Kelly Olynyk now has to choose between a return to Gonzaga and a move to  the NBA. / Gonzaga University

Which state’s Division I men’s basketball coach had the worst ending to the season: Seattle University’s Cameron Dollar at 8-22, Washington’s Lorenzo Romar at 18-15 and a first-round NIT exit, or Gonzaga’s Mark Few, at 32-3 a serious success, yet ousted in the second round after being seeded No. 1?

Obviously, each team was operating at different levels of expectations. But they are united in major disappointments.

Some may think the Redhawks aren’t a part of the discussion given their fledgling Division I status, but that perspective lost traction Friday, as soon as the Florida Gulf Coast Fighting Tangerines, or whatever, beat Georgetown 78-68. In their second year of eligibility for the NCAA tournament from the Atlantic Sun Conference (who knew?), the 15th-seeded Citrus Products beat the No. 2 Hoyas. Then Sunday, they beat the No. 8 seed, San Diego State, 81-71, to become the first No. 15 seed to make the round of 16.

It’s true that the Hoyas have lost to a double-digit seed four years in a row, becoming a tourney tradition at least as great as former Purdue coach Gene Keady’s comb-over. But FGCU, which, again, is not a credit union, has been in the big time about a minute and a half. That flash was enough to get most of North America to google Fort Meyers, FL., over the weekend, and induce applications that are probably choking the school’s servers as you read.

That is, of course, the goal of SU’s return to Division I — cheap publicity of the kind that helped grow Gonzaga’s enrollment, donations and profile over the last decade to the point where the little Jesuit school in Spokane can make loans to the Vatican.

But that kind of eminence for SU at the moment is hard to see, much less achieve, from the bottom of the Western Athletic Conference (3-15), whose membership is undergoing a wholesale makeover. It would be just SU’s luck to have FGCU in the WAC next year (or for that matter, have SU move to the Atlantic Sun). But clearly, The Redhawks’ worst record under Dollar has the arrow pointing the wrong way.

But Dollar’s lower lip is no closer to the ground than Few’s. Gonzaga’s decade-long seat of eminence in college ball took a hit Saturday night when it was eliminated from the tourney by the eighth-seeded Wichita State Shockers 76-70, the second of two sub-par tourney performances, following a narrow win over 16th-seeded Southern.

The blow was not decisive in the long term, but it does empower the hecklers who don’t take Gonzaga seriously with the always powerful told-you-so argument regarding strength of schedule in the mid-major West Coast Conference.

Before the game, Few finally acknowledged this was his best team at Gonzaga, and at a national-best 32-3, that is undoubtedly true. Just as true is that none of his teams have gone beyond the round of 16, suggesting that there is something of a ceiling to the Zags’ capacity for achievement.

Just after I was persuaded that Gonzaga’s underrated defense was the key to reaching its first Final Four, the Zags allowed Wichita to shoot 50 percent, including a remarkable 14 of 28 beyond the arc — just after Southern on Thursday hit on 10 of 24 treys. The Zags were obviously limited Saturday by a foot injury to Gary Bell, their best perimeter defender, early in the game, but it was clear the Zags lack sufficient athleticism to cover the ground out to the arc, where much of the college game is played these days.

The Shockers also emulated what Southern established — pushing Gonzaga back on its heels a bit with physical play. It’s not fair to say the Zags are soft, but they aren’t sharpening their elbows to, say, Big 10 Conference pointiness by playing in a mid-major league. Absent a change in conferences, what they need is, well, John Stockton — who during his long NBA Hall of Fame career was known to be one of the game’s dirtiest players. But his Gonzaga eligibility expired some time ago and they haven’t found his equivalent.

As for Washington’s tepid season, the 9-9 conference mark is looking a little better in view of the success of Oregon and Arizona, each reaching the tourney’s round of 16. But the hecklers of Romar will remind that the Huskies were 0-5 against those teams — 0-7 if the pair against UCLA is added.

But the hecklers tend to forget that two of Romar’s players from a year ago, when the Huskies were regular-season Pac-12 champions, left early to enter the NBA draft, where Terrence Ross and Tony Wroten went in the first round. While some around the program will say Romar was happy to see Wroten go, there’s no doubt he had the the talent to win a few games single-handedly. That could not be said this season of any Husky, especially after C.J. Wilcox was double-teamed, then faded.

The Huskies were ordinary, but for many — too many — in the overwrought world of college basketball, an ordinary year is intolerable. Even a good year is intolerable. UCLA Sunday night fired Ben Howland despite the fact that his team won the Pac-12 regular-season championship. The sixth-seeded Bruins were 25-10 and ousted from the NCAA tourney in the first round, but had a decent excuse, losing star freshman guard Jordan Adams to a broken foot in the final game of the Pac-12 tournament.

Howland took UCLA to Final Fours in 2006, 2007 and 2008 and won more conference championships (four) than any Bruins coach since John Wooden. But his program last year was described in a Sports Illustrated as out of control. It will cost UCLA $3.2 million to buy out his contract.

Speculation began last night that Romar, a Los Angeles native and a former Bruins assistant, is on the short list to replace Howland. Despite his hecklers, Romar is no trouble at Montlake.

What is in some trouble is college basketball. The one-and-done rule is approaching its seventh anniversary, and is probably the biggest contributor to the randomness that is increasingly a part of seasonal outcomes.

Forcing superior high school players into a year of useless college before entering the NBA may be a hoot for fans who love the 15-over-2 upsets, and a plethora of close results — which explains how CBS and Turner justified the $10.8 billion, 14-year deal with the NCAA — but it does little for coaching and program stability, virtues that are in the long-term best interests for program success.

Even for a single year, it is fun to have around premier players such as Anthony Davis, Kevin Durant, Greg Oden, Derrick Rose, Kevin Love and Shabazz Muhammad. But it doesn’t do much for the game except make money.

“It certainly brought in a little more star power to the game and maybe a little more initial notoriety for the individual classes,” Indiana coach Tom Crean said. “But unless a player comes in and really wants to impact the team, the team doesn’t necessarily get better.”

Gonzaga has had few early entries and as a partial consequence a better team concept. The flip side is it also lacked that NBA-caliber talent that makes them a Final Four team. Washington has had more NBA talent, but as this season attested, had a hard time coming together.

As far as which state coach had the most disappointment, it has to be Few, because it’s so hard in college basketball now to get as close to the pinnacle as Gonzaga was, only to find out the Zags weren’t really that close.

 

 

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14 Comments

  1. One-and-done has become the go to move for people bemoaning the current state of the game. I’ll back you in not liking it. Guys should be able to declare when they want. No one can force a team to draft them. But, one-and-done can’t be an explanation for everything that’s wrong with the game either. Syracuse, Kentucky, Arizona, Ohio State, Kansas, North Carolina, et al. somehow manage to survive.

    • No one is saying survival is at stake. And yes, someone will win the championship every year. The issues are the impatience of the fan base, the desperation of colleges for income and the increased pressure on coaches to break the rules and squeeze kids harder than hell.

      And it’s made for a crappier brand of ball. Just because games are close and/or dramatic doesn’t make them great.

      The game is diminished. I’d prefer to let players go pro whenever they choose and let the colleges play with players who see value in four years.

  2. I believe the Zags are the new LMU. During the Paul Westhead era their run and gun offense made them the class of the West Coast but come tourney time the level of competition they faced was more than they could handle. Few did not make adjustments in play calling after their opening game which exposed their weaknesses. A pressing, rotating defensive scheme was called for and it didn’t happen.

    Being #1 in the nation and getting bounced in the first round is more of a letdown then for the Huskies and Redhawks. At least both those teams pretty much met expectations. Fews job is safe but he might consider reviewing the plays he uses.

    • J, I saw only parts of the Southern game and dared to have a life on Saturday night, so I’ll take your word on playcalling. I think a healthy Bell would have made a difference, but Few has to take responsibility. Three losses? Man must be an idiot.

  3. Ha! FGCU /credit union reference, good one ART!

    BTW anyone who thinks the Shockers came out of nowhere should remember they have been a legitimate program in their own right for some time. Non other than Antoine Carr and our own X Man Xavier McDaniels, are just some of the alumini…..

    • Agreed, Shockers have been legit for awhile. They had a midseason run of injuries to their studs that dented the record some, otherwise they could have beeen a 3-4 seed.

  4. Well done Art – The postseason, now with the one-and-done system, is / will never be what it was.
    Howland – was he fired for infractions? If for his record, UCLA made a mistake.

    • His record, or lack thereof, in the past 4 years. Twice they didn’t make the NCAA tourney, had a losing record in 09-10 and haven’t won a NCAA tourney game since 08. Not an easy pill to swallow considering the Bruin’s history in basketball.

      • Plus, Bill Walton ripped Howland during the first UW game and said he should be gone. Don’t think I’ve ever heard a house broadcaster do that.

  5. Really Art? You have the audacity to defend the UWs sub-par season saying, “it is looking a little better … ” because AZ and OR advance in the tourney the Huskies never made it to. The UW basketball woes will end when Romar departs. Not a moment before.

    • Sorry, PJ. 18-15 is not a woe team. 8-22, that’s a woe team.

      My point was Az and Ore are making P-12 look less like a stiff league, and Washington had a good shot at beating both.

      Read today’s column too

  6. Since Arizona was briefly mentioned in both the story and at least one comment, it reminded me that Art, in quite a few of his P-I columns over the years, vented his displeasure with UA’s former coach, Lute Olsen. It’s possible I could have missed it, but no specifics were ever given by Art for Olsen getting under his skin. As far as I knew, from all outward appearances, Olsen was a really well liked guy, didn’t have any noticeable anger issues, never grabbed a player by the throat, etc.. Just curious, Art, what the heck happened between the two of you, anyway?

    • I don’t recall any major issue. He was imperious, controlling, arrogant, self-righteous, and more or less like a lot of big-time college coaches. I think a lot of people around the UA campus were glad for his departure, despite his great won-loss record. He just wore out the people closest to him.