After a disappointing loss to Old Dominion, Virginia Tech returns home for tune it up against
*all team ratings are RPI, courtesy of www.kenpom.com
Biggest Win: #71
Worst Loss: at #334
The Liberty Flames come to
Senior forward Alex McLean has been unquestionably
However, McLean also played a big role in the brutal loss to
Elsewhere, the Flames will get plenty of production and tons of minutes from its guard duo of junior Anthony Smith and sophomore B.J. Jenkins. Smith and Jenkins both average 33+ minutes and 12+ points on the year, and rebound pretty well for little guys too, pitching in 4.2 boards per game to the cause. Jenkins is kind of your classic feast or famine type of player. In four games this year, he’s over 16 points. In the other six, he hasn’t topped 9. Jenkins has already thrown up 46 3-balls in just 10 outings, so he’s obviously not afraid to chuck the ball, whether he’s hitting or not. Smith is the more consistent of the two, with between 8 and 17 points in all but one game this year, but he’s a poor distributor by guard standards, with a brutal 1:2 assist:turnover ratio.
Prediction:
At
Biggest Win: #193 Bucknell, 72-56
Worst Loss: at #163
Here’s what I don’t get about the RPI: The Deacons have lost to all three teams they’ve played above 163, and beaten all six teams they’ve played below 193. So what rating are they? 127. Ugh. But I digress…
The true big loss of the year happened in the offseason, as Wake coach Skip Prosser died suddenly, leaving the Deacons in the hands of longtime assistant and friend Dino Gaudio. We’ll know a lot more about this squad after Wednesday’s informative clash with USF, but for now, this team is a near blank-slate, with nary an interesting win or loss to speak of.
Wake’s best player looks to be freshman James Johnson. Johnson is a 6-foot-8, 200 lb. sinewy beanpole from Cheyenne, Wyoming, but he’s looked right at home on Tobacco Road so far, scoring a bit (12.4 ppg) and rebounding a lot (9.7 rpg). Throw in at least one block in every game but one, 2 steals a game, 5 straight 11 rebound games, and you’re probably looking at an ACC Freshman of the Year frontrunner. At 41.5%, Johnson’s field goal percentage reveals he hasn’t yet developed that college shooting touch, so forcing him to take uncomfortable shots is a key for the Tech D. Surrendering a layup is always bad business, but especially so in this case, because when Johnson gets near the hoop, he’s a beast, with 30 offensive rebounds in the last 6 games.
This is a young team all around, with sophomore L.D. Williams second in scoring, junior guard Harvey Hale third, freshman guard Jeff Teague fourth and sophomore guard Ishmael Smith fifth. The team is almost incredibly youthful, with Hale the only upperclassman averaging above 1 point a game. They’re also small; of the top five scorers, only Johnson is above 6’4, and three of them are sub 6’2, 180 lbs. This is a time for Tech’s bruiser mentality to simmer to the surface. Even if Wake tries to use its bench height to stack up with Tech in the middle, subs Jamie Skeen and Chas McFarland will be playing far more than they’re used to doing.
Prediction: Whatever the basketball equivalent of “punching them in the mouth” is, Tech
needs to do it in
think they will. Tech by 6.
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