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NCAAB

The Late Game Situation: Fantasy Shots Week 13

Another week, another tie for The Late Game Situation. With time running out, we are in the final week of conference play before we hit the tournaments. With the current records standing at 6-4-2 and 4-6-2, this week becomes a must win for Stein if he wants a chance to tie me during the conference tournaments. Here are the lineups for Week 13:

Stein:

G- Ishmael Smith, Wake Forest (13.2 ppg, 6.2 asts) – 2/27 vs. North Carolina
G- Reggie Holmes, Morgan State (21.5 ppg, 4.2 reb) – 3/1 vs. North Carolina A&T
G- Dominique Jones, South Florida (21.3 ppg, 6.1 reb) – 3/2 vs. DePaul
F- Omar Samhan, St. Mary’s (21.1 ppg, 11.1 reb) – 2/27 vs. Loyola-Marymount
F- Keith Benson, Oakland (16.9 ppg, 10 reb) – 2/27 vs. IPFW

Georgetown over Notre Dame – 2/27
Morgan State over North Carolina A&T – 3/1

Soldano:

G- Adrian Oliver, San Jose St. (23.3 ppg, 5.4 reb) – 2/27 vs. Fresno State
G- Demetri McCamey, Illinois (15.2 ppg, 6.8 asts) – 3/2 vs. Ohio State
G- Sherron Collins, Kansas (15.1 ppg, 4.4 asts) – 3/3 vs. Kansas State
F- Jamine Peterson, Providence (19.1 ppg, 10 reb) – 2/27 vs. South Florida
F- Kenneth Faried, Morehead State (16.9 ppg, 13.2 reb) – 2/27 vs. UT-Martin

UTEP over Rice – 2/27
Ohio State over Illinois – 3/2

College Basketball 2Nite: The Late Game Situation, returns next Friday at 10 PM (EST) where we will discuss the end of the regular season and preview the conference tournaments. Winners will be picked and we’ll tell you is in and who is out of the big dance. Check us out on WCWPSports.

NCAAB

The Late Game Situation: Fantasy Shots Week 11

We had a first on the Fantasy shots this past week. Stein and I tied 3-3-1 to keep the standings as is. I hold a one game lead on Brandon and looking to continue my reign of being the finer ma gentlemen. Here are our picks for Week 11:

Stein:

G- Jeffrey Taylor, Vanderbilt (13.9 ppg, 5.3 reb) – 2/13 vs. LSU
G- Malcolm Delaney, Virginia Tech (20 ppg, 4.2 ast) – 2/13 vs. Virginia
G- Sylven Landesberg, Virginia (18.1 ppg, 5.2 reb) – 2/17 vs. Florida State
F- Greg Monroe, Georgetown (15.4 ppg, 9.5 reb) – 2/14 vs. Rutgers
F- DeMarcus Cousins, Kentucky (16.4 ppg, 10.1 reb) – 2/16 vs. Mississippi St.

Vanderbilt over LSU – 2/13
Virginia over Florida State – 2/17

Soldano:

G- Mikhail Torrance, Alabama (15 ppg, 5.5 ast) – 2/13 vs. Arkansas
G- Austin Freeman, Georgetown (16.8 ppg, 3.6 reb) – 2/14 vs. Rutgers
G- Devan Downey, South Carolina (23 ppg, 3.4 ast) – 2/17 vs. Arkansas
F- Al-Farouq Aminu, Wake Forest (16.4 ppg, 11 reb) – 2/16 vs. Virginia Tech
F- Larry Sanders, Virginia Commonwealth (14.9 ppg, 8.7 reb) – 2/16 vs. Drexel

South Carolina over Georgia – 2/13
Seton Hall over DePaul – 2/14

Listen to College Basketball 2Nite: The Late Game Situation, with the Ma Gentlemen, every Friday night at 10 PM (EST) on WCWPSports.

NCAAB

The Late Game Situation: Fantasy Shots Week 6

On this week’s edition on College Basketball 2Nite: The Late Game Situation, Brandon Steinberger and I predicted winners for the six major conferences starting from the Pac-10 and ending with the ACC. Here is what we think:

Pac-10: Soldano – Washington, Stein – Washington State
Big 12: Unanimous – Texas
Big Ten: Soldano – Purdue, Stein – Ohio State
SEC: Unanimous – Kentucky
Big East: Soldano – Syracuse, Stein – West Virginia
ACC: Soldano – North Carolina, Stein – Maryland

Here are the official lineups for Fantasy Shots Week 6: (Soldano 3-2, Stein 2-3)

Stein:

G – Gordon Hayward, Butler (16.6 ppg, 9.1 reb) – 1/10 vs. Detroit
G – Elliot Williams, Memphis (19 ppg, 4.5 asts) – 1/13 vs. East Carolina
G – Raymond Taylor, Florida Atlantic (16.8 ppg, 6.5 asts) – 1/9 vs. Louisville-Monroe
F – Wesley Johnson, Syracuse (17.3 ppg, 8.7 reb) – 1/10 vs. South Florida
F – Yancy Gates, Cincinnati (10.4 ppg, 6.7 reb) – 1/13 vs. St. John’s

Quinnipiac over Wagner – 1/9
Temple over Pennsylvania – 1/13

Soldano:

G – Ishmael Smith, Wake Forest (12.9 ppg, 5.8 asts) – 1/12 vs. Maryland
G – LaceDarius Dunn, Baylor (17.6 ppg, 3.7 reb) – 1/12 vs. Colorado
G – Ashton Gibbs, Pittsburgh (17.5 ppg, 2.7 reb) – 1/13 vs. UConn
F – Lance Stephenson, Cincinnati (12.5 ppg, 4.8 reb) – 1/13 vs. St. John’s
F – Jarvis Varnado, Mississippi State (14.3 ppg, 10.9 reb) – 1/14 vs. Arkansas

Texas over Colorado – 1/9
Kansas State over Texas A&M – 1/12

NCAAB

The Late Game Situation: Fantasy Shots Week 4

As a reader of 3rd String Safety you know that all of us are in some way affiliated with WCWPSports, telling you why you should not be surprised if Tampa Bay drops a 40 burger on the Jets or why Spags took the Rams job just to get his coaching experience for when Coughlin leaves, or even the simpler things like how to pronounce Oshmigo Atogwe?

No matter the reason you tune in, two members of the 3rd String Family, Brandon Steinberger and myself, have provided you with another incentive to check us out. I present to you, College Basketball 2Nite: The Late Game Situation. We want you, our loyal readers, to help track a segment that Stein and I have created called The Late Game Situation Fantasy Shots (SHOTS! SHOTS! SHOTS! Ah Damnit, it doesn’t have the same effect when written, just watch the video on YouTube.)

Anyways this is what the segment consists of. Each week, Stein and I pick 5 players (3 guards, 2 forwards). The players can only be chosen once throughout the season and you select one of their games throughout the week (Sat-Thu) to which they will play. We accumulate their stats for the selected game and see at the week’s end which team performed at a higher level. The statistics are your basics: Points, Rebounds, Assists, Steals and Blocks. Finally, we choose two teams to win one game during the week. The team can only be chosen once and each game is considered to be another category. This is our 4th week of fantasy shots and I am off to an ass-kicking 3-0 start.

Without further ado, here are the picks for Week 4:

Stein’s Team:

G – Xavier Henry, Kansas (17.2 ppg 4 asts) 12/29 vs. Belmont
G – Ronald Moore, Siena (8.5 ppg 8.4 asts) 12/31 vs. St. Peter’s
G – Damion James, Texas (17 ppg 10 reb) 12/29 vs. Gardner Webb
F – Kyle Singler, Duke (15.7 ppg 7 reb) 12/29 vs. Long Beach St.
F – Al-Farouq Aminu, Wake Forest 12/28 (23 pts, 17 reb, 6 blks)

Xavier over LSU (12/29)
Mississippi over Jacksonville St. (12/29)

Soldano’s Team:

G – Rotnei Clarke, Arkansas (20 ppg 3 reb) 12/30 vs. Baylor
G – D.J. Kennedy, St. Johns (16.7 ppg 6 reb) 12/31 vs. Georgetown
G – Dominique Jones, South Florida (18.6 ppg, 6 reb) 12/30 vs. Louisville
F – Wesley Johnson, Syracuse (16.8 ppg 8 reb) 12/29 vs. Seton Hall
F – Storm Warren, LSU (14 ppg 10.7 reb) 12/29 vs. Xavier

UCLA over Delaware State (66-49) 12/27
Oklahoma State over Pacific (12/29)

Make sure you listen to College Basketball 2Nite: The Late Game Situation every Friday night at 11 PM (EST) on WCWPSports.

NBA

2009 NBA Mock Draft

Just 9 days before the NBA Draft, let’s roll right into Mock Draft 4.0…

Round One:

1. Los Angeles Clippers – Blake Griffin PF, Oklahoma – Mike Dunleavy has already come out and said that Griffin will be the pick here, basically casting away any sort of drama leading up to the draft. The Clips organization is so sure of the pick that they are using Griffin as a ploy to hope sell season tickets. Even though they have a ton of power forwards, they could ship one of them (Kaman, Z-Bo, Camby) to a team possibly like Chicago for a point guard like Kirk Hinrich.

2. Memphis Grizzlies – Hasheem Thabeet C, UConn – In my second mock draft, I had Thabeet going to Memphis because Rubio reportedly had no interest playing for the Grizzlies and would consider staying in Europe for a year and pull his name out. The Grizzlies can really use Thabeet’s size and defense and I am unsure whether the Grizz would feel comfortable about their chances that Rubio would actually come over if they drafted him. The Kings could swap picks here.

3. Oklahoma City Thunder – James Harden SG, Arizona State – Harden fits a need for the Thunder in which he can play shooting guard between Westbrook and Durant. Combine Harden’s scoring ability with Jeff Green coming off the bench and playing a Ben Gordon/Manu Ginobli type of role, the Thunder have a nice nucleus forming. Other mocks have Rubio being selected but Rubio will not provide the same scoring that Harden will and I think the Thunder want Westbrook to grow as a true point.

4. Sacramento Kings – Ricky Rubio PG, Spain – The Kings have been rumored that they might be swapping this pick with the Grizzlies for a guy like Spencer Hawes or Jason Thompson in order to guarantee they can select Rubio. If that happens I think Thabeet will go number 3 to the Grizzlies. Rubio makes the Kings immediately improved and steadies the backcourt along with Kevin Martin. If Rubio is off the board, I guarantee Jrue Holiday is the pick.

5. Washington Wizards – Stephen Curry PG/SG, Davidson – The Wizards are one of those teams that absolutely covet Curry and could snatch him up here. The Bobcats and of course the Knicks are also extremely high but this pick here is not out of the realm of possibilities. With Harden off the board, Jordan Hill slipping, and point guard not being a need, the Wizards will turn to Curry who might just be the best scorer of this year’s draft.

6. Minnesota Timberwolves – Jrue Holliday PG/SG, UCLA – Holliday was shooting up draft boards in the recent weeks but lately has had a string of non-impressive workouts (according to him). However, his upside, ability to play both point and some off the ball, and commitment to defense will make him a definite lottery pick and in my eyes top ten. If there is one player in this draft that is a lottery pick based off of ceiling, it is Holliday. Remember he only averaged 8 points per game at UCLA. He could go as high as number four to the Kings.

7. Golden State Warriors – Tyreke Evans PG/SG, Memphis – The Warriors have reportedly made a promise to Monta Ellis that they will not draft a point guard on June 25th. If so, that eliminates Johnny Flynn and Brandon Jennings, two players who would seem to make sense. Evans can play the point but he can also play off the ball. He can run in transition which fits Don Nelson’s style but to truly be effective, he is going to have to work on his jumper.

8. New York Knicks – Johnny Flynn PG, Syracuse – Max Caster alluded to the idea that the Knicks really like Jordan Hill out of Arizona. One thing you have to understand about the draft, teams like a lot of people. There were reports about how the Knicks could trade up for Thabeet. The Knicks seem to like every point guard in the draft. To me, if the Knicks draft Hill here, I see a lot of Channing Frye, and that is not a good sign (fellow Wildcat, also drafted at 8, bust pick). Point guard is a need right now and a guy like Flynn who can step in and contribute right away is huge. The Knicks can also consider Brandon Jennings who has a ton of upside and has been really impressive in workouts.

9. Toronto Raptors – Demar DeRozan SF, USC – The Raptors need help at the wing because they could potentially be losing Anthony Parker and Shawn Marion to free agency. DeRozan, because is so athletically gifted and could play the 2, could be drafted even higher by either the Wizards or Timberwolves. If DeRozan is gone, the Raptors can look at point guard or someone else to fill their void at the three or two.

10. Milwaukee Bucks – Jordan Hill PF, Arizona – Hill slips from number five to the Wizards to now number ten from my last mock. Truth is, Hill’s stock is slipping and there are prospects in the lottery with just more upside. The Bucks will be making a decision between two people here: Brandon Jennings and Hill. Ramon Sessions and Charlie Villaneuava are both hitting free agency so the Bucks have to fill one of those voids on draft night.

11. New Jersey Nets – Terrence Williams SF, Louisville – ESPN has Tyler Hansbrough going here and even me being a die-hard Tar Heel fan have to question that idea. Hansbrough just does not have lottery level talent to me, but he definitely is mid-late first round worthy. With that being said, Williams continues to be impressive at the right time and is showing people why he is truly one of the most versatile players in the draft. At Louisville last year, T-Will averaged 13 points, 8.5 rebounds, and 5 assists, very impressive numbers.

12. Charlotte Bobcats – Gerald Henderson SG, Duke – Will this pick ever change?!?! Henderson averaged 17 points in his final season with Duke but had an abysmal tournament. He is an effective slasher who will get his points that way and has above average on the ball defensive skills. He is one of the few shooting guards in the draft and would fill the void left when Jason Richardson was shipped to the Suns.

13. Indiana Pacers – Brandon Jennings PG, Italy – Some mocks have Jennings going in the top ten, others have him going to number 11 to Jersey (which does not make sense because they have Devin Harris and Jennings is going to be a starter). The wild-card teams for me with Jennings are the Warriors, Knicks, and Bucks. Because all three passed on him, he is left for Indiana. The Pacers need a big body and DeJuan Blair is a possibility but there are large concerns over his knees. Jennings fills a need at the point guard position and gives the team a certain amount of swagger they have been missing.

14. Phoenix Suns – Jeff Teague PG, Wake Forest – Teague took his decision to whether stay in the draft or go back to school down to the final hours. Because he chose to stay, I have to think he has a promise from a lottery team that they will draft him because another year at Wake would have done right. The Suns want to change the make-up of their roster and have already put their big men on the trading block. Drafting Teague will allow him to start from day one and find a new home for Steve Nash.

15. Detroit Pistons – Earl Clark SF/PF, Louisville – Clark slips out of the lottery for the first time in my mock draft but is selected here. Detroit will have to make the decision between Clark and Austin Daye of Gonzaga. Daye also took his decision down to the final hours and stayed in the draft, a move questioned by some. Clark can be the second coming of Lamar Odom because of his versatility and ability to shoot from the outside considering his frame.

16. Chicago Bulls – B.J. Mullens C, Ohio State – This appears more and more likely to be the choice in just about a week. The Bulls want to add size and because of Mullens height a lot of teams feel he has the potential but it will take a couple of years for him to effectively produce and see results.

17. Philadelphia 76ers – Ty Lawson PG, North Carolina – My first three mocks had Eric Maynor going here but with the hiring of Eddie Jordan, the Sixers are going to get back to their up and down style of offense. Lawson slipped on some boards but has regained some ground with holding his own against some of the elite guards in the draft such as Flynn, Evans, and Jennings. If he can remain healthy and play 70 games a year, this could end up being a big steal.

18. Minnesota Timberwolves – Austin Daye SF, Gonzaga – The Timberwolves need help at the three and Daye could eventually contribute in a big way. I am not as high on Daye as others are. I believe he needs to show more toughness and grit. But, when a potential late lottery pick is at 18, it is important you draft best player available.

19. Atlanta Hawks – Eric Maynor PG, Virginia Commonwealth – The Hawks have swung and missed on three point guards. Marvin Williams over Chris Paul. Shelden Williams over Rajon Rondo. Acie Law over Rodney Stuckey. They can’t make the same mistake 4 times in a row can they? Mike Bibby is a free agent and Eric Maynor is one of the most NBA-Ready players in the draft after spending 4 seasons at VCU.

20. Utah Jazz – DeJuan Blair PF, Pittsburgh – Similar to the Daye situation, Blair is viewed as a late lottery pick. At 20, the Jazz would welcome Blair with open arms. With Paul Millsap and Carlos Boozer hitting the open market in July, there is a huge void in the rebounding department that Blair can fill. However, there are questions about his knees and how well he will able to hold up over the course of an 82 game season.

21. New Orleans Hornets – Sam Young SF, Pittsburgh – Young can provide some scoring and solid minutes at both the two and the three coming for the Hornets. With the decline of Peja Stojakovic’s play, the Hornets are looking to add a guy who can give them energy at the small forward position. Young might not be able to score as effectively as some others remaining in the draft but he will bring great experience.

22. Dallas Mavericks – James Johnson PF, Wake Forest – Dallas can perhaps reach for a point guard like Patty Mills and fill a need. Or they can grab Johnson who would be considered a steal here based on pure skill. Johnson has not shown anything too impressive at the workouts which has allowed him to drop but nonetheless can turn out to be a valuable piece for the Mavs in the future.

23. Sacramento Kings – Omri Casspi SF, Israel – Sac-town loves tall European swingman who can shoot effectively from downtown. Examples, Peja and Hedo Turkoglu. The biggest difference is that Casspi is more athletic and is a much better defender than the two.

24. Portland Trail Blazers – DaJuan Summers SF, Georgetown – Summers can play both forward positions all while shooting the ball pretty consistently. To me this pick makes sense because Summers can step in and play for Batum who struggled in his rookie season. The Blazers could also look at point guard for Patty Mills or Darren Collison.

25. Oklahoma City Thunder – Tyler Hansbrough PF, North Carolina – Hansbrough is out to prove the doubters wrong and there will be some people who do not believe Hansbrough is first round talent. However, this pick makes sense. The Thunder need toughness down low and Psycho T is going to bring it every night.

26. Chicago Bulls – Chase Budinger SG/SF, Arizona – Budinger will provide scoring for a team that might end up losing Ben Gordon and Luol Deng. He is athletic enough where he can create his own shot. However, the Bulls will be playing 4 on 5 when the other team has the ball as Budinger is just awful on defense.

27. Memphis Grizzlies – Toney Douglas PG, Florida State – With the jury still out on Mike Conley, Toney Douglas provides solid backup play and a guy you could eventually turn to, in order to start. I value Douglas more than Patty Mills at this point because of his shooting ability, defense, and leadership.

28. Minnesota Timberwolves – Jonas Jerebko SF, Sweden – Jerebko can stay overseas and wait to come over to the NBA which would allow the T-Wolves to not carry three rookies on their 12 man roster.

29. Los Angeles Lakers – Wayne Ellington SG, North Carolina – Ellington is one of the purest shooters in the draft and can provide offense and scoring for a bench who really underperformed this season. With the Lakers potentially losing Lamar Odom in free agency, they will need someone who can fill it up on offense for the second unit.

30. Cleveland Cavaliers – Taj Gibson PF, USC – The Cavs could potentially lose Ben Wallace and Anderson Varaejo in the off-season so the Cavs need some bodies down low. As seen in the Orlando series, Z is not going to cut it down low. Gibson, although thin, needs to add some weight but at 6′10” has a crazy wingspan and can excel at shot-blocking.

Round 2 aka The “I Get My Name Announced By Adam Silver So I’m Special” Round

31. Sacramento Kings – Derrick Brown SF, Xavier

32. Washington Wizards – Marcus Thornton SG, LSU

33. Portland Trail Blazers – Darren Collison PG, UCLA

34. Denver Nuggets – Patrick Mills PG, St. Mary’s

35. Detroit Pistons – Victor Claver PF, Spain

36. Memphis Grizzlies – Jeff Adrein PF, UConn

37. San Antonio Spurs – Jeff Pendergraph – PF, Arizona State

38. Portland Trail Blazers – Jermaine Taylor SG, Central Florida

39. Detroit Pistons – Rodrigue Beaubois PG, France

40. Charlotte Bobcats – Josh Heytvelt C, Gonzaga

41. Milwaukee Bucks – Curtis Jerrells PG, Baylor

42. Los Angeles Lakers – Jodie Meeks SG, Kentucky

43. Miami Heat – DeMarre Carroll SF, Missouri

44. Detroit Pistons – Jack McClinton SG, Miami

45. Minnesota Timberwolves – Danny Green SF, North Carolina

46. Cleveland Cavaliers – Dionte Christmas SG, Temple

47. Minnesota Timberwolves – Jon Brockman PF, Washington

48. Phoenix Suns – Dante Cunningham SF/PF, Villanova

49. Atlanta Hawks – Jerel McNeal SG, Marquette

50. Utah Jazz – Paul Harris SF, Syracuse

51. San Antonio Spurs – A.J. Price PG, UConn

52. Indiana Pacers – Tyrese Rice PG, Boston College

53. San Antonio Spurs – Leo Lyons PF, Missouri

54. Charlotte Bobcats – Brandon Costner SF, North Carolina State

55. Portland Trail Blazers – Henk Norel PF, International

56. Portland Trail Blazers – Sergio Lull PG, Spain

57. Phoenix Suns – Wesley Matthews SG, Marquette

58. Boston Celtics – Robert Dozier PF, Memphis

59. Los Angeles Lakers – Alade Aminu PF, Georgia Tech

60. Miami Heat – Jeremy Pargo PG, Gonzaga

That’s it for the newest mock! The final mock will be coming out on June 24th the day before the draft. I will also be posting my rankings for each position in the draft.

Leave a comment, and tell me who you think your favorite team should target in the draft.

NBA

2009 NBA Draft Position Rankings

Here is a quick run-down on my individual rankings by position for the upcoming draft. This is not the order I have them going in my mocks as I select players to teams based on need and fit.

* = 1st rd projection

Point Guards:

1. Ricky Rubio 6′4” 180 lbs – Spain*
2. Stephen Curry 6′3” 185 lbs – Davidson*
3. Johnny Flynn 6′0” 172 1bs – Syracuse*
4. Brandon Jennings 6′1” 170 1bs – Italy*
5. Jrue Holliday 6′ 3” 185 lbs – UCLA*
6. Ty Lawson 6′0” 195 lbs – North Carolina*
7. Eric Maynor 6′2” 175 lbs – Virginia Commonwealth*
8. Jeff Teague 6′2” 180 1bs – Wake Forest*
9. Darren Collison 6′1” 165 lbs – UCLA
10. Toney Douglas 6′1” 196 lbs – Florida State*

Shooting Guards:
1. James Harden 6′ 5” 218 lbs – Arizona State*
2. Tyreke Evans 6′5” 195 lbs – Memphis*
2. Gerald Henderson 6′5” 215 lbs- Duke*
3. Terrence Williams 6′6” 220 – Louisville*
4. Wayne Ellington 6′5” 190 lbs – North Carolina*
5. Marcus Thornton 6′4” 198 lbs – LSU
6. Jermaine Taylor 6′4” 210 lbs – Central Florida
7. Jodie Meeks 6′4” 208 lbs – Kentucky
8. Jack McClinton 6′1” 185 lbs – Miami
9. Dionte Christmas 6′5” 190 lbs – Temple
10. Jerel McNeal 6′3” 195 lbs – Marquette

Small Forwards:

1. Demar DeRozan 6′7” 207 lbs – USC*
2. Austin Daye 6′10” 210 lbs – Gonzaga*
3. Sam Young 6′6” 210 lbs – Pittsburgh*
4. Omri Casspi 6′8” 220 lbs – Israel*
5. DaJuan Summers 6′8” 241 lbs – Georgetown*
6. Chase Budinger 6′7” 218 lbs – Arizona*
7. Jonas Jerebko 6′9” 210 lbs – Sweden*
8. Derrick Brown 6′7” 225 lbs – Xavier
9. DeMarre Carroll 6′8” 225 lbs – Missouri
10. Danny Green 6′6” 210 lbs – North Carolina

Power Forwards:

1. Blake Griffin 6′10” 251 lbs – Oklahoma*
2. Jordan Hill 6′10” 235 lbs – Arizona*
3. DeJuan Blair 6′7” 265 lbs – Pittsburgh*
4. Earl Clark 6′9” 220 lbs – Louisville*
5. Tyler Hansbrough 6′9” 230 lbs – North Carolina*
6. James Johnson 6′8” 235 lbs – Wake Forest*
7. Taj Gibson 6′9” 210 lbs – USC*
8. Victor Claver 6′10” 218 lbs – Spain
9. Jeff Pendergraph 6′9” 230 lbs – Arizona State
10. Jeff Adrien 6′6” 225 lbs – UConn

Centers:

1. Hasheem Thabeet 7′3” 265 lbs – UConn*
2. B.J. Mullens 7′0” 260 lbs – Ohio State*
3. Josh Heytvelt 6′11 260 lbs -Gonzaga
4. Goran Suton 6′10” 245 lbs – Michigan State
5. Luke Nevill 7′1” 250 lbs – Utah

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