Friday, March 27, 2009

Aztecs NIT Win Scatters Demons

Some who were there will tell you that Wednesday night's San Diego State men's basketball 70-66 victory over Saint Mary's in the NIT quarterfinals was the greatest Aztecs sports event they've ever experienced. They're almost right, but there's more.

What we witnessed was an exorcism. This was 12,000 screaming fans who sent packing whatever demons have been infecting the school's athletic programs over the last couple of decades.

I don't need to rehash the litany of disasters SDSU fans have experienced just as it appeared their team was about to scale the precipice. And it would take away from our good feelings. We know about them all too well.

The game Wednesday night was a tangible sign that SDSU is turning the corner, something we've been so close to for so long -- not just in men's basketball but other sports.

It's my position that 2009 is the dawn of a new era for athletics at San Diego State University. You can really sense things changing and people around town are slowly but surely figuring it out. The past two days at my work, a place where few folks attended or even noticed SDSU, people have been talking about the game.

But back to the new aura at SDSU. Consider that the women's hoops team both hosted the NCAA Tournament and won a game, just three years after going winless in conference play, and all the key players return next year. Water polo is ranked fifth in the nation. The best college baseball pitcher in the past decade is hurling for SDSU as I write. Softball is still good.

Then there's football. I really think this is where everything started to turn around. Following last fall's 2-10 disaster, what big-money boosters we have stepped forward with a whopping million bucks to buy out coach Chuck Long. That people are willing to fork over serious money during the worst economy in years to get rid of someone is telling.

Somehow, be it fate suddenly turned kind or what, we ended up with Ball State's Brady Hoke taking the reigns. Hoke knows how to turn around bad programs with no resources. This program, despite the 2008 record, is not in horrible shape overall and SDSU has a lot of resources. That potential exists here, along with obvious respect for the new coach, attracted Al Borges and Rocky Long to the mesa. They're merely two of the best coordinators in college football over the past two decades. Adding an NFL legend in Brian Sipe to the staff and bringing in a very solid recruiting class considering the time available only made things look better.

Hoke started the turnaround the moment he was introduced at his press conference. With a commanding "Good afternoon" and his expectation of a response from the gathered media, he woke people up very quickly. Whoa! This guy is different! Things are going to be different in Aztecland with him around. And they have been -- ever since.

I have no idea if coach Steve Fisher's men's basketball Aztecs will defeat Baylor Tuesday at the NIT semifinals in New York. The Bears have beaten some pretty good teams and their midseason slump was courtesy of some very good opponents. Plus, with good perimeter shooters and a 7-footer inside, they present the matchup combination (think Utah and BYU) that has caused them some trouble this year.

If the Aztecs lose, it doesn't matter, because they were playing in Madison Square Garden at a time when only seven other basketball teams are still alive.

In those troubling past couple of decades, they wouldn't have made it this far. They'd have approached the summit, against a great Saint Mary's team, and fallen short. That the Gaels gave the Aztecs all they wanted and the home team still prevailed as the fans went bananas, is further evidence that times are finally changing for the better.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

March 09 Notes

Back again. I'm working on a pretty major project right now that's keeping me away from the blogs but I'm close to the point where I might start becoming a more regular poster again. We'll see.
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Good for the Chargers, LaDainian Tomlinson and his agent to come together on a deal to stay in San Diego for three more seasons. Cooler heads prevailed. It was clear to team officials that the fans wanted LT to remain, and the player and his handlers understood his age and injury history.

It's likely that LT's best years are behind him but he could be productive for several more years yet. Now I'd like to see GM AJ Smith grab a blocker or two for him. Once again, I'm afraid a below-average offensive line is going to keep the Chargers from mounting a serious Super Bowl drive this fall.
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In the late-1950s, fans of the then-Milwaukee Braves had a saying: "Spahn and Sain and pray for rain," in reference to high-quality starting pitchers Warren Spahn and Johnny Sain and the lack of anything behind them.

The Padres apparently go into the 2009 season with something like: "Peavy and Young and a bunch of dung." I am relatively okay -- not thrilled by any stretch -- with the lineup on the field, especially if Kevin Kouzmanoff or Chase Headley come into their own. The starting pitching depth, however, is a joke. Cha Seung Baek as a third starter is a reach, followed by whom? Wade LeBlanc? Josh Geer?

The Friars are headed for a 100-loss season.
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Make up for it by going to San Diego State to see Stephen Strasburg. He is as dominant as a pitcher for the Aztecs as Marshall Faulk was as a football running back.
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Concerning San Diego State, is there any remaining question that Beth Burns is the best coach on campus? She turned a women's basketball team winless in conference play to a co-champion in three seasons. What's more, the nucleus of the team is in sophomores and juniors and with more talent slated to come in, what's happening this year is merely an appetizer.

The women's season has been quite a bit more satisfying than that of the men, who at times appear to be the most talented team in a conference where the top four teams were separated by a game in the standings and the fifth, UNLV, swept tournament top-seeded BYU and hosts this week's tourney.

It's a shame how the community has failed to embrace coach Steve Fisher's Aztecs, who have won 20-games four years in a row and will go into the NCAA Tournament or NIT for the fourth straight season. However, a lot of it is their own doing, from Lorrenzo Wade's brush with the law to getting out-hustled on television in the last couple weeks of the year. The one thing this team can't do is shoot, and poor-shooting teams always look ugly no matter all the other things it does well.

The fans' reception to the Aztecs -- and I toss out last week's UNLV game because that's the one all the diehards bought tickets for months ago -- confirms my suspicion of the San Diegans will support a winner theory. No, they want a quality product that will leave them satisfied at the end that they didn't waste their hard-earned money.

I suspect the Aztecs will handle UNLV surprisingly easily in their first-round MWC contest Thursday. I think their defense has the cold Rebels so flummoxed that SDSU might run them out of their own house. But then all bets are off. The Aztecs are good enough to win the whole thing and inconsistant enough to go home early. I think they have to make the MWC final and hope small conference upsets are few -- Cleveland State's Horizon final defeat of Butler has already removed an available at-large slot -- for the Aztecs to be chosen for the NCAA field.

The women made their first splash in the MWC Tournament last year. I'd like to say the right now, on paper, they're hotter than anyone and should be favored to win it. But there's teams that owe them some payback this time around, and there's some good women's teams in the league capable of knocking them off. We'll have to hold our breath and hope for the best.
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Love the Brady Hoke football hire. I wish I'd been available to comment on it at the time. The respect shown him by his peers is all you need to know, and the recruiting class appears phenomenal for the short time the new staff had available.