big south tourney

shawn555

Registered
Forum Member
Apr 11, 2000
7,192
132
63
berlin md
5dimes
NCAA Men's Basketball Conference Tournaments Big South Conference Tournament
Tue 3/5 12:00PM
HTC Center - Conway, SC - Championship March 10
Coastal Carolina +240
Charleston Southern +250
Gardner-Webb +290
High Point +500
UNC Asheville +600
VMI +2000
Winthrop +3500
Campbell +5000
Liberty +5000
Radford +6000
Presbyterian College +20000
Longwood +75000
 

shawn555

Registered
Forum Member
Apr 11, 2000
7,192
132
63
berlin md
Tuesday, March 5 - First Round
GAME 1: No. 4N Radford vs. No. 5S Winthrop, 12:00pm
GAME 2: No. 3S UNC Asheville vs. No. 6N Longwood, 2:00pm
GAME 3: No. 3N Campbell vs. No. 6S Presbyterian College, 6:00pm
GAME 4: No. 4S Coastal Carolina vs. No. 5N Liberty, 8:00pm

Thursday, March 7 - Quarterfinals
GAME 5: No. 1S Charleston Southern vs. Winner Game 1, 12:00pm
GAME 6: No. 2N VMI vs. Winner Game 2, 2:00pm |
GAME 7: No. 2S Gardner-Webb vs. Winner Game 3, 6:00pm
GAME 8: No. 1N High Point vs. Winner Game 4, 8:00pm

Saturday, March 9 - Semifinals
GAME 9: Winner Game 5 vs. Winner Game 6, 12:00pm (TV: ESPN3)
GAME 10: Winner Game 7 vs. Winner Game 8, 2:00pm (TV: ESPN3)

Sunday, March 10 - Championship
GAME 11: Winner Game 9 vs. Winner Game 10, 12:00pm (TV: ESPN2)
 

shawn555

Registered
Forum Member
Apr 11, 2000
7,192
132
63
berlin md
big south tournament has been part of rotation schedule since 2010.

Up until last year it was just an 8 team tournament.

Last year saw two first round games the under went 2-0 dogs 1-1

Quarterfinal games have been even dogs 6-6, under 7-5 double digit favs 1-4

Semifinals dogs 2-4 under 3-2-1 double digit favs 2-0

Finals under 4-1 dogs 3-2



under in all games 16-8-1
 

shawn555

Registered
Forum Member
Apr 11, 2000
7,192
132
63
berlin md
Longwood-UNC Asheville Tuesday In First Round


inShare
3/4/2013 8:29:00 PM




MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. ? Longwood University will play two-time defending Big South Conference Champion UNC Asheville on Tuesday afternoon, March 5, at 2 p.m. during the first-round of the 2013 VisitMyrtleBeach.com Big South Men's Basketball Championship. The Lancers finished their regular season with a record of 7-24 overall, 4-12 in the Big South, and are the number six seed from the North Division. The Bulldogs finished the season with a record of 16-15 overall, 10-6 in the Big South, and are the number three seed from the South Division. The game will be played at the HTC Center on the campus of Coastal Carolina University in Conway, South Carolina and can be heard locally on WVHL Radio, Kickin' Country 92.9 FM, as well as via the Internet at wvhl.net.

Looking At Longwood
Longwood finished the regular season with four wins in its last six conference games, including three-straight before the league finale on the road at VMI on March 2 (L 94-80). The Lancers are coached by 10th-year head coach Mike Gillian, and are led by Tristan Carey (15.6 points, 5.3 rebounds, 76 3FG), Michael Kessens (13.1 points, 8.5 rebounds, 53% FG) and Jeylani Dublin (10.1 points, 5.7 rebounds, 51% FG). David Robinson (8.8 points, 36 3FG), Karl Ziegler (6.6 points) and Lucas Woodhouse (4.5 points, 5.3 assists) have also been in the recent six-man rotation. The Lancers average 67.6 points, allowing 81.5 points, while shooting 44% (785-1782) from the field, including 31% (152-485) on three-point field goals (4.9) and 69% (375-542) at the free throw line.

Looking At UNC Asheville
UNC Asheville finished the regular season with one win in its last five conference games, and lost its league finale on the road at Winthrop on March 2 (70-61). The two-time defending Big South Champion Bulldogs are coached by 17th-year head coach Eddie Biedenbach, and are led by Jeremy Atkinson (17.7 points, 7.0 rebound) and Keith Hornsby (15.1 points, 50 3FG). Trent Meyer (9.9 points, 64 3FG), Will Weeks (9.0 points, 5.3 rebounds), D.J. Cunningham (7.8 points, 5.9 rebounds, 3.1 blocks) and Jon Nwannunu (7.1 points) have also been in the recent rotation. Asheville averages 71.7 points, allowing 68.6 points, while shooting 45% (798-1759) from the field, including 34% (153-451) on three-point field goals (4.9) and 71% (475-665) at the free throw line.

Series History
Longwood and UNC Asheville are meeting for just the fourth time since first playing during the 1985-86 season. The Bulldogs lead the series, 3-0, including a 68-65 home win this season on January 19 (see below). Asheville also won the two games played 27 years ago, including a 65-62 win in Virginia on December 9, 1985 and a 61-52 win in North Carolina on Jan. 6, 1986.

@UNC Asheville 68 - Longwood 65 / January 19 Recap
Jeremy Atkinson scored 17 points, including the go ahead free throw with 35.3-seconds left, to lead UNC Asheville to the victory at Kimmel Arena. David Robinson led Longwood with a game-high 20 points, but the visitors missed a layup and two three-point field goal attempts in the final minute. The Bulldogs got two free throws from Trent Meyer with 18.7-seconds remaining to secure the win. Asheville led 60-53 with 10:11 left before the Lancers tied it at 64-64 with 2:07 to go on a jumper from Lucas Woodhouse. Atkinson made 1-2 free throws at 1:59, and Michael Kessens made 1-2 free throws at 1:41, leaving it tied at 65-65. Following a defensive stop, Robinson missed a three-pointer with 51-seconds left, before Atkinson made the free throw at :35.3. Woodhouse missed a floater in the lane with 21-seconds to play, and Meyer made his two free throws at :18.7. After timeouts by both teams, Tristan Carey got a good look from the left wing in three-point territory that was off iron with two-seconds left and rebounded by the hosts as the clock expired.

Who's Hot?
Longwood ? with four wins in its last six Big South games, averaging 75.3 points while shooting 48% (163-339) from the field, including 35% (30-86) on three-point field goals (5.0) and 76% (96-127) at the free throw line. The strong finish has been led by a six-man rotation of Tristan Carey (18.8 points, 7.5 rebounds, 18 3FG), Michael Kessens (16.3 points, 6.7 rebounds, 53% FG), Jeylani Dublin (14.3 points, 6.2 rebounds, 59% FG, 82% FT), Lucas Woodhouse (9.5 points, 3.7 rebounds, 8.7 assists, 88% FT), Karl Ziegler (8.3 points, 51% FG) and David Robinson (7.0 points, 7 3FG, 88% FT). Woodhouse (38.3), Carey (37.2), Kessens (33.5), Robinson (30.7), Dublin (28.2) and Ziegler (23.3) have combined to play 1,147 of the 1,200 total minutes in the last six league games. Even more impressive is the fact that these six players began the season with a combined total of five years of collegiate playing experience ? Carey is a junior (two), Robinson is a junior (two), Dublin is a redshirt-sophomore (one), while Kessens, Woodhouse and Ziegler are each freshmen.

Determined To Lead
Tristan Carey (15.6 points, 5.3 rebounds, 1.8 assists) has led Longwood in scoring this season, including a team-best 76 three-point field goals (2.5). He has scored in double-figures during 24 of the 31 games, and has 16 games with at least five rebounds. Carey has the team's seven highest scoring individual games this year, including a career-high 40 points against Liberty on Feb. 19, 31 points against Radford on Feb. 16 and 30 points against FAMU on Nov. 23, along with four other games of at least 23 points. In addition, he enjoyed two excellent games during the 2012 Continental Tire/Las Vegas Invitational on Nov. 23-24 in Las Vegas at the Orleans Arena, averaging 24.5 points and 6.0 rebounds while shooting 58% (18-31) from the field that included an impressive 67% (12-18) on three-pointers. Carey was named the Big South/Choice Hotels Player of the Week on February 25 (see elsewhere), and to the 2012 Continental Tire/Las Vegas Invitational All-Tournament Team (see elsewhere).

Smooth European Import
Michael Kessens (13.1 points, 8.5 rebounds, 53% FG), from Nyon, Switzerland, has been impressive while scoring in double-figures in 24 of the 31 games with 10 double-doubles: 17 points, 15 rebounds against Norfolk State on Nov. 15; 17 points, 11 rebounds at Arkansas on Nov. 18; 14 points, 16 rebounds against FAMU on Nov. 23 in Las Vegas; a career-high 20 points, 14 rebounds against Cornell on Nov. 24 in Las Vegas; 18 points, a career-high 17 rebounds against Central Penn on Nov. 28; 16 points, 11 rebounds against Southern Virginia on Dec. 13; 12 points, 10 rebounds against Coastal Carolina on Jan. 5; 16 points, 11 rebounds at UNC Asheville on Jan. 19; 14 points, 14 rebounds against High Point on Feb. 13; and 11 points, 14 rebounds at UT Martin on Feb. 23. He has five other games with nine rebounds, and has been named The Crons Brand/Big South Freshman of the Week four times (see elsewhere).

Perseverance Pays Off
Jeylani Dublin (10.1 points, 5.7 rebounds, 51% FG) only played in 29 games totaling 148 minutes during his first two years. He missed the final 22 games last year with a broken hand and received a medical hardship waiver from the NCAA. Dublin has started 29 of the 31 games (760 minutes) this season, scoring a career-high 19 points at No. 12 Creighton on Nov. 20. He has three double-doubles: 11 points, 11 rebounds vs. FAMU on Nov. 23 in Las Vegas; 12 points, 10 rebounds at Canisius on Dec. 17; and 14 points, a career-high 12 rebounds at VMI on March 2. He has scored in double-figures in 18 of the 31 games overall. Dublin has 20 games with at least five rebounds.

The Art Of Passing
Lucas Woodhouse (4.5 points, 5.3 assists) has started 14 of the 31 games, including the last 13, during which he is averaging 7.2 points and 8.2 assists. He has already set a new school record for season assists, 164, surpassing the 147 assists by Ryan Earl during 2002-03. Woodhouse has five double-figure assist games: at Radford (10) on Jan. 16, at UNC Asheville (11) on Jan. 19, against Radford (11) on Feb. 16, against Liberty (10) on Feb. 19 and at UT Martin (11) on Feb. 23. He posted double-doubles at Radford (12 points, 10 assists) on Jan. 16, against Radford (12 points, 11 assists) on Feb. 16 and at UT Martin (10 points, 11 assists) on Feb. 23. Woodhouse has 15 games with at least six assists, including 11-straight.

Working Hard To Get There
David Robinson (8.8 points, 36 3FG) played his finest two games of the season back on Nov. 28 and Dec. 1 when he averaged 19.0 points while shooting 62% (16-26, 4-10 3FG) at home against Central Penn (17 points) and Dartmouth (career-high 21 points). More recently, Robinson had 20 points (4-6 3FG), including 15 in the first half, at UNC Asheville on Jan. 19, and 16 points (5-7 FT) against Presbyterian on Jan. 26.

Coming Of Age
Karl Ziegler (6.6 points) has started two of the 31 games, while playing at least 10 minutes in every game, including 20 games with at least 20 minutes on the floor. He has posted career highs of 14 points and seven rebounds at UT Martin on Feb. 23, and again at Campbell on Feb. 27, while posting 13 points at VMI on March 2, 13 points against Liberty on Feb. 19 and 12 points at Liberty on Jan. 22. Ziegler has eight double-figure scoring games and six games with at least five rebounds.

The Three-Point Stat
Longwood has made at least one three-point field goal in 331 consecutive games, dating back to a road game at Division II Lenoir-Rhyne (11.26.02, 0-6), including a school-record 20 three-pointers made at home against VMI (12.12.11, 20-40). The streak, however, was in jeopardy a year ago against UMKC (11.26.11, 1-13) during the 2011 Chicago Invitational Challenge. The Lancers have made 152 three-pointers (4.9) this year, including a season-high, nine three-pointers three times, most recent against Liberty (9-23) on Feb. 19. The season-low is one made three-pointer, that has occurred twice, at home against Southern Virginia on Dec. 13 (1-8) and again at home against High Point on Feb. 13 (1-10).
 

shawn555

Registered
Forum Member
Apr 11, 2000
7,192
132
63
berlin md
Campbell faces Presbyterian Tuesday in Big South Championship First Round


CONWAY, S.C. ? After finishing third in the Big South Conference North Division standings, Campbell opens play Tuesday with a 6:00 p.m. tip-off against Presbyterian in the VisitMyrtleBeach.com Big South Championship. The winner of Tuesday's game will face Gardner-Webb, which finished 2nd in the South, Thursday at 6:00 p.m.

Campbell (12-19, 7-9) dropped its last 3 regular season games, including a 63-62 setback Saturday at High Point in a contest the Camels led by 14 in the 2nd half. Trey Freeman led CU with 19 points, while Marvelle Harris added 14, plus 9 boards and Darian Hooker scored 12.

Presbyterian (8-23, 4-12) finished 6th in the South Division and dropped its final 2 games, including a 76-57 setback Saturday at Gardner-Webb. Khalid Mutakabbir hit a career-high 6 three-pointers in an 18-point showing.

Campbell vs. Presbyterian Notes:

The Blue Hose lead the Big South and rank 16th nationally in team free throw percentage (.759). Campbell stands 4th in the league in free throw accuracy (.711) and made more FTs (411) than PC attempted (396) during the regular season.
Campbell won the only game between the schools this year, 62-46, on Jan. 12 in Clinton, S.C. CU led by 5 at the break and opened the 2nd half on a 12-0 run. Trey Freeman led CU with 13 points, Andrew Ryan and Darius Leonard had 10 each, while Darian Hooker chipped in 9. Marvelle Harris pulled down 13 rebounds. Khalid Mutakabbir led PC with 18 points and Jordan Downing added 13.
Second-team all-conference guard Trey Freeman has already moved into 3rd place on Campbell's single-season assists list (180) and needs only 4 to move past Dan Pogue (183 in 1995-96) into 2nd place. Pogue holds the record with 207 dishes in 1993-94. Freeman also sits 7th on CU's career assists charts (291) in less than 2 full seasons. He leads the league and ranks 23rd in the nation with a 5.81 assists average this year.
Campbell stands 9-9 all-time in Big South Tournament play after last year's quarterfinal loss to Winthrop. Tuesday is PC's Big South tourney debut. Campbell was 2-12 in A-Sun tournament play during its 17-year (1995-2011) membership.
In Campbell's 62-46 win at PC on Jan .19, CU held the Blue Hose to 32.7 percent (17-52) shooting, including 3-of-17 (.176) threes. CU hit 9-of-10 from the line in the last 1:10.
PC stands 5th among Big South schools in 3-point field goals made per game (6.03) and 3rd in 3-point accuracy (.347). Davidson transfer Jordan Downing is 2nd overall among league leaders in 3FG% (.436) after connecting on 50.7% of his treys against Big South competition (1st in the league). He is 7th in 3s per outing (2.32).
Presbyterian senior guard Khalid Mutakabbir is the Big South's all-time leader in minutes played (4503) and is the 2nd-highest active career scorer (1557 points) among BSC players.
Neither Presbyterian (1-17) nor Campbell (4-11) fared well away from home during the regular season. Both schools were 0-2 at neutral sites.
 

shawn555

Registered
Forum Member
Apr 11, 2000
7,192
132
63
berlin md
Trey Freeman leads Campbell into Big South tournament

Trey Freeman leads Campbell into Big South tournament

By Bret Strelow
Staff writer

BUIES CREEK - As a member of AAU legend Boo Williams' less-heralded "B" team, undersized point guard Trey Freeman worked feverishly to become a Division I prospect.

Freeman is now an all-conference performer for Campbell, which opens Big South tournament play today against Presbyterian in Conway, S.C., but a broken toe has limited his practice time and prevented him from making the desired improvements as a college sophomore.

Camels coach Robbie Laing has to repeatedly stress the importance of rest to Freeman, a gym rat who's in basketball purgatory when he's observing workouts rather than participating in them.

"Literally and figuratively, nobody hurts more for Campbell than Trey does," Laing said.

It's been a painful season for the preseason pick to win the Big South's North Division.

Leading scorer Darren White suffered a season-ending knee injury in early January. Freeman, who was initially diagnosed with turf toe, has still managed to average 14.1 points and rank second in the league with 5.8 assists while leading a team that settled for the North's No. 3 seed.

The 6-foot-2, 175-pound Freeman recorded 14 assists in a home win against VMI on Feb. 16 and scored 21 points in an overtime victory at Radford three days later. On Sunday, a day after leading the Camels with 19 points in their 63-62 loss at High Point, Freeman was named second-team all-conference.

"He's been courageous as heck," Laing said. "All year long, he's been playing in severe pain, giving effort. He's had some remarkable games, games healthy people don't have, pushing off a bad wheel."

Longtime AAU program
Williams started his renowned AAU program in the Tidewater area of Virginia in 1982, and the alum list includes such noteworthy names as J.R. Reid, Alonzo Mourning, Joe Smith, Allen Iverson and J.J. Redick.

Bring up Freeman, and Williams speaks admiringly.

"I've been doing it 30 years," he said, "and you couldn't write a story on a better kid."

Former Virginia Tech coach Seth Greenberg expressed regret to Laing last season that Freeman, who had scored 16 points against the Hokies, wasn't in Tech's program. So how did Freeman end up at Campbell?

Associate head coach Charles Baker, who has known Williams for many years, and assistant Brian Burg were one of the first schools to follow Freeman on the summer circuit. He was on Williams' second-tier team, not the higher-profile club that included top-100 recruits James Michael McAdoo (North Carolina), Dorian Finney-Smith (Florida via Virginia Tech) and Justin Anderson (Virginia).

Williams admits he probably made a mistake by putting Freeman on the "B" team, but playing starter's minutes helped him more than being a reserve with the elite group. And it's not like Williams' secondary team ever lacks talent. VCU guards Darius Theus and Briante Weber were "B" players. So was former Old Dominion guard Kent Bazemore, who's in the NBA with the Golden State Warriors.

"What makes me proud about Trey is the work ethic to make himself into a player," Williams said. "He wasn't a kid that was entitled. He worked at it. The biggest thing about Trey, he put in the time and got results from it."

Off the radar
When a coach from a college outside one of the power conferences establishes a solid relationship with an under-the-radar recruit, it's exciting and stressful. The better he plays, the more likely it becomes that bigger schools notice and develop interest.

Laing can remember being in Orlando, Fla., for a national AAU event, and most coaches were at Disney's Milk House arena to watch the top prospects. He used a GPS and drove about 15 minutes to an off-site high school gym where Freeman's team was playing.

After Laing arrived, he spotted Belmont coach Rick Byrd, who was competing against Campbell at the time as the leader of the Atlantic Sun Conference's premier program.

"Oh, no," Laing thought. "Don't let this happen."

Byrd was actually there to see a different player, and he eventually signed with Belmont. Freeman committed to Campbell before the start of his senior season at Kellam High School in Virginia Beach, Va., saying he picked the Camels over Old Dominion, Saint Francis (Pa.) and Colgate. Larger schools were also recruiting him, but Laing could offer immediate playing time with point guard Junard Hartley closing out his college career.

"I felt like I was more important to them," Freeman said. "I felt like I was on the backburner at other schools and here I was more wanted. It felt like a better fit."

Freeman enjoyed a breakout senior year, averaging 20.1 points and earning second-team all-state honors. He started in his Campbell debut, opened with a pair of 20-point games and was 29-for-29 from the free-throw line before finally missing at Iowa.

No sweat. Freeman scored 15 points in a 77-61 upset of the Hawkeyes, and he had 28 points to lead the Camels past Liberty in his first Big South game. He was named the league's freshman of the year after averaging 13.9 points, and the conference recognized him as a first-team pick this preseason.

Under difficult circumstances, Freeman increased his averages across the board.

"He's turned out to be a really good player, and we saw it coming," Williams said. "He's a good scorer, knows how to lead a team. He's a steal for Campbell."

Presbyterian vs. Campbell
Time: 6 p.m., Tuesday, March 5

Where: HTC Center, Conway, S.C.

Records: Presbyterian (8-23, 4-12), Campbell (12-19, 7-9)

The bulletin board: The Camels are the No. 3 seed from the Big South's North Division, and Presbyterian finished sixth in the South Division. The winner plays Thursday at 6 p.m. against South No. 2 seed Gardner-Webb (20-11, 11-5).

"I think we can beat anybody in this league, particularly on a neutral floor, on any night," said Campbell coach Robbie Laing, whose injury-plagued team was picked to win the North Division. "We have to catch lightning in a bottle somehow."
 
Bet on MyBookie
Top