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2020-2021 College basketball thread


Fordgalaxy
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Gonzaga is good.

I've always wanted Indiana's 1976 undefeated season to be the last of its kind, but if it has to fall, I wouldn't mind it falling to the Zags.

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If the Zags play D the next (2) game(s) like they did tonight, they win the whole thing. Nobody gonna hold them under 80 so if they can keep other teams in the 60s or 70s, it's theirs.
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Horrible shot by UCLA. I don't think the non Juzang Bruins have broken 20 all night.

No kidding.

 

They gutted out a win...mainly because Michigan couldn't hit the broad side of a barn.

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Meanwhile on the women's side, South Carolina held Texas scoreless in the final quarter to advance to the final four. Zero pints in the last ten minutes...hard to imagine.

 

UConn, Stanford, Arizona and SCarolina.

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Meanwhile on the women's side, South Carolina held Texas scoreless in the final quarter to advance to the final four. Zero pints in the last ten minutes...hard to imagine.

 

UConn, Stanford, Arizona and SCarolina.

It's not surprising, Texas is a "dry" state. Plus, the Longhorns' coach probably figured they'd play better if they weren't drinking.

Edited by laughedatbytime
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Meanwhile on the women's side, South Carolina held Texas scoreless in the final quarter to advance to the final four. Zero pints in the last ten minutes...hard to imagine.

 

UConn, Stanford, Arizona and SCarolina.

 

Baylor got screwed at the end of the game and everyone, even the daughter of the Uconn coach said so. Ridiculous that such an obvious call was overlooked (I don't think it was missed, they just decided to not call either of the 2 fouls that occurred).

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Meanwhile on the women's side, South Carolina held Texas scoreless in the final quarter to advance to the final four. Zero pints in the last ten minutes...hard to imagine.

 

UConn, Stanford, Arizona and SCarolina.

It's not surprising, Texas is a "dry" state. Plus, the Longhorns' coach probably figured they'd play better if they weren't drinking.

 

Since they scored zero, maybe they should have tried it drunk as lords! :cheers:

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Meanwhile on the women's side, South Carolina held Texas scoreless in the final quarter to advance to the final four. Zero pints in the last ten minutes...hard to imagine.

 

UConn, Stanford, Arizona and SCarolina.

It's not surprising, Texas is a "dry" state. Plus, the Longhorns' coach probably figured they'd play better if they weren't drinking.

 

Since they scored zero, maybe they should have tried it drunk as lords! :cheers:

Yeah, sounds like a coaching issue.

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Meanwhile on the women's side, South Carolina held Texas scoreless in the final quarter to advance to the final four. Zero pints in the last ten minutes...hard to imagine.

 

UConn, Stanford, Arizona and SCarolina.

It's not surprising, Texas is a "dry" state. Plus, the Longhorns' coach probably figured they'd play better if they weren't drinking.

:lol:
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Meanwhile on the women's side, South Carolina held Texas scoreless in the final quarter to advance to the final four. Zero pints in the last ten minutes...hard to imagine.

 

UConn, Stanford, Arizona and SCarolina.

 

Baylor got screwed at the end of the game and everyone, even the daughter of the Uconn coach said so. Ridiculous that such an obvious call was overlooked (I don't think it was missed, they just decided to not call either of the 2 fouls that occurred).

Yeah, that no call was inexplicable. She was fouled by two different players.
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Meanwhile on the women's side, South Carolina held Texas scoreless in the final quarter to advance to the final four. Zero pints in the last ten minutes...hard to imagine.

 

UConn, Stanford, Arizona and SCarolina.

UConn. Close, but no cigar-AGAIN. Last night was UConn's fourth consecutive NCAA semifinal loss. They never lead, Paige was basically shut down, and it was the lowest team score of the season.

Congratulations to the Lady Wildcats, would enjoy seeing them take it all.

Zero pints in 10 minutes? That's pretty sorry drinking :hail:

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Meanwhile on the women's side, South Carolina held Texas scoreless in the final quarter to advance to the final four. Zero pints in the last ten minutes...hard to imagine.

 

UConn, Stanford, Arizona and SCarolina.

UConn. Close, but no cigar-AGAIN. Last night was UConn's fourth consecutive NCAA semifinal loss. They never lead, Paige was basically shut down, and it was the lowest team score of the season.

Congratulations to the Lady Wildcats, would enjoy seeing them take it all.

Zero pints in 10 minutes? That's pretty sorry drinking :hail:

Fire Aurriemma!

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Meanwhile on the women's side, South Carolina held Texas scoreless in the final quarter to advance to the final four. Zero pints in the last ten minutes...hard to imagine.

 

UConn, Stanford, Arizona and SCarolina.

UConn. Close, but no cigar-AGAIN. Last night was UConn's fourth consecutive NCAA semifinal loss. They never lead, Paige was basically shut down, and it was the lowest team score of the season.

Congratulations to the Lady Wildcats, would enjoy seeing them take it all.

Zero pints in 10 minutes? That's pretty sorry drinking :hail:

:lol:

 

Arizona made some clutch shots, and their defense was impressive. PAC12 Stanford advanced as well. More west coast dominance!

 

 

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Will history repeat itself tonight...?

 

maxresdefault.jpg

 

Ryan Hollins swished his free throws. Jordan Farmar swiped away the ball and made the winning pass. Darren Collison jumped on a loose ball, securing another stolen possession. Gus Johnson, calling the action, affirmed the shock of a captivated nation that had just witnessed a comeback for the ages: “Unbelievable!”

 

These men all contributed significantly to the improbable story of UCLA-Gonzaga in the 2006 NCAA men’s tournament Sweet 16, but what they wouldn’t fully understand until later is that they were merely supporting actors in what would go down in history as the Adam Morrison Crying Game.

 

Johnson noticed it first, mid-histrionics, with 2.6 seconds left, after Collison had won the held ball — Morrison, the national player of the year, looking around Oakland Arena in pure horror, seeing that his 24 points had not been enough to stop the Bruins from turning a 17-point deficit into a one-point lead. CBS cameras captured Morrison with his mouth agape, and, even with time remaining for the Bulldogs to tie or win, he was on the verge of a breakdown.

 

After J.P. Batista’s potential game-tying heave missed at the buzzer, Morrison fell to the floor face down and stretched out his 6-foot-8 frame, his dark brown mop of hair covering him as he gulped for air.

 

 

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Will history repeat itself tonight...?

 

maxresdefault.jpg

 

Ryan Hollins swished his free throws. Jordan Farmar swiped away the ball and made the winning pass. Darren Collison jumped on a loose ball, securing another stolen possession. Gus Johnson, calling the action, affirmed the shock of a captivated nation that had just witnessed a comeback for the ages: “Unbelievable!”

 

These men all contributed significantly to the improbable story of UCLA-Gonzaga in the 2006 NCAA men’s tournament Sweet 16, but what they wouldn’t fully understand until later is that they were merely supporting actors in what would go down in history as the Adam Morrison Crying Game.

 

Johnson noticed it first, mid-histrionics, with 2.6 seconds left, after Collison had won the held ball — Morrison, the national player of the year, looking around Oakland Arena in pure horror, seeing that his 24 points had not been enough to stop the Bruins from turning a 17-point deficit into a one-point lead. CBS cameras captured Morrison with his mouth agape, and, even with time remaining for the Bulldogs to tie or win, he was on the verge of a breakdown.

 

After J.P. Batista’s potential game-tying heave missed at the buzzer, Morrison fell to the floor face down and stretched out his 6-foot-8 frame, his dark brown mop of hair covering him as he gulped for air.

 

 

 

I remember watching that game. As is true today, it's hard to conceive of UCLA as the plucky underdog.

 

Morrison was a great college player (and the third pick in the draft) but washed out pretty quickly as a pro.

Edited by laughedatbytime
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Will history repeat itself tonight...?

 

maxresdefault.jpg

 

Ryan Hollins swished his free throws. Jordan Farmar swiped away the ball and made the winning pass. Darren Collison jumped on a loose ball, securing another stolen possession. Gus Johnson, calling the action, affirmed the shock of a captivated nation that had just witnessed a comeback for the ages: “Unbelievable!”

 

These men all contributed significantly to the improbable story of UCLA-Gonzaga in the 2006 NCAA men’s tournament Sweet 16, but what they wouldn’t fully understand until later is that they were merely supporting actors in what would go down in history as the Adam Morrison Crying Game.

 

Johnson noticed it first, mid-histrionics, with 2.6 seconds left, after Collison had won the held ball — Morrison, the national player of the year, looking around Oakland Arena in pure horror, seeing that his 24 points had not been enough to stop the Bruins from turning a 17-point deficit into a one-point lead. CBS cameras captured Morrison with his mouth agape, and, even with time remaining for the Bulldogs to tie or win, he was on the verge of a breakdown.

 

After J.P. Batista’s potential game-tying heave missed at the buzzer, Morrison fell to the floor face down and stretched out his 6-foot-8 frame, his dark brown mop of hair covering him as he gulped for air.

 

 

 

 

IMO, the only way that happens is if Gonzaga plays poorly and UCLA plays exceptionally.

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