A View from the Cheap Seats

If there’s ever been a year we’ve needed a fresh basketball season – and soon – this is it.

But let’s not get ahead of ourselves just yet.

Atsur is gone, leaving us without a tested point guard, much less a proven one. The freshman Gonzalez is hurt while the sophomore Johnson isn’t eligible until December; until then, it’s up to the red shirt sophomore Degand. Basically, we have to replace a four-year starting point guard on a team that last season was for the most part not very good and all too often just downright terrible.

Sure, we manhandled Virginia Tech twice and executed a near-flawless performance in the unforgettable win over Carolina, but we still finished the regular season just slightly above abysmal at 5-11. We finished ninth in scoring offense and tenth in scoring defense, ninth in three-point field goal percentage and eleventh in three-point field goal percentage defense, eleventh in offensive rebounding and eighth in defensive rebounding, and dead last in turnover margin. Without even looking at the stats, too often we just downright seemed bad; we were vastly unprepared against Duke and Virginia, just flat out let the game get away from us against Boston College, and woefully lacked poise in a late match up against Maryland.

So let’s all just calm down. There’s no good reason to get overly excited or confident about this season. Right?

Forget that. Check your cautious optimism at the door: we’re going to be really good this season.

We might have been lethargic and overmatched for much of the regular season last year, but there was marked improvement across the board by March. That team at the end was, without question, a good team. And without making light of the task of replacing Atsur – we can only hope that finding a point guard isn’t as hard as finding a quarterback – we’re putting an improved version of that good team on the floor this season.

Last year’s tournament team will always be remembered most for its unyielding heart and unflinching intensity, but the statistics really drive home the fact that a better team was on the floor in March while giving us a brief glimpse of what we can expect this season.

Over four consecutive days, against four NCAA tournament teams, we shot an average of 56%, seven percentage points above our season average of 49%. Against Duke, we shot 61% from the field and 40% behind the arc; Virginia, 53% and 42%; Virginia Tech, 53% and 46%; and Carolina, 55% and 43%.

During that run, Costner racked up 90 points on 52% shooting; Grant, 59 on 53%; Fells, 51 on 58%; and McCauley, 47 on a scorching 67%. Off the bench, the fearless Horner chipped in a much-needed nine against Virginia Tech and eight against Carolina to lessen the impact of the early foul trouble that both Costner and McCauley got into those games.

On defense, we held Virginia to 40% and Virginia Tech to 42% from the field; only Carolina, at 58%, bettered us in field goal percentage. And after finishing the regular season near the bottom of the standings in total rebounding, only Virginia Tech out-rebounded us, 33-28.

And this wasn’t a fluke weekend where a few guys found their rhythm during a March run, rather an invariable precursor of where we were headed. State had become a well-coached, well-prepared, hard-fighting team capable of making noise on the nation’s premier stage, the ACC tournament.

Now that same team is poised this season to do more than just make some noise.

Costner (16.8 points per game), Grant (14.7), and McCauley (14.4) were not only our top three scorers last season, but they are also three of the top 10 returning scorers in the ACC this season. Costner is second in returning rebounding (7.3 per game), while McCauley is fourth (6.9).

By all indications, if Degand, and eventually Johnson and/or Gonzalez, can transition seamlessly into the point, then how can you not be excited about what this team will do?

Grant plays his more natural position on the wing, where he creates scoring opportunities by attacking the basket, while Fells provides a strong compliment with his range. The addition of the freshmen Hickson and Smith not only relieves both Costner and McCauley of tiring minutes (34 each last season), but this dynamic provides for Costner to play further out, creating a nightmarish mismatch for many opposing coaches.

Meanwhile, Lowe has shown a proven, intriguing knack for quickly identifying mismatches and exploiting them to create scoring opportunities. Evidenced by the comments players have been making since March, it’s apparent this team has bought wholeheartedly into their coach and his philosophy. They listened and improved, and by March they had also proved they could win.

But enough about last year; last year was our feel good story – Lowe’s first team made a lot us believe again. But no one will be surprised by our success this season. And to be honest, feel good stories usually end in nothing more than moral victories. Last year we needed that moral victory; after over a decade of discontent and underachieving, followed by a humbling coaching search, many of us needed that win over Carolina and that remarkable March run to help us heal.

Personally, a feel good story doesn’t make me feel good anymore – let someone else be Cinderella. I’m ready to hang a banner. And that’s exactly what this team is capable of doing.

So yeah, I’m pretty excited.

About LRM

Charter member of the Lunatic Fringe and a fan, loyal to a fault.

07-08 Basketball General NCS Basketball

68 Responses to A View from the Cheap Seats

  1. RochesterRedWolf 10/11/2007 at 10:16 AM #

    one thing that cannot be stated enough with regard to defense and intensity…last year you basically had a 7man rotation, more importantly there was almost zero rotation among costner and mcCauley, they played alot of minutes, this affected end of game intensity and execution. The fact that there were very few options also meant that Costner and McCauley were constantly having to play “smart” and probably even “super-smart” and not get in foul trouble, and you know against Hopsbrow you technically can’t be on the same court at the same time with him and not get whistled for a foul. This year the coaches will get to do something about both of those by having what I think will be a phenomenal rotation which allows maximum intensity for whoever is on the floor and more importantly maximum intensity on the defensive end by the big guys and not have to worry too much about foul trouble.

  2. RochesterRedWolf 10/11/2007 at 10:18 AM #

    does anyone know the record of the team w/Atsur and the record when atsur was hurt, i think we won like one game over that stretch and Gavin Grant (poor guy) was setting conference and national records in turnovers.

  3. Trout 10/11/2007 at 10:28 AM #

    The players have EXTREME confidence in the coaches. To me, that is very important. Our players truly believe they are playing for the best coach in America.

  4. Rick 10/11/2007 at 10:29 AM #

    This Atsur thing is over blown.

    A couple of things to remember.
    1) Going into the year, Atsur was our sole returning starter. Grant was the only other player with ANY playing time. No other player had any experience at all. NONE. It is almost like someone knew they were leaving and so did not prepare fro the future. Nothing else makes sense.
    2) The whole team is more experienced which is going to show up in more consistent ball handling.
    3) The team was not ready for life without Atsur. Losing our most important and most experienced player really hurt the team. We have had all summer to prepare for life without him.
    4) The two redshirts have had at least a year of coaching under Lowe and Towe. It doesn’t get any better than that.

    I am excite3d about this year and am convinced we will have a year at elast comparable to Herb’s best year.

  5. packgrad93 10/11/2007 at 10:47 AM #

    With the talent Herb left & the additions Sid brought in, this team should go deep in the NCAA tourney. Anything less would be disappointing.

  6. noah 10/11/2007 at 10:50 AM #

    What counts as “deep” in the tournament? Sweet 16?

  7. packplantpath 10/11/2007 at 10:53 AM #

    Same question I have. Herb’s best year? I doubt we get that far in, but hope I’m wrong. I’m excited, and yes, it could happen but I’m not holding my breath. I want strong improvement and fun games. Everything else is gravy.

  8. Rick 10/11/2007 at 11:24 AM #

    “Same question I have. Herb’s best year? I doubt we get that far in,”

    You realize two wins matches Herb’s marque year.

  9. statered 10/11/2007 at 11:27 AM #

    I have no problem believing that we will equal Herb’s best year. I think we have a legit shot at either an acc regular season or acc tourney title. I haven’t felt that way since V was here.

  10. TNCSU 10/11/2007 at 11:32 AM #

    Sweet Sixteen is nice, but I think this team has it’s sights set a little higher….Elite Eight OR beyond….

  11. TNCSU 10/11/2007 at 11:34 AM #

    A first round bye in the ACC (finishing in the Top 4) tourney should help, too.

  12. RickJ 10/11/2007 at 11:38 AM #

    RochesterRedWolf brings up an interesting point about the limitations of our defense last year because of the short bench. I am really looking forward to seeing how our defense develops this year.

    Lowe spent the good part of his NBA assistant coaching career as a defensive specialist. I believe this is one of the reasons he has such a special gift for calling plays on the offensive end – he knows what will work against certain defenses & personnel. With a full roster and added quickness, we may get to see the same deal on the defensive end this year.

  13. Wolf-n-Atl 10/11/2007 at 11:57 AM #

    One other point to remember, even when we got Atsur back he was still nursing his injuries. He was not 100% at the end of the year and especially not in the ACC tournament. A health Atsur would have made a big difference in our record last year.

  14. PackMan97 10/11/2007 at 11:59 AM #

    “It is almost like someone knew they were leaving and so did not prepare fro the future. Nothing else makes sense.”

    :rolleyes

    We didn’t have experience but we had talent left. Costner would have seen PT in Herb’s last year if he didn’t have an injury redshirt. We also had Werner, Horner and Davis coming in. Some folks forget the reason we were so shallow was that we lost our two best incoming recruits and our best player went pro early. Yes, we can all agree that Herb did a horrible job managing the playing time of freshmen but to say he was intentionally sabatoging our program because he had ultra top secret plans to leave at the end of the year is the height of stupidity!

  15. packgrad93 10/11/2007 at 12:06 PM #

    “What counts as “deep” in the tournament? Sweet 16?”

    I’d say sweet16 at least. Glad the program has been raised from lucky to get into any post-season tourney to expecting to make runs in the dance.

  16. packgrad93 10/11/2007 at 12:09 PM #

    “I want strong improvement and fun games.”
    I expect wins too.

  17. PacknSack 10/11/2007 at 12:42 PM #

    Let’s not get ahead of ourselves. We all know guard play is essential to success and extended play in March. Right now we don’t have an ACC-experienced point guard, so we should reserve projections and expectations until January 1.

  18. PackBacker001 10/11/2007 at 12:55 PM #

    Guys, I can’t help it. You are making with nervous with this excitement. I’m relatively young, so I don’t remember a time when we were good at anything, much less basketball. All this unbridled enthusiasm has me seeing sprained ankles, torn ligaments, pulled hammies, etc…

    Is it really possible that we can be good and not have a bunch of injuries ruin the season? I’ll believe it when I see it.

  19. lush 10/11/2007 at 1:00 PM #

    so now gavin grant and tracey smith have said they dont think we’ll lose more than 4 games this year, correct? if thats true we should have an acc championship (regular season or tournament) and at least a final four. that would be a monumental acheivement for sid in 2 years, and 100x better than anything herb did in 10.

    if the players beleive it, i believe it too.

  20. LRM 10/11/2007 at 1:09 PM #

    The four losses predictions might be a bit overzealous.

    The only national champion in the past 10 years without at least four losses was ’99 UConn (34-2).

    With that said…sure, why not.

  21. Mr O 10/11/2007 at 1:19 PM #

    Totally agree with Rick on losing Atsur. Our top six players are good enough that our best lineup may not include any of the three potential PGs.

  22. packgrad93 10/11/2007 at 1:25 PM #

    “if thats true we should have an acc championship (regular season or tournament) and at least a final four. that would be a monumental acheivement for sid in 2 years, and 100x better than anything herb did in 10. ”

    don’t hold your breath. I expect great season, but I expect to lose more than 4 games too.

    ” Our top six players are good enough that our best lineup may not include any of the three potential PGs.”

    that would put GG or Fells out of position at the point. I hope one of the PGs are in out top 6 players.

  23. ChuckAllYall 10/11/2007 at 1:26 PM #

    Just the fact that players (and fans) are talking about National Championships is a stark contrast over the past decade of mediocre expectations. This is the momentum that we needed to get the ball rolling again. Now, it is the job of this years team to go out and continue building on what Sid and the boys put together at the end of last season.

    If this team can stay healthy, play solid defense, and a serviceable point guard emerges…….look out.

  24. ncsu96 10/11/2007 at 1:29 PM #

    we are going to miss atsur’s shooting a bunch, this made him great at feeding the post and opened things up for costner and mccauley.

  25. TampaPack 10/11/2007 at 1:31 PM #

    ^ Exactly ChuckAllYall. Being at State from 95-99 while there were some great games and upsets, there was never really the feeling that you knew or expected to win a game – not even against those early out of conference directional schools. This is something new to us younger wolfpack fans.

    Having said that, I like it and can barely contain my excitement until the first jump ball. Game on!

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