U Hopes to Make
NCAA Tourney
With five new players on the roster and
without three starters from last season, the Gopher basketball team’s
outlook seems as much about guesswork as it does facts. Coach
Tubby Smith is not without expectations, though,
and that includes improving on last season’s 20-14 record, 8-10 in the
Big Ten Conference.
Smith said on Friday he hopes the
improvement equates to “more wins and being in the NCAA tournament.”
The Gophers began practice last week and are preparing for their
exhibition opener at Williams Arena against St. Cloud State on November
3 without last season’s three leading scorers, guard Lawrence
McKenzie, forward Dan Coleman and center Spencer
Tollackson. Smith and his staff will be trying to figure out how
best to blend his eight returning players with newcomers Ralph
Sampson III, Colton Iverson, Devoe Joseph, Devron
Bostick and Paul Carter.
Sampson and Iverson are forward/center
guys who provide size on a roster that doesn’t have much. Smith said
both are two inches taller than Coleman and Spencer, both listed last
year at 6-9. Sampson will be a face-the-basket player, while Iverson is
better near the basket, according to Smith.
Joseph, a guard who is considered one of
the best young players in Canada, can handle the ball and score. So,
too, will Bostick, a junior college transfer with a big reputation for
outside shooting. Carter, another junior college transfer, is 6-9 and
will have to help with the size issue although he only weighs
195 pounds.
Among the returnees are guards Blake
Hoffarber, Lawrence Westbrook and Al Nolen, and
forward Damian Johnson. Hoffarber, although only a sophomore, is
already considered a clutch scorer and his .427 three point field goal
percentage last season is eye-catching. Smith said Westbrook was one of the team’s
“most consistent” players last season, contributing offensively and
defensively. Nolen’s athleticism helped him rank second among
Big Ten leaders in steals (1.94 per game) but he needs to be a
more aggressive playmaker as the team’s point guard. Johnson is a
defensive specialist who improved his scoring last season, going from
1.6 points per game in 2006-07 to 7.1 last season.
In Smith’s first season as Gopher coach
the team improved defensively from 66.2 points per game in 2006-07, to
giving up
63.2 last season. There will be no less emphasis on defense going
forward. “If they don’t defend, they won’t play,” Smith said. “I
promise you that.”
Two college basketball preview magazines
add evidence about the guesswork for the coming season. Athlon
Sports predicts a fifth place finish for the Gophers in the Big
Ten. Lindy’s College Basketball puts the Gophers in eighth
place. Athlon forecasts a Big Ten title for Purdue while
Lindy’s likes Michigan State (plays here on New Year’s Eve). Both
publications have the same four teams making the NCAA tournament, Purdue,
Michigan State, Wisconsin and Ohio State.
Smith’s teams at Kentucky made 14
consecutive tournament appearances. Asked on Friday whether he had any
regrets about coming here and building a program, Smith said no. “I
think every place is good,” he said. “We expect to be as good or
better here. …”