DC vs IU in FF. 19 rebounds Nuff said.mcw's game against indiana has gotta be top 5 right? melo against texas #1? monster performance in a final 4 game
obviously talking about syracuse only
Not taking anything away from MCW, I would think it may not even be top 10 all-time for SU.mcw's game against indiana has gotta be top 5 right? melo against texas #1? monster performance in a final 4 game
obviously talking about syracuse only
Not taking anything away from MCW, I would think it may not even be top 10 all-time for SU.
It might be top 10. I'm just suggesting that it isn't a given. Keep in mind, there have been a lot of very big individual performances in the NCAAT at SU over the years: Rudy Hackett, Jimmy Lee, Rony Seikaly, DC, Melo, GMac, Addison, JW, etc. Some others here with better memories can fill in some more blanks here.career high 24 pts, 5 rebounds 4 steals in sweet 16 game against heavily favored #1 seed. gotta be top 10.
mcw's game against indiana has gotta be top 5 right? melo against texas #1? monster performance in a final 4 game
obviously talking about syracuse only
I'm not sure that we spent enough time praising the true dominance of SU's performance in that game vs Indiana, considering we were then looking forward to playing Marquette two days later. But going back to look at the numbers again, this was a special performance by the entire team.
On defense especially, here are some notes to detail just how historic our defensive effort vs Indiana was:
- Indiana averaged 78.1 points per 100 possessions in its loss to Syracuse Thursday, its worst offensive efficiency in the last two seasons. Entering the Round of 16, the Hoosiers had averaged 117.4 points per 100 possessions, the second-most efficient offense in the nation. Indiana's effective field goal percentage and turnover percentage Thursday were also season worsts.
- Indiana scored 50 points vs Syracuse, tied for the 4th-fewest points by a 1 seed in the shot clock era.
- Indiana shot 28.6 percent and had 16 turnovers against Syracuse's zone. The Hoosiers had nine of their 42 field goal attempts against the zone blocked. They entered the game shooting 52.8 percent against zone defenses this season, fourth best in the nation.
- Didn't matter that Indiana ranked third in the country this season in scoring, putting up 79.5 points per game -- and never fewer than 56 -- while making 48.6 percent of its shots. This game they were limited to 50 points on 33.3% shooting.
- Indiana's largest lead was 1 point, while Syracuse's largest lead was 18!
- Jordan Hulls & Yogi Farrell, Indiana's 2 main guards (if not counting G/ Victor Oladipo) did not score a point between them! Not a single point in the 49 combined mins they were on the floor, as they shot 0-8. (On the season, Hulls averaged 9.7 ppg, while Ferrell averaged 7.6 ppg, good for 17.3 ppg combined.)
So, speaking of the team's defensive effort in general, it was pretty historic. And MCW was a big part of that.
And then on offense/individual note, MCW:
- scored a game high 24 points (almost half of what the entire Indiana roster scored total!) on 9-19 FG, 3-6 3pts, 3-6 FTs,
- 5 rebounds,
- game high 4 steals,
- 1 assist (shocking so low),
- 1 block and
- only 1 turnover!
This last point (only 1 turnover) is huge, considering the amount of turnovers committed by every other guard playing in the game was as follows:
Yogi Farrell - 4 turnovers
Victor Oladipo - 3 turnovers
Jordan Hulls - 2 turnovers
Brandon Triche - 6 turnovers
Trevor Cooney - 1 turnover
MCW - 1 turnover
For MCW to have made as many plays as he did & only have 1 turnover, shows how in the zone he was on this night. Just a classic performance against a top notch opponent - one I will never forget.
put it this way.. MCW's was one of the best sweet 16 performances ever that I recall.
Unfortunately, he may have had one of the 10 worst performances ever by a Syracuse player in the tourney 2 games later. Don't care though. He got us to the final four, he should be remembered as such.
MCW played well, but I'm not sure you can put it as a top 5 game. I think G-Mac vs. BYU is easily the best game I've seen. After that, the Melo, Wallace, and Autry games are easy. I like MCW, but that wasn't an epic game. It was a very good game, but not one for the ages. Go back to Amazon and buy the BYU game and tell me thats not amazing.
I'm not sure that we spent enough time praising the true dominance of SU's performance in that game vs Indiana, considering we were then looking forward to playing Marquette two days later. But going back to look at the numbers again, this was a special performance by the entire team.
On defense especially, here are some notes to detail just how historic our defensive effort vs Indiana was:
- Indiana averaged 78.1 points per 100 possessions in its loss to Syracuse Thursday, its worst offensive efficiency in the last two seasons. Entering the Round of 16, the Hoosiers had averaged 117.4 points per 100 possessions, the second-most efficient offense in the nation. Indiana's effective field goal percentage and turnover percentage Thursday were also season worsts.
- Indiana scored 50 points vs Syracuse, tied for the 4th-fewest points by a 1 seed in the shot clock era.
- Indiana shot 28.6 percent and had 16 turnovers against Syracuse's zone. The Hoosiers had nine of their 42 field goal attempts against the zone blocked. They entered the game shooting 52.8 percent against zone defenses this season, fourth best in the nation.
- Didn't matter that Indiana ranked third in the country this season in scoring, putting up 79.5 points per game -- and never fewer than 56 -- while making 48.6 percent of its shots. This game they were limited to 50 points on 33.3% shooting.
- Indiana's largest lead was 1 point, while Syracuse's largest lead was 18!
- Jordan Hulls & Yogi Farrell, Indiana's 2 main guards (if not counting G/ Victor Oladipo) did not score a point between them! Not a single point in the 49 combined mins they were on the floor, as they shot 0-8. (On the season, Hulls averaged 9.7 ppg, while Ferrell averaged 7.6 ppg, good for 17.3 ppg combined.)
So, speaking of the team's defensive effort in general, it was pretty historic. And MCW was a big part of that.
And then on offense/individual note, MCW:
- scored a game high 24 points (almost half of what the entire Indiana roster scored total!) on 9-19 FG, 3-6 3pts, 3-6 FTs,
- 5 rebounds,
- game high 4 steals,
- 1 assist (shocking so low),
- 1 block and
- only 1 turnover!
This last point (only 1 turnover) is huge, considering the amount of turnovers committed by every other guard playing in the game was as follows:
Yogi Farrell - 4 turnovers
Victor Oladipo - 3 turnovers
Jordan Hulls - 2 turnovers
Brandon Triche - 6 turnovers
Trevor Cooney - 1 turnover
MCW - 1 turnover
For MCW to have made as many plays as he did & only have 1 turnover, shows how in the zone he was on this night. Just a classic performance against a top notch opponent - one I will never forget.
Melo Texas, Gerry against Kansas, Gerry against BYU, DC in the title game, John Wallace vs Georgia, Autry against Mizzou, Wes 31/14 against Gonzaga, Seikaly with 33 and then 26 in back to back games against Florida/UNC to lead SU into the Final Four, and MCW are definitely in the top 10 performances in SU Tourney history for me. Maybe even Michael Lloyd's 14 assist game?
I haven't watched the Oklahoma 2003 game since then, so I can't remember if it was a better defensive effort taking all things into account or not. I mean they were a 1 seed also, right? But I can't remember if they had 2 POY candidates, etc.