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Huskies bail on the Zags, and Husky fans

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    It shouldn’t be so much to ask: Couldn’t somebody in charge in college athletics act like the enterprise hasn’t completely lost its mind?
 
  We’re about to have athletes get on planes and travel 2,500 miles to decide who’s better in soccer and volleyball. We’re paying some jocks a couple of million dollars – for a few, that might be on the low side – to throw hitch passes and run the pick-and-roll. Some administrators are hell-bent to screw up the best thing about the NCAA, the men’s basketball tournament, because of course, more teams that go 8-10 in their conference will make it really good.
 
  A sanity break from all this apparently won’t be found in the Washington athletic department, which has decided the collegiate sports world in these parts will be better if its men’s basketball team doesn’t play Gonzaga.
 
 The Zags and Huskies had arranged a four-year home-and-home deal starting with the 2022-23 season. At the halfway point, Washington has invoked a clause in that contract that stipulates the deal can be voided in the event of a coaching change.
 
 Washington finally cashed out Mike Hopkins after last season and beckoned Danny Sprinkle of Utah State. And with that, it has the standing to opt out of the last two years of the deal, and will, a move reported late last week by CBS Sports.
 
  Nobody at Washington has said anything publicly by way of explanation. I’m told reliably that the Huskies initiated the opt-out. Gonzaga may have shrugged, figuring, not without reason, that if Washington’s NET ranking is 76 or worse next season, that’s merely a Quad 3 victory for the Zags.
 
  Certainly, the new league will be demanding for Washington, requiring 20 Big Ten games and an inherently rigorous travel schedule.
 
  But the irony is prodigious: To ease the rigors of traveling cross-country to play Penn State and Rutgers, the Huskies are lopping a national powerhouse across the state that requires a half-hour plane ride.
 
 Make it make sense.
 
 The Big Ten hasn’t yet announced its schedule for 2024-25, only each team’s opponents. Playing 20 last season, most conference teams had two league games the first week of December.
 
 That leaves two-thirds of November and the rest of December to squeeze in non-league opponents. True, it can happen that one party is shy of obvious open dates, and I don’t know the specifics of Washington’s schedule. But it seems safe to assume that the Huskies concluded they have enough on their plate without taking on a team getting mention as a possible national titlist.
 
  In any case, know this: If both sides want a game to happen, they can make it happen.
 
  A commenter on the story in the Seattle Times, my old paper, pretty much nailed it: “Teams all over the country fight tooth and nail to get games like this on their schedule. New guy walks into the UW hoops program and says, ‘Nah, not interested.’ “
 
  I’ll never understand the inclination to soft-pedal a non-league schedule in the name of getting victories. In almost all cases, the intrepid will get more points in analytics – and certainly in the court of public opinion – with even a competitive loss than they will a victory over a tomato can merely showing up for a payday. 
 
  Moreover, for all the challenges posed by the Big Ten, it isn’t as though Washington enters as a lost child in the wilderness, thanks to the transfer portal. Incoming is Great Osobor, the Mountain West player of the year last season at Utah State. It’s a team that should be at least competitive.
 
  This has long since ceased to be a question of which program needs the other. If there’s any element of that, it’s the Huskies who need the Zags, who can schedule just about anybody in the country. Next season, Gonzaga plays Kentucky at Climate Pledge Arena in Seattle, two-time defending champ Connecticut at Madison Square Garden, UCLA and San Diego State.
 
  I can’t forget a conversation I had several weeks ago with a well-connected, old-line Husky. I asked him what sort of vibe he was getting from his friends about his school’s move to the Big Ten.
 
  “Everybody hates it,” he said, stopping after three words.
 
 Think he’d rather play at Minnesota, or see his team play Gonzaga?
 
  The fans, as usual, take it on the shorts. It isn’t enough that West Coast teams have set up shop in the Eastern and Central time zones. It isn’t enough that their athletic departments cry poor and squeeze boosters for more cash to support NIL deals. Give us more, just keep giving us more.
 
  I'm guessing the Huskies figure their fan base might be more inclined to accept the move since the first game of the final two years of the deal was to have been in Spokane. And assuredly, Washington will replace that date with a "buy" game at Edmundson Pavilion.  (FYI, the home schedule of Sprinkle’s Utah State outfit last season consisted of Southern Utah, Cal-Irvine, San Diego and East Tennessee State. And Northwest Nazarene.)
 
 So this becomes the latest chapter in a mostly lamentable saga of Washington dealings with its upstart neighbor in Spokane.
 
 They played annually from the late ‘90s on, until, early in the 2000s, there was a celebrated rift caused by UW assistant Cameron Dollar’s NCAA-improper contact with Clarkston big man Josh Heytvelt. That, and what UW coach Lorenzo Romar considered negative recruiting by Gonzaga coach Mark Few and his staff, prompted the Huskies to call a halt to the series after the 2006-07 season.
 
  Then came a misbegotten effort by the UW in 2009 to shame the Zags into a corner, when the Huskies proposed a three-year schedule of games at KeyArena, which would have had them playing four miles from their campus to Gonzaga’s 285-mile trip. Gonzaga turned that down like a fake Rolex and the ploy backfired, as Washington was widely scorned in the media for the charade.
 
  Few and Romar came to a détente of sorts eventually, and the two sides agreed to terms again for the 2016-17 season. Then Hopkins took over at Washington. Few liked him – who didn’t like Hopkins (and playing his teams)? – and there was a full-on thaw.
 
  Now it’s getting freezing in here again. The Huskies seem to be missing an important point: No matter the (debatable) short-term benefit they might see in bailing, the optics of it are far more lasting. They’re going to be seen as the ones who sabotaged the series.
 
  If Sprinkle walked into athletic director Pat Chun's office and proposed curtailing the series, and I'm Chun, I say, “No. We’re Washington. We’re better than that.”
 
  Except, unfortunately, the Huskies aren’t.
#godawgs #gohuskies #huskies #huskyfamily #slipperstillfits #unitedwezag #uwgonzaga #uwhuskies #wcchoops #wccsports #zagsmbb #zagup

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Banchero and UW, where a little talent is a dangerous thing

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The top-shelf basketball talent from the Seattle area just keeps coming. A year after Jaden McDaniels became a five-star recruit, coaches from around the country are coveting 6-9 Paolo Banchero of O’Dea High in Seattle, a 2021 prospect that Rivals.com ranks as the No. 2 player in the nation. Among others, that has the interest of schools like Duke, North Carolina, Kentucky, Gonzaga and of course, Washington.

There’s a thick connection to Seattle and the University of Washington. Banchero’s mom Rhonda played at Washington from 1992-95 and is No. 6 on the school career scoring list and No. 8 in rebounding. His dad Mario played football at the UW. And of course, there’s the close culture of basketball players who grew up in the 206; in a recent interview with KING-TV, Banchero made reference to the legion of other players who have made the city one of the wellsprings of basketball talent in the nation.

Only circumstance lends any hint about where Banchero might want to go to school. He hasn’t publicly named a list of finalists (while he has visited the first four aforementioned), and both parents say they aren’t inclined to push him in any direction.

Not that any coaches ever slip a dollop of negative recruiting into their pitch, but for people like John Calipari of Kentucky and Mark Few of Gonzaga, and the longtime head men at Duke and North Carolina, Mike Krzyzewski and Roy Williams, it has to be tempting to point out to Banchero what kind of season the local team is having. Indeed, the 2019-20 UW struggles serve to underscore a much longer, deeper trend at Washington.

Over the years, nobody has frittered away high-end talent like Washington.

The numbers are startling. This is something I researched a few years ago, and with the Huskies bogged down in an eight-game losing streak and looking at a challenge even to get out of the Pac-12 cellar, the subject merits updating.

Back in 2006-07, Washington had seven-foot Spencer Hawes. It started 10-1 and skidded to 19-13 overall and 8-10 in the Pac-10. The Huskies didn’t play in the post-season and Hawes decided to take his gifts to the NBA after one year.

So I looked at specifically that phenomenon: Schools that since 2007, have had a player taken in the first round of the NBA draft, while the school failed to make the NCAA tournament that season.

It’s not a pretty picture on Montlake.

If, as expected, Washington fails to make the NCAA tournament – and now its chance is reduced to winning the Pac-12 tournament – and Isaiah Stewart and Jaden McDaniels get taken in the first round of the draft as widely expected, the Huskies will have had nine such first-round picks who didn’t get to the NCAA tournament that season since ’07.

As we speak, no other school in the country has more than three. That’s a stunning gap in a sport in which the bubble is regularly viewed as soft, and which affords a lot of opportunities to qualify for the NCAAs.

These are the instances at issue, and the Huskies’ post-season destination, since ’07:

2007 – Spencer Hawes (no post-season tournament).
2012 – Terrence Ross and Tony Wroten (NIT semifinals).
2014 – C.J. Wilcox (no tournament).
2016 – Marquess Chriss and Dejounte Murray (NIT second round).
2017 – Markelle Fultz (no tournament).

The phenomenon happens more than you might guess. Since 2007, there have been 70 instances of first-round picks not getting to the Big Dance that season, or about five a year. But if there are five more in June, and the Huskies don’t pull off a miracle run and Stewart and McDaniels are history at the UW, that would be nine of 75 belonging to Washington. For Washington to have more than eight percent of such cases, when there are 75 Power Six conference schools, is jaw-dropping.

Next-most such shortfalls is three by Indiana and Syracuse, UW coach Mike Hopkins’ old school. There are another 10 two-time offenders.

Put Hawes aside, and it’s even more stark. Since 2012, there are six Huskies who fall into this category over a mere eight seasons. Nationally, in that period there are 40 such cases, so the UW owns 15 percent of them. And it’s very likely to jump higher soon.

Then there’s this: The worst-case scenario – no NCAA and departures by Stewart and McDaniels – would mark the third time in that 14-year stretch that it’s happened to a tandem of Huskies the same season. Elsewhere, it’s happened only once, to Kentucky in 2013, and that carries a bit of an asterisk since Nerlens Noel, a first-round NBA selection that year, went down with a season-ending knee injury on Feb. 12.

How possibly to explain this?

This season, the Huskies can look to the ineligibility of guard Quade Green, which is reasonable to a point. But it’s also become a convenient catch-all for a team that had four losses by Jan. 2 with him.

You could also say that because seven (of the potential nine without a Big Dance ticket) are/were one-and-done players, it’s not as much a black mark on the Huskies as it is the NBA procedure of drafting on potential rather than production.

My sense is that more than anything, what did in Lorenzo Romar after a successful start at Washington was his inability to tame the beast that is Seattle-area talent – that is, not only being able to recruit it, but to recruit it selectively, to construct rosters that included it, and ultimately, to coach it.

What Romar did is not Hopkins’ fault, but after a two-year start and nothing but hosannas thrown his way, Hopkins is overseeing a badly underachieving season that evokes problems of his predecessor.

Who knows what Paolo Banchero might do? If his mindset is being one-and-done, he might well conclude that it’s not worth the uprooting to go cross-country, or even across the state, for eight or nine months’ apprenticeship for the NBA. He might decide the local connections he would make going to the UW would be beneficial when he’s done playing basketball. He might also figure he can be the guy who successfully bucks Washington’s lengthy, head-scratching trend.

One thing you can probably count on: He’s going to hear about that history from other coaches.
#godawgs #huskies #theslipperstillfits #uwhuskies #wcchoops #zagmbb

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