tribecalledquest wrote:siudawgs wrote:Listened to every one of the MVC coach interviews the Valley posted this week. A few quick thoughts:
- I'm leaning toward UNI as my pick to win the league. Sounds like Hutson is in excellent shape/having a great summer, and I think their mix of returnees/newcomers/coaching is as intriguing as anyone's in a year without a dominant team on paper. In some order, I think UNI, SIU, Bradley and Murray look like they have the inside track at top-4. (I realize most will pick Bradley to win the league, and they might. Murray and SIU will both be ultra athletic, but I think SIU will be better-coached than Murray).
- Outside of those 4, I'd go with Illinois State, Drake, UIC and Valpo as the next group, and I think ISU is probably the best of that bunch. They will shoot it a lot better this year and Kinziger is going to be First Team All-Valley. We'll see what kind of inside play they get ... if that exceeds expectations, they will surprise.
- Like I mentioned before, there is no clear-cut last place team on paper like there often is, but I'd guess it'll come from one of Indiana State, Evansville, Belmont and Missouri State. Graves made it clear this is a laying the foundation-type year and they will give the young guys opportunities, so I'd probably lean that way, but Belmont, Evansville and Mo State all lost a ton, and didn't replace it as well as several of the other Valley teams.
I realize every team lost a lot of players but why is SIU considered the best of the group of people who are starting from scratch?
I can't speak for how others will view SIU relative to the rest of the league this year, but personally I am pretty optimistic based on the combination of high-end Valley athleticism (particularly at the 2/3/4 spots), size (8 of the 13 scholarship players are 6-6 or taller), some proven scoring punch (transfers Dibba, Sykes and Elliott are all established DI scorers) and grit/defensive toughness (Davis and Mayo being two guys who I expect to set the tone as two-way, high-motor guys).
Personally, and others may put less stock in this, I also give SIU intangible points for coaching (Nagy is a winner and has a solid staff in place IMO) and homecourt edge compared to the UICs and Valpos of the world.
10 of SIU's 13 scholarship guys are newcomers so I get they're far from a sure thing to be good, but with as much roster turnover as there is around the league, I feel pretty good about SIU's prospects relative to most.