Hi, my name is OverTheHilltop, and you might remember me from such previous blog posts as Gregg Doyel is an HDC, and Jerrelle Benimon: The Silent Killer. Your blog hosts/Ponzi scheme operators/cult leaders/lunch documenters have invited me to post my thoughts here about upcoming Georgetown games. Worst mistake they'll ever make. But who can turn down the opportunity to preview a sure to be sparsely attended Saturday morning showdown with the Hoyas' traditional arch-rival, the South Florida Bulls? Before you expel Flamin' Hot Cheeto crumbs through your nose, check the standings: the Bulls enter Saturday tied with your beloved Blue and Gray in the loss column. So let's get you ready for Saturday's action.
*Got a clever/un-clever/irritating name for this feature? Suggest one below.

TV/Internet/Radio. ESPNU/ESPN3/ESPN980.
It's Been So Long Since Last We Met. For those who think that the Big East will absorb Houston, UCF, and SMU while raising the hoops fortunes of those schools (do these people exist outside of the Marinatto house?), please consider USF. In six seasons as part of the Big East, the Bulls have won more than 5 conference games just once, a 9-9 finish two years ago fueled by Dominique Jones's tattoos. They have made no NCAA appearances during that time and lost their only NIT game.
This year, expectations were barely higher in Tampa, and a scuffling 6-6 start against non-conference competition portended little better. But then a 17-point road win at Villanova caught some attention, and suddenly a USF squad more accustomed to looking up at the .500 line has drifted up the conference standings. The Bulls' record deserves a small asterisk, as the wins have come against six of the bottom seven teams in the conference. Still, wins are wins in the Big East, and a half-dozen of them means that the Hoyas can't afford to overlook the Bulls Saturday.
Bulls to Know. South Florida's strength is in its front court, which is anchored yet again by senior big man Gus Gilchrist (10.7 ppg, 5.3 rpg), who's in his fourth year of moderate-volume, low-efficiency production. At 6'10", 245 lbs., Gilchrist is massive, but like the similarly large Yancy Gates, occasionally fancies himself more of a mid-range jump shooter than a banger. Gilchrist was the team's only double-digit scorer from last year, a distinction in which he's joined this year by junior guard Jawanza Poland (no relation) (10.4 ppg, 3.6 rpg), a 6'4" athlete who makes hay slashing to the hoop but struggles from deep. Between these two are a trio of forwards: Toarlyn Fitzpatrick (8.9 ppg, 7.0 rpg, team-high 46.3 3FG%) crashes the boards and occasionally strokes the ball from deep; Ron Anderson, Jr. (8.7 ppg, 5.6 rpg) cleans up the offensive glass and provides defensive grit; and Victor Rudd (9.0 ppg, 4.2 rpg) is a rangy wing scorer who puts up threes more frequently but less accurately than Fitzpatrick. Running the show is freshman point guard Anthony Collins (6.9 ppg, 5.0 apg, 3.1 TO pg, 1.8 stl pg), a pleasant surprise for coach Stan Heath's club, which otherwise lacks point guard depth.
When South Florida Has the Ball.
When Georgetown Has the Ball.
Transition. Press. South Florida relies on its bigs, and Heath lately has favored a seven-man rotation, both of which contribute to the Bulls' methodical pace, the fourth-slowest in the country. The Hoyas aren't exactly gazelles, ranking in the bottom half of the conference and the nation in pace. But they've succeeded in faster-paced games this year (Memphis, to a lesser degree DePaul), and may be able to generate turnovers, and easy points, by deploying their press. Marquette beat South Florida by 20 in large part by outrunning the Bulls, as can be seen here, or here.
Prediction. Playing South Florida always seems like a lose-lose proposition: there's the prospect of an upset loss (2006 in the Sun Dome, 2010 in Verizon), and the wins are often too close for comfort (a 3-point escape at home in 2006, a 6-point win last year). The match-up is particularly unsavory this year, given the Bulls' improvement. But they have yet to prove that they can do it against against an above-average squad, dropping double-digit decisions to Notre Dame and Marquette, and also barely losing to Connecticut. Regardless of outcome, Saturday's game won't be easy on the eyes: South Florida is a middling-at-best offensive squad, while Georgetown has suffered prolonged scoring droughts throughout the season. The Hoyas have become accustomed to winning ugly recently; expect more of the same Saturday. Georgetown 56, South Florida 49.
0 recs | 17 comments
RIP Phil Hartman
HoyaJoker07 - February 3, 2012
Very happy to see OtH posts over here
Some of the best pre/post game write-ups out there…I was actually waiting for this today. The Global Phenomenon seems to be unifying the Hoya Internet Nation.
WarmupEwing - February 3, 2012
Since you have your own site
CrossOverTheHilltop?
HoyaJoker07 - February 3, 2012
Unrelated - but new ACC schedule released
Pitt and Cuse will be opposite division. 18 game conference schedule (up from 16). Maryland and Pitt are now “rivals” meaning the only guaranteed home and home is between those two. No more Duke – Maryland twice a year. Or even maryland UVA. Cuse gets BC as its rival. 2013 at the earliest. Realignment is the best.
bunk moreland - February 3, 2012
This makes me happy
Hire Esherick - February 4, 2012 via Android app
there is something casually artistic about an asterisk
CasualHoya - February 3, 2012
i also encourage all to click on the 'no relation' link
well done
CasualHoya - February 3, 2012
“For those who think that the Big East will absorb Houston, UCF, and SMU while raising the hoops fortunes of those schools (do these people exist outside of the Marinatto house?), please consider USF. In six seasons as part of the Big East, the Bulls have won more than 5 conference games just once, a 9-9 finish two years ago fueled by Dominique Jones’s tattoos. They have made no NCAA appearances during that time and lost their only NIT game.”
Well USF’s record in CUSA was 56 wins and 104 losses
So I’d say their 29 wins and 87 losses against BE opponents is arguably an improvement when factoring level of competition.
hoyasincebirth - February 3, 2012
Wait, so why did we invite them to join the Big East again?
That question contains both snark and genuine curiosity, because Miami disappeared and was shortly replaced by USF with little fanfare. Were they a football-fueled addition as well?
Hoya Saxual - February 3, 2012
yup
hoyasincebirth - February 3, 2012
There goes Old Georgetown
Seems to be a logical title.
Or at least as much as logic as this lunch documentation blog ever has.
KeepItSaxa - February 3, 2012
proof that syracuse is in canada
It is not included on THIS LIST of miserable cities in the US
hoyabballownsall - February 3, 2012
People can come up with incontrovertible evidence to prove anything Kent....
HoyaSmacksYa - February 3, 2012
*Jeepers Peepers?
vivanloshoyas - February 3, 2012
Pregame
Details?
hoyafan03 - February 3, 2012 via mobile
Channel, I believe
At the ungodly hour of your choice. I’d imagine folks would be there by at least around 10am.
SirHoya - February 3, 2012
If this feature will alternate with NYHoya's
perhaps it should be called “Games That Matter Just As Much in the Conference Standings Even if No One Pays Attention.”
HoyaSmacksYa - February 4, 2012
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