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03.16.2009 6:27 am

Meet The Ultimate NCAA Cinderfella

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There are dozens of cool stories in this NCAA Tournament, but perhaps none are more compelling than Morgan State and coach Todd Bozeman.

You may recall that the NCAA slapped an eight-year coaching ban on Bozeman after he was busted for paying a player to play at California.

While away from the college game for 10 years, he coached AAU teams, worked overseas clinics and did some NBA scouting. Rather than give up on his career, Bozeman made an unlikely comeback at Morgan State – a once-proud athletic juggernaut that fell on very hard times.

He took the job in 2006, after Morgan State finished 4-26.

Now Bozeman has Morgan State in the NCAA Tournament. His Bears, 23-11, won the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference tourney title. They earned a No. 15 seed and a first-round match-up against Oklahoma.

“Personally, it’s been a long, long road back for me,” Bozeman told the Baltimore Sun.

“It means everything,” Todd’s wife, TeLethea Bozeman, told the newspaper. “He has talked about the possibility of this moment, and if it were to happen, the only thing missing is the fact his father was not here to be with him.”

ELSEWHERE ON THE BRACKET

Several things caught the eye of experts:

Pat Forde, ESPN.com: “Who else could dream up this oddball plot? It began with North Carolina touted as invincible and the Big East considered unrivaled. It ended with the Tar Heels losing four times in their own league and the Big East getting no more NCAA bids than the Big Ten or ACC.”

Dan Wetzel, Yahoo! Sports: “New Jersey has nearly 9 million residents, yet not a single state school made the tournament. North Dakota has 640,000 residents, most of whom will be rooting on North Dakota State. Even better, NDSU made the tourney in its first attempt (it was previously a D-II powerhouse). In contrast, Northwestern has been trying to no avail for the last 71 seasons.”

Andy Staples, SI.com: “We knew the SEC was bad, but it wasn’t clear whether the committee would punish the league for mediocre play and abysmal out-of-conference scheduling. It did. Regular-season champ LSU is a No. 8 seed. Eastern division champ Tennessee is a No. 9 seed. Mississippi State, the big-conference bracket buster, is a 13.”

Gary Parrish, CBSSports.com: “The argument people are making for Arizona is that it ‘beat some people.’ Well, yeah. It’s Arizona, a national brand and member of the Pac-10, which allows it to schedule in a way where there are plenty of opportunities to beat some people. So the Wildcats beat some people — like Kansas, Washington, Gonzaga and UCLA. But they nearly lost twice as many top 50 games as they won, and they are 5-9 against other teams in this NCAA tournament field. Meantime, Creighton was .500 against the top 50, 2-1 against other teams in this field. So it appears the only thing that hurt Creighton is that it didn’t have as many opportunities as Arizona to beat some people, and if that’s what kept Creighton out of the field then something is wrong with the process, because that’s a little too BCS-ish for my tastes.”

WHEN MASCOTS FIGHT

March Madness can get the best of anybody in college athletics, including the mascots. The Associated Press fills us in:

RENO, Nev. — The mascots for Utah State and New Mexico State got physical with each other down the stretch of the teams’ Western Athletic Conference tournament semifinal Friday night.

During a timeout with 7 seconds left and New Mexico State leading 70-69, Utah State’s mascot, “Big Blue” the bull, confronted New Mexico State’s “Pistol Pete” cowboy mascot and ripped off his fake mustache.

The cowboy then chased the bull to halfcourt, jumped on his back and tried unsuccessfully to pull him to the floor.

“Pistol Pete” then started to try to choke his rival before retreating to his end of the court.

Mascot fight!

Mascot fight!

Here is another mascot fight, from last year.

MYSTERIES OF THE UNIVERSE

Questions to ponder while wondering if Keenan Burton and Donnie Avery are ready to become primary NFL receivers:

  • Can Mizzou Nation show Mike Anderson enough belated love to keep him happy in Boone County?
  • Will the Blues ever beat the Red Wings again? Or will their suffering continue season after season after season?
  • Are Rams fans feeling better about their team’s decision to pass on Jay Cutler? Shouldn’t a kid from Vanderbilt be smarter than this?
  • Isn’t the World Baseball Classic’s mercy rule there to protect lesser baseball countries like Italy and the Netherlands? Did anybody expect Team USA to need that rule to minimize embarrassment?
  • And will Puerto Rico’s stunning WBC success validate Jose Oquendo’s decision to stiff Joel Pineiro?

ROCKING OUT WITH THE CHICK

Bill Belichick
, Charlie Weis and Jon Bon Jovi. It’s musical magic!

QUIPS ‘R US

Here is what some of America’s leading sports pundits have been writing:

Scott Ostler, San Francisco Chronicle: “Brian McNamee claims he played Pin-the-Tail-on-the-Roger in the Yankees’ hot-tub area. Memo to McNamee and (Roger) Clemens: Get a room! Imagine the embarrassment had Alex Rodriguez walked in on them. Awkward!”

Mike Bianchi, Orlando Sentinel: “Call me unpatriotic if you want, but the only way I’m watching the World Baseball Classic is if Tiger is playing in it.”

Greg Cote, Miami Herald: “In Doral’s first round, Sweden’s Henrik Stenson stripped down to his form-hugging underwear – no shoes, no pants, no shirt, no problem — for a shot from the water. Look for it in the upcoming DVD, Golfers Gone Wild.”

Dan Daly, Washington Times: “Can you believe the marathon game between Syracuse and Connecticut in the Big East tournament? Guess we know now why UConn coach Jim Calhoun - whose hefty salary was in the news a while back - makes the big bucks. Just look at how much overtime the man puts in.”

Dwight Perry, Seattle Times: “Even more amazing than Thursday’s Big East tournament game between Syracuse and UConn going six overtimes? No postgame interviewer asked Huskies coach Jim Calhoun if he gets paid time-and-a-half for that one.”

MEGAPHONE

“I’m not a crazy, crazy pro football guy. I mean, I like the Pats. I followed the Pats this year without (Tom) Brady, yeah. My father made a lot of money, he ran a little book, and in the end he just learned to bet heavy against New England when I was a kid. So Steve Grogan and his bad knees bought us our first VCR and first washer-dryer before my mother threw him out. So that taught us from a young age to view pro football with disdain and was just an opportunity to view Patriots fans as fans who would bet with consistently broken hearts, no matter what.”

Actor Ben Affleck, to Esquire.

8 comments

Comments are closed.

Man, I’m so sick of Boston fans bithcing and moaning about their “broken hearts”. Like it happens no where else?
Get some stones New England and stop your whinning. I think they kind of wish the Curse of the Bambino was still going, so they keep bitching and moaning.

NCAA “body of work” crap is a scam they came up w/ the last few years to keep the mid majors to a minimum. As Parrish documents, Arizona over Creighton is a joke.

— kjklsl
10:37 am March 16th, 2009

My boyfriend Tim and I are really hopeful Mizzou can make a real run!

— S.W.
11:15 am March 16th, 2009

They need to institute a new rule in college football and basketball that says you can only play one more home game than road game during the regular season. That way some of these BCS-level schools will have to travel to a Creighton or a San Diego St. to meet the requirement and will see how tough they really are. Until then strength of schedule and “bofy of work” is a bunch of BS.

Nice homestand for the Note. Edmonton is up next and they are right in front of us in the standings…Perron has played well lately.

— Tim
11:30 am March 16th, 2009

Gary Parrish, CBSSports.com, said: “So it appears the only thing that hurt Creighton is that it didn’t have as many opportunities as Arizona to beat some people, and if that’s what kept Creighton out of the field then something is wrong with the process, because that’s a little too BCS-ish for my tastes.”

He nailed it. The Big Dance is now a made-for-TV event that routinely snubs quality mid-majors to instead inflict upon us a series of also-rans from power conferences with lots of well-to-do alumni and schools in big markets.

— 7dez7
12:38 pm March 16th, 2009

Get a grip, Tim. Creighton doesn’t play football. The reason the bigs have more home games against the smalls is because it’s a payday for the smalls. Akron gladly takes its trouncing in front of 105,000 paying customers at the Shoe. OSU has routinely mixed in other Ohio schools (along with the USC’s, Texas’s, and Oklahoma in ‘10 & ‘11) in order to bolster their coffers, and spread the wealth in-state.

— greggh
12:49 pm March 16th, 2009

gregg, yes I know Creighton doesn’t have football. If that is all you managed to glean from my post than it’s little wonder you went on with the rest of your rant. It had nothing to do with paydays for the small schools. My point is that Creighton has to play a tougher non-con schedule, including road games, as a way to bolster their resume, while Arizona plays nobody and gets in even while playing in this year’s pathetic Pac 10. It’s the same in foorball. Maybe we wouldn’t have to see Ohio St choke in BCS games if they were forced to go on the road once in a while instead of playing 9 home games every season. Then the pretenders could be exposed for the frauds that they are…

— Tim
1:28 pm March 16th, 2009

Today’s tipsheet title: “Meet The Ultimate NCAA Cinderfella.” Cinderfella? How in the world does a major newspaper such as the STL Post Dispatch allow such a blatent typo? Wouldn’t the Mizzou school of journalism give out an automatic “F” to Jeff Gordon if this was an assignment?

As for the NCAA, it doesn’t matter if it’s the BCS or a playoff system of more than 65 teams. As long as a money driven selection commitee is in charge of the post season berths, there will always be inferior teams getting in over superior teams for political reasons.

Speaking of which, wouldn’t the potential of Creighton going on a George Mason type tourney run be a better ratings bonanza than Arizona’s inevitable beatdown in the first or second round?

As for the NIT tourney, shouldn’t they make foam hands with 66 fingers for the champion? After all, winning the NIT makes you the 66th best team in the country.

— Josh "I'm Sloshed" Hancock
7:57 pm March 16th, 2009

Tim, sorry for the lateness of this reply, but, yes, I understood your point. My rant, if that’s what you want to call it, was to say that, since you included football, the bigs play more home games precisely because that’s the way the smalls want it. They make a lot more $ by playing at the sold out OSU or Mich than at their small home venues. OSU has purposely taken the added step of scheduling mostly Ohio schools to keep the money in-state. But they play their share of home-and-homes with other bigs. That went directly to your “only one more home game than away” point. I do happen to agree with you in the case of basketball, though. Entirely different. If you had kept it to that only, no rant.

— greggh
1:30 pm March 18th, 2009