ESPN Network: ESPN | NBA.com | NHL.com | ABC | Radio | EXPN | Insider | Shop | Fantasy
2001 NCB Preview

SEARCH ESPN

ESPNWeb
M COLLEGE BB
Scores
Schedules
Rankings
Bracketology
Bracketology
Power 16
Mid-Major Top 10
Cinderella Watch
Fans Poll Top 25
Standings
Statistics
D-III Tournament
Transactions
Teams
Players
Recruiting
Message Board
CONFERENCES


ESPN MALL
TeamStore
ESPN Auctions
SPORT SECTIONS
MLB
   Scores | GameCast
NFL
   Scores
Col. Football
   Scores
NBA
   Scores
Golf
   Scores
Tennis
   Scores
Motorsports
Soccer
Boxing
NHL
M Col. BB
W Col. BB
WNBA
Horse Racing
Recruiting
Sports Business
College Sports
Olympic Sports
Action Sports
ESPNdeportes
ProRodeo
More Sports
Tuesday, March 4
 
BC's season saved by the Bell

By Gregg Doyel
Special to ESPN.com

If you believe everything you read, and we at ESPN.com are advocates of the written word, then six weeks ago you believed Boston College was playing its way into the NIT, and senior guard Troy Bell was playing his way out of the NBA draft.

Unbelievable, huh?

Troy Bell
Troy Bell has averaged 30.2 points over the last 11 games.
Since the Eagles swooned to an 8-8 start (1-4 in Big East play), they have won nine of their last 10 games, including 92-84 over Villanova on Tuesday. They entered the final week of the regular season with a great shot at an NCAA Tournament bid, and a decent chance at first place in the conference's East division.

Read that last sentence again -- yes, it's true -- and then you'll be ready for something even chewier, like this: Troy Bell is playing as well as anyone in the country.

In the last 11 games before Tuesday, Bell averaged 30.2 points. He scored a season-high 38 against Villanova. He has scored at least 26 points in each of the past 13 games, and he is on pace to break the Big East's conference scoring record of 27.4 set in 1981-82 by Seton Hall's Dan Callandrillo. Before Tuesday, Bell was averaging 27.9.

Eagles coach Al Skinner said, "This is the best he's played since he's been at Boston College," and Bell had played pretty well for Boston College before this season.

As a freshman, Bell averaged 20.1 points in league play, breaking Allen Iverson's Big East freshman record. As a sophomore, Bell was a first-team All-American and the Big East's Co-Player of the Year (with Troy Murphy), and led the Eagles to 27 victories and the league championship. As a junior, Bell led the Big East in scoring at 21.6 points per game despite undergoing arthroscopic knee surgery on Oct. 31 and not missing a single game.

"He was just the best player on a good team," Skinner said of Bell's previous seasons. "He's clearly playing great basketball now. He's got his game together."

And the Eagles are coming along for the ride. Once thought not even to be a bubble team (not by us, surely), Boston College definitely doesn't look like a bubble team now -- it looks like a sure thing NCAA entrant. Even if the Eagles lose their final game, Saturday against Connecticut, they would take an 8-2 record over their final 10 games into the Big East tournament -- and that kind of strong finish will mean as much to the NCAA selection committee as the Eagles' RPI, which stands at a decent No. 46.

The Eagles' strong finish ought to be enough to overcome their weak start, which began with a 27-point loss to Saint Joseph's and then a loss to Holy Cross that dropped them to 1-2.

"We've stumbled a bit this season, losing games we shouldn't have," Skinner said. Boston College also lost to Kent State and Northeastern before righting itself, and guess who was manning the rudder? Mr. Bell, of course.

Bell's scoring spree has pushed his overall scoring average to 25.8, fourth in the country, and he also is contributing 3.9 assists and 2.3 steals. He leads the Big East in three-point proficiency (42.4 percent) and production (3.5 per game).

Bell's take on his awesome individual numbers?

"My only goal is to get into the NCAA Tournament," he said. "I just want to go out with a bang."

With his fourth point against Villanova, Bell moved into 50th place among all-time NCAA scorers. The new No. 51 will be Elgin Baylor.

If he scores 70 points over the final two games -- are you saying he won't? -- Bell would surpass Syracuse's Lawrence Moten as the all-time official leading scorer in Big East, which recognizes only conference games for the purposes of career records. Unofficially Bell already holds that distinction, his 2,497 points the most scored by any Big East player since the league formed in 1979.

Games of the Week
Temple at Xavier
Saturday

The Owls are playing their best basketball of the season. Here, they'll find out just good they really are.
Connecticut at Boston College
Saturday

The winner could clinch the East division title as well as a pretty good seed in the NCAA Tournament.
Duke at North Carolina
Sunday

The Tar Heels would clinch a spot in the NIT by winning this game. Duke would avoid losing to the Tar Heels by winning this game.

Blue Bonnies, Green Day
This has not been the season St. Bonaventure would have liked. The Bonnies woke up Monday morning with a 7-7 record in conference play, which wasn't what they were hoping for, and went to bed that night with it much worse. They were determined to be 1-13 instead, having been forced to forfeit six A-10 victories thanks to the recent discovery that junior college transfer Jamil Terrell hadn't been eligible, after all.

The Bonnies also have been barred from the Atlantic 10 tournament, meaning their season will end Saturday when they play host to Dayton.

It's a humble end to the outrageous individual season carved out by Bonnies junior guard Marques Green, surely one of the best players that most of America has never heard of.

St. Bonaventure has played just one game this season on a television station that broadcasts beyond the A-10's geographic footprint, meaning the good people of Arizona, Nevada, California, Wyoming, Texas ... have no idea how special a player Marques Green truly is.

Here's a hint:

He leads the A-10 in scoring (21.3) and assists (8.0), plus foul shooting (87.9 percent) and steals (2.6), plus three-pointers made (3.5). He is in the top 15 nationally in each of those categories except for scoring, where he ranks No. 27.

"Everyone in the A-10 knows his ability," says Bonnies coach Jan van Breda Kolff. "Outside the A-10 a lot of people probably aren't sure who Marques Green is. He's had a remarkable year. He's a great player, just one of those kids who gets better every day ... He's one of those coaches on the floor. We played him 40 minutes last game, and we generally only give him a minute's rest -- and that minute is usually about 30 seconds."

Green's season has caught even his coach by surprise. Last season, teamed with A-10 scoring leader J.R. Bremer (24.6 points per game), Green was able to float under the radar of opposing defenses for 15.4 points and six assists per game. With Bremer going to the NBA, van Breda Kolff went looking for another scoring guard to pair with Green, unsure how Green would handle being the focal point of opposing defenses. Van Breda Kolff's search on the recruiting trail didn't pan out, leaving Green to bear the brunt of defensive attention.

"J.R. scored so many points, and Marques scored some because everyone worried about J.R.," van Breda Kolff says. "For Marques to have the scoring output he has produced on a consistent basis is remarkable because teams do work hard at shutting him down. We try to encourage him to shoot more than he does, yet here he is second in the country in assists."

In the Bonnies' 94-89 victory last week against George Washington, Green scored his team's final nine points of regulation and 13 of 15 points in overtime. That's 22 of the Bonnies' final 24 points, and he had an assist on the other basket.

Green also is a psychology major who volunteers as a coach in the Police Athletic League back home in Pennsylvania.

Finally, and we're mentioning this last because obviously it hasn't hindered him in the least: At 5-foot-7, Green is the shortest player in the Atlantic 10.

Big deal.

Around the East

  • Maryland coach Gary Williams posted his 500th career victory Sunday at N.C. State, and all told he has had a better year on the bench than last season when the Terps won the national title. You don't think? The Terps lost four starters from that team, including all-time great Juan Dixon and sophomore Chris Wilcox to the NBA, and still have gone 11-4 in league play.

  • In the preseason, Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim said freshman Gerry McNamara might be the best shooter he's ever had. Shows what he knows. McNamara has missed four free throws -- all season. At 94.2 percent, McNamara is third nationally in foul shooting. Maybe Boeheim was right, after all.

  • Duke puts the sixth-longest home winning streak in ACC history on the line Thursday against Florida State, which defeated the Blue Devils 75-70 in Tallahassee, Fla., Feb. 2. The Blue Devils have struggled on the road this season, falling to 3-5 thanks to their loss Sunday at St. John's, but have won 27 straight games at Cameron Indoor Stadium. Duke already owns the two longest home winning streaks in ACC play, winning 46 straight from 1997-2000 and 36 in a row from 1991-93.

  • North Carolina freshmen are averaging 42 points per game, the No. 4 freshman scoring average in ACC history. At 35.6, Duke's freshmen are sixth.

  • The Big East has five of the country's top 11 freshman rebounders, led by Syracuse's Carmelo Anthony (No. 1, 9.6). Also on the list are Notre Dame's Torin Francis (third, 8.4), Boston College's Craig Smith (fifth, 8.1), Villanova's Jason Fraser (10th, 6.5) and Seton Hall's Kelly Whitney (11th, 6.0).

    Who's Hot
    Saint Joseph's junior Jameer Nelson is second in school history in career assists with 528, and if the Hawks play enough games in the A-10 and NCAA tournaments, he could pass No. 1 Rap Curry, who handed out 580 assists from 1991-94. And then play his senior season.

    Who's Not
    Virginia has lost six consecutive games to fall out of NCAA Tournament contention barring a surge to the ACC tournament title -- an unlikely event considering the Cavaliers have not won a single postseason game in four seasons under coach Pete Gillen. The Cavs are without their starting point guard, Keith Jenifer, whose indefinite suspension is looking more and more like a season-ending deal, and with their former starting center, All-ACC candidate Travis Watson, playing poorly off the bench after missing a recent academic commitment.

    Quote To Note
    "This is a very uncharacteristic problem regarding one of our institutions, and our presidents are determined something like this never happen again.."
    -- A-10 commissioner Linda Bruno on St. Bonaventure's postseason ban.

    Gregg Doyel covers college basketball for The Charlotte Observer and is a regular contributor for ESPN.com. He can be reached at gdoyel@charlotteobserver.com.








  •  More from ESPN...
    Katz: Weekly Watch
    ESPN.com's Andy Katz hands ...
    Who's on the bubble?
    Who's in, who's out? ESPN.com ...

    Gregg Doyel Archive

     ESPN Tools
    Email story
     
    Most sent
     
    Print story
     
    Daily email
     



    ESPN.com: Help | PR Media Kit | Sales Media Kit | Contact Us | Tools | Jobs at ESPN.com | Supplier Information | Copyright ©2007 ESPN Internet Ventures. Terms of Use and Privacy Policy and Safety Information/Your California Privacy Rights are applicable to this site. Employment opportunities at ESPN.