I'll begin with the MAC East Division and place the teams in order I predict them to finish. At the end of this thread I will post the MAC tournament champion.
MAC EAST DIVISION
KENT STATE
LAST YEAR: 21-11 overall, 12-4 in the MAC; lost in the MAC semifinals.
THE SKINNY
Kent State's goal in 2007-08 is to make it 10 straight 20-plus win seasons. A huge factor in the Golden Flashes' continued success is the play of seniors, who seemingly thrive when it's their turn to lead. For last year's two seniors — Omni Smith (13.9 points per game) and Armon Gates (9.3 ppg) — it was a matter of accepting coming off the bench. They handled their new roles well and the team won 14 of its last 17 games before a MAC Tournament loss to Akron in the semifinals.
For a sixth straight season, coach Jim Christian will have to replace the leading scorer from the previous year (Omni Smith). Christian hit on a lineup of guards Jordan Mincy (leading assist man and best defender), Rod Sherman and Chris Singletary with forwards Mike Scott and Julian Sullinger. It was almost uncanny how Kent's season turned when that group began each game by midseason. Kent has loads of experience and capability. Scott can jump out of the gym and is a great defender while Sullinger a very small 6'4" wide-body immovable post player plays like he's much bigger and is a great rebounder.
Singletary (6.0 ppg, 3.3 rpg) committed to Missouri out of high school and the 6-foot-3, 225-pounder nearly left Kent State in late December last year, but had a change of heart, and helped key a winning run. Sophomore Rodriquez Sherman and Singletary were on the All-MAC Freshman Team last season. Forward Haminn Quaintance (8.2 ppg, 5.3 rpg, 1.7 bpg) could be dominant if he's able to harness his talent and settle into a regular role. "Q" is a shot blocker with silky fast moves and runs the floor like a guard.
STRENGTHS: Tradition. Sixth-year coach Jim Christian has put five 20-plus win seasons on the back end of streak started by Gary Waters. Relative to the rest of the MAC, Kent State probably has as much athleticism on its roster as any other team and lot's of depth. If Isaac Knight can avoid the foul plagued games of last season, his defensive presence and board work will be key to the Flashes inside game. Brandon Parks, a 6-10 behemoth from Bunker Hill, IN can run the floor and gave Kent valuable minutes in the early season last year but did not fit Kent's up tempo offense. He threatened to transfer but returns this season and will play an important role in the middle.
WEAKNESS: The Golden Flashes were a miserable free-throwing shooting team last season (64.2 percent) and two of the team's better player at the line have graduated in Omni Smith and Armon Gates. Depth at point guard is a concern. Mincy is a great defender and good distributor. Sherman probably will pick up the slack.
NEWCOMERS: Three Juco transfers figure to keep Kent State stocked. Seven-footer Gabe Garcia (250 pounds), from Sao Paulo, Brazil, is a slow moving project but could help them in foul situations since they usually play a smaller lineup. Rashard Woods may be the key to the Flashes scoring slack, and the 50th ranked guard in the nation has not disappointed in the preseason scoring 28 points in an exhibition game vs. Hiram.
KEY PreMAC GAMES: The Flashes have 8 non-conference home games and would like to avoid last season's 7-7 beginning. A quick glance finds Coppin State, Detroit, Xavier, St. Louis, Youngstown, George Mason, Texas-Corpus Christi, and Cleveland State, a January2nd trip to Chapel Hill to take on the #1 Tar Heels, and a matchup vs. either Indiana or Illinois State in the Chicago Invitational on Thanksgiving weekend.
MAC EAST DIVISION
KENT STATE
LAST YEAR: 21-11 overall, 12-4 in the MAC; lost in the MAC semifinals.
THE SKINNY
Kent State's goal in 2007-08 is to make it 10 straight 20-plus win seasons. A huge factor in the Golden Flashes' continued success is the play of seniors, who seemingly thrive when it's their turn to lead. For last year's two seniors — Omni Smith (13.9 points per game) and Armon Gates (9.3 ppg) — it was a matter of accepting coming off the bench. They handled their new roles well and the team won 14 of its last 17 games before a MAC Tournament loss to Akron in the semifinals.
For a sixth straight season, coach Jim Christian will have to replace the leading scorer from the previous year (Omni Smith). Christian hit on a lineup of guards Jordan Mincy (leading assist man and best defender), Rod Sherman and Chris Singletary with forwards Mike Scott and Julian Sullinger. It was almost uncanny how Kent's season turned when that group began each game by midseason. Kent has loads of experience and capability. Scott can jump out of the gym and is a great defender while Sullinger a very small 6'4" wide-body immovable post player plays like he's much bigger and is a great rebounder.
Singletary (6.0 ppg, 3.3 rpg) committed to Missouri out of high school and the 6-foot-3, 225-pounder nearly left Kent State in late December last year, but had a change of heart, and helped key a winning run. Sophomore Rodriquez Sherman and Singletary were on the All-MAC Freshman Team last season. Forward Haminn Quaintance (8.2 ppg, 5.3 rpg, 1.7 bpg) could be dominant if he's able to harness his talent and settle into a regular role. "Q" is a shot blocker with silky fast moves and runs the floor like a guard.
STRENGTHS: Tradition. Sixth-year coach Jim Christian has put five 20-plus win seasons on the back end of streak started by Gary Waters. Relative to the rest of the MAC, Kent State probably has as much athleticism on its roster as any other team and lot's of depth. If Isaac Knight can avoid the foul plagued games of last season, his defensive presence and board work will be key to the Flashes inside game. Brandon Parks, a 6-10 behemoth from Bunker Hill, IN can run the floor and gave Kent valuable minutes in the early season last year but did not fit Kent's up tempo offense. He threatened to transfer but returns this season and will play an important role in the middle.
WEAKNESS: The Golden Flashes were a miserable free-throwing shooting team last season (64.2 percent) and two of the team's better player at the line have graduated in Omni Smith and Armon Gates. Depth at point guard is a concern. Mincy is a great defender and good distributor. Sherman probably will pick up the slack.
NEWCOMERS: Three Juco transfers figure to keep Kent State stocked. Seven-footer Gabe Garcia (250 pounds), from Sao Paulo, Brazil, is a slow moving project but could help them in foul situations since they usually play a smaller lineup. Rashard Woods may be the key to the Flashes scoring slack, and the 50th ranked guard in the nation has not disappointed in the preseason scoring 28 points in an exhibition game vs. Hiram.
KEY PreMAC GAMES: The Flashes have 8 non-conference home games and would like to avoid last season's 7-7 beginning. A quick glance finds Coppin State, Detroit, Xavier, St. Louis, Youngstown, George Mason, Texas-Corpus Christi, and Cleveland State, a January2nd trip to Chapel Hill to take on the #1 Tar Heels, and a matchup vs. either Indiana or Illinois State in the Chicago Invitational on Thanksgiving weekend.
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