1
Eric Sorrentino [email protected] Turgeon baffled lately Texas A&M coach Mark Tur- geon wasn’t exactly pleased with the Aggies’ recent incon- sistencies. For instance, A&M beat Texas Tech by 44 points on Feb. 27, then lost to Oklahoma, 64-37, the next game. “This is probably the most frustrating season I’ve been through as a coach,” Turgeon said. “With that said, we’ve still won 21 games. But the ups and downs are unexplainable. You don’t win by 44 one game, then lose like we did.” A&M (21-8) is 7-7 in confer- ence play. Big 12 No. 2 in RPI The Big 12 Conference now has the second-highest Rat- ings Percentage Index in the nation. As of Sunday, the con- ference had seven teams in the Top 50 of the RPI, which calcu- lates a team’s winning per- centage (50 percent), its opponents’ winning percent- age (25 percent) and the opponents’ opponents winning percentage (25 percent). “I’d be disappointed if we don’t get six teams in,” Okla- homa State coach Sean Sut- ton said of the NCAA Tourna- ment. The Cowboys (16-12) have now won five straight confer- ence games to even their Big 12 record to 7-7. Sutton has mentioned in the past that five games ago, he set a goal for his team in the locker room to win its final seven games. Five down, two to go. Griffin to miss time Oklahoma standout fresh- man Blake Griffin underwent knee surgery Sunday and will miss the Sooners’ last two reg- ular-season games. Coach Jeff Capel said he expected Griffin to return in time for the Big 12 Tournament on March 13. Griffin, who averages 15.2 points and 9.3 rebounds per game, tore the medial menis- cus in the first half of Satur- day’s victory over Texas Tech. He actually returned in the second half and scored 10 points and grabbed five boards, despite the injury. “We didn’t know the extent of the injury at the time,” Capel said. “He’s played as well as anyone in this league in the last five or six games. I would- n’t trade him for anyone in the country.” Rush/Rogers honored KU’s Brandon Rush and Bay- lor’s Kevin Rogers were named the Big 12 Players of the Week. Rush went off for 21 points against Kansas State on Satur- day. Rush leads the Jayhawks in Big 12 play with 14.2 points per contest. Rogers, a 6-foot-9 junior out of Dallas, has averaged 18 points and 11.5 rebounds in Baylor’s last two victories, over Colorado and Missouri. Bears break out razors Baylor coaches made a deal with their players toward the end of February that for each game the Bears won, an assis- tant coach would have to shave his head. The Bears have won three straight games. They’d still have to win their final two regular season games, then reach the Big 12 Tournament championship to apply the razor to head coach Scott Drew. “Right now, I’m good with my hair,” Drew said. “They have to keep winning if they want to see it any different.” Tough season expected Colorado coach Jeff Bzdelik had a rather candid response when asked about the Buf- faloes’ 11-17 record (3-11 con- ference). “What’s happened is fully what I expected to happen,” the first-year coach said. “I knew we weren’t a very good rebounding team. I knew we weren’t going to be a very good defensive team. I knew we would struggle to score at times. “There’s a lot of things being done that aren’t reflected into wins: Facilities, culture, envi- ronment, tangible evidence that there’s an investment in the basketball program that’s never been done here before. I almost have to giggle if any- body thought we’d be doing better than what we’re doing right now.” It might be difficult for the Texas Longhorns to secure a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament after the loss to Texas Tech. If Texas wins out in the reg- ular season and advances to at least the Big 12 Tournament finals, though, it will have plenty to show the nominating commit- tee. No team in the Associated Press Top 25 poll has defeated three Top 10 teams this season. No team, that is, except the Longhorns. Texas ran No. 7 Tennessee out of the gym on Nov. 24 with a 97-78 victory on a neutral court in Newark, N.J. UT then defeated No. 1 UCLA, 63-61, on Dec 2 at Pauley Pavilion. The Long- horns capped off their third Top 10 victory on Feb. 11 with a 72-69 vic- tory over the No. 3- ranked Kansas Jayhawks at home. Those victories look even better now. UCLA, Tennessee and Kansas are presently third, fourth and fifth, respec- tively, in the AP poll. Texas coach Rick Barnes said he pur- posely chose difficult non-league teams earlier in the season. “I will go back to when I was at Prov- idence and what (former coach) Dave Gavitt said to me,” Barnes said. “He said at the end of the year, if you don't get in the tournament because of your non- league schedule, there's no one to blame but you. He said you have a choice to decide how you want to play. Now do you want a schedule to get in the NIT? Schedule to get in the NIT. But if you want a schedule to get in the NCAA Tournament, you better be will- ing to play and not let your schedule work against you.” The closest any team has come to three Top 10 victories is Wisconsin. The Badgers have victories against No. 9 Texas, No. 11 Indiana and No. 12 Indi- ana. Close, but not as decorated a resume as the Longhorns. Texas, No. 9 in the AP poll, presently sits at 25-5 (12-3 Big 12) and atop the conference with Kansas. It wasn’t sup- posed to be that way this year, accord- ing to Big 12 coaches. Before the season, not one coach picked Texas to win the conference. Ten picked Kansas, while two picked Texas A&M, which is fifth in the con- ference standings. So how’s Texas in position to win its second Big 12 title in three years? One answer could be the emergence of guards D.J. Augustin and A.J. Abrams, who average a combined 36.2 points per game. When Kevin Durant darted for the NBA, Augustin instantly became the Longhorns leader. Augustin, who receives at least one “best point guard in the nation” refer- ence per national broadcast, gets his teammates involved consistently. His 5.83 assists per game are a large reason four UT players average double-digit point totals. Abrams, who eas- ily has more three- pointers than any- one in the Big 12, has been the primary benefactor of Augustin’s ability to slash to the basket. Defensively, the Longhorns have seen Connor Atchley and Damion James play monster roles. Atchley leads the conference in blocked shots, while James has been a beast on the glass. In fact, James averages a double-double with 12.5 points and 10.5 rebounds. One more home game remains for the Longhorns — Sunday against Okla- homa State — for at least a share of the Big 12 title. B IG XII S POTLIGHT LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD A weekly look inside the Big 12 Conference 4B Wednesday, March 5, 2008 Barnes revitalizes program There’s a reason Texas men’s basketball coach Rick Barnes is locked into a con- tract that would keep him in Austin until 2017. Simply put, he's the best basketball coach in the histo- ry of the program. Texas’ nine straight tourna- ment appearances in Barnes’ first nine seasons — a school record — would have been considered exceptional in the eras before Barnes arrived. Now, it’s just expected. When Barnes took the UT job to start the 1998-1999 sea- son, he didn’t inherit a pro- gram that had much success or tradition. The farthest Texas had advanced in the NCAA Tour- nament was the Final Four, but that was in 1947. The most recent success Texas had in the tournament was the Elite Eight in 1990. This season will make Barnes a perfect 10-for-10 in tournament appearances. In UT’s previous 58 seasons, it made the tournament only 16 times. It’s baffling to think before Barnes arrived, the UT play- er with the most NBA suc- cess was former Kings/Pac- ers forward LaSalle Thomp- son, who averaged near eight points and seven boards in his 15-year pro career. Barnes, who coached for six years at Providence and four years at Clemson, recruited talent the UT bas- ketball program never had witnessed. Barnes brought in athletes like Chris Owens, T.J. Ford, Royal Ivey, LaMarcus Aldridge, P.J. Tucker, Daniel Gibson, Kevin Durant, A.J. Abrams, D.J. Augustin and Connor Atchley. The obvious reason not a single coach in this year’s preseason poll picked Texas to win the conference was because of the departure of Durant, who was selected No. 2 overall in last year’s NBA Draft. It’s tough to picture this group actually better after losing Durant, but that is the direction Barnes has led Texas. Despite several key players darting early to the NBA in the Barnes era, he has provided enough stabili- ty to make a deep tourna- ment run several years (Sweet 16 in 2001-02, Final Four in 2002-03, Sweet 16 in 2003-2004, Elite Eight in 2005-2006). Few other teams in the Big 12 other than Kansas and Texas have this type of stabil- ity. Try picturing Kansas State without Michael Beasley and Bill Walker next year. A bit of a different team. Recently, Barnes has done an impressive job keeping Texas near the top of the conference with Kansas, which has dominated the Big 12 with seven conference titles in 11 years. In the realm of Big 12 Con- ference history, Texas clearly isn’t Kansas. But the Long- horns (134-56, .705) are cur- rently second to the Jay- hawks (156-34, .821) in con- ference winning percentage since the Big 12 Conference started in 1997. None of it would be possi- ble for UT without the pro- gram Barnes has built. — Journal-World copy editor Eric Sorrentino can be reached at 832-6360 Little giant killers ——— Texas boasts one of nation’s most appealing resumes S ORRENTINO S C ALE Looked darn near unbeatable past two games Important for Connor Atch- ley to stay out of foul trouble Bears riding a three- game win streak Nothing like playing CU to get back on track Along with KU, hottest team in league Losing Blake Girffin hurts tourney chances Most per- plexing team in league (lost 4 of 5) UT euphoria killed with trip to Lawrence 3-game win streak snapped on road Tigers have given up an avg. of 83 points last 7 games Cyclones have dropped 3 straight Haven’t won a conference game on road this year This week in the Big 12 Conference Turgeon 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 27-3 overall 12-3 Big 12 20-8 overall 8-6 Big 12 19-10 overall 9-6 Big 12 21-8 overall 7-7 Big 12 19-10 overall 7-7 Big 12 16-12 overall 7-7 Big 12 16-13 overall 7-8 Big 12 17-11 overall 6-9 Big 12 15-14 overall 5-9 Big 12 14-15 overall 4-10 Big 12 11-18 overall 3-12 Big 12 25-5 overall 12-3 Big 12 Nobody saw this season coming from Texas. Nobody would have guessed they would tie Kansas for a Big 12 Confer- ence title. Yet as remarkable as the Longhorns doing that is, in retrospect, what KU pulled off in the Big 12 two sea- sons ago is even more amazing. That Texas team had Daniel Gibson and LaMar- cus Aldridge, both scoring in double figures presently for their NBA teams. And neither guy was the best player on the team. That was P.J. Tucker. KU started three fresh- men and two sophomores, tied Texas for the regular season title and defeated the Longhorns in the Big 12 Conference tourney title game. That was even more amazing than what Texas has done this year. — TOM KEEGAN TKEEGAN@LJWORLD.COM What Keegan says By Eric Sorrentino l Journal-World copy editor Texas is the only team in the AP Top 25 poll that’s defeated three teams in the Top 10. Those wins: l No. 7 Tennessee, W 97-78 (Nov. 24, Newark, N.J.) l No. 1 UCLA, W 63-61 (Dec. 2, Los Angeles) l No. 3 Kansas, W 72-69 (Feb. 11, Austin, Texas) RESUME BUILDERS UT NCAA Tournament results since coach Rick Barnes took over: THE BARNES ERA Texas is 42-4 at home in Big 12 play the last five years: HOME SUCCESS 1998-99: First-round loss 1999-00: Second round 2000-01: First-round loss 2001-02: Sweet 16 2002-03: Final 4 2003-04: Sweet 16 2004-05: First-round loss 2005-06: Elite 8 2006-07: Second round 2007-08: -- 2002-03: 7-0 2003-04: 7-1 (loss vs. Oklahoma State) 2004-05: 6-2 (losses vs. Iowa State, Oklahoma) 2005-06: 8-0 2006-07: 7-1 (loss vs. Kansas State) 2007-08: 7-0

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Eric [email protected]

Turgeon baffled latelyTexas A&M coach MMaarrkk TTuurr--

ggeeoonn wasn’t exactly pleasedwith the Aggies’ recent incon-sistencies. For instance, A&M

beat TexasTech by 44points onFeb. 27,then lost toOklahoma,64-37, thenext game.

“This isprobablythe most

frustrating season I’ve beenthrough as a coach,” Turgeonsaid. “With that said, we’ve stillwon 21 games. But the ups anddowns are unexplainable. Youdon’t win by 44 one game,then lose like we did.”

A&M (21-8) is 7-7 in confer-ence play.

Big 12 No. 2 in RPIThe Big 12 Conference now

has the second-highest Rat-ings Percentage Index in thenation. As of Sunday, the con-ference had seven teams in theTop 50 of the RPI, which calcu-lates a team’s winning per-centage (50 percent), its

opponents’ winning percent-age (25 percent) and theopponents’ opponents winningpercentage (25 percent).

“I’d be disappointed if wedon’t get six teams in,” Okla-homa State coach SSeeaann SSuutt--ttoonn said of the NCAA Tourna-ment.

The Cowboys (16-12) havenow won five straight confer-ence games to even their Big12 record to 7-7. Sutton hasmentioned in the past that fivegames ago, he set a goal forhis team in the locker room towin its final seven games. Fivedown, two to go.

Griffin to miss timeOklahoma standout fresh-

man BBllaakkee GGrriiffffiinn underwentknee surgery Sunday and willmiss the Sooners’ last two reg-ular-season games. Coach JJeeffffCCaappeell said he expected Griffinto return in time for the Big 12Tournament on March 13.

Griffin, who averages 15.2points and 9.3 rebounds pergame, tore the medial menis-cus in the first half of Satur-day’s victory over Texas Tech.He actually returned in thesecond half and scored 10

points and grabbed fiveboards, despite the injury.

“We didn’t know the extentof the injury at the time,” Capelsaid. “He’s played as well asanyone in this league in thelast five or six games. I would-n’t trade him for anyone in thecountry.”

Rush/Rogers honoredKU’s BBrraannddoonn RRuusshh and Bay-

lor’s KKeevviinn RRooggeerrss were namedthe Big 12 Players of the Week.

Rush went off for 21 pointsagainst Kansas State on Satur-day. Rush leads the Jayhawksin Big 12 play with 14.2 pointsper contest.

Rogers, a 6-foot-9 junior outof Dallas, has averaged 18points and 11.5 rebounds inBaylor’s last two victories, overColorado and Missouri.

Bears break out razorsBaylor coaches made a deal

with their players toward theend of February that for eachgame the Bears won, an assis-tant coach would have toshave his head. The Bears havewon three straight games.They’d still have to win their

final two regular seasongames, then reach the Big 12Tournament championship toapply the razor to head coachSSccootttt DDrreeww.

“Right now, I’m good withmy hair,” Drew said. “Theyhave to keep winning if theywant to see it any different.”

Tough season expectedColorado coach JJeeffff BBzzddeelliikk

had a rather candid responsewhen asked about the Buf-faloes’ 11-17 record (3-11 con-ference).

“What’s happened is fullywhat I expected to happen,” thefirst-year coach said. “I knew weweren’t a very good reboundingteam. I knew we weren’t goingto be a very good defensiveteam. I knew we would struggleto score at times.

“There’s a lot of things beingdone that aren’t reflected intowins: Facilities, culture, envi-ronment, tangible evidencethat there’s an investment inthe basketball program that’snever been done here before. Ialmost have to giggle if any-body thought we’d be doingbetter than what we’re doingright now.”

It might bedifficult for the

Texas Longhorns tosecure a No. 1 seed in the

NCAA Tournament after theloss to Texas Tech.

If Texas wins out in the reg-ular season and advances to atleast the Big 12 Tournamentfinals, though, it will have

plenty to show the nominating commit-tee.

No team in the Associated Press Top25 poll has defeated three Top 10 teamsthis season. No team, that is, except theLonghorns.

Texas ran No. 7 Tennessee out of thegym on Nov. 24 with a 97-78 victory ona neutral court inNewark, N.J. UT thendefeated No. 1 UCLA,63-61, on Dec 2 at PauleyPavilion. The Long-horns capped off theirthird Top 10 victory onFeb. 11 with a 72-69 vic-tory over the No. 3-ranked Kansas Jayhawksat home.

Those victories lookeven better now. UCLA,Tennessee and Kansasare presently third,fourth and fifth, respec-tively, in the AP poll.

Texas coach Rick Barnes said he pur-posely chose diff icult non-leagueteams earlier in the season.

“I will go back to when I was at Prov-idence and what (former coach) DaveGavitt said to me,” Barnes said. “He saidat the end of the year, if you don't get inthe tournament because of your non-league schedule, there's no one toblame but you. He said you have achoice to decide how you want to play.Now do you want a schedule to get inthe NIT? Schedule to get in the NIT. Butif you want a schedule to get in theNCAA Tournament, you better be will-ing to play and not let your schedulework against you.”

The closest any team has come tothree Top 10 victories is Wisconsin.The Badgers have victories against No.9 Texas, No. 11 Indiana and No. 12 Indi-ana.

Close, but not as decorated a resumeas the Longhorns.

Texas, No. 9 in the AP poll, presentlysits at 25-5 (12-3 Big 12) and atop theconference with Kansas. It wasn’t sup-posed to be that way this year, accord-ing to Big 12 coaches.

Before the season, not one coachpicked Texas to win the conference.Ten picked Kansas, while two pickedTexas A&M, which is fifth in the con-ference standings.

So how’s Texas in position to win itssecond Big 12 title in three years?

One answer could be the emergenceof guards D.J. Augustin and A.J. Abrams,who average a combined 36.2 points pergame.

When Kevin Durant darted for theNBA, Augustin instantly became the

Longhorns leader.Augustin, whoreceives at least one“best point guard inthe nation” refer-ence per nationalbroadcast, gets histeammates involvedconsistently. His 5.83assists per game area large reason fourUT players averagedouble-digit pointtotals.

Abrams, who eas-ily has more three-pointers than any-

one in the Big 12, has been the primarybenefactor of Augustin’s ability to slashto the basket.

Defensively, the Longhorns haveseen Connor Atchley and DamionJames play monster roles. Atchley leadsthe conference in blocked shots, whileJames has been a beast on the glass. Infact, James averages a double-doublewith 12.5 points and 10.5 rebounds.

One more home game remains forthe Longhorns — Sunday against Okla-homa State — for at least a share of theBig 12 title.

BIG XII SPOTLIGHTLAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD

A weekly look inside the Big 12 Conference4B

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

BarnesrevitalizesprogramThere’s a reason Texas

men’s basketball coach RickBarnes is locked into a con-tract that would keep him inAustin until 2017.

Simply put, he's the bestbasketball coach in the histo-ry of the program.

Texas’ nine straight tourna-ment appearances in Barnes’first nine seasons — a schoolrecord — would have beenconsidered exceptional in theeras before Barnes arrived.

Now, it’s just expected.When Barnes took the UT

job to start the 1998-1999 sea-son, he didn’t inherit a pro-gram that had much successor tradition.

The farthest Texas hadadvanced in the NCAA Tour-nament was the Final Four,but that was in 1947. Themost recent success Texashad in the tournament wasthe Elite Eight in 1990.

This season will makeBarnes a perfect 10-for-10 intournament appearances. InUT’s previous 58 seasons, itmade the tournament only 16times.

It’s baffling to think beforeBarnes arrived, the UT play-er with the most NBA suc-cess was former Kings/Pac-ers forward LaSalle Thomp-son, who averaged near eightpoints and seven boards inhis 15-year pro career.

Barnes, who coached forsix years at Providence andfour years at Clemson,recruited talent the UT bas-ketball program never hadwitnessed.

Barnes brought in athleteslike Chris Owens, T.J. Ford,Royal Ivey, LaMarcusAldridge, P.J. Tucker, DanielGibson, Kevin Durant, A.J.Abrams, D.J. Augustin andConnor Atchley.

The obvious reason not asingle coach in this year’spreseason poll picked Texasto win the conference wasbecause of the departure ofDurant, who was selectedNo. 2 overall in last year’sNBA Draft.

It’s tough to picture thisgroup actually better afterlosing Durant, but that is thedirection Barnes has ledTexas. Despite several keyplayers darting early to theNBA in the Barnes era, hehas provided enough stabili-ty to make a deep tourna-ment run several years(Sweet 16 in 2001-02, FinalFour in 2002-03, Sweet 16 in2003-2004, Elite Eight in2005-2006).

Few other teams in the Big12 other than Kansas andTexas have this type of stabil-ity. Try picturing KansasState without MichaelBeasley and Bill Walker nextyear. A bit of a different team.

Recently, Barnes has donean impressive job keepingTexas near the top of theconference with Kansas,which has dominated the Big12 with seven conferencetitles in 11 years.

In the realm of Big 12 Con-ference history, Texas clearlyisn’t Kansas. But the Long-horns (134-56, .705) are cur-rently second to the Jay-hawks (156-34, .821) in con-ference winning percentagesince the Big 12 Conferencestarted in 1997.

None of it would be possi-ble for UT without the pro-gram Barnes has built.

— Journal-World copy editor Eric Sorrentinocan be reached at 832-6360

Little giantkillers

———

Texas boasts one of nation’smost appealing resumes

SORRENTINOSCALE

Looked darnnear unbeatablepast twogames

Important forConnor Atch-ley to stayout of foultrouble

Bears ridinga three-game winstreak

Nothing likeplaying CUto get backon track

Along withKU, hottestteam inleague

Losing BlakeGirffin hurtstourneychances

Most per-plexing teamin league(lost 4 of 5)

UT euphoriakilled withtrip toLawrence

3-game winstreaksnapped onroad

Tigers havegiven up anavg. of 83points last 7games

Cycloneshavedropped 3straight

Haven’t wona conferencegame onroad thisyear

This week in the Big 12 Conference

Turgeon

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

27-3 overall

12-3 Big 12

20-8 overall

8-6 Big 12

19-10 overall

9-6 Big 12

21-8 overall

7-7 Big 12

19-10 overall

7-7 Big 12

16-12 overall

7-7 Big 12

16-13 overall

7-8 Big 12

17-11 overall

6-9 Big 12

15-14 overall

5-9 Big 12

14-15 overall

4-10 Big 12

11-18 overall

3-12 Big 12

25-5 overall

12-3 Big 12

Nobody saw this seasoncoming from Texas.Nobody would haveguessed they would tieKansas for a Big 12 Confer-ence title.

Yet as remarkable as theLonghorns doing that is, inretrospect, what KU pulledoff in the Big 12 two sea-sons ago is even moreamazing.

That Texas team hadDaniel Gibson and LaMar-cus Aldridge, both scoringin double figures presentlyfor their NBA teams. Andneither guy was the bestplayer on the team. Thatwas P.J. Tucker.

KU started three fresh-men and two sophomores,tied Texas for the regularseason title and defeatedthe Longhorns in the Big 12Conference tourney titlegame. That was even moreamazing than what Texashas done this year.

— TOM [email protected]

WhatKeegan

says

By Eric Sorrentino lJournal-World copy editor

Texas is the only team in theAP Top 25 poll that’s defeatedthree teams in the Top 10. Thosewins:

lNo. 7 Tennessee, W 97-78(Nov. 24, Newark, N.J.)lNo. 1 UCLA, W 63-61 (Dec. 2,

Los Angeles)lNo. 3 Kansas, W 72-69 (Feb. 11,

Austin, Texas)

RESUME BUILDERS

UT NCAA Tournament results sincecoach Rick Barnes took over:

THE BARNES ERA

Texas is 42-4 at home in Big 12 play thelast five years:

HOME SUCCESS

1998-99: First-round loss1999-00: Second round2000-01: First-round loss2001-02: Sweet 162002-03: Final 4

2003-04: Sweet 162004-05: First-round loss2005-06: Elite 82006-07: Second round2007-08: --

2002-03: 7-02003-04: 7-1 (loss vs. Oklahoma State)2004-05: 6-2 (losses vs. Iowa State, Oklahoma)2005-06: 8-02006-07: 7-1 (loss vs. Kansas State)2007-08: 7-0