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Milwaukee's Daily Magazine for Thursday, May 24, 2012

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In Sports Commentary

Buzz Williams has the Marquette basketball program pointed in the right direction.

In Sports Commentary

Few teams in the Big East have been able to hold Jae Crowder back.

The Buzz grows at Marquette


They're too injured. They are too undersized. They are too reliant on the three-point shot.

All repeated criticisms of the Marquette basketball program, currently the No. 10 ranked college basketball team in both major polls.

Constantly underrated and lacking blue-chip star power, what Buzz Williams has built at Marquette has been nothing short of remarkable. That the Golden Eagles have been steadily rising as one of the top programs in the nation despite losing such stars as Jerel McNeal, Wesley Matthews, Lazar Hayward, and Jimmy Butler to graduation is mind-boggling.

First of all, Williams is not nearly as country-bumpkin stupid as he wants you to believe. I wouldn't go as far as to say it is an act. But it isn't that far away from one. In terms of his basketball instinct, attention to detail, and routine, Williams is borderline obsessive.

In terms of basketball knowledge, Williams is borderline genius.

But because of his upbringing in Texas, Williams has a southern drawl that some mistake for a lack of intelligence. When Williams glowingly talks about opposing coaches he has faced and beaten, like Bo Ryan, Jim Boeheim, or Jim Calhoun, he downplays his own accomplishments.

Please, make no mistake about what the fourth-year coach brings to the table. At one point during last season, Williams was asked to describe his team's play in one word. The word he used? "Pugnacity."

That word also describes how Williams has coached since he was elevated to the top spot when Tom Crean left for Indiana in 2008.

Marquette may not be the biggest or fastest team in college basketball; they may not have very much flash in their game, and they have not had a top-tier singular player since Dwayne Wade left for the NBA nearly a decade ago.

But there also might not be a harder working team in the nation than the Golden Eagles.

And while they may get beaten from time to time, rarely will they get outworked. Part of the challenge of being a Marquette basketball player nowadays is surviving Williams' famous "boot camp" before the start of the season. Until you complete your training, you aren't allowed to wear the team's official practice gear. It is a badge of honor to be included in those that survive.

It is equally shameful to be left out.

This is the mentality that has permeated Marquette this season. Overcoming injuries to big men Chris Otule and Davante Gardner, the Golden Eagles have seen senior leaders Darius Johnson-Odom and Jae Crowder put everyone else on their back. Both players are in consideration for Big East Player of the Year, having led Marquette to wins over No. 7 Wisconsin and No. 21 Louisville.

In addition, Marquette has been able to hang with the top teams in the country, suffering narrow road losses at No. 9 Georgetown and No. 1 Syracuse in back-to-back games.

Since that Jan. 7 loss at the Carrier Dome, Golden Eagles only hiccup was a 76-59 whipping at Notre Dame Feb. 4. Perhaps that served as the wake-up call that they needed, with MU having ripped off four straight wins since, including last Saturday's 79-64 convincing win over the defending NCAA Champion Connecticut Huskies.

In that game, despite not having a healthy player over 6-7, Marquette still outrebounded U-Conn 33-30. Never mind that the Huskies feature one of the top centers in the country in 6-10 Andre Drummond. Crowder got Drummond into foul trouble and dominated him when they were matched up together.

For the player many expect to be the No. 2 overall selection in this year's NBA Draft, Drummond was held to just seven points and four rebounds. Meanwhile, Crowder turned in one of the greatest individual performances in school history, registering 29 points and 12 rebounds in Marquette's victory.

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Talkbacks

yinger73 | Feb. 22, 2012 at 11:29 a.m. (report)

Buzz Williams is one of the rising stars in the college basketball coaching community. I hope he stays at MU for a long time. He has done an amazing job with this year's squad. He will only become a better recruiter and is vastly underestimated for his X's and O's. Jae Crowder might be the most underrated player in America. He will please whatever team steals him in the late 1st/early 2nd round of this years' NBA draft.

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