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Post by milwsport on Apr 2, 2006 19:16:52 GMT -6
Having criticized PMCK, I must admit he was right on target with his remarks about AT
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Post by JimmyLemke on Apr 4, 2006 11:10:19 GMT -6
I've seen multiple badger basketball games, 2 in person this year. Halo, I'd be more impressed with Evanochko's point totals if he wasn't the main scorer for the team.
I just think that Kammron Taylor did too close of a job to Boo Davis against a much tougher schedule. They played in the Big 10, which was the second best conference this year in almost everyone's perspective. The Horizon League, while tough, is no Big 10 - just another problem with the mid-major tag.
Don't get me wrong - Boo Davis and Evanochko are both worthy of first team status - so is Tucker - but Kam Taylor holds the edge on Davis.
I think Tucker should be first team over Taylor, at closer inspection.
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Post by Pantherholic on Apr 4, 2006 12:56:53 GMT -6
They played in the Big 10, which was the second best conference this year in almost everyone's perspective. does anyone else agree w/ this? i thought the Big 10 was awfully inconsistent this year and downright embarrassing in the NCAA tourney. seemed like most teams didn't want to win a road game this season.
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Post by dylanrocks on Apr 4, 2006 13:12:07 GMT -6
Over the last four years, 26 Big Ten teams have beaten a total of seven teams seeded sixth or higher in the Big Dance (effectively, the equivalent of top 25 teams) while five Horizon League schools (Milwaukee three times, Butler and Chicago) have beaten a total of five. The Horizon League's total is sixth among all leagues, the Big Ten's is fifth.
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SRT4driver
Junior
We Are MILWAUKEE! And I'm all about accountability, unlike '5th Placer' Jeter apologists.
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Post by SRT4driver on Apr 4, 2006 14:37:53 GMT -6
Over the last four years, 26 Big Ten teams have beaten a total of seven teams seeded sixth or higher in the Big Dance (effectively, the equivalent of top 25 teams) while five Horizon League schools (Milwaukee three times, Butler and Chicago) have beaten a total of five. The Horizon League's total is sixth among all leagues, the Big Ten's is fifth. Wow, there's an impressive statistic if I've ever seen one, Paul! What's the BCS conference that the HL ranks ahead of? And I'm assuming the conferences ranked 1st through 4th are all BCS leagues too...
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Post by uwmpanther on Apr 4, 2006 14:41:48 GMT -6
while five Horizon League schools (Milwaukee three times, Butler and Chicago) have beaten a total of five. I don't think "Chicago" is right, they lost in the first round to Kansas. But Butler beat two teams in 2003, so the total is still five (2 Butler victories, 3 for UWM)
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Post by pnthr97 on Apr 4, 2006 15:12:18 GMT -6
while five Horizon League schools (Milwaukee three times, Butler and Chicago) have beaten a total of five. I don't think "Chicago" is right, they lost in the first round to Kansas. But Butler beat two teams in 2003, so the total is still five (2 Butler victories, 3 for UWM) Chicago is right. The HL's participants in the tourney the last four years were UWM/Butler, UIC, UWM and UWM. Combined, these teams have beaten the 5 teams referred to. Although UIC can't say they contributed to the five, they were the HL's representative.
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Post by uwmpanther on Apr 4, 2006 15:48:26 GMT -6
I don't think "Chicago" is right, they lost in the first round to Kansas. But Butler beat two teams in 2003, so the total is still five (2 Butler victories, 3 for UWM) Chicago is right. The HL's participants in the tourney the last four years were UWM/Butler, UIC, UWM and UWM. Combined, these teams have beaten the 5 teams referred to. Although UIC can't say they contributed to the five, they were the HL's representative. Ok, I read the original post again. You guys are right , and I was not
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