Thoughts on Day 1 of the calendar year
So while I have a minute and before I fall asleep, a few thoughts on today's games:
It may be tough to overstate the significane of today's win for Rider.
I don't think it'd be a stretch to say that this could be the start of a significant turnaround. The Broncs host Marist Sunday at Alumni Gym, so we'll see fairly quickly if they can continue to do the good things they did today. If they do, they'll be 3-0 in the MAAC, which, after the way they looked in their last four games, is something with which Rider fans should be extremely pleased.
There's a lot of basketball left to be played, but a loss today may have been tough to overcome in terms of contending for a conference title. Had they lost, they'd be riding a three-game skid into Sunday's game and already have a MAAC loss before playing any games against Siena, Niagara and Fairfield. They also would have absolutely no reason to be confident with 16 MAAC games still ahead of them.
But they beat an Iona team that included Gary Springer, they did it on the road, and they did it convincingly.
Harris Mansell played wearing a sleave on his right elbow. He said he took a substance similar to IcyHot before the game, though he wasn't sure exactly what it was, and that his elbow felt "pretty good" while attempting 11 shots, 10 from 3-point range.
A whole lot is going to depend on how that elbow holds up. If it holds up well enough for Mansell to be a 35 percent 3-point shooter and a reliable scorer, there could be more good things to come.
No one in Iona's backcourt stepped up
Springer played well today, scoring 13 points in 17 minutes off the bench, and proving difficult as ever for Rider to slow down in the low post. He took six shots, all of them layups or dunks, and made them all. But he and Milan Prodanovic (12 points) were the only Gaels in double figures. Rider, by contrast, had four players in double figures.
I'm sure Kevin Willard would have liked more from Devon Clarke, who scored only three points in 22 minutes. Prodanovic, who has one of the sweetest strokes in the MAAC, scored 12 points on 4-of-10 shooting. But Trinity Fields and Scott Machado were a combined 3-for-13 from the floor, and that was a major reason the Gaels didn't do much offensively.
Fairfield needs help in the backcourt
The glass-half-full view of the way Ed Cooley divied out minutes today is that 11 players played. The glass-half-empty approach is that neither Jamal Turner (1o minutes) nor Lyndon Jordan (5) nor Sean Crawford (2) has emerged as the kind of reliable reserve who can play 20-25 minutes and help the offense run. Jon Han was a pre-season first-team all-MAAC pick for a reason, but he can't carry the entire backcourt load by himself, and Warren Edney's injury further necesitates somebody else stepping up.
Edney, by the way, had been one of the biggest reasons for Fairfield's improvement. It'd be a shame if the tendonitis that's been plaguing him keeps him from being a major factor in January and February.
As for what losing to Siena means, here's my take: I think Fairfield fans should be extremely disappointed the Stags didn't bring home a statement victory, and here's why: in years past, it would have been perfectly reasonable to consider a six-point loss on the road a good showing -- a showing that proved Fairfield belongs on the same court with Siena. But in years past, merely putting up a respectable showing was often (though there were a few exceptions) all the Stags were capable of and all they ever did.
Regardless of Siena's standing as a dominant power, this is Fairfield's best chance to win the league in at least four years. Han will be gone next year, and there's no telling what his absence could mean, especially with the lack of a clear heir apparent waiting in the wings. So there can't be a 'wait til next year' approach.
This is not to say that it's doom and gloom at 1073 North Benson. The Stags will get another shot at Siena during the regular season (Jan. 17 in Bridgeport) and potentially yet another during the MAAC tournament.
It's simply to say that it isn't enough to say 'Oh well, it's Siena on the road. What more could they do?'
The bottom line is somebody is going to have to beat Siena on the road, or the Saints will march right on back to the NCAA tournament. Had Fairfield done that today, it would have sent a statement that it's more than capable of being that team. That the Stags didn't do that should be -- and I suspect is -- a source of great frustration among players, coaches and fans.
1 Comments:
I thought Fairfield played well - they got a lot of basketball out of Han, Johnson and especially Nero. Their big 3 were clicking - unfortunately Siena has a few more weapons and got big games out of 4 of their starters and got solid contributions off the bench in the way of minutes and energy. That's going to be the problem - Siena is going to need to have 3 guys have an off night to beat them....even then, they'll still have 2 or 3 guys capable of carrying the team.
Fair to say, given his performance over the years, that Ronald Moore should probably be some sort of an All-MAAC player at the end of the year. Show me a better pure point in the MAAC.
As for Rider - their win over Iona had little significance, in my opinion. Rider is getting nothing out of Brandon Penn and Jermaine Jackson - NOTHING. Gadsen can't stay on the floor because he has no idea how to play defense and gets himself into foul trouble before the initial media timeout. Rider fans love to spout how they have the best talent in the MAAC, but Harris Mansell has a bad elbow for a few games and Rider has no one capable of stepping in to fill those minutes. Having watched Rider 4 or 5 times this year and watching Fairfield/Siena yesterday - Rider is not even close to having the type of talent Fairfield and Siena had on the floor. Leave it to Rider to have an NBA Lottery pick and not be able to win a middle-of-the-road mid-major conference. Rider blew its shot last year and they're now one of six or seven MAAC teams that are a significant level below Niagara, Siena and Fairfield.
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