Latest Big East Basketball Stories
Posted: Nov 4th 2009 6:00PM ET by David Whitley (RSS feed)
Filed under: Syracuse, Big East

There could have been bigger upsets Tuesday night. Mike Bloomberg could have lost the New York mayor's job to Stephon Marbury. Or "The Jay Leno Show" could have won its time slot.
If you were caught up watching those returns, you may have missed the biggest upset in the history of mankind, or at least New York.
Move over, Joe Willie. Step aside, Miracle on Ice.
Give it up for Le Moyne!
Le Who?
Posted: Nov 4th 2009 8:00AM ET by Brett McMurphy (RSS feed)
Filed under: Big East

NEW YORK -- Last season, Pittsburgh made the NCAA tournament's Elite Eight. This year, the
Panthers aren't even picked to finish in the top eight of the Big East Conference.
Such are the occupational hazards of playing in the biggest and baddest basketball league in the land.
"You can go from first to 10th in this league in one season," Cincinnati coach Mick Cronin told FanHouse. "Pittsburgh went to the Elite Eight last year and they're picked to finish ninth in the league this year.
"Not only is it hard to climb in this league, it's just as easy to fall."
Posted: Nov 3rd 2009 8:00AM ET by Brett McMurphy (RSS feed)
Filed under: Big East

NEW YORK -- Whether it was Villanova's Final Four trip last season or his bench demeanor,
Wildcats coach Jay Wright has made a big impression on a majority of the Big East players.
Wright was the top vote-getter in FanHouse's poll of the league's players asking which coach, other than their own, they would like to play for. Wright, who received 29.7 percent of the votes, edged Syracuse's Jim Boeheim, with 24.3 percent.
Two weeks ago at the Big East's media day, FanHouse polled 37 players representing all 16 schools that attended Madison Square Garden on a variety of subjects. The players were guaranteed anonymity for their responses with only one stipulation: they could not vote for their coach, a teammate or their school in any of the categories.
While the players voted for Wright as the coach they would like to play for, Seton Hall's Bobby Gonzalez (24.3 percent) edged UConn's
Jim Calhoun (21.6 percent) as the "opposing coach that screams the most."
Posted: Nov 2nd 2009 9:53AM ET by Michelle Smith (RSS feed)
Filed under: Connecticut, Oklahoma, Stanford, Tennessee, Big 12, Big East, Pac-10, SEC, Women's Basketball

Part of the beauty of college basketball is that it isn't like college football. The top teams don't have to be afraid of playing a tough opponent; worried that risking a single loss would derail a season's worth of effort.
Instead, the best teams in college basketball want to cut their teeth on one another, learn from their shortcomings, shore up before spring, or build a resume for the NCAA committee by collecting wins against stiff competition.
The following is a list of the top five schedules in women's college basketball this season. These teams are going to do it the hard way. And you gotta admire that.
Posted: Oct 21st 2009 4:16PM ET by Brett McMurphy (RSS feed)
Filed under: Louisville, Big East

NEW YORK -- Despite recent revelations that
Rick Pitino had an extramarital affair and then an alleged $10 million extortion attempt against him, the Louisville coach said those concerns have not been an issue with recruits.
"What you failed to realize in recruiting, it hasn't come up one time in one phone call," Pitino said. "Because you're [media] interested in it, because it's your job ... [but] the players and the recruits are not interested.
"All they're interested in are their futures, making their lives better for their families some day, becoming the best player they possibly can be and winning games. And that's really what they're tuned into."
Posted: Aug 13th 2009 10:00PM ET by Clay Travis (RSS feed)
Filed under: Kentucky, Louisville, Big East, Coaches, Police Blotter

Every time news breaks, like the
Rick Pitino imbroglio did Tuesday night, I always feel a little twinge of sympathy for the lawyer who ends up hurling a semantic argument into the whirlwind of 24-hour news coverage. These days news coverage has room for two opinions: you're right or you're wrong. The shades-of-gray approach doesn't sell.
But that doesn't mean lawyers don't try to split hairs. Think Bill Clinton asking what the meaning of is, is. Inevitably, these hair-splitting defenses blow up. Which brings me to this, according to his lawyer, Rick Pitino didn't pay for
Karen Sypher's abortion. Heavens no. What he did was pay for an uninsured woman to get health coverage .... which she then, oh by the way, used to have an abortion. That's a great story except for one flaw, pregnancy is a preexisting condition. So adding health insurance doesn't cover an already existing pregnancy.
Oops.
Bad excuse. But not as bad as the 10 excuses for the $3,000 the legal team considered and rejected. Read on for those.
Posted: Aug 11th 2009 11:52PM ET by Chas Rich (RSS feed)
Filed under: Louisville, Big East, Coaches, Police Blotter

There's something like 10 kinds of crazy in the ever-expanding story on Louisville coach
Rick Pitino and his
relationship with the alleged extortionist Karen Cunagin Sypher. It didn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that the information she was holding over the married Pitino's head involved an extramarital affair. Still, this is now approaching pure soap-opera levels of melodrama.
The latest, as reported by the Courier-Journal, is that Pitino admitted to police investigators that he did have sex with Sypher and subsequently gave her $3,000 for an abortion after she claimed she was pregnant.