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I'm starting to warm up to Weber, but it sounds like he is pretty dependent on the three ball. Although we have a lot of guys who can hit, none have been too consistent to this point. From reports that Semi Ojeyle's mother didn't like Martin, I would hope that Weber can get back into his home, and I have read some stuff about recruiting in Illinois that made it difficult to do it ethically, so it may actually be a little bit easier for him to recruit to K-State because he doesn't have to deal with those issues. I do hope he can bring in some recruiters. The red flags I hae read are that he is not very felexible, and if he doesn't have the players to fit his system, he just keeps plowing.Highlander wrote:I thought Weber was a pretty safe pick without huge upside (of course Haith did not even look like a safe pick and the results so far have been pretty good). He didn't really shine in a state that puts out tons of good players but he does put together solid well balanced teams that should do at least as well as most of Martin's teams. How well he can recruit to Manhattan will obviously be an issue. I really do not know how well situated KSU is for next year. I suspect McGruder will be a preseason all big XII player but losing Samuels will hurt and Spradling needs to shoot better than in the low 30's percentile from behind the arc to play the role he does. Plus, didn't Martin's top recruit bolt? Is Weber having anyone follow him to KSU?phxcat wrote:Highlander wrote: Missouri, like you say, loses a lot of talent but has a lot coming in. It will be interesting to see how it comes together. K-State should bethe best positioned out of the three, but how many players will leave? How will Webber coach them? Highlander, do you have any thoughts on Webber?
I would not trust anything a player says a few minutes after losing in the championship game of the NCAA tourney. Consequently, I put little stock in Withey saying he'll be back. I don't think he's ever going to be an offensive juggernaut, his value is defense and his stock as a defensive player is high right now. KU may not make it far into the tourney next year and he may not get this kind of exposure again. He'll rethink the statements he made if there is a clear first round projection.
I really don't think he needs to "improve" that much next season to climb the draft boards. If he just maintains what he has done for the last few months of the season, he has a shot at the lottery. I'm not sure what the one and dones are like, but Withey will lead the nation in attention per shot block next season with AD gone. He will also average close to a double-double with TRob not sucking up as many boards. So to me at least, he is in a very similar position to TRob last year, projected high first round, but could be a lottery pick if he stays. He is every ESPN guy's favorite white post player (during the game at least) and will be doted on all season. If he is worried that this season was a fluke and TRob was the only reason for his success, then I could see him leaving. Other than that, he could make a lot more by staying and is pretty much guaranteed the same position in the draft next year do to his size alone.KCMax wrote:The two draft boards I have seen have Withey projected as a second round pick, which is not guaranteed money, so I can't imagine him leaving. If he develops a better offensive game next year, he could be a lottery pick.
Unpossible. National media wants to talk down the KSU job to be equal to a Kent State job. Middle of the map bigots.chingon wrote:Thought this was interesting. Both local schools and Missouri made the list.
For what?AllThingsKC wrote:Are you looking for validation?
Would you clarify that?KCPowercat wrote:Unpossible. National media wants to talk down the KSU job to be equal to a Kent State job. Middle of the map bigots.chingon wrote:Thought this was interesting. Both local schools and Missouri made the list.
Seems like schools in the bigger cities or very proximal to big cities have a big advantage when it comes to value. Otherwise, why would Minnesota, Maryland, Northwestern and UNLV be on that list and why would Louisville be #1. KSU and Mizzou are a bit of an outlier being one of the few programs on the list located in small college towns not all that proximal to large cities.chingon wrote:Would you clarify that?KCPowercat wrote:Unpossible. National media wants to talk down the KSU job to be equal to a Kent State job. Middle of the map bigots.chingon wrote:Thought this was interesting. Both local schools and Missouri made the list.
Hahaha. Come on. I was just teasing.shinatoo wrote:Both local schools and Missouri. LOL
you never miss a dig do you?
I know. It was funny.chingon wrote:Hahaha. Come on. I was just teasing.shinatoo wrote:Both local schools and Missouri. LOL
you never miss a dig do you?
The joy ride of the 2011-12 Baylor athletic season appears to have hit a speed bump. A report released Monday revealed violations in the university’s men’s and women’s basketball programs that the N.C.A.A. deemed “major.”
A nearly three-year investigation yielded a summary disposition, essentially the facts as agreed upon by the N.C.A.A. and Baylor, and ESPN.com obtained a copy Monday. The most significant of the violations appears to be more than 1,200 illegal phone calls by Baylor staff members.
Baylor’s punishment is expected to be announced by the N.C.A.A. this week, but it is not expected to be significantly different from the university’s self-imposed sanctions. According to the summary disposition, Baylor’s men’s program has docked itself two scholarships and prohibited Coach Scott Drew and an assistant, Jerome Tang, from making recruiting phone calls for two months.
Wow."I don't have feelings most of the time. I just hate people without caring," adding that he was motivated by a strong dislike for the Syracuse basketball program because it beat his favorite team, Kansas, in the 2003 NCAA championship game.
longviewmo wrote:http://espn.go.com/mens-college-basketb ... d/7809174/
Wow."I don't have feelings most of the time. I just hate people without caring," adding that he was motivated by a strong dislike for the Syracuse basketball program because it beat his favorite team, Kansas, in the 2003 NCAA championship game.