
Baker’s status in question
By Whitey Reid
Published: January 24, 2010
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nowBuzz up!
Following Virginia’s 69-57 loss at Wake Forest on Saturday, the normally
talkative Tony Bennett suddenly turned laconic when asked to elaborate on guard
Calvin Baker’s status.
Baker, a senior co-captain, didn’t make the trip to Winston-Salem.
“Coach’s decision” was all Bennett would say.
On Sunday, sources confirmed to the Daily Progress that Baker’s situation is
related to his displeasure with his reduced role on the team. The sources said
Baker’s future status is in flux.
The ultra-competitive Baker, who was named one of three team captains just a
couple of weeks ago, was supplanted in the starting lineup by freshman Jontel
Evans two games ago. Against UNC Wilmington, the Newport News native played a
season-low seven minutes.
Virginia guard Sammy Zeglinski said he wasn’t sure why Baker didn’t made the
trip to Wake Forest.
“It was a little bit of adversity,” said Zeglinski, who had a rare sub-par game,
going 0-5 from the field. “We just had to overcome it. I don’t think it had
anything to do with the loss.
“I just don’t think we performed. We gave enough effort to win. We just didn’t
have the execution.”
Bricks
Fans seated behind the baskets at Joel Coliseum waved giant foam bricks at
Virginia players when they were shooting free throws.
Apparently, they had an effect.
Virginia, which came into the game shooting 76.3 percent from the foul line —
second in the ACC — shot just 8 of 16 from the stripe.
No Tristan
It was somewhat of a surprise that Bennett, with his team trailing by 24 points
in the second half, didn’t give freshman Tristan Spurlock a chance to taste some
ACC competition.
Spurlock, a 4-star recruit coming out of high school, hasn’t played in four of
the last five games and has only seen mop-up duty so far this season.
Kleptos
Just about the only statistical positive from a team standpoint on Saturday was
Virginia’s 12 steals, which tied a season-high and directly contributed to Wake
Forest’s 24 turnovers. Jeff Jones led the way with three thefts. Sylven
Landesberg, Jontel Evans and Will Sherrill had two each.
Dunks
Landesberg (18 points) scored in double figures for the 17th time this season
(every game) and 40th time in his career. ... Jones (10 points) scored in double
figures for the sixth time this season and 17th time in his career.
Not so fast…
Andrew Seidman, Cavalier Daily Senior Associate Editor
Sports
January 25, 2010 0
They’ve conceded they are not the most athletic team. Or the biggest. Or the
most talented. Sixteen games into the season, the Cavaliers took pride in their
ability to win games with superior team defense, despite their other
shortcomings. It was the 17th that exposed the limitations of a team with only
one true player who can create his own shot, and of a team that lacks any
significant post game and relies too heavily on outside shooting.
It was the 17th that showed the value of the athleticism and experience that top
ACC teams like Wake Forest boast and Virginia clearly lacks, and just how far
Virginia can slip when its defense is borderline mediocre. For a team that was
decidedly first in the ACC, the 69-57 loss to the Demon Deacons demonstrates
Virginia’s small margin for error and proves just how precarious its first-place
standing in the ACC really is.
Granted, the Cavaliers faced a significant disadvantage after Sylven Landesberg
and junior forward Mike Scott got in foul trouble midway through the first half.
But even when Scott played, he mostly seemed checked out — content to take
outside shots instead of establishing a down low threat.
Scott wasn’t the only one who struggled. The vastly improved sophomore guard
Sammy Zeglinski, who entered the game leading the ACC with a robust 48.7
three-point shooting percentage after connecting on just 31.4 percent of his
attempts a year ago, couldn’t find any rhythm whatsoever. With Landesberg and
Scott on the bench for much of the first half, Zeglinski appeared to press the
issue, forcing shots and making poor decisions. He finished the night with one
point on 0-5 shooting, including three missed three-pointers.
“Just all night, we never really got anything going offensively,” Zeglinski
said.
His counterpart, senior guard Ish Smith, meanwhile, had everything going.
Floaters in the lane. Fade-away baseline jumpers. You name it, and Smith had it.
As smooth as his name may suggest, Ish was in total control. He knew exactly
when to penetrate into the lane for layups, when to find his teammates — always
with crisp passes — and when to pull it back and let the clock run. His
composure certainly caught coach Tony Bennett’s eye.
Smith “lets it come, he doesn’t press the issue,” Bennett said. “He seems like
he has great feel, and I think that has to do with his experience and being a
senior — he knows when to be aggressive, when to let it come.”
That’s exactly the sort of poise Virginia lacked. Everything was forced — junior
guard Mustapha Farrakhan’s quick jumpers, junior forward Will Sherill’s bricks
and even Landesberg’s play in the second half, when he went into
“No-one-else-is-touching-the-ball” mode and scored 14 of his 18 points. I can’t
exactly blame Landesberg. He was the only Cavalier generating anything on
offense. The point, however, is still clear: Nothing came easy for Virginia,
while the Demon Deacons — and Smith in particular — let everything come to them.
On one possession late in the game with 1:45 remaining, Smith danced around for
33 seconds, toying with his defenders and launched an acrobatic floater as the
shot clock wound down that saw nothing but net. Earlier in the game, he drove
through the lane and tossed a perfect no-look alley-oop pass to five-star
recruit Tony Woods, who threw it down with 245 pounds of authority.
“I told [Smith] after, I said, ‘I played with Muggsy Bogues,’” Bennett said. “I
saw his picture up there and I said, ‘You’re close to as fast as Muggsy, which
is saying a lot … He draws so much attention, he sucks the rest of the defense
in with him.”
Bennett also commented on Wake’s length and how important that was to its
defense. Indeed, with 6-foot-9 Al-Farouq Aminu, 7-foot Chas McFarland and
6-foot-11 Tony Woods and David Weaver, the Deacs could out-jump the Cavaliers,
own the paint and play impressive denial defense.
So, given Wake’s superior athleticism, talent and experience, Virginia needed to
clamp down on defense. Which it didn’t.
What, in particular, did Virginia fail to do?
“I thought the ball pressure wasn’t very good,” Bennett said. “The ball got too
deep — out of position. At times didn’t help on screens, at times didn’t get
back — there was a lot of break downs, at times didn’t block out. It wasn’t just
one thing that I could point to — it was too many. And a good team exploits you,
that’s a credit to the way they attacked us. For us to be competitive, you can’t
have that many.”
In other words, Virginia laid an egg. But then again, every other team in the
ACC has suffered a loss equally as embarrassing. Duke got throttled on the road
at N.C. State. North Carolina clearly hasn’t recovered from its Championship
Hangover. Every team in the conference has at least one loss, and Virginia
happens to be one of the only two teams with only one. But if Bennett and Co.
look at their daunting schedule, they’ll notice Virginia Tech comes to town
Thursday. Then they’ll head to Chapel Hill the following Sunday. In other words,
the Cavaliers could begin to crumble just as quickly as they built their
surprising 3-0 start in the ACC.
I don’t think the players would disagree with me about this: If the D doesn’t
show up during the next few weeks, Virginia will learn just how fast things can
fall apart in the ACC.