calumnus said:
SFCityBear said:
calumnus said:
SFCityBear said:
calumnus said:
Cal has no one, first team, second team or honorable mention.
https://pac-12.com/article/2021/10/13/media-selects-preseason-2021-22-pac-12-mens-basketball-all-conference-teams
I guess we can thank Oski Utah decided to blow up their program as they also have zero players named. Of course, that is because they have zero starters returning.
Four McDonald's All-Americans coming into PAC-12. 10 All-Conference transfers. Not sure if Shepard was included in that, he was third team All Conference USA two years ago, but not last year.
It appears the other 2020 BDWs: UW, WSU and ASU are getting significant talent infusions and it's going to be tougher to get wins. UCLA, Oregon, Colorado, USC, Arizona, Stanford, ASU and OSU are all considered potential NCAA Tournament teams. They are all going to need to get wins against us to get there.
Does this mean that we are in the Driver's Seat?
As in football, we can be the "bad loss" spoilers for the rest of the conference.
At this point, I will take any win we can get and love it. As I wrote before, I expect 14, and will be disappointed
with anything less.
Was UCSD included in your 14 expected wins?
Well, no need to worry. Your boy Celestine will return soon and then the team will get back on track.
Look, I made the prediction just to counter all the cynicism building on the board week by week, whether it was warranted or not. Cal fans are a particularly cynical bunch, it seems, especially over something we can do almost nothing about, which makes the word "fan" a misnomer in this case.
So why didn't you tell me ahead of time that Cal would be missing 5 players for the first game of the season? I, along with everyone else was predicting a win over UCSD. but if you had told me we will be playing our very first game missing one starter, Celestine, one other rotation player (our best 3-point shooter), Foreman, and three players who are possible rotation players, Thorpe, Bowser, and Roberson, then I would not have predicted a win.
Predictions are made (and I think all of us made our predictions based on what we knew or felt about the roster or the coach and the schedule) assuming a full complement of players, healthy players. The reality is that every team has players who will get injured and miss games or will play hurt. That is modern basketball, and modern sports. When Willie Mays played baseball, players usually played 9 innings every game every day, and there was no disabled list. Today players are platooned, play only a few innings, usually don't play every day, and there are THREE disabled lists for all the injured.
You don't know this, but before the football season, I predicted that Arizona would be one of Cal's wins. At game time, Cal had 5 starters out with injury or Covid positive tests including their best player, and lost. A couple weeks ago, when I heard USC's best player was out, I predicted Cal would beat USC. Now the game has been cancelled due to Cal having 44 players test positive. In basketball, even if you have only 1 or 2 players hurt, it can kill your chances. Last year 2 of our 3 best players got hurt, and the season was toast.
Before Covid, injuries had become a fact of life in college basketball. It is impossible to make an accurate prediction of any kind in any sport now. It must be driving bookies and gamblers nuts.
Many players these days seem to get hurt in practice. When I first saw Ty Wallace play, driving to the basket and crashing to the floor, I predicted he would hurt himself. It was a miracle that it took him 4 years to finally get hurt, and sure enough, his last injury occurred in a scrimmage, and probably cost Cal a chance a run in the NCAA. How did Jabari Bird get hurt? It was a back injury. Those are usually a contact thing. He was a very fragile player at Cal, often getting injured. I always felt that Cuonzo was partially to blame, by taking a smooth finesse player who had a great short- and mid-range game, and trying to make him a more physical player taking it hard to the rim, or shooting threes. Of the two, Bird seemed to prefer shooting threes.
Since you seem to know a lot that is negative about Mark Fox, would you know whether Fox's practice sessions, especially his scrimmages, are especially physical or rough, with a lot of contact, and players trying to overextend themselves beyond what is safe?
SFCityBear