Even as I was engaging in some April Foolishness, claiming that ESPN’s Andy Katz was reporting that Indiana would hire Mike Brey, Andy Katz was actually reporting that Indiana would hire Marquette’s Tom Crean — and that has now been confirmed.
Meanwhile, “El Kabong” at ND Nation has taken some heat for his Brey-to-Indiana April Fool’s joke, which he now admits was a joke. (Money quote: “Part of me thinks the only thing I should be embarrassed about is the joke is so hackneyed a twit like Brendan Loy apparently thought of it too.” Heh.)
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Categories: Notre Dame, NCAA Basketball & Pools
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Breaking news: ESPN’s Andy Katz is reporting that Notre Dame head coach Mike Brey, the back-to-back Big East Coach of the Year who used to be such a frequent subject of Irish Trojan criticism that you’d have thought his first name was "Fire," will be introduced tomorrow morning as the new head coach at Indiana.
The last time rumors cropped up of Brey’s possible departure (for N.C. State, in that case), I said they were "too good to be true." Now I actually think this might be a big loss for the Irish. I just hope Brey won’t take assistant coach Gene Cross with him to Hoosierland!
Anyway, I’ll have more on this after work, but Katz has more details.
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Categories: Notre Dame, NCAA Basketball & Pools
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Big, and good, news for Notre Dame Law School: Professors A.J. and Patricia Bellia have turned down tenured offers from the University of Virginia Law School, which is ranked in the U.S. News Top 10, and will stay at NDLS. Brian Leiter calls this a "major retention coup for Notre Dame."
My impression is that it’s almost an article of faith among some NDLS critics, skeptics and detractors that the school’s young superstar professors, such as the Bellias, will inevitably be "poached" by other, higher-ranking law schools in due course. This development appears to contradict that belief, which is a very good thing.
As Leiter says, "Notre Dame has long had a strong reputation among practitioners … but the school
has also noticeably strengthened its faculty from a scholarly point of
view in the last decade." Indeed, during last year’s unfortunate "Paulinogate" incident, one thing that became crystal clear was that pretty much everyone, even those who strongly criticize the law school for various things, totally disagreed with Jimmy’s criticisms of the faculty: there was almost universal agreement among Irish Trojan commenters that the NDLS faculty rocks. And the Bellias are a big part of that, so it’s great that they’re staying put. Indeed, I daresay this is a much bigger deal than last week’s news that NDLS had climbed back to #22 in those flawed U.S. News rankings. Those numbers may vary from year to year, but if profs like the Bellias are staying put, the law school will be just fine.
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Categories: Notre Dame
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If you think the men’s tournament is Chalk City, check out the women’s bracket: the Elite Eight consists of four #1 seeds and four #2s. (Admittedly, chalkiness is more common on the women’s side, where parity is less pronounced than among the men. But still.) #1-seed Tennessee sealed the deal last night with a 74-64 win over #5 Notre Dame, which is now 0-16 all-time against UT.
The Irish gave the Lady Vols a much better game than they did in an 87-63 loss back in January at the Joyce Center. In this one, ND led at halftime, 33-31. But between about the 18-minute mark and the 13-minute mark of the second half, Tennessee went on a 17-1 run, and Candace Parker wound up with a career-high-tying 34 points. That was just too much for the Irish to overcome.
In my 11th annual women’s pool, six contestants correctly predicted the "all chalk" Elite Eight: Ken Stern, Kevin Pilz, Tom Caputi, Carol LaPlante, Joseph Hiegel and Lisa Velte.
Stern currently leads the pool with 316 out of a possible 352 points. He took first place from Chuck Wessell when #3 Texas A&M beat #2 Duke last night. Wessell, who had picked the Blue Devils, is now second with 313. Pilz is third with 311. Those three contestants are the only ones ahead of the "all favorites bracket," which would have 309 points. Complete standings here and after the jump. Information on who’s still alive to win the pool — 21 contestants in all — here.
Incidentally, I forgot to mention this before, but in the men’s pool (presented by the UCLA Bruins, blah blah blah), 28 contestants got the "all-chalk" Final Four right. Their names are listed after the jump.
Notre Dame and Tennessee are about to get underway in a Sweet Sixteen showdown. The #5-seed Fighting Irish are the last chance to prevent an “all chalk” Elite Eight in the women’s NCAA Tournament; so far, all the #1 and #2 seeds have won.
Incidentally, the women’s pool standings and scenarios are updated through seven Elite Eight games. Ken Stern currently has the lead. The standings are after the jump as well.
One year after rising to the #1 ranking in the country only to be stunned by Michigan State in the NCAA regional final, the #12-ranked Fighting Irish of Notre Dame got their revenge tonight, beating the Spartans 3-1 (after previously upsetting the top seed, New Hampshire) to advance to their first Frozen Four in school history! WOOHOO!! (Hat tip: NDLauren.)
The Irish will play the hated Skunkbears of Michigan, whose football team lost to Appalachian State last year, in a national semifinal in Denver on April 10. Michigan is ranked #1 in the land.
[UPDATE: Folks in the South Bend area are encouraged to assemble at the Joyce Center around 4:30 AM to greet the team upon its return. (Hat tip: John.)]
Now… can the Fighting Irish women’s basketball team pull off an even more monumental upset tomorrow by upsetting #1-seed Tennessee in the Sweet 16? The Irish are 0-15 all-time against the Lady Vols. How does two milestones in 24 hours sound? GO IRISH!!!
P.S. Speaking of women’s basketball, the ladies are now halfway to the Elite Eight after another quartet of non-upsets. In my pool, Chuck Wessell continues to have the lead. Complete standings here and after the jump. Information on who’s still mathematically alive to win the pool here.
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Categories: Notre Dame, NCAA Basketball & Pools
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Above The Law has confirmed the legitimacy of the leaked U.S. News law-school rankings, which I blogged last night. As I mentioned in that post, they show Notre Dame Law School erasing last year’s decline and returning to #22.
Meanwhile, there is breaking news at NDLS. Less than an hour ago, Dean Patty O’Hara wrote an e-mail to the student body, announcing that she is stepping down at the end of next year. The e-mail was forwarded to me, and it’s printed in full after the jump.
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Categories: Notre Dame
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#5-seed Notre Dame and #4-seed Oklahoma — playing in West Lafayette, Indiana — are tied 72-72 in overtime in the second round of the women’s tournament. Winner gets Tennessee in the Sweet Sixteen. GO IRISH!!
UPDATE: IRISH WIN!! Notre Dame is Sweet 16-bound!! Wooo!! GOOOO IRISH, BEEEEAT LADY VOLS!!
I’ll update the pools in the morning.
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Categories: Notre Dame, NCAA Basketball & Pools
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U.S. News and World Report’s 2009 law-school rankings aren’t due to be officially released until Friday, but there are scattered reports of leaks. (Hat tip: yea.) Specifically, law blog The Shark has published a PDF scan of an apparently Xeroxed copy of the alleged list (purportedly found at an unspecified “newsstand”); Xoxohth poster “Gerbil21″ claims he saw the magazine on display early at a local Barnes & Noble and wrote the rankings down by hand; and poster “m1″ on Law School Discussion took a digital picture of the alleged new rankings page.
If the leaked list is accurate — a big “if” — it would mean Notre Dame Law School has recovered from last year’s drop from #22 to #28, climbing back into a tie for #22. However, I can’t vouch for the accuracy of these purported leaks in any way, shape or form. I’m just passing on the links. You can consider them sort of like the early unweighted exit polls on election nights: lend them whatever credence you feel is appropriate, with “none” being a perfectly valid answer. We report, you decide.
Oh, and insert your own rankings-don’t-matter disclaimer here. :)
P.S. For example.
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Categories: Notre Dame
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The Notre Dame men were eliminated by Washington State yesterday, but the Notre Dame women are still alive, headed for a Tuesday second-round matchup with Oklahoma after beating #12-seed Southern Methodist this afternoon. Go Irish!!
In my women’s pool, there’s a five-way tie for the lead among Kay Torg, Ken Stern, Tom Caputi, Chuck Wessell and F.X. McGahee — and, in a tournament that has seen only two upsets in 24 games, those co-eaders are also tied with the “all favorites bracket.” Complete standings here and after the jump.
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Categories: Notre Dame, NCAA Basketball & Pools
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Wazzu 61, Notre Dame 41, final.
You don’t win too many games scoring 41 points, least of all in the NCAA Tournament.
So all three of “my teams” are gone within the tournament’s first three days. All four if you count UConn. Harumph. I guess now I’m rooting for… Davidson? The Butler-Tennessee winner? And of course, whoever’s playing UCLA. :)
Meanwhile, we’ve got a thriller in overtime between Marquette and Stanford. Go Pac-10!! GO DRUNKEN TREES!!!
UPDATE: Stanford wins!! Brook Lopez hit the game-winner with 1.3 seconds left. One of the best games of the tournament for sure. And the Trees won despite losing their coach in the first half.
P.S. Incidentally, Notre Dame’s loss knocked Khalil Aboukhaled out of sole possession of first place in the pool, back into a four-way tie with Liz Janelle, Alex Whitfield and Ryan Morgan. That’s still the situation after Stanford’s win, which all four of the co-leaders predicted. Full update coming after the Kansas-UNLV game ends.
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Categories: Notre Dame, NCAA Basketball & Pools
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I kid, I kid! :) But Notre Dame clearly isn't playing too well, down 32-19 at the half. Though we missed almost the entire first half because Purdue-Xavier took so long to finish. Speaking of which,
Khalil Aboukhaled (a.k.a. fezafou) now leads the pool.
UPDATE: Harumph. With the Irish trailing 38-28 with 14:08 left, CBS has switched us over to the closer Stanford-Marquette game. Off to MMOD I go.
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Categories: Notre Dame, NCAA Basketball & Pools
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George Mason will not be this year’s George Mason. Or even this year’s Winthrop, for that matter. :) Hurrah! Admire Mike Brey!

Don’t fret, Coach! You won!
Up next: Wazzu, Saturday at 6:40. GO IRISH!!
Well, hey, my bracket may be shot, and I may be tied for 242nd out of 245 in my pool, and I may have seen all my major predicted upsets come and go without happening… but at least one of my alma maters won today!
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Categories: Notre Dame, NCAA Basketball & Pools
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Notre Dame and George Mason are underway. Go Irish! I want my alma maters to at least go 1-for-2 today…
P.S. Also: Go Fullerton!! The #14-seed Titans are about to tip off against #3 Wisconsin. After all this carnage in my bracket, is it too much to ask that I get my one totally absurd upset pick right? :)
UPDATE: Good news: Notre Dame has jumped out to a 23-7 lead over George Mason. Bad news: CBS has deemed the game a blowout, and sent us out to a different game. Good news: The game they sent us out to is Wisconsin-Fullerton; the Titans lead by 3!
UPDATE 2: 33-21 Irish at the half.
UPDATE 3: And 30-28 Wisconsin. Go Fullerton!!
UPDATE 4: Damn. The Badgers are on a 15-3 run, and just like that, it’s 45-34 Wisconsin with 12:19 left.
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Categories: Notre Dame, NCAA Basketball & Pools
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On this NCAA Tournament Eve, here’s a question I’ve been meaning to pose to my blog audience — or, more specifically, to the sports fans within that audience. What’s the most devastating loss you’ve ever suffered as a sports fan?
After the jump, my answer to this question. But I’m really curious about your answers.