College basketball has seen teams similar to WSU before. Smaller schools from non-power conferences made up of mostly upperclassmen (some who have probably seen a redshirt year) with good enough shooters to have games where they look unbeatable. You've seen them before, too. WSU, Bradley, SIU, UNI from 2006-2010. George Mason and VCU, too. They're fully capable of knocking off a mid-level powConf team and semi-elite in successive games. But once they're over-exposed to teams with 4-and-5-star talent, they get stopped dead in their tracks. If not, it's a fluke (GMU, VCU, WSU). Some will give due recognition but the majority will dismiss them.
What college basketball isn't used to seeing are those same smaller schools from the non-powConf with 3-4 players (two of whom are underclassmen) in their starting lineup who could start for almost any team in the country. Top-five teams are expected to win on accumulation of talent. Everyone knows only teams with 4-and-5-star recruits and a couple of early draft entrants belong in the top 5 and among NC contenders. Right?
But here is where things really diverge from conventional wisdom. When is the last time college basketball saw a non-powConf team, with 3-4 players who could start for nearly any team in the country, coming off a Final Four, who wins the way Wichita State wins? It's the consitently calm, tough, gritty, refuse-to-lose characteristics that rarely accompany teams with high-level talent. It's highly undervalued and it will take some time before the talking-heads who have never coached a D1 game (let alone the ignorant fans of powConf teams) give it the proper value.
Butler did lay some groundwork a few years ago, particularly in regards to the value of having an underrated coach, proving non-powConf schools could accumulate talent that the powConfs missed on, and following up a banner year with another banner year. I firmly believe that had Butler not gone to back-to-back NC games, WSU, if ranked at all to start this year, would not have been 16th, but outside the top-20.
So, I can't fault the media-types and fans too much for not believing WSU is a top-five team (mega-kudos to those who do). The Shockers are blazing the trail from where Butler left off (SDSU might be right there with us, too). Trailblazers have more doubters than believers during their quest. Unfortunately, the Valley isn't helping WSU this year, so our beloved Shocks are going to have to prove it in the dance, just like Butler before us.
For the record, I don't think it's going to take another Final Four to prove it. But it will take an Elite 8. How cool would it be for WSU, SDSU and SLU to get that far?
:bball_spin:
What college basketball isn't used to seeing are those same smaller schools from the non-powConf with 3-4 players (two of whom are underclassmen) in their starting lineup who could start for almost any team in the country. Top-five teams are expected to win on accumulation of talent. Everyone knows only teams with 4-and-5-star recruits and a couple of early draft entrants belong in the top 5 and among NC contenders. Right?
But here is where things really diverge from conventional wisdom. When is the last time college basketball saw a non-powConf team, with 3-4 players who could start for nearly any team in the country, coming off a Final Four, who wins the way Wichita State wins? It's the consitently calm, tough, gritty, refuse-to-lose characteristics that rarely accompany teams with high-level talent. It's highly undervalued and it will take some time before the talking-heads who have never coached a D1 game (let alone the ignorant fans of powConf teams) give it the proper value.
Butler did lay some groundwork a few years ago, particularly in regards to the value of having an underrated coach, proving non-powConf schools could accumulate talent that the powConfs missed on, and following up a banner year with another banner year. I firmly believe that had Butler not gone to back-to-back NC games, WSU, if ranked at all to start this year, would not have been 16th, but outside the top-20.
So, I can't fault the media-types and fans too much for not believing WSU is a top-five team (mega-kudos to those who do). The Shockers are blazing the trail from where Butler left off (SDSU might be right there with us, too). Trailblazers have more doubters than believers during their quest. Unfortunately, the Valley isn't helping WSU this year, so our beloved Shocks are going to have to prove it in the dance, just like Butler before us.
For the record, I don't think it's going to take another Final Four to prove it. But it will take an Elite 8. How cool would it be for WSU, SDSU and SLU to get that far?
:bball_spin:
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