Rich Hofmann: For Temple's Allen, defense means another A-10 title

March 13, 2010
  • Lavoy Alem goes to the basket between St. Bonaventure's Chris Matthews (left) and Malcolm Eleby.

ATLANTIC CITY - Around the Temple basketball team, especially at tournament time, even after all of these years, a dog-eared copy of the Chaney-English Dictionary still earns its place in the briefcase. Yesterday, thumbing through it, the correct saying leaped off of the page. For future reference, it is the entry immediately preceding "Speed kills," "The company you keep," and, "You've got the known and you've got the unknown, and the unknown just kicked our ass."

There it is:

Smelling yourself (verb): to be overconfident, taken with success, the result of listening to too much praise. As in: "Like my mother used to say, when you get uppity, you're smelling yourself."

It was Temple's greatest danger yesterday - and that really is not to disrespect St. Bonaventure, a .500-ish team that played a decent overall game at Boardwalk Hall in the Atlantic 10 Tournament quarterfinals. It is just the reality when you are a 26-5 team headed to a likely seed in the top quadrant of the NCAA Tournament.

These are uncharted mental waters for this group of Owls, who won the last two A-10 Tournaments because they needed to win them to assure an NCAA berth. Those teams were desperate and they were led by Dionte Christmas, who dominated the scoring and the moment. This team is entirely different.

Which brings us back to smelling themselves, and to Lavoy Allen, the player who leads them in two crucial issues in March: defense and humility.

"There were a lot of upsets in college basketball [Thursday], especially in the Big East Conference," Allen said, after he scored 14 points and grabbed 15 rebounds in the Owls' 69-51 dismantling of the Bonnies. "We didn't want that to happen today. We came out and tried not to take them for granted. We went out and played our game.

"We need to win this tournament. We're just trying to do what we do. We're not looking ahead to the NCAA Tournament. Now we're just worrying about tomorrow."

Tomorrow is now today, and Rhode Island is the opponent. It is a game that means everything for the Rams and their tournament hopes, and nothing for the Owls. Most people see Temple as a four-seed in the tournament, which means it could break anywhere from a three to a five, depending upon the rest of the bracket's Lunardian rhythms.

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