Showing posts with label Dick McGuire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dick McGuire. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 1, 2025

Match-ups for Sweet 16: KY 2012 vs. Dartmouth 1944, Duke 1992 vs. UConn 2011, UNLV 1991 vs. UNC 2017

 Kareem led UCLA to a big win in the first of four games featuring original all-time great teams who coming off being upset, playing against four new teams in the game included when we decided every dynasty (2 or more title game appearances in 3 years) had to have a team in the game.

Here are the match-ups, with each teams ratings so you know the favorite, and if they have a great point guard that could help them win down if the game is tight down the stretch. The gre at team coming off the upset is listed first in each match-up.

UCLA 1967 - Kareem Abdul-Jabbar +14 vs. Kansas 1952 - Clyde Lovellette +1, UCLA favored by 15, UCLA actually won 79-64.

Kentucky 2012 - Anthony Davis +16 vs. Dartmouth 1944 - Dick McGuire -2, Kentucky actually won 80-60.

Kentucky favored by 18 over the only one of our 312 team that is not the actual roster of the 1944 Dartmouth team that fell one basket short of the title in their second title game in three years. While Dick McGuire was on the roster and went onto be a regular NBA All-Star, due to a lack of stats we compiled this team by adding Dick's brother Al McGuire and other Dartmouth players from throughout the 1940s who whom we could find stats.

Duke 1992 - Christian Laettner +11- * all-time PG Hurley vs Connecticut 2011 - Kemba Walker +1, Duke favored by 10 and despite incredible guard play on both sides, PG Hurley gives them and end if close. Result Duke 92, UConn 88, despite 33 from Kemba Walker.

UNLV 1991 - Larry Johnson +11- * all-time PG Anthony vs North Carolina 2017 - Justin Jackson +5, UNLV by 11 in what looks like the closest match-up, but also has the edge in a tight game at the end due to Great Anthony running the point. Actual result UNLV 85-84.

The following is the second of the Value Add Basketball Game instructions that includes the links to all teams and the instructions on having a great point guard on the team.

Click and Print the Teams You Want to Play


A | B | C | D | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y |

Choose the two teams you want to play from their links below, then click and print each one.  If you are playing two great teams against each other, the sheet will contain all 10 players on the team so you simply use the sheet. If you have drafted your own team of great players, then you print each player's team and cut out their card.

The rating by the team tells you how much better or worse they are than the average team. So if the first time, Alabama 1977 were to play the second team Alabama 2023, the 2023 team would be a 5-point favorite, because they are a +3 and the 1977 team is a -2.

If the team has an all-time great point guard, then he is listed after the rating. That gives the team an advantage in close games in the final 9 possessions - the right hand column on the scoresheet. As long as the player listed is the game during those last 9 possessions, the team has an edge because he will make steals or other turnovers against the team less likely. If you "all-time PG" by team, then ignore rolls of 12, 14 or 16 (possible steals) or 42, 44, 46 (other turnovers) and go straight to the 20-sided die for the result. 

A


Alabama 1977 - Reggie King - 2 Rating
Alabama 2023 - Brandon Miller +3
Arizona 1997 - Mike Bibby+3 - * all-time PG Bibby
Arizona 2015 - Stanley Johnson +3
Arizona St. 1980 - Byron Scott -4
Arizona St. 2009 - James Hardin -5
Arizona WOMEN 2021 - Aari McDonald -8
Arkansas 1978 - Sidney Moncrief -1
Arkansas 1994 - Corliss Williamson +6
Arkansas 2021 - JD Notae -3
Auburn 1984 - Charles Barkley -7
Auburn 2019 - Chuma Okeke -1
Auburn WOMEN 1989 - Carolyn Jones +6
Auburn WOMEN 2009 - KeKe Carrier & DeWanna Bonner -14

B

Baylor 2021 - Jared Butler +3
Baylor WOMEN 2012 - Kalani Brown +8
Baylor WOMEN 2019 - Brittney Griner +10
Boston College 2006 - Jared Dudley -6
Bowling Green 1963 - Nate Thurmond #49 best player ever -2
Bradley 1954 - Elmer Behnke -7
Brigham Young 1981 - Danny Ainge -3
Buffalo 2019 - Jeenathan Williams -4
Butler 2010 - Gordon Hayward -5

C

California 1959 - Jack Grout +1 - * all-time PG Kidd
California 1993 - Jason Kidd -5
Centenary 1976 - Robert Parish -10
Central Florida 2019 - Joey Graham -7
Charlotte 1977 - Cedric "Cornbread" Maxwell -2
Cincinnati 1960 - Oscar Robertson +10 - * all-time PG Robertson
Cincinnati 1962 - Paul Hogue +17
Cincinnati 2002 - Jason Maxiell +5
Clemson 1987 - Horace Grant -2
Colorado 2021 - McKinley Wright -6
Colorado St. 2024 - Isaiah Stevens -4
Colorado St. WOMEN 1999 - Becky Hammon -4
Connecticut 1996 - Ray Allen +7
Connecticut 1999 - Richard Hamilton +5
Connecticut 2004 - Ben Gordon +3
Connecticut 2011 - Kemba Walker +1
Connecticut 2023 - Adama Sanogo +11
Connecticut WOMEN 1995 - Rebecca Lobo - +10
Connecticut WOMEN 2002 - Sue Bird & Diana Taurasi +14
Connecticut WOMEN 2010 - Breanna Stewart +10
Connecticut WOMEN 2016 - Maya Moore +14
Creighton 2014 - Doug McDermott -1
Creighton 2020 - Ty-Shon Alexander -4
Creighton 2023 - Ryan Kalkbrenner -2

D

Dartmouth 1944 - Dick McGuire -2
Davidson 2008 - Stephen Curry -6- * all-time PG Curry
Dayton 1967 - Don May -2
Dayton 2020 - Obi Toppin -2

Delaware WOMEN 2013 - Elena Delle Donne -12
DePaul 1980 - Mark Aguirre -2
Detroit Mercy 1960 - Dave DeBusschere #73 best player ever -3
Drake 1969 - Willie McCarter -1
Duke 1986 - Johnny Dawkins +3- * all-time PG Dawkins
Duke 1992 - Christian Laettner +11- * all-time PG Hurley
Duke 2001 - Shane Battier +13- * all-time PG Bibby J. Williams
Duke 2010 - Jon Scheyer +5
Duke 2015 - Justise Winslow +4
Duke 2022 - Wendell Moore -2
Duke WOMEN 2006 - Alison Bales -2
Duquesne 2024 - Jimmy Clark -14

F

Florida 2006 - Joakim Noah +10
Florida Atlantic 2023 - Johnell Davis -6
Florida St. 1968 - Dave Cowans -10
Florida St. 1993 - Charlie Ward -1

G

George Mason 2006 - Jai Lewis -7
Georgetown 1984 - Patrick Ewing +5
Georgetown 1989 Alonzo Mourning +3
Georgetown 1995 - Allen Iverson +3- * all-time PG Iverson
Georgetown 2007 - Roy Hibbert +0
Georgia 1982 - Dominique Wilkins -9
Georgia Tech 1990 - Dennis Scott -1- * all-time PG Anderson
Georgia Tech 2004 - Jarrett Jack -1
Georgia WOMEN 2013 - Jasmine James -1
Gonzaga 1984 - John Stockton -15- * all-time PG Stockton
Gonzaga 2017 - Nigel Williams-Goss +6
Gonzaga 2023 - Drew Timme -1
Grand Canyon 2024 - Tyon Grant-Foster -11

H

Holy Cross 1950 - Bob Cousy +0- * all-time PG Cousy
Houston 1968 - Elvin Hayes +9
Houston 1983 - Hakeem Olajuwon +6
Houston 2021 - Quentin Grimes +1

I

Illinois 1989 - Nick Anderson +5
Illinois 2005 - Deron Williams +5
Indiana 1976 - Scott May +11
Indiana 1981 - Isaiah Thomas +4- * all-time PG Thomas
Indiana 2002 - Jared Jeffries +0
Indiana St. 1979 - Larry Bird +4
Indiana WOMEN 2024 - MacKenzie Holmes -5
Iowa 2001 - Reggie Evans -7
Iowa 2021 - Luka Garza -4
Iowa St. 2014 - DeAndre Kane -1
Iowa WOMEN 2024 - Caitlin Clark +3

J

Jacksonville 1970 - Artis Gilmore +3
James Madison University 2024 -11

K

Kansas 1952 - Clyde Lovellette +1
Kansas 1957 - Wilt Chamberlain +6
Kansas 1988 - Danny Manning -4
Kansas 1997 - Paul Pierce +8- * all-time PG Vaughn
Kansas 2008 - Mario Chalmers +3
Kansas 2022 - Ochai Agbaji +1
Kansas St. 2008 - Michael Beasley +3
Kansas St. 2023 - Markquis Nowell +1
Kentucky 1948 - Alex Groza +5
Kentucky 1970 - Dan Issel -2
Kentucky 1978 - Jack Givens +10- * all-time PG Macy
Kentucky 1996 - Antoine Walker +13
Kentucky 2012 - Anthony Davis +16
Kentucky WOMEN 2013 - A'dia Mathies - -3

L

La Salle 1954 - Tom Gola -1
Liberty 2023 - Darius McGhee -14
Long Beach State WOMEN 1987 - Cindy Brown +0
Louisiana Tech 1985 - Karl Malone -8
Louisiana Tech WOMEN 1982 - Pam Kelly +10
Louisiana Tech WOMEN 1988 รข€“ Teresa Weatherspoon +6
Louisville 1968 - Wes Unseld -5
Louisville 1980 - Darrell Griffith -1
Louisville 2013 - Russ Smith +5
Louisville WOMEN 2009 - Angel McCoughtry -5
Louisville WOMEN 2014 - Shoni Schimmel -5
Loyola Marymount 1990 - Bo Kimble -1
Loyola-Chicago 1963 - Jerry Harkness +5
Loyola-Chicago 2018 - Cameron Krutwig -9
LSU 1953 -Bob Pettit -6
LSU 1970 - Pete Maravich -14- * all-time PG Maravich
LSU 1992 - Shaquille O'Neal +0
LSU 2006 - Glen Davis -2
LSU WOMEN 2005 - Sylvia Fowles -6
LSU WOMEN 2023 - Angel Reese +1

M

Marquette 1955 - Terry Rand -6
Marquette 1971 - Jim Chones -4
Marquette 1977 - Butch Lee +0
Marquette 1994 - Jim McIlvaine -2
Marquette 2003 - Dwyane Wade +0
Marquette 2011 - Jimmy Butler -5
Marquette 2023 - Tyler Kolek -2
Marquette WOMEN 2019 - Chloe Marotta, Natisha Hiedeman +4
Marshall 1956 - Hal Greer -11
Maryland 1984 - Len Bias -4
Maryland 2002 - Juan Dixon  +4
Maryland WOMEN 2006 - Crystal Langhorne +1
Massachusetts 1971 - Julius Erving (Dr.J) -17
Massachusetts 1996 - Marcus Camby +3
Memphis 2008 - Derrick Rose +4  all time PG
Miami 1965 - Rick Barry -6
Miami 2013 - Shane Larkin -3
Miami 2023 - Norchad Omier -6
Michigan 1965 - Cazzie Russell +4
Michigan 1989 - Glen Rice +8
Michigan 1993 - Chris Webber & Fab 5 +8
Michigan 2013 - Trey Burke +2
Michigan St. 1979 - Magic Johnson +6- * all-time PG Johnson
Michigan St. 2000 - Mateen Cleaves +5- * all-time PG Cleaves
Michigan St. 2009 - Draymond Green -1
Michigan State WOMEN 2005 - Liz Shimek +0
Minnesota 1977 - Kevin McHale +3
Minnesota WOMEN 2004 - Lindsay Whalen -8
Mississippi 2001 - Justin Reed -3
Mississippi St. 2005 - Lawrence Roberts - -10
Mississippi State WOMEN 2018 - Victoria Vivians +4
Missouri 1982 - Steve Stipanovich -1
Murray St. 2019 - Ja Morant -12

N

Navy 1986 - David Robinson -5
NC State 2024 - DJ Burns -6
NC State 1974 - David Thompson +9
NC State WOMEN 2024 - Aziaha James -1
Nebraska 2014 - Terran Petteway -10
Nevada 2004 - Kirk Snyder -5
New Mexico 1974 - Bernard Hardin -2
New Mexico St. 1970 - Jimmy Collins +0
New York University 1948 -Dolph Schayes -18
Niagara 1970 - Calvin Murphy -14- * all-time PG Murphy
North Carolina 1957 - Lennie Rosenbluth +0
North Carolina 1965 - Billy Cunningham -14
North Carolina 1972 - Bob McAdoo +5
North Carolina 1982 - Michael Jordan +9
North Carolina 1998 - Vince Carter+9- * all-time PG Cota
North Carolina 2005 - Sean May +9- * all-time PG Felton
North Carolina 2017 - Justin Jackson +5
North Carolina 2022 - Armando Bacot -6
North Carolina WOMEN 2007 - Erlana Larkins -1
Northwestern 2017 - Vic Law -5
Notre Dame 1970 - Austin Carr -3
Notre Dame 1981 - Orlando Woolridge -4
Notre Dame WOMEN 2001 - Ruth Riley +2
Notre Dame WOMEN 2012 - Kylar Diggins +8
Notre Dame WOMEN 2018 - Arike Ogunbowale +4

O

Oakland 2024 - Trey Townsend -19
Ohio St. 1960 - Jerry Lucas +11
Ohio St. 2007 - Greg Oden +2
Ohio State WOMEN 1993 - Katie Smith +1
Ohio State WOMEN 2016 - Kelsey Mitchell -8
Oklahoma 1985 - Wayman Tisdale -1
Oklahoma 2016 - Buddy Hield +0
Oklahoma St. 1946 - Bob Kurland -5
Oklahoma St. 2004 - John Lucas +1
Oklahoma WOMEN 2002 - Stacey Dales -4
Oklahoma WOMEN 2010 - Abi Olajuwon -5
Old Dominion WOMEN 1980 - Nancy Lieberman +4
Old Dominion WOMEN 1985 - Adrienne Goodson +6
Old Dominion WOMEN 1997 - Ticha Penicheiro +5
Oregon 2017 - Dillon Brooks +1
Oregon St. 1982 - AC Green +3
Oregon St. 1990 - Gary Payton -5- * all-time PG Payton
Oregon WOMEN 2019 - Sabrina Ionescu +4

P

Penn St. 2018 - Tony Carr -5
Penn State WOMEN 2012 - Maggie Lucas -9
Pittsburgh 2009 - DeJuan Blair +2
Princeton 1965 - Bill Bradley -5
Princeton 2023 - Tosan Evbuomwan -15
Providence 1960 - Lenny Wilkens -8- * all-time PG Wilkens
Providence 1987 - Billy Donovan +0
Purdue 1969 - Rick Mount -1
Purdue 2018 - Carsen Edwards +2
Purdue 2024 - Zach Edey +6
Purdue WOMEN 2003 - Shereka Wright -7

R

Richmond 2011 - Justin Harper -10
Rutgers 1976 - Phil Sellers -1
Rutgers WOMEN 1988 - Sue Wicks -5
Rutgers WOMEN 2005 - Cappie Pondexter -1
Rutgers WOMEN 2007 - Kia Vaughn - +0

S

San Diego St. 2011 - Kawhi Leonard -2
San Diego St. 2023 - Jaedon LeDee -8
San Francisco 1956 - Bill Russell +6
Santa Clara 1996 -Steve Nash -10- * all-time PG Nash
Seattle 1958 - Elgin Baylor -1
Seton Hall 1989 - John Morton +1
Seton Hall 2020 - Myles Powell -5
SMU 2017 - Semi Ojeleye -1
South Carolina 1973 - Mike Dunleavy -3
South Carolina 2017 - Sindarius Thornwell -2
South Carolina WOMEN 2017 - A'ja Wilson +5
South Carolina WOMEN 2024 - Kamilla Cardoso +10
Southern Illinois 1967 - Walt Frazier -15- * all-time PG Frazier
St. Bonaventure 1970 - Bob Lanier+2
St. Joe's 2004 - Jameer Nelson +1- * all-time PG Nelson
St. John's 1985 - Chris Mullin -1
St. Mary's 2023 - Logan Johnson -3
St. Peter's 2022 - Doug Edert -18
Stanford 2008 - Brook Lopez -4
Stanford WOMEN 2012 - Nnemkadi Ogwumike -2
Stanford WOMEN 2021 - Kiana Williams +8
Stephen F Austin 2016 - Thomas Walkup -11
Syracuse 1966 - Dave Bing #74 best player ever & Jim Boeheim -7
Syracuse 1987 - Rony Seikaly +0- * all-time PG Douglas
Syracuse 2003 - Carmelo Anthony +0

T

TCU 2023 - JaKobe Coles -5
Temple 1958 - Guy Rodgers +1
Tennessee 1977 - Bernard King -2
Tennessee 2023 - Santiago Vescovi +1
Tennessee WOMEN 1989 - Bridgette Gordon +12
Tennessee WOMEN 1998 - Tamika Catchings, Chamique Holdsclaw +14
Tennessee WOMEN 2007 - Candace Parker +12
Texas 2003 - T.J. Ford -1- * all-time PG Ford
Texas 2007 - Kevin Durant -6
Texas 2023 - Marcus Carr +0
Texas A&M 2007 - Acie Law -1
Texas A&M WOMEN 2011 - Danielle Adams +7
Texas Tech 2019 - Jarrett Culver +1
Texas Tech WOMEN 1993 - Sheryl Swoopes -4
Texas WOMEN 1986 - Clarissa Davis +14
Texas WOMEN 1989 - Clarissa Davis (not usually used) -2
Texas WOMEN 2018 - Ariel Atkins -5
Tulsa 2000 - Eric Coley +1

U

UCLA 1964 - Walt Hazzard +15- * all-time PG Hazzard
UCLA 1967 - Kareem Abdul-Jabbar +14
UCLA 1972 - Bill Walton +18
UCLA 1975 - Dave Meyers +11
UCLA 1987 - Reggie Miller -6
UCLA 2006 - Jordan Farmar -2
UCLA 2008 - Russell Westbrook +4- * all-time PG Westbrook
UCLA 2021 - Jaime Jaquez -4
UCLA WOMEN 2018 - Monique Billings -3
UNLV 1987 - Armen Gilliam +4
UNLV 1991 - Larry Johnson +11- * all-time PG Anthony
USC 2021 - Evan Mobley +1
USC WOMEN 1983 - Cheryl Miller +6
USC WOMEN 1994 - Lisa Leslie, Tina Thompson -3
Utah 1998 - Andre Miller -3- * all-time PG Miller
Utah St. 2024 -Great Osobor -9
UTEP 1970 - Tiny Archibald -12- * all-time PG Archibald
UTEP (Texas Western) 1966 - Bobby Joe Hill -1

V

Vanderbilt 1993 - Bill McCaffrey +0
Vanderbilt WOMEN 2002 - Chantelle Anderson -2
VCU 1985 - Calvin Duncan -4
VCU 2011 - Bradford Burgess -11
Villanova 1950 - Paul Arizin #66 best player ever -3
Villanova 1985 - Ed Pinckney -7
Villanova 2018 - Mikal Bridges +6
Virginia 1981 - Ralph Sampson +2
Virginia 2019 - Kyle Guy +5
Virginia Tech 1986 - Dell Curry -7
Virginia Tech WOMEN 2023 - Elizabeth Kitley -5
Virginia WOMEN 1991 - Dawn Staley +2
Virginia WOMEN 2018 - Dominique Toussaint -14

W

Wake Forest 1996 - Tim Duncan -1
Wake Forest 2005 - Chris Paul +1- * all-time PG Paul
Washington 2006 - Brandon Roy -2
Washington St. 2008 - Taylor Rochestie -8
Washington WOMEN 2017 - Kelsey Plum -3 
Weber St. 2010 - Damian Lillard -17 all time PG Lilliard
West Virginia 1959 - Jerry West -1- * all-time PG West
West Virginia 2010 - Kevin Jones -1
Western Kentucky 1966 - Clem Haskins -1
Wichita St. 2013 - Fred VanVleet -5
Wisconsin 2015 - Frank Kaminsky +4
Wyoming 1943 - Ken Sailors -5

X

Xavier 2023 - Jack Nunge -4

Y

Yale 2024 - Danny Wolf -14




Thursday, December 26, 2024

The Return of College Basketball's Best: Boeheim, Smith, McGuire & the Great New Dynasties Compete

Favorite   YrStar (all-time top 75)       vs.RnkUnderdogYr    Star (all-time rnk if top 75)
Cincinnati1962Paul Hoguevs.198Syracuse1966Dave Bing #74, Jim Boeheim
UCLA1964Walt Hazzardvs.141Villanova1950Paul Arizin #66
UCLA1975Dave Meyersvs.140Detroit Mercy1960Dave DeBusschere #73
Kentucky1978Jack Givensvs.129Bowling Green1963Nate Thurmond #49
Kentucky2012Anthony Davis #53vs.128Dartmouth1944Dick McGuire
Duke1992Christian Laettnervs.95Connecticut2011Kemba Walker
UCLA1967Kareem Abdul-Jabbar #3vs.85Kansas1952Clyde Lovellette, Dean Smith
UNLV1991Larry Johnsonvs.47North Carolina2017Justin Jackson

In the 4th annual Value Add Basketball Tournament, we’re excited to feature a truly unique matchup: three of the greatest basketball coaches of all time—Jim Boeheim, Dean Smith, and Al McGuire—AS COLLEGE PLAYERS a competing against some of the most iconic players and dynasties in basketball history. 

We’ve created new matchups for our fourth tournament by adding eight new teams based on two key criteria: ensuring that all 28 college dynasties included in my recent CBS Sports piece on the 28 greatest dynasties as well as any team with a player featured in the NBA's recent 75th Anniversary Team.

Seeding and Tournament Breakdown:

The seeding worked out beautifully, with four newly identified dynasties being added to the mix and matched against teams that have either already been in the tournament or are looking to regain their spot in the race for the title. Among the new teams, four are favored against underdog teams added because one of their players was named by the NBA as one of the 75 greatest in history, while the remaining four face off against previous favorites who have had to bounce back after surprising upsets.


8 New All-Time Great Teams from Dynasties:

While we’ve previously included teams from UCLA, Connecticut, Kentucky, and Kansas in our Value Add Basketball Game (read more here), we realized several key dynasties runs from those schools were missing. To fill this gap, we’ve added six teams from these storied programs, along with two “non-blue blood” teams that also had a lasting impact on college basketball.


Cincinnati 1962 (Paul Hogue)
Seed: 1 | All-Time Rank: 2


Cincinnati, featuring Paul Hogue, is ranked among the top teams, thanks to a dynastic stretch post-Oscar Robertson and his 1960 team already in the game (of the 234 teams, this broke our rule of no two teams within two years of each other to avoid much overlaps in players).



UCLA 1964 (Walt Hazzard)
Seed: 2 | All-Time Rank: 3


With Walt Hazzard leading the way, this UCLA team remains one of the most dominant in history. We originally treated the 1964-75 UCLA run as one dynasty, but decided to instead threat it as four 3-year dynasties to include the 1964 and 1975 teams in addition to Kareem's 1968 and Walton's 1972.

UCLA 1975 (Dave Meyers)
Seed: 3 | All-Time Rank: 14


This team, led by Dave Meyers, brings UCLA’s deep tradition into the fold, and not only did this team get John Wooden one final title, but they faced the toughest competition (Strength of Schedule) of any other dynasty EXCEPT Michigan's Fab 5 and Michael Jordan's UNC champs.



Kentucky 1978 (Jack Givens)
Seed: 4 | All-Time Rank: 18


Jack Givens’ Kentucky squad had a magical run to the title and will be looking to make another deep tournament run.


North Carolina 2017 (Justin Jackson)
Seed: 9 | All-Time Rank: 47


The 2017 Tar Heels, led by Justin Jackson, will try to prove they deserve a higher ranking in this competitive field. They would have one back-to-back titles except for Villanova's buzzer beater the year before these champs.


Kansas 1952 (Clyde Lovellette)
Seed: 10 | All-Time Rank: 85


Clyde Lovellette’s Kansas team is a historical powerhouse, but if they lose their openers they will fall to 5th place among Kansas teams. Paul Pierce and Mario Chalmers both have teams in our all-time Final 5, the recent 2022 champs are ahead of this time, and if they lose their first game they will slip behind Wilt Chamberlain and the 1957 squad.


Connecticut 2011 (Kemba Walker)
Seed: 11 | All-Time Rank: 95


UConn’s 2011 national title squad, led by Kemba Walker, faces an uphill battle to prove themselves once again. This team did not look that strong until the tournament, which they simply picked the dribbles of opponents to never let them set up their offense, which they will definitely have to do again if this surprise champ from 2011 hopes to pull an upset in their first game against the overpowering champ from the year after they claimed their title - Kentucky 2012 and Anthony Davis. Whether or not they win in the game, the actual season was one of Jim Calhoun's most incredible title runs.




Dartmouth 1944 (Dick McGuire)
Seed: 12 | All-Time Rank: 128


The "Dartmouth 1944 and Friends" team is a unique entry, combining players from the 1940s, including NBA legends Dick McGuire and his brother, Al McGuire, alongside military trainees who played during World War II. Though this team near had the same lineup, they nearly captured a national title, and we’re thrilled to see them make their debut.


Make no mistake, the star of this "Dartmouth and Friends 1944" team and the actual 1944 team was Dick McGuire, who would go onto dish out more than 4,000 assists in the NBA en route to being named an NBA All-Star seven times and finishing 11th in MVP voting one year. This is our only team of 310 Value Add Basketball Game teams in the game that does not use the actual roster - but since the roster was changing every game anyway between military training that year, we decided to put together this team to represent the team that came so close to winning the title despite a new line-up every game. As the only team in the game that includes players not actually on the squad, I named them the “Dartmouth 1944 and Friends” team with Dick McGuire - 

Players were sharing time between Marine and Navy training and playing some games but not others - making the win over Big Ten champ Ohio State to improve to 19-1 to make their second national title game in three years before an overtime 40-42 loss to Utah in the title game even more impressive. We had left them out of the game due to how hard it was to cobble together stats but decided to put together a "Dartmouth and Friends" team using stats for five Dartmouth players from the 1940s that made the NBA in addition to the two Marine trainees who played some of those games between training and we let Dick bring his little brother Al McGuire to play as well.



  • 4 New Teams Featuring All-Time Greatest NBA Players:
We also realized that several players who made ESPN’s NBA 75th Anniversary Team (https://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/33297498/the-nba-75th-anniversary-team-ranked-where-76-basketball-legends-check-our-list) had college teams that deserved to be included. We’ve added these teams to the tournament, ensuring the best of both worlds: dominant college programs and some of the greatest NBA players ever.


Bowling Green 1963 (Nate Thurmond)
Seed: 13 | All-Time Rank: 129


Nate Thurmond led Bowling Green to the NCAA tournament twice, and his rebounding dominance will be critical in this competition. Bowling Green 1963 featuring  Nate Thurmond #49 is our tournament  13 -seed currently ranks as our No. H:H and No.  129 in our rating of the greatest teams ever. Thurmond was the first player NBA player to ever record a dradruple-double during his career, and he once recorded 42 rebounds in a game – only topped by Bill Russell and Wilt Chamberlain in the history of the NBA. He took  Bowling Green to the NCAA tournament twice and recorded 31 rebounds in his last college game.




Detroit Mercy 1960 (Dave DeBusschere)
Seed: 14 | All-Time Rank: 140


DeBusschere, a unique two-sport athlete, led Detroit Mercy to national recognition before going on to an illustrious NBA career.Detroit Mercy 1960 featuring  Dave DeBusschere #73 is our tournament  14 -seed currently ranks as our No. H:H and No.  140 in our rating of the greatest teams ever. DeBusschere was also an MLB baseball pitcher his first couple of years after taking Detroit Mercy to the baseball and basketball national tournaments, but after two MLB seasons focused on the NBA the rest of his career. According to Wikipedia, the only 12 other athletes to make the NBA and MLB are Danny Ainge, Frank Baumholtz, Hank Biasatti, Gene Conley, Chuck Connors, DeBusschere, Dick Groat, Steve Hamilton, Mark Hendrickson, Cotton Nash, Ron Reed, Dick Ricketts and Howie Schultz.




Villanova 1950 (Paul Arizin)
Seed: 15 | All-Time Rank: 141


Arizin’s remarkable journey from being cut from his high school team to becoming a national player of the year is a testament to his incredible career. Villanova 1950 featuring  Paul Arizin #66 is our tournament  15 -seed currently ranks as our No. H:H and No.  141 in our rating of the greatest teams ever. The coach at Arizin high school deserved to be fired, because he cut Arizin from the team – but a few years later Villanova’s coach saw him playing a CYO game and according to Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Arizin), “Severance approached Arizin and asked him if he would like to go to Villanova, to which Arizin answered: ‘I already go to Villanova.’" Perhaps the easiest and best recruiting job ever.  He scored 85 points in a game and was named national player of the year in 1950.

Syracuse 1966 (Dave Bing, Seed: 16 | All-Time Rank: 198

Jim Boeheim is our tournament  16 -seed currently ranks as our No. H:H and No.  198 in our rating of the greatest teams ever. He revolutionized the point guard position as a tall athletic player who did all the distribution you want in a point guard, but also scored at will  - finishing fifth in the nation by his senior season before a great NBA career. While he was certainly well known after becoming Mayor of Detroit, his roommate and teammate  Jim Boeheim went onto be arguably the greatest coach in the history of college basketball. Ironically we stumbled on three coaching legends accidentally by pulling up these teams, so now have player cards for Boeheim, Dean Smith (from Kansas 1952) and Al McGuire’s brother Dick McGuire from Dartmouth 1944.



4 Teams Rebounding from Surprising Upsets:

Finally, we have four teams that experienced shocking upsets in previous tournaments. These teams are hungry for redemption and will look to prove that their losses were mere flukes.

  1. Kentucky 2012 (Anthony Davis)
    Seed: 5 | All-Time Rank: 21 Kentucky 2012 featuring  Anthony Davis #53 is our tournament  5 -seed currently ranks as our No. H:H and No.  21 in our rating of the greatest teams ever. Kentucky is 4-2 in our game, and has looked dominant in winning those four games by an average of 17 points – just what we thought would happen in our game. One of their two losses was in our first big tournament of 96 teams, where they can be excused for being upset by Michael Jordan. However, when we had only developed teams since the www.kenpom.com pages were compiled in 2002, they were stung by another upset by the Auburn 2019 team.  We put them at No. 2 in our preseason rankings, but they dropped to their current No. 21 due to that loss, so we want to see if they are elite.

  2. Duke 1992 (Christian Laettner)
    Seed: 6 | All-Time Rank: 26

    Duke 1992 featuring  Christian Laettner is our tournament  6 -seed currently ranks as our No. H:H and No.  26 in our rating of the greatest teams ever. The legendary Duke 1992 team was No. 10 all-time in our preseason ranking, and the Laettner years is ranked as one of the best five dynasties of all time in our recent CBS Sports piece https://247sports.com/college/marquette/article/john-pudner-marquette-kryptonite-only-blemish-as-22-24-uconn-soars-in-top-10-all-time-rankings-242853394/. However, after never losing the heartbreakers during their actual run, they did lose two heartbreakers – on a last second shot by Michael Jordan and their hated rivals, and then again to their hated Big East rivals UConn 2004 to drop from our 10th all-time best team to 26th for now – hoping for a win to shoot back up.

  3. UCLA 1967 (Kareem Abdul-Jabbar)
    Seed: 7 | All-Time Rank: 35

    UCLA 1967 featuring  Kareem Abdul-Jabbar #3 is our tournament  7 -seed currently ranks as our No. H:H and No.  35 in our rating of the greatest teams ever. Kareem’s UCLA only lost once in our game – as they did in real life against Houston in the “Game of the Century,” but it was the biggest upset in the 304 games we’ve played since inventing the Value Add Basketball Game.  UCLA’s team is rated a +13 in our Value Add Basketball Game, good enough to start the season as our No. 3 team in addition to being ranked our No. 1 dynasty, and was therefore a 16-point favorite up against the DePaul 1980 team that was a -3. Hoewver, Mark Aguire and Terry Cummings no only pulled the biggest upset in our 304 games, but kept the tempo fast with steals to not let UCLA settle and work it into Kareem, and the Blue Demons not only won but pulled away 86-71 to send UCLA plunging all the way to 35th all-time in our game.

  4. UNLV 1991 (Larry Johnson)
    Seed: 8 | All-Time Rank: 45
    The Runnin’ Rebels of UNLV were once considered a top-tier team, but a string of upsets has dropped them down the rankings. Now, they’re back for redemption.UNLV 1991 featuring  Larry Johnson is our tournament  8 -seed currently ranks as our No.   45 in our rating of the greatest teams ever. This story was familiar – UNLV looked like one of the best ever as the 11th ranked team all-time in our game. However, they dropped all the way to 45th after two losses and need this tournament to try to reestablish themselves as elite. It was the 1991 Christian Laettner team that stunned them in the rematch in real life in 1991, and in the game it was the 2001 Duke team from a decade later that beat them.  That was not the game that dropped them a lot though – rather it was the 1966 national champs from Texas Western, the same team that would become UTEP and made history as the first all-Black starting team in a title game that beat the all-white Kentucky team of Adolf Rupp and his white socks.


Conclusion:

This year's Value Add Basketball Tournament promises to be one of the most exciting and unpredictable yet, with fresh faces, familiar dynasties, and historic players competing for the ultimate title. Will the new additions prove their place among the greatest teams of all time, or will the established powers reclaim their spots? Only time will tell, but one thing is certain: it’s going to be an unforgettable tournament for someone like me who loves to relive and learn about the greatest teams and players by seeing their strengths in the course of games..