1
Region 2 men's basketball / Re: MBB: NEWMAC
« on: December 01, 2023, 09:13:43 am »
Sort of a State of the NEWMAC from one fan’s perspective as we end November. After a pretty awful ‘22-‘23 comparable period collectively, there is unmistakable improvement this year.
Putting aside the OOC opponents each team faced each year, and eliminating games played against D1 or D2 teams, the bump in conference W-L record is encouraging. I didn’t include Salve Regina because they weren’t a conference member in 22-23.
Team/22-23/23-24
Babson 4-3 4-3
Clark 6-0 5-1
Coast Guard 1-5 4-2
Emerson 2-3 2-4
MIT 2-5 1-6
Springfield 1-5 2-3
WPI 5-0 6-1
Wheaton 3-3 4-2
Total 24-24 28-22
Team assessments:
Coast Guard has already equaled their entire season win total of last year (4). Nice 4-guard rotation of Rooney (9.0), Shettles (13.2), Yagey (12.3), and Frazer (11.2). No signature wins, but they’re improving and never a team to be taken for granted when conference play begins.
MIT continues its puzzling, recent history. They are still missing 3 of their top returning guys from last year and have started 4 freshmen in every game. Is there another D3 team in the country doing that? If/when they get everyone back they will surely be more competitive, and could still be a NEWMAC playoff team. FY’s Gogolin 13.1 / 5.6 on .493/.400/.720 and Bland 12.6 / 4 on .508/.385/.719 could be in contention for NEWMAC ROY.
Wheaton is being led by 2 sophomore guards, Henry and Pedevillano. It’s a very young team that lost a lot through graduation and Carlisle’s xfer so it’s hard to see them finishing above 7th in the NEWMAC.
Emerson has been a pleasant surprise, even at 2-4. They’ve beaten Colby in Maine, and took Albertus Magnus to OT in CT. Their offense is potent when they are draining 3’s. Guards Arico (17.8) and McNamara (16.2) are streaky, but deadly when they’re on. FY Gasset Ruiz from Spain looks like a solid all-around player and is leading the team in rebounding.
Springfield is uber-athletic, but they don’t shoot very well, turn the ball over a lot, and sometimes don’t play with the necessary focus. That combination was on display in the last 10 minutes last night when they lost after leading by 14 against Amherst at home.
Clark is off to another fast OOC start and they are doing the right thing again with SOS. Almost pulled one out against a strong Tufts team. It will be interesting to see if McArdle (17.3/10.8) can score on Adams (WPI) inside, he being one of the few big men with low post skills in the conference. Upcoming games against Trinity (TX), Westfield St, and CWRU will help in determining whether they have Pool C credentials if the AQ isn’t in play.
WPI lost Lowther to graduation, but their incoming class looks loaded: Molen is starting, and Bledsoe, Bleier, and Veiking are all playing 10+, meaningful mpg. Bledsoe is an absolute sniper (11/20 from 3) with a quick release, but all these guys are playing with poise you don’t typically find with freshmen. Then they have Adams playing better than ever, a regional AA candidate in Callahan, a solid off-guard and defender in Sevilla, and senior starter Lufkin hasn’t even dressed yet. A big win over NE regional power Williams and a competitive game with Tufts will help their SOS. Barring injury or an unexpected stumble they’re a likely tournament team, even if they don’t get the AQ.
Babson is off to a start that very much looks like last year: Building a strong SOS, but not able to quite close out winnable one-possession games (WashU, Albertus Magnus, and St. Joseph’s CT); best win to date Brandeis (again); and far too reliant on too few scorers (Amado 22.6 and Baxter 20.6). They desperately need someone else who can score in the paint if they are to reach a higher level. Still hoping that Mason can be ready by the new year for rotation help, but he plays a stretch forward, so the inside scoring void will still be present. I can’t complain about 3 consecutive tournament appearances, but a recruiting class like WPI just brought in would do wonders for the continuity of the program.
There’s still a long way to go, but right now I’d rank WPI a clear #1, Clark and Babson close for #2 and #3, giving the edge to Clark because Babson has problems handling McArdle, and then there’s another drop in talent level for a group of teams battling for the #4 and #5 seeds in the NEWMAC tournament. Having seen each team a few times, I’d submit Coast Guard, Springfield, Emerson, MIT, Salve Regina, and Wheaton for 4-9.
Putting aside the OOC opponents each team faced each year, and eliminating games played against D1 or D2 teams, the bump in conference W-L record is encouraging. I didn’t include Salve Regina because they weren’t a conference member in 22-23.
Team/22-23/23-24
Babson 4-3 4-3
Clark 6-0 5-1
Coast Guard 1-5 4-2
Emerson 2-3 2-4
MIT 2-5 1-6
Springfield 1-5 2-3
WPI 5-0 6-1
Wheaton 3-3 4-2
Total 24-24 28-22
Team assessments:
Coast Guard has already equaled their entire season win total of last year (4). Nice 4-guard rotation of Rooney (9.0), Shettles (13.2), Yagey (12.3), and Frazer (11.2). No signature wins, but they’re improving and never a team to be taken for granted when conference play begins.
MIT continues its puzzling, recent history. They are still missing 3 of their top returning guys from last year and have started 4 freshmen in every game. Is there another D3 team in the country doing that? If/when they get everyone back they will surely be more competitive, and could still be a NEWMAC playoff team. FY’s Gogolin 13.1 / 5.6 on .493/.400/.720 and Bland 12.6 / 4 on .508/.385/.719 could be in contention for NEWMAC ROY.
Wheaton is being led by 2 sophomore guards, Henry and Pedevillano. It’s a very young team that lost a lot through graduation and Carlisle’s xfer so it’s hard to see them finishing above 7th in the NEWMAC.
Emerson has been a pleasant surprise, even at 2-4. They’ve beaten Colby in Maine, and took Albertus Magnus to OT in CT. Their offense is potent when they are draining 3’s. Guards Arico (17.8) and McNamara (16.2) are streaky, but deadly when they’re on. FY Gasset Ruiz from Spain looks like a solid all-around player and is leading the team in rebounding.
Springfield is uber-athletic, but they don’t shoot very well, turn the ball over a lot, and sometimes don’t play with the necessary focus. That combination was on display in the last 10 minutes last night when they lost after leading by 14 against Amherst at home.
Clark is off to another fast OOC start and they are doing the right thing again with SOS. Almost pulled one out against a strong Tufts team. It will be interesting to see if McArdle (17.3/10.8) can score on Adams (WPI) inside, he being one of the few big men with low post skills in the conference. Upcoming games against Trinity (TX), Westfield St, and CWRU will help in determining whether they have Pool C credentials if the AQ isn’t in play.
WPI lost Lowther to graduation, but their incoming class looks loaded: Molen is starting, and Bledsoe, Bleier, and Veiking are all playing 10+, meaningful mpg. Bledsoe is an absolute sniper (11/20 from 3) with a quick release, but all these guys are playing with poise you don’t typically find with freshmen. Then they have Adams playing better than ever, a regional AA candidate in Callahan, a solid off-guard and defender in Sevilla, and senior starter Lufkin hasn’t even dressed yet. A big win over NE regional power Williams and a competitive game with Tufts will help their SOS. Barring injury or an unexpected stumble they’re a likely tournament team, even if they don’t get the AQ.
Babson is off to a start that very much looks like last year: Building a strong SOS, but not able to quite close out winnable one-possession games (WashU, Albertus Magnus, and St. Joseph’s CT); best win to date Brandeis (again); and far too reliant on too few scorers (Amado 22.6 and Baxter 20.6). They desperately need someone else who can score in the paint if they are to reach a higher level. Still hoping that Mason can be ready by the new year for rotation help, but he plays a stretch forward, so the inside scoring void will still be present. I can’t complain about 3 consecutive tournament appearances, but a recruiting class like WPI just brought in would do wonders for the continuity of the program.
There’s still a long way to go, but right now I’d rank WPI a clear #1, Clark and Babson close for #2 and #3, giving the edge to Clark because Babson has problems handling McArdle, and then there’s another drop in talent level for a group of teams battling for the #4 and #5 seeds in the NEWMAC tournament. Having seen each team a few times, I’d submit Coast Guard, Springfield, Emerson, MIT, Salve Regina, and Wheaton for 4-9.