Basketball resumes in the Palestra

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Two-time national runner-up Bulldogs visit the Palestra in the quarterfinals of the College Basketball Invitational




The recent storylines of the Penn and Butler basketball seasons couldn?t be more different.

The Bulldogs (21-14) spent the last two years in the national spotlight ? NCAA tournament darlings who defied all odds to reach the national finals twice in two years.

The Quakers (20-12) are coming out of the national cellar ? still fresh off the worst season in program history in 2010 ? and haven?t been to the big dance since 2007. Their last tournament win was 18 years ago, when Penn coach Jerome Allen was the starting point guard.

History aside, both will meet at the Palestra Monday night in the quarterfinals of the College Basketball Invitational, and if this weekend?s postseason action has taught us anything, history, rankings, seedings and standings must be put aside.

?They still have to come on the road and play us,? said sophomore guard Miles Cartwright, who led the Quakers with 23 points in a first-round win over Quinnipiac Wednesday.

?I know [the Bulldogs] have a couple guys who have been there, been in that situation and that?s going to help them,? Cartwright said. ?But I don?t feel like it?s a great advantage. I feel like we have experience too. We?re going to use that to our advantage too.?

While Butler may have postseason experience, coach Brad Stevens fields a young team this year. Only three players who logged more than 10 minutes in the NCAA title game last year remain.

One of those, 6-foot-11 junior Andrew Smith, now leads the Bulldogs with 10.9 points per game. The center scored 17 points and grabbed seven rebounds in Butler?s 75-58 win over Delaware in a first-round CBI game last week, and will be a tough matchup for Penn?s young post players.

After six consecutive postseason appearances ?five of them in the NCAA tournament ? and three conference championships in four years, Butler finished tied for third in the Horizon League and exited the conference tournament in the semifinals after a 19-point loss to Valparaiso.

?They play extremely hard,? Allen said of the Bulldogs. ?They defend, they rebound the ball, they share the ball and it should be a good test for us.?

Allen knows Butler?s postseason experience will be an advantage.

?That?s something you can?t discount,? he continued. ?The fact that those guys have been around, they?re used to playing on the road. They?re used to playing in the middle of March, so certain things won?t be foreign to them.?

While both teams would certainly rather be playing in a certain other tournament come March, neither is taking Monday?s matchup lightly.

?On the periphery it might seem like we?re not really playing for anything, but this means the world to us,? Cartwright said.

While Allen only takes things one game at a time, he?s hoping the experience in the CBI breeds some desire for a bigger stage next year.

His hope is that ?come next September, that?s all they?ll be thinking about.?
 

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ZACK-SANITY?

Butler coach Brad Stevens compared Penn senior Zack Rosen to another Ivy League guard of some renown. "His numbers are almost across the board better than Jeremy Lin," Stevens said. "He is the Ivy League Player of the Year. Jeremy Lin wasn't." Rosen (18.5 ppg, 5.3 apg, 40 percent on 3s) and Butler's Ronald Nored are two of 10 finalists for the Lowe's Senior Class Award.



BY THE NUMBERS

Road teams are 2-14 in four years of CBI quarterfinals
. . . . Penn has won eight of nine games and Butler eight of 10. . . . Penn is 6-1 in games decided by three or fewer points and 9-1 when limiting opponents to fewer than 60 points. . . . Against a common opponent -- Delaware -- Penn won 69-60 and Butler won 75-58 (in the CBI). . . . This will be Nored's 142nd game, breaking Matt Howard's school record. Nored has 204 steals, three fewer than Butler record held by Thomas Jackson (1998-2002).
 

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Progress at line has been vital
Bulldogs hope to sustain considerably improved free throw shooting in tonight's CBI quarterfinal






A Butler basketball team without free throw shooters would be like a Kenyan track team without distance runners.

Butler's coordinator of basketball operations, Darnell Archey, shot .973 in 2002-03 and set an NCAA Division I record by making 85 free throws in a row. Another ex-Bulldog, A.J. Graves, shot .948 in 2006-07 and is seventh on the all-time NCAA list at .900. Graves' brother, Matthew, a Butler associate head coach, shot .868 in 1997-98.

The current Bulldogs aren't as sharp as all that, but their late-season improvement contrasts with earlier struggles. They will try to stay steady from the foul line when they play at Penn tonight in a quarterfinal of the College Basketball Invitational.

A victory would send the Bulldogs (21-14) into a semifinal Wednesday at Hinkle Fieldhouse against Princeton (20-11) or Pittsburgh (18-16). Those teams play tonight.

Over the past 13 games, the Bulldogs have shot .691 on free throws. Unimpressive? Yes, but markedly better than .619 through the first 22 games, then making Butler among the worst in the country.

Coach Brad Stevens said the staff didn't panic about free throws. Players said they shot more on their own, especially during semester break. Stevens conceded "it's hard to reinvent the wheel" at midseason and that summer-long practice is necessary for accuracy.

"You have to identify what they need to do," Stevens said. "Try to coach them on that. Obviously, small tweaks are all you can do. The repetition of doing it the right way every time is the critical component to free throw percentage. Just like putting."

Sophomore forward Khyle Marshall shot .485 on free throws through Jan. 26, including 1-of-6 and 0-of-5 games. He has improved that to .667 on 18-of-27 since then.

"I definitely feel more relaxed," Marshall said. "I just try to clear my mind of everything and not really think about it. I imagine it as if we were shooting free throws in practice. You block out the fans and people on the line.

"Just me and the rim."

Ronald Nored has long been accurate in the clutch, but his overall percentages were .469, .623 and .632 in his first three seasons. He is shooting .706 as a senior, .814 over the past 13 games.

Nored said performing well in other areas can give a player confidence, and a confident player makes free throws.

Stevens said Nored worked diligently to limit shooting motion. The coach said that before the season, he calculated it would be important for Nored to make free throws because Butler would be in many close games and Nored often would have the ball.

"Just go up there and shoot them and make them," Nored said.
 
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