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    Hoops City

    Short drive, long journey: Texas poised to give Houston a "local" team in FinalFour

    Jim Beviglia
    Jan 30, 2011 | 2:58 am
    • The Longhorns are tough enough to be a Final Four team.
    • The billboards have gone up around Houston and the countdown to the Final Fouris officially underway.
      Photo by David Rossman
    • Texas' Jordan Hamilton
    • T.J. McConnell of Duquesne
    • Chris Singleton of Florida State

    The Final Four in Houston is less than 70 days away (62 until the first Saturday national semifinal game at Reliant Stadium on April 2 to be exact). Two large countdown billboards are already up in the city and 18 other Final Four billboards are spread around the area.

    "We want to make sure that everyone knows the Final Four is coming," Doug Hall, vice president game, facility and LOC management for the 2011 Houston Final Four Local Organizing Committee, tells CultureMap. "We're coming down the stretch now."

    With that in mind, it's time to beef up on your college basketball knowledge. You want to know the difference between Duke and the Dukes long before Huskies or Buckeyes descend on Discovery Green to party. In this regular feature, Jim Beviglia will break down the national college hoops scene with a focus on which teams are racing for Reliant.

    TEAM OF THE MONTH: TEXAS

    The easy win over a good Texas A&M team was an eye-opener. But it was nothing compared to the second-half ambush the Longhorns put on a previously-unbeaten Kansas team, ending a four-year unbeaten streak at Allen Fieldhouse for the Jayhawks. And the seventh-ranked Longhorns (18-3, 6-0 in the Big 12) haven't stopped rolling since, shutting down Oklahoma State and completely overpowering No. 11 Missouri 71-58 this week.

    All of the elements are there for a long tourney run: A go-to scorer (Jordan Hamilton), a low-post threat (Tristan Thompson), a long-range bomber (J’Covan Brown), a heady point guard (Cory Joseph) and lots of experienced depth. The Horns are a little thin inside, but there aren’t many college teams that can exploit that these days. Some potential stumbling blocks do exist though.

    Coach Rick Barnes has had many teams peak in January and peter out in March and Hamilton’s sideline shouting with Barnes at the end of the Kansas game isn’t exactly a positive sign. Still, Texas has progressed a lot quicker than anybody might have expected. It should be interesting to see what the Longhorns do next.

    RISING: FLORIDA STATE

    It hasn’t always been pretty, but the ‘Noles followed up on their upset of Duke with three more ACC wins in a row. Even Saturday's ugly loss at a revenge-minded Clemson cannot stanch the excitement in Tallahassee.

    With a 5-2 conference record, the Seminoles trail only Duke and North Carolina in the ACC. Florida State sometimes has a hard time putting the ball in the basket (see the 44 points against Clemson), but it possess lots of size and a stingy defense. Chris Singleton is an NBA talent, while Derwin Kitchen is an underrated point guard. Neither the RPI nor the efficiency stats guys think too highly of Leonard Hamilton’s bunch, but they could cause nightmares for a potent offensive team come tourney time.

    REELING: KANSAS STATE

    It's been a nightmare season for the Wildcats — with Saturday's 24-point loss at rival Kansas more of the same. Even after beating Baylor, Kansas State is only 2-5 in the Big 12 (14-8 overall).

    One of Wildcats' big guys off the bench (Freddy Asprilla) left the program midseason. It's amazing to think that this team had an intimidating aura about it at the start of the season. That’s long gone. The ‘Cats suddenly have to worry about even getting into the tourney instead of where they’ll be seeded.

    UNDER THE RADAR: DUQUESNE

    Don’t look now, but the Dukes are 6-0 in the rugged Atlantic 10, tied for conference lead with Xavier and on their longest winning streak (nine games) in three decades heading into Sunday's game against Dayton. Duquesne can light it up from outside the arc and it excels at creating turnovers. Senior leaders Bill Clark and Damian Saunders have benefited greatly from the arrival of freshman point guard T.J. McConnell, who leads the conference in steals.

    The margin for error here is very slim; the team RPI is terrible and the Dukes have no non-conference wins worth a darn. They do have a favorable schedule though, and they definitely possess the talent to keep up their winning ways.

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    Beyond the Boxscore

    Houston in line to get more Final Fours after 2016: NCAA officials expect it tobecome a regular

    Chris Baldwin
    Apr 5, 2011 | 7:07 pm
    • The success of Bracket Town meant almost as much to the NCAA as the success atReliant Stadium.
      Photo by Bruce Bennett
    • NCAA official Greg Shaheen praised Houston's Final Four efforts.
    • Kemba Walker wasn't the only one who flew high at this Final Four.
      Photo by Streeter Lecka/Getty Images

    When even NCAA officials are making jokes about the lowest-scoring NCAA Championship Game since 1949, you know they had a good time in Houston.

    That's what happens in the Final Four wrap-up press conference Tuesday. Greg Shaheen — the highest-ranking NCAA official in the room — opens his portion with a crack about the offensive woes Monday night.

    Shaheen notes that if more people had the motor shown by Houston Final Four Local Organizing Committee interim executive director Doug Hall then "we might have had a game last night where both teams scored 60 points."

    "You were on overdrive," Shaheen says to Hall.

    Yes, there is a whole lot of love in the room when the Houston LOC and the NCAA meet for the last time before this 2011 Final Four becomes part of the record books — and thoughts begin to slowly turn to the 2016 Final Four that will be held in Houston and the 2015 regional at Reliant Stadium before that.

    It does not figure to end in 2016 though. Shaheen — the NCAA's interim executive vice president of championships and alliances — tells CutureMap he expects there will be even more Final Fours in Houston in the future.

    "I don't see any reason why Houston wouldn't become a regular part of our rotation," Shaheen says.

    Shaheen would be the first to say that the NCAA's Basketball Committee will make the final call like usual on future sites, but he says the committee is thrilled with Houston's performance.

    "This is what a showcase event should look like," Shaheen says of a Houston event that set the Final Four record for total attendance (145,747 at the two nights of games) and also drew an estimated 140,000 to the Big Dance Concert Series (the concert figure is based on an "approximation" of the number of people who came through Discovery Green during all three concerts that lasted several hours each) and another 49,000 to Bracket Town at the George R. Brown Convention Center. "This is what a national championship should feel like.

    "It should be exhausting the next morning and be a seamless effort."

    Later Shaheen quips, "UConn is not the only winner here."

    Instead, Texas might be the biggest winner of all. For the Lone Star State has emerged as the NCAA's big event darling. Texas will host three Final Fours in a six-year stretch (Houston in 2011 and 2016, Dallas in 2014). And that type of dominance is not expected to end anytime soon either.

    "In the modern era, for both the men's and women's championships, I don't know that any state has emerged like Texas," Shaheen says. "And I think you have to include San Antonio (host of the 1998, 2004 and 2008 Final Fours) in that equation as well. There are a lot of things Texas offers the championships that are unique."

    Standing off to the side in the ballroom at the Hyatt Regency — which served as the headquarters for the coaches convention during Final Four week, housing all the big names who weren't coaching in the games — Robert Dale Morgan is sure of what makes Houston such a lure.

    Morgan, the president and executive director of the 2011 Houston Final Four LOC, held a similar position for Houston's 2004 Super Bowl and many credit his vision with helping the city see its big sports event potential, with a Super Bowl, Major League Baseball All-Star Game, NBA All-Star Game, Major League Soccer All-Star Game and now a Final Four all having been held here since 2004. Not that Morgan wants that recognition.

    He chooses to sit in the crowd rather than on the stage at the wrap-up press conference. He probably could have blended in to, wearing a Houston Final Four hat with his suit, if so many people on the stage didn't point him out. Bob Beauchamp, chairman of the Houston Final Four LOC, calls Morgan, "the best in the business."

    "Having six million people who care," Morgan says in explaining how Houston's positioned itself as the host city with the most. "Having a dozen Fortune 500 companies. And oh by the way, we have really great weather 300 days out of the year."

    Trash Talk Between Friends

    Houston hands off the Final Four to New Orleans, next year's host. The transition is a bit of intentional symbolism by the NCAA which wants to recognize how closely the two cities are linked and the Bayou City's role in helping after Hurricane Katrina.

    This will be the fifth Final Four that New Orleans has hosted and the city's LOC executive director John Koerner can't help but point out to Houston, the new city in "the rotation," how great every one of the NCAA Championship Games held in the Big Easy has been.

    "New Orleans has hosted some of the most memorable finals ever," Koerner says. "We had Michael Jordan's shot, Keith Smart's shot, Chris Webber's infamous timeout and Hakim Warrick's block at the buzzer."

    And from its first Final Four, Houston has? Well, a whole lot of clangs — and Butler's record-low 18.8 percent shooting.

    Not that anyone in the NCAA is holding it against the Bayou City. The organization credentialed 1,387 media members for this Final Four, loved the visibility brought about by having it in one of the America's biggest cities. Even if you have to wonder how much everyone was into it locally. The TV rating in Houston for the unsightly Butler-UConn national championship game only ranked 30th out of the 56 major media markets.

    Shaheen's not dwelling on that. Instead, he's sticking around Houston to take in more of the city without the pressures of the mega event.

    "I don't have a flight home," Shaheen says, knowing that Southwest Airlines' grounded jets have made it much harder than usual to land one last minute. "So I'll be staying here two, three, four, five more days. I may be looking to get an apartment and just become a resident."

    Shaheen laughs. Who says NCAA suits don't have a sense of humor?

    When they are happily in Houston, they sure do.

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