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A Blast from the NCAA Tournament Past

If you haven't heard, the NCAA went ahead and gave basketball fans Christmas in February, by releasing NCAA Vault, a video archive of every Sweet Sixteen game and beyond for the last ten years. So if you'd like to forget all about this season, you can watch the 2005 or 2009 championship teams, or even the 2007 and 2008 squads that self destructed against Georgetown and Kansas, respectively. But I've already blogged about those games, as they happened. No, I was more fascinated by the 2000 team, the underachieving, badly dressed team that would be Bill Guthridge's last. So with 150 basketball games to choose from, I picked the UNC-Tulsa game.

There are a lot of similarities between the 2000 squad and this year's team. Both started the season highly ranked, but fell out of the polls in January. What evicted that year's team was a four game losing streak, and although they righted the ship to finish 9-7 in the conference, they lost in the first round of the ACC tournament and were generally though to have only squeaked into the NCAAs on the basis of their name. They were incredibly shallow – I dare you to name anyone who came off the bench for that team besides Julius Peppers – and were prone to turnovers, like this year's squad. Yet given an eight seed, the Tar Heels knocked off the top seed in the South, Stanford, and powered their way to the Final Four, despite only having two players who would ever make the NBA.

If you need any reminder that this isn't a Roy Williams team, though, you get on the first possession, where the Heels turn it over on a shot-clock violation. The entire game it's Tulsa, coached by a young Bill Self in his last game as a Golden Hurricane, pushing the tempo, while UNC plays a slow game. They also play a lot of zone defense. The turnovers and shooting sure look familiar, though. The Heels gave up the ball 15 times, including 9 steals, and shot a miserable 2 of 12 from beyond the arc. So how did this team succeed where the current crop flounders?

In two ways, both in the backcourt. One, they have Ed Cota handling the ball. He plays almost, if not the entire game (he's listed at 40 minutes, but I'm pretty sure he's absent at one point). Even though he coughs it up seven times, he has four years experience at this point, and never loses his cool no matter how the team struggles. The second thing this team has is a go-to scorer in Joseph Forte. Forte's kind of overlooked in recent Carolina history after chafing under Matt Doherty's coaching, leaving prematurely, and flaming out with the Boston Celtics. But he's the primary offensive spark on this team, and especially in this game, where he went 10 for 17 from the field, while the other five players combine to go 12 for 33. During a 14-4 second half run that breaks open a tie game, ten of those points come from Forte, who is everywhere on the court, picking up every rebound and punishing an opponent who chose to focus exclusively on Brendan Haywood.

This year's team lacks both of those, and as a result are prone to turning small runs against them into large ones. The 2000 team doesn't seem fazed by anything – from their opponents' size and speed to the fact that Bill Guthridge's mother passed away earlier that week. If you want to see what this year's team should be capable of, this is the game to watch. The play is slower, and the players bigger – between Haywood, Lang and Peppers there's some serious bulk up front – but the frustrations are still there. That team just overcame them in a way this year's team cannot.

Oh, and as a bonus, James Worthy does the color commentary on the game. Some nice anecdotes there.

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Circled around the nail

But you never drove it home. The difference between these two teams isn’t talent as our current squad is far more gifted. Rather the difference is their unflappable nature. It trickled down from the coach, whose mother passed that same week straight into his players. There’s a steely determination about Guthridge, Cota, Peppers, Lang and even Forte. When things happened they don’t look to the refs, complain or bitch they dug deep and pressed on.

Ed Cota is still my favorite Heel of all time, the ease and confidence that carried himself with in going from world beaters Jamison-Carter to Lang, Forte etc was amirable. He was tough and as a NY kid there was no whine about him.

The bulk was noticeable and something lacking today. Outside of Hansbrough we haven’t had a player as physical as Heywood (who was soft early) Lang or Peppers. I still remember the screen Pep set on Brett Nelson (or was it Teddy Dupay) in the Final Four game. Just a tough, physicality. We’re not gonna get that from Deon Thompson.

Yeah BoYeeEEeeE

by InTheBleachers on Feb 24, 2010 10:06 AM EST via mobile reply actions  

I Don't Think This Team Complains to the Refs

The just look lost. They don’t have that certainty the 200 team had though, you’re right. I don’t know if it’s having lost so many good players – the 2000 team was a season removed from Jamison and Carter, and knew they could persevere without them – or just that too many breaks went against them early in the ACC season. They pull it out against Georgia Tech and perhaps they get a but more grounded and fight their way to .500.

Or not.

by T.H. on Feb 24, 2010 7:12 PM EST up reply actions  

Brian Bersticker

Without looking up the roster, I can remember Bersticker coming off the bench. Double B! The Stick! He was blonde, skinny, and a member of the “Party” Party when he inadvertently became a write-in candidate for student body president (or senior class president). The mascots handed out “Double B for Prez” fliers to the students at the games, and we cheered and waved them around whenever he subbed in. I think he ended up with a third of the votes, much to the chagrin of the two guys who actually campaigned.

Step back and reminisce with me for a few moments to our haughtier days….God damn, Peppers was a monster….

by bmoreheel on Feb 24, 2010 2:03 PM EST reply actions  

Actually Bersticker was a medical redshirt that season. (This remains the the greatest thing I’ve seen written on him.)

But yeah, watching Peppers dunk on anyone was great . He made sure all of his defenders knew he played football.

by T.H. on Feb 24, 2010 7:05 PM EST up reply actions  

Don't forget

Capel was a solid wing player – this team lacks one of his size and shooting ability. While he struggled at times, he was also a solid contributor.

Gut was the big man coach under Coach Smith – it would be awesome if he could come back and teach Deon, Zeller, and even moreso, Ed Davis because they all need his experience and input. He’s made NBA regulars out of guys with way, way less talent.

This team also was more fundamentally sound. In the TN game, look at the way the break the press, they run our different half-court offenses, and they run the secondary break. If our team even figured out one of those things I’d be impressed.

Peppers was nasty, indeed …

by sabre74kkn on Feb 24, 2010 3:00 PM EST reply actions  

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