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MUScoop => Hangin' at the Al => Topic started by: CrackedSidewalksSays on October 27, 2011, 04:15:05 PM

Title: [Cracked Sidewalks] The Rest of the Big East, Part II
Post by: CrackedSidewalksSays on October 27, 2011, 04:15:05 PM
The Rest of the Big East, Part II

Written by: noreply@blogger.com (Alan Bykowski)

It's time to continue our look at the teams Marquette will be vying for  conference glory with this season. This is the second installment in our  "Rest of the Big East" preview. If you missed it, the first part is here (http://www.crackedsidewalks.com/2011/10/rest-of-big-east-part-i.html). Without further delay, let's get back to the previews:

Notre Dame
Who's Back: Tim Abromaitis, Scott Martin, Eric Atkins, Joey Thomas, Jack Cooley
Who's New: Jerian Grant, Pat Connaughton
Coaches / Media Predictions: 9th / 9th
The Skinny:  After losing Ben Hansbrough, Carleton Scott, and Tyrone Nash, everyone  will expect a huge drop-off for the Irish. Of course, that was the  expectation last season when Luke Harangody left too. Tim Abromaitis is a  first-team All-Big East pick, and there's plenty of experience with  super-senior Scott Martin and juniors Joey Thomas and Jack Cooley. Eric  Atkins showed plenty of promise as a starter last year, and Jerian Grant  could be a surprise breakout player for the Irish after redshirting  last year. Don't be at all surprised to see Mike Brey's squad finish in  the top half of the Big East. They won't challenge for the title again,  but they will surprise some people.

Pittsburgh
Who's Back: Ashton Gibbs, Travon Woodall, Nasir Robinson
Who's New: Khem Birch, Malcolm Gilbert, Isaiah Epps, Cameron Wright
Coaches / Media Predictions: 4th / 4th
The Skinny:  Gibbs wasn't expected to return and is the Big East Preseason Player of  the Year. While they have some experience in Woodall and Robinson (if  he's healthy) this team is very young. McDonald's All-American center  Birch will likely start, and Gilbert should get time behind him. Epps  and Wright are both redshirt freshmen. The Panthers will almost  certainly enter Big East play with an unbeaten record and top-ten  ranking thanks to a very soft non-conference schedule. But finishing in  the top four might be tough for such a young team. Expect Pitt to stay  in the top half of the league, but they'll need a lot more than Gibbs to  challenge for another Big East crown.

Providence
Who's Back: Vincent Council, Gerard Coleman, Kadeem Batts, Bilal Dixon
Who's New: LaDontae Henton
Coaches / Media Predictions: 15th / 16th
The Skinny:  New coach Ed Cooley is trying to bring the swagger back to Providence,  but it won't happen this year. With Marshon Brooks gone, Providence's  backcourt is thin. Vincent Council and Gerard Coleman both averaged in  double-figures last year, but the only player to back them up is Bryce  Cotton after freshman Kiwi Gardner was ruled ineligible. Up front, the  Friars are a bit undersized (no one over 6'9") and don't have a lot of  experience. Three of the four guys in the expected rotation are  underclassmen. The bottom line is this team is in for a long season.  Their bench only really has two likely contributors beyond the starting  five, and they just aren't very talented. Once Henton matures and guys  like Kris Dunn and Ricardo Ledo arrive, Cooley will have a chance to  turn it around, but right now, there's no way they finish above the  bottom two.

Rutgers
Who's Back: Dane Miller, Gilvydas Biruta, Austin Johnson, Mike Poole
Who's New: Myles Mack, Jerome Seagears
Coaches / Media Predictions: 11th / 11th
The Skinny:  Mike Rice seems to have the Scarlet Knights pointed in the right  direction. Miller, Biruta, and Johnson make up a solid frontcourt,  though losing four-star freshman Kadeem Jack for the year hurts their  depth. The backcourt isn't nearly as settled. Freshmen Myles Mack and  Jerome Seagears will both be in line for major minutes, as the only  returning guard to average more than 11 mpg or 3 ppg is erratic shooter  Mike Poole. A bid to the NCAAs may not be far off, but it likely won't  yet come this year. Expect Rutgers to finish around where they are  predicted and be in pretty good shape for a NIT berth when March rolls  around.

Seton Hall
Who's Back: Jordan Theodore, Herb Pope, Fuquan Edwin
Who's New: Kevin Johnson, Aaron Cosby
Coaches / Media Predictions: 13th / 13th
The Skinny:  Seniors Theodore and Pope had better lead this team, because they are  the only two upperclassmen on Kevin Willard's team. Trying to predict  what SHU will do is like throwing darts in the ocean. If healthy,  Theodore and Pope have the ability to be All-Big East players. Edwin  needs to become more consistent to help pick up the scoring slack left  by Jeremy Hazell. A trio of European imports, sophomores Aaron  Geramipoor and Patrik Auda and freshman Haralds Karlis, will likely need  to contribute significant minutes. SHU also has two solid recruits in  Johnson and Cosby that could contribute. The Pirate faithful think the  13th-placed predictions are a slight, and that an easier non-conference  schedule and a healthy team should have them in the top half of the Big  East and back in the NCAA Tournament. But objectively, it would only  take one senior getting injured to tank the season. This team should  land somewhere just below the middle of the league, with postseason  play, more likely the NIT, a distinct possibility.

And that's  two-thirds of the league previewed. Keep your eyes open this weekend for  a look at the final five teams in the Big East.

http://www.crackedsidewalks.com/2011/10/rest-of-big-east-part-ii_27.html
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