Page 1 of 3 123 LastLast
Results 1 to 25 of 62
  1. #1
    Too weird to live, and too rare to die. midgetonadonkey's Avatar
    Post Count
    23,737


    NCAA Tournament bid in first year with a conference.

    ing Aye!!!

  2. #2
    The Florida Gator Sam's Avatar
    Post Count
    1,322
    I agree. Go Islanders with Stott Carter!!! He's a Gator!!!

  3. #3
    Agent Wonderbread j-6's Avatar
    My Team
    Texas Longhorns
    Post Count
    4,284
    I thought A&M-Corpus were the Sea Aggies. Did they change the name trying to get their own iden y established?

  4. #4
    Too weird to live, and too rare to die. midgetonadonkey's Avatar
    Post Count
    23,737
    They were never the Sea Aggies.

  5. #5
    I thought A&M-Corpus were the Sea Aggies. Did they change the name trying to get their own iden y established?

    I thought that A&M Galveston is/was the Sea Aggies.

  6. #6
    The Last Good Sport samikeyp's Avatar
    My Team
    Texas Longhorns
    Post Count
    28,298
    I thought that A&M Galveston is/was the Sea Aggies.
    You are correct.

  7. #7
    Too weird to live, and too rare to die. midgetonadonkey's Avatar
    Post Count
    23,737
    http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2...13sportCat=ncb

    Islanders complete improbable eight-year trek

    By Kieran Darcy
    Page 2

    HOUSTON -- With two seconds left, everything went into slow motion. There was a baseball pass … then a second pass, intercepted by a blur in a white uniform. And then it was over.

    The Texas A&M-Corpus Christi players celebrated in typical style -- sprinting to center court, massing into a giant collective hug before donning their championship T-shirts. But there is nothing typical about their story.

    The coach … well, he took another leap. Pretty similar to the one he took 18 Marches ago. Except maybe, just maybe, a wee bit more vertical.

    And in that brief moment he had to himself, when his feet left the ground and his arms surged above his head, fists clenched, he didn't have time to contemplate the journey. He didn't have time to look at the logo on the uniforms, or the mascot, or the fans in the stands. All he had time to do was release an expression of pure happiness for his players and satisfaction for a job well done.

    After a long, challenging nine-year pregnancy, Ronnie Arrow had finally given birth to a basketball program.

    Corpus Christi
    Steve Nurenberg
    From no pencils to an NCAA Tournament berth, Ronnie Arrow built the Corpus Christi program from scratch.

    If Arrow looks vaguely familiar, he should. He's one of the perennial stars of NCAA Tournament highlight reels -- leaping in celebration after his No. 11 seed South Alabama Jaguars upset the Alabama Crimson Tide 86-84 in the first round of the 1989 Big Dance.

    Arrow brought the Jags to the Dance again in 1991. His time at South Alabama didn't end like a fairy tale, however -- as is so often the case in the coaching profession. Four games into the 1994-95 season, following back-to-back blowout losses to Southern Utah and Evansville, Arrow was forced to resign.

    Arrow, a coaching lifer, was suddenly without a job for the first time in his professional life. Prior to taking the South Alabama job in 1987, he'd been the head coach at San Jacinto Junior College for 10 years, winning three national championships.

    Arrow subsequently took a job as a national recruiter for Excel Communications, a long-distance phone company. But after a couple years away from the game, he realized he wanted back in.

    In the spring of 1998, Arrow got a phone call from his good friend Tim Floyd, now the coach at USC. Floyd had heard about an opening for a head coach at a school called Texas A&M-Corpus Christi. There was only one catch:

    The school didn't even have a team.

    Texas A&M-Corpus Christi is a university of 8,600 students in Corpus Christi (pop. 314,100), the eighth-largest city in Texas. The city is also a very popular vacation destination, since it sits right on the Gulf of Mexico. And the school is nicknamed The Island University, since the campus is on its very own island.

    The university has undergone several transformations since it was first established in 1947. In 1989 the Texas Legislature approved an expansion of the school to make it a four-year comprehensive university. In 1994 that expansion came to fruition with the arrival of the school's first freshmen and sop res.

    Corpus Christi
    Steve Nurenberg
    For the seven seniors on the Islanders, the Southland le means a dream trip to the NCAA Tournament.

    Another aspect of the university's expansion plan was the introduction of an athletics program. "Athletics is hugely important for student engagement and school spirit," says Ken DeDominicis, a vice president for ins utional advancement who was heavily involved in these efforts.

    With that in mind, DeDominicis proposed an unusual move. He wanted Texas A&M-Corpus Christi to go straight to Division I. "We wanted to get the name of the university out there," says DeDominicis. "Why not go for the whole enchilada?"

    The school wasn't going to field a football team, so the men's basketball team would be its highest-profile program. Now it just needed the right person to take the helm.

    "Took about two seconds," to accept the job, Arrow says now.

    But only when Arrow arrived at Corpus Christi full time did he realize just how big of a challenge he faced. "We had nothing. No papers, no pencils, no mascot," says Arrow. "We didn't even have a logo."

    He also didn't have any players, save for three transfers who had to sit out their first year anyway. So Arrow spent that whole first year on the road, recruiting. But he did still hold a Midnight Madness event to kick things off in the fall of '98. "I was in a tux, and my two assistants were there, with the three transfer kids and about six boosters," says Arrow. "We did some shooting, and some passing. … And I told the guys, 'Y'all will remember this, 'cause from now on there will be a lot more exposure.'

    "I thought it'd be, max, three years before we'd be in a conference."

    On Feb. 27, 2006, the Texas A&M-Corpus Christi Islanders wrapped up their seventh season of Division I men's basketball with a 93-69 home victory over Texas-Pan American. For the seventh straight season, there would be no March Madness in Corpus Christi.

    Heading to the Big Dance

    Texas A&M-Corpus Christi through the years:

    1999-2000 -- 13-13
    2000-2001 -- 14-14
    2001-2002 -- 12-15
    2002-2003 -- 14-15
    2003-2004 -- 15-11
    2004-2005 -- 20-8
    2005-2006 -- 20-8
    2006-2007 -- 26-6 (and counting)

    • Corpus Christi team page
    • Player statistics
    • Blue Ribbon tournament guide Insider

    That wasn't because of a lack of effort, or improvement. Arrow had guided the Islanders to an impressive 13-13 record in their first season, 1999-2000. The Islanders hovered around .500 for the next four seasons as well. Then, in 2004-05, the Islanders had a breakthrough campaign, going 20-8, including a noteworthy win at Florida State. And they followed that up with another 20-8 season in 2005-06, becoming the first independent team to register back-to-back 20-win seasons since Notre Dame in 1989.

    But without a conference affiliation, the Islanders had no chance to compete for an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament, and no realistic chance for an at-large bid either.

    Holding on to the slimmest of hopes that they might receive a call from the NIT, the Islanders kept practicing for almost two weeks after their final game last season. On Selection Sunday the team gathered at Beamer's -- a local burger joint -- to watch the NIT selection show and see if the phone would ring.

    "We wrote letters, and I kept calling people. People told me we were being considered," says Arrow. "But lookin' back, I don't know if an independent could ever get in [to a postseason tournament]. But I always had to keep that carrot out there for the kids."

    It was a disappointing day. But the players and coaches immediately turned their attention toward the future and went to work, knowing the 2006-07 season would be different. Knowing next season they'd have seven seniors. And knowing they'd finally be joining a conference.

    Ten minutes before the tip-off of the Southland Conference tournament championship game this past Sunday afternoon, the national anthem was playing in the arena. Inside the Islanders' shoe box of a locker room, nestled in the far left-hand corner of the gym, associate head coach Andy Helton was barking at the players. "Let's go git it!"

    Corpus Christi
    Steve Nurenberg
    Seven-foot center Chris Daniels was the Southland Conference Player of the Year.

    The team then huddled up in the middle of the room to say the "Our Father," their standard pregame ritual. But before they launched into the prayer, Arrow leaned in from behind the huddle and said, in his raspy Southern twang, "We're champions, boys. Let's go prove it."

    Yes, this season the Islanders finally had that chance.

    On July 1, 2006, Texas A&M-Corpus Christi was formally admitted into the Southland Conference, meaning these seven seniors would finally get a chance -- one single chance -- to make an NCAA Tournament, and make a dream come true:

    • Taurean Mitc . One of Texas A&M-Corpus Christi's starting guards, Mitc actually grew up in Corpus Christi. But that doesn't mean he always wanted to be an Islander. "As a freshman [in high school], I'd never heard of the team," says Mitc . "I knew most of the players, and I had played with them, and I was like, 'This is not a good team!'" But Arrow was the first Division I coach to offer Mitc a scholarship and he decided to stay home and play in front of his family and friends.

    • Josh Ervin. Ervin is Mitc 's backcourt running mate and fellow co-captain. In fact, the two are practically interchangeable -- they're the same size (6-foot-1), and both handle the ball very well and will knock down an open perimeter shot. Ervin hails from Houston.

    • Kevin Menifee. A 6-5 swingman from Pittsburgh who can lock a player down defensively and swarm the glass for rebounds -- all while appearing to barely break a sweat -- Menifee is also the brother of former UConn and current WNBA star Swin Cash.

    • Seth Engelken. A 6-7 power forward from Missouri, Engelken will scratch and claw for every loose ball and rebound he can get his fingers on, and he also handles the ball pretty well for a big man.

    • Chris Daniels. The 7-footer from San Antonio was the Southland Conference's Player of the Year this season (15.2 ppg, 6.6 rpg, 1.5 bpg), and has NBA scouts checking him out. He can opt to return for one more season at Corpus Christi after regaining the year of eligibility he lost due to academics as a freshman. He says he probably will return for one more year.

    Daniels is also quite the character. One of his many nicknames on the team is Big Greasy -- "because I used to weigh 300 pounds. And my lips are extremely big. I got teased a lot as a little kid. Imagine these lips on a 6- or 7-year-old's body!" Deep down, Daniels seems like quite the teddy bear -- which is rather ironic since, according to the team's media guide, he sleeps with a teddy bear. "Aw man they're just playin', I don't sleep with no teddy bear," Daniels replied when questioned about that. "They just told me to say that for fun."

    • Josh Washington. J-Wet (because his jump shots usually splash through the net) is the team's sixth man, and he provides instant offense from behind the 3-point arc (he's the team's second-leading scorer). Washington hails from Lubbock, Texas, and played two seasons for Bob Knight at Texas Tech before transferring to Corpus Christi, hoping to get more playing time. Washington also stands out from the rest of his teammates because he wears a green T-shirt during warm-ups, while the rest of the team wears blue shirts. "I've been wearing it since our first conference game, and it's brought me good luck," says Washington. "The guys call it the green light shirt."

    Corpus Christi
    Steve Nurenberg
    Senior guard Josh Ervin averages 8.2 points per game and shoots 40 percent from the 3-point arc.

    • Cedric Smith. Most teams can't afford the luxury of bringing a player as good as Smith off the bench. He's the team's third-leading scorer at 9.8 ppg, plus he's shooting 59.2 percent from the field -- which is actually down from the 66.2 percent he posted a season ago, which was second in Division I. Odds are, if Smith puts up a shot, it's going in.

    Besides those seven seniors, Texas A&M-Corpus Christi features:

    • Scooby Johnson. Scooby, like Smith, shoots a very high percentage from the field (60.4 percent), and averages a similar 9.2 ppg off the bench. He's also the guy on the team most likely to have his own late-night talk show someday.

    • Matt Slatnick. Every Cinderella needs a walk-on who can play and Slatnick fills that role perfectly. The 5-11 sop re from Austin can really fill it up from beyond the 3-point arc if he gets open looks.

    • Carl Nelson. Nelson, a 6-11 sop re, only averages six minutes per game, but provides valuable breather time for the other big men, particularly Daniels.

    And then there's the scout team, aka the "White Team" (because they always wear white uniforms in practice) -- the group of five guys who don't often see serious minutes during the games but are responsible for learning the opponent's plays and showing them in practice. That group is led by 6-foot sop re guard Dominique Taylor, and also includes 5-10 freshman Brandon Roberson, 6-foot redshirt freshman Adan Montalvo, 6-5 junior Cameron Teague and 6-7 redshirt freshman Chad Nelson.

    Seven Islanders average at least 20 minutes per game (and an eighth, Engelken, averages 15.2), and no player averages more than 27 minutes -- meaning this team is pretty deep for a Cinderella, and Arrow keeps his players fresh.

    Also, Texas A&M-Corpus Christi is second in the nation in field-goal percentage (52.4 percent), behind only the defending national champs, Florida (52.7 percent) -- pretty darn impressive.

    The Islanders didn't have any eye-opening nonconference wins this season. They lost at Oklahoma State by 22, at Mississippi State by 24, at UNLV by 10 and at Purdue by 18. But all those games were before January. The Islanders rolled through their first year of conference play, winning the regular-season Southland le with a 14-2 record (23-6 overall).

    Last Thursday, the first day of the Southland tournament, the Islanders took care of No. 8 seed SE Louisiana 80-72, shooting 59.6 percent but committing 26 turnovers, which allowed the Lions to hang around. On Friday, the Islanders knocked off No. 4 seed McNeese St. 87-66, shooting 56.4 percent and pretty much controlling the game the whole way.

    That set up Sunday's championship game against No. 3 seed Northwestern State, which won the conference tournament a year ago, and went on to upset Iowa as a No. 14 seed in the first round of the Big Dance.

    A fitting opponent for the final step.

    With two seconds left, everything went into slow motion.

    Corpus Christi
    Steve Nurenberg
    Team of destiny? Chris Daniels and his teammates won't be an easy win for Wisconsin.

    The Islanders had jumped out to a 44-36 halftime lead, but the Demons kept hanging around, and hanging around, and hanging around. And all of a sudden Northwestern State trailed by only one, 79-78, with two seconds to play.

    Josh Ervin stood at the foul line, to shoot two. But there was a delay of several minutes, as the referees tried to get the correct time displayed on the scoreboard. Then Northwestern State called a timeout, to ice the shooter.

    Ronnie Arrow and the Islanders were going to have to wait even longer.

    Finally, Ervin received the ball from the referee. Dribble, dribble, dribble, spin, dribble … good. Dribble, dribble, dribble, spin, dribble … good. 81-78. Timeout Northwestern State. Following that, timeout Texas A&M-Corpus Christi.

    Then -- finally -- there was a baseball pass … then a second pass, intercepted by a blur in a white uniform. The Islanders were going to the NCAA Tournament.

    And several minutes later, standing on a ladder holding a pair of scissors, Ronnie Arrow cut the cord, and held his piece aloft for the crowd that had gathered below to see. He lingered on that ladder for a moment. And his eyes fell on the logo on the uniforms, and the mascot, and the fans that had poured down from the stands.

    "This is a culmination of all the players who for eight, nine years have helped build this program," says Arrow. "We've come a long way."

    Now he gets to watch his baby grow.

  8. #8
    Just happy to be dancin after owning the southland. The 7' CD will score and hopefully rebound against Wisc.

  9. #9
    Wisconsin Spurs Fan Dre_7's Avatar
    My Team
    Wisconsin Badgers
    Post Count
    6,507
    No Brian Butch, so their 7 footer will have a nice little game, but it wont really matter cuz Wisconsin will easily handle A&MCC.

    But speaking of butch, he did practice (AND SHOOT WITH HIS RIGHT HAND!!) yesterday. A great sign. If We are able to get to the elite eight and he is able to play, that will change the whole outlook of the potential Florida v. Wisconsin matchup!

  10. #10
    Corpus Christi Spurs Fan Phenomanul's Avatar
    My Team
    Air Force Falcons
    Post Count
    10,363
    Go Islanders!!!!!

    Wiki Wiki Wiki Wiki...

  11. #11
    License to Lillard tlongII's Avatar
    My Team
    Oregon State Beavers
    Post Count
    28,727
    No Brian Butch, so their 7 footer will have a nice little game, but it wont really matter cuz Wisconsin will easily handle A&MCC.

    But speaking of butch, he did practice (AND SHOOT WITH HIS RIGHT HAND!!) yesterday. A great sign. If We are able to get to the elite eight and he is able to play, that will change the whole outlook of the potential Florida v. Wisconsin matchup!

    You won't get past the Ducks.

  12. #12
    License to Lillard tlongII's Avatar
    My Team
    Oregon State Beavers
    Post Count
    28,727
    Corpus Christi scores the first 10 points of the game!

  13. #13
    Corpus Christi Spurs Fan Phenomanul's Avatar
    My Team
    Air Force Falcons
    Post Count
    10,363
    Corpus Christi scores the first 10 points of the game!

    Hopefully they can keep Wisconsin at bay the rest of the way.

  14. #14
    Saytowns Fawtbox King lebomb's Avatar
    My Team
    UTSA Roadrunners
    Post Count
    10,746
    Hopefully they can keep Wisconsin at bay the rest of the way.

    X2............Im rooting for em...since they wooped our asses! Also, they are representing the southland conf.

  15. #15
    Everything > Jim Rome SoCalSpursFan's Avatar
    Post Count
    901
    16-4...hmmm

  16. #16
    Veteran ace3g's Avatar
    My Team
    TAMU-CC Islanders
    Post Count
    40,447
    I go to TAMUCC, hopefully Josh Washington is ok, he is our best 3 point shooter and a 2 yr student of Bob Knight at Texas Tech

  17. #17
    TAMUCC is really kicking the out of Wisconsin. Hopefully they will keep the defense strong and hold off Wisconsin in the 2nd half.

  18. #18
    Dr. Pepper Johnny_Blaze_47's Avatar
    My Team
    Texas State Bobcats
    Post Count
    24,692
    Southland!

  19. #19
    YEAH!! The best game yet

  20. #20
    Saytowns Fawtbox King lebomb's Avatar
    My Team
    UTSA Roadrunners
    Post Count
    10,746
    Islanders!!! representin teh SOUTHLAND.

    Northwestern of last year??? Upset???

  21. #21
    Dr. Pepper Johnny_Blaze_47's Avatar
    My Team
    Texas State Bobcats
    Post Count
    24,692
    Dre_7 might plotz if this keeps up.

  22. #22
    Corpus Christi Spurs Fan Phenomanul's Avatar
    My Team
    Air Force Falcons
    Post Count
    10,363
    Watch it in Tivo later or keep up with the thread..... Damn! And I'm stuck at work at the moment.

  23. #23
    Watch it in Tivo later or keep up with the thread..... Damn! And I'm stuck at work at the moment.
    No matter what you have to watch this 1st half later... talk about defense smothering a team. Under 5 minutes left in the half and Wisconsin has 9 points. Amazing

  24. #24
    Wisconsin Spurs Fan Dre_7's Avatar
    My Team
    Wisconsin Badgers
    Post Count
    6,507
    One word so far: Embarrasing.

  25. #25
    License to Lillard tlongII's Avatar
    My Team
    Oregon State Beavers
    Post Count
    28,727
    Corpus Christi!

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •