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Parrish: The Thoughts
 
 
Parrish: The Thoughts By Gary Parrish
CBSSports.com Senior Writer
Tell Gary your opinion!
 
 
Sneak preview: SEC/Big East Invitational
Updated: Jan/31/2008 12:05 PM

The matchups for next season's SEC/Big East Invitational were announced Thursday morning.

It's eight teams playing four games at two locations.

It looks like this ...

Dec. 16 in Nashville

 Vanderbilt vs. South Florida

 Tennessee vs. Marquette

Dec. 18 in Cincinnati

 Mississippi State vs. Cincinnati

 Ole Miss vs. Louisville

Among the interesting storylines is the matchup between UT and Marquette that will feature Bruce Pearl against Tom Crean. If you recall, Pearl was the coach at Wisconsin-Milwaukee (just down the street from Marquette) before moving to Tennessee, so he and Crean have a history. Also, the event will mark the return of Andy Kennedy to Cincinnati. If you recall, Kennedy was the interim coach at Cincinnati when Bob Huggins was removed before the 2005-06 season, so he and the city have a history.

 
 
Beasley cashed the check against Kansas
Updated: Jan/31/2008 06:53 AM

Michael Beasley made good on his promise.

Josh Carter made a bunch of 3-pointers on his home court.

Here's Thursday morning's edition of What You Need To Know.

Notable game from Wednesday: I'm not sure Kansas State could beat Kansas in Africa (like Michael Beasley proclaimed), and I have my doubts about whether the Wildcats will beat the Jayhawks at Allen Fieldhouse on March 1 (like Beasley has also proclaimed). But give Beasley credit for backing his strong words with a 25-point effort to lead No. 22 KSU to an 84-75 upset of the second-ranked Jayhawks that led to the capacity crowd at Bramlage Coliseum flooding the court to celebrate the school's first home win against Kansas in 24 years. With the win, KSU improved to 15-4 overall, 5-0 in the Big 12. Kansas is 20-1, 5-1 in the Big 12. And don't forget, the rematch is March 1.

Notable performance from Wednesday: Sticking in the Big 12, Josh Carter sank 4-of-7 3-point attempts to finish with 19 points and 10 rebounds in No. 23 Texas A&M's 80-63 victory over 10th-ranked Texas. Carter was 5-of-11 from the field, 5-of-6 from the free throw line. The junior wing has now reached double-digits in points in 15 consecutive games while hitting at least one 3-pointer in 16 consecutive games.

Notable game scheduled for Thursday: Eric Gordon is hurt, which is bad news for Indiana because the 11th-ranked Hoosiers are at 13th-ranked Wisconsin. But the non-shooting wrist that was injured in Tuesday's practice isn't expected to keep the fabulous freshman sidelined, meaning Gordon will take the court and try to help IU avoid back-to-back losses. The Hoosiers are coming off Saturday's 68-63 loss to Connecticut and are 17-2 overall, 6-0 in the Big Ten. Wisconsin is 16-3 overall, 6-1 in the Big Ten. Tip-off is set for 9 p.m. ET.

 
 
Perfect 10-11? It's Illinois ... or USF ... or Iowa ... or Rutgers
Updated: Jan/30/2008 11:40 AM

Bruce Weber described Illinois as "the best 10-11 team in the country" following a victory against Northwestern on Sunday, which is kinda like claiming to be the smartest person in your GED class or the sanest person at Britney Spears' home. It's hilarious, really. But because I'm not the type of writer who takes quotes at face value, I decided to do a little research to see whether Illinois actually is the best 10-11 team in the country heading into its game Wednesday night at Michigan State.

As it stands, there are eight 10-11 teams -- Fresno State, Illinois, Iowa, Old Dominion, Rutgers, South Florida, Stetson and Tennessee State. Of that group, I think the crown of best 10-11 team belongs to either South Florida, Illinois, Iowa or Rutgers, but it's really close.

Here are the vital statistics ...

USF
 RPI: 120
 Best wins: Florida State and UAB
 Worst losses: Buffalo and Cleveland State

Illinois
 RPI: 123
 Best wins: Arizona State and Missouri
 Worst losses: Tennessee State and Penn State

Iowa
 RPI: 147
 Best wins: Michigan State and Michigan
 Worst losses: Louisiana-Monroe and Bradley

Rutgers
 RPI: 162
 Best wins: Pittsburgh and Villanova
 Worst losses: St. Peter's and Nebraska

So you tell me, America. Are the Illini really the best 10-11 team in the country? And even if they are, isn't it wild to think that only three years ago at this time they were the best 21-0 team in the country?

 
 
All that effort -- all for naught
Updated: Jan/30/2008 06:55 AM

Southeast Missouri State used three OTs to win.

Tennessee's Chris Lofton sank a bunch of threes in a win.

Here's Wednesday morning's edition of What You Need To Know.

Notable game from Tuesday: Derek Wright finished with 43 points and Drake Reed added 29 in Austin Peay's 121-116 loss at Southeast Missouri State. That's right, Austin Peay got two great individual efforts and lost ... in triple-overtime. So no, it wasn't quite Baylor over Texas A&M in five OTs. But it wasn't bad for a midweek Ohio Valley Conference match-up.

Notable performance from Tuesday: Chris Lofton is starting to look a lot like Chris Lofton. The Tennessee senior sank 5-of-9 3-point attempts and finished with 23 points to lead the Vols to a 93-86 victory at Alabama that pushed Bruce Pearl's team to 18-2 overall, 5-1 in the SEC. Lofton is now 17-of-32 from 3-point range in his past three outings, which is must better than when he started the season by making just 3-of-17 3-point attempts in his first three outings.

Notable game scheduled for Wednesday: The match-up would be so much better if it were at Fifth Third Arena because the ovation would be off the charts. But Cincinnati at West Virginia is still must-see TV thanks to it being the first game Bob Huggins will coach against the school that unceremoniously removed him before the 2005-2006 season since said school unceremoniously removed him before the 2005-2006 season. Huggins compiled a 399-127 record in 16 years at Cincinnati, making him the winningest coach in school history. He was ultimately replaced by former assistant Mick Cronin, who is 20-30 at the helm heading into this contest. Tip-off is set for 7 p.m. ET.

 
 
Searching for No. 65
Updated: Jan/29/2008 06:03 PM

I'm updating the Projecting the Field and Projecting the Seeds right now.

It'll be up on the site in the morning.

But for the life of me I can't find 65 schools that deserve to make the field.

Honestly, it's insane. And though I've always believed it to be true, what this process has reminded me (this week particularly, for some reason) is that the NCAA Tournament DOES NOT need to be expanded. Sixty-five participants (31 league champions plus 34 at-large bids) is more than enough, proof being how I really can't decide on my final at-large team because none of them seem worthy of a berth.

To complete the bracket I'm picking between (in alphabetical order) ...

 Arkansas

 Boston College

 BYU

 Florida State

 Illinois State

 N.C. State

 Oregon

 Providence

 Seton Hall

 Villanova

Fine teams, every one of them.

But would any of those schools have a legitimate gripe if they didn't make the Field of 65?

 
 
Some teams aren't meant for life on the road
Updated: Jan/29/2008 09:41 AM

Oklahoma State still can't win on the road.

Saint Mary's just can't win as a ranked team.

Here's Tuesday morning's edition of What You Need To Know.

Notable game from Monday: Oklahoma State has now dropped 17 consecutive road games, the latest coming by a 64-61 margin at Oklahoma. Blake Griffin and Taylor Griffin combined for 35 points and 10 rebounds to send the rival Cowboys to their fifth consecutive loss overall. It's the longest losing streak at OSU since a six-game skid in January 1987. The Cowboys are now 10-10. Oklahoma is 15-5.

Notable performance from Monday: Brandon Johnson got 25 points and four assists to lead San Diego to a 63-55 upset of 21st-ranked Saint Mary's just hours after the Gaels broke into the AP poll. The 6-foot junior made 9-of-15 shots -- including 3-of-5 3-point attempts -- to lead the Toreros to just their third win in school history over a ranked opponent. With the loss, Saint Mary's dropped to 17-3. It will drop out of the AP poll next Monday.

Notable game scheduled for Tuesday: Win or lose, Virginia Commonwealth will exit atop the CAA standings. Such is the advantage of having a two-game lead in the league standings. But if the Rams (15-4, 8-1 in the CAA) can go to George Mason (14-6, 6-3 in the CAA) and escape with a victory then they'll pretty much clinch the league title barring some sort of collapse because these two schools only play once this season, meaning VCU would own a three-game lead over the perceived second-best team in the league, plus the head-to-head tie-breaker. Tip-off is set for 7 p.m. ET.

 
 
Also receiving -- my wrath: The Poll Attacks
Updated: Jan/28/2008 06:08 PM

The top 15 schools in the AP poll, coaches poll and my poll are the same.

Just in a slightly different order.

But after that everything gets crazy. And honestly, there's not a whole lot of difference between No. 16 (Connecticut, in my rankings) and No. 26 (UConn, in my rankings) these days. A reasonable person could rank Florida (though I didn't) or Southern California (like I did). So there's no reason to debate personal preference when the bodies of work are similar, which is why I'm going to instead focus the Poll Attacks on the Others Receiving Votes and explain why certain teams shouldn't be getting any votes at all.

AP poll: Today I call out Scott Boatright and Taylor Zarzour, the two AP voters who placed Houston on their ballots despite it making no sense at all. The Cougars are 15-3, and that looks swell on paper. But their best victories are over Marist (yippie!), UTEP (hooray!) and an out-of-sorts Kentucky team (whoopee!).

Nine of Houston's wins are against teams outside the Top 200.

Twelve of Houston’s wins are against teams outside the Top 150.

Fourteen of Houston's wins are against teams outside the Top 100.

So it's obvious the Cougars (whose schedule is rated 203rd nationally) have really only played three quality opponents -- Arizona, UMass and Virginia Commonwealth -- and their record in those games is ... 0-3. Furthermore, the loss to Arizona came at home and by 14 points, and the wild thing is how Arizona still doesn't appear on the ballots of Boatright or Zarzour despite Arizona being 14-6 against the top-ranked schedule in the country with wins over Washington State, UNLV and Texas A&M and three of the losses coming at No. 1 Memphis, at No. 2 Kansas and at No. 14 Stanford.

Where would Houston be with Arizona's schedule?

My guess: 11-9, at best.

Coaches poll: How is freaking Davidson getting votes again?

Did those wins over Western Carolina, Citadel and Charleston prove something?

Look, I don't mean to pick on Davidson. The Wildcats are a nice team with a great coach. But I'm not sure anything aggravates me more than Davidson receiving votes in the last week of January based on nothing other than it moving into its subpar conference and winning games that only show how Davidson is better than all the teams in the 14th-rated league in the country. The Wildcats could've proved themselves in early games against North Carolina, Duke, UCLA and N.C. State, but they lost all of those match-ups ... plus games at Western Michigan and Charlotte. Consequently, the Wildcats are 0-3 against the Top 25 and 0-4 against the Top 50 with eight of their 13 wins coming against teams ranked outside the Top 200.

In other words, Davidson is worse than Houston.

And you know how I feel about Houston!

 
 
Hurricanes gain a huge notch
Updated: Jan/28/2008 07:08 AM

Miami got a huge win.

Nick Calathes got a double-double.

Here's Monday morning's edition of What You Need To Know.

Notable game from Sunday: If there's such a thing as a must-win game in January, Miami had one against Clemson. It was at home and a loss would've sent the Hurricanes to 1-4 in the ACC and further on their way to the NIT. Instead, Miami won 75-72 and snapped a three-game losing streak. So the Hurricanes are now 15-4 overall, 2-3 in the ACC while Clemson is 15-5 overall, 3-3 in the ACC.

Notable performance from Sunday: Nick Calathes nearly messed around and got a triple-double, finishing with 15 points, 10 assists and seven rebounds in Florida's 86-64 victory over 14th-ranked Vanderbilt. It was the Gators' first win over a Top 50 opponent and Calathes' second-double-double this season. The 6-foot-6 freshman has scored at least 14 points in eight consecutive outings.

Notable game scheduled for Monday: Connecticut has strung a trio of nice wins -- against Marquette, at Cincinnati and at Indiana -- heading into this showdown with Louisville. The Huskies are 14-5 overall with three of the losses coming to teams appearing in the latest Top 25 (and one) rankings, specifically No. 1 Memphis, No. 8 Georgetown and No. 16 Notre Dame. Their other two losses were to Gonzaga and Providence. Meantime, Louisville is 15-5 and on a two-game winning streak. With a victory, the Cardinals will move into a tie for first in the win column in the Big East standings. Tip-off is set for 7 p.m. ET.

 
 
Kansas showing no mercy on hapless Huskers
Updated: Jan/26/2008 05:06 PM

Is it possible to stop the Kansas-Nebraska series?

I know they play in the same league and all, but this is getting ridiculous.

The Jayhawks spent Saturday destroying Nebraska, which is what they always do to Cornhuskers. The final was 84-49, meaning Kansas has now beaten the Huskers by at least 20 points in each of the past six meetings. The other margins were 79-58, 92-39, 76-56, 69-48 and 96-54. We're reaching the point where Las Vegas will refuse to put lines on these games, kinda like it does when a Division I opponent plays a Division II opponent.

Anyway, the byproduct is that the two undefeated teams will remain undefeated.

Memphis beat Gonzaga.

Kansas beat Nebraska.

So expect those schools to again be No. 1 and No. 2 in the rankings.

The rest of the top five should be Duke, North Carolina and UCLA, barring any more upsets.

 
 
No love for Kevin? He'll make you pay
Updated: Jan/25/2008 07:00 AM

Arizona shocked Washington State.

Kevin Love dominated in his home state.

Here's Friday morning's edition of What You Need To Know.

Notable game from Thursday: Arizona used 23 points from Jerryd Bayless and hit 12 3-pointers as a team to hand sixth-ranked Washington State its second loss of the season. The Wildcats pulled away in the second half and won 76-64, leaving Washington State in a three-way tie for second in the Pac-10 standings behind UCLA. Speaking of the Bruins ...

Notable performance from Thursday: Kevin Love returned to his home state and stuck it to Oregon, finishing with 26 points in No. 8 UCLA's 80-75 win over the Ducks. The 6-foot-10 center made 8-of-11 field goal attempts (including 2-of-2 from 3-point range), and his 18 rebounds matched the total of Oregon's entire roster while setting a record for UCLA freshmen. Love's eight offensive boards were three more than Oregon had as a team.

Notable game scheduled for the weekend: Gonzaga-Memphis is getting most of the attention as the best non-league match-up on tap, but Connecticut-Indiana isn't bad either. The Huskies are 13-5 after winning two straight over Marquette and Cincinnati. The seventh-ranked Hoosiers are 17-1, having not lost since Nov. 24 while Eric Gordon averages 22.1 points per game. Tip-off is set for Saturday at 1 p.m. ET.

 
 
You 'need to know' about this
Updated: Jan/24/2008 07:43 AM

This is usually the spot to find What You Need to Know.

And it still is.

But for now all you need to know is Baylor beat Texas A&M in five overtimes.

Yep, five overtimes!

The final score was 116-110.

"I wish it would've been on national TV," Baylor coach Scott Drew said by phone early Thursday. "You would've enjoyed that game."

You think, Scott?

Because it wasn't on national TV most of the basketball world was reduced to following things via scoreboard ticker. So that's what the basketball world did, and the text messages started hitting my phone in the second overtime.

"Are you seeing this?," read one.

"Get me to College Station," read the next.

"Holy S---!" read another.

"Baylor is gonna run out of players," read another.

It was a wild game all-around, one in which five Baylor players fouled out. It was the longest game in Big 12 history, setting the Big 12 record for most points in a league game (Baylor's 116) and most combined points in a league game (226). Each team had a 30-point scorer (Baylor's Curtis Jerrells finished with 36 while Texas A&M's Bryan Davis had 30), nine players reached double-digits in points, there were 106 combined free throws and four players recorded at least 50 minutes on the court

Beyond that, it was a huge win for Baylor.

The Bears are now 16-2 overall, 4-0 in the Big 12.

This was their first victory as a ranked team since 1969.

"We had about 500 students waiting for us when we got back at 1:30 in the morning," Drew said, still excited despite the hour. "It was just crazy."

 
 
We'll see what these Bears are made of
Updated: Jan/23/2008 01:58 PM

Baylor might be really good.

Or Baylor might be totally overrated.

It's reasonable to have contrasting opinions at this point. But we're going to learn everything we need to know about the Bears in an upcoming nine-game stretch that will show whether Scott Drew's team is worthy of its national ranking or merely the beneficiary of crafty scheduling. Baylor is 15-2 overall heading into Wednesday night's game at Texas A&M, and that sounds great on the surface. But 13 of those wins came at the expense of opponents outside the Top 100 at CollegeRPI.com, meaning the Bears have played just four Top 100 opponents, meaning the Bears are just 2-2 against Top 100 opponents.

In other words, there isn't much there.

But the level of competition is about to increase in a big way because eight of Baylor's next nine games are against Top 100 opponents and seven of the next nine are against Top 50 opponents. Between Jan. 23 and Feb. 23, the Bears will play Texas A&M (No. 41 in the RPI), Texas Tech (No. 70), Kansas (No. 3), Oklahoma State (No. 122) and Kansas State (No. 50) once each -- plus Texas (No. 12) and Oklahoma (No. 36) twice. Making things tougher, five of those nine games will be on the road. So this is a difficult stretch by any definition. But if the Bears are truly a Top 25 team they should be able to avoid a collapse.

 
 
Drake, Kentucky making waves
Updated: Jan/23/2008 12:33 AM

Josh Young is back.

Kentucky basketball might be too.

Here's Wednesday morning's edition of What You Need To Know.

Notable game from Tuesday: Josh Young played for the first time in nearly two weeks, hit a key 3-pointer in overtime and led Drake to a 68-60 victory at Creighton that extended the 22nd-ranked Bulldogs' winning streak to a school-record 16 games. Drake held Creighton to just 34.5 percent shooting from the field and won as a ranked team for the first time in 33 years.

Notable performance from Tuesday: Patrick Patterson finished with 20 points and eight rebounds to help Kentucky notch its biggest win of the Billy Gillispie era, a 72-66 upset of No. 3 Tennessee. The freshman forward made 6-of-11 shots (and 8-of-9 free throws) in 39 minutes in an effort that was so impressive Gillispie used part of his postgame interview on national television to describe Patterson as a "star".

Notable game scheduled for Wednesday: Western Kentucky at New Orleans is a splendid match-up featuring a pair of 14-5 teams and two of the best players the Sun Belt has ever produced, namely Courtney Lee and Bo McCalebb. Lee is a 6-5 wing averaging 20.8 points for the Hilltoppers. McCalebb is a 6-0 guard averaging 22.3 points for the Privateers (and he's now the Sun Belt's all-time leading scorer). Tip-off is set for 8 p.m. ET.

 
 
Hoyas barely scrape by again
Updated: Jan/22/2008 08:28 AM

Georgetown won in overtime.

D.J. Augustin didn't need overtime.

Here's Tuesday morning's edition of What You Need To Know.

Notable game from Monday: Georgetown got another scare at home, not unlike the Connecticut game from nine days earlier. But the ninth-ranked Hoyas managed to escape again, this time in overtime and by a 64-62 margin. Both teams combined for just one field goal in the extra period. And though Jonny Flynn had a shot at the buzzer for the win, the Hoyas were able to celebrate when the long 3-pointer rattled out.

Notable performance from Monday: D.J. Augustin finished with 26 points in Texas' 63-61 victory at Oklahoma State. The sophomore point guard made 7-of-16 shots, 9-of-10 free throw attempts and scored UT's final 10 points. He's now scored at least 16 points in 15 consecutive games as is widely recognized as the best in the nation at his position.

Notable game scheduled for Tuesday: Drake will play as a ranked team for the first time since the 1974-75 season when it visits Creighton. The No. 22 Bulldogs are 16-1 overall, 7-0 in the Missouri Valley Conference and winners of 15 consecutive games. But this could be their toughest test to date given how Creighton is 14-3 overall, 5-2 in the MVC and 10-1 at home. Tip-off is set for 8:05 p.m. ET.

 
 
Terps shouldn't be near Top 25
Updated: Jan/21/2008 06:58 PM

Maryland is on one too many ballots.

Texas A&M is on way too many ballots.

As always, allow the Poll Attacks to explain why.

AP poll: One of the first things I do when the AP poll is released is go to the Others Receiving Votes category and see if any undeserving teams got a single point or two because there's usually a head-scratcher near the bottom. And this week is no exception, what with Maryland sitting there with one point.

Maryland?

Seriously?

I know Maryland's win at North Carolina was great and all, just a thrilling ending and a huge upset. But the reason it was a huge upset is because Maryland has been terrible this season, meaning you'd have to be crazy to think the Terps are a Top 25 team with a 12-7 record when their second best victory is against Wake Forest, when they possess losses to six unranked teams (including American) and when no other school in the Top 25 has more than four losses.

So yeah, Cormac Gordon (of the Staten Island Advance) is kinda crazy.

Or at least he votes that way.

Coaches poll: I like Texas A&M -- everything from the coaching staff to the players to the potential for great things. But there's a reason I dropped the Aggies completely out of my Top 25 (and one), and it's because there is nothing that has happened on the basketball court that suggests they should still be ranked.

The Aggies are ...

 14-3 against a schedule ranked 150th.

 1-2 against the top 50 and 2-3 against the top 100 at CollegeRPI.com.

 Losers of two straight (to Texas Tech and Kansas State) by an average of 18.0 points.

Does that sound like a Top 25 team?

Of course it doesn't.

But the Aggies are still 16th -- five spots ahead of a Stanford team that is ...

 15-3 against a schedule ranked 82nd.

 2-2 against the top 50 and 5-3 against the top 100 at CollegeRPI.com.

 Winners of two straight (over Arizona and Arizona State) by an average of 9.5 points.

 
 
Cougars end the futility
Updated: Jan/21/2008 07:10 AM

Washington State beat Oregon.

Eric Gordon beat Penn State's zone.

Here's Monday morning's edition of What You Need To Know.

Notable game from Sunday: Washington State still hadn't managed to snap a losing streak to Oregon despite all of Tony Bennett's recent success. But that changed with a 69-60 victory that gave the Cougars their first win over the Ducks since 2001. The effort snapped a losing streak that had stretched 13 games and kept WSU in a three-way tie for first in the Pac-10 with UCLA and Arizona State. Derrick Low finished with 27 points, and the Cougars' 16-1 record is the best start since the 1948-49 team opened 18-1. WSU can match that mark this week with wins at Arizona and Arizona State.

Notable performance from Sunday: If you're planning to play zone against Indiana be prepared to extend it 30 feet. Otherwise, there's a good chance Eric Gordon will simply shoot over it like he did in the Hoosiers' 81-65 victory against Penn State. The 6-foot-4 freshman was 5-of-11 from 3-point range, 8-of-17 from the field overall. He finished with 25 points, six rebounds and three assists to help IU win its 27th consecutive home game.

Notable game scheduled for Monday: It's doubtful we'll get the triple-overtime thriller we had last year (if only because Kevin Durant is no longer around), but Texas at Oklahoma State from Gallagher-Iba Arena is still an interesting contest. The Longhorns are 14-3 with losses to Michigan State, Wisconsin and Missouri after starting the season 11-0. Oklahoma State is 10-7 and in desperate need of a marquee win to settle a fan base that is growing impatient since a five-game winning streak has been snapped by back-to-back losses to Baylor and Iowa State. Tip-off is set for 9 p.m. ET.

 
 
Tar Heels to topple from top five
Updated: Jan/20/2008 03:14 AM

LOS ANGELES -- Trying to update the Top 25 (and one) should make for a fun Sunday given all the upsets, and we still need to see what Washington State does against Oregon. But assuming the Cougars win I'm pretty sure my top five will look like this:

1. Memphis
2. Kansas
3. Tennessee
4. Washington State
5. Duke

 
 
Memphis can take over No. 1 thanks to UNC's upset loss
Updated: Jan/19/2008 07:33 PM

LOS ANGELES -- An examination of the way writers voted last week makes it pretty obvious that as long as Memphis beats Southern Miss late Saturday, the Tigers will move into the top spot of Monday's Associated Press poll thanks to North Carolina's loss to Maryland.

The only other candidate is Kansas (which plays Missouri late Saturday).

But considering Memphis had 24 first-place votes last week compared to Kansas' three, it would take a major change in thinking for the Jayhawks to jump the Tigers, particularly given how Memphis was No. 2 on 34 of the 45 ballots that had North Carolina No. 1.

In other words, if the writers who had Memphis No. 1 keep Memphis No. 1, and the writers who had Memphis No. 2 on ballots where North Carolina was No. 1 advance Memphis to No. 1, then Memphis will have 58 first-place votes compared to Kansas' 14, making John Calipari's Tigers the top-ranked team in the country by a wide margin.

As long as they beat Southern Miss, of course.

If you're wondering, Memphis is a 23-point favorite.

So if the Tigers lose at home it'll be a choke job for the ages.

 
 
What You Need To Know: It's a first for Cleveland State
Updated: Jan/18/2008 10:56 AM

LOS ANGELES -- Cleveland State got a huge win.

Wayne Chism had a huge performance.

Here's Friday morning's edition of What You Need To Know.

Notable game from Thursday: Somehow, 12th-ranked Butler is now two games back in the loss column in the Horizon League following a 56-52 loss to Cleveland State that doubled as CSU's first-ever regular-season victory over a Top 25 opponent. The Vikings entered 1-26 in games against ranked opponents, with their lone win coming against No. 16 Indiana in the 1986 NCAA Tournament. Cedric Jackson and J'Nathan Bullock each finished with 14 points.

Notable performance from Thursday: A.J. Ogilvy might be the better player and pro prospect, but Wayne Chism tagged him with an 18-point, 18-rebound effort in No. 6 Tennessee's 80-60 victory over 16th-ranked Vanderbilt. A 6-foot-9 sophomore, Chism matched in this single game the number of rebounds he tallied in the entire month of December while making 8-of-13 field goal attempts. The only negative? He was 0-of-4 from the free throw line. But I suppose that can be overlooked given how Chism grabbed as many offensive boards (seven) as all five Vandy starters combined.

Notable game scheduled for the weekend: I'm here in Los Angeles for Saturday's showdown between Southern California and UCLA that will provide the first of at least two matchups between freshmen stars O.J. Mayo and Kevin Love. It'll feature a sold-out crowd at Pauley Pavilion, and though the Trojans are clear underdogs, this is a crucial contest for Tim Floyd. If he loses, his star-studded team will drop to 1-4 in the Pac-10. Tipoff is set for 3:30 p.m. ET on CBS.

 
 
Celebrating a milestone and Christmas
Updated: Jan/17/2008 02:47 AM

Bob Knight reached another milestone.

Temple reached out and smacked Xavier.

Here's Thursday morning's edition of What You Need To Know.

Notable game from Wednesday: After failing to record his milestone 900th victory last weekend at Oklahoma State, Texas Tech's Bob Knight did it with a 68-53 blowout of 10th-ranked Texas A&M. Naturally, he was less than enthused. "This thing never crossed my mind," Knight told reporters afterward. "I could care less about this. I'm just happy to get it over with." For the record, I'm happy he got it over with, too. And now if Eddie Sutton can just get his 800th victory everything will be right in the college basketball world.

Notable performance from Wednesday: Dionte Christmas scored 19 of his 23 points in the second half to help Temple cruise to a 78-59 victory against No. 20 Xavier. The junior guard hit 9 of 12 shots and added six rebounds and five assists for the Owls, who handed Xavier its second blowout loss of the season. Temple is now 7-8 while Xavier is 14-4. Christmas has reached double figures in every game.

Notable game scheduled for Thursday: Another night, another big SEC showdown -- this time one that features in-state rivals Tennessee and Vanderbilt. Tennessee is 14-1 and ranked sixth while Vanderbilt is 16-1 and ranked 16th. The two schools will play at Thompson-Boling Arena, where UT has a 24-game winning streak. This will be the first meeting in which both schools have been ranked since 1968. Tennessee is coming off an 80-56 victory at South Carolina. Vanderbilt is coming off a 79-73 double-overtime loss at Kentucky. Tip-off is set for 7 p.m. ET.

 
 
Both Gators, Rebels have things to prove
Updated: Jan/16/2008 04:18 PM

OXFORD, Miss. -- I'm catching a flight Thursday afternoon for Los Angeles in anticipation of Saturday's USC-UCLA game that will double as the first meeting of freshmen stars O.J. Mayo and Kevin Love. That should be fun (and you can see it exclusively on CBS!). But before heading west, I opted to drive south, where I'll be at Wednesday night's SEC showdown between Florida and Ole Miss here at the Tad Smith Coliseum.

No matter the outcome, we should learn a lot about both teams.

Well aware of what he was losing (which is to say everything), Billy Donovan put together a schedule designed to build confidence and stockpile wins, and it's worked brilliantly (evidence being that 15-2 record). But the reality is that here we are in the middle of January -- more than halfway through the regular season -- and the Gators' best victories are against Temple, Georgia Southern and Alabama. They've really only played two good teams (Ohio State and Florida State) and those contests resulted in double-digit losses. So if Florida loses for a third time by a large margin at Ole Miss, then it might be time to wonder whether this team is truly NCAA Tournament worthy, though for now the Gators should get the benefit of the doubt (back-to-back national titles buys the benefit of the doubt, case you didn't know).

As for Ole Miss, every coach I've spoken with whose team has played the Rebels (14-1) believes they are legitimate and that they've taken on the personality of Andy Kennedy. In fact, one assistant told me they remind him of a "Bob Huggins team on Red Bull" and added he doesn't expect them to flounder now that league play has begun. Regardless, when you're picked last in the SEC (which Ole Miss was) people tend to be skeptical until the evidence is such that it can't possibly be ignored any longer. So the Rebels still have some proving to do, and this seems like a good opportunity to further convince the masses.

 
 
What You Need To Know: Spartans bounce back
Updated: Jan/16/2008 01:07 AM

Michigan State scored more than 36 points.

Luke Harangody scored more than any two Cincinnati players combined.

Here's Wednesday morning's edition of What You Need To Know.

Notable game from Tuesday: Michigan State rebounded from that embarrassing 43-36 loss at Iowa (36 points!) with a 66-60 victory over Ohio State. Drew Neitzel got 13 points, five rebounds and five assists in the victory that dropped OSU's record to 12-5 heading into Saturday's game at sixth-ranked Tennessee. Michigan State is 15-2 and ranked 11th nationally. The Spartans are off until Monday's game at Minnesota.

Notable performance from Tuesday: Harangody continued his splendid play, getting 25 points and