‘Immature’ Illini Next Up for Gophers
ESPN college basketball analyst
Dan
Dakich told Sports Headliners that despite having four
seniors who average more than 20 minutes per game, the Illinois team
that plays at Williams Arena tomorrow night against the Gophers needs
better leadership.
Illinois, with guard Demetri McCamey,
forwards Mike Davis and Bill Cole, and center Mike
Tisdale, was expected to be among the Big Ten’s best teams and for
awhile was a top 25 ranked school, but the Illini have lost five of their
last seven. Illinois is 5-5 in conference games and 15-8 overall, and
has followers wondering if a rally and possible NCAA tournament
invitation will happen.
“Really immature (team),” Dakich said on
Sunday when asked what’s wrong with the Illini. “Shouldn’t be (with)
four seniors, all productive seniors. I went to their practice. Really
immature group. (Coach) Bruce Weber is catching a lot of heat,
but ask anybody in basketball, he’s a great basketball coach.
“…This should be the easiest coaching year
of his life. Because these guys should be taking care of the locker
room like Ohio State’s guys do. It’s not getting it done. Immaturity,
it doesn’t play in the Big Ten.”
McCamey is among the conference’s most
talented players. He ranks second in league assists per game at
6.70. He averages 14.7 points and Davis averages 11.3. Davis and
Tisdale are two of the conference’s best tandem rebounders. Cole is a
sometimes starter who makes .406 percent of his three point attempts.
Minnesota’s anxious fan base can only hope Illinois doesn’t come
prepared to play its best. The Gophers are a troubled team, too,
having lost three of their last four games. After point guard Al
Nolen went out of the lineup following the Michigan win on January
22, the Gophers managed to beat Northwestern at home before losing three
consecutive games including last Sunday to unbeaten and No. 1 ranked
Ohio State, a team Dakich and a lot of other experts admire.
The Buckeyes have perimeter players who
can score and a highly effective inside scorer in sensational freshman
forward Jared Sullinger. That’s a combination Minnesota can only
envy. The Gophers have inconsistent inside play and simply lack
playmakers on the outside, needing multiple players who can shoot and
also score off the dribble.
“You better have playmakers, and that’s
what’s hurting Minnesota,” said Dakich, the former Indiana player and
head coach at Bowling Green. “Up here when we did the Minnesota-Indiana
game (January 4), Al Nolen went and made plays. Whether it’s hitting
shots or creating for others. …”
Freshmen guards Austin Hollins and
Chip Armelin have shown some promise in filling a playmaker role,
along with Blake Hoffarber, out of position but assigned the
point guard role with Nolen out indefinitely with his broken foot.
Armelin, who scored a career high 14 points on Sunday against Ohio
State, showed speed to the basket and ability to improvise his shot
coming off the bench. Hollins got his first start, played 32 minutes
and scored eight points.
The Gophers are 5-6 in the Big Ten, 16-7 overall. Do coach Tubby
Smith and his players have reason to be concerned about receiving a
much anticipated NCAA invite?
“I think they have work to do, because who
can’t you lose to in this league?” Dakich said.