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A snapshot of Louisville-Michigan

April 8, 2013 By Frank Burlison Leave a Comment

Louisville 82, Michigan 76

Why Louisville won: The Cardinals turned in a much better offensive performance than did Michigan’s last two opponents (Florida and Syracuse) and crushed the Wolverines with 15 offensive rebounds.

The Turning Point: With his team trailing by 12 points, Luke Hancock hit four 3s in a stretch of two minutes late in the first half.

The Star: Luke Hancock came off the bench to score a team-high 22 points to go with three assists and two steals.

The X Factor: Sophomore forward Chane Behanan scored 15 points and grabbed 12 rebounds – seven of those on the offensive end.

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A look at Monday night’s finale . . . a prediction, too

April 7, 2013 By Frank Burlison Leave a Comment

Frank looks at Monday night’s championship game:

No. 4 (South) Michigan (31-7) vs. No.1 (Midwest) Louisville (34-5), 9:23 p.m., CBS

Records vs. NCAA tournament field: Michigan 13-6, Louisville 16-5.

Records vs. common opponents: Michigan State beat Pittsburgh (67-62) and Syracuse (61-56); Louisville won two of three with Syracuse (winning 58-53 and 78-61 and losing 70-68) and beat Pittsburgh (64-61).

Best individual matchups: Trey Burke (6-0, So., Michigan) vs. Peyton Siva (6-0, Sr., Louisville) when Louisville is in man-to-man; Mitch McGary (6-9, Fr., Michigan) vs. Gorgui Dieng (6-10, Jr.,

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Stars? Who needs ’em? Not Louisville, Michigan

April 6, 2013 By Frank Burlison 1 Comment

ATLANTA – What bails a basketball team on a night when its best offensive players are struggling to score?

Uh . . . that’s a rhetorical question.

A team can always rely on its defense to get it out of the stickiest of jams:

It’s the oldest and most reliable of the staples of Hoops Coaching 101.

Of course, a few other offensive options can always come in handy, too.

Both NCAA Championship semifinal winners illustrated that perspective Saturday night in the Georgia Dome.

Russ Smith, Gorgui Dieng and Peyton Siva – who have combined to average 39 points this season as their team’s three-best scorers – missed 21 of 28 shots from the floor Saturday night for Louisville.

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Michigan-Syracuse snap shot

April 6, 2013 By Frank Burlison 3 Comments

Michigan 61, Syracuse 56

Why Michigan won: On a night when Trey Burke, Tim Hardaway Jr. and Nik Stauskas were just five of 29 from the field, freshmen Glenn Robinson III, Mitch McGary, Spike Albrecht and Caris Levert combined for 34 points.

The Turning Point: Reserve Jordan Morgan took a charge from Brandon Triche on a potential score-tying shot with 19 seconds to go.

The Star: Post Mitch McGary had 10 points, 12 rebounds and six assists to go with blocks on the opening two possessions of Syracuse to get his team into the title game.

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Snap shot on Louisville-Wichita State

April 6, 2013 By Frank Burlison 2 Comments

Louisville 72, Wichita State 68

Why Louisville won: The Cardinals struggled to turn the Shockers over for most of the game and got a combined shooting effort of 7 of 26 from Russ Smith and Peyton Siva but still pulled it out via the clutch shooting of reserves Luke Hancock and walk-on Tim Henderson.
The Turning Point: Louisville went from its zone to a man to man in the second half and it took away the WSU rhythm it had played with vs. the zone — then went back to the zone in time to force a key 24-second violation.

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Meet Frank

Frank Burlison

Frank Burlison is a well-regarded basketball writer who was inducted into the U.S. Basketball Writers Association Hall of Fame in 2005. His opinions on the potential of high school and college players are widely respected and sought by college coaches and NBA scouts, personnel directors and general managers from coast to coast. Oh, yes – he can offer plenty of thoughts on movies, television and pop music. Yes, he can rank those, too. Hint: He’s a big The Godfather, Larry Sanders, The Wire and The Beatles loyalist.

To learn more about Frank's scouting services, click here.

Endorsements

Gary McKnight

Frank Burlison is one of the most knowledgeable basketball people in the business! His passion for the game puts him at the top of the list. There are very few people whose evaluation skills I trust like I do Frank’s!

Gary McKnight
Winningest coach (892-81) in California boys’ basketball history during his 29 seasons at Santa Ana (Calif.) Mater Dei

Marques Johnson

Marques Johnson

I have been a fan of Frank Burlison’s skills as a talent evaluator for over twenty years. He stands out as one of the absolute best in the business.

Marques Johnson
1977 National Player of the Year, 5x NBA All-Star

George Raveling

George Raveling

I’ve known Frank for at least 35 years and have the utmost respect for his writing as well as his understanding of, and insight into, basketball. His ability to evaluate basketball prospects is almost impeccable. Most coaches and scouts watch a player and can tell you how good he is NOW. What separates Frank from the others is that he can watch the same player and tell you how good he can be two or three years down the line.

George Raveling
3x Pac-10 Coach of the Year, Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Famer
Director of International Basketball, Nike

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