The BU Zoo Blog

Morning Java: No Postseason For You Edition

by Phyr on Mar.02, 2010, under 2009-10, Morning Java

The hammer came down last night.  Binghamton has “elected” to withdraw from this year’s America East Tournament.  All the best guessing points towards pressure from SUNY.  This is personally quite disappointing to me.  The America East Tournament has always been one of the highlights of the year for me.  Two friends and I have been going to every America East Tournament since the Event Center opened (except last year at Albany, but 2 of us made it to the championship game).

I feel worse for the players.  The only thing that I can lose from this is money (give it back Hartford!).  The kids playing this season lost a whole lot more.  The 8-8conference record that Macon and his boys turned out was quite an accomplishment considering how many players they lost and the few scholarships they had.  They lost their reward for putting up with the crap all season which they weren’t involved with.

And just like that its the off season.

Leave a Comment :, more...

Morning Java: Road to Hartford Edition

by Phyr on Mar.01, 2010, under 2009-10, Morning Java

The Bearcats finished up the season yesterday with a 79-68 loss to Vermont.  Binghamton is still locked into the 5th seed which means that we will play Boston (4 seed) for the right to play the Stony Brook v. Play-in-game winner.  I would have selfishly loved Stony Brook on the other side of the bracket for a Binghamton-Stony Brook final  (that I could attend at Stony Brook!)

  • Press & Sun Bulletin: “Binghamton University’s men concluded their America East Conference basketball season with a 78-69 loss to Vermont on Sunday.  The Catamounts’ Marqus Blakely, two-time conference Player of the Year, contributed 17 points, five rebounds, five assists and three blocked shots on Senior Day in what may have been his final game in Patrick Gym.  Binghamton (13-18, 8-8 America East) was within four of Vermont with 3:24 remaining before committing three turnovers in a 36-second span, leading to seven consecutive Catamounts points and a 74-63 lead.  The Bearcats drew no closer than eight through the conclusion.  Fifth-seeded Binghamton will oppose fourth-seeded Boston University in an America East Conference Tournament quarterfinal, scheduled for a 2:45 p.m. tip-off Saturday in Hartford.  Freshman Dylan Talley had a game-high 20 points on 8-for-14 shooting and added a team-high four assists in 29 minutes. Junior forward Moussa Camara added 17 points, the 11th straight game he’s reached double figures. Sophomore center Kyrie Sutton chipped in 14 points on 6-for-9 shooting.”
  • Burlington Free Press: “‘Greer Wright is one of the best offensive players in the league: He’s 6-7, he can shoot, and Garvey took him out of his game,’ UVM coach Mike Lonergan said. ‘That was a big key to the game.’  Binghamton erased a 10-point halftime deficit and took a 49-48 lead on Moussa Camara’s long 3-pointer with just less than 13 minutes remaining in regulation, Vermont rattled off the next seven points to regain control.  ‘They got a lot of offensive rebounds on us today; the last few days that hasn’t been happening,’ Binghamton coach Mark Macon said. ‘They have a lot of size in there; their big guys were getting the ball in there and laying it up.’”
Leave a Comment :, , , , , more...

Morning Java: Better Than Expectations Edition

by Phyr on Feb.25, 2010, under 2009-10, Morning Java

Everyone and their mother had Binghamton picked last this year.  With a victory over Hartford last night, the Bearcats clinched at least an 8-8 conference record and the 5th seed in the AE Tourney.  At of things to be proud of on this basketball team.  Can’t say the same thing about the people in charge.

  • Press & Sun Bulletin: “Kyrie Sutton delivered his best performance in a Binghamton University jersey, scoring a career-high 18 points as Bearcats cruised to a 66-53 victory over Hartford in an America East Conference men’s basketball game on Wednesday night at the Events Center.  Greer Wright added 16 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists, with Dylan Talley adding 15 points for BU (13-17, 8-7 America East), which prevailed in front of 4,791 fans in its final regular-season home game this season.  The victory clinched the fifth seed for BU in next week’s America East tournament in Hartford.”
Leave a Comment :, , , more...

Morning Java: (Not) Senior Day Edition

by Phyr on Feb.24, 2010, under 2009-10

It’s (not) senior day with Binghamton taking on Hartford in the home finale.  Binghamton is jockeying with Hartford and UNH for the 5th (likely to play Boston), 6th(Maine), and 7th (Vermont) seed.   I don’t really like Bing matched up against either of those three teams but I would take Boston, Maine, and Vermont over Stony Brook everyday of the week.

  • Press & Sun Bulletin: “BU (12-17, 7-7 America East) is currently in fifth place in the America East and can clinch the fifth seed in next week’s conference tournament with a victory over the Hawks.  With a loss, there is the possibility of BU falling all the way to the seventh seed. Conference seeding, however, matters little to  Macon right now.  ‘I just want us to get better each game,’ Macon said. ‘This has nothing to do with the conference tournament. We not going into the conference tournament until it starts. I don’t want to jump the gun.’  The positives that BU displayed in its decisive victory over UMBC — good ball movement, rebounding proficiency — were severely lacking during its four-game losing streak, which occurred exclusively on the road and included losses by 42 points at Boston University and by 20 points at Stony Brook.”
  • WICZ (Video): “If Binghamton University’s Student Association has their way, Basketball Coach Kevin Broadus will no longer coach at BU.  The association’s president says after reading about Broadus’ coaching conduct in Judge Kaye’s report, students no longer want him working at the university.  Therefore, the S.A. is formally calling for his immediate resignation as head coach.”
Leave a Comment :, , , , , , more...

Morning Java: Apology? Edition

by Phyr on Feb.23, 2010, under 2009-10, Morning Java

Usually Tuesdays are Monday-less sucky cousin but today I feel very happy to get back into the flow of things.  A lot of work to do, but its not the end of the world.

  • Pipe Dream: “If you read the statement looking for anything like an administrative apology, you would have been extremely disappointed. In fact, the review was barely mentioned. The only quote DeFleur included to sum up the 99-page report, which implicated her and key University administrators as playing main roles in the scandal, was Judge Judith Kaye’s comment that BU was “one of the nation’s premier public universities” – one of DeFleur’s favorite phrases, and hardly Kaye’s own words.  We’re pretty sure that’s not the message Kaye’s team of lawyers was trying to send.  This kind of evasion seemed to be the real, and only, purpose of the statement. Instead of accepting the blame that so obviously lies at their feet, DeFleur and Swain made a mockery of themselves and the University by throwing around hollow rhetoric of honesty and commitment to values; we’ve all seen that their actions indicate otherwise. Honor and integrity are nowhere to be seen in this mess.”
  • Pipe Dream: “The Bearcats’ star junior Greer Wright had an off game, converting on only one of eight shots for seven points while also turning the ball over four times. However, junior forward Mahamoud Jabbi, who has been hot of late, and freshman guard Dylan Talley picked up the slack and then some for the Bearcats. Jabbi and Talley scored 20 and 25 points, respectively – both career highs for the first-year Division I players. Jabbi also grabbed 11 rebounds in the game while Talley dished out five assists to only two turnovers. ‘We were just hitting on all cylinders today,’ Macon said.  Leading by just eight points, 20-12 with 11 minutes to play, the Bearcats caught fire and pushed out to a 46-29 halftime lead. Jabbi had 14 points and five rebounds in the first half.  Binghamton tallied a total of 18 assists, its highest output of the season. ‘I had them doing things in practice where I wouldn’t let them shoot the ball,’ said Binghamton interim head coach Mark Macon. ‘It showed today with how they shared the ball.’”
  • Press & Sun Bulletin: “‘We wanted Judge (Judith) Kaye to lead the review and investigation, we wanted to begin immediately and contracting through the state takes a long time, and we did not want tuition or taxpayer dollars used,’ SUNY spokesman David Henahan said in an e-mail Monday.An Albany news Web site Monday raised questions about whether SUNY should have used a competitive-bidding process instead of directly hiring the law firm that employs retired New York Court of Appeals Chief Judge Judith Kaye, who headed the investigation. The probe cost $913,381, which is to be split between SUNY and BU.”
  • WBNG (Video): “Noticeably absent on the Bearcat bench Sunday was assistant coach Mark Hsu.  He was prominently featured in retired Judge Judith Kaye’s 99-page audit of the program, named for assisting former player Malik Alvin pay his court fees after being arrested for stealing condoms at Wal-mart, and then again for helping Alvin fix a plagiarized school assignment.  Hsu did not travel with the team on their recent road trips, and after the game interim head coach Mark Macon was asked about his future with the program. Macon would only  say that he could not answer those questions.  Following that press conference, the university released a statement. ‘After consultation with America East commissioner Patrick Nero, interim director of athletics Jim Norris has determined that assistant coach Marc Hsu will not be coaching in practice or games until further notice.’”
Leave a Comment :, , , , , , more...

Morning Java: Boo Edition

by Phyr on Feb.22, 2010, under 2009-10, Morning Java

It’s Monday and the official end of my vacation.  My vacation wasn’t a really good one but that doesn’t really matter.  Girlfriend is doing much better.  My attendance AE Tourney in Hartford still might be in jeopardy.  She is going to see her neurosurgeon on Wednesday.  If she gets the ok, she will attend a science conference in Baltimore and I will be going to Hartford.  If she doesn’t get the ok to travel, I’m probably just going to eat the tickets or give them away so stay tune.  Updates tomorrow, I got a billion things to do.

Leave a Comment more...

Morning Java: Car Accident Edition

by Phyr on Feb.16, 2010, under 2009-10, Morning Java

Saturday was not very good day for me at all.  After Binghamton’s thumping by Stony Brook, a friend was driving me and my girlfriend back to NYC.  To make a long story short, some young kid blew threw a light as we were making a left turn and t-boned our car.  Girlfriend ended up with two skull fractures and hearing loss (should be back in 2 weeks).  Everyone else was ok.  Both of us finally got home last night after spending most of Sunday in the hospital and Monday seeing the Ears, Nose , and Throat doc.  Could have been a lot worse!

Leave a Comment more...

Morning Java: Stony Brook Edition

by Phyr on Feb.13, 2010, under 2009-10, Morning Java

Yesterday, I left NYC for Long Island to celebrate Papa Phyr’s 60th birthday.  Today, we are prepping for tonight’s Binghamton-Stony Brook game .  We’ve been very fortunate that the game has been usually scheduled for a weekend.  I can jet out from the city and take the train right to Stony Brook.  This game has special meaning for me because I grew up around Stony Brook in the neighboring town Setauket (along with the Town of Rich People Old Field make up the Three Villages).

My dad told me yesterday that he will be wearing his Stony Brook shirt tonight.  I can’t blame him.

  • Press & Sun Bulletin: “Despite findings critical of her role as overseer of the Binghamton University’s athletic department, Lois DeFleur will be allowed to retire as president on her own terms.  SUNY officials said Friday they’ve had no discussions about the possibility of removing DeFleur before her summer retirement date, despite a spate of incidents that included suspensions and a drug arrest in the basketball program, a sexual-harassment lawsuit, the reassignment of the athletics director and the benching, with pay, of the basketball coach.  ‘We have no intention to try to alter her schedule’ to leave July 30, said Carl Hayden, the attorney who chairs the SUNY Board of Trustees.”
  • Press & Sun Bulletin:”BU has won six straight games over the Seawolves (17-7, 9-2 AE), including a 64-62 victory on Jan. 12 at the Events Center when Greer Wright nailed the game-winning shot with 1.8 seconds left.  Wright, last week named the America East Player of the Week for the third time this season, is averaging team-best 15.4 points for the Bearcats.  Since losing back-to-back games at BU and Maine, Stony Brook has won five straight games to move atop the America East standings, most recently an 83-64 home victory over then-second place Maine on Wednesday.  In the win over Maine, Muhammad El-Amin scored a game-high 24 points. El-Amin leads Stony Brook in scoring with a 15.5 per game average.  ‘I don’t look at standings, but I know the other coaches and the kids do,’ Macon said. ‘I’m just worried about us getting better, but I know this game is going to be a dogfight.’”
  • Wall Street Journal: “Binghamton University’s basketball program is a big deal in the America East Conference, and earned the conference’s automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament last season. But while no one would confuse the Bearcats with a big-time athletic machine, the lawlessness and culture of entitlement, malfeasance and favoritism exposed by a recent State University of New York-commissioned report on the controversy-plagued program puts Binghamton up there among college sports’ troubled programs.”
  • Deadspin: “In a report from the Department of Obviousness, Binghamton’s attempt to build a competitive basketball team resulted in numerous violations in recruiting, academics, and assorted criminal behaviors. So, mission successful if they wanted to build a real D1 program.”
  • Pipe Dream: “In its final pages, the report recommends that BU establish a “more active role” in oversight and control of the athletics program, and that SUNY should consider appointment of an athletic oversight officer.  ‘At times, as this report shows, the intensity of the desire to win may undermine and compromise that primary [academic] mission,’ it reads. ‘The president took no corrective action in her role as the supervisor of the athletic director and the person charged with ultimate responsibility for BU’s intercollegiate athletic program.’ DeFleur, who over winter break announced her plans to retire this July, held a press conference with campus media groups Tuesday. Pipe Dream reporters, who had requested an interview several times, were present at the conference. In total, the reporters were allowed to ask three pre-approved questions before the meeting came to an end.  At the conference, DeFleur said she will have no administrative involvement with the University once she retires, aside from giving her support. She said she believes ‘change is good.’”
  • Pipe Dream: “Despite Pipe Dream editors practically begging her for an interview, DeFleur only consented to sit down to pre-approved questions at her recent press conference, in which she gave an impressive speech and answered nothing at all. She was then conveniently out of town when the audit results were released. The hypocrisy is sickening, especially coming from the woman who has continuously touted our claim as the Premier Public University of the Northeast. All the while, she has been privately putting academics second to her NCAA dreams.  And now, after dragging this school through the mud on her quest to D-1 fame, DeFleur is leaving the premises and not looking back, leaving us to deal with the mess.  With all due respect Ms. President, we’ve been taught that it’s honorable to own up to your mistakes, not set up others to take the fall and cover your own ass. Your skeletons are coming out of your airplane hangar, and if you have any respect for the school you’ve claimed to love for the past 20 years, you should show your commitment by sticking around to help us salvage this school and its reputation.”
Leave a Comment :, , , more...

Morning Java: Lack of Institutional Control Edition

by Phyr on Feb.12, 2010, under 2009-10

If you read this blog everyday, then you probably all ready know that the Judith Kaye’s report on the BU basketball program is out.  I’m not going comment on it until I’m fully done reading it (half way there) but lack of institutional control of the program is ridiculous.  Not only was there no control but the senior administration and athletic department officials told down right lies to help Kevin Broadus get the players he wanted here. So many articles this morning that I’m going to be late for work.

  • Press & Sun Bulletin: “A report Thursday from the State University of New York, produced at a cost of $913,000, found: * Academic irregularities. An assistant basketball coach and a player discussed the coach “rewording” the player’s paper. Coach Kevin Broadus worked to get a grade changed. An independent-study class was created for four athletes.  * Admissions issues: Basketball recruits who didn’t meet academic standards were admitted. Coaches tried to circumvent BU’s established process for reviewing athletes’ applications for admission. * Crime/drug issues: Star player “Derrick” D.J. Rivera illegally bought a television and clothing using a debit card that wasn’t his, as teammates looked on. In other incidents, other players smoked or possessed marijuana. * Talk of improper benefits. A player claimed – but later recanted – that a coach paid for players’ cell phones. An assistant coach texted a player that the coach would give the player money for gas.  * A cover-up attempt. A coach labored to resolve a marijuana-possession charge against a key player before the case reached town court.”
  • Press & Sun Bulletin: “Gerald Mollen is happy to finally get his hands on the Binghamton University report.  The Broome County District Attorney said information contained in the 102-page document will help his office move forward with criminal charges against four former basketball players allegedly involved in making purchases with a stolen debit card.  To this point, Mollen said, his hands have been somewhat tied…After officers reviewed security videos from the stores where the card was used, Lukusa met with police and identified D.J. Rivera, Malik Alvin and Paul Crosby – all BU players – as the men in the video. Later, another player, Corey Chandler, was identified as the fourth individual.”
  • Press & Sun Bulletin: “‘Honestly, I haven’t seen the report,’ said Rivera, who added he had no plans to read the lengthy document. “We go to class every day and play basketball when we can. We’re regular students.  ‘I have no thoughts about it. That’s it. Nothing really.’  Alvin was equally evasive.  ‘I’m not too worried about it,’ Alvin said. ‘Whatever they do, they have to do. I’m just concentrating on my education.’ Fine, who was dismissed from the team shortly after campus police discovered marijuana in his dormitory room following a complaint, was a little  more forthcoming with his thoughts about the report.  ‘I can’t speak for everyone else, but my situation is, the report said my eyes were glassy,’ Fine said. ‘They were trying to imply that I was high. I passed the drug test a week after the incident happened. I can’t control what they write in the paper, but I know I passed the test.’  Fine said he was in his room alone, but that the marijuana wasn’t his.  ‘I’m not going to blame anyone else,’ Fine said.”
  • Press & Sun Bulletin: “Admissions officials felt slighted, ignored and sometimes bullied as Binghamton University basketball coaches tried to get recruits into school despite questionable qualifications.  That’s the picture painted after a four-month SUNY investigation, which concluded that coach Kevin Broadus recommended admission of a recruit who had no academic qualifications supporting admission, and pushed the university to admit a transfer student who had been kicked off his previous college team for disciplinary reasons.  ‘Coach Broadus recommended (Corey) Chandler’s admission to BU without disclosing to Admissions that Chandler had been dismissed from the Rutgers athletic program,’ the report says.”
  • Inside Higher Ed: “A scathing investigative report of myriad academic improprieties committed by the men’s basketball program at the State University of New York at Binghamton implicates its outgoing president and former athletics director for their lack of oversight. The independent audit, commissioned last fall by Nancy L. Zimpher, SUNY’s chancellor, was led by Judith S. Kaye, former chief judge of the New York Court of Appeals. The report, which cost SUNY $913,381, was released Thursday. In it, Kaye chronicles Binghamton’s rapid  transition in the National Collegiate Athletic Association from a low-profile Division III, or non-scholarship, program to a high-profile Division I program with a surprisingly successful men’s basketball team during the two-decade tenure of Lois B. DeFleur, who announced her retirement as president last month, and Joel Thirer, its athletics director, who retired amid scandal last fall.”
  • New York Times: “The Binghamton travesty was certified Thursday in a special report issued by a panel led by Judith S. Kaye, a former chief judge of the New York Court of Appeals.  This cautionary tale shows how Binghamton University, with 11,500 undergraduates holding an excellent average College Board score of 1,290, was held hostage by an upgraded basketball program that forgot to honor academic standards or, for that matter, normal ethics or honesty.  The administrators at Binghamton might as well have leased out a portion of the campus to a counterfeiting operation or a prostitution ring or a drug mill. Go all the way. Instead, a few administrators had the bright idea of turning Binghamton into a powerhouse capable of reaching the N.C.A.A. tournament. What a lousy goal. What poor judgment. By so-called educators.”
  • ESPN: “The report documents how Binghamton officials compromised academic standards in order to build a winning men’s basketball team, details how coaches and athletic officials at Binghamton pressured admissions staffers to admit questionable recruits and chronicles previously-unreported allegations of criminal behavior on the part of several former basketball players.  The report recommends hiring an “athletic oversight officer” for the entire State University of New York system, reporting to the chancellor and Board of Trustees on admissions, the academic progress and behavior of student-athletes, and rules compliance.  Citing text-message exchanges, the SUNY report also suggests Binghamton coaches made cash payments to players and assisted them with academic assignments.  ‘I am disappointed that a great institution like Binghamton University would, in any way, because of its athletic program, compromise its terrific academic reputation,’ SUNY chancellor Nancy Zimpher said Thursday in a conference call with reporters. The SUNY report also cites potential NCAA violations by former Binghamton coach Kevin Broadus, who was placed on paid leave by the school last October.”
Leave a Comment :, , , , , , , , , more...

Morning Java: Report Day Edition

by Phyr on Feb.11, 2010, under 2009-10

After Jim Norris came out and said yesterday that the report would be done soon, it looks like the time table shifted up a little bit:

  • Press & Sun Bulletin: “This could be the day the public will get some answers about what happened inside Binghamton University’s athletics program.  Top officials in the state university system are scheduled to reveal the findings of a four-month investigation into troubles that got six men’s basketball players kicked off the team and their coach suspended, prompted claims that a female employee was sexually harassed, and cost the athletics director his job.  SUNY’s executive committee will meet this morning to discuss Judge Judith Kaye’s probe of the program, and likely will release the report later in the day, said SUNY spokesman David Henahan. He said SUNY Chancellor Nancy Zimpher and Trustees Chairman Carl Hayden are scheduled to answer questions in a 2 p.m. conference call with reporters.  The report is expected to contain recommendations for BU, though details weren’t available Wednesday night.”
  • Press & Sun Bulletin: “It was a different story Saturday, when the Bearcats allowed a game-closing 11-0 run in a 61-49 loss at Maine. BU hopes to avoid a repeat when it visits University of New Hampshire in an America East Conference contest at 7 p.m. Thursday. The two teams met 12 days ago at the Events Center in a game won by BU, 76-73, in overtime. In that Jan. 30 game, Greer Wright scored 29 points and Dylan Talley converted a three-point play with 21 seconds left in overtime for the Bearcats (11-14, 6-4 America East). It was one of three games during BU’s four-game winning streak that the Bearcats won by six points or fewer. With the exception of its 80-63 victory at University of Maryland, Baltimore County on Jan. 27, all of BU’s other America East games have been decided by single digits. Wright hopes to continue his torrid play since the start of BU’s America East schedule. The junior transfer from City College of San Francisco is averaging 19.1 points, 6.8 rebounds and 3.6 assists in America East play. Those represent increases from his season-long averages of 15.5 points, 5.9 rebounds and 2.8 assists per game.”
Leave a Comment :, , , , , , , more...

Looking for something?

Use the form below to search the site:

Still not finding what you're looking for? Drop a comment on a post or contact us so we can take care of it!