by CaliJay » November 21st, 2011, 11:39 pm
Not trying to turn this into a McDermott love-fest, but thought this was a pretty good article from the Des Moines register about the game vs. Iowa and this columnists thoughts on Doug.
Hansen: Hawkeyes squander an opportunity
[ 1 ] November 20, 2011 | Marc Hansen Share Opportunity was everywhere you looked Sunday at Wells Fargo Arena.
For a Creighton team with a decided Iowa influence, the game was an NCAA Tournament showcase, a chance to tell the selection committee the Bluejays from the Missouri Valley Conference belonged with the boys from the BCS schools.
No, take that further. It was a chance to show the selection committee that maybe the big boys didn’t belong with them.
For the Hawkeyes, it was a great opportunity to get central Iowa behind them. Nearly 13,000 showed up at the Well, roughly 70 percent cheering for the Black and Gold.
It was a fresh start in an unblemished season, a new year in a promising new era. For the Hawkeyes, alas, it was opportunity lost.
The final score was 82-59 and it wasn’t as if the Bluejays pulled away at the end to make it look worse than it really was. To the contrary, with just under four minutes to play, the Hawkeyes trailed 80-48.
This was not Iowa’s day. So far it hasn’t been Iowa’s decade times two, but the hope among the Hawkeye faithful is Fran McCaffery will change that.
Judging by his recent recruiting efforts — get back, Roy Williams — someday he will. Sunday’s outcome, on the other hand, failed to inspire confidence.
There’s this sneaking suspicion Creighton would have beaten Iowa without Doug McDermott nearly throwing a perfect game, and that’s saying something about his old man’s program.
The sophomore from Ames had quite the line: 10 for 15 from the field, 25 points, nine rebounds, no turnovers in only 28 minutes.
The kid could turn out to be one of the Valley’s all-time greats. Harrison Barnes isn’t the only player from that two-time state championship team who could start for North Carolina.
McDermott is that good. A picture of efficiency, he probably could have scored 40, but he slipped into the background when he knew his scoring wasn’t needed.
The answer to McDermott was sitting on the Iowa bench in street clothes. Unfortunately, Ryan Bowen used up his eligibility before going off to play nine years in the NBA.
Bowen is a little taller than McDermott and was more of a greyhound in his playing days. But McDermott has that same all-day motor, the same kind of agility. And more.
Bowen smiled when asked whether he sees himself in McDermott.
“He’s much more skilled offensively than I was in college,” Bowen said. “He has such a great work ethic, but he hits the outside shots. That’s definitely something I didn’t have at that stage. I averaged four points when I was a freshman and five points when I was a sophomore. He’s way ahead of me there. He’s a very good player on a very good team.”
Bowen’s boss picked up where he left off. Few players as gifted inside and out, McCaffery said. Uncanny ability to feel where the defense is without getting his shot blocked.
Can post up or “pick and pop.” Tremendous free-throw shooter. Can put it on the deck. Scores with his left hand as well as his right.
On he went. McCaffery could have talked about McDermott all night. The more he did, the less there was to say about his own team, which was probably a good thing.
No matter how you spin it, this was a disappointing game for McCaffery. His most valuable player, point guard Bryce Cartwright, wasn’t feeling well and played only half the game.
Honestly? It wouldn’t have mattered.
It wasn’t just McDermott, either. It was his supporting cast as well. Consider Gregory Echenique, the transfer from Rutgers.
With his sparkly pink shoes, Echenique looked like he was headed to a dance recital for large people. Or a pajama party. He could pass for an NFL lineman.
Valley players are often as tall as everyone else. But seldom do they carry 270 pounds on a 6-9 frame. Appearance-wise, Echenique was one of the few inside players from either team who passed the BCS eye test.
McDermott passed about every test there was. He plays and plays and never stops moving. His expression is the same whatever the situation. Not that this was the best time to grade him in the handling-adversity department.
We’ll hear even more about him as the season progresses, but here’s something we’ll never hear: He wouldn’t play so much if his father wasn’t the coach.