Mississippi St 75, SLU 50: Game Five

One of the best rebounding teams in the country played SEC football against an inexperienced Atlantic 10 team playing basketball.   Football beat basketball 75-50 in a game that was never in doubt.   Mississippi St shot 59% from the floor and dominated the backboards (39-24 rebounding advantage), while holding SLU to 25% from the three-point line and 41% True Shooting Percentage.

Lineups

In this space, we try and discern what Jim “Safecracker” Crews is seeing and hearing, as he turns the dials on different combinations to see what will click.

Starters:

  • Austin McBroom
  • Ash Yacoubou
  • Davell Roby
  • Tanner Lancona
  • John Manning

Back to the starting lineup from the first two games, perhaps due to Lancona and Manning showing signs of life defensively vs NC A&T.

Minutes Leaders (non-starters in Bold):

  • McBroom (27)
  • Yarbrough (22)
  • Bartley (22)
  • Yacoubou (17)
  • Agbeko (17)

Hard to get a read on anything here, as the minutes were distributed relatively evenly in a game featuring zero Crunch Time and heaping helpings of Garbage Time.

SLU Player Stats

(Definitions at bottom of post)

Screen Shot 2014-11-29 at 6.31.46 AM
Data from www.kenpom.com
  • Reggie Agbeko had a plus game overall; like the rest of the SLU team he was bulldogged on the glass
  • Everyone else was overmatched

Summary

SLUs first game against a Top 100 team (MSU was #85 on KenPom.com going in) states emphatically the Billikens are not yet ready for such competition.  Looking ahead, this trio of upcoming games stands out as comparable to MSU:

  • 12/21: Vermont (#103)
  • 12/31: Vanderbilt (#99)
  • 1/3: Rhode Island (#87)

Pomeroy currently has SLU winning all three of these home games each by a point.  December should reveal the range of possiblilties in the A-10 season to come.

—————————————————————————–

AdjGS:  variation on the Game Score metric created by John Hollinger, detailed here.  Hollinger’s original formula is Adjusted to reallocate the points in the game by ratio of the player’s overall impact.  Credit to the team at Rock M Nation for this improvement.

SLU 57, NC A&T 54: Game Four

In front of a small crowd, SLU improved to 3-1 with a 57-54 victory over one of the lowest-rated teams in the country.  The Billikens were in control most of the way but let NC A&T hang around long enough to make their move midway through the second half.

Miles Reynolds rebounded from a shot to the face to thoroughly controlled the action, bulling his way to the line time and time again (14-18 FT).  McBroom carried the team in Game One, and Reynolds did all that and more in Game Four.

Lineups

In this space we take a look at the Starters, even though Starting Is For High School (TM), and the Minutes Leaders as we try to get some insight as to how Coach Jim “Safecracker” Crews sees this team.

Starters:

  • Austin McBroom
  • Ash Yacoubou
  • Davell Roby
  • Reggie Agbeko
  • Austin Gillmann

First start of the year for Gillmann, as the Safecracker turns the dial on bigs, listening.  Agbecko was in the Grandy Glaze role of “Starter but…” as he was limited to 11 minutes.

Minutes Leaders (non-starters in Bold):

  1. McBroom (29)
  2. Yacoubou (25)
  3. Lancona (23)
  4. Reynolds (21)
  5. tie-Manning (17) & Crawford (17)

Overall, 10 of 12 guys played double-digit minutes.  Lancona and Manning, the Game One starters, garnered extra minutes with defense, and Reynolds took command.

SLU Player Stats

(Definitions at bottom of post)

Source: www.kenpom.com
Source: www.kenpom.com
  • Miles Reynolds had the strongest game of any Billiken this year.  His production accounted for over half that of the other 11 guys — offsetting five guys in the negative — and AdjGS does not even take into account Fouls Drawn.   He carried SLU to victory.
  •  McBroom returned to form, suggesting he has overcome the wrist injury from Game One
  • Manning’s 3 blocks stand out on the defensive side, with 2 big ones in the closing minutes.  He did not start for the first time this year, but he finished very strong.  Also standing out are Lancona and Reynolds each with 3 steals.
  • Agbeko and Jolly combined for 7 rebounds in 20 minutes, with Reggie’s two turnovers dragging down his GS.   Turnovers were a problems for Yacoubou and Bradley as well.
  • Yacoubou’s 5 rebounds and 2 assists only partially offset a poor shooting night.

Summary

This squad will be hard-pressed to improve on last year’s defense, but two areas where the fruit hangs low are Block % (last year ranked #324 overall) and Steal % (#305).   Reynolds, Reynolds, and more Reynolds.   His best is quite good.

—————————————————————————–

AdjGS:  variation on the Game Score metric created by John Hollinger, detailed here.  Hollinger’s original formula is Adjusted to reallocate the points in the game by ratio of the player’s overall impact.  Credit to the team at Rock M Nation for this improvement.

 

TAMU-CC-XYZ 62, SLU 56: Game Three

The undersized but experienced Islanders of Texas A&M-Corpus Christi upset the Billikens at home in Game Three of the season for both schools.  SLU falls to 2-1.  TAMU-CC improves to 2-1.

The Lineups

The Safecracker continued turning and twisting and listening, trying to find the right combination and hear that click.

Starters:

  • Austin McBroom
  • Ash Yacoubou
  • Davell Roby
  • Reggie Agbeko
  • John Manning

Straight swap of Agbeko in for Lancona at the 4 spot.   Both saw action but neither finished among the leaders in minutes played.

Minutes Leaders (non-starters in Bold):

  1. Yacoubou (29)
  2. McBroom (28)
  3. Roby (26)
  4. Marcus Bartley (20)
  5. Brett Jolly (18)

Bartley and Jolly both had strong games this week in the road win at Indiana St.  Perhaps their added minutes were a reward for that effort.

The Turning Point

Win probability chart: http://kenpom.com/winprob.php?g=655
Win probability chart: http://kenpom.com/winprob.php?g=655

With 5 minutes left there was an 88% probability of a SLU win, but we defied the odds and lost.   Three straight missed free throws mixed with two turnovers and a game-long lead evaporated in two minutes.  You can see the yellow cliff dive.

SLU Player Stats

Numbers from www.kenpom.com
Numbers from www.kenpom.com

 

  • Strong game from Roby, hitting two threes, hitting the boards and dishing out a few assists.  His best game of the three so far.
  • Lancona came off the bench for the first time this year, and responded with his most productive game
  • Agbeko returned to the starting lineup (even though Starting Is For High School(TM)) but did not leave a major mark.  Got on the glass and struggled from the line.
  • Limited minutes for Gillmann (5) & Crawford (8), the first time two guys were under ten minutes in a game.
  • McBroom missed all three of his 3s and was not a major factor in his 28 minutes.  Could be lingering effects from the hard fall in Game One.
  • Manning, Bartley and Jolly played big minutes (by SLU standards) and mustered 3 Rebounds, 3 Turnovers and 6 Fouls among them.

Summary

There was bound to be a bump in the road to maturity.  A team of upperclassmen came and took our lunch money.  One major ingredient missing in freshmen and players growing into their minutes is Poise.  It does not grow in a linear fashion but limps and soars and sputters along until you just have it.  The TAMU-CC guys had it; we are still working to get it.

The Jesuit Basketball Conference

ESPN’s Joe Lunardi made a bold claim during Thursday’s Gonzaga-Saint Joseph’s telecast:


Sounds like something worth examining.  To gauge whether Lunardi is on or off his rocker, I took a look at the 20 Jesuit universities playing Division I men’s basketball.  Here is what such a conference would look like.  All data below from Ken Pomeroy.

The Candidates

Jesuit Basketball
Jesuit colleges playing DI basketball

Gonzaga and Big East schools both old (Georgetown) and new (Xavier, Creighton) lead the way.  Our Billikens are fifth and lead a parade of Saints, Sans, and Santas as we move down the list.

As you can see from the “Best Win” column, a handful of quality wins so far for the group, with Holy Cross over Harvard by far the most surprising.  Nice work, Crusaders.  On the flip side, Lunardi’s own Saint Joseph’s Hawks could do nothing when left alone with Angie Dickinson, the Seattle hoops scene remains totally WAC, and when Saint Peter’s took Niagra they experienced poor basketball lasting more than two hours without even consulting a doctor.  So there are some early embarrassments on the record.

The Rankings

Before we build a fake conference to figure out how these Jesuit Juggernauts would fare against the rest of the country, let’s take a look at the current (real) conference rankings.

Conference Rankings through Sat, Nov 22
Conference Rankings through Sat, Nov 22

OK, let’s start with a quick rocker proximity check for Joey Buckets.  Here is where a full, inclusive 20-team Jesuit Conference (“JesCon20”) would rank among the nation’s best:

All 20 Jesuit teams, with secular conference adjustments
All 20 Jesuit teams, with secular conference adjustments

Ugh.  JesCon20 is both plodding offensively (99.8 AdjO) and thoroughly mediocre on the defensive side, only getting to the 11th-ranked conference overall.  No fun to watch and certainly not what Lunardi had in mind.

Joeymandering

In order to make The Lunardi Proclamation come true, we are obviously going to have to do a bit of Jesuit basketball gerrymandering.  Let’s call it Joeymandering.  Twenty teams is way too big and unwieldy anyway, and we are sure Loyolas & Friends would not want to hold their compadres back, so let’s Joeymander the list down and just take the top 14.  Seems reasonable.

JesuCon top 14.  Apologies to Loyola Chicago, Loyola Marymount, Seattle, Saint Peter's, Fairfield, and Loyola MD.  
JesuCon top 14. Apologies to Loyola Chicago, Loyola Marymount, Seattle, Saint Peter’s, Fairfield, and Loyola MD.

We are moving on up like George and Weezy.  Lept over the top-heavy American, and are now within striking range of the A10.  However, considering the JesCon14’s average team is not even in the Top 100 (#110 in AdjO; #104 in AdjD), we must trim further.

Six more have to go. We are taking it to JesCon8.

JesCon 8.  Further apologies to Santa Clara Boston College Detroit Holy Cross Canisius Fordham
Further apologies to Santa Clara, Boston College, Detroit, Holy Cross, Canisius, and Fordham

Now we are getting somewhere.  The JesCon8 conference  has a boutique feel and the offensive chops to compete with the Top 3, but is going to be held back by its Pac12-ish defense.  They can hold their conference summit around a table at Sushi Den, but still are not Top 3.

With a little more Joeymandering we might be able to make a man’s dream come true.  We take it to JesCon6.

JesCon6.  This is the third best mythical conference in the country.  Gonzaga Georgetown Xavier Creighton Saint Louis San Francisco
JesCon6. This is the third best (mythical) conference in the country.
* Gonzaga
* Georgetown
* Xavier
* Creighton
* Saint Louis
* San Francisco

Yahtzee!!  Bonzai!  We did it!  High sixes and Hail Marys all around!  JesCon6!  JesCon6!  JesCon6!

So Joe Lunardi was correct all along.  What he meant to say was:

If the Jesuits had their own conference — then kicked out their 14 lowest-ranked schools — they would be the 3rd best in the nation.

Well said, Joey Buckets.  Well said.

Conclusion

We leave you the Braketologist’s Dilemma: in order for us to Joeymander a Jesuit Conference worthy of the #3 ranking in America and prove our guy right, we had to leave behind Lunardi’s own Saint Joseph’s Hawks.  They would have to form their own MAACish amalgam.

Screen Shot 2014-11-23 at 1.48.26 PM
Jesuit Conference joeymandered to become the #3 conference in all the land.  Notice #7.

Between now and March Saint Joseph’s could play their way into the Top 6 of this, the Number Three Fake Conference in the country, or maybe Joe Lunardi just holds the line and keep the JesCon6 Hawk-less and riding high in the rankings.

Either way, it is bound to be an interesting broadcast at the (Fake) Conference Tournament at the JesuDome in Rome, Italy.

SLU 69, Southern Indiana 56: Game Two

This game was not televised — first of three such games this season — so the Eye Test stands obscured by Sycamore Vision.  I could not see the forest for the trees.

Fellow 13er Kentucky buried Kansas last night under their Two Platoon: Coach Cal played between 17 and 21 minutes and forced the ESPN announcers to use the word “reinforcements” instead of “subs”.  SLU Coach Jim Crews stuck with the same starting lineup but continued trying many different combinations.  Always turning, always listening for the click.

Lineups

Starters:

  • McBroom
  • Yacoubou
  • Roby
  • Lancona
  • Manning

The Safecracker went with the same starting lineup for the second straight game.  Since Starting Is For High School (TM), we will monitor Minutes Leaders this season to see if Coach Crews reveals his thinking as the season progresses.

Minutes Leaders:

  1. McBroom (26)
  2. Crawford (24)
  3. Yacoubou (22)
  4. Bartley (20)
  5. Gillmann (18)

We will see going forward if the Safecracker holds his starters constant as he gets a better feel, or instead we start to see the Minutes Leaders migrate into the starting lineup.

SLU Player Stats

(Definitions at the bottom of the post)

Screen Shot 2014-11-19 at 7.34.17 PM

  • Fantastic all-around game from Yarbrough, earning GS beyond his point production with 5 Rebounds, an Assist and a Steal
  • Bartley was perfect from three, perfect from the stripe, and also was an all-court factor
  • Yacoubou took the mantle in this one, shooting often and poorly but getting to the line and converting his freebies (7-9 FT)
  • Jolly got after it and led the team in production (GmSc /Min 0.57), banging his way to 4 Rebounds, 4 Fouls, and shooting 6 FTs.  Just when you thought no one could get in foul trouble with a twelve-man rotation, along came Jolly and his Hack-a-Syc strategy
  • I was wondering how far into the season we would go before McBroom was not the best player, and whether SLU could win without his best game.  A lingering sore wrist led to 1-8 shooting, but the team carried him to its first roadie.

Summary

Always good to get a win when your top scorer is off, when you are on the road with an inexperienced team, and do it while sticking to the mission of getting guys minutes and trying combinations.   Banged-up McBroom, no Glaze, no problem.  2-0 and on we go.

—————————————————————————–

AdjGS:  variation on the Game Score metric created by John Hollinger, detailed here.  Hollinger’s original formula is Adjusted to reallocate the points in the game by ratio of the player’s overall impact.  Credit to the team at Rock M Nation for this improvement.

SLU 62, SIUC 59: Game One

The season is underway.  SLU coach Jim Crews planned on playing all 13 scholarship players, boldly shrugging all parallels to the Last Supper.  But before the game started.

Well, OK.  Injury aside, Grandy captained the Intro line and gave out some impressive handshake combinations and chest bumps, though it looked like the injury dampened his usual enthusiasm.

Lineups

In this space, we will try to get a sense of what Jim “Safecracker” Crews is feeling as he tumbles through all possible combinations.  Who is starting, who is finishing, and how the minutes are allocated should tell us what direction the team will head.

  • Starters: McBroom, Yacoubou, Roby, Lancona, Manning.
  • Second-half:  (same)
  • Crunch Time: McBroom, Yacoubou, Roby, Mike Crawford, Austin Gillmann

Miles Reynolds also logged some Crunch Time minutes.  All 12 available scholarship players saw action, nine scored and everyone played double-digit minutes except Reggie Agbeko, who just missed out with nine.  Interesting that starters Lancona and Manning played minor roles overall, with Crews going small for extended stretches.  Foul trouble was not an issue, but a couple of minor injuries surely messed up the planned rotation.

SLU Player Stats

(Definitions at the bottom of the post)

  •  Career game for McBroom, announcing himself as the primary ball-handler and shooter.  He was the best player on the floor.
  • Ash was tough on the boards and showed driving ability.   Very strong debut for the Villanova transfer.
  • Mike Crawford grabbed some of the minutes vacated by Lancona and Manning, and left his mark with a stat-stuffing performance capped by a clutch tying three.  Last year he was used sparingly to spell Jake Barnett, putting up a couple of threes and mostly staying out of the way.  In this game, he was stable and poised (though one of his turnovers caused my daughter to audibly retch) and looked ready for an expanded role.
  • Gillmann did a few things befitting a fledging Rob Loe, namely “being tall and thin” and “passing pretty well from the top of the arc” and “launching an occasional three”.  He found McBroom through traffic on the kickout for the winning three.
  • Davell Roby was limited by the injury (see below) and the referees.   Home cooking overall was quite delicious — SLU was in the double-bonus most of the game despite a mostly-perimeter attack — but Roby was not allowed to share in the buffet.  I am sure Rammer is in his corner.  He looks like an enthusiastic defender and a second ballhandler.  If we can sketch out McBroom as the designated Shooter, Ash is the designated Driver, I am guessing Roby is a guy who does a bit of both, while guarding the opponent’s best perimeter guy.
  • Yarbrough did a reasonable Glaze impression — 5 boards in 12 mins, hands somewhat honeybaked — and is one sturdy dude.  In fact, among Glaze, Yarbrough and Agbeko,  SLU’s football coach may have found his next all-conference Tight End.

Injuries

We mentioned Glaze’s shoulder above.  While there were certainly enough able bodies around last night, this three-point shooting SLU team will need Grandy’s pick-and-roll skills and kinetic abilities down low to make the geometry work over the long haul.

Roby had a rough night even beyond the unwanted whistles, getting raked across the cheek in the first half and returning with the giant band-aid from my grandma’s mirror cabinet under his left eye.

McBroom suffered a wrist injury on a pile up after grabbing a huge defensive rebound with 2:40 left, drawing yet another two-shot foul.  He winced noticeably and made only one of the free throws.  (McBroom went 7 of 10 overall on the night from the lin; great for most, but three misses usually constitutes a bad month for a 90% FT shooter.)  He somehow shrugged off the pain with 10 seconds and hit a clutch, step-back three pointer that broke the tie and won the game.   All the more impressive after this post-game news:

 

Summary

Contributions in a tight game from just about everyone — including the sold-out crowd — and a couple of big threes to tie, then win it.  The team was disjointed at times but fun to watch.   Time will tell whether a three-point win against SIUC proves cringe-worthy or something to crow about, but undefeated feels pretty good.  Onward!

AdjGS:  variation on the Game Score metric created by John Hollinger, detailed here.  Hollinger’s original formula is Adjusted to reallocate the points in the game by ratio of the player’s overall impact.  Credit to the team at Rock M Nation for this improvement.

SLU and Kentucky Are Basically the Same

SLU and Kentucky are basically the same when it comes to college basketball.  Both wear the royal blue and are undefeated at press time.  Both dwell in the Central time zone.  Both play home games in a sold-out Arena.

However, perplexed reader, I realize there are differences.  To wit:

Sweet Sixteens (since 1985):

  • Kentucky  18
  • SLU 0

McDonald’s All-Americans (2014-15):

  • Kentucky 9
  • SLU 0

Pre-season rank (KenPom.com):

  • Kentucky #3
  • SLU #81

As the season kicks off, let’s not dwell on what divides us.  What unites SLU and Kentucky is both schools are in the unique position of trying to figure out how to play 13 guys.   They approach this problem for different reasons, and are choosing to tackle it different ways.

Kentucky coach John Calipari has the aforementioned 9 McDonald’s All-Americans, adding an incredibly talented freshman class to a group that largely opted to give college another year.  Cal is going with an innovative Two Platoon system, essentially creating two independent units that will swap in wholesale.

SLU coach Jim Crews had five senior starters depart, adding transfers and six freshman to returnees hungry for minutes.  The early word is coach Crews will use a Safecracker’s approach, trying as many different combinations as he can until something clicks.

Coach Crews has proven himself and incredibly skilled tinkerer when it comes to his lineups, inserting an offensively-limited sophomore Grandy Glaze  into the starting lineup two years ago, and tapping senior Jake Barnett last year.  Both moves touched off long winning streaks — Glaze 11 straight, Barney a record 19 in a row — and Crews knew well enough to leave it be when those streaks ended.  Two straight A-10 titles were the result.

I will be interested to see if SLU sticks with Safecracker through the entire non-conference season, or if the buzz around Kentucky’s inevitable success with Two Platoon causes SLU to give it a go.

A Glazey Shade of Winter

On Jan 19 2013, SLU lost at home to Rhode Island 82-80 in overtime.  Second straight loss limping to a 1-2 start in the A-10.  Combined with another early season home dud against Santa Clara and losing potential resume-builders against Kansas and Washington, and the Billikens were booked standby on the CBI Express.

Coach Jim Crews inserted Grandy Glaze into the lineup for the next game, against Duquesne.  The sophomore from Toronto went a perfect 4-4 from the field, snagged 11 rebounds, and 2 steals in a 73-64 win over the Dukes.  He played 27 mins and his Offensive Rating was 136.  He set a few thousand picks and ran up on his toes.  The only negative was a Shaquian 0-4 from the line.

SLU won 11 straight, and have put up 43 wins agains 9 losses since.  They have won two A-10 regular season titles, one A-10 tournament and have gone 2-2 in NCAA Tournament play.   Glaze unquestionably was a catalyst in all this success.

But while his energy and attitude have lifted the program, his production has lain low.  Those 27 minutes against Duquesne a year and a half ago are the most he has played since.  Crews replaced Glaze in the starting lineup seven games into last season, first trying freshman Reggie Agbeko before running with Jake Barnett and the Five Seniors.

Similar to the Glaze Effect the year prior, the Barny Bounce was immediate and lasting as SLU ripped off a 19-game winning streak and moved into the Top 10 for the first time since the 1960’s.  Grandy continued to do Grandy things, but his minutes remained low even when it was clear the seniors were running out of gas.  Glaze played double-digit minutes only once in the last eleven games.  His rebounding rate was up (a stellar 27% Defensive Rebounding rate, per KenPom.com), he shored up his foul shooting (72%), but he played only one minute in the 2nd round loss to Louisville.

What can we expect from Grandy Glaze as a senior?  Well, we know he is going to bring the fun.  Intro line handshake routines should be killer.  He is the biggest personality available, plus the most experienced guy on an inexperienced team.  Coach Crews has been banging the “starting is for high school” drum repeatedly this preseason, so we may see a dozen or more different lineup combos while the roster sorts out, but through all that churn the minutes should be there for Grandy.  What will he do with those minutes?

Fun With Projections

Ken Pomeroy has a fantastic feature where he crawls to find statistically similar players.  Per KenPom.com, these five were the most similar to Grandy as a Junior (Similarity scores in parentheses):

  1. ’10 Marshall Moses, Oklahoma St (877)
  2. ’08 DeAndre Coleman, South Alabama (870)
  3. ’12 Leon Gibson, Houston (859)
  4. ’10 Gabe Blair, Wichita St (858)
  5. ’08 Marquise Gray, Michigan St (858)

All 6’6″ to 6’8″ and around 235 lbs.  All thick-chested rebounders.  All Juniors.  I took the average changes — for better and for worse — these five doppelgrandys produced in their Senior year versus their Junior year, and fed them into the WAB supercomputer.  Then I coated them with a 2014 Glaze to come up with a plausible Senior year composite for our man.  Some highlights below:

Screen Shot 2014-11-11 at 9.44.56 PM

 

A modest increase in minutes leading to a substantial jump in Offensive Rtg.  More Grandy, better results.  Marginally more aggressive, using more possessions and using them wisely.   The foul-related metrics are what stand out.  Fouls Committed down nicely, and Fouls Drawn up 40%!  This is a substantial change from fouler to foulee.

Careful With That Axe, Eugene

Commanding the ball AND going from “roundly ignored” to “foul worthy” on offense.  Hmm.  These traits remind me of a similarly-sized Billiken from way back in the early 2010s.  6’6″ 240 lbs.  The Machine from Eugene: Brian Conklin.  You may recall Conk spent his first two years just getting by on adrenaline and enthusiasm, setting picks, treating the ball like a hot potato, and fouling everything that moved.  By Junior year, he started to figure things out and put together a few good runs.  The overall numbers were solid, but the leap as a Senior was remarkable.

Conklin the Senior commanded the ball and scored with clever post moves and bulldog determination, becoming more and more foul-worthy.  His overall rebounding rates declined as he traded weakside boxing out action for posting up and initiating contact.  Even as fellow Senior Kyle Cassity slumped down the stretch, Conk carried the load.

Conclusion

Of the 5 doppelgrandys identified by KenPom.com, only one went to the NCAAs as a Senior.  Marquise Gray and Michigan St went all the way to the final game, losing to North Carolina and Psycho T.  Gray was a role player on that team, sharing minutes with a 6’7″ 230 pound freshman named Draymond Green.

Brian Conklin the Senior led SLU to the NCAA tourney and a first round win over Memphis.  Conk and the Bills were stopped short of the Sweet Sixteen by Draymond Green, also now a Senior, and his Michigan St club.

Will Glaze assert himself like a doppelgrandy?  Will he become full-on and foul-worthy?  I think Crews leans on Glaze more this season, and Grandy responds with a better-than-doppelgrandy performance halfway to Senior Conklin.  November is awash with dubious math and boundless optimism.  Starting Saturday, the puzzle starts to take shape.  See you at Chaifetz.


 

Greatest Names in Billiken Basketball History

If you were spitballing, brainstorming, or as Marketing Professionals prefer “Ideating”, trying to come up with the perfect name for a college basketball player, the conversation might go something like this:

Marketing Pro #1: “Well, for the first name let’s go super-positive.  Just over-the-top.  And make it sound vaguely-British or Australian to give it international appeal.”
Marketing Pro #2: “How about ‘Grandy’?”
MP1: “Perfect.  Gold.  Print and ship a jillion copies.  Any ideas for the last name?”
MP2: “Everyone loves donuts.  ‘Glaze’?”

I have no idea whether Grandy Glaze’s parents are in Marketing or what they are Professionals in.  I suspect they walk around every day just being awesome and seeing what comes of it.  What I know for certain is Grandy Glaze is the best name in the history of SLU Billiken basketball.  Here is the top 16, as compiled by a pot of coffee and the WAB Supercomputer.


Top 16 Names in Billiken Basketball History

1) Grandy Glaze

Jaunty, Vaguely British + Evocative of Donuts = WINNER!

2) Quirk

Not a misprint.  Quirk.  That’s it.  The WAB Supercomputer found two mentions of this man called Quirk: state discuss champ for SLUH in 1943; one free throw made for SLU basketball in 1944-45.   That’s it. Two sports, one name.  And that that name sums up the whole story: Quirk.

3) Daryl “Pee Wee” Lenard

“Pee Wee” used to be a fairly common nickname for an undersized baller.  Pee Wee Reese, Pee Wee Kirkland.  You could be sure without even looking that Pee Wee was under 5’10” and could seriously play.  Then Pee Wee Herman came along and completely dominated the scene and owned the name.   Paul Rubens’ fateful day at the matinee has ruined the nickname for a time.  Perhaps less messy reason for its demise is we cannot agree on one way to spell it:  Pee Wee, Peewee, Pee-wee, PeeWee.  Let’s grab an Icee and use the WiFi at Pei Wei to hash it out.  SLU’s famous Pee Wee gets extra points for the fact that we always knew his first name was Daryl, and for the stripped down spellings of both his first and last (given) names.  His parents were pioneers of offensive efficiency before we even knew what that meant.

4) Jordair Jett

Hard to separate how great the name was from how great the look was.  Dreads flying, face stoic, thick as a brick.  Plotting, lurking, exploding.  Alliteration was hardly needed in this name, but it certainly adds more.

5) Reverend Al Dudenhoffer

I can’t decide whether this name is more or less fun if Al was an actual Reverend or not.  I am going to go with less.  I hope someone from the dorms just decided to call him Reverend Al.  All three parts of this name are terrific.  Each pops on its own.  Bonus points that the initials spell out RAD.  Today, we would have mashed this up to Rad Dude.  I don’t think that is an improvement on the Reverend Al Dudenhoffer.

6) Travis Tadysak

Middling first name gives way to a killer last.  Pro tip: Add to your enjoyment by changing the pronunciation of the middle syllable from “eee” to “yuh”.  Practice this is in the car as you would practice Rosetta Stone prepping for a trip overseas, and you will thank me later.

7) H Waldman

“The H stands for nothing. You got a problem with that?!”   When your point guard has this kind of attitude, you are going to the Tournament.

8) Bruno Krzeminski

Maybe should have been a boxer.  Maybe a Chicago ward boss.  If I am looking at the other team’s roster and see I have to guard Bruno Krzeminski, I am tweaking an ankle in warmups.

9) Abdur Rahim Al Matiim

Four names, all interesting.  Chantable.  Singable.  You could make a terrific starting five just using combinations of all of these names:

  • G – Al Matiim
  • G – Abdur Rahim
  • F – Rahim Matiim
  • F – Matiim Al Abdur
  • C – Al Matiim Rahim

Post-9/11, these guys would have a terrible time getting through airport security, but they would win a ton of games.  If Matiim came along today we would have screwed this up by reducing him to A-RAM.

10) Luther Burden

You have no chance of guarding this man.

11) Junie Jefferies

Fun, alliterative, whimsical.  The WAB supercomputer discovered that his given name was “Lowell”, and gave bonus points that we never knew that before.  Thank you for keeping that on the down low, June Bug.

12) Austin McBroom

Rammer has added the “Hollywood” nickname as a cherry on top, not that this name needs it.   Truth told, Austin would not be my first choice for a basketball player’s first name, but it really sets up the finish perfectly.  Austin is a nice boy who gets everyone else involved; McBroom drops bombs, tells you about it, then steals your girlfriend.  Austin has seven assists and stays in front of his man;  McBroom hits nine threes and has six turnovers.  We are going to need both of these guys this year.

13) Redditt Hudson

His first name became a thing.  That thing was bought by Conde Nast and counts among its investors Snoop Lion nee Snoop Dogg nee Snoop Doggy Dogg nee Calvin Cordozar Broadus, Jr.   So basically, Redditt Hudson invented the Internet and launched a thousand fantastic names by himself.  I would not be surprised to learn he fathered every other player on this list, naming each from atop a golden throne using a scepter.

14) Dick Boushka

I could tell you that Dick Boushka was a tough-minded rebounder in the 1950s, but I don’t have to.  His name already told you that.

15) Justin Love

If you slow it down enough, it could be a rom-com.  Just. In. Love.  Starring Rachel McAdams and Channing Tatum.  Opens Friday.   But that would detract from how cool it is when your team’s best player is named Love.

16) Rashid Shabazz

Rashid Shabazz is born to be a basketball player.  Right now,  I bet Rashid Shabazz could call up Marcus Jones, Rasheed Malik, Sid Mudd, and LaTodd Johnson, whatever their ages, this fivesome would dominate any pickup game in the world on name alone.