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

Sunday, March 29, 2015

The Big Ten Stands Up for Itself


By RON MALY

Hey, not bad for a basketball league that lots of people said wasn't up there with the big boys during the regular season.

The Big Ten, I mean. 

There was plenty of conversation making the rounds, of course, in January and February about the Big 12 and the Atlantic Coast Conference being the best collegiate conferences in America.

There's certainly nothing wrong with the ball they play in the Big 12 and the ACC.

But look who's really doing some talking now? 

The Big Ten, which has two teams in the Final Four. 

Both will be underdogs in next Saturday's semifinal round at Indianapolis, but the important thing is that Wisconsin and Michigan State are in the field--which means they have a chance, and that's much more than a ton of other teams around the U.S. can say. 

Wisconsin, clearly the power of the Big Ten, matches muscle with No. 1-ranked and unbeaten Kentucky, and suddenly that game doesn't seem like the mismatch it may have appeared to be a couple of weeks ago. 

Notre Dame, certainly not as strong as Wisconsin, gave Kentucky all it could handle before losing by a basket Saturday. 

I'm sure you won't hear any of the Badgers say they can't upset Kentucky at Indy. 

And Michigan State's players obviously feel
Przemek Karnowski
they can defeat Duke.  


[Actually, I was hoping Gonzaga would beat Duke today. I wanted to see Przemek Karnowski, the 7-1 Gonzaga player from Poland, play another game or two].

Still, it looks like an excellent Final Four to me. 

I just wish they could get the ridiculous Charles Barkley off of those pregame, halftime and postgame TV discussion groups, and I wish confused announcer Vern Lundquist would retire in the next 24 hours. 

Finally, while on the subject of TV, I guess the NCAA tournament isn't as important to national television giant CBS as you'd think.

I just can't believe that Saturday's games won't be televised by CBS.

Instead, both of the semifinal round games are on TBS, which--in my estimation--is a second-rate network.

The same thing happened when yesterday's Elite Eight games were televised by TBS, not CBS.

I couldn't believe that either.

Evidently, CBS didn't want to give up its lightweight Saturday programming schedule to make way for The Big Dance.

The championship game Monday, April 6, will be on CBS.

THE SCHEDULE

Saturday, April 4

Duke (33-4) vs. Michigan State (27-11), 5:09 p.m., TBS

Wisconsin (34-3) vs. Kentucky (38-0), approximately 7:49 p.m., TBS

Monday, April 6

Semifinal winners, 8 p.m., CBS

*
A maly, too ITEM--If Wisconsin and Michigan State should happen to win their semifinal round games, it would set up a classic all-Big Ten championship game.
Johnny Orr
It wouldn't be the first time that has happened. In 1976 at Philadelphia, Bobby Knight's Indiana team defeated Johnny Orr's Michigan squad, 86-68,  for the title. Four years later, Orr was coaching at Iowa State. I covered many NCAA basketball tournaments, including Final Four championships, for my newspaper in that wonderful time of my life, and the Knight-Orr matchup at Philly was about as classic as things could get.