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Author Topic: Rush the Court MU season in review  (Read 1135 times)

Pakuni

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Rush the Court MU season in review
« on: May 21, 2013, 12:04:39 PM »
Season in Review: Marquette Golden Eagles
May 21st, 2013

The Golden Eagles earned a share of their first Big East regular season championship with their second consecutive 14-4 conference record. As the No. 3 seed in the Big East Tournament, Buzz Williams’ squad was dispatched in their first game by a lower-seeded Notre Dame team. But it rebounded in the Big Dance, visiting the Sweet Sixteen for the third straight year before suffering an Elite Eight loss to Syracuse in Washington, D.C.

Preseason Expectations

Despite coming off the program’s best season as a Big East member in 2011-12, most anticipated a rebuilding year as Buzz Williams sought to replace leading scorers Darius Johnson-Odom and Jae Crowder. The Golden Eagles were tagged seventh at Big East Media Day (behind Pitt, Notre Dame and Cincinnati), while we here at the Big East microsite ranked them fifth (still behind the Irish and Bearcats) in what was perhaps our most glaring collective miscalculation.

The Good

The Golden Eagles surpassed everyone’s expectations, which in large part was attributable to the coaching abilities of Williams. Even with elite talent –– a luxury that Williams has never had –– nobody takes a program to three straight Sweet Sixteens without having a pretty good notion of what they’re doing. Vander Blue (14.3 PPG, 3.2 RPG) finally bloomed into the explosive scorer everyone expected him to be when he joined the program two years ago, becoming the team’s leading scorer while shooting 45% from the floor. Much in the way that Kadeem Batts developed in 2012-13, so too did Davante Gardner (11.5 PPG, 4.8 RPG) fashion himself into a trustworthy asset on both ends of the floor, becoming one of the best free throw-shooting big men in the league.

The Bad

Todd Mayo (5.3 PPG, 14.1 MPG) remained a non-factor after off-the-court issues plagued his freshman year. Coming off a summer-long suspension with an opportunity to split minutes with Trent Lockett and Blue, Mayo was instead declared academically ineligible and sat out the first 10 games of the year. Subsequently, he regressed statistically in nearly every facet and failed to score more than 13 points in a game after doing so five times as a freshman. Although Blue became a prolific scorer, he remained woefully inefficient from beyond the arc, shooting just 30.3%. That Blue led the team in made three-point shots (with only 40 buckets) reveals a major weakness in the Golden Eagles’ offense; Jamil Wilson was the only other player to make as many as 30 threes (at a 36% clip). In the Elite Eight blowout loss to Syracuse and its suffocating 2-3 zone, Marquette went 3-of-25 (12%) from beyond the arc, as Blue, Wilson and Junior Cadougan shot a combined 2-of-18.

The Future

Marquette’s prospects for next year fell victim to perhaps the most shocking of NBA early entries when Blue channeled God Shammgod and declared for the draft against virtually everyone’s advice. Lockett (7.0 PPG, 5.1 RPG) was a serviceable backcourt fill-in for Johnson-Odom this season, but his single year of eligibility is now up. The graduation of senior point guard Cadougan (8.5 PPG, 3.8 APG) leaves only two of this past year’s five leading scorers remaining on the roster in Gardner and Jamil Wilson (9.7 PPG, 4.9 RPG). Nevertheless, Marquette appears poised to reload with the best recruiting class of the Williams era, which Scout currently ranks #6 and tied for tops in the Big East (the Big East of yore, that is –– the one with Syracuse and the defending National Champions). Mayo will compete with highly-touted incoming freshmen JaJuan Johnson and Duane Wilson to replace Blue and Cadougan in an entirely overhauled backcourt. Williams filled his junior college quota with 6’8″ Iowa prospect Jameel McKay, who eschewed offers from Indiana, Memphis and others to come to Wisconsin and try to become the next Jae Crowder. McKay should complement Gardner and Jamil Wilson well, while physical four-star small forward Deonte Burton will take a spot right behind Wilson in what’s shaping up to be the most talented and deep frontcourt in the Catholicized Big East. Productive 6’11″ role player Chris Otule (5.1 PPG, 63.4 FG%), who suffers from glaucoma, has asked his school to formally petition the NCAA for a sixth year of eligibility on his behalf, and he is expected to receive it.

http://rushthecourt.net/2013/05/21/season-in-review-marquette-golden-eagles-2/

Jay Bee

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Re: Rush the Court MU season in review
« Reply #1 on: May 21, 2013, 01:52:46 PM »
Productive 6’11″ role player Chris Otule (5.1 PPG, 63.4 FG%), who suffers from glaucoma, has asked his school to formally petition the NCAA for a sixth year of eligibility on his behalf, and he is expected to receive it.

smh
Thanks for ruining summer, Canada.