ND's not going to be any good. The keys are going to be if Kyle McAlarney can be as good as he looked in spurts last year running the offense. It'd be foolish to hope for a Chris Quinn type season (Quinn was among the most underrated players in all of basketball last season thanks to his miserable team), but if he can score 10-12 points a game and run the offense well that'd be more than acceptable. Russell Carter has the most talent by far on the team, but he's a senior and has yet to put that talent together consistently, though he was getting there at the end of last season. Rob Kurz is a decent big man who can shoot 3's as well as anyone on the team and is a ballhawk on the boards. Oh, and Colin Falls is the best pure shooter in the country. The main problem is going to be depth. Beyond the starting five (assuming Luke Zeller is the fifth), there's really no one with meaningful game experience other than Ryan Ayers, who played plenty in the Irish's two NIT games and looked good. Definitely a rebuilding year but it will be fun to see what happens. Ball State is in the same boat as ND - young team led by a couple of good seniors who has major size deficiency. With one added wrinkle: This is the first year of the Ronny Thompson Era at BSU. The good news is that we managed to get a 6-10 260-pounder, Micah Rollin, to play center. The bad news is that he scored 4 points a game in NAIA play last year (granted it was his first season of organized basketball in his life). The team's going to be led by the guards Skip Mills and Peyton Stovall. Skip led the MAC in scoring last year and piled up 38 points in a valiant but losing effort in the first round of the MAC tournament last year, and Stovall was the leading returning scorer in the conference coming into last season when he tore his ACL in the 2nd game. Backing them up will be Brandon Lampley, Anthony Newell and Jalon Perryman, who all had one game each where they looked incredible but couldn't produce consistently, unsurprising since they were all freshmen. D'Andre Peyton will be the main source of inside scoring, he is a 6-6 220 pounder that plays bigger than that and really began coming on nicely at the end of last year. On the whole, I'd be surprised if either of my teams finished above .500 in conference play, but both have bright futures. And wow that wasn't supposed to be that long a post.