2008–09 Clemson Tigers men's basketball team

2008–09 Clemson Tigers men's basketball
NCAA Tournament, At-Large Bid
Conference Atlantic Coast Conference
Ranking
AP No. 24
2008–09 record 23–9 (9–7 ACC)
Head coach Oliver Purnell
Assistant coach Ron Bradley
Assistant coach Frank Smith
Assistant coach Josh Postorino
Home arena Littlejohn Coliseum
2008–09 ACC men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
#2 North Carolina 13 3   .813     34 4   .895
#6 Duke 11 5   .688     30 7   .811
#12 Wake Forest 11 5   .688     24 7   .774
#16 Florida State 10 6   .625     25 10   .714
#24 Clemson 9 7   .563     23 9   .719
Boston College 9 7   .563     22 12   .647
Maryland 7 9   .438     21 14   .600
Virginia Tech 7 9   .438     19 15   .559
Miami (FL) 7 9   .438     19 13   .594
North Carolina State 6 10   .375     16 14   .533
Virginia 4 12   .250     10 18   .357
Georgia Tech 2 14   .125     12 19   .387
† ACC Tournament winner
Rankings from AP Poll

The 2008–09 Clemson Tigers men's basketball team represented Clemson University. The Head Coach is Oliver Purnell. The team played its home games in Littlejohn Coliseum in Clemson, South Carolina. All games were produced and broadcast locally by the Clemson Tigers Sports Network.

Pre-season

On Tuesday, October 21, 2008 the NCAA suspended Freshman Catalin Baciu for the first five games of the season for his participation with a Romanian professional basketball team. The term of the suspension equals the number of games Baciu played as a 15-year-old for U Mobitelco Cluj, a club team that plays in Romania’s top pro division, Divizia A. Although Baciu was not paid for his participation, NCAA rules prohibit student-athletes from playing on a professional team, regardless of whether they are employed. He played for a total of four minutes in his five games with U Mobitelco Cluj.[1]

On Sunday, October 26, 2008, members of the ACC media were polled and picked Clemson to finish fifth in the conference behind North Carolina, Duke, Wake Forest and Miami respectively.[2]

Regular season

On Sunday, November 16, 2008, The Tigers won the inaugural Charleston Classic 8-team tournament in Charleston, SC. This marks the 25th time in school history Clemson has won a regular season tournament.[3]

On Saturday, November 22, 2008, Clemson beat Charlotte 71–70 at Halton Arena, marking the first time ever a current member of the Atlantic Coast Conference has played at Charlotte. (Miami played during there during their time as a member of the Big East).

On Wednesday, January 21, 2009, Clemson lost to North Carolina 94–70. This extended the NCAA record for the longest road losing streak against one opponent to 54 games. This also ended Clemson's streak of not losing back-to-back ACC games that dated back to the 2006–07 season.

On Sunday, January 25, 2009, with a 73–59 victory over Georgia Tech, Senior guard K. C. Rivers broke the team record for most career wins as a player with 85. The previous record of 84 was co-held Cliff Hammonds and Elden Campbell.

On Monday, February 2, 2009, EA Sports announced that Littlejohn Coliseum was one of the Top-15 toughest places to play in College Basketball. Through an online poll, Fans determined 15 finalists, whose home courts were judged to be the most difficult for opposing teams to play in. These results will form an integral part of a new game mode in the EA SPORTS NCAA Basketball videogame franchise for 2009–10.[4]

Students rush the court after No. 10 Clemson's 74–47 victory over No. 3 Duke (2009-2-4)

On Wednesday, February 4, 2009, Clemson defeated No. 3 Duke in Littlejohn Coliseum by a score of 74–47. With the win, Clemson snapped a 22-game regular season losing streak to the Blue Devils dating back to January 7, 1997. The win was also Clemson's first win over a top-5 team since a victory over No. 5 Virginia in 2002.

The 27-point victory was Clemson's largest margin of victory against a top 25 team in history. The previous best was a 22-point victory margin on two occasions. Clemson defeated a fourth-ranked NC State team led by David Thompson at Clemson 92–70 on Feb 22, 1975 at Clemson, and defeated a 13th ranked Maryland team by 22 points, 93–71 on January 19, 1977 at Clemson.

The defeat was also the worst suffered by Duke since the NCAA Championship game of 1990, a 103–73 victory by UNLV on April 2, 1990. The 27-point margin was the largest for Duke in an ACC regular season game since January 18, 1984 when Wake Forest defeated Duke at Winston-Salem, 97–66.[5]

Clemson's 10-point win over Boston College in Boston on Feb 10 was just the third ACC road win over an ACC team that finished the year with a winning record in the last 22 years. Boston College finished the ACC regular season with a 9–7 record and went to the NCAA tournament.

On Tuesday, February 17, the EA Sports Tour visited Littlejohn Coliseum as Clemson hosted Maryland. Along with judging the game day atmosphere, the tour handed out video games, t-shirts and hosted an NCAA Basketball 09 tournament leading up to the game. After their visit, Novell Thomas, the producer of the NCAA Basketball game, wrote that "Hands down, Clemson just set the bar for all hosts of the EA SPORTS Toughest Places to Play, tour."[6] The 29-point victory was the largest margin of victory in Clemson history over Maryland, and tied for the largest margin of victory for a Clemson team against an ACC team that advanced to the NCAA Tournament. Clemson defeated Florida State in 1997–98 by 29 points.

The Tigers finished the season at 9–7, which gave them back-to-back winning seasons in the conference for the first time since the 1965–66 and 1966–67 teams did it. It is also Clemson's eleventh winning season in the conference since 1953.[7]

Clemson defeated five NCAA tournament teams during the regular season in Duke, Maryland, Boston College, Temple and Illinois. It is the most wins over NCAA Tournament teams in the regular season for the Clemson program since 1997–98.

Clemson finished the regular season with a 14–0 record against non-conference teams, one of just eight Division I teams with a perfect non-conference record. The others were Pittsburgh, UConn, North Carolina, Wake Forest, Minnesota, Illinois State and Stanford.

The Tigers won seven regular season ACC games by double digits, the most regular season league wins by 10 points or more in Clemson history. Statistically, Clemson finished the year with a +10.3 average margin of victory, third best in school history. Clemson's .688 free throw percentage was the third best for the program in the last 22 years. Clemson's .374 three-point percentage was the fourth best in school history.

Postseason

ACC tournament

Clemson entered the ACC Tournament as the No. 5 seed with a 9–7 record in the ACC Regular Season. The Tigers lost their opening game to No. 12 seed Georgia Tech 86–81 dropping their record to 3–8 all-time in the opening round of the tournament.

NCAA tournament

Clemson was selected for the NCAA Tournament for the second consecutive year, joining Duke and North Carolina as the only ACC schools to make the tournament each of the last two years. It was just the third time in Clemson history that Clemson has gone to the NCAAs in consecutive years.[8] The Tigers opened the tournament in Kansas City, Missouri as the No. 7 seed in the South Region. Down by double-digits against #10-seed Michigan in the first round, the Tigers went on a 14–0 run to make it 58–57 with just over a minute left. Clemson had a chance to tie the game with 13 seconds left, but K. C. Rivers' contested 3-pointer at the buzzer fell short. The 59–62 loss dropped Oliver Purnell to 0–5 all-time in NCAA Tournament games as a head coach.[9]

Roster

Coaches & staff

Position Name Year at CU Experience Alma Mater Hometown
Head CoachOliver Purnell
6th
31
Old Dominion ('75)Berlin, Maryland, United States
Associate Head CoachRon Bradley
6th
31
Eastern Nazarene ('74)Springfield, Massachusetts, United States
Assistant Head CoachFrank Smith
6th
19
Old Dominion ('88)Alexandria, Virginia, United States
Assistant CoachJosh Postorino
2nd
8
Dayton ('99)Clearwater, Florida, United States
Director of OperationsMichael Morrell
1st
1
Milligan College ('05)
Video ServicesAndy Farrell
1st
0
Dayton ('07)Richmond, Virginia, United States
Graduate AssistantAdam Gordon
1st
0
Tampa ('06)Ocala, Florida, United States

Players

No.NameHt.Wt.PositionYearHometown
03Anderson, Zavier5' 09"160PGSOGreenville, South Carolina, United States
10Baciu, Catalin7' 02"230CFRCluj-Napoca, Romania
04Baize, Jonah6' 06"205FSOEvansville, Indiana, United States
35Booker, Trevor6' 07"240FJRWhitmire, South Carolina, United States
45Grant, Jerai6' 08"220FSOBowie, Maryland, United States
21Narcisse, Brian6' 06"200FFRNorth Augusta, South Carolina, United States
22Oglesby, Terrence6' 02"190GSOKongsberg, Norway
55Petrukonis, Karolis6' 11"260CJRTrakai, Lithuania
15Potter, David6' 06"205FJRSevern, Maryland, United States
01Rivers, K.C.6' 02"215GSRCharlotte, North Carolina, United States
05Smith, Tanner6' 05"205SGFRAlpharetta, Georgia, United States
02Stitt, Demontez6' 02"150PGSOMatthews, North Carolina, United States
12Sykes, Raymond6' 09"220FSRJacksonville, Florida, United States
44Yanutola, Jesse6' 04"215FSRTega Cay, South Carolina, United States
11Young, Andre5' 09"160PGFRAlbany, Georgia, United States

2009 commitments

Name Hometown High school / college Height Weight Commit date
Devin Booker
C
Union, SC Union (SC) 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 220 lb (100 kg) Mar 25, 2007 
Scout:3/5 stars   Rivals:4/5 stars   247Sports: N/A    ESPN grade: 89
Donte Hill
G
Virginia Beach, VA Norfolk Collegiate School (VA) 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 200 lb (91 kg) Aug 9, 2008 
Scout:3/5 stars   Rivals:3/5 stars   247Sports: N/A    ESPN grade: 85
Milton Jennings
PF
Summerville, SC Pinewood Prep (SC) 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 200 lb (91 kg) Apr 9, 2008 
Scout:5/5 stars   Rivals:5/5 stars   247Sports: N/A    ESPN grade: 95
Noel Johnson
SG
Fayetteville, GA Fayette County High School (GA) 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 180 lb (82 kg) Jun 19, 2009 
Scout:4/5 stars   Rivals:4/5 stars   247Sports: N/A    ESPN grade: 95
Overall recruiting rankings: Scout: 22
  • Note: In many cases, Scout, Rivals, 247Sports, and ESPN may conflict in their listings of height and weight.
  • In these cases, the average was taken. ESPN grades are on a 100-point scale.

Sources:

Schedule and results

Date
Time, TV
Rank# Opponent# Result Record Site (Attendance)
City, State

Nov 6*
7:30 pm
USC Aiken
Exhibition
W 94–60 
Littlejohn Coliseum (3,000)
Clemson, SC
Regular season

Nov 14*
9:30 pm, CSS
vs. Hofstra
Charleston ClassicGame 4'
W 98–69  1–0
Carolina First Arena (4,582)
Charleston, SC

Nov 15*
8:19 pm, CSS
vs. TCU
Charleston Classic • Game 8'
W 70–58  2–0
Carolina First Arena (1,571)
Charleston, SC

Nov 16*
4:00 pm, CSS
vs. Temple
Charleston Classic • Game 11'
W 76–72  3–0
Carolina First Arena (3,026)
Charleston, SC

Nov 19*
7:30 pm, ACC Select
Wofford W 93–40  4–0
Littlejohn Coliseum (7,509)
Clemson, SC

Nov 22*
7:00 pm, CBS All-Access
at Charlotte W 71–70  5–0
Halton Arena (9,105)
Charlotte, NC

Nov 25*
8:00 pm
Savannah State W 81–49  6–0
Littlejohn Coliseum (6,595)
Clemson, SC

Nov 28*
7:30 pm, ACC Select
Presbyterian W 79–58  7–0
Littlejohn Coliseum (9,238)
Clemson, SC

Dec 2*
7:30 pm, ESPN2
at Illinois
ACC–Big Ten Challenge
W 76–74  8–0
Assembly Hall (14,741)
Champaign, IL

Dec 7*
3:00 pm, ACC Select
Liberty W 80–75  9–0
Littlejohn Coliseum (6,657)
Clemson, SC

Dec 13*
2:00 pm, ACC Select
SC State W 90–63  10–0
Littlejohn Coliseum (5,927)
Clemson, SC

Dec 16*
7:00 pm, ACC Select
No. 25 North Florida W 76–36  11–0
Littlejohn Coliseum (5,892)
Clemson, SC

Dec 21
7:45 pm, FSN
No. 25 at Miami (FL) W 91–72  12–0 (1–0)
BankUnited Center (4,755)
Coral Gables, FL

Dec 30*
7:00 pm, FSN
No. 20 at South Carolina
Carolina-Clemson Rivalry
W 98–87  13–0
Colonial Life Arena (16,168)
Columbia, SC

Jan 3*
4:00 pm, ACC Select
No. 20 East Carolina W 79–66  14–0
Littlejohn Coliseum (8,223)
Clemson, SC

Jan 6*
9:00 pm, FSN
No. 12 Alabama W 66–59  15–0
Littlejohn Coliseum (10,000)
Clemson, SC

Jan 10
Noon, Raycom
No. 12 NC State W 63–51  16–0 (2–0)
Littlejohn Coliseum (10,000)
Clemson, SC

Jan 17
3:30 pm, ABC
No. 10 No. 2 Wake Forest L 68–78  16–1 (2–1)
Littlejohn Coliseum (10,000)
Clemson, SC

Jan 21
9:00 pm, ESPN
No. 10 at No. 5 North Carolina L 70–94  16–2 (2–2)
Dean Smith Center (21,750)
Chapel Hill, NC

Jan 25
7:45 pm, FSN
No. 10 Georgia Tech W 73–59  17–2 (3–2)
Littlejohn Coliseum (8,000)
Clemson, SC

Jan 29
7:00 pm, ESPN2
No. 12 at Virginia Tech W 86–82  18–2 (4–2)
Cassell Coliseum (9,847)
Blacksburg, VA

Feb 4
9:00 pm, ESPN
No. 10 No. 4 Duke W 74–47  19–2 (5–2)
Littlejohn Coliseum (10,000)
Clemson, SC

Feb 7
7:00 pm, Raycom
No. 10 Florida State L 61–64  19–3 (5–3)
Littlejohn Coliseum (10,000)
Clemson, SC

Feb 10
9:00 pm, FSN
No. 12 at Boston College W 87–77  20–3 (6–3)
Conte Forum (6,126)
Chestnut Hill, MA

Feb 15
1:00 pm, Raycom
No. 12 at Virginia L 81–85 OT 20–4 (6–4)
John Paul Jones Arena (10,971)
Charlottesville, VA

Feb 17
7:30 pm, ESPN2
No. 13 Maryland W 93–64  21–4 (7–4)
Littlejohn Coliseum (9,700)
Clemson, SC

Feb 22
1:00 pm, Raycom
No. 13 at Georgia Tech W 81–73  22–4 (8–4)
Alexander Memorial Coliseum (8,339)
Atlanta, GA

Feb 25
7:30 pm, ESPN2
No. 12 Virginia Tech L 77–80  22–5 (8–5)
Littlejohn Coliseum (9,728)
Clemson, SC

Feb 28
2:00 pm, Raycom
No. 12 at No. 23 Florida State L 66–73  22–6 (8–6)
Donald L. Tucker Center (12,100)
Tallahassee, FL

Mar 3
7:00 pm, Raycom
No. 18 Virginia
Senior Night
W 75–57  23–6 (9–6)
Littlejohn Coliseum (8,150)
Clemson, SC

Mar 8
6:00 pm, FSN
No. 18 at No. 10 Wake Forest L 88–96  23–7 (9–7)
LJVM Coliseum (14,665)
Winston-Salem, NC
Postseason

Mar 12
2:00 pm, Raycom
No. 17 vs. Georgia Tech
ACC Tournament • First Round
L 81–86  23–8
Georgia Dome (26,352)
Atlanta, GA

Mar 19*
7:10 pm, CBS
No. 24 vs. Michigan
NCAA Tournament • First Round
L 59–62  23–9
Sprint Center (17,398)
Kansas City, MO
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses.
All times are in Eastern Time.

Player statistics

Finals Stats[10]

# Name GP GS Min FG% 3PT% FT% R/G A/G STL BLK PTS/G
35Booker, Trevor323230.7.571.409.7079.71.7476315.3
01Rivers, K. C.323231.0.449.392.6676.01.6551414.2
22Oglesby, Terrence323125.8.375.388.8451.71.828113.2
02Stitt, Demontez323225.9.413.273.6732.43.848148.7
12Sykes, Raymond323121.7.578.000.5575.10.720327.9
15Potter, David32017.6.380.365.7562.21.31974.9
45Grant, Jerai32114.6.644.000.6473.20.512454.7
11Young, Andre32014.9.377.390.6320.82.13114.4
05Smith, Tanner32013.2.448.357.6671.81.12963.6
10Baciu, Catalin904.9.400.000.4002.10.4322.0
21Narcisse, Bryan1604.2.533.000.6670.80.3211.5
44Yanutola, Jesse712.0.200.000.5001.10.3200.4
55Petrukonis, Karolis604.5.200.000.0001.00.5100.3
03Anderson, Zavier701.6.500.000.0000.40.0110.3
04Baize, Jonah401.8.000.000.0000.30.3000.0
Clemson Totals.463.374.68837.214.929818778.3
Opponent Totals.431.359.66635.213.324310668.0

Awards and honors

Trevor Booker

K.C. Rivers

Tanner Smith

Oliver Purnell, Head Coach

Ron Bradley, Associate Head Coach

Rankings

Ranking Movement Week
Poll Pre 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Final
USA Today/ESPN Coaches RV RV RV RV RV 25 20 16 11 9 9 11 10 11 13 13 19 18 21 26
Associated Press RV RV RV RV RV 25 22 20 12 10 10 12 10 12 13 12 18 17 24

Final season notes

[20]

Team notes

Clemson finished the season with a 23–9 record for a .719 winning percentage. This marks the fifth consecutive year that Clemson has improved its winning percentage from the previous year. Head Coach Oliver Purnell joins former Georgia Tech coach Bobby Cremins as the only coaches in ACC history to take a program to a better winning percentage in five consecutive years. Cremins did it from 1980–81 through the 1986–87 season. The team finished the year with 23 wins, tied for the fifth highest total in school history. The .719 winning percentage ranks in a tie for fourth best in school history and the best since the 1989–90 team was 24–8 for a .750 winning percentage. The 23 victories gave Clemson at least 20 wins for the third straight year, a first in Clemson history. Clemson has 72 wins over the last three years, third among ACC teams behind North Carolina and Duke.

Clemson finished the year ranked 24th in the final Associated Press poll. It marks the second consecutive year Clemson has been ranked in the final AP poll, the first time in history Clemson has finished in the top 25 in any poll in consecutive years. Clemson was ranked in the AP poll for 14 consecutive weeks and in the USA Today poll for 13 consecutive weeks, the second longest streak of weeks in the top 25 in the same season in Clemson history and most since 1996–97 team was ranked in all 19 polls. Clemson reached a high ranking of No. 9 in the USA Today poll on Feb 9, the highest ranking for the program since the 1997–98 season.

Clemson won 10 games away from home, including seven on the opponent's home court. The 10 wins away from home were the most since the 1996–97 team won a record 11. The seven road wins were the most since the 1986–87 team won eight on the opponent's home court. The Tigers posted a 4–4 ACC road record this year, the most ACC road wins in a season for the Clemson program since 1996–97.

Individual notes

Clemson's senior class of K.C. Rivers, Raymond Sykes and Jesse Yanutola finished their careers with 91 victories, a Clemson record for a four-year class. The previous record was 84. The class also had a record 33 ACC regular season wins and 12 ACC road wins. The .679 winning percentage is second best in Clemson history behind the seniors of 1979–80.

See also

References

  1. Sterlow, Paul "NCAA suspends Tigers' freshman center", The State, October 21, 2008,
  2. "North Carolina Favored in 2008–09 Pre-Season Poll by ACC Media". Men's Basketball. The ACC. Retrieved 2008-10-26.
  3. "Clemson Men's Basketball Team to Play Host to Wofford in Home Opener Wednesday Night". Men's Basketball. Clemson Tigers. Retrieved 2009-03-05.
  4. "Clemson Named by EA SPORTS One of the Toughest Places to Play in the Country". Men's Basketball. Clemson Tigers. Archived from the original on February 8, 2009. Retrieved 2009-02-02.
  5. "Clemson vs. Duke Postgame Notes". Men's Basketball. Clemson Tigers. Archived from the original on February 15, 2009. Retrieved 2009-02-05.
  6. "Toughest Places to Play – "Death Valley" Edition". Inside EA Sports. EA Sports. Archived from the original on February 24, 2009. Retrieved 2009-02-19.
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  8. "Final Clemson Basketball Notes 2008–09". Men's Basketball. Clemson Tigers. Archived from the original on June 2, 2009. Retrieved 2009-03-21.
  9. "Clemson Falls to Michigan in NCAA Tournament". Men's Basketball. Clemson Tigers. Archived from the original on March 25, 2009. Retrieved 2009-03-21.
  10. "Season Statistics". Men's Basketball. Clemson University Athletic Department. Archived from the original on March 8, 2009. Retrieved 2009-03-21.
  11. "Clemson Downs Temple 76–72, Wins Charleston Classic". Men's Basketball. Clemson University Athletic Department. Retrieved 2008-11-16.
  12. "ACC Announces Basketball Players of the Week". Men's Basketball. The ACC. Retrieved 2008-11-17.
  13. "Oklahoma's Griffin Headlines Naismith Trophy Mid-Season Candidates". Naismith Awards. Atlanta Tipoff Club. Archived from the original on March 2, 2009. Retrieved 2009-02-24.
  14. steven. "National Association of Basketball Coaches Announces 2009 Division I All-District Teams" (PDF). National Association of Basketball Coaches. Archived (PDF) from the original on June 3, 2009. Retrieved 2009-03-05.
  15. "Rivers, Landesberg Earn ACC Honors". Men's Basketball. The ACC. Retrieved 2008-12-22.
  16. "Rivers, Lawal, Aminu Earn ACC Weekly Honors". Men's Basketball. The ACC. Retrieved 2009-02-02.
  17. "Miami's Jack McClinton and Duke's Greg Paulus Headline the 2009 All-Atlantic Coast Conference Academic Men's Basketball Team". Men's Basketball. TheACC.com. Retrieved 2009-03-06.
  18. "USBWA NAMES FINALISTS FOR 2009 HENRY IBA AWARD". U.S. Basketball Writers Association. Retrieved 2009-03-02.
  19. "BasketballScoop 2009 Coaches of the Year powered by Critical Reload". BasketballScoop.com. Archived from the original on April 3, 2009. Retrieved 2009-03-31.
  20. "Final Clemson Basketball Notes 2008–09". Men's Basketball. ClemsonTigers.com. Archived from the original on June 2, 2009. Retrieved 2009-03-21.
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