TONIGHT!! Biorhythms: Exhibition v Winston-Salem State

donbosco

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Exhibition vs Brigham Young University
9:00 pm (ET)
The Delta Center, Salt Lake City
ESPN Plus
UNC Radio Network

The UNC Tar Heels:
#1 Kyan Evans P = 40, E = 90, I = 65, X = 50
#7 Seth Trimble P = 0, E = 10, I = 0, X = 0
#8 Caleb Wilson P = 50, E = 90, I = 100, X = 75
#44 Luka Bogavac P = 15, E = 100, I = 35, X = 25
#13 Henri Veesaar P = 20, E = 70 I = 0, X = 10
#15 Jarin Stevenson P = 50, E = 100, I = 15, X = 30
#11 Jonathan Powell P = 70, E = 10, I = 0, X = 35
#3 Derek Dixon P = 25, E = 5, I = 80, X = 50
#2 James Brown P = 20, E = 75, I = 5, X = 10
#1 Zayden High P = 0, E = 50, I = 10, X = 5
#4 Jaydon Young P = 100, E = 5, I = 80, X = 90

Coach Davis Wisdom = 55

BYU Cougars
3 A.J. Dybantsa P = 45, E = 80, I = 85, X = 65
13 Keba Keita* P = 100, E = 95, I = 50, X = 75
1 Robert Wright P = 20, E = 70, I = 5, X = 10
15 Richie Saunders P = 5, E = 95, I = 0, X = 0
30 Kennard Davis P = 5, E = 0, I = 0, X = 0
5 MIhailo Boskovic* P = 100, E = 95, I = 80, X = 90
6 Aleksej Kostic* P = 20, E = 10, I = 100, X = 60
7 Khadim Mboup* P = 55, E = 100, I = 45, X = 50
24 Dominique Diomande* P = 80, E = 95, I = 80, X = 80
33 Xavion Staton P = 100, E = 70, I = 35, X = 65

Coach Kevin Young Wisdom = 90

This is an exhibition game, thus like the Memphis game (which the Tar Heels won) last year, will not be taken into consideration in any way toward standings or power ratings. That said, it is the first chance to both see the Tar Heels versus something other than themselves as well as travel and play in a hostile venue.

The Brigham Young Cougars have recently poured a good deal of cash into becoming a college basketball contender. Coach Kevin Young was brought in last season to Professionalize their program and he scored big almost immediately by landing the #1 high school prospect in Brockington, Massachusetts’ A.J. Dybantsa (6-9 wing). The touted prospect did not disappoint last week in an exhibition versus Nebraska by scoring 30 on good shooting. That said, BYU lost that game by a point to a Three-Point Heavy Cornhusker attack. Dybantsa is a force on the court and plays everywhere in a very-NBA almost position-less style. Joining him are four foreign players ranging from Mali to Serbia to Austria to France but Dybantsa’s biggest potential help is a local Utah boy, Richie Saunders (6-5 wing) who shoots from faraway in deadeye fashion. Keba Keita also returns to rebound (6-8, Mali, Sr). Newcomer point guard Richard Wright III, in from Butler, is expected to run the show and well, while portal man from Southern Illinois, Kennard Davis (6-6 wing) brings some gaudy stats to the Beehive State as well. There are International bigs a-plenty with Mihailo Bostick (6-10, Serbia), Dominique Diomande (6-10, France), and Khadim Mboup (6-9, Senegal) to rebound the ball. Coach Kevin Young will work to have his squad play pro sets and shoot fast. He’s the great-great-great-great-great nephew of Brigham Young by the way.

The Tar Heels…
Frontcourt: Sparkplug and highly skilled freshman Caleb Wilson has the best biorhythms on the team. He is 6-9 and perhaps ought to be listed among the wings because he will play outside/inside. Joining him in that role will be returnee to NC from the Yellowhammer State, Jarin Stevenson, a 6-11 inside/outside man…the Rhythms are promising for #15 – Good physical and very fired up. The prize of the portal for Carolina will man the pivot: Henri Veesaar comes to Chapel Hill from Arizona full of vowels and standing 7-0. His rhythms tonight are not good other than great ‘want-to.’ Zayden High returns to the team from exile to add his 6-10 all-over-the-court enthusiasm…he sometimes thinks like a guard. Last but definitely not least, a bulked-up and bespectacled James Brown (6-9) is also among the several highly motivated Heels to hit the court in the paint tonight.

Wings: Jonathan Powell, in from West Virginia, is 6-6 and skilled. He may be the sleeper of the off-season transfer ‘gets’ and should have a big role this season. Powell is athletic for tonight’s tilt. If Bogavac can’t go for whatever reason, he’ll step-up and surprise. Jaydon Young of Goldsboro spent time in Blacksburg but like Jarin Stevenson, returns to the Tar Heel State to play for the Flagship. He’s a 6-4 and finished strong last year for the Hokies. He’s a ballhawk who plays hard. It will be difficult to keep him off the court this year. His ritmos for today are very good. He should play well…how much time he will get is the question. The biggest question mark is the Montenegran Flash, Luka Bogavac. At 6-5, he’s a shooter with four years professional experience in Euro-League ball. As of this writing, weirdness from the Carolina Administration (nothing new about that – Thanks Lee Roberts) has his eligibility in limbo. If he does play then fire looks to be the word. If he doesn’t play tonight then Powell or Stevenson will step into the starting lineup. Either of those possibilities are themselves enticing.

Guards: This is Seth Trimble’s team and that will be evident. The oddness of a young man that stays with his initial chosen school an entire career notwithstanding, Trimble has proven himself a True Tar Heel for the ages and should continue to do so. His biorhythms are badly off for tonight’s game unfortunately. Perhaps he lied about his age? Joining Trimble as field general for this squad is Colorado State Transfer, Kyan (KEYE-AN) Evans – A Missourian and 6-2 natural point, he’s a distributor and will keep the ball moving. His rhythms for tonight are solid and he’s got the Intel Edge. Freshman Derek Dixon has excited observers at practice so far and at 6-4 is being worked up as the second point guard. He is said to be multi-skilled and a hard-nosed defender. His biorhythms for tonight are also solid and his Intel Arc is tops – always a plus for a guard.

Overall: Above we have described the players most likely to see time this season. The team is deeper than it has been in recent years and the interchangeability of the parts is intriguing. The Tar Heels are bigger than they’ve been in years and those bigs bring both power and mobility…at times there may be line-ups of 7-0, 6-11, 6-9, 6-6, and 6-3…at other times we might go 6-2, 6-3, 6-6, 6-9, 6-9. The encouraging thing is that both such Fives would be up and down the court and on-the-ball defenders.

Tonight the Cougars of BYU have better overall biorhythms but this one is probably going to be played with both teams taking this as an opportunity to experiment with some lineups. Certainly the competitor in each of them will be trying to win and the thought of a head-to-head Dybantsa/Caleb Wilson match-up is titillating – and may well happen – but this is also pre-season and all should remember that. This is about building for The Ones That Count. In that spirit, the Biorhythms will make no prognostication for a score. Gonna enjoy it just the same
 
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Last year at this time, the preseason game @ Memphis, the Heels won in a hostile environment by a comfortable 8 points: 84-76. Seth Trimble went off. He was terrific scoring 33… 33 points!

Memphis last year, as you probably don’t recall, went on to win their conference with a 16-2 record finishing 29-6. A solid team. A very good team. How in the world we went into their gym and beat such a quality team, only to stink up the place the rest of the year barely making the NCAA tournament play in round baffles me. Yes, I know the game was merely a “scrimmage” but there’s no way you can convince me that the coaches and players didn’t play to win that match up.

Just like tonight… I expect both teams to be full throttle. I’ll gladly take an 8 pt loss tonight as long as we go 29-6 this season.
 
Last year at this time, the preseason game @ Memphis, the Heels won in a hostile environment by a comfortable 8 points: 84-76. Seth Trimble went off. He was terrific scoring 33… 33 points!

Memphis last year, as you probably don’t recall, went on to win their conference with a 16-2 record finishing 29-6. A solid team. A very good team. How in the world we went into their gym and beat such a quality team, only to stink up the place the rest of the year barely making the NCAA tournament play in round baffles me. Yes, I know the game was merely a “scrimmage” but there’s no way you can convince me that the coaches and players didn’t play to win that match up.

Just like tonight… I expect both teams to be full throttle. I’ll gladly take an 8 pt loss tonight as long as we go 29-6 this season.
For some reason I did not get to watch the exhibition game against Memphis last season but I do remember asking people if it felt like a real game and it seemed like everyone was emphatic that it did.

Learned my lesson not to put a ton of stock in these games lol. A blowout win or blowout loss would be noteworthy I guess, but otherwise as long as we look like we at least belong on the same court as BYU I’m good.
 
Last year at this time, the preseason game @ Memphis, the Heels won in a hostile environment by a comfortable 8 points: 84-76. Seth Trimble went off. He was terrific scoring 33… 33 points!

Memphis last year, as you probably don’t recall, went on to win their conference with a 16-2 record finishing 29-6. A solid team. A very good team. How in the world we went into their gym and beat such a quality team, only to stink up the place the rest of the year barely making the NCAA tournament play in round baffles me. Yes, I know the game was merely a “scrimmage” but there’s no way you can convince me that the coaches and players didn’t play to win that match up.

Just like tonight… I expect both teams to be full throttle. I’ll gladly take an 8 pt loss tonight as long as we go 29-6 this season.
I think the big-picture takeaway is that a single game played in late October or early November - especially one that isn't a fully competitive game and the coaches are using to try stuff out - is probably never going to be a particularly accurate indicator of how good a team is.
 
Last year at this time, the preseason game @ Memphis, the Heels won in a hostile environment by a comfortable 8 points: 84-76. Seth Trimble went off. He was terrific scoring 33… 33 points!

Memphis last year, as you probably don’t recall, went on to win their conference with a 16-2 record finishing 29-6. A solid team. A very good team. How in the world we went into their gym and beat such a quality team, only to stink up the place the rest of the year barely making the NCAA tournament play in round baffles me. Yes, I know the game was merely a “scrimmage” but there’s no way you can convince me that the coaches and players didn’t play to win that match up.

Just like tonight… I expect both teams to be full throttle. I’ll gladly take an 8 pt loss tonight as long as we go 29-6 this season.
I hate to say this but I thought about it a lot as last season unfolded: it was notable at the time who did NOT play for UNC in that game — RJ Davis.

This is no knock on RJ but we were so over-reliant on him last year it was maddening. Our offense was often moribund with everyone trying to get out of RJ’s way and the opposing defense knew that.
 
I hate to say this but I thought about it a lot as last season unfolded: it was notable at the time who did NOT play for UNC in that game — RJ Davis.

This is no knock on RJ but we were so over-reliant on him last year it was maddening. Our offense was often moribund with everyone trying to get out of RJ’s way and the opposing defense knew that.
Another thing was Trimble, who was incredible in that game, got a concussion early on in the season. It really seemed to take a long time for him to get back to his full self after that. I think that really hurt us because he looked so improved to start the season.
 
Another thing was Trimble, who was incredible in that game, got a concussion early on in the season. It really seemed to take a long time for him to get back to his full self after that. I think that really hurt us because he looked so improved to start the season.
I could definitely buy that the concussion derailed his season for awhile.

That type of injury isn’t as common in basketball compared to football so I think people underrate how tough it can be to come back from.
 
I totally agree about Seth and RJ last year. If Seth hadn’t been hurt…

But if a frog had wings….

Let’s not forget Seth was fine early on but we still lost the 4 games that mattered in Nov. Dec. - when he wasn’t injured.

Maybe the Memphis game wasn’t a predictor of the season. Maybe tonight’s game won’t predict this season. But I’ll stand by my statement. I’ll gladly trade an 8 pt loss tonight for a 16-2 ; 29-6 season like Memphis had last year! :cool:
 
I think the big-picture takeaway is that a single game played in late October or early November - especially one that isn't a fully competitive game and the coaches are using to try stuff out - is probably never going to be a particularly accurate indicator of how good a team is.
This is an extremely big season for BYU. Their basketball team is in the top-10 preseason and their football team is having a Playoff-caliber year. The football team has been here before, but this is really rarified air for the basketball team. BYU boosters have a lot of money to give to both teams, but they are going to have to decide, moving forward, whether to invest money into the basketball team. I suspect that they are going to treat this game as a chance to prove themselves against a blue blood, and I fully anticipate it being as competitive a game as an exhibition game can be.
 
This is an extremely big season for BYU. Their basketball team is in the top-10 preseason and their football team is having a Playoff-caliber year. The football team has been here before, but this is really rarified air for the basketball team. BYU boosters have a lot of money to give to both teams, but they are going to have to decide, moving forward, whether to invest money into the basketball team. I suspect that they are going to treat this game as a chance to prove themselves against a blue blood, and I fully anticipate it being as competitive a game as an exhibition game can be.
I don't really think that changes/disputes my overall point. BYU can treat it like their super bowl if they want, and may well do so, but that doesn't mean the game is going to be all that instructive about how good we will be this year, whatever the result. I'm gonna watch, don't get me wrong, and it will certainly teach us a lot more than intra-squad scrimmages But trying to draw anything other than extremely broad and tentative conclusions would be foolish.
 
I don't really think that changes/disputes my overall point. BYU can treat it like their super bowl if they want, and may well do so, but that doesn't mean the game is going to be all that instructive about how good we will be this year, whatever the result. I'm gonna watch, don't get me wrong, and it will certainly teach us a lot more than intra-squad scrimmages But trying to draw anything other than extremely broad and tentative conclusions would be foolish.
Fair - and I didn't mean it as a dispute of your point, which I agree with. With that in mind, I think it is closer to an indicator of what we will see than exhibition games generally are.
 
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