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

Sunday, March 22, 2015

Swan Song On the Dance Floor


By RON MALY

Spring football, anyone?

I know I'm not ready for that. And maybe you aren't either.
The Big Dance


But what choice do we have now that Northern Iowa, Iowa and Iowa State have been eliminated from the NCAA basketball tournament?

I guess we can pop some corn and look at videotape of the defeats.

Count me out of that, too.

The end came rather quickly for the three Iowa teams, especially for the Cyclones, who were embarrassed by unheralded UAB, 60-59, in Louisville on Thursday--the first day of the Big Dance.

UNI and Iowa stayed on the dance floor a little longer, but now they've said goodbye to the 2014-2015 season, too. 

Both teams won their opening games in Seattle easily, but the Sweet Sixteen dreams they had turned out to be pure fantasy.

Iowa's defense went on spring break at a very inopportune time against 34-game winner Gonzaga.  

Consequently, the Hawkeyes were demolished, 87-68, in their round-of-32 matchup.

In the last game of the opening week of the tournament, UNI was no match for Louisville's quickness in a 66-53 loss.

Louisville coach Rick Pitino called it his team's best game of 2014-2015 after ending UNI's season at 31-4.

The Cardinals' zone defense left  UNI standout Seth Tuttle little room to operate, and held him to 14 points and just seven field goal attempts.

"We got off to a good start and found some openings against Louisville's zone," Jacobson told reporters. "But they made some adjustments, and I didn't adjust soon enough to find some different ways to get Tuttle the ball."

Iowa's defense was nowhere to be found against Gonzaga, and the Hawkeyes paid a huge price for the disappearing act. 

I wrote that Iowa was capable of winning, but it needed to bring its "A" game. 

Unfortunately, that didn't happen. 

It was more like a D-minus game that the Hawkeyes brought to the building.

Gonzaga [34-2] had far too much firepower for the Hawkeyes, whose season ended with a 22-12 record. 

Gonzaga shot a blistering 61.5 percent from the field, drilling 13 of 15 uncontested shots, including 6 of 6 three-pointers.