UA Basketball 2014-2015 Discussion

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azgreg
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Re: UA Basketball 2014-2015 Discussion

Post by azgreg »

Spaceman Spiff wrote:
catgrad97 wrote:So all the yearly profits of the Arizona football program, even now, get swallowed up by girls basketball, times 250 percent?

That's a problem.
That's reality most places. There are lots of nonrevenue sports that lose money every year.
All the Olympic sports come to mind.
catgrad97
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Re: UA Basketball 2014-2015 Discussion

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To the tune of $3.5 million, though?
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Merkin
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Re: UA Basketball 2014-2015 Discussion

Post by Merkin »

Spaceman Spiff wrote:
catgrad97 wrote:So all the yearly profits of the Arizona football program, even now, get swallowed up by girls basketball, times 250 percent?

That's a problem.
That's reality most places. There are lots of nonrevenue sports that lose money every year.
Pretty much all of them. Not sure how many Div I sports there are, but at least 20, with only men's BB and FB making money, and from that article above not even many of those do.

20 scholarships for women's rowing, 15 for women's equestrian, and 12.6 for men's lacrosse? http://www.scholarshipstats.com/ncaalimits.html
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Re: As good a place as any to post this

Post by Katzenfreund »

.
Last edited by Katzenfreund on Thu May 07, 2015 12:28 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: UA Basketball 2014-2015 Discussion

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azgreg
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Re: UA Basketball 2014-2015 Discussion

Post by azgreg »

Merkin wrote:
Isn't that Dudek's desert budget?
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Re: As good a place as any to post this

Post by Lute4God »

Katzenfreund wrote:
azgreg wrote:Many tourney teams don't turn profit

http://espn.go.com/mens-college-basketb ... urn-profit
I've read the article earlier today. You forgot to mention the most important part, though...
While schools are required to file numbers, how schools report the data varies greatly, depending on what they choose to attribute to a certain program. For example, a school might decide to attribute more or less TV revenue, sponsorship money or donations to the basketball team when it's not exactly clear how much came in from the program alone.
20 minutes worth watching...



Agreed!

Oliver does his homework. Quite a bit I didnt know already. System is broken if it's basic purpose is to deny workman's comp type help for thousands and thousands of college athletes.
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Re: UA Basketball 2014-2015 Discussion

Post by AZCatGirl »

http://www.tucsonnewsnow.com/story/2857 ... s-bad-boys

Really good article about the team.
“The reality is that the hardest games to win are over teams on their home court. Teams that don’t play those games can spin it however they want, but what they’re saying is, ‘We don’t want to lose in our non conference season.’" - Sean Miller
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Re: UA Basketball 2014-2015 Discussion

Post by HiCat »

AZCatGirl wrote:http://www.tucsonnewsnow.com/story/2857 ... s-bad-boys

Really good article about the team.

Yep, good stuff. Cool reading.


Miller's model for Arizona: Pistons' Bad Boys
Posted: Mar 20, 2015 2:47 PM Updated: Mar 20, 2015 2:47 PM


Anthony Gimino Anthony Gimino

By Anthony Gimino
Special for Tucson News Now

When ESPN debuted a special on an iconic era of Detroit Pistons basketball last spring, Arizona Wildcats coach Sean Miller had a new motivational tool.

The network's "30 for 30" documentary -- "Bad Boys" -- has become a foundational focal point for Miller's team, which continues its march through the NCAA Tournament with a game Saturday against Ohio State in Portland.

Miller's persona, as a player and as a coach, is of a bulldog from Pittsburgh, so the sensibilities of that Pistons era of basketball fit perfectly with what he is further trying to accomplish with the Wildcats, opening his players' eye to a slice of NBA history that faded before they were born.

With that as a background, there doesn't seem to be a wrong message these Cats could take from the "Bad Boys" special:

"How close they were as a team," said senior point guard T.J. McConnell.

"I'd say the main thing was, 'Know your role,'" said sophomore forward Rondae Hollis-Jefferson.

"The biggest thing I took away from that were the sacrifices they made for each other," said senior center Matt Korcheck.

"Just being all in and playing hard basketball, that was the most important thing," said junior center Kaleb Tarczewski.

"For us, it's how to be tough; a mentality thing. It's like, 'We're not going to get punked,'" said freshman wing Stanley Johnson.

Miller gathered his returning players over the summer for a "30 for 30" watch party and then showed the documentary to the Wildcats again after the newcomers arrived. The team has seen at least part of the show multiple times since then.

"He wanted our team to be like that," McConnell said of Miller trying to impart the us-against-the-world mentality of that Pistons family
.

"We've watched it so many times that we're pretty much like that. We kind of figured it out as they kept talking about how close they were and what they would do for each other. We said to ourselves, 'We have to be like that.'"

Arizona doesn't necessarily aspire to the level of thuggery and villainy achieved by those Pistons teams, who came of age in the 1980s during the Bird and Magic dynasties in Boston and Los Angeles before winning back-to-back NBA titles in 1989 and 1990. Love 'em or hate 'em, though, those Pistons -- Isiah Thomas, Bill Laimbeer, Dennis Rodman, Joe Dumars, Rick Mahorn, John Salley, Mark Aguirre, Vinnie Johnson, etc. -- were admirable in that they didn't much give a damn about anything other than getting those rings.

"We're not going to back down from anybody, no matter who you are, where you come from, how big you are, how tough you are," Stanley Johnson said. "We're the tougher dudes and, guess what, we're going to show you -- not by fist fighting -- but by how hard we play on every possession, how hard we crash the glass, how we play our offense, how we play our defense.

"That is just the way we play our basketball."

While Lute Olson's great Arizona teams were often artistic, a flowing basketball poem, they sometimes carried a "soft" label into the NCAA Tournament, when the games typically slow down, grinding into a physical battle of wills. If Miller has anything to do with it, "soft" will never apply to his Wildcats. Remember how he advised his guys in the locker room during the 2011 NCAA Tournament: "Nastiness," he informed them, "is required."

Nastiness was the Bad Boys.

"There's a lot of messages that you can get out of it," Miller said of the lessons from the Pistons.

"I think most importantly is, with team success, it's amazing how individual accolades follow, how players within a team, when they sacrifice, it almost comes back around where again they benefit. Dennis Rodman would be a great example, someone who focused on being a great teammate, defender, rebounder. The next thing you know he's the sixth man of the year, Hall of Fame player. Somebody had to take on that role, and he did it. ...

"So there are a lot of lessons. I think the last part is that defense is something you can control better than offense. I thought for our team being totally committed to being a great defensive team will take us the furthest we could go."

It's as Dumars says in the documentary, "Every great team needs an identity."

For Miller, that identity is defense and rebounding -- just like those Bad Boys from yesteryear.

"I think the whole Pistons team was a true team, where defense and rebounding was the backbone of their team," Arizona assistant coach Joe Pasternack said last week.

"Everybody had a certain role on the team and everybody had to accept that role. Rodman accepted his role as being the defensive and rebounding king. Laimbeer was the enforcer. Isiah was the scorer. ...

"We have a lot of talent. We just need everybody to accept their roles and put defense and rebounding first. And, I think, obviously, we've done that. Guys have just done an unbelievable job of buying in and accepting their roles."

Such as the willingness of Hollis-Jefferson early in the season, and then Gabe York later, to accept a role off the bench.



Anthony Gimino has covered University of Arizona athletics for more than two decades, including as the football beat writer for the Arizona Daily Star and the columnist for the Tucson Citizen.
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Re: UA Basketball 2014-2015 Discussion

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Re: UA Basketball 2014-2015 Discussion

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Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
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