It seems like every year UCLA is the favorite to win the Pac-10 and this year is no different. Back are familiar faces Darren Collison, Josh Shipp, and Alfred Aboya. Joining them will be the slowly emerging James Keefe, sharp shooter Michael Roll, and a fabulous freshman class highlighted by guard Jrue Holiday and forward Drew Gordon. With the talent on the floor and the brain trust on the bench, a fourth straight Final Four is not out of the question.
Challenging UCLA will primarily be USC and Washington State. The Trojans lost OJ Mayo to the NBA but have a capable replacement in freshman DeMar DeRozan. The steady hand of Daniel Hackett will be key because he knows how to spread the ball and how to lead. Junior Taj Gibson returns up front and will look to regain the positive draft buzz he had after his freshman year.
Washington State returns three solid contributors in big man Aron Baynes, forward Daven Harmeling, and guard Taylor Rochestie. Many of the authorities on college basketball have been touting freshman forward Klay Thompson as a possible star. If Thompson can fulfill these lofty expectations, then coach Tony Bennett should have another successful season on his hands.
A team to watch will be Arizona State. Kevin Love and Mayo outshined James Harden last year as Pac-10 freshman so now Harden will have his time to shine. The Sun Devils have a nice inside out combo with Harden and senior forward James Pendergraph. Pendergraph needs to be as productive on the inside as Harden is on the outside for ASU to be successful.
You also can't count out Arizona as well as a possible surprise team in Oregon. Brandon Jennings shocked the world when he bypassed college for a year of European basketball. Lute Olsen still has junior star Chase Budinger as well as solid big man Jordan Hill. The 'Zona role players like Nic Wise, Jamelle Horne, and Fendi Onobun will have to step up or Arizona will be close to the bubble come March. For Oregon, their hopes will rest on the small shoulders of TaJuan Porter. The 5-foot-6 junior is the Ducks' best player and will need to score early and often every game. Senior Churchill Odia has one more year to fulfill the potential many people thought he had and will need to step up for his team. In the post, Maarty Leunen is gone and now the bulk will fall to talented freshman Michael Dunigan from Chicago. Keep an eye on Joevan Catron, he could in for a big season.
1. UCLA, 2. USC, 3. Washington State, 4. Arizona State, 5. Arizona, 6. Stanford, 7. Washington, 8. Oregon, 9. California, 10. Oregon State
Awards Section:
Player of the Year: James Harden, SG, Arizona State
Freshman of the Year: DeMar DeRozan, G/F, USC
Most Improved Player: Jamelle Horne, F, Arizona
Coach of the Year: Herb Sendek, Arizona State
All Pac-10 1st team:
C Jon Brockman, Washington
PF Taj Gibson, USC
SF Chase Budinger, Arizona
SG James Harden, Arizona State
PG Darren Collison, UCLA
Sunday, October 19, 2008
Saturday, October 18, 2008
2008-2009 College Basketball Preview: Big Twelve
Big 12 member Kansas took home the title last season but after massive graduation and NBA defections, they are full of newcomers and while possessing tremendous talent, will falter early on because their youth and inexperience. The contenders for the Big 12 title fall to Oklahoma and Texas.
It seems like Rick Barnes loses NBA talent every season and still puts together a quality team. He is a fantastic recruiter and this team is no different from some of his others in the past. His main scoring option will be senior AJ Abrams. He may be short in stature at 5-11 but his ability to shoot and score points in unparalleled. If Rick Barnes chooses to go with three guards, watch out for the steady handed Justin Mason to play the small forward spot and freshman PG Dogus Balbay to handle the point. If Balbay emerges, it could free up Abrams to primarily focus on scoring. Up front are Damion James, Gary Johnson, and Connor Atchley. James has made significant strides the last two seasons and this could be the year he becomes an All-American.
Oklahoma looks like the slight favorite over Texas because of their experience (three starters back) and especially sophomore PF Blake Griffin, a possible top five NBA draft pick in 2009. Along side Griffin will be his brother, Taylor, sweet shooting senior Austin Johnson, and McDonald's All-American guard Willie Warren. Look for UCLA transfer Ryan Wright to have a nice impact in the post off the bench for the Sooners.
Nipping at the heels of the top two will be Baylor. Scott Drew has stockpiled talented guards and is working with Curtis Jerrells, LaceDarius Dunn, Henry Dugat, and Demond "Tweety" Carter. They will push the ball at every opportunity and will make every game a track meet. The big question will be if Kevin Rogers, Qunicy Acy, Josh Lomers, and Mamadou Diene can hold down the fort up front. The long term success of this team depends on the development of their frontcourt players.
1. Oklahoma, 2. Texas, 3. Baylor, 4. Kansas, 5. Kansas State, 6. Texas A&M, 7. Missouri, 8. Oklahoma State, 9. Texas Tech, 10. Nebraska, 11. Iowa State, 12. Colorado.
Awards Section:
Player of the Year: Blake Griffin, F/C, Oklahoma
Freshman of the Year: Marcus Morris, F, Kansas
Most Improved Player: Cole Aldrich, C, Kansas
Coach of the Year: Frank Martin, Kansas State
All- Big 12 1st Team:
F/C Blake Griffin, Oklahoma
PF Damion James, Texas
SF James Anderson, Oklahoma State
SG AJ Abrams, Texas
PG Curtis Jerrells, Baylor
It seems like Rick Barnes loses NBA talent every season and still puts together a quality team. He is a fantastic recruiter and this team is no different from some of his others in the past. His main scoring option will be senior AJ Abrams. He may be short in stature at 5-11 but his ability to shoot and score points in unparalleled. If Rick Barnes chooses to go with three guards, watch out for the steady handed Justin Mason to play the small forward spot and freshman PG Dogus Balbay to handle the point. If Balbay emerges, it could free up Abrams to primarily focus on scoring. Up front are Damion James, Gary Johnson, and Connor Atchley. James has made significant strides the last two seasons and this could be the year he becomes an All-American.
Oklahoma looks like the slight favorite over Texas because of their experience (three starters back) and especially sophomore PF Blake Griffin, a possible top five NBA draft pick in 2009. Along side Griffin will be his brother, Taylor, sweet shooting senior Austin Johnson, and McDonald's All-American guard Willie Warren. Look for UCLA transfer Ryan Wright to have a nice impact in the post off the bench for the Sooners.
Nipping at the heels of the top two will be Baylor. Scott Drew has stockpiled talented guards and is working with Curtis Jerrells, LaceDarius Dunn, Henry Dugat, and Demond "Tweety" Carter. They will push the ball at every opportunity and will make every game a track meet. The big question will be if Kevin Rogers, Qunicy Acy, Josh Lomers, and Mamadou Diene can hold down the fort up front. The long term success of this team depends on the development of their frontcourt players.
1. Oklahoma, 2. Texas, 3. Baylor, 4. Kansas, 5. Kansas State, 6. Texas A&M, 7. Missouri, 8. Oklahoma State, 9. Texas Tech, 10. Nebraska, 11. Iowa State, 12. Colorado.
Awards Section:
Player of the Year: Blake Griffin, F/C, Oklahoma
Freshman of the Year: Marcus Morris, F, Kansas
Most Improved Player: Cole Aldrich, C, Kansas
Coach of the Year: Frank Martin, Kansas State
All- Big 12 1st Team:
F/C Blake Griffin, Oklahoma
PF Damion James, Texas
SF James Anderson, Oklahoma State
SG AJ Abrams, Texas
PG Curtis Jerrells, Baylor
Friday, October 17, 2008
2008-2009 College Basketball Preview: Big Ten
The top five from last year, Wisconsin, Purdue, Indiana, Michigan State, and Ohio St will still be tough this year, except for Indiana because of their gutting and subsequent rebuilding this season. Purdue and Michigan State look like the favorites on paper. Purdue is returning every important player minus Scott Martin (transfer) and Tarrance Crump (senior). Still on board are Robbie Hummel, Chris Kramer, Keaton Grant, and budding star guard E'Twaun Moore. Matt Painter's baby Boilermakers finished second last year and figure to stay in second or ascend to the top. The development of Hummel, Moore, and especially Johnson will be the key. Development will equal a Big Ten regular season championship.
Nipping at their heels will be a familiar face, Michigan State. Tom Izzo looks like he may finally have the right combination of size and speed that he has been looking for since his first and only title in 2000. Raymar Morgan, Travis Walton, Goran Suton, and Kalin Lucas are back. Drew Neitzel is gone but MSU fans could have an addition by subtraction deal on their hands. Neitzel was a supreme talent but his teammates defferred to him too much, now it's their turn to shine. Lucas, along with Chris Allen and Durrell Summers will need to step up and show that they deserved their lofty expectations coming out of high school two years ago. Throw in super freshman Delvon Roe and you have size, speed, and depth at every position. Even if they don't win the Big Ten, the Spartans could make noise in March.
Ohio State has been stockpiling talent for several years now but this talent is still young and may not be ready for the big stage. The frontcourt will be anchored by freshman BJ Mullens and sophomores Dallas Lauderdale and Evan Turner. Mullens, who some said was the best high school player in the nation, will be counted on early and often to score and rebound consistently. In the backcourt is David Lighty, a strong 6-foot-5 guard who can score and also provide leadership to a young team. Lighty will need to help out because it could be a point guard by committee with freshman Anthony Crater and junior PJ Hill.
A team to look out for is Tubby Smith's Minnesota team. They lose three out of their top five but Smith's coaching abilities can't be overlooked. They return Big Ten Tournament hero Blake Hoffharbar and quick guard Lawrence Westbrook. Smith also brought in a highly touted freshman class with guard Devoe Joseph, forward Colton Iverson, and center Ralph Sampson III (yes that Ralph Sampson). The excitement is there, watch out for this team late in the season.
Outside the top four, the rest of the Big Ten is relatively weak.
1. Purdue, 2. Michigan State, 3. Ohio State, 4. Wisconsin, 5. Penn State, 6. Michigan, 7. Iowa, 8. Minnesota, 9. Illinois, 10. Northwestern, 11. Indiana.
Awards Section:
Player of the Year: Raymar Morgan, F, Michigan State
Freshman of the Year: BJ Mullens, C, Ohio State
Most Improved Player: JaJuan Johnson, F, Purdue
Coach of the Year: Ed DeChellis, Penn State
All-Big Ten 1st team:
C BJ Mullens, Ohio State
PF Raymar Morgan, Michigan State
SF Robbie Hummel, Purdue
SG E'Twaun Moore, Purdue
G Manny Harris, Michigan
Nipping at their heels will be a familiar face, Michigan State. Tom Izzo looks like he may finally have the right combination of size and speed that he has been looking for since his first and only title in 2000. Raymar Morgan, Travis Walton, Goran Suton, and Kalin Lucas are back. Drew Neitzel is gone but MSU fans could have an addition by subtraction deal on their hands. Neitzel was a supreme talent but his teammates defferred to him too much, now it's their turn to shine. Lucas, along with Chris Allen and Durrell Summers will need to step up and show that they deserved their lofty expectations coming out of high school two years ago. Throw in super freshman Delvon Roe and you have size, speed, and depth at every position. Even if they don't win the Big Ten, the Spartans could make noise in March.
Ohio State has been stockpiling talent for several years now but this talent is still young and may not be ready for the big stage. The frontcourt will be anchored by freshman BJ Mullens and sophomores Dallas Lauderdale and Evan Turner. Mullens, who some said was the best high school player in the nation, will be counted on early and often to score and rebound consistently. In the backcourt is David Lighty, a strong 6-foot-5 guard who can score and also provide leadership to a young team. Lighty will need to help out because it could be a point guard by committee with freshman Anthony Crater and junior PJ Hill.
A team to look out for is Tubby Smith's Minnesota team. They lose three out of their top five but Smith's coaching abilities can't be overlooked. They return Big Ten Tournament hero Blake Hoffharbar and quick guard Lawrence Westbrook. Smith also brought in a highly touted freshman class with guard Devoe Joseph, forward Colton Iverson, and center Ralph Sampson III (yes that Ralph Sampson). The excitement is there, watch out for this team late in the season.
Outside the top four, the rest of the Big Ten is relatively weak.
1. Purdue, 2. Michigan State, 3. Ohio State, 4. Wisconsin, 5. Penn State, 6. Michigan, 7. Iowa, 8. Minnesota, 9. Illinois, 10. Northwestern, 11. Indiana.
Awards Section:
Player of the Year: Raymar Morgan, F, Michigan State
Freshman of the Year: BJ Mullens, C, Ohio State
Most Improved Player: JaJuan Johnson, F, Purdue
Coach of the Year: Ed DeChellis, Penn State
All-Big Ten 1st team:
C BJ Mullens, Ohio State
PF Raymar Morgan, Michigan State
SF Robbie Hummel, Purdue
SG E'Twaun Moore, Purdue
G Manny Harris, Michigan
Thursday, October 16, 2008
2008-2009 College Basketball Preview: Big East
You look at the teams and talent in this league and you can only say wow. This could be the best conference top to bottom in the history of college basketball. Talented bigs? Luke Harangody, Hasheem Thabeet, DeJuan Blair, Earl Clark, check. Floor leaders? Levance Fields, Jonny Flynn, Dominic James, AJ Price, check. It's going to be a dogfight once conference play opens and the team who survives and excels will be the team that wins the regular season conference title. The tournament is up for grabs because all sixteen teams are in and if you get hot, you can make a run.
You must start with the top tier teams of the conference in Connecticut, Notre Dame, and Louisville. UCONN has another potent three guard lineup with AJ Price, Jerome Dyson, and McDonalds All-American Kemba Walker. Up front is Jeff Adrien and Hasheem Thabeet. They may get hit on the offensive boards, but their speed will be the difference because they can control the tempo. Add Stanley Robinson from his hiatus in December and your looking at a Final Four possibility.
Notre Dame has the inside-outside combination of Luke Harangody and Kyle McAlarney. Throw in Tory Jackson, Luke Zeller, and the underrated Zach Hillesland to create a smart, veteran, and talented core. The Irish were stymied by the stingy Washington State defense last March and are motivated to move past that and into the Sweet 16. This is Mike Brey's most talented team to date.
Rick Pitino's Louisville Cardinals also boast depth and talent. In the backcourt are veterans Andre McGee and the sweet shooting Jerry Smith. Edgar Sosa looms on the bench after a season in Pitino's doghouse. If Sosa can find his game, then the team will take off. Earl Clark and freshman Samardo Samuels will carry the load upfront. Athletic freshman big Terrance Jennings could be a darkhorse contributor off that bench as well.
Even with those talented teams, Pittsburgh (Levance Fields, DeJuan Blair, Sam Young), Syracuse (Jonny Flynn, Paul Harris, Eric Devendorf, Marquette (Dominic James, Jerel McNeal, Wes Matthews, and Villanova (Scottie Reynolds, Corey Stokes, Dante Cunningham) have the talent to play big-time basketball. The talent is sublime and it will be an absolute treat to watch the conference this season.
DISCLAIMER: Every lower ranked team has the potential and talent to move up. That's West Virginia, Georgetown, Cincinnati, DePaul etc.
1. Connecticut, 2. Notre Dame, 3. Louisville, 4. Pittsburgh, 5. Marquette, 6. Syracuse, 7. Georgetown, 8. Villanova, 9. Cincinnati, 10. West Virginia, 11. Rutgers, 12. DePaul, 13. South Florida, 14. St. Johns, 15. Providence, 16. Seton Hall
Awards Section:
Player of the Year: Sam Young, F, Pittsburgh
Freshman of the Year: Samardo Samuels, F, Louisville
Most Improved Player: Chris Wright, G, Georgetown
Coach of the Year: Jim Boeheim, Syracuse
All-Big East 1st Team:
C Luke Harangody, Notre Dame
PF Earl Clark, Louisville
SF Sam Young, Pittsburgh
SG AJ Price, Connecticut
PG Jonny Flynn, Syracuse
You must start with the top tier teams of the conference in Connecticut, Notre Dame, and Louisville. UCONN has another potent three guard lineup with AJ Price, Jerome Dyson, and McDonalds All-American Kemba Walker. Up front is Jeff Adrien and Hasheem Thabeet. They may get hit on the offensive boards, but their speed will be the difference because they can control the tempo. Add Stanley Robinson from his hiatus in December and your looking at a Final Four possibility.
Notre Dame has the inside-outside combination of Luke Harangody and Kyle McAlarney. Throw in Tory Jackson, Luke Zeller, and the underrated Zach Hillesland to create a smart, veteran, and talented core. The Irish were stymied by the stingy Washington State defense last March and are motivated to move past that and into the Sweet 16. This is Mike Brey's most talented team to date.
Rick Pitino's Louisville Cardinals also boast depth and talent. In the backcourt are veterans Andre McGee and the sweet shooting Jerry Smith. Edgar Sosa looms on the bench after a season in Pitino's doghouse. If Sosa can find his game, then the team will take off. Earl Clark and freshman Samardo Samuels will carry the load upfront. Athletic freshman big Terrance Jennings could be a darkhorse contributor off that bench as well.
Even with those talented teams, Pittsburgh (Levance Fields, DeJuan Blair, Sam Young), Syracuse (Jonny Flynn, Paul Harris, Eric Devendorf, Marquette (Dominic James, Jerel McNeal, Wes Matthews, and Villanova (Scottie Reynolds, Corey Stokes, Dante Cunningham) have the talent to play big-time basketball. The talent is sublime and it will be an absolute treat to watch the conference this season.
DISCLAIMER: Every lower ranked team has the potential and talent to move up. That's West Virginia, Georgetown, Cincinnati, DePaul etc.
1. Connecticut, 2. Notre Dame, 3. Louisville, 4. Pittsburgh, 5. Marquette, 6. Syracuse, 7. Georgetown, 8. Villanova, 9. Cincinnati, 10. West Virginia, 11. Rutgers, 12. DePaul, 13. South Florida, 14. St. Johns, 15. Providence, 16. Seton Hall
Awards Section:
Player of the Year: Sam Young, F, Pittsburgh
Freshman of the Year: Samardo Samuels, F, Louisville
Most Improved Player: Chris Wright, G, Georgetown
Coach of the Year: Jim Boeheim, Syracuse
All-Big East 1st Team:
C Luke Harangody, Notre Dame
PF Earl Clark, Louisville
SF Sam Young, Pittsburgh
SG AJ Price, Connecticut
PG Jonny Flynn, Syracuse
2008-2009 College Basketball Preview: ACC
Clearly the class of the ACC and of the nation is North Carolina. They are far and away the most talented team in the nation. They bring back Ty Lawson, Wayne Ellington, Marcus Ginyard, Danny Green, Deon Thompson, and a guy named Tyler Hansbrough. Don't forget Bobb Frasor and highly touted freshman bigs Luke Zeller and Ed Davis. Their only problem is on defense, if they can hustle back and play tough man-to-man defense and possibly win a slowdown game, then they can win the title. Fix the halfcourt offense and defense, the title will be all but guaranteed.
Many of the teams in the ACC have questions that, with favorable answers, will translate into success. Maryland has an amazing player in Greivis Vazquez but they also have questions about who will shoulder the load in the post. Miami also has talent with Jack McClinton, who established himself as one of the premier ACC guard last season. He is aided by blue-chip freshman DeQuan Jones. Once again, inside scoring will be a problem. Anthony King is gone so all eyes on Dwayne Collins to see if he can really be as talented as everyone thinks he is.
Once again Duke is a threat to UNC because of their unbelievable array of slashing and shooting talent. Greg Paulus, Nolan Smith, Gerald Henderson, Jon Scheyer the list goes on. Keep an eye on Clemson, Miami, and especially Wake Forest. The Deamon Deacons return all their key players and add a stacked frontcourt class of Al-Farouq Aminu, Tony Woods, and Ty Walker.
Even NC State, the last place team in the conference last season, has a chance to make some noise. The team admittedly had some chemistry problems last year but this year the chi looks better. Brandon Costner needs to forget his sophomore slump and become ready to carry the Wolfpack like the star player he can be.
1. North Carolina, 2. Duke, 3. Miami, 4. Wake Forest, 5. NC State, 6. Clemson, 7. Virginia Tech, 8. Georgia Tech, 9. Maryland, 10. Florida State, 11. Boston College, 12. Virginia
Awards Section:
Player of the Year: Tyler Hansbrough, F/C, North Carolina
Freshman of the Year: Al-Farouq Aminu, F, Wake Forest
Most Improved Player: Gani Lawal, PF, Georgia Tech
Coach of the Year: Sidney Lowe, NC State
All-ACC 1st Team:
C Tyler Hansbrough, North Carolina
PF James Johnson, Wake Forest
G/F Greivis Vazquez, Maryland
SG Jack McClinton, Miami
PG Tyrese Rice, Boston College
Many of the teams in the ACC have questions that, with favorable answers, will translate into success. Maryland has an amazing player in Greivis Vazquez but they also have questions about who will shoulder the load in the post. Miami also has talent with Jack McClinton, who established himself as one of the premier ACC guard last season. He is aided by blue-chip freshman DeQuan Jones. Once again, inside scoring will be a problem. Anthony King is gone so all eyes on Dwayne Collins to see if he can really be as talented as everyone thinks he is.
Once again Duke is a threat to UNC because of their unbelievable array of slashing and shooting talent. Greg Paulus, Nolan Smith, Gerald Henderson, Jon Scheyer the list goes on. Keep an eye on Clemson, Miami, and especially Wake Forest. The Deamon Deacons return all their key players and add a stacked frontcourt class of Al-Farouq Aminu, Tony Woods, and Ty Walker.
Even NC State, the last place team in the conference last season, has a chance to make some noise. The team admittedly had some chemistry problems last year but this year the chi looks better. Brandon Costner needs to forget his sophomore slump and become ready to carry the Wolfpack like the star player he can be.
1. North Carolina, 2. Duke, 3. Miami, 4. Wake Forest, 5. NC State, 6. Clemson, 7. Virginia Tech, 8. Georgia Tech, 9. Maryland, 10. Florida State, 11. Boston College, 12. Virginia
Awards Section:
Player of the Year: Tyler Hansbrough, F/C, North Carolina
Freshman of the Year: Al-Farouq Aminu, F, Wake Forest
Most Improved Player: Gani Lawal, PF, Georgia Tech
Coach of the Year: Sidney Lowe, NC State
All-ACC 1st Team:
C Tyler Hansbrough, North Carolina
PF James Johnson, Wake Forest
G/F Greivis Vazquez, Maryland
SG Jack McClinton, Miami
PG Tyrese Rice, Boston College
Monday, June 2, 2008
Euro 2008 Viewing Guide
NOTHING TO DO:
Austria v Croatia 11:50 AM ESPN2 June 8th
Romania v France 11:50 AM ESPN2 June 9th
Switzerland v Turkey 2:30 PM ESPN2 June 11th
Austria v Poland 2:30 PM ESPN2 June 12th
Greece v Russia 2:30 PM ESPN2 June 14th
Poland v Croatia 2:30 PM ESPNC June 16th
EH, MAYBE:
Germany v Poland 2:30 PM ESPN2 June 8th
Greece v Sweden 2:30 PM ESPN2 June 10th
Italy v Romania 11:50 AM ESPN2 June 13th
Austria v Germany 2:30 PM ESPN June 16th
Netherlands v Romania 2:30 PM ESPNC June 17th
Russia v Sweden 2:30 PM ESPN2 June 18th
DVR IF YOU HAVE TO:
Switzerland v Czech Republic 11:50 AM ESPNC June 7th
Portugal v Turkey 2:30 PM ESPNC June 7th
Spain v Russia 11:50 AM ESPN2 June 10th
Turkey v Czech Republic 11:50 AM ESPNC June 15th
Switzerland v Portugal 2:30 PM ESPN2 June 15th
Greece v Spain 2:30 PM ESPN June 18th
MUST WATCH:
Netherlands v Italy 2:30 PM ESPN2 June 9th
Czech Republic v Portugal 11:50 AM ESPN2 June 11th
Croatia v Germany 11:50 AM ESPN2 June 12th
Netherlands v France 2:30 PM ESPN2 June 13th
Sweden v Spain 11:50 AM ESPN2 June 14th
France v Italy 2:30 ESPN June 17th
Austria v Croatia 11:50 AM ESPN2 June 8th
Romania v France 11:50 AM ESPN2 June 9th
Switzerland v Turkey 2:30 PM ESPN2 June 11th
Austria v Poland 2:30 PM ESPN2 June 12th
Greece v Russia 2:30 PM ESPN2 June 14th
Poland v Croatia 2:30 PM ESPNC June 16th
EH, MAYBE:
Germany v Poland 2:30 PM ESPN2 June 8th
Greece v Sweden 2:30 PM ESPN2 June 10th
Italy v Romania 11:50 AM ESPN2 June 13th
Austria v Germany 2:30 PM ESPN June 16th
Netherlands v Romania 2:30 PM ESPNC June 17th
Russia v Sweden 2:30 PM ESPN2 June 18th
DVR IF YOU HAVE TO:
Switzerland v Czech Republic 11:50 AM ESPNC June 7th
Portugal v Turkey 2:30 PM ESPNC June 7th
Spain v Russia 11:50 AM ESPN2 June 10th
Turkey v Czech Republic 11:50 AM ESPNC June 15th
Switzerland v Portugal 2:30 PM ESPN2 June 15th
Greece v Spain 2:30 PM ESPN June 18th
MUST WATCH:
Netherlands v Italy 2:30 PM ESPN2 June 9th
Czech Republic v Portugal 11:50 AM ESPN2 June 11th
Croatia v Germany 11:50 AM ESPN2 June 12th
Netherlands v France 2:30 PM ESPN2 June 13th
Sweden v Spain 11:50 AM ESPN2 June 14th
France v Italy 2:30 ESPN June 17th
Thursday, May 15, 2008
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