January 2009 Archives

2008-09 Game #22: Jays 73, Indiana State 62

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Look, I know the team is struggling. Their performance has been spotty, and they aren't where we expected them to be on January 28. But on Tuesday night, we got a ghastly preview of what the Qwest Center might look like if the Jays ever had a down year, because apparently many folks believe THIS is a down year.

How else to explain almost 30% of the courtside seats sitting empty? That's inexcusable. Come on, if you really feel like you don't want to go to the game because the team is struggling, fine. But give your tickets away! Hell, sell 'em! But make sure someone is enjoying them.

How else to explain a student section at less than 50% occupancy? The students reminded me of the pre-2003 days at the Civic. And for those of you who don't remember those days, trust me, this is not a good thing. For any students reading this, you DO NOT want to be compared with the student sections of my years.

How else to explain Billy Bluejay forgetting there was a game? The kid who masquerades around as Billy didn't show up for the game, and rumor has it the reason is that he forgot there was a game. Come on man, at least have the decency to pull a Dennis Howard and claim you didn't have a ride to the arena! But don't try to excuse yourself by saying you forgot there was a game. Too bad Dirty Billy isn't around anymore, the understudy could have taken center stage last night.

Gameday: Indiana State

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At the game on Saturday, I was pounding Diet Pepsis because it was an afternoon game and I had a long drive ahead of me following the end. This afforded me the sort of mental clarity that I do not always possess during and particularly after games.

The people sitting next to me were attending their first game of the year, a dad and his kids. In talking to the dad at halftime, he mentioned that the guards were taking an inordinate number of threes -- even more than CU usually does. This got me to thinking. Why is that?

2008-09 Game #21: Drake 74, Jays 62

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I made a promise not to criticize any players by name over the homestand, and I'm going to keep that promise despite the loss to Drake. In fact, I'm done ripping players on this team, period, because during Saturday's game I came to some startling realizations. Its amazing what an afternoon game where you drink a soft drink instead of Pabst Blue Ribbon can do for one's ability to think critically.

But you know what? I'm not going to get into any of that today. Basketball is supposed to be fun, and it is. I enjoy going to games, getting a beverage, some food, and cheering on the team. Is it more fun when they win? You're damn right it is. But is my life really any different when they don't? Nah. The beer is still tasty, the mini donuts are still delicious, and I still had the privilege of sitting in good seats to watch something I enjoy for a couple hours to distract me from all of the worrisome things going on in the world around us.

Why am I so positive today? You know what, I became an uncle again yesterday, and its pretty damn impossible to ever be sad or depressed when you've been at a maternity ward and held a healthy baby. That's some truth right there. I'm out of town at the moment, using free Wi-Fi in a coffee shop in Des Moines to check email and write a quick post here after visiting my brother and his wife at the hospital to see their newborn daughter, which is their second girl. Yep, my super macho brother, the guy who thinks he's Burt Reynolds, now has two daughters. That's pretty funny to me.

I'll be back in Omaha tomorrow and back on this site with some amateur blogger theories on what's going on with this team. See ya then. You bet.

Gameday: Drake

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Over Christmas, I sat and watched a movie with my two-year old niece. That movie: Cinderella. Yes, the Disney animated movie. Now, ordinarily, I do not watch Disney animated movies. In fact, given the choice between watching a Disney animated movie and watching a Hugh Grant movie, I'd think long and hard before opting for option C, no matter what option C is. And given the choice between watching a Disney animated movie and watching a Carrot Top movie, I'd go get a root canal.

Why do I tell you these things? Because Drake is a pumpkin, and its after midnight. Their 28 win season is history, and now that those rascals in Cedar Falls have shown the league how to defend Josh Young, the Bulldogs are either ordinary or terrible, depending on who you talk to.

Either adjective works for me, because after watching the UNI-Drake game on ESPN2 last Saturday, and then deciding to go to the mall -- TO THE MALL!! -- because the game was so lopsided, I'm convinced the Jays will win today. Plus, I received a couple of emails from Drake fans telling me how terrible their team is, how coach Mark Phelps is trying to ram a system the players can't run down their throats, and how Drake Nation is growing restless.

Wait...Drake Nation? You cannot be serious. My Dad is the only person I've ever known who wore a Drake sweatshirt out in public on a non-gameday before last year, and that was only because he went to school there. I remember him taking us to games at Veterans Auditorium and seeing more Iowa and Iowa State shirts than Drake shirts, even though neither of those state schools were on the court.

2008-09 Game #20: Jays 79, Evansville 57

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In my Gameday post, I predicted the Jays would fold like a cheap suit and lose at Evansville Tuesday night. Not surprisingly, the reaction from my readers was outrageous. Several of them asked me what took so long; several more asked me what the hell was wrong with me. Hell, the editor of CollegeHoops.net even sent me an email linking me to their preview, making sure to point out they predicted a big Jays win and expressing surprise at my prediction.

Alright, alright, I get it. But you have to admit, this is a tough team to figure, isn't it? One night, they play poorly but manage to scrap and claw their way to an overtime win against Southern Illinois. The next night, they put no effort in and get blown out of the gym by the worst team in the Valley. Then they come back and blow out one of the best teams in the league at home this season.

Can you figure it out? Because I sure as heck can't. Oh, you can cop out and answer "inconsistency", but doesn't that seem like too easy of an answer? It does, but its sure as hell the only thing that makes sense.

Here's how messed up this season is: ordinarily when a 4-3 team goes on the road and beats a solid opponent by 22, you'd think the team had turned the corner and was about to reel off a winning streak. But I honestly don't have any better read on what happens next than I did before. Each game is a singular event at this point, offering almost no predictive ability for the next one. Your guess is as good as mine as to what happens against Drake on Saturday. At this point I'd believe almost any outcome up to and including Antoine Young tearing off his jersey to reveal Superman's cape and a red S on his chest.

Gameday: Evansville

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Tuesday night, the Jays travel to Evansville for an ESPNU telecast that, when the Worldwide Leader chose it in October, seemed odd. Evansville? Really? I was esctatic, don't get me wrong, because every road game televised is one fewer game I have to sit and stare at a tiny pixellated streaming Windows Media Player window playing a horribly produced webcast, or worse yet, one fewer game I have to rely on the radio broadcast to follow the game.

In October, it was an odd choice. By the first of the year, it seemed downright clairvoyent: Evansville was suddenly the sleeper pick to win the league, and Creighton was coming off a win in the Las Vegas Classic.

Now, on the eve of the game, it is again an odd choice to showcase the Valley, but not for the reasons you'd expect. The Jays are playing some bad basketball at the moment, struggling to put two good efforts in a row together.

On the radio today, Dana Altman and several of the players dropped the same party line on listeners that we've heard all season. Frankly, its getting absurd: players talking about being disappointed, about feeling embarrassed by their effort, and coaches saying the team is struggling to find their identity. We've heard it all year, and no one backs up the talk with action.

I'm a graphic designer by trade, I write a basketball blog as a hobby, and I last played basketball competitively in high school. Meanwhile, the coaches and players live and breathe basketball, specifically Jays basketball. It isn't shocking that one of these groups would know the identity of the team, and one wouldn't.

What is surprising is that its the coaches and players claiming they're struggling to find an identity, and not me. Since they're telling the world they don't know that their identity is, I'll give them some unsolicited advice to help them figure it out: You're soft, weak and small. Your players, for the most part, play to avoid contact. For all of the talk of strength training, my eyes make me skeptical that anyone even knows where the weight room is, much less that they lived there all summer. And the bulk of the minutes at the "4" position have been played by guards 6'4" or smaller.

Its preposterous to claim this team is "struggling to find its identity." Seems pretty clear cut to me. Stop making excuses and do something about it already, before I do something really crazy like order three bags of mini donuts in one game, ask for a half-PBR half-Schlitz hybrid at the Cheap Beer stand, or order a soft pretzel with a cup of nacho cheese and ask them to hold the pretzel. Doubt it? Just try me.

Here's my advice to all us fans: Pretend you are a Detroit Lions fan. Stop looking at the season as a whole. Take each game for what it is: two hours of diversionary entertainment. Don't go in with any expectations, just watch and try to enjoy yourself. Turn on ESPNU, grab a snack, cheer like mad, throw your shoes at the TV if necessary. Win or lose, don't get caught up in the season. You'll be much happier that way.

Who knows, someday the most famous Lions fan might cease to be Axel Foley, and the Jays might actually outrebound someone. A man can dream, can't he? You bet.

2008-09 Game #19: Wichita 74, Jays 61

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We're 19 games into the season, which is for all practical purposes 2/3 of the way through a season. By this point, its generally pretty clear who you are and what you're capable of. And at this point, the Bipolar Jays are two things: capable of beating all but the very best teams on a good night, and capable of losing to all but the very worst of teams on a bad night. In other words, a gloriously average team.

On Saturday, they took a mood swing back into the lazy, lackadaisical bunch we saw against Northern Iowa two weeks ago, and at this point, calling them average is actually a compliment, because many people I know are calling them much worse. And not all of the words are adjectives, either.

Wichita State is getting better as the season progresses, and coming into the game, I mentioned it scared me that they hadn't won a game in the league. The Valley Game of the Week on regional television, the fans wearing black for a "blackout" promotion, and the players wearing their road black jerseys as part of it -- combine these with the fact that traditionally Wichita State and Creighton don't much care for each other, and you've got a recipe for a tough game. Then add in that the crowd was insane and the refs were allowing the teams to play and not calling much, and things start to favor the more desperate team. All of the above favored Wichita State.

Gameday: Wichita State

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There's a plethora of delicious storylines heading into Saturday's matinee in Wichita. You've got the fallout from the postgame fireworks after the SIU game, the injury to Chad Millard, and the retribution, if any, from Wichita for the perceived "running up the score" by Creighton in their first meeting. Oh, and Wichita is winless in the league entering today's "Blackout" game on FSN, making this a deadly trap game for the Jays. Is that enough to grab your interest? I thought so.

First, the postgame fireworks -- and sadly, I'm not talking about the sort of fireworks that the White Sox shoot off every time one of their players hits a homerun. No, apparently in Wednesday's game, SIU's freshman stud Kevin Dillard was running his mouth, and late in the game, Cavel Witter called him on it. Their trash-talking spilled over into the postgame handshakes, where a fight nearly erupted.

Specifically, Dillard -- who had a big night -- took to celebrating after he made a shot late in the game. Enter Witter, The Enforcer, who was mad as hell and wasn't going to take it anymore:

"(Dillard) was running his mouth and celebrating on our court, and I took that personally. This is a rivalry game, and that got the blood boiling. On that play, I told myself that if he crosses over, I'm taking the ball. He did, and I took it."

2008-09 Game #18: Jays 73, SIU 72 (OT)

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A few years ago, I took a date to a restaurant that had long been a favorite of mine. Every time I dined there, the food was exquisite, and it never disappointed. On this night, the food was merely average -- not bad, not great. Eminently forgettable. Then dessert came out, and it was the most unbelievably delicious thing you could imagine. And I can imagine quite a bit. As we departed the restaurant, my date commented that dinner had been amazing, forgetting all about the average main course.

Why do I tell you this?

After the game, we were at the bar celebrating the win and trying in vain to stay warm by drinking cold beer -- a plan only a genius such as myself could devise. Trust me, there is no off position on the genius switch. Anyway, one of my buddies says to me, "That was the greatest game I've ever seen!!"

He conveniently forgot the first 35 minutes of average, forgettable basketball and only remembered the exhilarating finish. For most of the night, this was UNI: Part Deux, and like the awful Charlie Sheen movie I stole that title from, it made me want to throw up in my mouth. There were still way too many open shooters with open looks, and the Jays only made SEVEN baskets after halftime. Seven. Seriously, you could look it up.

But hey, the Jays beat Southern Illinois in overtime, so I'd be the veritable turd in the punch bowl to point those things out, wouldn't I? Yes, yes I would. I am many things, but I am not a turd, nor do I make a habit of swimming in punch bowls. Its 3AM, and its time to celebrate what went right, not harp on what went wrong.

Gameday: Southern Illinois

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Oh boy, its Southern Illinois Day, which isn't a holiday but dammit, it ought to be. We all ought to have the day off work (paid, of course) so we can go to the bar and get properly primed for the hated Salukis. Someone once wrote that the Salukis are "an unholy abomination on this Earth, and they must pay." Put on a bow-tie, read that to yourself in your best George F. Will voice, and tell me you don't believe it.

I don't care that the media will try to tell you this year's first matchup doesn't have the luster of years past. They'll try to make you believe that because Creighton and SIU are, for the moment, middle of the pack teams in the Valley, the game is of little significance. They are wrong. FSN Kansas City will try to tell you the Nebraska-Iowa State game is the better contest, an opinion they drive home by bumping the Creighton-SIU game from their airwaves in favor of that mediocre Big XII game. They are fools.

Folks, do not be distracted from the task at hand. Southern Illinois has won 9 of the last 10 regular season meetings with Creighton. Southern Illinois has only lost once in the Qwest Center. This cannot continue.

We as fans need to get nasty. We need to be on them before the game starts. They need to feel unwelcome. On Wednesday night, it is time to release anything you've been holding in. Whatever is wrong in your life, it is because of the Salukis.

Get passed over for a promotion...its their fault. Girlfriend break up with you...its their fault. Wife force you to go see "Bride Wars"...its their fault. Husband a lazy oaf...its their fault. Car trouble...its their fault. Global Warming...its their fault. The economy...its their fault. Get laid off from your job...its their fault. Bad grade on a test...its their fault. Boss a jerk...its their fault. TPS reports filling your inbox...its their fault. Nickelback exists...its their fault.

Its not enough to beat them. I want to destroy them. I want to rip their heart out and show it to them while its still beating, reminiscent of Indiana Jones and The Temple of Doom. I want shoulders lowered, I want elbows, I want blood. The Salukis play tough basketball, we need to be tougher, we need to be nastier. I want Kyle Korver/Joe Dabbert in the MVC finals effort. I want SIU to leave Omaha wondering if they should shut their basketball program down and give up.

Now then, any questions?

2008-09 Game #17: Jays 73, Bradley 64

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Heart.

In yesterday's Gameday post, I wrote that my heart said the Jays would win, but that my head said they would lose.

In Tuesday's game, the Jays heart -- or lack thereof -- disgusted the fans and, apparently, embarrassed the players. According to Dana Altman in this morning's World-Herald:

"The guys were embarrassed Tuesday night. They felt bad. They knew they had let our fans down and they had let themselves down. And the coaching staff, we didn't have them ready, so we have to take our share of the responsibility. Fortunately, we bounced back tonight."

Bounce back? Did they ever. For 38 minutes, the Jays led this game. For the entire 40 minutes, the Jays showed the toughness, grit and most importantly, the heart that had been lacking in the previous two losses.

Gameday: Bradley

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I hesitate to call the fifth game of the conference slate a "must-win". I hate that term; what does it really mean? The only must-win games are conference tournament and NCAA tournament games, really, because if you lose you go home. But this morning, January 10, the Jays sit at 2-2 in the conference and are coming off of two demoralizing losses, one at home to a scrappy UNI team and one on the road to a superior Illinois State team. A loss tonight to the undefeated Bradley Braves, and not only will the Jays be 2-3 in the league, but they'll be a whopping THREE games back of Bradley in the standings.

So yeah, I'd say this game is awfully important.

Dana Altman's comments to the Omaha World-Herald do a great job of summing up the predicament:

"Our guys are trying, but there's just no flow to what we're trying to do. Our rhythm offensively is disrupted right now. Defensively, we'll have some great possessions, but then we'll make some fundamental mistakes that hurt us. We're not disciplined enough or well-coached enough to overcome those breakdowns, and that leads to us giving up some easy baskets."

Surprisingly, Vegas has the Jays as a 1.5 favorite in this game, which may be a reflection of how Bradley has arrived at their 4-0 record: wins over three of the worst teams in the conference, plus a home win over Illinois State. A dude I was talking to at the bar, who's REALLY down on the team, called the 1.5 points a "Godsend" and "Manna from heaven." He's so certain that the Jays will lose he's betting untold fortunes on that line, as well as straight up.

He's banned from ever sitting in my seats in 113 again. Those seats are reserved for people who don't bail on a team after two losses. Its fine to believe your team might lose a game; hell, you might see me do that at the bottom of this post, I haven't decided yet. But one of my rules is you never, ever, ever bet against your team. Period. If you do, you suck, and people who suck can't sit in my seats.

2008-09 Game #16: UNI 69, Jays 66

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For the first time since 1996, Northern Iowa leaves Omaha with a win. Creighton falls to 2-2 in the league after a home court loss to an average UNI team. And you know what?

Its not the loss that's nagging at me, stuck in my craw like a popcorn kernel. I've rooted for the Minnesota Vikings my entire life, so trust me, I know how to deal with a loss. No, my problem is when a team doesn't play hard. If you play with max effort and lose because the other team is better, or simply has a better night, I'm generally OK with that. Teams can learn from that.

I'm not sure you can learn much from a performance when you half-ass your effort. And I'm sorry, that display on Tuesday was not even half-assed. It was more like a quarter-assed effort. I get pissed as hell when players don't give maximum effort. What am I talking about, specifically? Not hustling, not rebounding for fear of contact, not diving for loose balls, not getting back on defense. I'm sorry if I'm off base here, but I don't think its too much to ask for players to play hard EVERY game. Not most games, not when they feel like it, EVERY game. I won't make excuses for you if you don't play hard. For two straight games, this team has played at about 60% effort, and that pisses me off.

And you don't want to piss off The Polyfro.

Gameday: Northern Iowa

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The Eleventh Annual Polyfro Cup gets underway tonight when Creighton hosts Northern Iowa. For those of you who are new to this site or new to me or new to whatever, the Polyfro Cup is a mythical yet lightly regarded JPEG trophy that is awarded annually to the team with the best record among Creighton, Drake and Northern Iowa.

Why those three schools? Its easy: while I graduated from Creighton, my brother did likewise from Northern Iowa, and our dad from Drake. So every year since 1997, when I became the second in the Univers family to attend a Valley school, we've passed around the "Traveling JPEG" -- a JPEG version of a basketball trophy with three players, one for each school.

It was quite amusing to me for nine of those years, because Creighton won it every year. When I was in school, Drake and UNI were alternatively horrible and terrible, depending on the year. And even when UNI had their renaissance under Chewbacca, er, I mean, Greg McDermott, the Jays seemed to have their number. But then last year...ah, last year. Drake had their renaissance, but they swept the Jays in three games, they swept UNI in two meetings, and BAM the trophy was on its way, traveling via email attachment back to Iowa.

The quest to return it to its rightful place in my Documents folder begins tonight.

2008-09 Game #15: Illinois State 86, Jays Much Less

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The response to the Jays' 22-point loss in what was (so far) the biggest game of the year was eminently predictable. Because taken on the surface, that was what my old college roommate used to call "An ass kicking buffet." Illinois State kicked the Jays posterior, and then came back for seconds, and thirds, and later, dessert. The Redbirds were faster, more athletic, more fundamentally sound, played better defense, and hit every open shot. They were better in every aspect of the game. Period.

Its becoming a disturbing trait of this team that when they don't shoot well, the rest of their game goes into the crapper too. When Booker Woodfox is hitting shots and P'Allen is making plays, they rebound, play defense and beat good teams like Dayton and St. Joes. When they have an off night shooting, they get outrebounded by a million, play Bullfighter Defense, and lose the game.

Their energy for the other aspects of the game come from offense, which is not a recipe for success, because you're going to have nights where shots don't fall. Those are the nights that separate the good teams from the great teams. Do you win the games when you shoot 35% from the field and only make a couple of threes? The teams that do are the ones who win league championships.

About the Author

Max Univers (not his real name) is a graphic designer and author of two books, neither of which you’ve probably heard of. A 2001 graduate of Creighton University’s Journalism program, Max takes time out of his busy nightlife to share his thoughts on Jays hoops here during the season.

Why Univers? Its his favorite font, plus it just sounds really cool as a surname.

Why Polyfro? Years and years ago, Max had a giant afro wig that he wore as part of a Halloween costume. Not wishing to retire its giant fro awesomeness after the holiday, he began wearing the wig out in public as part of his everyday ensemble. One night at a dance club, the DJ called out the moniker over the soundsystem. Max thought it sounded cool, and purchased the URL shortly thereafter.

More questions? Send me an email: max-at-polyfro-dot-com. I like jokes, story tips, and generally all correspondence involving Bluejay athletics. Emails that point out how stupid I am and/or where I should go after I die are not encouraged.

The Polyfro Network

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This page is an archive of entries from January 2009 listed from newest to oldest.

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