The loss to UNC-Greensboro on Saturday was very disappointing, but oddly Ed Conroy wasn’t too worried about it. At least, that’s what he told Jeff Hartsell of The Post and Courier:
“I thought we did some really good things,” said Conroy. “We shared the ball well, only had six turnovers, shot the ball well from 3-point range. We just didn’t convert a lot of shots on the interior. We got some good looks there, but they didn’t go.”
There was also a reference earlier in the article to “a touch of fatigue and illness,” so perhaps the team’s energy level wasn’t as high as it normally was. Also less than energetic was a largely absent corps of cadets. The corps’ apathy and/or lack of presence this season during games at McAlister Field House (not to mention the homecoming game in football) has been noticeable. It’s an issue General Rosa and company must address.
Back to the court, The Citadel was outrebounded 41-24 by UNCG, which was basically the difference in the game, as it’s hard to overcome such a discrepancy without a huge edge in turnovers or shooting percentage, and the Bulldogs did not shoot particularly well (36%). The loss means that to clinch an overall winning season, as well as a winning season in Southern Conference play, The Citadel needs to win one of its two final regular season games.
That won’t be easy, as they are both road contests. Thursday the Bulldogs travel to Greenville to play an improving Furman club, followed by a Saturday game in Spartanburg against Wofford.
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The Citadel beat Furman 70-60 in Charleston on January 23. In that game, Cameron Wells had 22 points and 12 rebounds. He was only 6-17 from the field, but went to the foul line repeatedly and converted (8-8). Bryan Streeter also had a double-double in the contest. The Bulldogs were a solid 8-20 from 3-point land and also won the turnover battle against the Paladins (11-8).
Furman’s Amu Saaka scored 19 points (on only 12 shots) and figures to be a problem again for the Bulldogs this time around. The Paladins will also have Jordan Miller available for this game after he missed the first meeting. Miller scored 31 points against UT-Chattanooga, but has followed up that great performance with two games in which he shot a combined 4-14 from the field.
Getting a win against Furman at Timmons Arena would be nice for several reasons. Assuming the two teams don’t meet in the Southern Conference tournament, it would be the first time The Citadel had swept the Paladins in consecutive seasons since the 2000-2001 campaigns. Of course, there were only three games played in those years, as Furman screwed up in 2000 and scheduled too many games, leading to a penalty that resulted in only one game on the hardwood between the two schools that year.
The Citadel also won the second game played in the 1999 season, so it did win four straight against Furman from 1999-2001. That was the last time the Bulldogs won four straight in the series. The last time the Bulldogs won both home-and-away in consecutive seasons against the Paladins? 1939-1940 (part of a six-game win streak against Furman, the longest for The Citadel in the series’ history). The Citadel hasn’t won consecutive games in Greenville since 1992-1993.
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The Citadel had a late lead against Wofford in the game played on January 21, but couldn’t hold on and lost 44-42. As the score indicates, it wasn’t an offensive masterpiece. The Bulldogs shot 32% from the field. Wofford shot no better (30%), but outrebounded The Citadel 38-33 and committed one fewer turnover. The Terriers’ stated strategy of stopping Cameron Wells worked, as the rest of the Bulldog squad (save Zach Urbanus) combined for more turnovers (10) than made field goals (6).
You can bet Wofford will try to hold down Wells’ production again to win its sixth straight game over the cadets, but it may not be so easy this time, as the other Bulldogs have done a better job in recent games of shouldering the offensive load. Of course, the Terriers are likely to be better at putting the ball in the hoop on Saturday as well.
Noah Dahlman was his usual solid self in the first meeting (15 points, 6-12 FG, five rebounds). Odds are at least one of his teammates will provide offensive support. I anticipate a higher-scoring game this time (but not much higher — we’re not talking about a pair of run-and-gun teams here).
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Just a few stats to finish off this post…
— With one more regular season victory, The Citadel will clinch its second consecutive winning season. The last time the Bulldogs had two straight winning campaigns? 1979-1980. Before that, you have to go back to 1964-1965. The Citadel had four straight winning seasons from 1958-1961. Speaking of the 1958-61 era…
— If The Citadel beats Furman and/or Wofford, it will enjoy a second consecutive winning season in Southern Conference play. The last time the Bulldogs had two straight winning SoCon campaigns? 1960-1961.
You read that correctly. Actually, from 1958-1961 The Citadel had four straight winning seasons in conference play. The first three came under the direction of Norm Sloan, who then became the head coach at Florida. His successor at The Citadel, Mel Thompson (best known as Pat Conroy’s head coach at The Citadel, I suppose) would go 10-3 in SoCon action in his first season in charge.
Sloan took over a program that had not had a winning SoCon season since 1945. Actually, that doesn’t really tell the story. Let’s put it this way: from 1946 to 1956, The Citadel was 12-102 in league play. The five years preceding Sloan’s arrival in Charleston featured a combined conference record of 2-49.
Sloan was 5-9 in the SoCon in his first season, and then had league records of 9-6, 7-4, and 8-4.
Sloan won the national championship in 1974 while coaching North Carolina State. He had proved his worth as a coach many years earlier, though, at a small military college.
Incidentally, the only other time The Citadel had back-to-back winning years in the Southern Conference came in the 1938-1939-1940 seasons, when the Bulldogs had three straight winning SoCon campaigns, mostly under head coach Rock Norman (who coached the team in 1938 and 1939, and for the first eight games in 1940 before being replaced by Ben Parker).
There is definitely potential for The Citadel to make a little history with a win in either of its two games this week. I wouldn’t mind if instead of winning one of them, it won both.
Filed under: Basketball, The Citadel | Tagged: Amu Saaka, Ben Parker, Cameron Wells, Ed Conroy, Furman, Jeff Hartsell, John Rosa, Jordan Miller, McAlister Field House, Mel Thompson, Noah Dahlman, Norm Sloan, North Carolina State, Pat Conroy, Rock Norman, Southern Conference, The Citadel, The Post and Courier, Timmons Arena, UNC-Greensboro, UT-Chattanooga, Wofford, Zach Urbanus |
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