Richmond’s college basketball team did bettors a huge favor with a last-second basket on Monday night.
Right before time expired in the team’s game against Syracuse, Richmond’s Jason Nelson got off a three that swooshed through the hoop. It wasn’t enough to get the Spiders a win as the Orange took the Vivid Seats Empire Classic semifinals game, 74-71.
However, it was enough for Richmond to cover the spread. Syracuse was favored at -4, which got them a point away from swinging the spread in their favor.
Richmond’s last-second bucket got those who bet on the Spiders to cover a nice little payout that didn’t seem possible until Nelson’s shot fell down in Richmond’s favor.
Well, even if the basket didn’t do much for Richmond besides pad the stat sheet, it did give those who needed the Spiders to cover a happy Monday night.
As for those who needed Syracuse to get the cover, well, there’s always next time.
Historically, 12-seeds in the Men’s NCAA tournament fare well against their 5-seed counterparts. It’s one of the more popular upset picks in brackets for diehard tournament fans and casual observers alike.
But when No. 5 Iowa (-9.5) took the court against No. 12 Richmond in Buffalo on Thursday afternoon, most expected the Hawkeyes to take care of business. Unlike many of their past predecessors, they would run roughshod on the Spiders. How could they not?
Iowa had won 12 of its last 14 games, including the Big Ten conference tournament title. The Hawkeyes had the potential National Player of the Year in Keegan Murray and one of the country’s top sharpshooters in Jordan Bohannon. Many — including this misguided writer — had them going to the Final Four as a dark horse.
None of that resume mattered to Richmond, who upset the Hawkeyes 67-63, and became the first bonafide Cinderella of this tournament. The Spiders effectively flipped many brackets, as far as bettors with Tipico Sportsbook were concerned. Sixty percent of the people who bet the spread on this game had Iowa covering that -9.5. A whopping 86 percent of moneyline bets came in on the Hawkeyes. In other words, not many saw this coming!
What was jarring about the Spiders’ victory over one of the hottest teams in the country was their complete control. Iowa never seriously threatened Richmond, at least in a way where they couldn’t recover quickly. That’s thanks to the steady leadership of senior Jacob Gilyard, who pitched in 24 points and dagger after dagger through the black and gold’s heart.
The Spiders advance to the Second Round of the tournament for the first time since the early days of the Barack Obama administration, back in 2011. If they can take down a hot squad Iowa, you’d probably do well to bet on their chances moving forward against Providence (-2.5).
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Davidson vs Richmond prediction, college basketball game preview, how to watch, lines, and why each team might – or might not – win on Sunday in the Atlantic 10 Championship.
Davidson vs Richmond prediction, college basketball game preview, how to watch: Sunday, March 13
Davidson vs Richmond Game Preview, Atlantic 10 Championship How To Watch
It’s that time of year. Where half-court heaves break bettors’ hearts, too.
One of the best aspects of March Madness is how it highlights mid-major schools. Whereas most of the regular season understandably focuses on the blue-bloods, the third month of the calendar year is the scrappy underdog’s time to shine.
By that same token, games between two scrappers can be impossible to predict. When two dark horse teams are giving it their all, when they have nothing to lose — that is, except a potential bid in the NCAA Tournament proper — all prognostication goes out the window.
Enter Richmond (2.5-point favorites) and Dayton in the Men’s Atlantic-10 Conference tournament semifinals.
A low consensus spread and pregame over/under of 130.5 meant the betting market saw this high stakes tilt as evenly-matched. Up until the final few minutes of the game, it was. But then Richmond pulled away. And then Richmond couldn’t stop making free throws to pad a comfortable lead and place in the Men’s A-10 Tournament Final.
Congratulations to the Spiders on a 68-61 win. Also, congratulations to bettors who, at least, salvaged that generous over/under of 130.5.
Oh, no. 68 plus 64 is (counting fingers slowly) 132. Oh my goodness. A credit to Elvis and Dayton for playing to the final buzzer and maintaining their pride and dignity.
Otherwise, Richmond-Dayton over/under bettors: We are in your corner. We are your friends. Everything is going to be okay. Well, until the NCAA Tournament itself starts.
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Reflections on the Wisconsin Badgers’ loss to the Richmond Spiders.
Big-time college basketball played on national television at a neutral site just before Thanksgiving is not the same as playing pickup basketball on the playground in many ways. Yet, there is a basic principle about basketball, no matter where it is played, which applies to the sport and needs to be understood at all times. The Wisconsin Badgers hopefully absorbed that principle after losing to the Richmond Spiders on Monday night in Brooklyn.
That principle is simply this: When you miss a lot of long-range shots, take the ball to the basket. That’s it. That’s the tweet. If you miss 25-footers, create some two-footers or dunks, or at least some six-foot floaters. You can go back to the 3-point line at some stage of the game, but establish the ability to go to the rim and put the defense on its heels.
This isn’t a sermon on needing to play basketball inside-out, starting with forays to the tin and then kicking the ball out for threes. If one has shooters, there is nothing especially wrong or misguided about starting with 3-point shots to create drives to the basket on subsequent possessions. If the defense begins a game playing against the drive and allowing the jump shot, fine — you’re going to have to make some jump shots at some point. Shooters have to take them if given them.
However, if a team misses a ton of threes at the outset, it has to be willing AND able to go to the rack and collect foul shots. That is basic basketball. It is not a foreign concept or a strange notion to anyone who has played or watched the sport, whether on a playground or in an arena.
Very simply, Wisconsin missed 11 of its first 12 3-pointers against Richmond. The Badgers finished the night 7 of 27 from long distance. It is true that Wisconsin committed 15 turnovers, and that its offense simply didn’t function well against the Spiders. “Playing better” obviously fixes a lot of problems. Yet, this wasn’t just about “playing better.” This is more precisely about playing smarter and with more force.
If you’re going to struggle from 3-point range, you have to be able to formulate a Plan B. That Plan B when the long shots aren’t falling is to get to the foul line. Wisconsin generated only 14 free throws against Richmond. That is a problem. When threes don’t fall, someone has to be the alpha dog on the court and get two free throws against robust and vigorous defense. Wisconsin produced three players — Nate Reuvers, Aleem Ford, and Kobe King — who earned four free throw attempts, but no one earned more.
The next time Wisconsin shoots under 26 percent from three, the Badgers need to have 26 or more free throws as a counterbalance. That is a simple way of conveying the need to have a Plan B when shots don’t fall.
Wisconsin fell to the Richmond Spiders in the Legends Classic on Monday night. Here are the top three takeaways from the 62-52 loss.
Wisconsin was handed its second defeat of the season on Monday night, falling to Richmond 62-52 in the Legends Classic. Here are our top three takeaways from the game for the Badgers.
Wisconsin never had any business being in this game.
The Badgers certainly didn’t play their best defense of the season against the Spiders, who shot 46.4 and 35.3 percent from the field overall and long-range, respectively. Richmond guard Blake Francis torched Wisconsin with 19 points, many of them coming in critical moments when the Badgers were threatening to tie or take the lead.
However, many of the shots Francis knocked down were quite difficult, and Wisconsin was able to hold the other two members of Richmond’s high-scoring backcourt trio, Jacob Gilyard and Nick Sherod, well in check. The Badgers held the Spiders to 62 points, far below their season average of a 92.5 coming into last night’s contest. Overall, the Badgers’ defense was sufficient to win the game.
What doomed Wisconsin from start to finish last night was its putrid performance offensively.
The Badgers shot a woeful 17-50 (34%) from the field including just 7-27 (25.9%) from beyond the arc. They also committed a season-high 15 turnovers. Simply put, very few teams are going to win games when they put up those kinds of numbers.
However, Wisconsin somehow was still in this one late in the second half and found itself tied with Richmond at 50 with a little under five minutes remaining. The Badgers didn’t make a single field goal the rest of the game, which fit into the narrative of the rest of the contest for Bucky: whenever Wisconsin had the opportunity to tie or take the lead throughout most of the game, in many cases the Badgers either threw up an awful shot, committed a turnover or gave up a silly foul.
As a result, no matter how close the score was, it just never felt like Wisconsin had a chance in this one.
Wisconsin looks increasingly likely to be a team that will live or die by the three this season.
When the Badgers have gotten hot from long-range this season, this is a group that has looked capable of beating just about anyone they will face on their schedule. However, when the shots inevitably are not falling at some point, as was the case against Richmond last night, Wisconsin will be in danger of losing to most squads it will match up with the rest of the way.
It is true that last season’s squad experienced a similar dynamic. The difference between then and now? Over the last few years, if the shots weren’t dropping and Wisconsin needed a bucket, it could dump the ball down low to arguably the nation’s top post player in Ethan Happ, who was obviously more than capable of creating an opportunity for himself near the rim.
It’s unreasonable to expect him to be as deadly in the paint as Happ, but at this point, the Badgers desperately need Nate Reuvers to emerge as a consistent scoring option in the post to make this offense a bit more multidimensional.
Reuvers very well could become that guy at some point this season. We have seen flashes of brilliance from him in the paint on multiple occasions so far this year, including the first half in last night’s contest in which he scored ten points and deployed an array of moves near the basket.
However, the consistency from Reuvers was not there the rest of the game; he would ultimately finish 6-14 from the field, and like the rest of his teammates, could not buy a basket in some critical moments.
While Micah Potter’s return next month could help immensely in giving the Badgers more of a presence down low, Greg Gard needs more physicality and efficiency from Reuvers moving forward.
Tyler Wahl continues to impress.
This feels like it has been one of the top takeaways from each game Wisconsin has played this season, but man is Tyler Wahl fun to watch.
He’s had a hiccup here and there in a few games this season, but overall, the true freshman from Minnesota does not play like a rookie and continues to live up to the reputation he built on the recruiting trail as a versatile, hard-nosed player who will do all the little things to help his team win games.
He finished with a career-high seven points, two rebounds and a steal in 16 minutes of action against the Spiders last night, with that steal coming in a huge moment for the Badgers: with Wisconsin down five with seconds to go in the first half, Wahl poked the ball away as Richmond was setting itself up for the final shot before intermission and proceeded to drill a buzzer-beater from half-court. The shot brought the Badgers back within two and looked like it would provide them with a much-needed boost of momentum.
Wahl’s long-range shooting continues to come along nicely as well: in addition to that heave from half-court, he knocked down a big three in the second half to keep Wisconsin within four with about 11 minutes to go in the game.
Overall, Wahl continues to look like a guy who is going to have a major impact on the success of this program throughout his career in Madison. I have a feeling Gard is going to be giving him an increasingly long leash off the bench as the season moves forward, especially given the inconsistent play of others in the rotation.
Wisconsin takes on Richmond in the Legends Classic on Monday evening. Badger fans should be sure to know these three opposing players.
Wisconsin (4-1) will look to claim its fifth consecutive victory when it takes on Richmond (4-0) out of the Atlantic 10 tonight in the Legends Classic at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, N.Y.
Tonight’s matchup will be just the second time that these two programs have faced each other, with the first meeting coming in the First Round of the 2004 NCAA Tournament when the Badgers, a No. 6 seed, took down the No. 11 Spiders, 76-64.
Wisconsin is coming off of an 88-70 win over Green Bay at the Kohl Center last Thursday, while Richmond took down one of Bucky’s foes from earlier in November, McNeese State, 87-57 on Friday.
The Badgers are currently six-point favorites in this one, but the Spiders have had one of the nation’s most potent offenses to this point in the season and have already taken down one high major opponent this month in Vanderbilt.
Here are the three players on the other side who Badger fans should keep a close eye on throughout tonight’s contest.
Sherod was off to an excellent start to his sophomore season around this time a year ago, averaging 12.7 points, 5.2 rebounds, 2.8 assists and 1.3 steals per game. Unfortunately, he then suffered a torn ACL in Richmond’s sixth contest of the season and would go on the miss the team’s final 27 games.
Four games into his junior season, it’s safe to say the 6-4 guard has come back from that injury with a vengeance.
Sherod is tied for the team lead in scoring at 20.8 points per game, which is the second-highest mark in the Atlantic 10. He’s also shooting a blistering 55.6 percent from beyond the arc, again the second-highest mark in the conference behind the next player on this list and the No. 13 percentage in the country.
Richmond ranks third nationally in scoring at an average of 92.5 points per game, which is thanks in large part to an outstanding trio of guards that includes Sherod, Blake Francis (averaging 18.5 points) and the next player on this list.
Gilyard is the Spider that’s tied with Sherod for the highest scoring average on the team, but the junior guard is probably Richmond’s best overall player. The 5-9, 160-pounder will be the smallest guy on the court tonight, but he’s a force to be reckoned with on both ends of the court.
During his first two years in college, Gilyard racked up 868 points, 290 assists and 177 steals; since 1992, only Jason Kidd and Allen Iverson accumulated each of those numbers by the end of their sophomore seasons. He was named to the Atlantic 10 All-Defensive Team and Second Team All-Conference a year ago after leading the Atlantic 10 in steals and averaging 16.2 points and 5.2 assists per game.
It’s been more of the same for Gilyard in 2019. His three-point percentage is tops in the conference and No.7 nationally, and his overall field goal percentage is second-best in the Atlantic 10 and No. 20 overall. Gilyard is also averaging more steals than all but 13 Division I players.
If Richmond knocks off the Badgers tonight, Gilyard will be a major reason why.
Golden’s production has taken a bit of a dip this season as a result of the emergence of that high-scoring backcourt trio, but the 6-10 junior is still a guy who could give the Badgers some problems tonight in the post.
He was a Third-Team All-Conference performer each of his first two seasons at Richmond, the first player in program history to earn that distinction. Golden was the team’s leading scorer in 2018-19 at 17.2 points per game and finished the season with 1,083 career points to his name already, a total no other Spider had reached by the end of a sophomore season.
He also chipped in 7.1 rebounds per game and had more assists than all but one other player 6-10 or taller. That other player? Wisconsin’s Ethan Happ.
Again, while his numbers are obviously down through Richmond’s first four games, Golden remains a dangerous player who must be accounted for, and you can be sure Wisconsin will have his name circled on the scouting report.