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Welcome to TSLMail #268 - Friday, March 2, 2007 |
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Quick, what's something the Tech women's basketball team has done that the men's team has never done? Go to a Sweet 16? Wrong, the men's team did that in 1966-67, getting to the Elite 8 and finishing one game short of the Final Four, losing an agonizing 71-66 overtime game to Dayton. (As an aside, there were only 23 teams in the 1967 NCAA tournament. Another aside: the NIT had 12 teams that year. When Tech won the NIT in 1973, there were 16 invitees. In 1995, there were 32 invitees. But I digress.) Okay, there are a lot of things Tech's women's team has done that the men's team has not. But the answer we're looking for is: win an ACC tournament game. The 7th-seeded Hokies pulled it off again Thursday night, downing #10 seed Boston College, 60-54 in overtime. That marked Tech's second straight year winning their opening-round ACC tourney game. The parallels between the end of last season and the end of this season are eerie. The Hokies were a #7seed in last year's tournament, just like this season. Last year, they defeated Wake Forest in the last game of the regular season, then drew the Demon Deacs in the first round of the ACC tournament. This season, they beat Boston College in the last regular-season game, then turned around and played them in the ACC tournament. But there's one big difference between this year and last year: last year's team went to the NCAA tournament, and this year's team, barring something spectacular, won't. February was not kind to the Hokies. On February 5th, the Hokies beat Georgia Tech to run their record to 16-9, 5-4 in the ACC. With a slew of winnable games left, Tech's women were in good position to make it back to the NCAA's, despite an RPI that was hovering around 50. The next 13 days were rough, though, as the Hokies dropped four in a row and fell out of NCAA consideration. The first loss was an acceptable road loss to Maryland, but then the Hokies dropped a road game to Clemson 73-69 and a home game to Virginia, 79-76. The streak was capped by a 68-63 home defeat at the hands of suddenly red-hot NC State. The Hokies were 16-13, and that was that. VT eventually finished 6-8 in the ACC and entered the ACC tourney as the #7 seed. Two straight wins over BC put Tech at 18-13, but their RPI has plummeted to 78 (according to RealTimeRPI), and the NCAA tournament won't come calling, unless the Hokies beat powerful UNC, then (probably) Maryland, and (probably) #1-ranked, undefeated Duke. That would be a run to rival the one by the 7th-seeded Virginia Cavalier men's team in 1976, when the Hoos shocked the ACC by winning the tournament. Actually, it would be more impressive, because the gap between the haves and the have-nots in women's basketball is enormous. That leaves the Women's NIT, and the Hokies are a good bet to make the WNIT (though not a lock -- keep reading). The WNIT is expanding to 48 teams this year, meaning over 110 teams will participate in women's postseason play, between the NCAA tournament and the WNIT. Tech hasn't been to the WNIT since 2002, when the Ieva Kublina-led Hokies made it all the way to the semifinals before falling to Houston in overtime, 77-72. Houston closed regulation with a 16-4 run behind some talented guard play, then took the win in overtime. Interesting side note: The Hokies were 18-10 in 2001-2002, with an RPI of 35, but didn't get an NCAA invitation. Tech had started that season 15-2, but a 3-8 stretch run made the committee decide to leave the Hokies at the altar. Tech was the highest-RPI-rated team to miss the NCAA tournament that year. The WNIT is played exclusively on the home floors of participants, not at any neutral sites. Participating teams bid to host games on a round-by-round basis. In 2002, the Hokies played four WNIT games in Cassell, beating UNC-Greensboro (51-45), George Washington (68-52), and Vermont (76-48) before losing in a thriller against Houston, 77-72 in overtime. The Hokies aren't a lock to make the WNIT, though. The tournament has a somewhat complex selection method that ensures that a team from each of 31 conferences will be selected for the tournament. That only leaves 17 true at-large spots, which isn't a lot. It's hard to imagine the Hokies with no postseason destination at all -- that hasn't happened since Carol Alfano's last season as Tech's coach, in 1996-97 -- but it could happen. WNIT bids are extended March 12th, so we'll find out then. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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