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The Bullpen

Gonna try to talk about different areas of the team leading up to the Holidays and subsequently the start of the new season. Seems like forever between the end and the beginning of the next one.

I'm starting here because I think this group holds the key to whether or not the team is good or great. Just my opinion, but looking at other areas of the team, we are solid.

In the other thread we talked about the starting rotation (if the season started today) . Probably Bennett, Miller and Detmers. So, if we take those 3 out of the equation, who's left?...

WBB Cards clobber Clemson 76-44

After less than 40 hours rest, the Louisville women's basketball squad traveled to Clemson, met the challenged and dispatched the Tigers by 32 points. "Jones for three", Kylee power, going 0 for third quarter and other mischief awaits, so let's grab the feline by the tail and "ride the Tiger" (sorry Jefferson Starship) to today's ...

FIVE THINGS ABOUT THIS GAME

5) Why, yes I am a three-point shooter. Jazmine Jones delivered a perfect three-for-three "three" performance from beyond the arc yesterday as part of her game-high 17 points. She was 3 for 10 for the season prior to Saturday. Yes, we were sending up little prayers for success with Coach Walz each time she released a "trey". I'm not sure who was more stunned -- the scorekeeper, Clemson's defense or the Cardinal coaches. JJ Airlines adds a new feature to her flight plan.

4) If you miss it, I will find it. Kylee Shook grabbed a career high 15 rebounds against Amanda Butler's squad. 14 on the defensive end. She's taken to heart the Walz edict to the team "Go get the ball." Toss in three blocks, numerous shot alternation attempts and a couple of steals and you now know why I "think highly of Kylee" after this contest. Walz preaches each player finding their role on the team. Anyone want to guess what the Colorado Springs native's role is?

3) Pretty sure there's still a rim up there. Clemson's third quarter shooting performance was, well, not a thing of beauty. They tried an assortment of 12 attempts. Nothing went in. Figure that they were 3-26 from the floor in the second half and it doesn't surprise my that the local police are actively searching for a missing rim from Littlejohn Arena somewhere on the campus. Credit the Cardinal defense for creating the "failure to successfully launch", yes, but a few of those were wide open attempts that even Mrs. Wilson's fifth grade cagers at Caruthers Elementary consistently make.

2) Full "treys" delivered. Louisville continued to show they are a team to be reckoned from three point range A dozen of them tickled the nets Saturday (out of 25 attempts) and just about everyone got into the nightclub. Dana = 3, Arica =3, Jazmine = 3, Asia = 2 and Seygan Robins found one in the fourth quarter. The fourth quarter was when the bombardment was the strongest, the Cards going 5 for 10 from "outside". By then, the Clemson squad had turned off the "air raid" siren and gone to the bunkers. Shoving instead of guarding. Hands on hips. Searching for a white flag.

1) Runs are good. Louisville used a couple of runs to open this contest up. An 18-0 blitz in the first quarter and 32-6 sprint over the end of the second quarter to midway through the third quarter. The Cards scored 20 points off 17 Clemson turnovers and showed very little sign of "dead legs" after the huge win Thursday. Clemson, on the other hand, depended on 77 "bench" minutes (out of a possible 200). No doubt they were tired after getting pummeled by Notre Dame Thursday. The 24-12 Cardinal advantage in the final ten minutes featured 60% shooting by Louisville.

Bring on Syracuse.

-- sonja --



Why Missouri Football Got the Punishment That UNC Hoops Avoided

Great Article on the incredible irrationality of the NCAA: Missouri Punishment

My Take: Basically if a whole school cheats pervasively it's OK. When a very few players cheat, it's not OK. UNC degrees are worthless shams. UNC should have received the death sentence.

ANDY STAPLES Jan 31 2019 Sports Illustrated (SI)

https://www.si.com/college-football/2019/01/31/missouri-postseason-ban-academic-fraud-unc-basketball

Among the penalties the NCAA’s Committee on Infractions handed down to Missouri on Thursday because a former tutor did classwork for athletes, the most notable and damaging is a one-year bowl ban for Missouri’s football program. This case was a clear violation of the NCAA’s rules, and Missouri officials admitted the misconduct happened.

Sounds pretty open and shut, right? But it never is when it comes to NCAA infractions cases, because the NCAA has yet to prove it can investigate or adjudicate these cases fairly or evenly.

This penalty, which Missouri athletic director Jim Sterk has promised the school will appeal, will have a long tail. Every Missouri football player with only one season of eligibility remaining now is free to transfer anywhere and play immediately—regardless of whether that player has graduated. This could decimate the roster ahead of a season that seemed to have so much promise when Clemson graduate transfer quarterback Kelly Bryant chose the Tigers.

Some of you are probably wondering why that’s such a big deal. The rules were broken. The school admitted it. A penalty was due.

More of you are probably saying this: But what about North Carolina?

That’s because every case the NCAA handles involving academic fraud will now be viewed through the prism of what the COI did to North Carolina for a case involving years of fake classes that had a disproportionate percentage of athletes enrolled. And what did the COI do to North Carolina for years of academic fraud that helped the Tar Heels’ teams?

Nothing.

This column won’t re-litigate that case, nor will it bash North Carolina for its defense in that case. In fact, UNC’s defense was brilliant. The NCAA doesn’t have a rule against having an entire department full of fake classes that is open to every student on campus. The NCAA’s enforcement staff tried to accuse UNC of giving athletes “extra benefits,” which was incredibly stupid because the NCAA’s definition of an extra benefit is basically “something that isn’t available to the entire student body.” The classes were available to the entire student body. It’s an airtight defense, and it worked. Members of the COI—who work for schools and conferences—knew they couldn’t punish UNC because if UNC sued in real court, the verdict from the NCAA’s kangaroo court would never hold up.

The members of the COI who handled the Missouri case pointed out this difference in the report they released Thursday.

“The conduct at issue in this case is also distinguishable from the COI's decision in University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (2017). Among other differences, UNC stood by the courses and the grades it awarded student-athletes. In support of that position, UNC asserted courses were created and graded by an office secretary, student-athletes completed their own work. Here, by contrast, Missouri acknowledged that the tutor completed student-athletes’ work and, in most instances, this conduct violated its honor code.”

This is a massive cop-out that also happens to be 100% accurate. The NCAA never has and never will be in the business of judging an individual curriculum (at the college level; the NCAA is quite judgmental when it comes to high school coursework) and will leave that sort of thing to the accrediting agencies.

But this logic does nothing to satisfy rational, logical individuals who see this relative flea getting swatted with a sledgehammer while the elephant wanders away unscathed. It also does nothing to contradict the public image of the NCAA as a capricious steward that seems fundamentally incapable of applying its brand of justice fairly.

NIESEN: The NCAA Is Hitting Missouri Hard at the Worst Possible Time

Twelve years ago, Florida State was found guilty in an academic fraud case involving 61 athletes, 23 of them football players, who were given the answers to a test. The football program lost scholarships and had to vacate wins. Like Missouri on Thursday, Florida State officials decried the punishment as too harsh. But that was because it affected Bobby Bowden’s official win total. It didn’t affect the bottom line because there was no bowl ban. A case more similar to Missouri’s wrapped last year at Notre Dame. In that case, the COI found that an athletic trainer had helped two football players commit academic fraud and had provided six other players with impermissible benefits. The Irish were forced to vacate wins from 2012 and 2013, but they didn’t face a postseason ban. In both those cases, just as in the Missouri case, the schools admitted the rules had been broken.

But neither Florida State nor Notre Dame were slapped with a postseason ban. Missouri got one in football, baseball and softball in this case. The football postseason ban in particular could cost Missouri millions and could affect the program for years. Based on what Ole Miss is expected to lose from its SEC revenue distribution for being banned from a bowl this past season (about $8 million, with $4 million due back to Ole Miss if it has no trouble for five years), this could be a very expensive financial penalty for a case that looks similar to others that didn’t generate as harsh a penalty. The effect on the roster could be worse. If a large group of seniors leaves to play elsewhere, the Tigers will get creamed this year. That will affect recruiting for the classes of 2020 and ’21. Vacating wins that can easily confirmed on YouTube has nowhere near the effect causing a season of futility does. The NCAA will point out that Missouri is being punished as a repeat offender, but the most recent major infractions case involving Missouri wrapped in 2016 and involved men’s basketball. The tutor in the recent case also was found to have helped a men’s basketball player commit academic fraud, but that program did not receive a postseason ban. So because the COI was still mad about what Missouri basketball did years ago, it chose to hand down a tougher penalty to Missouri ... football?

Those final few sentences explain why the NCAA’s justice system is so frustrating to athletes, coaches and fans. In real court, defendants cut plea deals all the time. But prosecutors in a jurisdiction try to keep the punishments consistent. The COI—which has a constantly changing membership—rarely delivers consistent punishments. All three of the schools mentioned above cooperated with the NCAA in cases with similar circumstances. Only one got the NCAA equivalent of jail time.

None of this will ever change unless the schools—which make the NCAA’s rules and set up the NCAA’s disciplinary process—demand a change and then make that change. By their unwillingness to make any meaningful change, we should assume the schools are perfectly happy with a system that feels as if it doles out punishments by throwing darts at a board.

The people at the schools are the only ones who can effect change. And they don’t seem to care until they’re on the business end of a penalty that feels chosen at random.

SEC announces 2017-18 revenue distribution

SEC announces 2017-18 revenue distribution
Quote:Commissioner Greg Sankey announced Friday that approximately $627.1 million of total revenue was divided among the 14 institutions of the Southeastern Conference for the 2017-18 fiscal year, which ended August 31, 2018.

The total includes $604.1 million distributed from the conference office, as well as $23.0 million retained by institutions that participated in 2017-18 football bowl games to offset travel and other related bowl expenses.

The average amount distributed from the conference office, excluding bowl money retained by participants, was slightly over $43.1 million per school.
http://www.secsports.com/article/2590024...stribution

Access to mental health services guaranteed by P5

Also: P5 conferences also commit to change agent rules by January 2020

https://www.ncaa.org/about/resource...alth-services-guaranteed-autonomy-conferences

Big Changes are Starting:

Student-athletes in the Division I autonomy conferences (P5) are guaranteed access to mental health services and resources under legislation adopted unanimously by the Atlantic Coast, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12 and Southeastern conferences at the 2019 NCAA Convention.

The rule change is the latest move to improve the college experience for student-athletes and underscores the commitment to all aspects of student-athlete health.


The legislation requires all schools to make mental health services and resources available through the athletics department or the school’s health services or counseling services department. In addition, schools must distribute to student-athletes mental health educational materials and resources, including a guide to the mental health services and resources available at the school and information about how to access them.

The proposal was sponsored by the Pac-12 Conference. Erik Price, associate commissioner for compliance, introduced the proposal.

“This is the No. 1 issue facing our student-athletes on campus today. There is no school in this room that hasn’t already recognized this,” Price said. “Creative solutions are popping up everywhere, including from student-athletes who are destigmatizing anxiety, depression and other disorders that are so prevalent on our campuses. … We’d like to put in the manual, etch into it, a commitment to these services.”

Kayla Ellis, a student-athlete who competes in women’s volleyball at Oregon State, concurred.

“Just as important as physical well-being is mental well-being,” she said. “There are a lot of pressures that come along with sports, and this is … important to move us forward.”

The rule will take effect Aug. 1.

Additionally, team meetings now are allowed during the week immediately following the season, which previous legislation required to be free of athletically related activities. This change is effective immediately.

The autonomy conferences also adopted a resolution committing to bring forward specific legislative proposals that will redefine agent and advisor rules to assist student-athletes with career planning and decision making.

The resolution also committed the conferences to work collaboratively with the rest of Division I, including the Division I Council and other relevant organizations, to bring forward legislative proposals regarding tryouts with professional teams, and proposals in any other area of legislation applicable to the career planning.

“As we modernize rules in this area we want to help students, not hurt them by creating eligibility traps,” said Chad Hawley, associate commissioner at the Big Ten Conference. All five conferences sponsored the resolution.


The resolution committed the conferences to sponsoring and adopting legislation in these areas by the 2020 NCAA Convention.

Proposal. Source. What would change? Action
2018-110 — Meals for GA in women’s rowing and swimming and diving. Atlantic Coast Conference. For graduate assistant coaches in women’s rowing and swimming and diving, would replace training table meals with meals incidental to organized team activities. Adopted, 65-0-5. Effective Aug. 1, 2019.

2018-111 — Replace “relatives” and “parents or legal guardians” with “family members.” Atlantic Coast Conference. Would replace the terms “relatives” and “parents or legal guardians” with “family members” in all autonomy provisions. Adopted, 69-0-1.

2018-112 — Housing and meals during required summer athletic activities for student-athletes not enrolled in summer school. Big 12 Conference. Would allow schools to provide room and board to incoming student-athletes participating in required summer athletic activities before initial summer school enrollment and to student-athletes participating in summer activities who aren’t enrolled in summer school. Adopted, 62-16-2. Effective immediately.

2018-113 — Housing and meals during required summer athletic activities before enrollment. Big Ten Conference. Would allow schools to provide room and board to incoming student-athletes participating in required summer athletic activities before initial summer school enrollment. Rendered moot by the Division I Council’s adoption of 2018-42.

2018-115 — Game tickets during official visits. Southeastern Conference. Would reduce, from six to five, the maximum number of free home game tickets a prospective student-athlete can receive during an official visit. Adopted, 57-12-1. Effective Aug. 1, 2019.

2018-116 — Game tickets during unofficial visits. Big 12 Conference. Would allow schools to reserve tickets in addition to the maximum number of free tickets for the use of additional people with a prospective student-athlete on an unofficial visit. The tickets would be offered at face value. Adopted, 62-7-1. Effective Aug. 1, 2019.

2018-117 — Parking on unofficial visit. Atlantic Coast Conference. Would allow schools to arrange for special parking on unofficial visits. Defeated, 47-23-0.

2018-118 — Requiring access to mental health services. Pac-12 Conference. Would require schools to provide student-athletes access to mental health services. Adopted, 80-0-0. Effective Aug. 1, 2019.

2018-119 — Omega-3 Fatty Acids. Big 12 Conference. Would allow schools to provide omega-3 fatty acids to student-athletes. Adopted, 70-0-0. Effective immediately.

2018-120 — Team meetings during the seven-day required break from athletically related activities after a season ends. Atlantic Coast Conference. Would allow a team to have an end-of-season team meeting during the required week off from athletically related activities, provided no countable athletically related activities occur. Adopted, 62-18-0. Effective immediately.

R-2018-1 — Commitment to bring forward legislation related to agents. Atlantic Coast, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12 and Southeastern conferences. Commits the conferences to bringing forward legislation changing amateurism rules related to engagement with agents by the 2020 NCAA Convention. Adopted, 74-2-4.
  • Passage of a proposal, amendment or other motion requires at least a majority of yes votes from three separate conferences in combination with at least 48 yes votes from student-athlete delegates and school voters, or a majority of four separate conferences, along with at least 41 yes votes from student-athletes and school voters.
  • An abstention has the same effect as a “no” vote in calculations toward a majority of conference members.
Media Contact
Michelle
Brutlag Hosick
Associate Director of Public and Media Relations
NCAA
mhosick@ncaa.org

FB RECRUITING: Quick Saturday night visitor update

For this final weekend before national signing day, Louisville only had a handful of visitors: Dez Melton, Gervarrius Owens, Jalen Mitchell, and grad transfer TJ Holl.

Of no surprise I am hearing that the official visits are all going well. With that being said, from a conversation I had with a source, I am mainly focused on watching for a commitment from TJ Holl. We knew coming in that Melton seemed to be a secondary option to Tyler Devera, Jalen Mitchell to Jamious Griffin, and Gervarrius Owens to Starks/Nomura/Edwards. My understanding is that those are still the case which tells me the staff feels pretty confident in their top options. On their main target this weekend, Holl, I'm told that the staff feels very confident they can get him.

As always I'll keep you updated with what I'm hearing!

UNC is just better...

I know the Cards drilled them earlier in the season. But UNC has much more depth, size, and experience. Oh, and talent too.

Cards are having a good year, over achieving. When they get loose from behind the arc they can beat anybody. But when the 3 isn't going, they are in trouble.

This game looked a lot like the UK game.

UNC is probably a top 5-10 team. No shame in today's result.
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Cards v. UNC Part 2

Big game tomorrow to say the least.

The Cards started off the game at UNC on fire and things just snowballed from there. Cards had it going from inside and out... played great defense and kept UNC off the offensive glass. UNC was never able to really get their legs under them.

Cards will see a different team tomorrow. Can they replicate that same performance? Probably not to that level but if they can keep UNC off the glass and limit their transition baskets... I like the Cards chances.

The numbers from the first game @ UNC (recipe for a win):

Cards shot 52% from field. 42% from 3. Cards had 30 defensive rebounds and did an excellent job keeping UNC off the offensive boards.

UNC shot 35% from field. 14% from 3.

North Carolina vs Louisville History

North Carolina and Louisville have played together 18 times. Louisville has 5 Wins.

Since becoming a member of the ACC, Louisville has played North Carolina 7 times. Louisville has 3 Wins. Two of the 3 Wins were at the Yum Center.

One of the 7 ACC games with North Carolina was an ACC Tourney game. Thus 6 Regular Season matchups.

Altogether, Louisville has been ranked in 11 of the 18 games they played. North Carolina has been ranked in all 18 games.

The first ever UL-UNC game was March 25, 1972. North Carolina won that NCAA Tourney game 105-91.

On March 20, 1986, Louisville beat UNC 94-79 on its way to the CARDS' second NCAA National Championship.

The average score of all 18 games was UNC 81.7 -- UofL 77.7

In Louisville's top 100 most played opponents, Louisville has its lowest win % against UNC (@ 0.278), Virginia (@ ).200) and Georgetown (@ 0.250).
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