As the Virginia Tech men's basketball team gears up for
the second half of conference play, and the stretch run in February that will
ultimately define this team, there are some statistics that illuminate the
surprising first half play of a team that few predicted would be in this
position. But, those statistics don't tell the conclusive story, and in fact
there is other evidence that falls in the category of
things-that-make-you-go-hmm.
There is no question that the Hokies, along with fellow
raft boat survivor Miami, have been the surprises thus far in the ACC, as well
as nationally. Tech has catapulted to fourth place in the conference, and three
of their four losses in conference play have come against the "Big
Three" of North Carolina, Wake Forest and Duke, who happen to occupy the
first three spots in the conference.
It was just about this time last year, at the beginning of
February when the Hokies faced Providence at home with an 8-10 record, that the
team started its unlikely late season run in their final Big East conference
season. The Hokies went into that Friar game with a 1-6 conference mark, and
were simply trying to win enough games to get to New York City and avoid another
Big East cellar dwelling finish. That team won six of the next nine to finish
14-13 (7-9 Big East) and make the BE Tournament, where they went 1-1.
This season, the expectations have been increased as the
team hits that same stretch run. Some are even daring to use the word that is
mostly unheard of around here in recent years. Is Virginia Tech a
"bubble" team? To suggest that does not necessarily become proof of
one's losing contact with reality. While the NCAA tournament is still something
that is a definite long shot, one can make an argument that this team has an
opportunity to play its way into the NIT. To even think that the faithful will
show an eagerness to keep up with the RPI of the team and carefully peruse the
schedule of the Hokies is a most welcome development. To see people invest in
every individual game at this point in the season is a surprise to most
everyone.
Finding the ingredients for this surprising success for
the Hokies, while getting out your tarot cards to see if there is some 'Nawlins
shimmy on the horizon for the team's chances at post-season play, invites some
bewilderment at how it all has happened to this point.
Much has been made of the struggles of this team to
rebound effectively, and the statistics bear that out. The Hokies rank dead last
in the conference in rebounding, hardly a surprise to anyone that has closely
followed the team. Tech is dead last in the conference in total number of
rebounds per game, averaging just 32.5 per game. The Hokies are also dead last
in defensive rebounds per game, and rank only ahead of Florida State in
offensive rebounding in the conference.
Throw all of that together in your rebounding gumbo and
you have a team that is eleventh in the conference in rebounding margin. Not
only are they last, but they also are lagging greatly behind the other
conference teams. Only two ACC teams not named Virginia Tech have a negative
rebounding margin at this point, and they are Virginia at -0.3 and North
Carolina State at -0.6. Then there are the Hokies, who are being outrebounded by
4.7 rebounds per game.
Ouch. That isn't just a problem area, but something close
to seismic proportions. In fact, Virginia Tech has won the rebounding battle in
only three of 20 games thus far.
While that area continues to be a source of great concern,
it has been mostly neutralized by the outstanding job that the team has done in
two areas: creating turnovers and protecting the ball, something the Hokies have
proven to be most capable of this year. Tech ranks behind only N.C. State in the
conference in fewest turnovers per game, while coming in just behind North
Carolina in the conference in forcing turnovers per game.
With a turnover margin of +6.54 per game, the Hokies are
almost three-and-a-half turnovers better than the second-place Wolfpack in the
conference in turnover margin. That huge turnover margin difference almost
cancels out the significant rebounding disadvantage that the team finds itself
fighting. If you can't get additional shot opportunities by rebounding, one way
to get them is by protecting the ball better than your opponents and creating
turnovers, something this team is quite adept at.
The puzzling thing at this point in the season is how the
Hokies continue to win conference games, once the turnover margin is taken off
the table, effectively neutralized by the rebounding deficiency. There is no
other real team stat where the team excels at, instead being several other areas
where the team lags in the second half of the conference.
The team is ninth in three-point field goal percentage,
tenth in field goal percentage and tenth in free throw shooting percentage. The
Hokies are last in the conference in scoring offense, tenth in scoring margin
and tenth in field goal percentage defense.
Only in steals, where the Hokies rank second in the
conference behind North Carolina, while having the # 1 and # 2 ranked players in
the conference individually in Jamon Gordan and Carlos Dixon, does the team have
another statistical area that leaps out. Those steals are folded into your
turnover margin, not even representing a stand alone stat that perhaps tells the
story of how the team has been as successful as it has to this point.
Instead, with the puzzling nature of the team stats that
shows the Hokies still grappling to make their mark on the conference, the key
component that has probably shaped conference play has been the Hokies ability
to win close games. With two one-point victories to go along with a two-point
win over Clemson, this team has prevailed in every close game that went down to
the wire.
When trying to get out the crystal ball and forecast
whether the team is a legitimate post-season contender, all the statistical
analysis in the world cannot help bring clarity when you find yourself winning
close games in the final minute. Tech has done that on three occasions, and
perhaps it is because a team that takes care of the basketball exceedingly well
during the game, while proving it can consistently create turnovers by their
opponent, is an occurrence that takes on much greater significance in the last
four minutes of the game.
We do not know how many victories it will take for this
team to get to postseason play. In a year in which many experts expected the
Hokies to merely serve as a sure conference win for ACC teams, this team now
finds itself scrapping and clawing its way toward an exciting finish.
During the final seven games of conference play, the
Hokies are on the road for four of them, starting tonight in College Park, when
they take on Maryland. While they do have more road games left to play than home
encounters, three of those road games are against opponents that the Hokies have
already beaten. Tech dispatched Clemson, Virginia and North Carolina State
earlier in Blacksburg.
At this midpoint stage of conference play, it's clear that
three teams have risen to the apex of the conference. North Carolina, Duke and
Wake are the three best teams in the conference, while all remaining teams
appear capable of beating each other at any venue, based on that particular day.
One advantage that Virginia Tech might hold down the
stretch is their schedule, the road grind notwithstanding. Only Clemson and
Virginia Tech, among all remaining conference teams outside of Wake, UNC and
Duke, play only one remaining game against one of the "Big Three" of
the Tar Heels, 'Deacs and Blue Devils. Every other opponent has at least two
games against that trio. Furthermore, the Hokies will play only four total games
against that same trio of schools. Clemson is the only other non-Big Three
program to play the same number of games. Maryland, Georgia Tech, Virginia,
North Carolina State, Miami and Florida State each will play five games against
the three strongest members of the conference.
This final stretch of games will determine if the Hokies
are a true post-season team - even if it is the NIT - or an imposter who crashed
the party. In a conference that has shown how unpredictable it can be this year
and how closely balanced it is outside of the Big Three, it might just come down
to the final game of conference play. The Hokies have demonstrated that they are
not quite ready for the 'Heels, Blue Devils or 'Deacs. They have proven that
they can do just fine with the rest of the conference. In the end, that game
against the top tier trifecta that the Hokies won't play might end
up as big an influence as any concerning any possible March travel plans.