Thursday, January 29, 2015

Period 1 - Basketball

Due Date: Wednesday, February 11th

College basketball season is my favorite time of year.  I am a huge Maryland fan, but also think its important to watch other teams and players so that I can pick a good bracket for March Madness.  Because college basketball season is underway, I thought this would be a good assignment to get you thinking about ncaa college basketball and the top players.  The article below is about Jerian Grant, a standout guard from Notre Dame (who by the way just upset #4 Duke the other night).    Please answer the question after the article and please remember to put your name on your Blog so that I can give you credit.


Court general Jerian Grant

Notre Dame guard runs one of this season's best offenses


Brendan Bures | NCAA.com
Last Updated - Jan 29, 2015 09:47 EST
Contact |Archive |RSS
You saw it; we all saw it. Simply no way you didn’t. Even in our age of social hype and buzz, with enticing posts of must-see highlights and plays/players being called best or worst ever with little to no regard, you just had to see this dunk. It was the ‘dunk of the year.’ It still is.
Because as Notre Dame’s Jerian Grant broke toward his teammate inbounding the ball on the baseline, he broke a few other things: Georgia Tech’s defense, poor poster victim Tadric Jackson, any chance the Yellow Jackets, leading 46-42, would pull off an upset, but chiefly he broke gravity. OK, maybe "break" isn’t the correct verb; he shattered it.
Receiving the pass uncontested, Grant dribbled, stepped then soared, rising higher and higher, his ascent only stopped by the dunk itself, chin above the rim. He hung there for a second, eventually submitting to gravitational pull and returning to the rest of us on Earth. When his teammates met him on the ground to dap him up, he barely even reacted. Why would he? His dunk did all the talking he needed.
So, yeah, I guess you could label Jerian Grant a physically impressive player. He’s athletic, agile, strong. But it’s his physical creativity and understanding of space that’s spurred Notre Dame into a top 10 team and possible title contender.
Many ways exist for a basketball to pass through a hoop: jump shot, layup, dunk, pass to a teammate who does any one of those three ... even trick an opponent to knock it in. Grant, capable of all these scoring possibilities, does not seem to care how his team scores points, only that it does. His abilities and talents are not contained within a vacuum; he rises his teammates around him like other great players do. On the court, it’s like he knows he could score (sort of) when he wants, but throughout the game he appears more interested involving his teammates as much as possible. He lets them get theirs, too.


Rob Kinnan | USA TODAY Sports Images
Jerian Grant has a unique ability to hang in the air, creating open shots where others cannot.
Which in turn helps Grant get his. Without a defense respecting other scoring threats, the space an offense can work with shrinks considerably -- lanes clog, double-teams happen. Notre Dame has four players averaging more than 13 points per game, a statistic of design. The ball spreads in the Fighting Irish’s offense and the man at the helm, pushing this thing along, is Grant.
And that’s without saying much of Grant’s own skills to score. He has a nice-enough jumper, but his ability to penetrate and create off the dribble may be the best in college basketball. (Virginia’s Justin Anderson and Ohio State’s D’Angelo Russell are two of the main guys who make it an argument.) If that dunk somehow didn’t convince you, Grant’s a master in the air. His hangtime’s unreal as he can contort his body just enough to levitate a second or two longer than most defenders, opening the space he requires to score.
When he’s at his best, Grant finishes as much as he dishes. Earlier in the season, against a sneaky good Miami (Fla.) team (which is better than its ranking or record might indicate), Grant was a deadly 8-for-10 shooting with 23 points and adding eight assists to his night. In other words, he was responsible for more than half of Notre Dame’s 75 points in the win. And that was his second-best night of the season, compared to his elite 27-point, six-assist game in ND’s 79-78 overtime win against then-No. 19 Michigan State.
One guy doesn’t make a team, but he certainly can have a very large impact. Last season, at this time, Grant was sidelined for the spring semester because of academic issues, according to his coach. Following Grant’s final game of the season against Ohio State, Notre Dame lost 13 of its past 20 games, including its final stretch where the team lost five its past six. The Fighting Irish were not the same team without Jerian Grant.
Now, Notre Dame is 19-2 and headed into a crucial run, playing Duke twice in its next four games. Grant, for now, remains just outside the echelon of elite players in the country, but depending what happens Wednesday night, that might soon change. The question, I guess, is this: Will he fly through the air again, or crash-land with the rest of the lot back on planet Earth? We’ll see.
Naismith Power Rankings
Each week, we’ll rank the top players in the Naismith race. These rankings are fluid and mostly for fun, but they matter ... to someone.
1) Jahlil Okafor -- Coach K can credit his 1,000th win to Marshall Plumlee disrupting St. John’s momentum if he wants, but none of it was possible without Okafor. Outside of the special milestone, the game served as a reminder that Okafor looks like a man playing pickup at an elementary school most of the time. It’s just not fair.
2) Frank Kaminsky -- Frank the everything-but Tank continues doing Frank-the-everything-but-Tank things. Kaminsky held Wisconsin down with his 22 points and nine rebounds in its 69-64 OT win against a surprisingly feisty Michigan team.
3) Willie Cauley-Stein -- Kentucky's been pretty boring lately, huh? Blame Cauley-Stein (and middling opponents). Anchoring the Wildcats’ D isn’t flashy or stat-stuffing, but it dramatically impacts what opponents can do when Cauley-Stein is on the floor.

1.  Based on the article, what is Notre Dame's Record?
2. The article indicates that Notre Dame wasn't the same without Jerian Grant last season when he was academically ineligible.  Please give an example from the text that proves this statement.
3.  How many other players on Notre Dame are averaging 13 points or more?
4. Please read the Naismith Power Rankings and choose the player you think is most deserving.  It doesn't have to be someone in the article.  To receive FULL CREDIT you must support your answer with 3 pieces of evidence.

Period 2 - Team Games

Due Date: Wednesday, February 11th

Your overall health depends on your activity and diet the rest of your lives.  Making smart decisions takes an understanding of your body and health.  The article below discusses the 5 health-related components. Please read the article and answer the questions.  Please put your name on your Blog, or I can't give you credit.




CARDIOVASCULAR FITNESS


Fitness is such a broad term and a complex subject which can include health and skill related fitness. Health related fitness is often divided into several other components which form our overall health status:

Cardiovascular Fitness (Aerobic Fitness)
This is also sometimes known as stamina and is the ability of your body to continuously provide enough energy to sustain submaximal levels of exercise. To do this the circulatory and respiratory systems must work together efficiently to provide the working muscles with enough Oxygen to enable aerobic metabolism.
This type of fitness has enormous benefits to our lifestyle as it allows us to be active throughout the day, for example walking to the shops, climbing stairs or running to catch a bus. It also allows us to get involved in sports and leisure pursuits.
If we have good cardiovascular fitness then our health is also good as it helps with:
  • Fat metabolism
  • Improved delivery of Oxygen
  • Faster removal of waste products
  • Decreased levels of stress

Strength

Strength is vitally important, not only in sports but in day-to-day life. We need to be strong to perform certain tasks, such as lifting heavy bags or using our legs to stand up from a chair. Strength is defined as the ability of a muscle to exert a force to overcome a resistance.
Strength is important for our health as it enables us to :
  • Avoid injuries
  • Maintain good posture
  • Remain independent (in older age)

Flexibility

Flexibility is the movement available at our joints, usually controlled by the length of our muscles. This is often thought to be less important than strength, or cardiovascular fitness. However, if we are not flexible our movement decreases and joints become stiff. Flexibility in sports allows us to perform certain skills more efficiently, for example a gymnast, dancer or diver must be highly flexible, but it is also important in other sports to aid performance and decrease the risk of injury.
In daily activities we must be flexible to reach for something in a cupboard, or off the floor. It also helps:
  • Prevent injuries
  • Improve posture
  • Reduce low back pain
  • Maintain healthy joints
  • Improve balance during movement

Muscular Endurance

Muscular endurance, unlike strength, is the ability of a muscle to make repeated contractions over a period of time. This is used in day-to-day life in activities such as climbing stairs, digging the garden and cleaning. Muscular endurance is also important in sports, such as football (repeated running and kicking), tennis (repeated swinging of the arm to hit the ball) and swimming (repeating the stroke).

Body Composition

Body composition is the amount of muscle, fat, bone, cartilage etc that makes up our bodies. In terms of health, fat is the main point of interest and everything else is termed lean body tissue. The amount of fat we carry varies from person to person and healthy averages vary with gender and age. A healthy amount of fat for a man is between 15&18% and for women is higher at 20-25%. It is important to maintain a healthy percentage of body fat because:
  • Excess body fat can contribute to developing a number of health problems such as heart disease and diabetes
  • Places strain on the joints, muscles and bones, increasing the risk of injury
 
1. What are the 5 components of health related fitness?

2.  Of these 5 components, which do you feel you are strongest at?  Why?

3.  Which of the components do you feel you need to improve on the most? Why?

4.  What are 3 advantages of being flexible?

5.  What are 2 advantages of the strength component?

Period 4 - Basketball

Due Date: Wednesday, February 11th

College basketball season is my favorite time of year.  I am a huge Maryland fan, but also think its important to watch other teams and players so that I can pick a good bracket for March Madness.  Because college basketball season is underway, I thought this would be a good assignment to get you thinking about ncaa college basketball and the top players.  The article below is about Jerian Grant, a standout guard from Notre Dame (who by the way just upset #4 Duke the other night).    Please answer the question after the article and please remember to put your name on your Blog so that I can give you credit.


Court general Jerian Grant

Notre Dame guard runs one of this season's best offenses


Brendan Bures | NCAA.com
Last Updated - Jan 29, 2015 09:47 EST
Contact |Archive |RSS
You saw it; we all saw it. Simply no way you didn’t. Even in our age of social hype and buzz, with enticing posts of must-see highlights and plays/players being called best or worst ever with little to no regard, you just had to see this dunk. It was the ‘dunk of the year.’ It still is.
Because as Notre Dame’s Jerian Grant broke toward his teammate inbounding the ball on the baseline, he broke a few other things: Georgia Tech’s defense, poor poster victim Tadric Jackson, any chance the Yellow Jackets, leading 46-42, would pull off an upset, but chiefly he broke gravity. OK, maybe "break" isn’t the correct verb; he shattered it.
Receiving the pass uncontested, Grant dribbled, stepped then soared, rising higher and higher, his ascent only stopped by the dunk itself, chin above the rim. He hung there for a second, eventually submitting to gravitational pull and returning to the rest of us on Earth. When his teammates met him on the ground to dap him up, he barely even reacted. Why would he? His dunk did all the talking he needed.
So, yeah, I guess you could label Jerian Grant a physically impressive player. He’s athletic, agile, strong. But it’s his physical creativity and understanding of space that’s spurred Notre Dame into a top 10 team and possible title contender.
Many ways exist for a basketball to pass through a hoop: jump shot, layup, dunk, pass to a teammate who does any one of those three ... even trick an opponent to knock it in. Grant, capable of all these scoring possibilities, does not seem to care how his team scores points, only that it does. His abilities and talents are not contained within a vacuum; he rises his teammates around him like other great players do. On the court, it’s like he knows he could score (sort of) when he wants, but throughout the game he appears more interested involving his teammates as much as possible. He lets them get theirs, too.


Rob Kinnan | USA TODAY Sports Images
Jerian Grant has a unique ability to hang in the air, creating open shots where others cannot.
Which in turn helps Grant get his. Without a defense respecting other scoring threats, the space an offense can work with shrinks considerably -- lanes clog, double-teams happen. Notre Dame has four players averaging more than 13 points per game, a statistic of design. The ball spreads in the Fighting Irish’s offense and the man at the helm, pushing this thing along, is Grant.
And that’s without saying much of Grant’s own skills to score. He has a nice-enough jumper, but his ability to penetrate and create off the dribble may be the best in college basketball. (Virginia’s Justin Anderson and Ohio State’s D’Angelo Russell are two of the main guys who make it an argument.) If that dunk somehow didn’t convince you, Grant’s a master in the air. His hangtime’s unreal as he can contort his body just enough to levitate a second or two longer than most defenders, opening the space he requires to score.
When he’s at his best, Grant finishes as much as he dishes. Earlier in the season, against a sneaky good Miami (Fla.) team (which is better than its ranking or record might indicate), Grant was a deadly 8-for-10 shooting with 23 points and adding eight assists to his night. In other words, he was responsible for more than half of Notre Dame’s 75 points in the win. And that was his second-best night of the season, compared to his elite 27-point, six-assist game in ND’s 79-78 overtime win against then-No. 19 Michigan State.
One guy doesn’t make a team, but he certainly can have a very large impact. Last season, at this time, Grant was sidelined for the spring semester because of academic issues, according to his coach. Following Grant’s final game of the season against Ohio State, Notre Dame lost 13 of its past 20 games, including its final stretch where the team lost five its past six. The Fighting Irish were not the same team without Jerian Grant.
Now, Notre Dame is 19-2 and headed into a crucial run, playing Duke twice in its next four games. Grant, for now, remains just outside the echelon of elite players in the country, but depending what happens Wednesday night, that might soon change. The question, I guess, is this: Will he fly through the air again, or crash-land with the rest of the lot back on planet Earth? We’ll see.
Naismith Power Rankings
Each week, we’ll rank the top players in the Naismith race. These rankings are fluid and mostly for fun, but they matter ... to someone.
1) Jahlil Okafor -- Coach K can credit his 1,000th win to Marshall Plumlee disrupting St. John’s momentum if he wants, but none of it was possible without Okafor. Outside of the special milestone, the game served as a reminder that Okafor looks like a man playing pickup at an elementary school most of the time. It’s just not fair.
2) Frank Kaminsky -- Frank the everything-but Tank continues doing Frank-the-everything-but-Tank things. Kaminsky held Wisconsin down with his 22 points and nine rebounds in its 69-64 OT win against a surprisingly feisty Michigan team.
3) Willie Cauley-Stein -- Kentucky's been pretty boring lately, huh? Blame Cauley-Stein (and middling opponents). Anchoring the Wildcats’ D isn’t flashy or stat-stuffing, but it dramatically impacts what opponents can do when Cauley-Stein is on the floor.

1.  Based on the article, what is Notre Dame's Record?
2. The article indicates that Notre Dame wasn't the same without Jerian Grant last season when he was academically ineligible.  Please give an example from the text that proves this statement.
3.  How many other players on Notre Dame are averaging 13 points or more?
4. Please read the Naismith Power Rankings and choose the player you think is most deserving.  It doesn't have to be someone in the article.  To receive FULL CREDIT you must support your answer with 3 pieces of evidence.

Period 5- Basketball

Due Date: Wednesday, February 11th

College basketball season is my favorite time of year.  I am a huge Maryland fan, but also think its important to watch other teams and players so that I can pick a good bracket for March Madness.  Because college basketball season is underway, I thought this would be a good assignment to get you thinking about ncaa college basketball and the top players.  The article below is about Jerian Grant, a standout guard from Notre Dame (who by the way just upset #4 Duke the other night).    Please answer the question after the article and please remember to put your name on your Blog so that I can give you credit.


Court general Jerian Grant

Notre Dame guard runs one of this season's best offenses


Brendan Bures | NCAA.com
Last Updated - Jan 29, 2015 09:47 EST
Contact |Archive |RSS
You saw it; we all saw it. Simply no way you didn’t. Even in our age of social hype and buzz, with enticing posts of must-see highlights and plays/players being called best or worst ever with little to no regard, you just had to see this dunk. It was the ‘dunk of the year.’ It still is.
Because as Notre Dame’s Jerian Grant broke toward his teammate inbounding the ball on the baseline, he broke a few other things: Georgia Tech’s defense, poor poster victim Tadric Jackson, any chance the Yellow Jackets, leading 46-42, would pull off an upset, but chiefly he broke gravity. OK, maybe "break" isn’t the correct verb; he shattered it.
Receiving the pass uncontested, Grant dribbled, stepped then soared, rising higher and higher, his ascent only stopped by the dunk itself, chin above the rim. He hung there for a second, eventually submitting to gravitational pull and returning to the rest of us on Earth. When his teammates met him on the ground to dap him up, he barely even reacted. Why would he? His dunk did all the talking he needed.
So, yeah, I guess you could label Jerian Grant a physically impressive player. He’s athletic, agile, strong. But it’s his physical creativity and understanding of space that’s spurred Notre Dame into a top 10 team and possible title contender.
Many ways exist for a basketball to pass through a hoop: jump shot, layup, dunk, pass to a teammate who does any one of those three ... even trick an opponent to knock it in. Grant, capable of all these scoring possibilities, does not seem to care how his team scores points, only that it does. His abilities and talents are not contained within a vacuum; he rises his teammates around him like other great players do. On the court, it’s like he knows he could score (sort of) when he wants, but throughout the game he appears more interested involving his teammates as much as possible. He lets them get theirs, too.


Rob Kinnan | USA TODAY Sports Images
Jerian Grant has a unique ability to hang in the air, creating open shots where others cannot.
Which in turn helps Grant get his. Without a defense respecting other scoring threats, the space an offense can work with shrinks considerably -- lanes clog, double-teams happen. Notre Dame has four players averaging more than 13 points per game, a statistic of design. The ball spreads in the Fighting Irish’s offense and the man at the helm, pushing this thing along, is Grant.
And that’s without saying much of Grant’s own skills to score. He has a nice-enough jumper, but his ability to penetrate and create off the dribble may be the best in college basketball. (Virginia’s Justin Anderson and Ohio State’s D’Angelo Russell are two of the main guys who make it an argument.) If that dunk somehow didn’t convince you, Grant’s a master in the air. His hangtime’s unreal as he can contort his body just enough to levitate a second or two longer than most defenders, opening the space he requires to score.
When he’s at his best, Grant finishes as much as he dishes. Earlier in the season, against a sneaky good Miami (Fla.) team (which is better than its ranking or record might indicate), Grant was a deadly 8-for-10 shooting with 23 points and adding eight assists to his night. In other words, he was responsible for more than half of Notre Dame’s 75 points in the win. And that was his second-best night of the season, compared to his elite 27-point, six-assist game in ND’s 79-78 overtime win against then-No. 19 Michigan State.
One guy doesn’t make a team, but he certainly can have a very large impact. Last season, at this time, Grant was sidelined for the spring semester because of academic issues, according to his coach. Following Grant’s final game of the season against Ohio State, Notre Dame lost 13 of its past 20 games, including its final stretch where the team lost five its past six. The Fighting Irish were not the same team without Jerian Grant.
Now, Notre Dame is 19-2 and headed into a crucial run, playing Duke twice in its next four games. Grant, for now, remains just outside the echelon of elite players in the country, but depending what happens Wednesday night, that might soon change. The question, I guess, is this: Will he fly through the air again, or crash-land with the rest of the lot back on planet Earth? We’ll see.
Naismith Power Rankings
Each week, we’ll rank the top players in the Naismith race. These rankings are fluid and mostly for fun, but they matter ... to someone.
1) Jahlil Okafor -- Coach K can credit his 1,000th win to Marshall Plumlee disrupting St. John’s momentum if he wants, but none of it was possible without Okafor. Outside of the special milestone, the game served as a reminder that Okafor looks like a man playing pickup at an elementary school most of the time. It’s just not fair.
2) Frank Kaminsky -- Frank the everything-but Tank continues doing Frank-the-everything-but-Tank things. Kaminsky held Wisconsin down with his 22 points and nine rebounds in its 69-64 OT win against a surprisingly feisty Michigan team.
3) Willie Cauley-Stein -- Kentucky's been pretty boring lately, huh? Blame Cauley-Stein (and middling opponents). Anchoring the Wildcats’ D isn’t flashy or stat-stuffing, but it dramatically impacts what opponents can do when Cauley-Stein is on the floor.

1.  Based on the article, what is Notre Dame's Record?
2. The article indicates that Notre Dame wasn't the same without Jerian Grant last season when he was academically ineligible.  Please give an example from the text that proves this statement.
3.  How many other players on Notre Dame are averaging 13 points or more?
4. Please read the Naismith Power Rankings and choose the player you think is most deserving.  It doesn't have to be someone in the article.  To receive FULL CREDIT you must support your answer with 3 pieces of evidence.

Period 7 - Basketball

Due Date: Wednesday, February 11th

College basketball season is my favorite time of year.  I am a huge Maryland fan, but also think its important to watch other teams and players so that I can pick a good bracket for March Madness.  Because college basketball season is underway, I thought this would be a good assignment to get you thinking about ncaa college basketball and the top players.  The article below is about Jerian Grant, a standout guard from Notre Dame (who by the way just upset #4 Duke the other night).    Please answer the question after the article and please remember to put your name on your Blog so that I can give you credit.


Court general Jerian Grant

Notre Dame guard runs one of this season's best offenses


Brendan Bures | NCAA.com
Last Updated - Jan 29, 2015 09:47 EST
Contact |Archive |RSS
You saw it; we all saw it. Simply no way you didn’t. Even in our age of social hype and buzz, with enticing posts of must-see highlights and plays/players being called best or worst ever with little to no regard, you just had to see this dunk. It was the ‘dunk of the year.’ It still is.
Because as Notre Dame’s Jerian Grant broke toward his teammate inbounding the ball on the baseline, he broke a few other things: Georgia Tech’s defense, poor poster victim Tadric Jackson, any chance the Yellow Jackets, leading 46-42, would pull off an upset, but chiefly he broke gravity. OK, maybe "break" isn’t the correct verb; he shattered it.
Receiving the pass uncontested, Grant dribbled, stepped then soared, rising higher and higher, his ascent only stopped by the dunk itself, chin above the rim. He hung there for a second, eventually submitting to gravitational pull and returning to the rest of us on Earth. When his teammates met him on the ground to dap him up, he barely even reacted. Why would he? His dunk did all the talking he needed.
So, yeah, I guess you could label Jerian Grant a physically impressive player. He’s athletic, agile, strong. But it’s his physical creativity and understanding of space that’s spurred Notre Dame into a top 10 team and possible title contender.
Many ways exist for a basketball to pass through a hoop: jump shot, layup, dunk, pass to a teammate who does any one of those three ... even trick an opponent to knock it in. Grant, capable of all these scoring possibilities, does not seem to care how his team scores points, only that it does. His abilities and talents are not contained within a vacuum; he rises his teammates around him like other great players do. On the court, it’s like he knows he could score (sort of) when he wants, but throughout the game he appears more interested involving his teammates as much as possible. He lets them get theirs, too.


Rob Kinnan | USA TODAY Sports Images
Jerian Grant has a unique ability to hang in the air, creating open shots where others cannot.
Which in turn helps Grant get his. Without a defense respecting other scoring threats, the space an offense can work with shrinks considerably -- lanes clog, double-teams happen. Notre Dame has four players averaging more than 13 points per game, a statistic of design. The ball spreads in the Fighting Irish’s offense and the man at the helm, pushing this thing along, is Grant.
And that’s without saying much of Grant’s own skills to score. He has a nice-enough jumper, but his ability to penetrate and create off the dribble may be the best in college basketball. (Virginia’s Justin Anderson and Ohio State’s D’Angelo Russell are two of the main guys who make it an argument.) If that dunk somehow didn’t convince you, Grant’s a master in the air. His hangtime’s unreal as he can contort his body just enough to levitate a second or two longer than most defenders, opening the space he requires to score.
When he’s at his best, Grant finishes as much as he dishes. Earlier in the season, against a sneaky good Miami (Fla.) team (which is better than its ranking or record might indicate), Grant was a deadly 8-for-10 shooting with 23 points and adding eight assists to his night. In other words, he was responsible for more than half of Notre Dame’s 75 points in the win. And that was his second-best night of the season, compared to his elite 27-point, six-assist game in ND’s 79-78 overtime win against then-No. 19 Michigan State.
One guy doesn’t make a team, but he certainly can have a very large impact. Last season, at this time, Grant was sidelined for the spring semester because of academic issues, according to his coach. Following Grant’s final game of the season against Ohio State, Notre Dame lost 13 of its past 20 games, including its final stretch where the team lost five its past six. The Fighting Irish were not the same team without Jerian Grant.
Now, Notre Dame is 19-2 and headed into a crucial run, playing Duke twice in its next four games. Grant, for now, remains just outside the echelon of elite players in the country, but depending what happens Wednesday night, that might soon change. The question, I guess, is this: Will he fly through the air again, or crash-land with the rest of the lot back on planet Earth? We’ll see.
Naismith Power Rankings
Each week, we’ll rank the top players in the Naismith race. These rankings are fluid and mostly for fun, but they matter ... to someone.
1) Jahlil Okafor -- Coach K can credit his 1,000th win to Marshall Plumlee disrupting St. John’s momentum if he wants, but none of it was possible without Okafor. Outside of the special milestone, the game served as a reminder that Okafor looks like a man playing pickup at an elementary school most of the time. It’s just not fair.
2) Frank Kaminsky -- Frank the everything-but Tank continues doing Frank-the-everything-but-Tank things. Kaminsky held Wisconsin down with his 22 points and nine rebounds in its 69-64 OT win against a surprisingly feisty Michigan team.
3) Willie Cauley-Stein -- Kentucky's been pretty boring lately, huh? Blame Cauley-Stein (and middling opponents). Anchoring the Wildcats’ D isn’t flashy or stat-stuffing, but it dramatically impacts what opponents can do when Cauley-Stein is on the floor.

1.  Based on the article, what is Notre Dame's Record?
2. The article indicates that Notre Dame wasn't the same without Jerian Grant last season when he was academically ineligible.  Please give an example from the text that proves this statement.
3.  How many other players on Notre Dame are averaging 13 points or more?
4. Please read the Naismith Power Rankings and choose the player you think is most deserving.  It doesn't have to be someone in the article.  To receive FULL CREDIT you must support your answer with 3 pieces of evidence.