Archive for November, 2008

It’s no suprise that the Colonials have been a top-20 team for most of the year. What is surprising is that they’ve basically flown under the radar for most of this year despite returning four starters from last year’s team that won 22 games, the Atlantic 10 tournament title and secured it’s first NCAA tournament bid since 1999. This is a deep experienced team poised to do some damage in March.

This year’s edition of the Colonials is the culmination of a two year master plan by HC Karl Hobbs. In 2004, while Xavier and St Joe’s were rampaging thru the Atlantic 10 enroute to the Elite Eight, Hobbs played his kids and managed to win 18 games as well as garnering an NIT invite. Last year’s club returned the top-seven scorers from 2004 and won the conference before bowing to Georgia Tech in the first round of the Big Dance.

The 2006 edition returns intact except for off guard TJ Thompson (13.2 ppg) whose long range shooting and leadership will be missed. Thompson had started 117 straight games for the Colonials before graduating. While Thompson is a significant loss, Hobbs prefers to see the glass 4/5’s full rather than 1/5 empty.
And for good reason. George Washington is 10-1 and the only team in the Atlantic 10 with five players averaging in double figures.

The Colonials are led by shooting guard JR Pinnock who is averaging 15.4 points per game. Pinnock was the A-10’s Sixth Man of the Year last year and will get serious consideration for Player of the Year this year. Pinnock is joined in the back court by floor general Carl Elliot who averages 11.1 ppg while dropping 4.4 dimes per outing. Both guards are 6′5″ and solid rebounders.

PF Mike Hall is second in scoring at 13.1 ppg and also grabs 7.6 boards. A tireless worker, Hall has a non-stop motor and has become the heart and soul of the team. SF Omar Williams 7.3 ppg has selflessly put his game on hold to become the team’s top defensive stopper. His extra-long wingspan makes him particularly annoying to opposing scorers.

At center we have second-team A-10 and first team All-Name, Pops Mensah-Bonsu. Pops comes via London and is the most athletic of the Colonials. Bonsu averages 11.6 ppg and 7.6 rpg. Pops biggest problems have been foul trouble (he challenges everything, 130 career blocks) and foul shooting (makes Shaq look like Steve Kerr).

Maureece Reece is a talented sopomore guard who is first off the pine. Reece broke many of Wilt Chamberlain’s long standing HS records in Philadelphia and is avgg 11.3 ppg in his debut season. Freshman Montrell McDonald (5.8 ppg) and LSU transfer Regis Koundija (4.3 ppg / 2.7 ppg) are the other key reserves getting double-digit minutes.

Entering tonight’s game against St Louis, the Colonials only loss was a 79-58 blowout to a very tough North Carolina State team. The Wolf Pack are top-10 in the country in almost every statistical category and number one in FG% allowed. NC State held GW to just 31% shooting which might have been aided somewhat by a scheduling quirk that saw the Colonials without a game the prior fourteen days. George Washington does have quality wins against Maryland and Temple.

George Washington is off to a relatively slow start against the points this year at 3-2 but should be profitable in certain situations throughout A-10 play. The Colonials are 25-15 over the past three years as a favorite and a wallet fattening 24-13 in A-10 play. Talented, experienced, and deep. Keep your eye on George Washington as you’ll probably be seeing a lot more of them in March!

Dennis Macklin is a documented member of the Professional Handicappers League.
Read all of his articles at http://www.procappers.com/Dennis_Macklin.htm

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Nobody likes to make mistakes.

Who wants to be the kid who struck out to end the game? Or the boy who dropped the ball in the end zone? Or the girl who missed the game-winning shot?

Nobody. Especially impressionable young athletes.

So they play tentative. They play not to make mistakes. And end up making even more mistakes. Because they aren’t playing with the mind of a champion.

Champions understand the need to make mistakes. They understand that doing something wrong is the best way to learn how to do it right. By adjusting their approach the next time. Since they already know what doesn’t work, they keep experimenting until they find a way that does work.

Let your athletes make mistakes. Encourage them to make mistakes. Doing so will rid them of the stigma that mistakes are bad. And free them to think like champions.

Once your athletes realize that mistakes serve a positive purpose, you must make sure they accept responsibility for them.

Avoiding responsibility for mistakes is a natural human inclination. And athletes seem to have a special knack for transferring responsibility to everyone but themselves:

“The umpire made a bad call.”

“The sun was in my eyes.”

“I hurt my ankle.”

“The other team cheated.”

“I wasn’t ready.”

And the list goes on and on.

The problem is this: these excuses weaken the very character of the athlete.

When mistakes are denied, the athlete learns nothing. So she makes the same mistakes again. And again. And again.

But the whole purpose of making mistakes is to learn.

Champions understand this. That’s why they accept their mistakes. Figure out what they did wrong. Then correct it.

And become better and better while ordinary athletes grow weaker and weaker.

Have you ever tried to make excuses for your athletes? The next time you’re tempted to do so, remember that champions accept responsibility for their mistakes, learn and move on.

Help your champion accept responsibility. Then show her how to improve and continue on the path to greatness.

Bonnie Jean Schaefer is a writer and sports performance coach. She teaches young athletes how to think, perform and act like champions. Visit http://www.childrenintochampions.com for more information.

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The NBA Draft is approaching fast and NBA teams are taking a hard look at whom they can pick to improve their team. Last year a young man by the name of Chris Paul almost single handedly turned around the New Orleans Hornets and won rookie of the year. With his success many teams seem to notice the importance of a quality point guard which is why many teams are targeting Marcus Williams, a point guard from the University of Connecticut. Marcus Williams is a left-handed, pass first point guard that has the ability to make other players better. That is why so many teams want him.

Several teams including the Raptors, Lakers, and Hawks are very interested in drafting the guard. Their is so much talk about Williams, it would make some think he is the only point guard in the draft.

Even though he is highly touted he has had off the court problems in the past with the theft of some computers on campus. He is also considered to lack foot speed and good shooting ability. Even with that said he is a player that most feel has a lot of heart and that should allow him to overcome the negative and go on to have a solid NBA career.

Andre Bias is a webmaster and is the owner of several websites including, http://www.serioushoops.com, http://www.inkjetdealz.com, and http://www.kidfriendlyentertainment.com

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