2006–07 Missouri Tigers men's basketball | |||
---|---|---|---|
Conference | Big 12 North | ||
2006–07 record | 18–12 (7–9 Big 12) | ||
Head coach | Mike Anderson | ||
Assistant coach | Melvin Watkins | ||
Assistant coach | Matt Zimmerman | ||
Assistant coach | T.J. Cleveland | ||
Home arena | Mizzou Arena | ||
Seasons
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2006-07 | Big 12 | Overall | ||||
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Standings | W | L | PCT | W | L | PCT |
Kansas † | 14 | 2 | .875 | 33 | 5 | .868 |
Texas A&M | 13 | 3 | .813 | 27 | 7 | .794 |
Texas | 12 | 4 | .750 | 25 | 10 | .714 |
Kansas State | 10 | 6 | .625 | 23 | 12 | .657 |
Texas Tech | 9 | 7 | .563 | 21 | 13 | .618 |
Missouri | 7 | 9 | .438 | 18 | 12 | .600 |
Oklahoma State | 6 | 10 | .375 | 22 | 13 | .629 |
Nebraska | 6 | 10 | .375 | 17 | 14 | .548 |
Oklahoma | 6 | 10 | .375 | 16 | 15 | .516 |
Iowa State | 6 | 10 | .375 | 15 | 16 | .484 |
Baylor | 4 | 12 | .250 | 15 | 16 | .484 |
Colorado | 3 | 13 | .188 | 7 | 20 | .259 |
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The 2006–07 Missouri Tigers men's basketball team represented the University of Missouri in the 2006-07 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The season marked the first year of Mike Anderson's tenure.
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Missouri returned just two starters from the 2005-06 team, which finished 11th in the Big 12 and 12-16 overall. Guard Jimmy McKinney and center Kevin Young graduated, and leading scorer Thomas Gardner left school for the professional ranks. The coaching tumoil involving Quin Snyder had defined the previous season; the Tigers controversially fired the head coach in February in the middle of a losing streak.[1] Athletic director Mike Alden chose Mike Anderson from the University of Alabama at Birmingham, hiring him on March 26, 2006.[2]
Anderson promised to bring "The Fastest Forty Minutes of Basketball" to Columbia, a style of play modeled after Nolan Richardson's "40 Minutes of Hell."[3] It is interesting to note, however, that Anderson's moniker did not become popular until a few seasons had passed.
Anderson inherited seven players from Snyder's tenure. Junior Marshall Brown appeared to be a rising star after averaging almost double figures in scoring as a sophomore. Point guard Jason Horton, center Kalen Grimes and swingman Glen Dandridge-- all of whom arrived in Columbia as a highly-touted group of recruits-- rounded out the junior class. Sophomore Leo Lyons returned as well, along with sophomore Matt Lawrence, who played sparingly as a freshman. The only senior on the squad was Marcus Watkins, son of assistant coach Melvin Watkins.
Anderson's first recruiting class featured three junior college players in point guard Stefhon Hannah, forward Vaidatos Volkus and forward Darryl Butterfield. Hannah figured to star for Missouri right away; Anderson had plucked him away from Kansas State and Bob Huggins, who also heavily recruited him. Volkus was signed by Snyder's staff and retained by Anderson, and Butterfield was an obscure recruit from Mineral Area College. Anderson also brought in two freshmen: Keon Lawrence and J.T. Tiller. Lawrence was also a Snyder signee but stayed on because the school kept Watkins on staff. Tiller had committed to Anderson at UAB and followed him to MU.
With the program in turmoil and the loss of so many productive players from the previous team, the media picked Missouri to finish eighth in the Big 12.
Missouri did not have much difficulty in Mike Anderson's first three games as head coach, defeating North Carolina A&T, Army and Stetson to capture the John Thompson Foundation Classic title.[4]The Tigers, who did not play a road game until December, began 9-0, facing mostly inferior opponents. However, MU did actually defeat two eventual NCAA Tournament squads during this stretch. On November 19, the Tigers overcome a modest five-point deficit in the second half to defeat Davidson, a team that wound up with a 13-seed in March. Freshman Stephen Curry, a future First-Team All-American and NBA Draft pick in 2009, played for the Wildcats and scored 16 points.[5] A few weeks later on November 30th, Missouri routed the University of Arkansas 86-64 in a nationally televised game. The Razorbacks-- the program that employed Anderson for 17 seasons as an assistant and later hired him as head coach in 2011-- turned the ball over 24 times, giving Anderson's frenetic style of play a signature win for the first time in Columbia. Due to one of the more significant snowfalls in mid-Missouri history, only 5,428 fans attended the game. The athletic department allowed the fans to fill the lower bowl, though, to compensate for a storm that forced MU to cancel classes the next day.[6][7]
Missouri's undefeated start ended when it played its first true road game in West Lafayette, Indiana. A Carl Landry-led Purdue team broke away in the second half to win 79-62. Less than two weeks later, Missouri dropped its second game of the season, a 73-70 loss to rival Illinois in the Braggin' Rights series. The loss marked the seventh straight loss in the series for the Tigers. In a back-and-forth game, Illinois held on for the victory after junior guard Stefhon Hannah fumbled the ball on the final possession and failed to get off a potential game-tying three-pointer.[8]
The Tigers won their final two games of non-conference play, which included an 83-75 home win over Mississippi State. Ben Hansbrough, who later transferred to Notre Dame and earned Big East Player of the Year honors in 2011, scored eight points in that game for the Bulldogs.
The momentum of MU's surprising 11-2 start faded immediately, as the Tigers began Big 12 play with four straight losses. In Anderson's Big 12 debut, Iowa State overcame a 16-point second-half deficit to win on a last-second tip-in by Wesley Johnson. Keeping with the trend of undiscovered stars, Johnson is yet another Missouri opponent during the 2006-07 season that eventually reached stardom-- Johnson transferred to Syracuse and won Big East Player of the Year honors in 2010 and was drafted fourth in the 2010 NBA Draft.[9]Four days later, a heavily-favored Texas Longhorns team dominated Missouri in Austin, thanks to 34 points from Kevin Durant. Then, in the midst of another ice storm, Missouri dropped a home game to Kansas State. The Tigers nearly recovered from a 16-point hole in the second half, and trailed by just five points with less than a minute to play. However, with a chance to throw down a monstrous dunk in the open court, junior forward Marshall Brown missed the jam and killed any hope of a comeback.[10] Two days after that loss, Missouri faced the rival Kansas Jayhawks in Lawrence in an ESPN "Big Monday" game on Martin Luther King Day. The underdog Tigers battled the 6th-ranked Jayhawks wire-to-wire, but sophomore Matt Lawrence's tying three-point attempt as time expired did not even catch the rim.
Anderson won his first Big 12 game in Boulder, Colo., as the Tigers dominated the Buffaloes in a 14-point victory. MU returned home to defeat Bob Knight's Texas Tech team to draw to 2-4 in conference play, but it lost three of its next four games to fall to 3-7.
The Tigers worked their way back into post-season contention, though, with a three-game winning streak. First, Missouri edged Baylor by seven points on Valentine's Day. Three days later, Anderson won his first game against a ranked opponent by beating 18th-ranked Oklahoma State 75-64 at Gallagher-Iba Arena, a traditionally difficult Big 12 venue. Freshman guard Keon Lawrence led the team with 18 points, and even little-used reserve Glen Dandridge made a three-pointer and scored five points in four minutes of action. The next week, Lawrence-- no relation to Matt Lawrence-- continued his strong play and came up with one of the season's most exciting plays in a win over the Oklahoma Sooners. Lawrence made the game-winning basket with a turnaround jumper with less than a minute to play, despite not making a field goal in the first half.[11]
At 6-7, the Tigers had finally worked their way into the NCAA Tournament at-large conversation. Although experts said it was a pipe dream, Missouri appeared to have a very slim chance if it could win the remainder of its games and finish above .500 in the Big 12. Any talk of the NCAA Tournament ended after MU dropped an overtime game to the Nebraska Cornhuskers in Lincoln, though, a game dominated by Australian center Aleks Maric, who scored 31 points. Maric, who proved to be an extremely difficult match-up for the smaller Tigers during his career, made five free throws to seal the game in the final minute of overtime. Freshman J.T. Tiller missed a game-winning attempt at the end of regulation in that game, and the Tigers missed three shots from behind the arc with a chance to tie the game in OT.[12]
Missouri finished the conference season with a home win over Colorado on senior night, which honored lone senior Marcus Watkins, the son of assistant coach Melvin Watkins. The Tigers battled Texas A&M to a tie at half-time in the Big 12 finale, but the Sweet 16-bound Aggies blew the game open in the second half for a comfortable win. That left MU with a 7-9 record and a sixth-place finish in the Big 12.
Missouri drew 11th-seeded Baylor in the first round of the 2007 Big 12 Tournament, a game televised by ESPN2. The Bears entered the game with a 14-15 record but featured a young, talented backcourt-- these same players would take the program to a surprising NCAA Tournament appearance just a year later. Baylor's talent was obvious on the court that night, and Scott Drew's team shocked Missouri with a 14-point win. The loss was considered embarrassing at the time for Anderson's program, which appeared to take a step back after a promising regular season. Anderson's vaunted pressing style did not fare well against Baylor, as it shot 63 percent from the field and burned Missouri's full-court pressure for 40 minutes.[13][14]
Upon elimination from the Big 12 Tournament, the Tigers clearly did not have the credentials for an NCAA Tournament at-large bid. However, with a 6th-place finish in a power conference and an 18-12 overall record, the Tigers appeared headed to at least the NIT. On March 12, 2007, though, the NIT did not select Missouri to participate, ending Anderson's first season as head coach.
Date | Time | Opponent# | Rank# | Site | TV | Result | Attendance | Record | |||
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Exhibition | |||||||||||
2006/11/3 | 7:06 p.m. | University of Missouri-Rolla | Mizzou Arena • Columbia, MO | W 105–67 | |||||||
2007/11/6 | 7:06 p.m. | Lithuania Academy | Mizzou Arena • Columbia, MO | W 94–40 | |||||||
Regular season | |||||||||||
2006/11/10* | 7:06 p.m. | North Carolina A&T | Mizzou Arena • Columbia, MO (John Thompson Foundation Classic) |
W 101–80 | 6,230 | 1–0 (0–0) | |||||
2006/11/11* | 3:06 p.m. | Army | Mizzou Arena • Columbia, MO (John Thompson Foundation Classic) |
W 67–58 | 7,386 | 2–0 (0–0) | |||||
2006/11/12* | 4:06 p.m. | Stetson | Mizzou Arena • Columbia, MO (John Thompson Foundation Classic) |
W 66–45 | 4,634 | 3–0 (0–0) | |||||
2006/11/16* | 7:06 p.m. | Lipscomb | Mizzou Arena • Columbia, MO | W 89–69 | 5,413 | 4–0 (0–0) | |||||
2006/11/19* | 1:06 p.m. | Davidson | Mizzou Arena • Columbia, MO | W 81–75 | 5,319 | 5–0 (0–0) | |||||
2006/11/25* | 6:06 p.m. | Stephen F. Austin | Mizzou Arena • Columbia, MO | W 85–56 | 7,470 | 6–0 (0–0) | |||||
2006/11/27* | 7:06 p.m. | Coppin State | Mizzou Arena • Columbia, MO | W 98–77 | 5,737 | 7–0 (0–0) | |||||
2006/11/30* | 8:05 p.m. | Arkansas | Mizzou Arena • Columbia, MO | ESPN2 | W 86–64 | 5,428 | 8–0 (0–0) | ||||
2006/12/3* | 12:06 p.m. | Evansville | Mizzou Arena • Columbia, MO | W 73–54 | 4,857 | 9–0 (0–0) | |||||
2006/12/9* | 2:00 p.m. | at Purdue | Mackey Arena • West Lafayette, IN | ESPN360 | L 62–79 | 13,505 | 9–1 (0–0) | ||||
2006/12/19* | 8:05 p.m. | vs. Illinois | Scottrade Center • St. Louis, MO (Busch Braggin’ Rights Game) |
ESPN | L 70–73 | 22,153 | 9–2 (0–0) | ||||
2006/12/30* | 5:36 p.m. | Southern | Mizzou Arena • Columbia, MO | W 87–58 | 9,091 | 10–2 (0–0) | |||||
2007/1/2* | 7:06 p.m. | Mississippi State | Mizzou Arena • Columbia, MO | W 83–75 | 7,527 | 11–2 (0–0) | |||||
2007/1/6 | 5:06 p.m. | Iowa State | Mizzou Arena • Columbia, MO | L 65–66 | 10,142 | 11–3 (0–1) | |||||
2007/1/10 | 7:00 p.m. | at #25 Texas | Frank Erwin Center • Austin, TX | L 68–88 | 11,983 | 11–4 (0–2) | |||||
2007/1/13 | 3:01 p.m. | Kansas State | Mizzou Arena • Columbia, MO | L 81–85 | 7,340 | 11–5 (0–3) | |||||
2007/1/15 | 8:05 p.m. | at #5 Kansas | Allen Fieldhouse • Lawrence, KS | ESPN | L 77–80 | 16,300 | 11–6 (0–4) | ||||
2007/1/24 | 7:07 p.m. | at Colorado | Coors Events Center • Boulder, CO | W 79–65 | 3,186 | 12–6 (1–4) | |||||
2007/1/27 | 3:01 p.m. | Texas Tech | Mizzou Arena • Columbia, MO | W 71–58 | 15,061 | 13–6 (2–4) | |||||
2007/1/31 | 8:05 p.m. | at Kansas State | Bramlage Coliseum • Manhattan, KS | ESPNU | L 73–80 | 13,266 | 13–7 (2–5) | ||||
2007/2/3 | 12:47 p.m. | Nebraska | Mizzou Arena • Columbia, MO | L 61–66 | 15,061 | 13–8 (2–6) | |||||
2007/2/6 | 7:00 p.m. | at Iowa State | Hilton Coliseum • Ames, IA | W 77–55 | 11,933 | 14–8 (3–6) | |||||
2007/2/10 | 2:45 p.m. | #8 Kansas | Mizzou Arena • Columbia, MO | ABC | L 74–92 | 15,061 | 14–9 (3–7) | ||||
2007/2/14 | 6:06 p.m. | Baylor | Mizzou Arena • Columbia, MO | W 78–71 | 6,549 | 15–9 (4–7) | |||||
2007/2/17 | 12:47 p.m. | at #18 Oklahoma State | Gallagher-Iba Arena • Stillwater, OK | W 75–64 | 14,044 | 16–9 (5–7) | |||||
2007/2/20 | 6:06 p.m. | Oklahoma | Mizzou Arena • Columbia, MO | W 72–68 | 9,165 | 17–9 (6–7) | |||||
2007/2/24 | 12:47 p.m. | at Nebraska | Bob Devaney Sports Center • Lincoln, NE | L 77–82 (OT) | 11,154 | 17–10 (6–8) | |||||
2007/2/28 | 6:06 p.m. | Colorado | Mizzou Arena • Columbia, MO | W 91–82 | 9,141 | 18–10 (7–8) | |||||
2007/3/3 | 3:00 p.m. | at #7 Texas A&M | Reed Arena • College Station, TX | L 78–94 | 13,203 | 18–11 (7–9) | |||||
Postseason | |||||||||||
2007/3/8 | 8:30 p.m. | vs. Baylor | Ford Center • Oklahoma City, OK (Phillips 66 Big 12 Conference Tournament) |
ESPN2 | L 83–97 | 18,879 | 18–12 (7–9) | ||||
*Non-Conference Game. #Rankings from AP Poll. All times are in Central Standard Time. |
Name | # | Position | Height | Weight | Year | Home Town |
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Keon Lawrence | 2 | Guard | 6–2 | 180 | FR | Newark, New Jersey |
Stefhon Hannah | 3 | Guard | 6–1 | 175 | JR | Chicago, Illinois |
J.T. Tiller | 4 | Guard | 6–3 | 190 | FR | Marietta, Georgia |
Leo Lyons | 5 | Forward | 6–9 | 225 | SO | Kansas City, Kansas |
Nick Berardini | 10 | Guard | 6–1 | 180 | JR | Lake Forest, Illinois |
Jason Horton | 12 | Guard | 6–2 | 190 | JR | Dallas, Texas |
Michael Anderson Jr. | 13 | Guard | 5–11 | 170 | JR | Birmingham, Alabama |
Marshall Brown | 15 | Forward | 6–6 | 220 | JR | Austin, Texas |
Marcus Watkins | 23 | Forward | 6–4 | 200 | SR | Charlotte, North Carolina |
Glen Dandridge | 25 | Forward | 6–6 | 220 | JR | Goochland, Virginia |
Vaidotas Volkus | 32 | Forward | 6–8 | 220 | JR | Panevėžys, Lithuania |
Matt Lawrence | 33 | Guard | 6–7 | 210 | SO | Wildwood, Missouri |
Darryl Butterfield | 35 | Forward | 6–7 | 225 | JR | Miami, Florida |
Kalen Grimes | 44 | Center | 6–9 | 250 | JR | Hazelwood, Missouri |
Poll | Pre | Wk 1 | Wk 2 | Wk 3 | Wk 4 | Wk 5 | Wk 6 | Wk 7 | Wk 8 | Wk 9 | Wk 10 | Wk 11 | Wk 12 | Wk 13 | Wk 14 | Wk 15 | Wk 16 | Wk 17 | Final |
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AP | |||||||||||||||||||
Coaches |
Player | GP-GS | Min/G | FG% | 3PT% | FT% | R/G | A/G | STL | BLK | PTS/G |
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Stefhon Hannah | 30–29 | 30.4 | .452 | .391 | .788 | 3.5 | 4.6 | 72 | 0 | 15.4 |
Matt Lawrence | 30–30 | 27.3 | .485 | .443 | .722 | 3.1 | 0.8 | 28 | 1 | 11.2 |
Marshall Brown | 30–29 | 21.8 | .450 | .294 | .705 | 4.2 | 1.5 | 23 | 11 | 10.1 |
Keon Lawrence | 30–8 | 23.5 | .433 | .388 | .788 | 2.9 | 1.9 | 35 | 11 | 9.7 |
Leo Lyons | 30–6 | 17.9 | .550 | .190 | .646 | 4.3 | 1.1 | 33 | 22 | 7.4 |
Kalen Grimes | 30–24 | 16.7 | .497 | .000 | .596 | 5.6 | 0.4 | 8 | 35 | 7.0 |
Darryl Butterfield | 29–1 | 14.0 | .491 | .263 | .600 | 2.8 | 0.8 | 21 | 3 | 4.6 |
J.T. Tiller | 30–0 | 13.6 | .427 | .324 | .703 | 1.3 | 1.1 | 22 | 1 | 4.2 |
Jason Horton | 30–22 | 21.7 | .351 | .345 | .568 | 1.9 | 3.2 | 38 | 22 | 3.6 |
Marcus Watkins | 24–1 | 6.7 | .488 | .400 | .647 | 1.0 | 0.2 | 9 | 0 | 2.3 |
Vaidotas Volkus | 23–0 | 6.9 | .500 | .000 | .625 | 1.8 | 0.0 | 6 | 4 | 2.2 |
Glen Dandridge | 18–0 | 4.8 | .276 | .211 | .833 | 0.7 | 0.1 | 7 | 1 | 1.4 |
Nick Berardini | 8–0 | 1.1 | .333 | .333 | .333 | 0.1 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 0.5 |
Michael Anderson Jr. | 10–0 | 1.9 | .333 | 1.000 | .000 | 0.3 | 0.1 | 0 | 0 | 0.3 |
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