MBB: NESCAC

Started by cameltime, April 27, 2005, 02:38:16 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 12 Guests are viewing this topic.

Pat Coleman

We all know why, yes.
Publisher. Questions? Check our FAQ for D3f, D3h.
Quote from: old 40 on September 25, 2007, 08:23:57 PMLet's discuss (sports) in a positive way, sometimes kidding each other with no disrespect.

nescac1

#31741
Pre-season all-Americans are out and unsurprisingly, there is a ton of NESCAC representation. 

Shane Regan, now at UChicago, is first-team, Vetter and Okorougo both second team, and Morakis and Gyemisi are both represented as well.  As I've noted before, this is just a crazy loaded senior class for NESCAC teams:

https://www.d3hoops.com/awards/all-americans/men/preseason-2026

Everyone seems about where I'd expect them to be.  I would be surprised if anyone else in NESCAC ends up as an all-American this year, but Elias Espinosa, Ray Cuevas, Drew Lazarre, and Babacar Pouye are at least names to watch if they make a big leap. 

On another NESCAC note, I noticed that Tristan Joseph isn't playing for Middlebury this year.  Certainly a tough loss for them in a transition year with a new coach.  Based on the rosters released so far, no other major surprises in terms of players not returning. 

Ryan Scott (Hoops Fan)

Quote from: nescac1 on October 30, 2025, 01:36:52 PMOn another NESCAC note, I noticed that Tristan Joseph isn't playing for Middlebury this year.  Certainly a tough loss for them in a transition year with a new coach.  Based on the rosters released so far, no other major surprises in terms of players not returning. 

He's majoring in neuroscience.  Might not have been enough time this year!
Lead Columnist for D3hoops.com
@ryanalanscott just about anywhere

D3BBALL

Quote from: Ryan Scott (Hoops Fan) on October 30, 2025, 01:47:38 PM
Quote from: nescac1 on October 30, 2025, 01:36:52 PMOn another NESCAC note, I noticed that Tristan Joseph isn't playing for Middlebury this year.  Certainly a tough loss for them in a transition year with a new coach.  Based on the rosters released so far, no other major surprises in terms of players not returning. 

He's majoring in neuroscience.  Might not have been enough time this year!
Thats a huge loss for them. 16 points per game last year.

nescac1

Class of 2030 (gulp) recruiting update.  Very nice early class for Williams, with a lot of size and shooting.  Strong start to recruiting for Colby's new coach, as well. 

Amherst:
Hunter Stoll, 6'7 F, Choate
Dempsey Gonya, 6'4 G, St. Ann's (NY)
Grant Moses, 6'2 G, Meadows School (NV) (I am guessing he is related to former Amherst star PG Dan Moses)

Bates:
Alexander Gordon, 6'0 G, Brewster Academy

Bowdoin:
Zach Baum, 6'8 C, Noble and Greenough

Colby:
Riley Clarke, 6'6 F, Brooks School
Max Vogel, 6'4 W, New Trier (IL)

Connecticut College:
Sam Clachko, 5'11 G, Staples

Wesleyan:
Packy Doherty, 6'2 G, Scranton Prep (PA)

Williams:
Joseph Terreri, 6'7 F, Hill School (PA)
Gavin Dodge, 6'5 G, Acalanes H.S. (CA)
Elijah Webb, 6'9 F, Deerfield

nescac1

Now that every team has its pre-season roster posted, thought I'd take a more informed shot at a pre-season ranking, while emphasizing that 3-11 are REALLY tough to peg between personnel losses, coaching changes, and a lot of balance generally in the league after the top two.  I also picked an "x factor" player for each team, a newcomer or returning player who with a big leap could raise the team's ceiling. 

1. Trinity - virtually everyone back, plus added a potential impact transfer.  National title favorite with no glaring weaknesses. X-factor: Nathan Freisthler.

2. Tufts - again, virtually everyone back, and may get some extra juice off the bench from a talented group of underclassmen.  Legit national title contender.  X-factor: Dylan Reilly.  Huge gap after these top two teams. 

3. Williams - a top-tier core of Lee/Hansen/Yates/Rein should lead the way, and plenty of young talent to draw upon in support.  Rebounding / interior defense is a question mark as they may feature a very small starting five, depending on how things break. If they can figure that out, strong contender for an NCAA bid. X-factor: Jackson Rein.

4. Wesleyan - Regan and Johnson were the engine of everything they did on offense, who will step up as go-to playmakers? But still have a ton of length and athleticism, defense should again be elite and a lot of Final Four infrastructure returns.  Outside shooting is once again a big question mark.  Contender for an NCAA bid.  X-factor: Oscar Edelman, who needs to provide a ton of outside scoring.

5. Colby - hard team to predict with a new coach, but there is plenty of talent on hand, with most of the team back, a legit go-to guy in Poulton, and a lot of size in the talented rising sophomore class.  Will there be more emphasis on defense with a new regime? X-factor: Dan Civiello.  Long-shot contender for an NCAA bid.

6. Bates - dark horse team, a lot of talent and a team which lost a LOT of very close games last year including three league games on OT.  If Babacar Pouye, who can do it all but needs to do it more consistently, takes another leap and plays to his full potential Bates could be in the mix for third.  A team which could realistically end up anywhere between 3 and 10.  X-factor: Pouye.

7. Conn College - hard team to place - they will be a pain to play as always as the zone throws everyone off.  Espinosa is a top player in the league and Clarr could eventually be an all-league guy as well, but after that, there are a lot of questions on where the offense comes from, especially on the interior.  They have a few transfers who if they are factors right away would raise the ceiling considerably. X-factor: Garrett Clar.
 
8. Hamilton - lost a ton to graduation, Morgan did everything on offense for the last two years and there is no obvious replacement for him, they have a strong junior class but are probably going to have a transition year this season.  X-factor: Garret Keyhani, who needs to return to his sophomore form or ideally better for this team to have a shot at cracking the top four.

9.  Middlebury - losing Stevens and Joseph is a tough blow for the offense, and Brennan created so many extra chances with his rebounding, also difficult to replace.  But the biggest loss is Jeff Brown who never lost a battle of which team was most prepared.  A strong senior class can move them up a few notches if they can finally remain healthy, but this looks like a transition year with a new coach and few proven scorers.  X-factor: Edward Witherington.
   
10. Amherst - close call between them and Bowdoin for the last spot.  They go from among the biggest teams in the league to maybe the smallest, with only one big guy on the entire roster, and he's a first year.  Only 12 guys on the roster, period, which is dangerously thin, and only three returning players who scored more than 3 points per game (none of whom were in double-figures).  I do like the talent at guard with Garaud, Chin, and newcomers Neville and Adnan, and I assume they will look to push the pace and take advantage of their ballhandling depth in the backcourt, but interior play is a total mystery, and outside shooting looks pretty rough.  X-factor: Ryan Hempfling.

11. Bowdoin - hard to put a team with an elite player like Cuevas here, but they were 1-9 last year, although they did suffer some tough-luck losses, and lose their other three perimeter starters (including Logue who is not on the roster).  Should be solid at center with the Reeves/Bessire/Simond trio among the most experienced big-man groups around, but Cuevas is going to get a TON of attention on the perimeter and unclear who is going to step up as the second and third creator on offense. Outside shooting again likely to be a problem for this team, and they lost their defensive ace in Achufusi.  X-factor: Ben Chilson.