Bender {l Wrote}:Was the 2003 tournament snub of the Eagles the worst snub of the 64 team field era?
That 2003 team with a Senior Troy Bell and freshman Craig Smith was left out of the tourney, despite making it to the semi-final of the Big East tournament. They were clearly among the top five teams in the Big East all season, the top four teams all made the Sweet Sixteen. They beat NC State on the road, had a better record than them but NC State was selected ahead of them based largely on an "elite" win over Duke, and Jay Bilas was all over ESPN championing their cause claiming BC had no elite wins despite having won at UConn on the road.
They had obvious blemishes on their resume working against, they lost to Holy Cross, and the JJ Barea Northeastern Huskies, They lost to Coach Christian's Kent State team at a neutral site, but some of their early struggles were a result of Uka Agbai getting injured and the team needed to adjust. I always felt like them making it in off the bubble the year before cost them as well, because that team probably didn't deserve it as much as the 2003 team, the 2002 was on a slide at the end of the season, 2003 was on the upswing.
Logitano {l Wrote}:Bender {l Wrote}:Was the 2003 tournament snub of the Eagles the worst snub of the 64 team field era?
That 2003 team with a Senior Troy Bell and freshman Craig Smith was left out of the tourney, despite making it to the semi-final of the Big East tournament. They were clearly among the top five teams in the Big East all season, the top four teams all made the Sweet Sixteen. They beat NC State on the road, had a better record than them but NC State was selected ahead of them based largely on an "elite" win over Duke, and Jay Bilas was all over ESPN championing their cause claiming BC had no elite wins despite having won at UConn on the road.
They had obvious blemishes on their resume working against, they lost to Holy Cross, and the JJ Barea Northeastern Huskies, They lost to Coach Christian's Kent State team at a neutral site, but some of their early struggles were a result of Uka Agbai getting injured and the team needed to adjust. I always felt like them making it in off the bubble the year before cost them as well, because that team probably didn't deserve it as much as the 2003 team, the 2002 was on a slide at the end of the season, 2003 was on the upswing.
Upswing? If I remember correctly SU won the national title but other than that it was a down year overall for the big east. There were a ton of bottom feeders for us to feast on which we did but we lost to SU and Pitt which would have been legit wins for our resume. We got blown out in 2 of our last 3 games. UConn literally beat us at home by 37 points for Troy Bell's last game at Conte. That was not a great UConn team. Also St. Joe's hung a 30 point loss on us to start the season. I did not think it was a travesty of justice us not getting a bid. We finished the season getting blown out by Temple in the NIT.
twballgame9 {l Wrote}:Logitano {l Wrote}:Bender {l Wrote}:Was the 2003 tournament snub of the Eagles the worst snub of the 64 team field era?
That 2003 team with a Senior Troy Bell and freshman Craig Smith was left out of the tourney, despite making it to the semi-final of the Big East tournament. They were clearly among the top five teams in the Big East all season, the top four teams all made the Sweet Sixteen. They beat NC State on the road, had a better record than them but NC State was selected ahead of them based largely on an "elite" win over Duke, and Jay Bilas was all over ESPN championing their cause claiming BC had no elite wins despite having won at UConn on the road.
They had obvious blemishes on their resume working against, they lost to Holy Cross, and the JJ Barea Northeastern Huskies, They lost to Coach Christian's Kent State team at a neutral site, but some of their early struggles were a result of Uka Agbai getting injured and the team needed to adjust. I always felt like them making it in off the bubble the year before cost them as well, because that team probably didn't deserve it as much as the 2003 team, the 2002 was on a slide at the end of the season, 2003 was on the upswing.
Upswing? If I remember correctly SU won the national title but other than that it was a down year overall for the big east. There were a ton of bottom feeders for us to feast on which we did but we lost to SU and Pitt which would have been legit wins for our resume. We got blown out in 2 of our last 3 games. UConn literally beat us at home by 37 points for Troy Bell's last game at Conte. That was not a great UConn team. Also St. Joe's hung a 30 point loss on us to start the season. I did not think it was a travesty of justice us not getting a bid. We finished the season getting blown out by Temple in the NIT.
It wasn't the greatest season ever for the Big East, but it wasn't down, and it made up 1/4 of the Sweet Sixteen
That Pitt team finished 4th in the country, won the Big East Tourney in a year Cuse won the national title, and went to the Sweet 16. Brandin Knight and Julius Page were on that team.
UConn team had Ben Gordon and Emeka Okafor, finished 22th in the county and went to the sweet sixteen.
Notre Dame with Chris Thomas, Matt Carroll and Torin Francis went the the Sweet Sixteen and finished 23rd
Cuse won the national title with Carmelo, Warrick and McNamara.
Mike Sweetney, James Jones, Marcus Hatton, Ryan Gomes were all in the conference at that time.
The Villanova team that year was mediocre in record but had the great freshman class with Fraser, Sumpter Ray and Foye
Otherwise agree with the premise that it wasn't a big slight.
Logitano {l Wrote}:twballgame9 {l Wrote}:Logitano {l Wrote}:Bender {l Wrote}:Was the 2003 tournament snub of the Eagles the worst snub of the 64 team field era?
That 2003 team with a Senior Troy Bell and freshman Craig Smith was left out of the tourney, despite making it to the semi-final of the Big East tournament. They were clearly among the top five teams in the Big East all season, the top four teams all made the Sweet Sixteen. They beat NC State on the road, had a better record than them but NC State was selected ahead of them based largely on an "elite" win over Duke, and Jay Bilas was all over ESPN championing their cause claiming BC had no elite wins despite having won at UConn on the road.
They had obvious blemishes on their resume working against, they lost to Holy Cross, and the JJ Barea Northeastern Huskies, They lost to Coach Christian's Kent State team at a neutral site, but some of their early struggles were a result of Uka Agbai getting injured and the team needed to adjust. I always felt like them making it in off the bubble the year before cost them as well, because that team probably didn't deserve it as much as the 2003 team, the 2002 was on a slide at the end of the season, 2003 was on the upswing.
Upswing? If I remember correctly SU won the national title but other than that it was a down year overall for the big east. There were a ton of bottom feeders for us to feast on which we did but we lost to SU and Pitt which would have been legit wins for our resume. We got blown out in 2 of our last 3 games. UConn literally beat us at home by 37 points for Troy Bell's last game at Conte. That was not a great UConn team. Also St. Joe's hung a 30 point loss on us to start the season. I did not think it was a travesty of justice us not getting a bid. We finished the season getting blown out by Temple in the NIT.
It wasn't the greatest season ever for the Big East, but it wasn't down, and it made up 1/4 of the Sweet Sixteen
That Pitt team finished 4th in the country, won the Big East Tourney in a year Cuse won the national title, and went to the Sweet 16. Brandin Knight and Julius Page were on that team.
UConn team had Ben Gordon and Emeka Okafor, finished 22th in the county and went to the sweet sixteen.
Notre Dame with Chris Thomas, Matt Carroll and Torin Francis went the the Sweet Sixteen and finished 23rd
Cuse won the national title with Carmelo, Warrick and McNamara.
Mike Sweetney, James Jones, Marcus Hatton, Ryan Gomes were all in the conference at that time.
The Villanova team that year was mediocre in record but had the great freshman class with Fraser, Sumpter Ray and Foye
Otherwise agree with the premise that it wasn't a big slight.
Is this an attempt to argue for the sake of an argument? 4 out of 14 teams getting a bid from the big east in my view is a down year for the conference. Agree to disagree? I think we agree on my overall point that we feasted on the shitty teams and struggled against the top teams so a bid was not deserved. Looking it up we went 1-5 against UConn, ND, Pitt and SU.
hinghameagle {l Wrote}:No evidence to prove this, but I have always felt that BC got snubbed because of the year before. The year before BC was a controversial addition to the tournament off the bubble and then went out and played like dogshit against Texas. Ryan Sidney went scoreless and was embarrassingly bad. I always felt that BC got penalized for the previous years transgressions.
HJS {l Wrote}: When this snub happened, one of my first posts in reaction was something to the effect of "Fuck it. GDF should call the ACC and see if they need a 10th school." Funny how that worked out.
twballgame9 {l Wrote}:HJS {l Wrote}: When this snub happened, one of my first posts in reaction was something to the effect of "Fuck it. GDF should call the ACC and see if they need a 10th school." Funny how that worked out.
This is HJS' Ulysses right here, a fucking masterpiece.
Bryn Mawr Eagle {l Wrote}:twballgame9 {l Wrote}:HJS {l Wrote}: When this snub happened, one of my first posts in reaction was something to the effect of "Fuck it. GDF should call the ACC and see if they need a 10th school." Funny how that worked out.
This is HJS' Ulysses right here, a fucking masterpiece.
Wow, so that's where the idea started!
twballgame9 {l Wrote}:Bryn Mawr Eagle {l Wrote}:twballgame9 {l Wrote}:HJS {l Wrote}: When this snub happened, one of my first posts in reaction was something to the effect of "Fuck it. GDF should call the ACC and see if they need a 10th school." Funny how that worked out.
This is HJS' Ulysses right here, a fucking masterpiece.
Wow, so that's where the idea started!
The pure awesomeness of this HJS post will largely go unnoticed because he wasted his magnum opus on the hoops w3irdoz.
Bryn Mawr Eagle {l Wrote}:HJS' 2003 post needs to be found and preserved - it may be up there with footnote 4 of Carolene Products, or Paine's "Common Sense" in terms of historical documents that spawned a new idea - a whole new way of thinking - and that went on to change everything.
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