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Washington Makes Unserious Opening Offer to Play Gonzaga

Having lost eight of 10 games to Gonzaga between 1997 and 2006, the Washington Huskies felt they needed a break because "the schedule began to get away from us." Apparently, that was code for "tired of being beaten by an in-state team from a non-power conference."

Well, after a few years of finding themselves, Washington would like to renew the series with Gonzaga. Just as long as the games are played for Washington's benefit.

Rather than play a home-and-home type of series with Gonzaga as had been done (and how Gonzaga plays it with Washington State, Wake Forest, Illinois, and Michigan State), Washington wants a three game series to be played at Key Arena in Seattle as a neutral site contest. Apparently playing a scant five miles from Washington's campus still constitutes a "neutral" site to Washington's athletic department as long as the ticket sales are split 50-50.

College Basketball's Top 25 Coaches


In an effort to talk about something college basketball-related other than scandals in the summer, let's talk best current coaches. We'll attempt to order the top 25 current coaches in the nation. This is about the present and the future, not the distant past. What a guy did in the mid-90s doesn't matter near as much as the direction his program is currently headed. Past pedigree also matters, to an extent. For the perfect mix of past accomplishments with present achievement and a paved road for future success, look no further than the man atop the list.

Tim Floyd Reportedly Takes Arizona Job

Third Update: ESPN is reporting that USC coach Tim Floyd will be Arizona's next coach. ESPN's radio affiliate in Phoenix reports that the Trojan coach and Arizona athletic director Jim Livengood are finalizing a deal and an announcement is expected Thursday. Floyd coached USC for four seasons, including three NCAA tournaments and proved to be a highly effective recruiter. The Tuscon Citizen is reporting that Floyd flew in to discuss the job, but citing an unnamed source, says it is unclear if the coach was offered the job or even visited the campus. The paper reports that no press conference is yet scheduled for Thursday.

Has Arizona Ruined Its Coaching Search?

Everyone knew Russ Pennell had no chance to stay in Tucson as the head coach once Louisville finished off the Wildcats. It was an incredible run to the Sweet 16, seeing as though nobody even wanted the name "Arizona" in the tournament to begin with.

As the buzzer sounded on that 39-point rout, the coaching search became official. The Wildcats needed a high-profile coach to fill the shoes, and the legacy, of Lute Olson. That was easy in theory, but couldn't have gone worse thus far in the recruiting game.


FanHouse NCAA Hoops BlogPoll: No. 6, Gonzaga Bulldogs

This week, FanHouse is taking an early look at the top teams heading into 2008 with a BlogPoll decided on by our college hoops bloggers. To help with the team capsules, we've brought in some of the top fan bloggers around the internets to give us insights on their teams.

Today, we have enlisted Zach Bell and Max Mandel of the
The Kennel Report to break down the Gonzaga Bulldogs.

Gonzaga has become one of the most recognizable college basketball programs in the nation. During his tenure, Mark Few has elevated the small, Jesuit institution to the forefront of college basketball. He's had guys like Adam Morrison, Ronny Turiaf, and Dan Dickau but the talent he has for the 2008 season is the best he has ever had at Gonzaga.


FanHouse NCAA Hoops BlogPoll: No. 20, Davidson Wildcats

This week, FanHouse is taking a look at the top teams heading into 2008 with a BlogPoll decided on by our college hoops bloggers. To help with the team capsules, we've brought in some of the top fan bloggers around the internets to give us insights on their teams.

Today, we have enlisted me, The Sportz Assassin, of
FanHouse and SportzAssassin.com, to break down the Davidson Wildcats.

We all remember last season. Davidson began the season taking on top programs like North Carolina, UCLA and Duke, rolling through the Southern Conference schedule and then getting to the Elite Eight. Along the way, the Wildcats popped Gonzaga, Georgetown and Wisconsin and nearly beat eventual champion Kansas.

Stephen Curry became a superstar. Head coach Bob McKillop was finally getting his national recognition. The little school just outside of Charlotte is now big time.

More Bad News For Arizona Basketball, All Three Recruits Are Out For 2009-10

Tucson, Arizona might not have a lot of earthquakes, but they might have a decent idea of what an aftershock feels like.

Four days after it was reported that Lute Olson would be leaving the Arizona basketball program after 24 seasons as head coach, the recruits have abandoned the sinking ship faster than you can sing "Bear Down."

Three recruits who had committed to the University of Arizona have decided to re-open the recruiting process thanks to the resignation of Olson last week.

Abdul Gaddy, Solomon Hill and Mike Moser have all told Arizona media sources that they will look elsewhere now that Olson has retired. Gaddy was the second-ranked point guard (and No. 14th overall) in the ESPNU 100. Moser, a 6-8 forward, is ranked 18th at his position. Hill is the No. 21 forward.
With these three leaving, Arizona has zero recruits committed for the 2009-10 season, a blow to a program that looks to be tanking faster than the Illinois collapse of 2005. This is the second consecutive season that the Wildcats have failed in their recruiting, with top point guard recruit Brandon Jennings signing with Virtus Roma, a professional basketball team in Italy, last season.

The program will most likely be in shambles until a permanent replacement is named. If Arizona can land a big name like Mark Few, all things will be fine in the Old Pueblo. Until then expect the consecutive NCAA tournament streak to take a belly flop when March rolls around.

They Do Not Come From Nowhere: Gonzaga

Every year Cinderella captures our hearts in the NCAA Tournament. They begin fittings for their glass slippers in November, though. They Do Not Come From Nowhere introduces you to the teams that will be busting brackets nationwide come March.

Our first potential Cinderella is no stranger to the Big Dance. Mark Few has taken the Bulldogs to the ball in each of the last nine seasons. They no longer have to remind people how to pronounce the school's name or rely on the memory of John Stockton to tell people that they've been around a good long while. Still, they play in the West Coast Conference and are thus consigned to mid-majordom.

They return two talented guards in Jeremy Pargo and Matt Bouldin which means they won't miss departed leading scorer Derek Raivio all that much. Throw in Micah Downs and you have a typical Few team. They fill it up from the outside, move the ball well and put up points in bunches. Typically Few's teams also struggle defensively and that may be where this year's version surpasses recent versions.

The freshman Austin Daye is 6'10" with a 7'5" wingspan and could make life difficult on the perimeter for shooters used to open looks at the Bulldog hoop. He has eight blocks in his first two games and adds a new dimension to their defense. He's their leading scorer to boot and could be a major factor come tournament time.

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