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No need to eat crow for the road

By Ryan Greene
March 6, 2007 | 20 comments

Can’t make it to the Big 12 and NCAA Tournaments? Can’t read enough about the Jayhawks? Just like random bits and pieces with your hoops talk? The Greene Room is hitting the road to give you all three. Check back at KUSports.com every few hours over the next few weeks to read new entries, as KUSports.com editor Ryan Greene follows all of the action on and off the court from Oklahoma City, and then every March Madness sight the Jayhawks happen to visit.

8:33 p.m., Sunday March 11, 2007

There's no need to crow on that Texas pick. They proved again they're capable of hanging with the nation's hottest team.

Though while the Longhorns were up to the task, there was no question who the more mature team was on Sunday.

Between the two rosters, there was just one senior (Texas' Craig Winder). KU, though, has been through the fire, and they have this incredible mentality to them at this point, which will make it tough to pick against them again the rest of the way. You can sense it just in the way that they talk now, compared to the way they were at the beginning of the year. They don't speak so loosely now. They seem as focused a bunch as you'll find, and if they can handle the distractions at home in Lawrence this week and next, they should be OK for awhile.

When KU topped Texas 90-86 a week ago in Allen Fieldhouse, the Jayhawks watched the Longhorns have another ridiculous offensive first half, but were able to match them in terms of accuracy, and it didn't seem too far-fetched that KU would come back. This time, Texas got off to a similar start, and instead of resembling last Saturday's Jayhawks, KU looked more like Rocky Balboa from his first fight with Clubber Lang in Rocky III - punchless and without a chance.

But just like Texas did two nights ago against Baylor in a similar first half situation, the Jayhawks didn't panic. They stormed back, and in the run, left everyone with a multitude of memories from this one. Mario Chalmers' three from the top of the key to send the game into overtime, Darnell Jackson's block of D.J. Augustin followed by both Jackson and Russell Robinson putting home clutch free throws late - it all melted into one memorable performance. KU truly earned its one-seed next week.

As far as the bracket goes, don't let the names intimidate you as far as the West regional goes. There's more basketball history than most can comprehend if you add up the likes of KU, Duke, Kentucky, UCLA and Indiana, just to name a few. But while, with the exception of UCLA, all of these schools carry weight, none of them have lived up to the names on the front of the jerseys this year. There's no reason to believe KU won't come out of the West. On paper, the only team that should really give the Jayhawks a challenge is UCLA.

-Kevin Durant certainly deserves some love for what he again did to KU. Unless the two teams meet to play for a National Championship on April 2, Durant will never face the Jayhawks again.

In two games against KU in eight days, Durant averaged 34.5 points per game. But he never came away with the stat that truly mattered - a 'W.' Instead, KU will be to Durant what Florida was to Peyton Manning while at Tennessee.

Might as well get the two cents in, as my initial bracket has been completed. Final Four: Florida, KU, Georgetown, Texas A&M.

Championship game: Florida, Texas A&M.

National champ: Texas A&M.

12:50 p.m., Sunday March 11, 2007

While the Big 12 Tournament is just about done, one thing certainly isn't...I know that I have at least one (probably three) more games to hear the KU band play "Shot through the heart." I swear, after hearing the KU band play it now 30 times-plus this year, I'm ready to swear off of the song forever. It now makes me cringe. Then again, I'm probably not the only one who can lay claim to that about Bon Jovi.

Before KU and Texas tip, lets get the bits and pieces from this week out of the way:

-Mike Rigg is a zeus of sorts. The former 6News sports anchor has made it, 22 games out of 22 games. He wins nothing more than the right to go home and sleep for two days straight (That means he wins no added respect from me or Wood). Probably not worth the expended bodily and mental anguish when you look back at it.

-I came to Oklahoma, and true to form saw the mullet to end all mullets. Some guy outside of the Ford Center last night had a blonde 'do which was partyin' in the back all the way down to, well, the small of his back.

-I came, I saw and I conqured the Waffle House. Wood and I went last night. It was everything we had hoped and dreamed of. Gotta give Wood credit. It was his one goal coming down here to go there, and he sacrificed a potential steak dinner on the company's dime for the $5.69 All-Star Special, with complimentary extra grease for your stomach's delight. They truly, truly, truly need one in Lawrence. Wood, without his wife knowing, will probably keep it in business.

-Kevin Durant is gonna go off today. He was money during the warm-ups, though it was pretty funny to see him stand and stare down the court at Danny Manning warming up with the KU players. He respects the game's history, and you've got to in turn respect that about him.

Pregame prediction: Texas 74, Kansas 67. Durant scores 33, D.J. Augustin 31. KU gets a No. 1 seed, plays in Chicago Friday and Sunday, then San Antonio over my birthday.

6:32 p.m., Saturday March 10, 2007

Maybe this whole three games in three days thing isn't such a big deal afterall. At least KU players will tell you that.

All year, outsiders have tried to dig and claw to find a down side to Bill Self recruiting all the McDonald's All-Americans a roster could possibly hold. There's been concerns that selfishness might arise. Or that with all those guys being on the same level, this team doesn't have one true go-to guy.

Saturday, after KU worked K-State for the third time in 2007, the Jayhawks made an argument for the other side of the ledger.

“I’m pretty used to it from high school," freshman Darrell Arthur said. "AAU, we had to play back-to-back-to-back. We had a lot of time to rest. We had the early game yesterday, so we had ll day to rest yesterday. Coming back, we had fresh legs. I know everybody came from a big elite (AAU) team, and they play back-to-back-to-back, so they’re used to it.”

When asked what was the most games Arthur ever played in one day, he was quick to answere: Five.

That's the thing, Brandon Rush, Julian Wright, Sherron Collins, Mario Chalmers, all of those guys, as long as they're getting proper rest afterwards in the 24 hours between tip-offs, they couldn't possibly be bothered by the schedule.

-If KU has yet to lock up a No. 1 seed this weekend, which is probably no longer the case, what's going on in the rest of the country certainly hasn't hurt the Jayhawks' case. In case you haven't been paying close enough attention, KU's strength of schedule seems to look better and better by the hour.

-Northern Arizona, who KU dusted 91-57 to open the season, made it to the championship game of the Big Sky conference tournament before bowing out to Weber State.

-Oral Roberts, who shocked KU 78-71 in the Jayhawks' second game of the year, won 23 games and blew through the Mid-Con tournament.

-Southern Cal, who KU registered a 10-point win over in early December, made a run through the Pac-10 tournament before getting trounced by Oregon in the title tilt.

-Boston College (ACC) and Toledo (MAC) both made it to the semifinals of their league tourneys.

-Rhode Island upset top-seeded Xavier to make it to the Atlantic-10 finals.

If KU is not a one-seed at this point, then, in the words of Gary Bedore, I'll eat my shoe.

-Kevin Durant was at it again on Saturday. Seriously, if he drops 50 on the Jayhawks Sunday, nobody should be surprised. Friday night it was a huge second half. Saturday against Oklahoma State, he had a 19-point first half, scoring only seven in the final 20 minutes, but that included a dagger of a three-pointer atop the key which finished off pesky Oklahoma State late.

In the tournament, it can take that one magical player to put a team on his back and take them the whole way. Joakim Noah did it last year, Sean May the year before, Emeka Okafor before that, and the list goes on and on. Durant's getting an early start in his conference tournament, and is doing it with ease.

11:24 p.m., Friday March 9, 2007

I lightly made a joke with Wood on my way out the door around 8:15 tonight that my reason for going to watch the Texas/Baylor quarterfinal was because I wanted to be there when Kevin Durant dropped his first hundy-spot.

By halftime, he was one-twentieth of the way there, and was 1-for-13 from the floor.

Mission not accomplished.

Though having seen the first half he had a week ago in Lawrence, there was no reason to believe that Durant couldn't lead the Longhorns past a mere 18-point halftime obstacle. Texas won 74-69, Durant scored 24 of his 29 points in the second half, and Baylor wilted despite all the support in the world. To Durant's credit, too, that 1-for-13 showing might as well have had an asterisk with it, because he had about five or six shots in close that were half way down before mysteriously popping out.

Seriously, it was a home game for the Bears. They had a small sampling of fans in green and gold, but every KU and OSU fan in the house was in Scott Drew's corner. Didn't matter, and there's no reason to believe anyone's going to beat Durant this weekend after seeing him again prove he's the closest thing college basketball has to a divine power. I see him as the product of what you'd get if you rolled Larry Bird's ability and Appollo Creed's confidence into a warm tortilla shell and let them melt into one (kind of like ordering a burrito at Chipotle to go, but not opening the foil for a good 20 minutes so all of the ingredients mesh into a tasty goulash).

There's just something about that Texas team, too. They never once looked frazzled, even running off the floor for the intermission. They played the entire game with this strange aura that they knew they'd pull it out. They're young and brash, which are two qualities which should scare everyone in their path the rest of the way.

(Quick sidenote: Texas might have fewer fans here than any other school. It's incredibly weird.)

(One more: Baylor's Aaron Bruce by far wins the weekend's award for best on-court hair. He's wearing a very trendy mini-mullet which would fit in perfectly down the street at the Skky Bar.)

-But if KU goes down shy of another Big 12 Championship trophy acceptance, take it with a grain of salt. While they have a great shot at winning this thing, it wouldn't be the end of the world if K-State or someone on Sunday gets the best of the Jayhawks.

Look, there's no question the Jayhawks are the most talented team here this weekend, but even Bill Self himself today admitted that playing on Sunday can create mixed feelings for coaches and players.

That would have definitely been the case if Texas lost, as it would have taken just about all of the prestige out of this thing.

True, it's another day of rest, but more importantly, if KU is going to make a run for a national title this year, answer this: When was the last time a team ended its season on a 17-game winning streak? That's what it would take for the Jayhawks to clip the nets both in Oklahoma City and Atlanta.

Adding another chip on the shoulder before the official March Madness ensues wouldn't be such a huge tragedy.

See you tomorrow from the Ford Center.

5:11 p.m., Friday March 9, 2007

So far, Friday afternoon in the Ford Center has gone as planned: The higher seeds won the day's first two games and Bob Knight held another memorable press session.

KU played all right. The Jayhawks weren't great, but luckily for them, they didn't really have to be today.

This was a bad Oklahoma team. Jeff Capel certainly deserves a couple of pats on the back for what he's done with that team this year. Outside of senior Nate Carter and sometimes senior Michael Neal, no one on that team is a very good one-on-one offensive threat, and their depth is, well, non-existent.

Games like that leave the media with nothing really to do but nit-pick. So here goes:

-Sherron Collins still has yet to dunk in a game this season. He passed up another beauty of an opportunity Friday in the open court in the second half. Remember, the kid is capable of doing this. But heck, two points is two points I guess.

-You knew that if Brandon Rush had a productive second half, this game wouldn't be much in question. You have to wonder if Rush's teammates ever get frustrated. They will tell you Rush is the pulse of that offense when he's on, and he's the best scorer they have. It'd probably be tough to recall the last player who was more invisible in the first half of a game and then had more of a dominant-yet-smooth impact in the final 20 minutes.

-Just a hunch, but if KU plays like it did Friday, K-State has a great shot of knocking the Jayhawks out of the Big 12 tournament a day earlier than many expected. The 'Cats were incredible Friday. After the game, Lance Harris pointed out that the team came down here looking to do more than lock up an NCAA Tournament bid - they came to win the whole thing.

KSU shot 48.1 percent from the field, hit 10 three-pointers, owned Texas Tech on the glass and channeled the Red Raiders' offense so well that only one player in red did anything of note. Jarrius Jackson scored 28 of Tech's 45 points, but needed an Iverson-like 24 field goal attempts to do so.

Granted, doing that to a team like KU will be much tougher, but they played spirited, rested and relentless basketball. Tomorrow might be even tighter than KU's 71-62 win in Bramlage in February.

Other notables from Friday's early session

Most of the interesting stuff took place in a 10-minute span in the podium area.

First was K-State coach Bob Huggins. You can truly tell that the guy has been around and knows how to massage the system that is the NCAA Tournament Selection Committee.

First, he said this: "But, you know, the whole deal about whether we are in or not, it's ludicrous. I mean, when you think about it, we've got two teams in our league that are both playing for a one seed. And Texas has got to be, what, a three or a four? So then you are going to tell me from one through three and then the next best team in the league, which has been us, that we're not in the best 65 in the country, as good as this league is? I haven't really honestly paid all that much attention to it. I felt like we were in before we played this game."

Like any good coach, he's going to bat for his team, playing the politician and stating their case in the most convincing of ways (I happen to agree with what he said, too).

But he stroked the committee's ego right here, which was a good move on his part, to end his press session: You know, they say play better at the end of the year. We are 12-4 in our last 16 games. Texas is playing great. I mean, A&M is playing really, really well.

I'm not on the committee, so I let - and I honestly think the people have done a wonderful job over the years. It is a hard job. It is a hard job. It is a job you don't get a whole lot of credit for, you know. When it is all over with, nobody comes on T.V. and says, God, they did a wonderful job. They come on T.V. and start ripping on them about why didn't this team get in, whey didn't that team get in.

It is a hard job. It is a thankless job.

I told your guys, all we can do is do what we do and that's go win games. You drive yourself crazy sitting there - I'm not Joe Lunardi. I just try to control the things that we can control. The only thing we can control is how well we can play."

Here's another chip that should be in K-State's favor, though.

All of those same experts seem to be holding West Virginia back because of one snag. The Mountaineers are 22-9 overall, went 9-7 in the Big East (a.k.a. college basketball's deepest league) and won an opening round game in their conference tournament before bowing out to Louisville in the quarterfinals. The feather in their cap should be a 70-65 win over No. 2 UCLA on Feb. 10. But everyone, ESPN mostly, refuses to give too much credit because UCLA played the game without point guard Darren Collison (who is a wee-bit overrated, by the way).

OK, well what about Kansas State? It had to play the final 17 games of the season without its best player, freshman phenom Bill Walker. The 'Cats went 12-5, including a win at Texas.

Huggins is right. They were in before Friday.

The biggest fireworks before the dinner break came during Bobby Knight's press session...surprise, surprise.

Knight took control of the press conference from the second he got up on the stage. He proceeded to do the typical Knight stuff, with the borderline language and such. He only fielded four questions from the packed house. Here were two highlights:

Writer: Why weren't you guys able to get anybody going other than Jackson offensively?

Knight: Well, it could have had something to do with what we had for breakfast. I don't know. We may have eaten the wrong cereal. We may not have had the proper lighting in the locker room or maybe Kansas State was pretty damn good defensively and maybe we were a little bit tired. I would like to think that I already covered that sufficiently.

...later...

Writer: If you make the NCAA, are you concerned about being able to turn around from round one to round two? If you win round one, are you worried about turning around for round 2?

Knight: You have a day off.

Writer: One day makes a difference?

Knight: Goddamn, you don't think one day makes a difference? I mean, if you had to run five miles today, could you run five miles tomorrow? Would you rather wait until the next day? Damn, you need to get some exercise, boy.

He did say one thing indirectly that most informed folks can agree with: Conference tournaments are nothing but a money-making joke.

A true league champion is the team that emerges from a 16-game schedule over two months with the best record, not a team which can simply get hot over the course of three or four days. These tournaments give the conferences something to pat their own backs over just because, well, they can.

Though I will say that it gives me one more chance to watch Kevin Durant play in person, and I'm taking advantage of that in a few hours. So we'll talk to you then.

1:05 p.m., Friday March 9, 2007

Ryan Wood just spotted the sign of the day in Section 111:

"Make it rain JuJu"

Man...the phenomenon's sweeping the nation.

12:35 p.m., Friday March 9, 2007

Oklahoma junior guard David Godbold yesterday after his team's win over Iowa State pointed out how their conditioning is really kicking in late in the season.

If you've watched today's first half, that is brutally apparent. OU is not tired, and they again are truly playing like a team who doesn't want its season to be finished yet.

Brandon Rush is still looking timid on the offensive end, which was a problem late in the season. He's taken passes on a few open looks. Here's a not-so-bold prediction: If he scores 12 points in the second half (had three in the first), KU will win.

It'd be hard for KU to lose this game, though, anyways. Oklahoma is an atrocious team offensively. They've made two air-balls look like alley-oops in one half. That's about the same number you'll see in the Journal-World Friday morning pick-up sessions. They shot just 39.3 percent in the first half. KU wasn't atrocious, going 11-of-25 from the floor.

See you after the game. That is if you're still awake.

11:20 a.m., Friday March 9, 2007

First off, 'aeroku' is going to be tough to beat in this little contest of ours. That's a lot of anytime minutes to sacrifice.

We just nestled in courtside for the start of Friday's action. Upon arrival around 10 a.m., Texas was on the floor practicing, and Kevin Durant made a shot from 45 feet away, kicking the ball up to his head, balancing it up there for eight seconds, and then rolling it down, making the ball do three hands around the rim created by his arms before dropping it back down to his Nikes and booting it in, nothing but net.

OK, not really. But after last Saturday's first half in Allen Fieldhouse, tell me you honestly didn't believe it for about 4.2 seconds there. Seriously, though, it's going to be a fun day in the Ford Center. After the KU game comes two of basketball's most entertaining coaches in Bobby Knight and Bob Huggins. Then a suddenly-awake Oklahoma State team takes on Acie Law IV and Texas A&M. And if you can say you dislike Law, well, then you're lying.

The teams have just taken the floor, so we'll talk at halftime.

1:53 a.m., Friday March 9, 2007

I just realized a couple of hours ago that this blog went largely disregarded on my part today. Why's that? Well, not much going on if you're down here covering Kansas.

Before hitting the hay, here's what we learned today (<----Rhyme)...

-Kim Mulkey should have stuck with what was working. By wearing Wednesday what is now being referred to as the 'mother of the bride' outfit, her team was successful. She toned it down Thursday, and the Bears were thumped in the quarterfinals by the Sooners. Now there is no further reason to write about women's fashion this weekend.

-There is no team in the country, I guarantee it, which rolls deeper to a postseason event than Kansas. It took two buses for the Jayhawks and their Athletic Deptartment crew to get from the airport to the hotel Thursday. I'm guessing a crew of about 80. It's an entourage large enough to make Pac Man Jones jealous.

-Kansas will play Texas Tech Saturday. Calling it now. I'd bet $81,000 on it. All in singles.

-Texas will play Oklahoma State Saturday. Believe that as well.

-We'll talk plenty during tomorrow's game. And I'm starting a contest.

I know there's a lot of loyal fans out there, and I know that for most of you, working during a KU game must be killing you. And I know some of you will be sneaking around the system to watch or listen to the game. Whoever can provide me with the most desperate measures taken to watch or listen to tomorrow's game while at work or school will win a free KUSports.com T-Shirt. Post all entries in the comments space below. ONE EXCEPTION: My friends are ineligible. I know what all of your usernames are, so don't try.

Goodnight, all. Talk to you during the game.

11:40 a.m., Thursday March 8, 2007

Well, we're now underway in the first contest of the 2007 Big 12 Tournament, and Oklahoma is playing with that "We want Kansas again" fire in the earlygoing. It's 9-2 Sooners just over three minutes into the game. They're fired up, while Iowa State appears to have mailed it in before getting off the bus today.

It might not reflect it on the scoreboard so much, but that's because Oklahoma is just not that good at scoring the basketball. But they will win this game. The Sooners are defending superbly, they're screaming as they rip down defensive boards and, what I loke most, they all appear to be playing with sneers on their faces.

While we're at the Ford Center, which is beautiful, by the way, you just don't love basketball if there's not something about an NBA arena that doesn't make you just giddy inside. Some might call the modern-day coliseum's cookie-cutter in design, but I think basketball just takes on a greater feeling of importance when it's in a clean, new, state-of-the-art venue.

I would say the only thing that could make this better would be if the powers that be decided to put ESPN2's telecast of the Michigan-Minnesota game from Chicago on the big screen. Then again, I can't imagine it's much more exciting to watch than it is following it online. 20-16, Michigan at the half. Who am I kidding, they're just leading up to another inevitable letdown against Ohio State tomorrow with everything on the line.

The Jayhawks are set to arrive a few hours from now, but assistant coaches Kurtis Townsend and Tim Jankovich are sitting about 10 feet down the way on press row, scouting for tomorrow.

In KU news, it was released this morning that Julian Wright was named a third team All-American by the National Association of Basketball Coaches. Bill Self was named District 12 Coach of the Year.

Anyway, lets do the YouTube thing:

-This one isn't from YouTube, but it's too good not to post. It was spotted by Ryan Wood, and if you've followed the Pac Man Jones saga at all, it's right up your alley. My favorite part is the first lady they interview. How she said that so seriously, I'll never understand. (And if you're craving for more Pac Man laughs, this is fun as well)

-For those of you who can't get enough of Roy Williams, this is pretty solid.

Come to think of it, none of those were from YouTube. But we'll do some more later.

9:47 a.m., Thursday March 8, 2007

Good morning, and here's your photo:

http://www.newsok.com/more/photos?gallery_id=2269

Drag that link into your browser, and it's the sixth photo in from the left.

I'll talk to you all some more in a little bit before Oklahoma and Iowa State tip.

11:35 p.m., Wednesday March 7, 2007

I know you've been craving for an update from two posts ago, regarding Kim Mulkey's 'outfit' on the Baylor sidelines. So you'd better believe the topic came up during the post game press conference. Here you go, for your reading pleasure (and again, picture...well, shoot, I can't really tell you what to picture...):

Writer: Kim, a lot of people would say that's a finals outfit. What goes into your decision-making to wear an outfit into the quarter finals tonight?

(laughter)

Kim Mulkey: What in the hell does that have to do with basketball?

(laughter)

Baylor player Bernice Mosby: My coach looked good tonight, y'all.

Kim Mulkey: I don't know, man. I just thought that was good enough to wear. I don't know.

(laughter)

Kim Mulkey: Would you ask those questions of Bobby Knight? You wouldn't dare.

(after another two questions about the game)

Writer: He didn't give us a good answer.

I wish I could make this stuff up. I can't really top that for tonight. We'll have our YouTube fun tomorrow after the Oklahoma/Iowa State crapshoot at 11:30 a.m.

9:53 p.m., Wednesday March 7, 2007

Wednesday night in the Cox Convention Center has been overall a dud for the KU women's hoops squad. Until Bonnie Henrickson changed things up midway through the second half, that is.

Henrickson was just whistled for one of the funnier technical fouls you'll ever see.

Sophomore guard Ivana Catic had the ball poked from her in the backcourt, and while tumbling to the deck was called for holding the Baylor defender making the swipe. Henrickson called over to the other end of the floor, getting the ref's attention, and mocked his hand signal for the call, leaving Bonnie to simply turn and laugh as she was charged with a technical foul. The couple hundred KU fans behind the bench applauded her. What can you say, other than the coach has a sense of humor. She needs it on a night like tonight, because KU looks physically drained from last night's game.

9:20 p.m., Wednesday March 7, 2007

You know, it's times like these in which I truly wish I was a photographer. Because my words alone won't do it justice, but everyone deserves to catch a glimpse of this interesting get-up donned tonight by Baylor coach Kim Mulkey.

Two thumbs...down.

From 10 feet away, I'm going to call it a silver satin suit, with a shirt underneath that is nothing short of silver and blinding. Very peppy. And the hair-do adds about six more inches to her height...at least.

Seriously, this needs an accompanying photo. The camera on my phone won't do, either. Let's just say the woman looks like she stepped out of an episode of Dallas on TV Land. Get the picture?

7:09 p.m., Wednesday March 7, 2007

As we're sitting on our seats in the Cox Center awaiting KU's 8:30 tip against Baylor, the nation's 17th-ranked team, we're witnessing Oklahoma sophomore Courtney Paris slowly but surely break down Texas. If you've never seen this girl play, she's worth the price of admission, because she's the closest thing to a guarantee you'll get in women's college hoops.

In the first half, she was offensively invisible. She still turned in a five-point, seven-rebound, two-block stat line after 20 minutes. And now, just 2:30 into the second half, she's bumped that point total to 11 points, drawing fouls with two of her hoops (she is not a good foul shooter at all, that's for sure).

Just as she methodically wore down the Jayhawk defense a couple weeks ago with her 6-foot-4, 220-pound frame, she's doing it now to a much bigger team. Turn on Fox Sports Net if you can to catch the tail end of this one. She's No. 3 in white. She lives up to the old Phog Allen saying that you could take her and four cheerleaders and beat just about anyone.

And what do you know, before I could even post this, she just dropped in another and-one. Sheesh...

2:07 p.m., Wednesday March 7, 2007

Is it sad that I sat in the hotel room this afternoon counting down nearly an hour until the start of Syracuse vs. Connecticut in the opening round of the Big East Tournament?

No, because I'm a big fan of uniforms, and we were mere minutes from Syracuse pulling one of the biggest fashion uh-oh's in college hoops history.

By now, just about everyone has seen this link showing off Nike's new uniforms designed for 'Cuse, Arizona, Ohio State and Florida as they enter postseason play.

Upon closer look, Syracuse is wearing the new uniforms, which feature baggier-than-normal shorts and tigher-looking tops. Luckily, none of the players are wearing he hideous sleeved undergarments as shown in that link. Though it would have been much more fun to make fun of them had they been. So basically I was disappointed to see that Jim Boeheim's team looks relatively normal in the new threads. The one bad thing I can say is that the baggy shorts and non-baggy tops make the shorts look incredibly huge. I had all kinds of things conjured up in my head to rip on these potentially vicious excuses for jerseys, but Nike slinked away again.

I was expecting something as bad as this.

They're losing to UConn in the first half, which is pretty bad, so I'll ease off.

As far as everything here in Oklahoma City, well, lets just say the Big 12 is slacking at the moment. I made the effort to get out of the desk chair here to check the mondo-sized women's bracket on the side of the Cox Center to see who won the Texas A&M/Colorado game this morning, and instead had to fire up the computer to find out instead. A&M, the tournament's top seed, smoked the Buffaloes, in case you were curious.

It hasn't been a complete waste of a day by any means to this point. Earlier, I hoofed it down to Bricktown to meet with Mike De la Garza, who was the high school basketball coach of none other than Bill Self at Edmond Memorial High, just a few miles outside of OKC. You can read more about that tomorrow on KUSports.com and in the Journal-World. He had all kinds of interesting stuff to day, and it was an enjoyable lunch at Coach's, which overlooks SBC Bricktown Ballpark from high atop left field.

And everyone join our chat with KU commit Conner Teahan here in about 30 minutes on the site. I'll talk to you all again before Bonnie Ball tips off yet again tonight at 8:30.

Early prediction: Baylor 68, Kansas 65.

By the way, before tonight's game I'll post our weekly YouTube fun.

12:01 a.m., Wednesday March 7, 2007

One last thing...did you know that the term Quarter Pounder is a trademark? Crazy. Who would have thought that you could do that with a quantity?

Ryan Wood made the executive decision that the power will be fought, and the Quarter Pounder will now be referred to by us as the Royale with cheese. Anyways, thanks for the tangent, bg_duck.

11:50 p.m., Tuesday March 6, 2007

Quarter Pounder has been fixed. How dare I do such an injustice to McDonald's...shame on me...

11:10 p.m., Tuesday March 6, 2007

First off, in my last update of the night, let me tell everyone that we’ll have our weekly YouTube fun tomorrow afternoon. This week is a little different setting in The Greene Room, but you can’t mess with tradition, even if it’s only a few weeks old.

Now, some analysis (And don’t complain about me writing about women’s basketball like you normally do. Bonnie’s bunch deserves the ink at the moment).

As everyone probably knows about me by now, unwillingly I’m assuming, I have a huge thing for the Fab Five. And in a book written about them by Mitch Albom during the mid-90s, it talked about how during their first NCAA Tournament together in 1992, the Michigan freshman quint lived by the motto “Shock the world” on their way to the National Championship game. It was born from a pep talk the team received from Muhammad Ali.

Will the Kansas University women’s basketball team do the same thing this week in Oklahoma City? No.

But Tuesday night provided more than Bonnie Henrickson could ever have hoped for, knocking off No. 6 seed Oklahoma State. Not only did KU beat a team it had lost to in their only regular season meeting, but the ladies beat a hungry team with plenty on the line. The Cowgirls entered with a final Big 12 mark of 8-8. Despite having 20 wins on the season, a win Tuesday would have solidified a potential trip to the NCAA Tournament.

KU came away a 71-62 victor.

One thing stuck out in my mind, and that was the way KU responded in the second half. Oklahoma State’s Andrea Riley, who was the Big 12 Freshman of the Year this season, hit a stepback three as time expired in the first half.

I mean, this shot was just sick. She came down with all the confidence in the world, confused KU senior Shaq Mosley, swished it and was nodding her head in response just like Kevin Durant did last week in Allen Fieldhouse.

KU just kept finding ways to scrap back, especially on the defensive end. The Jayhawks forced OSU into every bad shot under the sun in the second half, and the Cowgirls were 6-of-31 from the floor in the final 20 minutes.

Then there was KU junior Taylor McIntosh, who took an elbow under her left eye, left for a minute, came back and put in clutch hoop after clutch hoop to finish the contest with a career-high 19 points and 13 rebounds.

Danielle McCray hit a key three-pointer in the corner late, and Kelly Kohn, who has been around a 50-percent free throw shooter all year, sank all but one of her late charities.

What this shows is that this team has something serious to build off of next year.

Though I'll say I might believe shocking the world is slightly more possible if the Jayhawks can take care of No. 3-seed Baylor tomorrow at 8:30 p.m. KU lost to the Bears 71-64 in their lone meeting this year.

7:26 p.m., Tuesday March 6

After nearly five hours on the road, one stop at McDonald’s for an artery-clogging quarter-pound morsel of delight and a quick catnap just past the Kansas/Oklahoma border, here we are.

Journal-World KU football beat writer Ryan Wood and myself are the first of the company gaggle to make it to Oklahoma City for a week of hoops, men’s and women’s (Wood is still quivering from his large Shamrock Shake, which made me regret not getting one the second we hopped back into the rental).

One thing about OKC being the host to this little deal is that as both a media member and a fan, you couldn’t possibly be more pleased with the set up. But especially as a media member, and afterall, that’s the most important group.

I could throw a Quarter Pounder out of the hotel room and hit both the Ford Center (men’s site) and the Cox Center (women’s site). Plus, in case I over sleep any of the games, the Big 12 has put massive brackets alongside the front facade of the Cox Center, displaying the entire tournament field for both the men’s and women’s tournaments, and they’re updated as the games are played (note to my employers: I will try my absolute best to not oversleep).

Early credit for most dedicated media member this week goes to former 6News sports anchor Mike Rigg, now doing the same for KOCO, Oklahoma City’s No. 1 station. He has vowed to watch every game of both tournaments, so we’ll see how long that lasts (the whole No. 1 station thing was Rigg’s idea. He’s a shameless self-promoter). I will be sure to point out the first second of action he misses.

We’re on press row getting ready for the start of the KU women’s 8:30 tip against Oklahoma State. I’ll talk to you guys afterwards.

KUSports.com editor Ryan Greene can be reached at rgreene@ljworld.com, or by phone at (785) 832-6357.

Comments

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Posted by bg_duck1 (anonymous) on March 6, 2007 at 11:49 p.m. (Suggest removal)

I'm a big fan of the Greene Room but just because its a blog doesn't mean you can throw all the rules about sentence structure out the window like your quarter-pounder! You are a PROFESSIONAL journalist after all (2 words), please write like it.

Otherwise, keep up the good work. Go Hawks!!!

Posted by jklein38 (anonymous) on March 7, 2007 at 12:02 a.m. (Suggest removal)

How could you not get the Shamrock Shake? Are you mad? Isn't it like watching A Christmas Story at least 5 times on Christmas morning? You don't know why you do it, you just do. Although I am partial to Christmas Vacation. Save the neck for me Greene. OK, I am rambling about nothing.....

Congrats to the Lady Hawks. Tough task tomorrow night against Baylor, but I expect to be reading this blog about another win.

Posted by doolindalton (anonymous) on March 7, 2007 at 8:31 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Hey duck,

Two grammatical errrors and a botched simile in your own short paragraph. Great job as a critic.

Posted by bg_duck1 (anonymous) on March 7, 2007 at 12:35 p.m. (Suggest removal)

I'm not the journalist

Posted by dbgjayhawk (anonymous) on March 7, 2007 at 12:51 p.m. (Suggest removal)

everyone in america should use proper grammar. did you even graduate from high school?

Posted by fabolous_bg (anonymous) on March 7, 2007 at 3:55 p.m. (Suggest removal)

man bgduck, u r getng kill'd on hear...lol

Posted by rohdek (Kyle Rohde) on March 7, 2007 at 5:03 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Thank god KU's not with Nike anymore. I don't think Roy or Coach K will be switching to those hideous things anytime soon.

Posted by bg_duck1 (anonymous) on March 7, 2007 at 7:22 p.m. (Suggest removal)

I agree, those are the most hideous uniforms ever created!! But I still wish we were with Nike being with Adidas just doesn't feel as prestigious because we were one of Nike's showcase teams, adidas is nice and all but just not the same.

hey fabolous you better watch it i know where you live...hahahaha

and yes i graduated from high school...i actually just graduated from KU in December fyi but not with an english degree ;)

one more thing...if you like uniforms, as do I, then check out www.uniwatchblog.com... it is a great site dedicated to "The Obsessive Study of Athletics Aesthetics" it is excellent
BEAK 'EM!!

Posted by dbgjayhawk (anonymous) on March 8, 2007 at 1:48 a.m. (Suggest removal)

ryan, do you have a link for a picture of her or anything? i'm really wanting to see this with my own eyes.

Posted by dbgjayhawk (anonymous) on March 8, 2007 at 9:54 a.m. (Suggest removal)

thanks ryan. i guess there are some things you just can't unsee. i'm actually sorry i asked for a picture.

Posted by bg_duck1 (anonymous) on March 8, 2007 at 11:10 a.m. (Suggest removal)

I think the Baylor women's coach is pretty hot, but definitely not an outfit for the 2nd round of the big 12 tourney

Posted by aeroku (anonymous) on March 9, 2007 at 7:54 a.m. (Suggest removal)

I have to work today, and our company doesn't allow us to access ESPN from work. I'm going to go home at lunch and turn the game on. Then, I'm going to call my cell phone from my home phone, set the home phone reciever by the TV speaker, and listen to the game through my cell phone. The best part is, I have a bluetooth headset that I will wear, so it won't look like I'm on the phone. Did I mention that I live in Illinois, so I can't just listen to the game on the radio?

Posted by 97jhawk (anonymous) on March 9, 2007 at 8:58 a.m. (Suggest removal)

I called by boss and told him this:

"Hi boss, hey, I justed wanted to let you know I'm having trouble with my vision and I just couldn't see coming into work today."

It worked. Just kidding. That's what vacation days are for.

Posted by deckbd (anonymous) on March 9, 2007 at 3:03 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Created a fake doctor's appointment in my Outlook calendar and then casually mentioned an appointment to my boss. A buddy and I ate wings at bar and stayed until the final buzzer. (I am sure that no one will notice that I smell like an ashtray this afternoon, right?)

Posted by KoolKeithFreeze (anonymous) on March 9, 2007 at 9:05 p.m. (Suggest removal)

I'm an English teacher in Japan, a country that has little to no appreciation for slacking off in the workplace. And though I have the ability to access the internet from the teacher's room, and can therefore follow games, I have to do it covertly. Even worse, due to time differences, I often have classes to teach in the midst of the action. So I have had to develop alternate stratagems. For instance: our textbook mentions the Civil Rights struggle in the U.S. in one section. So I found a link to MLK Jr.'s 'I Have a Dream' speech, moved the class into an empty room directly above the office (for the wireless connection), and forced the poor Junior High kids to listen to 20 minutes of deep, booming southern accent that they couldn't understand a word of; with myself, naturally, following the play-by-play and reading updates on KUSports.com...

Posted by aeroku (anonymous) on March 10, 2007 at 10:54 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Wouldn't it have been about 2:30 am in Japan when the game was on yesterday?

Posted by jklein38 (anonymous) on March 11, 2007 at 7:26 p.m. (Suggest removal)

You guys had to go all the way to Oklahoma to hit up waffle house? Why not just go right up to Bonner Springs and hit up the one by the turnpike exit or even the one in Platte City. You guys are crazy, I love you guys, but your crazy

Posted by Asher87 (anonymous) on March 11, 2007 at 11:50 p.m. (Suggest removal)

I hit the Waffle House in OKC too.

Oh, the memories.

Posted by dbgjayhawk (anonymous) on March 12, 2007 at 10:10 a.m. (Suggest removal)

texas a&m? i think i'm gonna have to disagree there.

Posted by jacque11 (anonymous) on March 12, 2007 at 3:22 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Ryan Greene are you Serious?!

You had KU losing to Texas, now you have them losing to Florida. Where is your common sense and your loyalty? Have some faith!

This team is mentally and physically stronger than any other in the country. You work for the LJ World, not CBS, you can pull for your team, I’m sure you won’t get in trouble!

I despise your negative propaganda Especially in March. You are definitely not a die hard alum/fan like some of us.

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