NCAA Basketball Preview 2014-15: American Conference
/The American Athletic Conference came out swinging in their first year of existence as UConn won the NCAA Tournament as a seven-seed. The conference will look much different than last year as last year's regular season and tournament champion Louisville leaves the conference as Tulsa, Tulane, and East Carolina join the fray.
Everything starts with UConn as they stunned nearly everyone to win the National Championship last year. Their top two scorers from last year in Shabazz Napier and DeAndre Daniels are now in the NBA, they will return guard Ryan Boatright and a host of big men that were role players off the bench. They prized recruit Daniel Hamilton incoming to aid in the losses of Napier and Daniels, but the guard play that helped this team win the whole shebang last year is gone. UConn should be an NCAA Tournament team again this year, but it will likely be as a nine or 10 seed.
SMU missed the NCAA Tournament last year, but showed a lot of promise and lost in the NIT final to Minnesota by two points. They would be the unquestioned favorite if Emmanuel Mudiay was joining the team, but is playing in China instead due to what's being called amateurism issues. SMU should still have have a solid team as Larry Brown is still the team's coach and the team's only loss from last year is Shawn Williams. SMU had a young team last year and were one of the best in the nation at not allowing points in the paint. Markus Kennedy was a beast down low, averaging 12.4 points and 7.1 rebounds per game as a freshman last year and the team has more of an intermediate presence with 6-6 Justin Martin coming in from Xavier. With Mudiay, SMU could have been a top-10 team, they are unlikely to be that good this year, but should be a solid top-20 program with their shear athleticism.
Memphis was one of the better offensive teams in the nation en route to a 24-10 season. They have a pair of big time transfers coming inn with former Vanderbilt guard Kendren Johnson and former Southern and Iowa State forward Calvin Godfrey. This should make Memphis the favorite in the conference as Shaq Goodwin and Austin Nichols were set to be a solid front line before the addition of Godfrey. Memphis is losing their top two scorers from last year in guards Joe Jackson and Michael Dixon Jr., but have 6-3 point guard Dominic Magee coming into the program. Head coach Josh Pastner has seen many of his teams fall short of expectations in his tenure in Memphis, but shouldn't this year. Memphis went eight deep last year and have a roster talented enough to be nine or ten deep this year.
Temple had the worst overall record in the conference last year at 9-22, but should be greatly improved this year. Head coach Fran Dunphy had led Temple to six straight NCAA Tournament appearances before the program amassed their lowest win total since the 1975-76 season last year. Temple was young and lacked depth last year, Though leading scorer Dalton Pepper is leaving the program along with big man Anthony Lee who decided to transfer to Ohio State, the team returns two players that averaged at least 15 points per game last season. Dunphy has yet to be able to develop big men Devontae Watson and Jimmy McDonnell, who are both going to be upperclassmen the year. If Temple is going to get back into postseason play, they need to ratchet up their defense which ranked 336th in the nation last year. Temple will not be a nine win team again this year, but their postseason hopes hinge on the development of Watson, McDonnell, and 6-8 freshman big man Obi Enechionyia.
Cincinnati split the regular season crown with Louisville last year, going 15-3 in conference and 27-7 overall, but should take the biggest fall of any team in the conference. Cincinnati was bounced in their first game of the NCAA Tournament by Harvard and have lost three of their starters from last year including All-American Sean Kilpatrick. With those departures, including Kilpatrick who filled up the box score last year with 20.1 points per game last year. Shaquille Thomas is the team's leading returning scorer at 6.8 points per game last season as Mick Cronen will need to look to his recruiting class to be a respectable team this year. Four of Cincinnati five recruits in the 2014 class were either power forwards or centers so they should either be loaded up front, but weak in the backcourt. With Tulane and East Carolina coming into the conference after ordinary seasons in lesser conferences and the South Florida program in disarray, Cincinnati will likely be in the middle of the conference standings, but will miss the big dance.
Tulsa was one of the best mid-major schools in the nation in Conference USA last year after a dismal 1-6 start. The made the field of 68 as a 13 seed, ending regular season play on a 20-6 run. Tulsa lost head coach Danny Manning to Wake Forest, but did well on the rebound, bringing in former Missouri and Miami head coach Frank Haith. Tulsa should be able to be towards the top of the conference this year despite the step-up in competition because if what they have returning from last year. Rashad Smith, James Woodard, and Shaquille Harrison where the team's top three scorers last season and will all be juniors this season. Tulsa is sort of in no man's land with their roster though because they have relatively no recruits incoming and stepping up competition-wise. They aren't good enough to hang with the likes of Memphis and SMU, but are light years ahead of Tulane and a South Florida team that went through a big debacle hiring a new coach. Expect Tulsa to be a 20 win team that is squarely on the bubble come Selection Sunday.
Houston and UCF should both finish towards the middle of the conference, but not be a threat for the big dance. Houston made a big splash by hiring Kalvin Sampson as their head coach, but the big recruits won't come until next year. They have six JUCO transfers on the way so their season could team could either be really good or remarkably bad so I will take the middle ground and put Houston in the NIT.
UCF was just 4-14 in the AAC last year but have a solid five man recruiting class incoming. Isaiah Sykes led the team in scoring and rebounding last year and is no longer with the team, but have an athletic team with a mix of talent returning. UCF should be a much improved free throw shooting team after shooting 61.4 percent as a team last year which will get this team to the 17 or 18 win territory.
The AAC did not get much respect from the selection committee last year as Louisville was a four-seed despite a 29-5 record and playing as well as any team in the nation down the stretch. Add SMU not making the big dance and the conference was more looked over than any other in the country. With UConn winning the NCAA Tournament, that should not happen again even without Louisville in the conference. The AAC should be able to get at least four teams into the field of 68 with a possibility of five or six.
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