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NCAAs big, but UC also wants AAC title
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ctipton Offline
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NCAAs big, but UC also wants AAC title
NCAAs big, but UC also wants AAC title
Tom Groeschen , tgroeschen@enquirer.com Published 2:36 p.m. ET Feb. 22, 2017 | Updated 17 hours ago

[Image: 636233698318219153-kj.jpg]
A deep NCAA Tournament run is the ultimate goal, but Kevin Johnson and the Cincinnati Bearcats also want to win the AAC championship.
(Photo: The Enquirer/Cara Owsley)

The NCAA Tournament is everything these days in college basketball, but the University of Cincinnati still wants to hang another American Athletic Conference championship banner in Fifth Third Arena.

The No. 15-ranked Bearcats (24-3, 13-1 AAC) will continue their march to a potential AAC title against Memphis (18-9, 8-6 AAC) on Thursday at UC at 7 p.m. (ESPN).

UC has not won a league championship since the 2013-14 season when the Bearcats shared the AAC title with Louisville. UC senior guards Kevin Johnson and Troy Caupain were freshmen on the 2013-14 team.

“It’s very important,” Johnson said of another league title. “It’s a step to one of our larger goals, which is to go far in March. “You take it one step at a time, just proving to people we can win this conference, regardless of how good it is. It allows us to continue to grow as a team and show some success so that when we get into March, we’ve got some fire up under us.”

UC’s 13-1 league record stands second to SMU (14-1) in the AAC. The two teams beat each other head-to-head, and if they tie for the league title they will be declared co-champions. Tiebreakers then would settle the Nos. 1-2 seeds for the postseason AAC tournament March 9-12 in Hartford, Connecticut, with UC and SMU having clinched first-round byes.

“This is what you battle for in the second half of the season,” Caupain said. “It just shows that all the scouting that the coaches do and the preparation they do is working. We’re winning games, knock on wood, following details and doing the little things right.”

UC coach Mick Cronin said the road to the AAC title will not be easy. UC finishes the regular season with Memphis, at Central Florida (17-10, 8-7 AAC), Houston (18-8, 9-5 AAC) and at UConn (14-12, 9-5 AAC).

“Our last four opponents have winning records,” Cronin said. “It is important to try to keep these guys fresh, mentally and physically, for March.”

UC has not had any major injuries this season. The worst was a hyperextended knee for freshman center Nysier Brooks, who missed three games before returning Feb. 12 against SMU.

“You look around the country, there have been a lot of bad injuries,” Cronin said. “If you want to make a run in March, you need to be healthy and you maybe need to be fortunate, to have some breaks go your way.”

SCOUTING MEMPHIS: Memphis is led by 6-foot-9 sophomore forward Dedric Lawson, a former McDonald’s All-American who is No. 2 in the AAC in scoring (19.5 ppg) and No. 1 in rebounding (10.1 rpg).

With 17 double-doubles this season, Dedric Lawson is tied for sixth in the NCAA. Along with his brother, 6-7 redshirt freshman K.J. Lawson, the Lawsons have a combined 26 double-doubles this season. K.J. Lawson is averaging 12.2 points and 8.5 rebounds.

Top Memphis players also include 6-5 junior guard Markel Crawford (14.1 ppg), 6-3 sophomore guard Jeremiah Martin (9.4 ppg) and 6-8 junior forward Jimario Rivers (6.3 ppg).

“They’re athletic, they’re long and they’re fast,” Cronin said. “Their transition, ability to convert your bad offense to layups at the other end, is great because of their speed and athleticism. That, along with both the Lawson guys, they’re very talented offensive players. They pass it well, they shoot it well. They score inside and out. They pose some problems.”

Memphis coach Tubby Smith is in his first year at the school. Smith coached Kentucky to the NCAA championship in 1998 and is in his 26th season a head coach (575-284).

Smith is one of only two coaches, along with Oklahoma’s Lon Kruger, to have taken five men’s basketball teams to the NCAA Tournament (Tulsa, Georgia, Kentucky, Minnesota and Texas Tech).

CUMBERLAND STATUS: Cronin declined to comment on whether freshman guard Jarron Cumberland will play against Memphis. Cumberland did not play in UC’s 80-60 win over Tulsa this past Saturday because of a curfew violation.

STREAKING: UC carries a 24-game home winning streak. Entering the week, that was the second-longest active streak nationally.

ATTENDANCE CLIMBS: UC’s home attendance average of 9,476 fans is a Cronin-era high, and the largest since the 2004-05 season (11,059). That was the last year of the Bob Huggins coaching era at UC.

UC drew 13,386 for its win over Tulsa this past Saturday, the third home sellout this season. As of Wednesday, UC athletic director Mike Bohn said ticket sales were 11,850 for the Memphis game.

-

No. 15 Cincinnati vs Memphis

Tipoff: 7 p.m. Thursday at Fifth Third Arena (13,176)

TV/Radio: ESPN/WLW-AM (700)

Records: UC 24-3 (13-1 AAC), Memphis 18-9 (8-6 AAC)

http://www.cincinnati.com/story/sports/c.../98259434/
 
02-23-2017 08:39 AM
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ctipton Offline
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RE: NCAAs big, but UC also wants AAC title
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Memphis' Craig Randall gains consistency with Dad's help
Mark Giannotto , USA TODAY NETWORK – Tennessee Published 6:40 p.m. CT Feb. 22, 2017 | Updated 11 hours ago

[Image: 636225172192919440--H5Y0619.jpg]
University of Memphis guard Craig Randall II (middle) celebrates after creating a Temple University turnover during second half action at the FedExForum.
(Photo: Mark Weber/The Commercial Appeal)

They’ve become a familiar pair at Larry O. Finch Center, Memphis sophomore Craig Randall II working his way around the perimeter as his father, also named Craig, stands underneath the basket.

They’ll start with mid-range jumpers. First off the catch, then off the bounce. Randall will have to make five of seven before moving out to the corner, where his father will direct him to swish two of three three-pointers. One night they may work on shooting around a curl screen or in pick-and-roll situations. The next evening it might be stationary shots over a zone defense.

The elder Randall does his best to simulate game scenarios because he tracks them all carefully, from his seats in section 103 of FedExForum or his television at home, trying to figure out improvements that can be made.

In recent weeks, the workouts have become more frequent and the lessons doled out can be harsh. Other days, though, Craig Randall will simply watch his youngest son launch shot after shot in silence, and remember why he dropped everything to move to Memphis.

“Sometimes, you don’t want to hear from your dad,” Randall’s father said. “Sometimes, I’m just here to pass the ball.”

When the Tigers face their stiffest test to date at No. 15 Cincinnati Thursday night, Randall will try to build off his best performance in months. He scored 13 points during last week’s loss at Connecticut, including 11 in the first half when Coach Tubby Smith called him the key cog as Memphis charged out to a 17-point lead.

But consistency has mostly eluded Randall to this point in his college career, and the toll that took ultimately convinced his father to find a job here in Memphis and relocate from Arizona last October.

“Last year was a tough year,” said Randall’s father, who is the vice president of sales and operation for a software company. “That was the first year he didn’t really have any local support.”

The Randalls, after all, are a basketball family. One older brother coaches at a basketball academy in China. Another, Kyle Randall, led Central Michigan in scoring during the 2012-13 season and currently plays professionally in Serbia. Craig Randall was the most emotional of the three, and had the most to live up to.

Though he grew up in Youngstown, Ohio, Randall followed his father to the Phoenix area for his senior year of high school when the elder Randall got a new job. He played for longtime NBA point guard Mike Bibby at Shadow Mountain High, but didn’t commit to Memphis until July. As a result, Randall missed out on valuable offseason workouts and, “just never caught up,” his father said.

Randall averaged only 2.3 points, shot 18.6 percent from three-point range and had a short leash as a freshman. But to understand the full extent of the problems, it’s important to realize the adjustments he was implementing on the fly.

“What most people don’t know, and I’m really not trying to start anything, but Craig has been a point guard his entire life until he came here,” Randall’s father said.

Randall, however, never went home after that disappointing initial college campaign. He stayed in Memphis, saying Tuesday he was in the gym nearly every night. He kept up the routine heading into the fall, eventually adding his father to the post-practice shooting sessions in October, and the results were there for all to see once his sophomore year began.

Seven games into this season, Randall was averaging double figures in scoring and had two outings in which he knocked down five three pointers. The former point guard had suddenly become a vital sharpshooter off the bench.

But, in retrospect, Randall allowed that initial success to change his methods and “I got away from getting in the gym after games,” he said. “In the middle of the season, I think I was trying to rush it and force it a little bit. But I know if you press, you’re probably not going to play as well. I’ve done that a lot this year.”

Over a 13-game stretch, Randall shot 7 for 39 from three-point range (17.9 percent) as his scoring average dipped below six points

“You can have some success and it will cause you to make some excuses for why you can’t get to the gym, and as a parent, you try not to force them to go to the gym,” Randall’s father said. “We thought he was going to have a really, really good year and the reality is he’s had a so-so year. But as of late, he’s kind of got back into a rhythm. Coach Smith has trusted him more and he’s delivered.”

Despite the ups and downs, only redshirt junior Markel Crawford has knocked down more three-pointers than Randall this season. With opponents increasingly using zone defenses against the Tigers, this sort of marksmanship from outside becomes even more valuable.

And yet, Randall might have the funkiest-looking shot on the roster. The left-hander lets go of the ball from just above his right shoulder, a habit Randall said Tuesday “really just happened last year when I came in.” He didn't shoot like this in high school. Smith is trying to raise his release point over time, but if it ever becomes a long-term issue, one person will be sure to correct it.

The trust between Randall and his father is different now, with both here in Memphis. Craig Randall knows he won’t be receiving a sugarcoated critique of his play. Randall’s father, meanwhile, better understands what his son goes through on the bench after being yanked from a game earlier than expected.

On most nights, though, their bond is as simple as a basketball drill. Randall shoots, his father rebounds and a relationship grows stronger.

“He’s turned the corner,” Randall’s father said. “He’s earned the right to be confident because he’s put the work in.”

Tigers' next game
Who: Memphis (18-9, 8-6) at No. 15 Cincinnati (24-3, 13-1)
When, where: 6 p.m. Thursday; Fifth Third Bank Arena
TV, radio: ESPN; WREC-AM 600, WEGR-FM 102.7

A closer look at Memphis-UC
Skinny: Memphis is a week removed from a 65-62 loss at Connecticut in which it blew a 17-point lead and will be looking to avoid its first three-game losing streak since the 2004-05 season. Cincinnati sits atop the American Athletic Conference standings with SMU and is off to its best start during Coach Mick Cronin's 11-year tenure. The Bearcats enter Thursday on a 24-game winning streak at home. Memphis won at Cincinnati since Dec. 19, 2007.

When Memphis has the ball: Thursday's game pits the two players that shared AAC preseason player of the year honors in Memphis sophomore Dedric Lawson and Cincinnati guard Troy Caupain. Coach Tubby Smith said a priority is to get Lawson back on track following a 12-point, seven-rebound performance at UConn in which he didn't score over the final 15 minutes of the game. The Tigers shot 48.1 percent from the floor in the first half against the Huskies, but once again struggled to generate quality shots facing a zone defense during their second-half collapse. Cincinnati continues to be one of the country's top defensive teams and leads the AAC in blocked shots and steals. Opponents are shooting just 37.5 percent from the floor against the Bearcats this season.

When Cincinnati has the ball: What separates these Bearcats from their predecessors is the ability to score at an elite level. Cincinnati leads the AAC in points per game with four players averaging double figures in scoring. Caupain and forward Kyle Washington, the team's leading scorer at 13.8 points per game, will each present matchup problems. Caupain's size (6-foot-4, 210 pounds) on the perimeter and Washington's ability to play inside and shoot a high percentage (42.4) from three-point range are a potent duo and the Bears have eight players averaging at least 11 minutes per game. Cincinnati ranks third in the country in assist-to-turnover ratio and leads the AAC in assists per game.

Reach Mark Giannotto at mark.giannotto@commercialappeal.com or on Twitter @mgiannotto

http://www.commercialappeal.com/story/sp.../98270058/
 
02-23-2017 08:53 AM
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levydl Offline
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Post: #3
RE: NCAAs big, but UC also wants AAC title
(02-23-2017 08:39 AM)ctipton Wrote:  CUMBERLAND STATUS: Cronin declined to comment on whether freshman guard Jarron Cumberland will play against Memphis. Cumberland did not play in UC’s 80-60 win over Tulsa this past Saturday because of a curfew violation.

Ahhhhh, come on. What's going on here?
 
02-23-2017 10:07 AM
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apoe Offline
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RE: NCAAs big, but UC also wants AAC title
(02-23-2017 10:07 AM)levydl Wrote:  
(02-23-2017 08:39 AM)ctipton Wrote:  CUMBERLAND STATUS: Cronin declined to comment on whether freshman guard Jarron Cumberland will play against Memphis. Cumberland did not play in UC’s 80-60 win over Tulsa this past Saturday because of a curfew violation.

Ahhhhh, come on. What's going on here?

Quote:Jon RothsteinVerified account‏@JonRothstein 1h1 hour ago
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Cincinnati's Jarron Cumberland (disciplinary) will play tonight against Memphis, per Mick Cronin. DNP in last game.
 
02-23-2017 10:12 AM
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Nobones Offline
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RE: NCAAs big, but UC also wants AAC title
Ctip. Thanks for the posts.
 
02-23-2017 11:02 AM
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Lush Offline
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RE: NCAAs big, but UC also wants AAC title
when wasn't the ncaa tournament everything in college basketball?
 
02-23-2017 08:06 PM
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Bruce Monnin Offline
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RE: NCAAs big, but UC also wants AAC title
Back in the days when the NIT was everything.
 
02-23-2017 08:07 PM
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