RON MALY HAS BEEN WATCHING THE PARADE GO BY FOR A LONG TIME. THIS IS ONE OF HIS WEBSITES.

Sunday, February 22, 2015

Tim Miles and His Nebraska Basketball Players Should Be Ashamed Of Themselves. People Wearing Aprons On the Cooking Channel Put Forth More Effort Than the Embarrassing Huskers Delivered In a 74-46 Loss To Iowa


By RON MALY

When I wrote about Rutgers' 81-47 basketball loss to Iowa a few nights ago in Iowa City, I regarded the Scarlet Knights as an embarrassment to Big Ten basketball as well as an embarrassment to collegiate basketball in general.
Photo of Tim Miles courtesy of HuskerOnline.com


Now I'm saying, not so fast.

I saw a team on TV today that's an even bigger embarrassment to basketball than Rutgers.

It's Nebraska.

Indeed, the Huskers set the sport back at least 75 years today.

And, yes, the Hawkeyes seem to be bringing out the worst in everyone.

Today, they absolutely crushed Nebraska, 74-46, in Lincoln.  The turning point in the game was when Iowa's players laced up their shoes. The Hawkeyes were in front, 42-16, at halftime, and the Huskers played like they'd never ever dribbled, shot or rebounded a basketball.

I quit watching the Iowa-Rutgers game at halftime. I quit watching the Iowa-Nebraska game long before halftime.

People wearing aprons on the Cooking channel put forth more effort than Nebraska's players produced in the 2 p.m. game on the Big Ten Network.

I chuckled to myself that Tim Miles, the iPad-savvy, smily-faced Husker coach who never met a TV camera he didn't like, was the victim of the Hawkeyes' onslaught.

Miles has gotten into the habit of tweeting at halftime of games, and he even managed to dispatch this message on Twitter at intermission of today's drubbing:


 
A 21-2 run to end the first is disgusting; We have to fight our tails off to get back into this game.

Dirk Chatelain, a sports columnist for the Omaha World Herald, must have thought it was a pretty disgusting half, too.

He tweeted:


 
How bad is it? Husker fans are lining up behind the Iowa bench asking Woodbury to poke them in the eyes.

Understandably, Miles wasn't in a jovial mood after the game

Here's what ESPN.com reported:

Following his team's 74-46 home loss to Iowa on Sunday, Nebraska coach Tim Miles has blocked his team's access to its locker room and lounge. 

He has also banned players from speaking to the media.

Nebraska, an NCAA tournament team last season, has lost five in a row and seven of its past eight games.

"If we're not going to play with pride, play to represent our fan base and our university better than we did today, then they'll get their voice back when they earn it," Miles wrote to ESPN.com via text message.

Miles said the bans on locker room access and media interviews will continue for an undetermined amount of time.

The Cornhuskers moved into the multimillion-dollar Hendricks Training Complex in 2011. It features iPads in every locker, a kitchen, a state-of-the-art sound system, a pool table and a plasma video wall.

Asked in his postgame press conference if the team's effort was acceptable, Miles said [courtesy of the World Herald]:

“No. You never want to throw your players under the bus, but that was just beyond disappointing. That’s not what we represent. When I was at Southwest Minnesota State as the coach, to pay for shoes at the Renaissance Festival in Minnesota for a weekend to pick up trash. If I had the option, I would do that tonight, tomorrow and the next day to pay back the fans for their tickets. Our fans have been so supportive and great, and we get 15,000 people out there to go non-compete mode. I thought we showed a softness, a lack of leadership and a lack of willingness to listen to leadership. It’s unacceptable. You have to have a great amount of pride to compete when things aren’t going well, and we just didn’t show any pride. I was looking at the stats, and they don’t matter. The game plan doesn’t matter. When you come out and kind of half-ass it, a team like Iowa remembers how we knocked them out of the NCAA tournament two years ago. They know what they’re fighting for. They looked like a team with pride. They had poise. They had aggressiveness. And they really put on a clinic."

Miles and his players should be ashamed of themselves.