 11th place finish. In Division I field and track, the top eight finishers in each event at the NCAA Outdoor Championships are eligible for All-America status. In the individual events, if one or more of the top eight finishers are of another nationality, eight American-born athletes are selected in addition to any foreign-born All-Americans.

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

This is obviously a major achievement. This is THE All-American list; Kristen is in elite company. Keep in mind that Kristen was competing with the big-time schools (UCLA, Alabama, Georgia, Texas, etc.) Here's the list of other high-jump athletes that received All-American honors, which helps illustrate how major this is for her and Davidson:

High Jump
Kristen Meister, Davidson College
Miruna Mataoanu, University of Alabama
Inika McPherson, University of California
Rhonda Watkins, University of California Los Angeles
Levern Spencer, University of Georgia
Peaches Roach, University of Iowa
Destinee Hooker, University of Texas
Sharon Day, California Polytechnic State University
Rebecca Christe, Harvard University
Kaylene Wagner, Kansas State University
Kristina Bolter, Miami University (Ohio)
Lacy Wilson, Texas Tech University

Congratulations, Kristen!!

Monday, May 21, 2007

Davidson adds NC State to schedule

Davidson adds game at N.C. State on Dec. 21
KEVIN CARY
Davidson has added a third ACC opponent to its 2007-08 schedule, playing at N.C. State Dec. 21. Davidson will also get a home game with the Wolfpack in the 2008-09 season.
The two teams haven't played since 1995. Both teams have been mentioned in preseason top 25 polls for next season. Davidson went 29-5 last season and has every scholarship player returning, including freshman standout Stephen Curry. N.C. State returns four starters from a 20-16 team.
Davidson has already scheduled two games at Charlotte Bobcats Arena against ACC opponents. Davidson will play North Carolina in a 7 p.m. game televised by ESPN Nov. 14, and will also play Duke Dec. 1. Coach Bob McKillop said it has not been determined whether the Duke or N.C. State games will be televised.
Davidson also has a game scheduled at Charlotte Dec. 5, and another game to be scheduled at Western Michigan. McKillop said the school is still trying to determine the rest of its nonconference opponents.
"We want to provide the best experience for our players and for our fans," McKillop said. "These games do that, and also give the best exposure to our program."

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Condolences to our neighbors, Winthrop

Winthrop player Adams dies of injuries
Single-car accident on Saturday
GARY McCANN

De'Andre Adams, the fiesty backup point guard for Winthrop’s basketball team, died early today in Atlanta Medical Center from injuries sustained in a Saturday morning single-car accident.

He was 20.

Adams had been in a drug induced coma with swelling of the brain since the accident around 4 a.m. Saturday morning about five minutes from his home in Austell, Ga.

Adams swerved to avoid a tree that had fallen into Clay Road. The car flipped several times before hitting a tree. Adams was wearing his seat belt. It took rescue personnel 45 minutes to cut the top off the car and get him into an ambulance.

He had been holding his own, but took a turn for the worst on Tuesday night. The 5-foot-6, 156-pound Adams would have been a junior this year. In two seasons with the Eagles he had endeared himself to his teammates and fans with his aggressive, energetic play.

Nicknamed “soy sauce” by his teammates because, they said, “he spiced things up” when he came on the floor, Adams played in all of Winthrop’s 65 games the past two seasons and was a key player in the Eagles’ first-ever NCAA Tournament win, a 74-64 victory over Notre Dame in Spokane, Wash. last March.

Funeral arrangements are incomplete.

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Davidson featured on NBC Nightly News

Davidson students and Baghdad University students had a video conference to discuss the situation in Iraq.

NBC Nightly News was on campus to cover the event.

Click here to watch. I don't know how long this link will remain active, so check it out ASAP if you want to watch.

Sidenote: I know nothing about how this event came to be....but I can't help but wonder if Tony Snow had any part in getting this event to Davidson - to garner some publicity for his alma mater. It's just a thought, and not too much of a stretch. He is apparently a big Davidson supporter, and he's got a connection or two.

UPDATE: I was too quick to credit Mr. Snow for this. Like I said, it was just a hunch.

FROM C. DANIEL'S COMMENT:
C. Daniel said...
James Zogby, head of the Arab-American Institute arranged it. He taught at Davidson for a semester as a visiting prof, and did the same thing around the time he taught here (4 years ago, perhaps?).

Monday, May 07, 2007

Brendan McKillop to be a Wildcat

Brendan McKillop signs with Davidson
Charlotte Catholic standout will be coached by his father
LANGSTON WERTZ JR.
His father is the men's basketball coach at Davidson. His brother was a high school basketball star who played for his father at Davidson.
Because of all that, Charlotte Catholic's Brendan McKillop, who signed with Bob McKillop's Davidson team Monday, was never sure he wanted to be a Wildcat until he watched them play in the NCAA tournament.
Brendan, a 6-foot-1 point guard, was the Queen City 3A/4A Player of the Year last season after averaging 26 points, five rebounds and five assists. He shared the Observer's player of the year award in Mecklenburg County with Butler's Demontez Stitt.
"At first, I wanted to get away from home and do my own thing," Brendan said. "I'd lived there my whole life. My brother (Matt) played at Davidson, and I've always been in my brother's shadow growing up and going to all the same schools he did."
Brendan got heavy interest from N.C. State, Virginia Tech, George Mason, Penn State and St. John's, said his high school coach, Bob Moran.
But Moran said Brendan began to "fall in love" with the Wildcats during workouts with the players. "And I think those players wanted him there," Moran said. "They saw he could fit in."
Brendan said he made his decision while watching Davidson play in the NCAA tournament this year, seeing how much fun the players were having. So he'll follow his brother after all. Matt graduated in 2006 and is an assistant at Emory University in Atlanta, Brendan said.
"I wasn't sure for a while," Brendan said, "but I'm glad I decided to go."

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

This is Davidson Basketball

Re-posting the video.

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Building the Empire

Davidson & McKillop on front page of ESPN.com College Basketball section
Do you know this man? Smart teams will schedule his club in '07-'08.
20-win mids should be scheduled, not ducked
(Click here for front page of ESPN.com College Basketball)
By Andy Glockner
ESPN.com


Quick: Name the best "RPI opponent" in the country last season.

Ohio State was atop the RPI at the end of the regular season, but the Buckeyes didn't provide the best bang for your RPI buck. Neither did Memphis, Florida, UCLA, Kansas, Wisconsin or North Carolina, even though all six of those elite programs also finished in the top 11 in the RPI. Why? Because all those teams were very likely to beat you, negating some of the benefit their strong win/loss records and strengths of schedule provided for your RPI.

As your own winning percentage is 25 percent of your RPI, you must add relative "beatability" into the equation. When you do, the answer probably will surprise you: It's Davidson. In addition to finishing the regular season with a 25-4 Division I record, the Wildcats' overall schedule (including games in the underrated Southern Conference, which ended up 19th of the 31 conferences in RPI) was strong enough to give the Wildcats the 10th-best combination of winning percentage and SOS in the country (measured with winning percentage being worth twice as much as SOS, per the RPI formula). Now weigh the fact that most Top 25 teams would be strongly favored over Davidson at home, and it's a no-brainer.

Don't worry if you didn't know that; you'd be hard-pressed to find a Division I head coach who would have answered that correctly. The evidence? The best RPI opponent in D-I in 2005-06 was Bucknell, and the Bison had one Top 50 RPI game on their schedule this past season (at Xavier). Bucknell -- a team that had won a first-round NCAA Tournament game each of the past two seasons -- had been weakened by graduation, but still was a very good bet to get 20-plus wins (it ended up 22-9). The Bison should have been on every major-conference team's speed dial, but almost no one wanted any part of them.

"The RPI thing is something I try to influence, because we have a beautiful place to play and our RPI is good, so we're not going to hurt you if you beat us, or maybe even if we beat you," said Bucknell coach Pat Flannery, who's always on the hunt for home-and-home series.

The Bucknell example speaks to the larger issue across Division I. Despite the huge amount of money at stake annually in today's college hoops world, it's clear that the vast majority of programs still don't understand how best to exploit the most fundamental of opportunities: nonconference scheduling.

Despite what the NCAA selection committee says every season about RPI being only one evaluation metric, it's an incredible predictor of NCAA Tournament inclusion, especially for major-conference teams. This past season, 37 of the top 40 teams in the RPI made the field of 65 (and only No. 30 Air Force had any type of reasonable gripe about being excluded). In 2005-06, it was 36 of the top 38 (No. 21 Missouri State and No. 30 Hofstra were the two controversial exclusions, although I agreed with both decisions). In 2004-05, it was a perfect 40 of 40 (No. 43 Miami (Ohio) was the first omission). The 2005-06 Cincinnati squad, which lost star Armein Kirkland to injury midway through the season, was the only BCS conference team in those three years to miss the NCAAs with an RPI of 40 or better (and the Bearcats finished at No. 40).

Why is that notable? Well, as Andy Katz reported Wednesday, major-conference teams that just missed this season's NCAA Tournament, such as Clemson (RPI No. 46) and Syracuse (No. 50), have no intention of changing their nonconference scheduling philosophy. Given what's at stake and how minimally a schedule would need to be tweaked for a program to gain significant RPI leverage, that's a mistake.

"We're looking to play good teams," Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim said. "[In addition to Baylor], we also got Wichita State and Drexel and Hofstra. Can you get 10 of those [teams]? We're still going to play Colgate and play Cornell. We're going to play them for 100 years. We've got Rhode Island [next season], which should be good. Saint Joe's has everyone back. We think we have good RPI teams [on next season's schedule]."

Loyalty and a sense of history are great, but making the NCAA Tournament -- and getting the best seed possible -- should be the first goal for any program each season. Although it's admirable on certain levels for Boeheim to say Syracuse will play teams such as Colgate annually, it's also not smart for the Orange to commit to do that. The Raiders have finished better than No. 238 in the RPI only once in the past eight seasons (No. 199 in 2001-02), and this past season, Colgate ranked 266th in combined winning percentage/SOS. Basically, the Raiders are an annual albatross on Syracuse's RPI.

That doesn't mean teams like Syracuse can't schedule -- and overcome -- those games. It just means that, at best, it's removing some margin for error -- margin Syracuse needed this season after it lost at home to Wichita State and Drexel. At worst, that one game could cost a team favorable seeding or, every so often, even an NCAA berth.

Look what would have happened to Syracuse this past season had the Orange simply been able to replace Colgate with Davidson.

As estimated by Ken Pomeroy's efficiency ratings and giving Syracuse standard home-court advantage, Colgate is a nearly automatic home win for Syracuse and Davidson would win one in every six meetings. Given that Rule 1 of RPI Betterment is "Don't lose at home," it appears Colgate is the smarter and safer choice. That's not the case, though. Davidson's record (rolled into Factor II, worth 50 percent of a team's RPI) is so much better than Colgate's that, even assuming Syracuse never loses to Colgate and accounting for the occasional loss to the Wildcats, Syracuse is much better off playing Davidson.

How much better? A quick crunch of the numbers shows that making that one switch in the schedule this season would have, on average, improved Syracuse's RPI by about 0.0057 -- or in other words, nine RPI spots this past season. That would have pushed the Orange from No. 50 to No. 41, right on the brink of what recently has been near-lock status for the NCAA Tournament. Five times out of six, the actual bump would be bigger. Just from one game.

Again, this isn't a rip on Syracuse; in playing home games against Penn, Holy Cross and Hofstra last season, in addition to Wichita State and Drexel, the Orange showed they "get it" more than most teams of their ilk. The Orange just happened to lose two of those games, which is killer in the new RPI formula.

The morals of the story? Understand the way the RPI works -- all wins are created equal -- and don't be afraid to schedule up. Top 50 programs can play opponents 150-200 RPI spots better than some of the worst teams on their current schedule with a minimal increase in the risk of a loss. The programs that more rapidly understand this risk/reward equation will reap the benefits -- a good situation to be in when those benefits include millions of extra dollars in NCAA Tournament revenues and TV exposure.

No one expected Davidson to be this good this season, but now the nation has been warned. The Wildcats didn't have a senior on their roster and should be a lock to have 22-plus wins again next season. As such, we'll find out who really does get it when we see which teams schedule Davidson in 2007-08.

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

A Proclamation by the President of the United States of America

Our Nation grieves with those who have lost loved ones at Virginia Tech. We hold the victims in our hearts. We lift them up in our prayers, and we ask a loving God to comfort those who are suffering.

As a mark of respect for the victims of the senseless acts of violence perpetrated on Monday, April 16, 2007, by the authority vested in me as President of the United States by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, I hereby order that the flag of the United States shall be flown at half-staff at the White House and upon all public buildings and grounds, at all military posts and naval stations, and on all naval vessels of the Federal Government in the District of Columbia and throughout the United States and its Territories and possessions until sunset, Sunday, April 22, 2007. I also direct that the flag shall be flown at half-staff for the same length of time at all United States embassies, legations, consular offices, and other facilities abroad, including all military facilities and naval vessels and stations.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this seventeenth day of April, in the year of our Lord two thousand seven, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and thirty-first.

GEORGE W. BUSH

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

New Davidson Basketball Video

Here's a little video I put together. Enjoy!

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Jason Zimmerman new Emory head coach

EMORY NAMES JASON ZIMMERMAN HEAD MEN’S BASKETBALL COACH

Emory University Athletics Director Betsy Stephenson has announced Jason Zimmerman’s appointment as head men’s basketball coach. Zimmerman will start his duties immediately.

“I want to thank Betsy Stephenson and all those involved in the search process for selecting me to lead the Emory men’s basketball program,” Zimmerman said. “Emory University strives for excellence in all areas and we look forward to having the basketball program reach that level of excellence.

“The reputation of Emory, its fine facilities, and the high regard that the University Athletic Association is held in made the job appealing,” Zimmerman stated. “Emory is about success and when you are around successful people, good things can happen. My family and I are honored and excited about joining the Emory family.”

Zimmerman, a native of Warsaw, Indiana, brings a wealth of experience to the Emory program having spent the last 11 seasons as an assistant coach at the Division I level.

Zimmerman spent seven seasons on the Davidson staff, where he worked for Bob McKillop, from 1996-97 through 2002-03. During his tenure, the Wildcats compiled an impressive 122-81 record and competed in the 1998 and 2002 NCAA Tournaments. Davidson won North Division championships in the Southern Conference in 1997, 1998, 2002 and 2003, and won the Southern Conference Tournament in 1998 and 2002.

“Jason Zimmerman is the type of person that you want your son to play for,” said McKillop, a six-time SoCon Coach of the Year. “He is a superb coach and caring individual. He will maximize the talents of those who play for him.

“He has the ability to get on the court and show what has to be done and how to do it,” McKillop continued. “Jason has the unique capacity to get players to blend and play roles. He is adept at getting players to grasp the team concept nature of the game while highlighting their individual strengths.”

Most recently, Zimmerman spent the 2003-04 through 2006-07 seasons as an assistant at the University of Evansville under Steve Merfeld. While with the Purple Aces, he coached Matt Webster and Clint Cuffle to All-Missouri Valley Conference honors while recruiting and coaching Jason Holsinger to the MVC 2005-06 All-Freshman Team.

“Jason is the kind of person who fits in well with the people he comes in contact with,” Merfeld said. He will have a positive impact on the student-athletes he will work with.

“He is extremely talented when it comes to skill development and he is an exceptional recruiter because of his ability to relate well to people. He has a true passion for the game of basketball and for coaching.”

Zimmerman was a four-year letterwinner at Davidson where he concluded his career as the school’s No. 18 all-time leading scorer with 1,260 points. One of the top players in the Southern Conference, he finished fourth in career free throw percentage and seventh in career assists, and was a member of Davidson’s 1994 NIT team. Jason also earned Davidson’s Thomas A. Sparrow Award for commitment to collegiate athletics. He graduated from Davidson in 1994 and earned his bachelor’s degree in economics.

“We are thrilled to have Coach Zimmerman lead our men’s basketball program,” Stephenson said. “His Division I background as both a student-athlete and coach has provided him the blueprint on how to be successful and prepared him for his role as Emory’s head coach.

Jason and his wife, Traci, have a son, Trevor, and daughter, Taylor.

**********************************
From The Emory Wheel
(Emory student paper)

Sports: Men's B-Ball Coach Hired

After searching for 40 days and sifting through more than 200 applications, Emory has selected University of Evansville (Ind.) Assistant Coach Jason Zimmerman as the men's basketball program's fourth head coach on Monday.

"He just has a great combination of experience and skills that we think will serve Emory well," Director of Athletics and Recreation Betsy Stephenson said.

Most recently, Zimmerman spent the past four seasons as an assistant to Evansville Head Coach Steve Merfeld, who resigned at the end of this last season. Zimmerman said he's excited for the opportunities ahead at Emory.

"Emory University and its excellence in every aspect makes it exciting because the basketball program can be built around that excellence," he said.

The Eagles finished 8-17 overall and 2-12 in UAA conference play this past year, marking their worst season in more than a decade. Zimmerman will be charged with rebuilding a program that has not made the NCAA tournament in 17 years.

And while Zimmerman's most recent coaching experience came in Indiana, his experiences as a player and assistant coach at Division I Davidson College may have had more to do with his hiring. After the resignation of former Emory Head Coach Brett Zuver on Feb. 28, Stephenson said she wanted a coach with "experience with selective admissions." Zimmerman faced that challenge when recruiting as an assistant coach for seven years at Davidson.

"It was really important [he had that]," Stephenson said. "It's hard enough to do that job without understanding how you weave through the recruiting process. He did that for the entire time he was at Davidson."

Viewers of this year's NCAA tournament may remember the Wildcats nearly knocking off the University of Maryland in the first round of this year's March Madness.

"They were everyone's upset pick," Emory junior guard Claude Pardue Jr. said.

Stephenson first learned about Zimmerman the same week.

"A friend told me I need to call this guy soon," she said.

Zimmerman helped Davidson to its current status as a perennial contender in the Southern Conference and went with the Wildcats to the NCAA tournament in 1998 and 2002 as an assistant under current Wildcats' head coach Bob McKillop.

"I was part of rebuilding that program with Coach McKillop, and I had a great mentor in that process," Zimmerman said.

Zimmerman hopes to transfer that rebuilding energy to Emory, where the Eagles program appears on paper to be in disarray. The Eagles lost six seniors, four starters and a head coach in the week following the wrap-up of an 8-17 season.

Junior guard Spiros Ferderigos, who has led the Eagles in scoring each of the past two seasons, said he's excited for a fresh start with Zimmerman.

"We're definitely not performing well and definitely rebuilding," he said. "It's good to know we have someone who has been [through rebuilding] as a player and as a coach."

Players met with three finalists late last week, and Pardue and Ferderigos said most team members endorsed the hiring of the two of the candidates. The decision ultimately rested with Stephenson, who emphasized that player input was an important part of the process.

"Their opinions mattered," she said. "If there was wholesale support, or marginal support or no support, it made a difference."

According to Emory Assistant Coach Jimmy Paulis, the finalists included one head coach and two assistant coaches. Paulis also met with the finalists and plans to keep his name in the running as Zimmerman decides on an assistant for next season. Emory's new head coach said he hasn't decided who his assistant will be, but he wants "someone who has a great understanding of Emory."

Paulis thinks his six years of experience at Emory and four as a player in Division III could be an asset for Zimmerman, who has spent the last 15 years in Division I. He is also exploring the possibility of becoming a Division III head coach elsewhere and did not apply for the head job at Emory.

"Through interaction with [Stephenson], I think they were looking to kind of go in a different direction," Paulis said. "Based on that communication, I just thought it would be in the best interest of everybody for me not to pursue it."

Whoever joins Zimmerman's staff will likely be coaching a style of play the Eagles haven't used in recent years. Pardue said that Zimmerman talked about employing a lot of secondary break and fast break options offensively, and he thinks that will suit Emory's returning personnel well.

"You look at our [returning] big guys, and they're fast players," Pardue said. "After watching Davidson, if he comes in and implements the same thing, I think it could be pretty successful."

Zimmerman said he likes his teams to "be aggressive on both ends of the court," and the Eagles might have to be next season. Emory returns just two players taller than 6-foot-3, and Ferderigos said Zimmerman's more aggressive style will suit Emory well next year.

"We're definitely going to be a little small next year if no big men come in," he said. "We're going to have to play uptempo. Maybe we can get a couple big men in, but we're probably going to need to be a running team."

Regardless of next season's outcome, Emory basketball takes its next step behind the vision of Zimmerman. Pardue believes that vision can bring Emory to the next level.

"He sees Emory with the potential to be an elite program, and we have everything here to have that," he said.

Wednesday, April 04, 2007

ESPN.com: Pre-season Top 25

Andy Katz, of ESPN, has Davidson JUST outside his preseason Top 25 for next season. His note mentions that once all the early entries to the NBA are known, Davidson may just jump into the rankings.

"Teams we'll regret not having, but reserve the right to toss in here after we know all the early-entry fallout: Davidson..."

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Davidson College Dropping Student Loans
by Elaine Korry

Davidson College, a liberal arts school near Charlotte, N.C., is adjusting its need-based financial aid programs to eliminate student loans.

Instead, the school plans to pump up its endowment and offer students who need financial help more grants and jobs.

President Robert Vagt wants to make a Davidson education accessible to more students whose parents don't have $120,000 saved for their educations.

"When they look at the price, they don't even apply," Vagt said. "And what this will mean is that students will begin applying to Davidson who in the past had thought, 'there's no way my family can do $40,000 a year.'"

At Davidson, 26 percent of the school's 1,700 students received loans to help pay the more than $38,000 it costs for tuition, room, board and books.

In 2004/2005, the most recent figures available from the U.S. Department of Education, their debt burden averaged more than $8,000 a year.

Nationwide, 65 percent of college graduates made it through without taking out any student loans, according to the U.S. Department of Education.

Davidson had previously taken steps toward easing the potential for high student debt. In this school year, student loans were limited to $3,000 a year.

Vagt said the decision may have started as a moral choice, but it wouldn't have succeeded without support from the Board of Trustees.

"Commitments by the trustees themselves to help fund this over the interim period, and they adopted a plan which will raise the endowment over the next four years, to permanently finance it," Vagt said.

Princeton University and Columbia University have implemented similar policies. Some major public colleges, such as the University of North Carolina, have done so for students from families with modest incomes. Davidson is the first small, liberal arts school to take this step.

Terry Hartle, with the American Council on Education, says it's a welcome step for parents, but it's also a smart business decision.

"This is a terrific marketing move," Hartle said. "Davidson is a very highly respected private college, but it's not necessarily well-known outside the Southeast. This will give it a great deal of national attention, and I would suspect that next year they will see thousands more applicants than they are seeing this year."

Hartle says many small liberal arts colleges would love to follow Davidson's lead, but few have the financial wherewithal to pull it off.

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Terrible news for Davidson Basketball fan and alum, Tony Snow
Tony Snow's Cancer Spreads To Liver
HANG IN THERE, TONY!
YOU CAN BEAT IT!!

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Davidson vs. Maryland: Highlights from CBS

CBS's broadcast highlights from the Davidson/Maryland game in the NCAA Tournament:

Monday, March 19, 2007

Steph for 3 against Maryland

Here's the shot that Steph hit from way downtown, right in front of Maryland Head Coach, Gary Williams.

Friday, March 16, 2007

My Vote for NCAA Coach of the Year

SoCon Regular Season Champs, SoCon Tournament Champ, a record of 29-5.......all after losing 7 seniors and almost all of the offense from last year. Amazing, absolutely amazing.
One heck of a job, Coach. Yes, the end of the season hurts, but we can't wait until next year. Even greater things are on the way. We are so close, oh so close...

Tony Snow gives Davidson and this blog some press in the NY Times

Tony: Thanks for apparently mentioning this website in your interview. It's good to know you are keeping up with the Wildcats.

Davidson Fills West Wing With Pride
By Thayer Evans

The White House press secretary and Davidson alum Tony Snow didn’t get to watch all of the 13th-seeded Wildcats’ 82-70 loss to No. 4 seed Maryland on Thursday, but he saw the game’s most entertaining action.

“I only got to see the brief spell in the second half where they got out to an 8-point lead,” Snow said in a telephone interview. “That made me proud of the alma mater.”

Snow, who has been White House press secretary since April , graduated from Davidson in 1977 with a bachelor of arts degree in philosophy. The 1,700-student liberal arts college in North Carolina, which has an enrollment with an average S.A.T. score of 1359, is one of the smallest schools to field an N.C.A.A. Division I basketball team.

An avid fan of the Wildcats, Snow often listens to their games over the Internet, including the postgame show with Coach Bob McKillop and John Kilgo, and follows them on a blog.

“I love it,” Snow said. “It’s a well-coached team with good players. It’s a good program.”
Despite Davidson’s defeat Thursday, its second consecutive first-round loss in the N.C.A.A. tournament, Snow is already talking about next season.

“It’s the third-youngest team in the country this year,” he said. “All the starters are back.”
Snow is just as optimistic about Davidson eventually winning its first game in the N.C.A.A. tournament since1969 when it reached the Round of 8 under Lefty Driesell.

“I sure hope it happens,” he said. “It’d make my heart glad and proud.”

Tony Snow also mentions the Wildcats in a White House Press Briefing

Press Briefing by Tony Snow and Dan Fisk
Holiday Inn
Mérida, Mexico
PARTICIPANTS: Tony Snow, White House Press Secretary Dan Fisk, Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director of Western Hemisphere Affairs
5:38 P.M. (Local)
Q It's the last night of the trip, would you like to say anything about the Venezuelan President? (Laughter.)
MR. SNOW: I am actually looking forward to tomorrow, when the valiant Davidson Wildcats take on the Maryland Terrapins. That is of keen interest.
Q -- no Chavez? (Laughter.)
MR. SNOW: But thank you for trying.
END 6:12 P.M. (Local)

Photos from Charlotte.com












Photo Credit: LAYNE BAILEY, Staff