Monday, November 26, 2007

Totem Poll No. 3

The most action of the season this week on the Totem Poll, including some shuffling near — but not at — the top of the list.

Teams have one more weekend of action before breaking for the holidays and a glance at this coming weekend's schedule suggests there might not be much more shuffling happening before the focus turns to 2008.

Here then, is your dose of Totem Poll.

1. (1) UBC Thunderbirds (9-1) — Granted it came against Thompson Rivers, but yet another pair of thorough beatings (by 20 on Friday, 28 on Saturday) and the T-Birds are once again an intimidating regular season team. The post-season? Well, that’s a different story.
2. (4) Calgary Dinos (7-1) — Made a serious, SERIOUS statement at home this weekend by absolutely pumping an Alberta Golden Bears team that had started to assert itself in the conference.
3. (3) Brandon Bobcats (7-1) — Held serve at home against rival Regina and played some of their better basketball of the season in doing so while also playing without two starters. They are far from flawless, but they’re still getting it done.
4. (2) Alberta Golden Bears (5-3) — Alright, just settle down. The people at the Totem Poll Head Office are well aware of the fact Alberta has beaten the team directly ahead of it in this week’s rankings. Sincerest apologies, but barely competing in your biggest rivalry game is grounds for a drop.
5. (5) Victoria Vikes (8-2) — Still not convinced that the glossy record is completely indicative of how good the Vikes are, but they can’t be blamed for their schedule to date. Leaving them here in the middle of the pack and expecting a slide when some of the tougher games finally hit their sked.
6. (6) Saskatchewan Huskies (5-3) — Not everyone is excited about spending a November weekend in Lethbridge. Unless, of course, you get to play its men’s basketball team. The Huskies were the beneficiaries of what we’ll here on out refer to as “The Lethbridge Twwo.” Yes, in this case, there’s two Ws in two.
7. (7) Regina Cougars (4-4) — With Yuri Whyms hurt and Tarik Tokar sitting out Saturday after receiving a Jamal Williams elbow on Friday, the Cougars had a glorious chance to grab a split against the ailing Bobcats. Instead we’re sitting here essentially crowning a Great Plains Division champion in November.
8. (10) Simon Fraser Clan (5-5) — The Clan were dealt a tough opening to their season with three of their first four games on the road and two of them coming against ranked opponents. Now, however, they’ve won five of their last six and it’s no surprise that Greg Wallis has led them in scoring in each of those victories.
9. (9) Winnipeg Wesmen (4-4) — A true middle-of-the-road team and suddenly finding themselves with a chance to grab second place in the Great Plains before the end of the semester. Any measure of success in a big home-and-home against Brandon this week could move that process along.
10. (8) Fraser Valley Cascades (4-6) — Had a shot at moving up the chain by stealing a roady in Victoria, but the winless weekend means UCFV has now lost six of its last seven and early-season excitement has been been washed out by a nasty slump.
11. (11) Trinity Western Spartans (3-7) — Still trying to find their way, they’ve been off and on in the past three weeks after starting the season 0-4. Suddenly they’re in a spot to jump into the Pacific’s final playoff spot with a pivotal doubleheader against UCFV in Abbottsford starting Friday.
12. (12) Thompson Rivers WolfPack (1-9) — Falling further and further out of the picture in the Pacific but in-division clashes with Simon Fraser this weekend might give the Wolfpack at least the appearance of a pulse.
13. (13) Manitoba Bisons (0-8) — The same cannot be said for these guys who are four games out of third place and continually losing close games. Including non-conference, they're 0-4 in one-possession games and 0-6 — half of their games — in games decided by five points or less.
14. (14) Lethbridge Pronghorns (0-8) — Dating back to last season, the Horns have now lost 13 straight games and only two of those games have been decided by less than 10 points. It will take an act from heaven to keep that streak from running to 15 this weekend when they host Alberta.

Saturday, November 24, 2007

Rise again

Gather 'round people. Today is about rebirth and resurrections and renewal.

Saturday was the ending of the Bill Callahan Era in Nebraska football, a black plague upon the followers of Lincoln, a pox that nearly sucked the life out of that congregation.

But this place is not the spot of absolution, or forgiveness. In fact, it is where we celebrate the cleansing of football souls across North America whose instincts tell them to yell "POWER" when someone else yells "HUSKER." They know the holiest of days — Game Day Saturday — is the time to drape themselves in red and they know their benediction is "Go Big Red."

And so it is that when Callahan got the axe after four relatively fruitless seasons — just one bowl win, no victories over the top 10 — that surging crescendo of joy you heard was coming from the Big Red Bretheren around the continent who celebrated this "loss" because of the perceived impending bigger gain. For it was Callahan who smudged so many historical items of a program that has been standing for 118 years. It was on his watch that the most embarrassing defeats ever witnessed in Lincoln came to fruition. So much of what made Husker fans proud was tarnished by a man who seemed wholly unaware of the team's importance to its followers and, worse yet, seemed uncaring of that history as well.

But there's bright lights to be seen. This story even has its saviour(s). One comes from Palos Heights, Ill., in the form of soon-to-be-senior quarterback Joe Ganz who, as a late-season replacement to the injured Sam Keller, tempted Husker fans in that what-might-have-been way by leading his offence with confidence and swagger, and even hanging a seven-TD effort on Kansas State.

And, you heard it here first (maybe): Let it ring out across the land that a man named Bo, a prodigal son, will return to Lincoln to help restore the luster to this program, and restore faith among its flock. Bo Pelini a former assistant under Tom Osborne, in my humble prediction, will be the next head coach of the Nebraska Cornhuskers.

And there will be cheers and relief and happiness in the corn-fed land of Lincoln. Men named Bo and Joe will send out their words and heal the Huskers, delivering them from their destruction. They will restore health and heal our wounds. They will cast out demons; they will speak in new tongues; ... they will lay their hands on the sick, and they will recover.

This, my friends, is called believing. And I am a believer.

Amen.


Monday, November 19, 2007

Totem Poll No. 2

So last Wednesday I started my Canada West conference rankings for men's basketball with the thought that having them come out the day after the national coaches' poll would be good timing.

I'm stupid.

No need to wait for the coaches to decide who they want to put where, I'm jumping the gun and changing the release date to every Monday.

Just think of it as a chance to disagree with me earlier in the week.

Here's the Canada West Totem Poll:

1. (1) UBC Thunderbirds (7-1) — They haven’t toyed with anyone this season. Convincing road wins at Winnipeg and Manitoba and UBC just continues to dominate.
2. (3) Alberta Golden Bears (5-1) — Took advantage of a sluggish Brandon team Saturday night and held serve on home court. Showing they can put up points with the best of them.
3. (2) Brandon Bobcats (5-1) — No one is doubting their ability to score, but the hallmark of BU has been its ability to stop even the most prolific point-getters. One-hundred-and-six points at Edmonton is not a good example.
4. (4) Calgary Dinos (5-1) — Did what they had to do by trouncing Lethbridge on the road. Kept pace with Alberta and more and more seems like the team the Bears will have to beat to grab the Central.
5. (5) Victoria Vikes (6-2) — Did the same trip as UBC but looked nowhere near as good in narrowly beating U of M and then dropping the weekend finale in OT to Winnipeg.
6. (7) Saskatchewan Huskies (3-3) — Perhaps having their starting PG quit the team will be a rallying call for the Dogs who are going to have a tough road to sled the rest of the way.
7. (6) Regina Cougars (4-2) — Got their first real test of the season — a roady at Saskatoon and Edmonton — and failed. Another benchmark weekend looms at Brandon with the Cougars suddenly needing something big to happen to challenge for the top spot in the Great Plains.
8. (8) Fraser Valley Cascades (4-4) — Give this group marks for rebounding after a feeble effort on Friday with a win on Saturday. It is very early but, with third place currently theirs, getting a split with SFU could prove to be huge.
9. (10) Winnipeg Wesmen (3-3) — No coach in the conference will be sad to see Erfan Nasajpour exhaust his eligibility after this season. The most recent applicant to the “Get Him Outta Here Club”? Craig Beaucamp, who’s Vikes watched the fifth-year guard score 41 and once again prove that the Wesmen can be in any game Erf is playing.
10. (9) Simon Fraser Clan (2-4) — One-up-one-down weekend seems apt for a team that has been hard to figure out. Maybe they’re getting too much credit but if they don’t do some convincing this weekend (vs. Manitoba, vs. Winnipeg), I’m off the bandwagon.
11. (11) Trinity Western Spartans (2-6) — With 20/20 hindsight, can now look back on a blown opportunity this weekend. By splitting with the previously winless Wolfpack, flunked a chance to pull into a tie for fourth in the division.
12. (14) Thompson Rivers WolfPack (1-7) — It took beating one of the conference bottom-feeders to do it, but the WolfPack are on the board with their first W. We think these will be few and far between, however.
13. (13) Manitoba Bisons (0-6) — The U of M women’s team is averaging 69 points per game. The U of M men’s team is averaging 64 points per game. Ladies and gentleman, your 2007-08 Manitoba Bisons. And even they rise above these guys ...
14. (12) Lethbridge Pronghorns (0-6) — Oh the Horns, who are a conference worst in scoring differential (-18.2 ppg), opponent field goal percentage (51%), rebounding margin (-15.3 rpg) and free-throw shooting (59%). So, they can’t score, they can’t stop anyone, they can’t rebound and they can’t shoot standing still.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Power Hour

Time for a debut here, people.

Now is the time of year that I get knee deep into covering the Brandon Bobcats for the Brandon Sun while also providing colour commentary on WCG-TV, the cable access station of southwestern Manitoba. That being said, I'm going to introduce a Canada West conference power rankings for this site, something I've mulled over wanting to add to our web site at the Sun. But falling short of that, I am adding it into this space as a regular feature on Wednesdays, one day after the national coaches poll is released.

Now I am loath to spin again the same tired song that gets played everywhere else, but — as has been well-documented — I have very little creativity and am not overly interested in exhausting effort to come up with my own ideas. Now, we also have the venerable Howard Tsumura at the Vancouver Province who already does a conference ranking on his own time, but no one is going to argue that coverage of university sports in this country is over-saturated, so I'm putting my hat in the ring. (Alright, fine. I'll add my own twist to the tired old tradition and come up with a different name for these rankings. See below).

First things first, for the CIS basketball people who read this post — sorry for my lack of content — let me just assess a couple of things in the Canada West for those who are interested and don't get out to watch all the teams on a regular basis.

MEN:
Thus far, Brandon has hosted Simon Fraser, Trinity Western and Manitoba and has run to 4-0. So that gives us five teams to have a look at.

Simon Fraser: I originally had them pegged for the No. 2 spot in the Pacific but their lackluster start combined with the surprising play of Fraser Valley and Victoria (the Vikes have rallied in the face of losing almost everyone), has Simon Fraser (2-4) suddenly having to climb a big hill. Such is life in that division if you don't get a great start. But a couple of wins this weekend, including a nice one over Calgary, has the Clan at least back in the discussion. Still, I'm hesitant to drink the kool-aid (incidentally, I'm tired of the over-use of that term, and will put an embargo on it in my future posts) and think that the Clan's depth is going to be the major sticking point to their success.

Trinity Western: A team — on paper — built for the switch to the up-tempo FIBA rules but one not quite talented enough to make it work yet. The Spartans (1-5) have a guy in Lucas Goltz who can fill it up and Luke Robinson who can stick some shots, but in the grand scheme of things TWU is simply not that good.

Manitoba: It was never more obvious than last weekened how much Manitoba (0-4) relies on Isaac Ansah. The athletic guard sat out both games in Brandon with a deep thigh bruise and suddenly you realize how little the Bisons have in the way of offensive production. On top of that, they're very reliant on one-on-one production so without a bona fide scorer, their offensive really sputters. Darcy Coss can be keyed on and then Manitoba has to find anyone else to score the ball. And, truth be told, there isn't anyone there to do so.

Brandon: The Bobcats have played the last four games without big man Yuri Whyms and were dealt a blow when Nik Quick decided to leave the team to tend to financial matters (he's an American without a work visa in Canada). But credit the Bobcats for winning those four games despite the fact that each of them lacked any artistry whatsoever. They absolutely stunk on Saturday in a win over Manitoba in which they shot 5-for-24 from the three and the Bisons just packed into a 2-3 zone. It made for boring ball, and the Bobcats — for much of these four regular season games — have looked very beatable when teams slowed the game down. BU hasn't gotten into its transition game nearly as much as it would like.



WOMEN:
Simon Fraser: Nothing to say here. No one beats this team this season (including UBC), and if they do manage to lose a conference game, it's merely a blip. They're good enough to roll over anyone.

Trinity Western: Much improved Spartans team that boasts some size as well as capable guards. Won't make a ton of noise this season, but considering the past struggles that squad has had, they've already achieved a considerable amount.

Manitoba: Another versatile 6-foot player (in the mould of Melanie Schlicter) would do wonders for the Bisons, who are the most up-tempo of up-tempo teams in the conference. As it is, they're a young group that should remain middle of the road in CanWest but the youngsters they do have are talented. Watch this team in a couple of seasons.

Brandon: Same ol' same ol' in the Wheat City for the women's team. They are, however, significantly improved from the past but are still wholly incapable of playing 40 good minutes, which has been their downfall. They'll get a win somewhere, however. Still missing a couple of pieces, namely a solid veteran presence with consistent scoring ability.


Without further adieu, let's do the first-ever TPA Totem Poll (misspelling intended):

MEN:
1. UBC Thunderbirds (5-1) — Here's my thing: The defending conference champions get the benefit of the doubt. Sure they have a loss (Nov. 3 @ Calgary), but they also boast impressive road wins at Simon Fraser (92-55), vs Trinity Western (104-77) and vs Fraser Valley (84-63). While you could argue that the one stiff test they received they failed, I prefer to look at that as the exception to the rule. They're flat blowing teams out, which is more than you can say for...
2. Brandon Bobcats (4-0) — The team that lost to UBC in last year's conference final before charging all the way to the national championship game. Brandon remains one of only two undefeateds in the conference but they haven't been impressive on their way there. They man-handled Trinity but struggled for 35 minutes or so against Simon Fraser and had to eke one out. And although they were never seriously challenged by U of M, they were far from pretty there, either. This is a team that needs its swagger back and quickly.
3. Alberta Golden Bears (3-1) —The Bears already own a pre-season win over the Bobcats but split with the Saskatchewan Huskies on their home floor this weekend, a performance not becoming of the nation's No. 6-ranked team. (Note: The author is wholly unconvinced of U of S's place among the national elite.). But Alberta does boast some impressive wins, namely blowouts of Ottawa and Fraser Valley along with wins over BU and Victoria. A handful of guys who can flat-out fill it up and, once again, the Bears are worthy of being mentioned among the conference heavy-hitters.
4. Calgary Dinos (3-1) — Into this spot by the slimmest of margins, the Dinos would likely love a do-over from their loss in Burnaby on Friday but they've nonetheless posted good results to date. An athletic bunch — with the Brothers Bekkering at the top of that list — that seems destined to finish just short of U of A in the Central Division.
5. Victoria Vikes (5-1) — By virtue of a slim loss to the Dinos, the Vikes take a back seat in these rankings. But they earn points for putting up a 5-1 record to this point despite their line-up having been gutted. Their top five leading scorers from last season are all gone but Vic has perservered. That said, don't be surprised if this ranking slips in the coming weeks: UVic has had by far the weakest schedule of anyone in the conference through three weeks.
6. Regina Cougars (4-0) — OK Cougs, you have the most tenuous of holds in the rankings this week. First off, Regina has played all four games on home floor and secondly its done it against teams with a combined 7-13 record. Still, the Cougars are 4-0 and, with the addition of Bryden Wright back in the lineup from a year off, are capable of putting up a bunch of points. They won't contend for the conference title and they won't be playing in nationals but they fill the "I'm not sure I wanna play them in the playoffs" role.
7. Saskatchewan Huskies (2-2) — A record of 2-2 is probably apt for this team that, because of its star player, can beat anyone on any given day but likely isn't good enough to really be feared regularly. The Huskies have already played 18 conference and non-conference games (18!) and Andrew Spagrud is averaging 33 minutes a game. If that isn't a recipe for breaking down your bus come February, I don't know what is. Spags is certainly a game-changer but the rest of the Huskies are beatable. Shooting guard Kyle Grant can kill you if left alone. So the solution? Don't let him do what he wants. Make Grant, who has a slow first step, put the ball on the floor. Then you're immediately testing their depth, which is not very good. All that adds up to a team I can't trust betting on.
8. Fraser Valley Cascades (3-3) — No slighting Barnaby Craddock and his new team, but the Cascades have but one "good win" in six conference outings and that was an OT win over Saskatchewan. This is not to gloss over their narrow win over Thompson Rivers, which didn't instil confidence.
9. Simon Fraser Clan (2-4) — A team that can beat you up with its size and toughness, but one still not quite geared for going at a high pace with the best of them. When they feed Greg Wallis, they have their most success, but they still go away from their big man on occasion. If they get their act together, they're the typical team that will make you work for everything you get.
10. Winnipeg Wesmen (2-2) — Went on the road to Regina — admittedly a tough spot to get wins — and got worked. So that means their only two wins came against the conference weakling Bisons. They'll get a shot in the arm in two weeks when Winnipegger Cam Hornby is eligible after transferring from South Dakota State.
11. Trinity Western Spartans (1-5) — The one bright side is they have a true gunner in Goltz who can score a ton. The tools are there but they're not, shall we say, the best tools in the land. They hung in with Regina but have otherwise been thumped in every outing, save for their win over Lethbridge.
12. Lethbridge Pronghorns (0-4) — Really not much to say: They haven't won a game in the conference and the only reason they're not in the basement is because a pre-season win over Saskatchewan at least showed they have the capability of winning. That, and the two below them are that much worse.
13. Manitoba Bisons (0-4) — They need, repeat NEED, Isaac Ansah in their lineup if they have a hope in this world of winning more than two games this season. Even with that, the post-season is a distant hope for a team that hasn't tasted victory yet.
14. Thompson Rivers WolfPack (0-6) — They've been blown out a lot, but a three-point loss at Victoria gives an iota of hope.