IN THE
PAINT
SYRACUSE VS. VIRG IN IA MARCH 4, 2019
BIG IMPACT Against Wake Forest, Paschal Chukwu was the interior presence Syracuse needs to carry it through the postseason. Page 3
VOICE-OVER Michael Veley has been the Carrier Dome’s public address announcer for 13 years. He is the voice of every SU home game. Page 4
DOME DEPTH The Carrier Dome’s affect on shooters has been questioned for years. Does the Dome cause poor depth perception? Page 5
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PASCHAL CHUKWU tallied nine points, four rebounds and three blocks against Wake Forest on Saturday. SU head coach Jim Boeheim said the senior center’s interior play was much improved compared to other games this season. alexandra moreo senior staff photographer
By Billy Heyen
senior staff writer
W
INSTON-SALEM, N.C. — At least a couple times every game, a Syracuse player lobs a pass toward 7-foot-2 Paschal Chukwu. For much of the season, those attempts have gone awry. Chukwu bobbles or doesn’t slam it home. Early Saturday, though, Elijah Hughes drove and tossed the ball up toward the rim — Chukwu timed his leap and threw the ball almost straight down through the rim. “He got a couple good alley-oops and he made a couple good plays down there, which he just hasn’t been doing,” SU head coach Jim Boeheim said. “That was a very good sign.” In Syracuse’s (19-10, 10-6 Atlantic Coast) 79-54 win over Wake Forest (11-17, 4-12) Saturday, Chukwu provided a rare interior option
Paschal Chukwu’s interior presence is “a very good sign” for Syracuse’s offense
for the Orange this season. He racked up nine points, four rebounds and three blocks, making all four of his shot attempts. And on a day when SU made its fewest 3-pointers in ACC play, Chukwu was part of a dominant effort in the paint that ensured poor perimeter shooting wouldn’t matter. “I thought Paschal was really important,” Boeheim said. “We found him down low and he finished a couple around the basket. That’s something we haven’t been getting. So even though we didn’t shoot it well from the perimeter, I thought that was something we haven’t had in there.” Boeheim has spent much of the season pointing out that Chukwu’s counterpart, Marek Dolezaj, isn’t big enough to play loads of minutes in the middle. And considering Bourama Sidibe didn’t check in until Saturday’s game was out of reach, Chukwu will have to provide a presence see chukwu page 9
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Meet Michael Veley, SU’s ‘Voice of the Carrier Dome’ PA By Matthew Gutierrez senior staff writer
At midcourt, Michael Veley knows he may have the best seat in the house. “Pretty good, huh?” he said before a Syracuse tip-off Feb. 9 against Boston College. He sets up a makeshift command center for each game. With a microphone attached to him, Veley sucks on cough drops to soothe his throat. A yellow marker, bottle of water and a roster with three columns — each player’s number, name and phonetic pronunciation — lie around him. A former athletic administrator, Veley has been Syracuse’s “Voice of the Carrier Dome” since 2006. He’s called home men’s basketball and football games every season since. He understands he’s a public-address announcer, not a full-on supporter. The public-address announcer — historically a measured voice — takes the role of enthusiastic supporter designed to uplift the crowd. Veley brings a more traditional tone to the Dome’s sound system.
I grew up a Syracuse fan, so this truly is an opportunity that I cherish. Michael Veley
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He’s not a screamer, but he indulges himself occasionally when it comes to big SU runs or the 70-point mark, at which point he clears his throat and declares “Taco time!,” where all fans in attendance get tacos from Taco Bell. Usually, he tries to convey a tone of warmth and respect, while injecting some life into the Dome crowd that usually contains north of 20,000 fans.
“I grew up a Syracuse fan, so this truly is an opportunity that I cherish,” said Veley, a native of Mannsville. Veley has been public address announcer for men’s lacrosse and women’s basketball games, too. He takes 10 to 12 hours to prepare for football games, he said. He learns the roster and potential schemes. Basketball requires less prep work because the rosters are much smaller. Before games, he arrives about two hours early to set up shop. Regardless of the event, he prioritizes the crispness of his diction. He doesn’t keep score or jot down many notes, but he watches the action intently. He’s focused less on larger game trends and more on who did what on a given play. The instant a player knocks down a shot or records a foul, Veley’s authoritative voice emanates from the Carrier Dome speakers. During timeouts, he leads on-court promotions and sponsored promotions. In the early 2000s, Veley had worked at the Carrier Dome alongside Carl Eilenberg, a Syracuse University alumnus and the “Voice of the Carrier Dome” since it opened in 1980. Veley worked near him as the in-stadium host. Soon, Eilenberg called Veley “Mr. Excitement” and Veley’s role slowly grew. He soon began doing starting lineups for teams. When Eilenberg retired, former Director of Athletics Darryl Gross’ administration asked him, “Should we have open auditions?” “You got the guy right here,” Eilenberg remembered saying, as he referred to Veley. “This is the guy to do the game. He understands it. He’s professional.” Veley’s first-ever game, in 2006, featured SU football versus Iowa. Iowa dressed 124 players, so there were 25 double numbers. “In the heat of the game, you’re like, ‘Which 24 made the tackle?’” Veley said. “So that was a lesson: You can’t prepare hard enough and long enough.” Veley’s voice scored the regular-season
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MICHAEL VELEY has been the “Voice of the Carrier Dome” public address announcer for football and men’s basketball since 2006. alexandra moreo senior staff photographer
runs for both the men’s lacrosse and basketball to respective national title games. He savors the big SU moments. He watches every play closely, but he doesn’t always remember the specifics after the game. “You just do’’t forget those little moments that are etched into your memory,” Veley said. “There’s times when I’ll go home and my wife will ask me a question, ‘What happened on this play here?’ You obviously see it, you’re describing it, but there’s so many things going on. “There’s no time to catch your breath,” he added. “It’s just boom, boom, boom, boom.” Before games, Veley joins a production meeting in which operations employees
meet with the officials. After a pair of SU free throws, he says: “Deuce for the ‘Cuse!” When SU senior point guard Frank Howard drained a 3-pointer last month, he proclaimed: “For three!” elongating the “e” at the end. “He doesn’t know the effect he has on us in the game,” Howard said. “He doesn’t know the effect he has on the recruits or the fans. He’s a part of this experience.” At the conclusion of every game, Veley reads off the final stats and leaders. Then, he leaves fans with the same departing words: “Thank you for your attendance tonight, travel home safely and enjoy the rest of your evening.” mguti100@syr.edu | @Matthewgut21
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Of the 88 current and former players and coaches The Daily Orange interviewed about depth perception issues in the Carrier Dome, the results were mixed — 45 percent say the depth has an impact on shooting ability in Syracuse home games. alexandra moreo senior staff photographer
Unclear view Examining the Carrier Dome’s supposed affect on shooters
By Matthew Gutierrez senior staff writer
O
shae Brissett’s first in-game shot at the Carrier Dome came from the corner. On a 3-pointer last season, the ball sailed past the rim. Brissett shook his head and ran back on defense. “That,” Brissett said last September, “was a big depth-perception thing on that miss.” Depth perception is a part of the Carrier Dome’s history. Built in 1980, the Dome accommodates multiple Syracuse sports, including football and lacrosse. For basketball games, the areas behind the baskets of SU’s makeshift court allow greater space than most other college venues between the basket and bleachers. The angle of the Dome’s bleachers is less steep than most other basketball arenas. That’s contributed to a long-standing ideology that the Dome is a notoriously difficult place for shooters, especially ones who are not used to it. But how true is that notion? Boeheim, associate head coach Adrian Autry and assistant coach Gerry McNamara swear the Car-
rier Dome depth effect isn’t real. Some players think it exists only in moderation. “I don’t think it’s in play,” said Boeheim, Syracuse’s 43-year head coach. “We practice, they get a lot of shots before games. People exaggerate that perception thing a bit.” Yet current and former Syracuse players, plus visiting players and coaches, say the Carrier Dome’s design creates a perception that can throw off one’s ability to shoot. Based on interviews with 88 players and coaches, The Daily Orange found that, of that group, 45 percent of players believe the Carrier Dome depth effect exists while the other 55 percent don’t think the building’s design causes skewed depth perception. Morehead State head coach Preston Spradlin specifically told his players not to think about the depth effect and Florida State head coach Leonard Hamilton highlighted it as a force to overcome. More than a dozen visiting players, including former Western Michigan guard Jerry Overstreet, said they struggle with depth perception as they shoot. Particularly when they catch and shoot in one motion. It gives them less time to set up and see dome page 9
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Beat writers predict unanimous result in SU-UVA game By The Daily Orange Sports Staff the daily orange
Syracuse (19-10, 10-6 Atlantic Coast) received a short respite from top-5 opponents in a win at Wake Forest on Saturday. Enter No. 2 Virginia (26-2, 14-2), which has won six games in a row. The Orange lost twice to the Cavaliers last season. Here’s what our beat writers expect to happen.
Charlie DiSturco (20-9) ‘Hoos House?
Virginia 68, Syracuse 54 To me, there is no team more complete than Virginia. The Cavaliers are deep, have a multitude of dynamic scorers, shoot the ball well and boast a dominant defense. Syracuse has been playing top-5 opponents well in recent weeks — think Duke and North Carolina — but this UVA team should have no problem tearing up the 2-3 zone. Virginia shoots 40 percent from 3, fourth in the country, and rarely turns the ball over. Not to mention the Cavaliers’ defense ranks second in adjusted efficiency and first in defending the 3 ball. Expect the Orange to struggle in their last home game of
the year.
better team picks up the victory at the Dome.
Matthew Gutierrez (17-12)
Billy Heyen (22-7)
Cavalier Virginia 60, Syracuse 53 The team to hit 60 points wins this game. Last season, at the Carrier Dome, SU fell 59-44, in a slow game that the Cavaliers dictated by playing excellent defense and rebounding. UVA does all of that stuff right. SU is capable of winning here, especially in the final home game of the season, which should warrant a strong crowd. But UVA has 10 ranked wins this season and has lost only to Duke, twice. The
‘Hoos on first Virginia 67, Syracuse 56 The current No. 2 team in the country will spoil Syracuse’s Senior Night. The Orange simply haven’t had an answer for good man-to-man defense because not enough SU players can beat guys off the bounce. UVA might have the best combo of defensive scheme and individual defensive ability in the country. It’ll be a long Monday night for the Syracuse offense. sports@dailyorange.com
SU opponent preview: What to know about No. 2 Virginia By Charlie DiSturco senior staff writer
After dominating Wake Forest on the road, Syracuse returns to the Carrier Dome on Monday night to take on No. 2 Virginia. For the third time in just over a week, SU will face a matchup with a top-5 opponent. The Cavaliers, meanwhile, have dominated since a loss to Duke in early February, winning six straight and holding opponents to 61 points or less in all of those games. Here’s what you need to know about Virginia.
All-time series: Virginia leads, 6-5
Last time they played: Inside the Carrier Dome, Syracuse’s offense struggled to beat the Cavaliers defense. The Orange scored just 21 first-half points and shot 34.8 percent from the field. UVA meanwhile shot 50 percent from the floor and jumped out to a double-digit lead. It set the stage of how the second half would play out: Syracuse’s poor shooting would ultimately spell doom. The Orange shot 10 percent from 3 in the latter frame and scored just 44 points total. Virginia finished with three players in double digits, with freshman De’Andre Hunter adding a team-high 15 points on 5-of-6 shooting. Tyus Battle scored 15 points, as only four from page 3
chukwu that he’s proven capable of in short spurts. At times, Chukwu’s done what someone might expect a 7-foot-2 player to do. He responded to his midseason benching with a 10-point, 18-rebound effort in an upset over No. 1 Duke that earned him his starting job back from Dolezaj. Recently, Chukwu’s started slow in games, lacking activity and movement but then affects shots in the second half. Wake Forest took advantage of another slow start for Chukwu, too. Sparingly used WFU freshman forward Isaiah Mucius hit four short jumpers, all in areas of the 2-3 zone from page 5
dome
see the rim. “It’s like shooting into outer space,” recalled Overstreet, who played in the Dome in 1988. The thought is not new. Since the Dome was built, former players said there were rumblings about how shooters could struggle to get going in the arena. Visitors said they focused more in the team shootarounds, hoping extra shots would mitigate the effect. Other players and coaches think the depth effect is overstated and its effect is distorted, only a myth that gets into players’ heads. “I don’t think there’s any depth effect,” said Autry, an SU forward in the 1990s. “Those things didn’t have an effect on how I shot the ball. They shouldn’t. Either you make it or you don’t.” Some, who said they don’t notice a difference, believe focusing on the rim helps. Picking a spot — either the front of the rim or back — keeps the background out of the equation. Syracuse director of operations Kip Wellman compared it to a backstop in baseball or a batter’s eye in centerfield. You see the background, but that’s not your focus, he said.
FRANK HOWARD scored 11 points on 4-of-17 shooting in Syracuse’s 59-44 loss to Virginia at home last season. alexandra moreo senior staff photographer
Orange. Syracuse’s offense needs to be at its best and take efficient shots. There have been glimpses of that: Elijah Hughes’ five first-half 3s against UNC, and Tyus Battle’s complete takeover for minutes at a time. (Again, think UNC and Boston College, among others). Even if Syracuse is able to put up points, the 2-3 zone will need to stifle the Cavaliers offense, which has shown it can put away any team, outside of Duke, with ease. If Hunter and Guy struggle early, SU needs to jump at the opportunity and take control on its home court. Stat to know: 26.7 — Opponents shoot just 26.7 percent from 3 against the Virginia defense. That ranks No. 1 in the country. KenPom odds: Syracuse has a 24 percent chance to upset Virginia, and is projected to lose 64-56. Player to watch: De’Andre Hunter, F, No. 12 After a redshirt year and a solid campaign last season, Hunter has emerged as Virginia’s most efficient player this season. The 6-foot-7 forward leads the team in points (15.2), is second in rebounds (5.3) and third in assists (2.1), all while shooting 54.7 percent from the field and 46 percent from 3. He was the leading scorer in last year’s matchup with Syracuse and will be one of the hardest players to guard Monday night.
total SU players would score in the 59-44 loss. The Virginia report: One of the more complete Virginia teams in recent years, the Cavaliers are not only known for their usual strength, defense, but have been among the best offensive teams in the country, too. UVA shoots the 3 at a 40-percent clip, fourth in the country. Hunter leads the way, shooting 46 percent, while juniors Kyle Guy (43.9) and Ty Jerome (40.9) have also strung together arguably their best seasons yet.
Defense has always been UVA’s strong suit and the same could be said this season. The Cavaliers rank second in the country in adjusted defensive efficiency, per Kenpom. com, and have held opponents under 60 points in all but six games. How Syracuse beats Virginia: As seen against North Carolina, Syracuse has been able to hang around with the best of the ACC. The Virginia defense is arguably the best in the country, and will pose a problem for the
that fall on Chukwu to protect. Dolezaj subbed in early for Chukwu, again. But the successful Hughes lob was a sign of things to come. In the second half, unlike most games, a poorly lobbed pass didn’t result in a turnover. Instead, Chukwu gathered the errant delivery and brought it down to the floor with him. Wake Forest converged, and Chukwu found himself in a common spot: Bringing the ball down and then being unable to get a clean shot off, even as the tallest man on the floor. But this time, he didn’t put it down. Chukwu kept the ball high and placed it off the glass with his left hand. A whistle blew to add a foul shot. Chukwu added a righty lay-in off a Dolezaj dish where he again
kept the ball high. And he converted an offensive rebound tip-in midway through the second half. “Yeah, it’s definitely fun,” Chukwu said of getting a chance to score the ball. As is often the case when Chukwu gets a few shots to fall, his defensive activity increased. He didn’t allow more easy looks for Mucius or the other Demon Deacons who planted themselves near the foul line or in the short corner. He rotated to help SU trap players deep into the corners, leading to bad passes and Syracuse steals up top. Chukwu blocked shots then, too, because that’s what he does best. He’s said he loves to spike the ball away, as if playing volleyball.
If not for a foul call that seemed incorrect on replay, Chukwu would’ve added a twohanded spike block to his collection against WFU, as well. “I thought (Paschal) was good defensively,” Boeheim said, “which he hasn’t been.” At one point in Saturday’s game, Chukwu had taken off his goggles, thinking he’d been pulled again. But Syracuse only had four players on the floor. Boeheim wanted his 7-foot-2 center out there, just as he’s known he would be needed all season long. So Chukwu put his goggles back on and jogged out to the center of SU’s 2-3 zone, exactly where the Orange needed him.
Not every Syracuse player thinks the depth effect exists, though. But Brissett, Jalen Carey, assistant coach Allen Griffin, walk-on Brendan Paul and graduate assistant Ben Horwitz each air-balled their first shot in the Dome. Last season, junior guard Tyus Battle said the Orange were getting off to slow shooting starts because younger players had to adjust to shooting in the Dome. “I think that was depth perception, but we picked it up,” he said in November 2017. Empty bleachers increase the depth effect, while fans mitigate it, players and coaches said. Location on the floor also contributes: Players said corner 3s are the hardest, especially those facing open space, where the only sight beyond the rim appears dark. Most players agree straightaway 3-pointers skew one’s perception the least. Among the 47 percent of players who do believe in the depth effect, they don’t always agree on which way it gets you. Most players say their first shot was an airball. As a result, they overcompensate and shoot farther to reach. But some players and coaches said they tend to shoot long and hit backboard or back of the rim, so they aim for the front rim. “It’s almost a christening,” Horwitz said.
“You have to airball your first shot.” On the day before games, SU women’s basketball guard Isis Young goes to the Dome for extra shots. She needed the preparation for confidence, because she felt the “enormous” background and curved bleachers altered her view.
I felt like I was chucking the ball and was still short. From the corners, it seems way farther than what it is.” Young’s teammate, Gabrielle Cooper, said she couldn’t find a rhythm until several games into her freshman season. “It’s like, ‘Woah,’ the stands are so far back,” Cooper said. Former SU guard Matt Roe, who left SU as the program’s all-time leading 3-point shooter, believes the most difficult aspect is gauging one’s distance to the basket. “The Carrier Dome looks like the rim is floating in the air,” he said. “All you want to do is use more legs. You can’t explain it, so you try to over-do it and then it just messes with your head.” SU women’s basketball head coach Quentin Hillsman has joked that shooting in the Dome is “like shooting to a football field.” But many players, including Sykes, never understood why teammates and opponents complained about the depth effect. So for now, at least, one of the larger mysteries surrounding the Dome’s history remains unsolved depending on whom you ask. “Your first time in there, it definitely gets you,” said freshman Buddy Boeheim. “The Dome isn’t like any other gym.”
For a while, I didn’t feel like I could shoot in there ... The depth made me feel like I had to shoot longer, but I felt like I was chucking the ball and was still short. Isis Young junior guard
“For a while, I didn’t feel like I could shoot in there,” Young said. “I felt like I’m chucking it and I’m not chucking it, and I was hitting the front rim a lot. The depth made me feel like I had to shoot longer, but
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