Men's Basketball Weekly Release - March 19
March 19, 2007
Complete Release in PDF Format OSU Advances to Round of 16: Ohio State has advanced to the Sweet 16 after posting a pair of victories last weekend and will face fifth-seeded Tennessee on Thursday in San Antonio, Texas. The Buckeyes will compete in the Round of 16 for the first time since 1992 when OSU suffered a 75-72 overtime loss to Michigan in the regional finals. The Big Ten has now sent at least one team to the NCAA Championship regional semifinal for the 19th time in the 23 years since the NCAA Tournament field expanded to 64 teams in 1985. Oden Named Tourney's Most Outstanding Player: Ohio State's Greg Oden became the first freshman to earn Big Ten Tournament Most Outstanding Player honors after averaging a double-double with 17.0 points and 12.3 rebounds during the three victories. The freshman also blocked four shots against the Badgers for a tournament total of 12, the most in Big Ten Tourney history. In addition, those 12 rejections ties Oden for fourth on the Big Ten Tournament career list, trailing Indiana's Jeff Newton for the all-time mark of 16. Oden was joined by teammate Mike Conley Jr. on the All-Tournament team, while Purdue's Carl Landry and Wisconsin's Kammron Taylor and Alando Tucker also earned All-Tournament laurels. OSU Claims Second-Straight Big Ten Title: Ohio State won its second consecutive Big Ten Championship for the first time since winning two straight championships during the 1991 and 1992 campaigns. The Buckeyes captured back-to-back outright crowns for the first time since running off three in a row between 1960-62, while becoming the first Big Ten squad since Illinois won two straight outright titles in 2004 and 2005. OSU has now tied Illinois for the third-highest total in conference annals with 17 Big Ten Championships, behind Purdue (21) and Indiana (20). Tucker Claims UW's Scoring Mark: With 2,217 points, Wisconsin senior Alando Tucker closed out his career establishing the UW's all-time scoring record, while also ranking ninth on the Big Ten's career scoring leaders chart. During the Big Ten Tournament, Tucker broke Wisconsin's all-time scoring record held by Michael Finley (2,147 points from 1992-95), establishing a new school mark of 2,177 points. Against Iowa on Feb. 10, Tucker became the second Badger and 23rd player in Big Ten history to score at least 2,000 points in his career. Tucker also became the first 2,000-point producer for the Big Ten since Indiana's A.J. Guyton (2,100 points from 1997-00). Tucker Tabbed Big Ten Player of the Year: Wisconsin's Alando Tucker captured the conference's highest honor as he was named the Big Ten Player of the Year in voting by both the coaches and the media. He is the second Badger in the last four years to earn the award as Devin Harris claimed Wisconsin's first Player of the Year laurel in 2004. In Big Ten games only, Tucker ranked second in the conference in scoring (19.7 ppg) and tied for eighth in rebounding (6.1 rpg). Other Individual Honors: Ohio State's Thad Matta was tabbed the Big Ten Coach of the Year by the media for the second consecutive year, while also picking up coaching accolades from his peers. OSU's Greg Oden was named Freshman of the Year after leading the conference in rebounding (8.9 rpg) and blocked shots (3.44 bpg) in Big Ten games only. He was joined on the All-Freshman Team by Iowa's Tyler Smith, Michigan State's Raymar Morgan, Northwestern's Kevin Coble and Ohio State's Mike Conley Jr. Oden also became the first freshman in Big Ten history to claim Defensive Player of the Year laurels and the first Buckeye since Ken Johnson won back-to-back honors in 2000 and 2001. The Big Ten's All-Defensive Team included Oden, Illinois' Chester Frazier, Michigan State's Travis Walton, Purdue's Chris Kramer and Wisconsin's Michael Flowers. Ohio State's Daequan Cook, who has recorded only one start in 30 games this season, was the conference's second recipient of the Sixth Man of the Year award. All-Conference Team: A total of seven of the 15 selections on the 2007 All-Big Ten teams were underclassmen and have a chance to return to their teams next season. Both All-Big Ten first-team squads included Iowa's Adam Haluska, Michigan State's Drew Neitzel, Ohio State's Greg Oden and Wisconsin's Alando Tucker. Purdue senior Carl Landry was honored by the coaches, while the media named Ohio State's Mike Conley Jr. to the top squad. UW'S Tucker earned first-team laurels for the second-consecutive year. Ohio State's Triple Crown Season: For the first time in Big Ten history, one school has earned outright conference titles in the sports of football and men's and women's basketball. Last year, the Buckeyes became the first conference school to earn Big Ten titles in all three sports, but shared the football crown. Haluska Takes Scoring Title: With 21.3 points per conference game this season (341 in 16 games), Iowa's Adam Haluska claimed the Big Ten's scoring title in conference only contests. The senior guard is the first Hawkeye to finish first in the conference scoring rankings since Andre Woolridge in 1997. Haluska was closely followed by last year' conference scoring leader Alando Tucker of Wisconsin, who closed out the Big Ten season with 19.7 points per game. In Other Conference Categories: Ohio State had two standouts finish first in four conference only categories. OSU freshman Greg Oden claimed the conference's rebounds and blocked shots titles, while teammate Mike Conley Jr. finished first in steals and assists. With 8.9 boards per game, Oden is the first freshman to lead the way on the glass since Minnesota's Kris Humphries (9.5 rpg) led the conference in rebounds in 2004. Oden is also the first Buckeye to claim the rebounding crown since Brad Sellers tallied a conference-best 11.5 boards per game in 1986. In addition, Oden (3.44 bpg) became the first freshman to lead the Big Ten in blocked shots since Penn State's Calvin Booth won the 1996 title (3.22 bpg). He is also the first Buckeye to lead in rejections since Ken Johnson won back-to-back crowns in 2000 and 2001. Conley closed out the Big Ten season with 6.56 assists per game, becoming the first OSU player to lead the pack in assists since Kelvin Ransey won the title (6.3 apg) in 1980. He is also the first freshman to rank first since Illinois' Deron Williams dished out 4.8 assists per game in 2003. In addition, Conley tallied a conference-best 2.06 steals per game, becoming the first freshman to lead in that category since Illinois' Dee Brown claimed the 2003 title with 1.88 thefts per contest. In addition, Conley is the second-consecutive OSU player to win the steals title as former Buckeye Je'Kel Foster tallied a conference-best 2.13 thefts last season. Big Ten Attendance Milestones: The Big Ten reached two attendance landmarks this season as the conference broke the two-million mark in all games for the 15th straight season, while also reaching the one-million plateau for league games only for the 30th consecutive season. In 2006-07, a total of 2,470,250 patrons passed through the turnstiles for 196 games for an average attendance of 12,652. In Big Ten contests, 1,200,542 fans flocked to conference arenas for 88 games for an average of 13,643 per outing, the highest since the 2001-02 campaign (13,790). In 2005-06, the conference led the nation in total attendance for the 30th-straight season with 2,255,332 total patrons. Non-Conference Success: With a 125-44 record this season, the Big Ten has posted the most non-conference victories in conference history, eclipsing the mark of 119 triumphs set during the 1988-89 season. Last season, the Big Ten closed out the season with the best out-of-conference winning percentage in over six years at .767 (115-35). Big Ten Homecourt Winning Streaks: Ohio State and Wisconsin closed out the season ranked among the nation's top five in consecutive wins at home. The Buckeyes have tallied 25 straight triumphs at Value City Arena, which stands as the third-longest streak in the nation. Wisconsin follows with 22 wins at home, the country's fifth-longest. Memphis leads the nation with a 32-game homecourt winning streak. The Buckeyes' last home loss was on Jan. 15, 2006, in double-overtime, 62-59, against the Spartans. Wisconsin's last defeat at home occurred on Jan. 31, 2006, when the Badgers fell to No. 6/6 Illinois, 66-51. OSU and UW still trail the Big Ten record of 53 straight home triumphs set by Michigan State from 1998 to 2002 -- a winning streak that was ended by the Badgers. Big Ten's Grand Company: The conference's group of 1,000-point scorers more than doubled from the start of the season as 12 standouts are now above that scoring plateau, including three teams with two or more players. Four Big Ten seniors began the season on the 1,000-point list in Iowa's Adam Haluska (1,862), Michigan's Dion Harris (1,599), Ohio State's Ron Lewis (1,662) and Wisconsin's Alando Tucker (2,217). Six more players joined the list this season in Michigan's Lester Abram (1,274) and Courtney Sims (1,329), Michigan State's Drew Neitzel (1,033), Minnesota's Lawrence McKenzie (1,004), Penn State's Geary Claxton (1,262), Purdue's Carl Landry (1,175) and David Teague (1,378) and Wisconsin's Kammron Taylor (1,223). Playing Smart Basketball: Iowa's Adam Haluska was named the 2007 ESPN The Magazine Academic All-American of the Year and first-team Academic All-American. Haluska, who is a finance and marketing major, becomes the first men's basketball player at Iowa to earn first-team accolades. He becomes the second Big Ten standout in the last three years to be honored since Michigan State's Chris Hill was named Academic All-American of the Year in 2005. To be nominated, student-athletes must be a starter or important reserve and carry a cumulative grade point average of 3.20 or higher.
|
|
|||||||||