A dream come true
Chalmers headed to Final Four for real
Posted Wednesday, April 2, 2008
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2008 NCAA Tournament
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Photo by Thad Allender
Kansas guard Mario Chalmers throws his fists in the air after the Jayhawks clinched a Final Four berth with a victory over Davidson in the Midwest Regional Final on Sunday in Detroit.
Photo by Nick Krug
Kansas University guard Mario Chalmers dreamed of playing in the Final Four as a youngster growing up in Anchorage, Alaska. His dream will be realized Saturday, when the Jayhawks face North Carolina in San Antonio.
Audio clips
2007-08 April 1 Pre-Final Four KU Media Day
- Darrell Arthur talks about the plan of attack against UNC's Tyler Hansbrough
- Jeremy Case talks about being the last link to Roy Williams on the KU roster
- Russell Robinson talks about being part of a star-studded point guard group at this weekend's Final Four
- San Antonio native Chase Buford talks about things to do for Jayhawk fans making the trip
- Sherron Collins talks about upcoming challenges this weekend against North Carolina and possibly beyond
Podcast episode
Press Conferences & Post-Game Interviews
Bill Self's April 1 pre-Final Four press conference
KU coach Bill Self met with the media in Hadl Auditorium Tuesday to discuss the upcoming Final Four, in which his team is part of history, with all four one-seeds having advanced to San Antonio. Self talked in-depth about gameplanning ... read more
Almarie Chalmers stood and watched her son, Mario, snip his rightful piece of the net at Detroit’s Ford Field on Sunday, commemorating his trip to this weekend’s Final Four.
She knew as well as anyone how much this moment meant to the Kansas University junior guard, the Jayhawks’ most mysterious star. She was watching as the dream began.
“I know at 2 years old, 3, 4, 5, he played Final Fours in the living room,” she said of her youngest child. “He had imaginary playmates. Michael Jordan, Magic (Johnson). He was always Mario. He played against them. And I think he won most of them.”
Several years later, he returned to the Final Four, this time for real, as a spectator. Watching UConn’s 2004 run to the title in San Antonio, he turned to his dad, telling him that one day it would be he on the floor chasing a championship.
Now it’s his turn. Not using his imagination in the house. Not dreaming from the stands.
The timing couldn’t be better. It comes at the end of a season during which Chalmers has made a subtle yet big jump. While he still is the epitome of quiet and collected off the floor, his game has evolved.
“I think he’s playing a lot more freely,” said Mario’s father, Ronnie, who has coached his son from the start, now as a member of the KU staff. “I think this year that he understands the system a lot better. He understands that when his turn comes to shoot, if he’s open, coach wants him to take that shot.”
The freedom comes from not only getting back to playing the style of ball that originally put Chalmers on the map, but being able to blend in on a team full of former prep royalty.
“He’s probably better off not getting the attention, because that’s just who he is,” Ronnie said. “He doesn’t care who gets the accolades, as long as we win.”
No longer Trajan’s tundra
It’s not much of a surprise that Mario Chalmers, like most basketball fans growing up in the ’90s, idolized Michael Jordan, even though the NBA is a long way from Anchorage, Alaska.
Enter Trajan Langdon.
For the longest time in Anchorage, Langdon was the standard. Still is, to an extent. Ronnie Chalmers was an assistant coach at East Anchorage High when Langdon was coming through. The McDonald’s All-American led East Anchorage to a state title in 1994 before starring at Duke and eventually heading off to the NBA.
Ronnie would bring Mario, then 7, to practices. Once practice was over, Langdon and Mario would take over the floor. They took turns feeding each other the ball for shots.
“I think that attention that Trajan gave Mario really inspired him to think, ‘One day I want to be like Trajan,’” Ronnie said. “Michael Jordan was his idol, but being around Trajan day in and day out, he was right there where you physically touch someone, and I think it had a big impact on him.”
Confirmed Mario: “Being around him, working out with him, seeing the kind of work ethic he had, I just wanted to emulate him.”
Emulate him he did. Just as Langdon had done at East Anchorage, Chalmers became the cornerstone of a dynasty across town at Bartlett High. Chalmers won two state titles and became the second player in state history to earn the 4A Player of the Year honor three times, duplicating Langdon’s feat.
“(Trajan) is pretty much the first one that made it big in basketball from Anchorage,” said Doug Hardy, one of Chalmers’ best friends and teammates since the age of 7. “Now, I think Mario’s overshadowed his name. If you asked right now about basketball (in Anchorage), I think Mario’s got him beat.”
Hardy, who recently played in the Division II Final Four for University of Alaska-Anchorage, never had a doubt about his friend’s goals.
“They say (in roulette) you’re not supposed to gamble all your money on black, but if black was basketball, he put it all on black,” Hardy said.
Hardy recalled childhood slumber parties with his best bud, which usually included shooting hoops in the Chalmers’ back yard for much of the night, or playing any of the “5,000 basketball video games” in Mario’s bedroom.
Despite his rising stardom as a prep, Chalmers remained soft-spoken. He wears the words “quietness” and “confidence” in ink under his wrists. His pastor, Tobitha Lawrence, always preached the value of those qualities to him, Chalmers said.
“I think his strength comes from his quietness,” Mario’s mom said. “In high school, he had to be more vocal. But here, because he has so much support around him from other teammates, he can afford to be quiet, because there’s other people who understand his quietness. But quiet doesn’t mean he’s disappeared. It means focused.”
The real Mario Chalmers
Darrell Arthur’s turnaround jumper fell off the front of the rim, and three months later, he fully admits Mario Chalmers was the last person he expected to be there.
“When I first saw it, I thought it was Brandon (Rush) or somebody,” Arthur said.
It was in a Dec. 18 victory at Georgia Tech, when Chalmers followed an Arthur miss with a vicious one-hand slam that stunned teammates.
The 6-foot-1 guard rose over two Yellow Jackets, finished the slam, kicked his leg high in the air, flexed his arms and let out a primal scream that was picked up in all its fury by ESPN microphones.
“When he did the kick and the leg, that motion, that was quite emotional,” Almarie said. “My mouth stood open. I was like, ‘I know that’s my son, but wow!’”
From that point on, Chalmers began going for the kill at the iron more often. It’s not to prove a point.
“Coach (Bill) Self told me (before the season) I have to get back to playing my game,” Chalmers said. “I think that’s just my game, getting to the rack and trying to explode on people.”
It was his game at Bartlett, dating to when he first slammed on someone as a ninth-grader against Kenai High. But for whatever reason, Chalmers, by his own admission, only showed flashes of it as a freshman at KU. Then as a sophomore it practically disappeared.
“He’s been getting up this year. He got his bounce back this year,” Arthur said. “He had the bounce in high school when I saw him play a couple of times.”
Chalmers’ ‘game’ didn’t magically reappear, though. Part of it was him having to take initiative this past summer in the weight room with Andrea Hudy, KU’s strength and conditioning guru.
There were Olympic weight-lifting drills which mimicked jumping and running. The clean and snatch, plus the jerk helped add strength to the hips, knees and ankles. There was boxing for agility and footwork. There were hours of plyometrics.
“There’s a thousand ways to skin a cat,” Hudy said. “And we did them all.”
And on the stat sheet, Chalmers’ game took off across the board.
Entering Saturday’s game against North Carolina, he’s averaging career bests in points per game (12.7), field-goal percentage (52.2), three-point percentage (47.6), rebounds (3.1) and assists (4.4) in almost the same amount of minutes he played per game as a sophomore.
Most notably as a junior, Chalmers has emerged as the go-to-guy on a team that doesn’t necessarily need to have one — a byproduct of becoming a true leader.
His big-play knack surfaced in the final minute at Southern Cal on Dec. 2 with a deep three-pointer to clinch a 59-55 victory. He buried eight three-pointers (en route to a career-high 30 points) in a memorable 84-74 victory against Texas on March 16 in the Big 12 title game.
He also was given the reins in two of KU’s three losses this season on the final possession: at Texas on Feb. 11 and at Oklahoma State on Feb. 23.
“Mario’s probably the biggest clutch player I’ve played with throughout my career in basketball,” Arthur said. “When we need a big-time bucket, we go to Mario, and he makes things happen.”
Echoed Brandon Rush: “At the end of the game, we want the ball in his hands because he makes plays.”
The next step?
Chalmers’ plans for next season are not yet determined. His overall improvement in the Jayhawks’ second straight 30-plus-win season has brought the should-I-stay-or-should-I-go question into play. His play has pushed Chalmers to the forefront. His name pops onto various mock drafts as a potential late-first-round pick in this June’s NBA Draft.
Chalmers holds all the cards. College players are able to declare for the draft, test the waters without hiring an agent and still come back to school once.
“He’s ready (physically). I wouldn’t think there’s a question,” said Hudy, without hesitation, having already prepped the likes of Ray Allen, Caron Butler and Richard Hamilton for the pro ranks in her career. “He’s committed to being a basketball player.”
The same opinion is offered up by Rush, who would be in the NBA if not for last summer’s knee injury.
“I think he’s ready, because he’s got the perfect body, he can play either position — he can play the point, he can play the two-guard,” he said. “I think he’s pretty much ready.”
But first things first.
About 30 minutes after cutting the net in Detroit, Chalmers plopped down in the spacious KU locker room, ready to take questions.
The answers, as usual, are short, simple and to the point.
Like Langdon, he’s going to play in a Final Four. Like Michael Jordan, he could soon be a national champion. He’s going up against North Carolina, the school he grew up a fan of and where he wanted to play one day.
But you won’t hear that out in the open. It wouldn’t be Chalmers’ style.
“It feels great to finally get there,” Chalmers said. “I watched my first Final Four in San Antonio, and to actually be going back there to play my first Final Four is pretty amazing. I never thought it’d be in the same exact spot, but I had faith I’d be able to go back to the Final Four.”
The Jayhawks and the Final Four
- Keegan: Jayhawks relish role of ’dogs (04-02-08)
- Other schools adopt KU mascot (04-02-08)
- Game to be shown at Allen Fieldhouse (04-02-08)
- Top teams have Big 12 ties (04-02-08)
- KU carries torch for conference yet again (04-02-08)
- The Big 12 & the Big Dance (04-02-08)
- Tar Heels fast, but KU in ’90 more ‘efficient’ (04-02-08)
- Self dismisses interest in OSU (04-02-08)
- Self ‘not a candidate’ for OSU job (04-02-08)
- Anthony Collins : OL, Cincinnati Bengals
- Derek Fine : TE, Buffalo Bills
- Charles Gordon : CB, Minnesota Vikings
- Justin Hartwig : OL, Pittsburgh Steelers
- Marcus Henry : WR, New York Jets
- Adrian Jones : OL, Kansas City Chiefs
- David McMillan : LB, Cleveland Browns
- Moran Norris : FB, San Francisco 49ers
- Brandon Rideau : WR, Chicago Bears
- Mark Simmons : WR, Houston Texans
- Aqib Talib : CB, Tampa Bay Buccaneers
- All-time list of 'Hawks in the NFL
- Darrell Arthur : F, Memphis Grizzlies
- Mario Chalmers : G, Miami Heat
- Nick Collison : C-F, Seattle Sonics
- Drew Gooden : F-C, Chicago Bulls
- Kirk Hinrich : G, Chicago Bulls
- Darnell Jackson : F, Cleveland Caveliers
- Raef LaFrentz : F, Portland Trailblazers
- Paul Pierce : G-F, Boston Celtics
- Scot Pollard : C-F, Boston Celtics
- Brandon Rush : G, Indiana Pacers
- Billy Thomas : G, Cleveland Cavaliers
- Jacque Vaughn : G, San Antonio Spurs Julian Wright : F, New Orleans Hornets
- All-time list of 'Hawks in the NBA
- Watch this space as we track recruits for the 2008-09 Jayhawks.
- » LB Tharp commits
- » C.J. Henry commits to Memphis, says brother still undecided
- » Henry to visit for Late Night
- » 2008 football signees
- » All football recruiting
- » All basketball recruiting

























2003, 2004, and 2007 EPpy Award Winner.
Comments
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Posted by ColdCoffee (anonymous) on April 2, 2008 at 6:56 a.m. (Suggest removal)
I was wondering when more talk of Chalmers and the NBA would come up in articles ... Mario is the one player I consistently feel confident about nearly every single game - if the team needs need a scorer, he scores, if the team needs need a defensive stop, he comes comes up with some amazing steals, if the team needs a spark, he throws down a vicious one-handed slam.
More often than not, it's the other teams that get "Chalmerized" (as one Texas fan put it), if there's a few points difference in the game between winning and losing.
While I'd hate to lose Mario after his Junior year, I wouldn't be shocked if he ended up declaring. But I sure hope he stick around "One More Year" [begins the chant].
Posted by jhwkfan162515 (anonymous) on April 2, 2008 at 7:17 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Remember our first-round opponents, the Portland State Vikings? Look at the trouble a couple of them got into south of the border...
http://sports.yahoo....
Posted by plasticJHawk (anonymous) on April 2, 2008 at 7:22 a.m. (Suggest removal)
I feel pretty confident that Chalmers will be back for his senior season. Chalmers is the kind of person who at this point in his career will take one more year and finish his degree and continue his growth. Next year he'll be our premier player. It'll be HIS team and I wouldn't be surprised to see him averaging 18 points a game. I don't think that he'll ever be an NBA lottery pick at 6'1 but he could get very close.
I wish that we wouldn't speculate on whether he'll stay or go because I feel like obsiously the seed has already been planted, but the more we make of it the more it will grow and begin to take root. I'd rather we just let it unfold on its own and whatever happens happens.
Posted by grantmvb (anonymous) on April 2, 2008 at 8:38 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Mario has had such a great season thus far and he continues to amaze everyone on the offensive end. His lock-down D is what makes him exceptional, not great. He has great vision and knows when to enter the passing lanes, but let's remember, in response to ColdCoffee's comment, Russ Rob makes most of those steals possible. His strength and guarding ability forces so many bad passes.
Posted by justanotherfan (anonymous) on April 2, 2008 at 9:04 a.m. (Suggest removal)
I think Mario will stay, but not because he can't play in the NBA right now. Look at the PGs that may be coming out this year... Derrick Rose, DJ Augustin, OJ Mayo, Jerryd Bayless, Eric Gordon, Ty Lawson, Darren Collison, etc. Yeah, Chalmers is better than at least half the guys on that list, but he's not as big as Rose, Mayo, Bayless and Gordon, and right now the NBA loves big PGs. That group, plus the overall talent of guys like Kevin Love, Michael Beasley, a couple of his own teammates (Rush, Arthur) definitely pushes him out of the lottery, maybe out of the first round entirely. I think he could have a long and successful NBA career, but I think he will be in much better shape on the draft boards next year. Looking at this year's high school class, not many one and dones in the group, so guys that are in school now may benefit by waiting if they are on the fringe this year.
Posted by ChicagoJHawk (anonymous) on April 2, 2008 at 9:19 a.m. (Suggest removal)
We have so many studs on our team but I have to say Chalmers is definitely my favorite player. He can run the ball up the court, play defense, shoot 3's, steal the ball, provide assists and dunk! The guy can do it all. Not only that but he's our most clutch player; definitely our go to go.
Posted by ChicagoJHawk (anonymous) on April 2, 2008 at 9:23 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Have you guys seen this on youtube? It was an April fools joke but I would have freaked out if I had seen this live!!
http://www.youtube.c...
Posted by Jaminrawk (anonymous) on April 2, 2008 at 9:23 a.m. (Suggest removal)
I think Mario will stay basically because he is a tweener at 6'1". He's more suited to be a shooting guard but not as tall as the prototypical NBA shooting guard. The kid is a great shooter and an all-world defender. I think having his dad here will entice him to stay and finish up his degree next year. He'll still get drafted and his numbers will probably be even better on a team without Rush, Jackson, Robinson, Kaun and Arthur. He'll be "the man" next year.
Posted by hawk_bred20 (anonymous) on April 2, 2008 at 9:34 a.m. (Suggest removal)
ChicagoJHawk- I was watching it live. I was so confused for about 20 seconds and then was like "ohhh April Fools joke". Then they kept going and I was getting even more confused. Finally they said it after the minute was up. It was pretty funny but kind of scary for a minute.
Posted by CasperCorps (anonymous) on April 2, 2008 at 10:30 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Chalmers is also my favorite, of any of our players he is the most ready to go to the league. I just wish he took as many shots as Rush does, I garauntee he'd make over half of them.. My other favorites on the team are Collins (can create his own shot), Jackson (just seems like a nice guy), Robinson (glue guy), and Rush (defense, and sometimes can score after heaving up ten or so) . How nice is it to have a team where its hard to pick a favorite. Rockem Hawks!!
Posted by jayhawk02 (anonymous) on April 2, 2008 at 11:54 a.m. (Suggest removal)
On a different note...I sure hope the KU faithful who travel to SA show class and give Roy a big hand to show their appreciation of him for the time he spent at Kansas. Then I hope we bring tears to his eyes during the game. But please stay classy Jayhawk nation!
Posted by FSUJHAWK (anonymous) on April 2, 2008 at 11:56 a.m. (Suggest removal)
anyone for some KU rap music to the final four...>?
http://www.topekajay...
Posted by robot (Robin Smith) on April 2, 2008 at 11:59 a.m. (Suggest removal)
BE ADVISED: Chalmers will declare for the draft this season to test the waters whether he's going or staying. So be ready in a few weeks or a month to hear him say so.
I have no insider knowledge but it is in his best interest to go work out, see where he is, and then decide. His coaches will likely advise him to do so and I'd be surprised if he didn't take the opportunity. He's got nothing to lose.
Posted by TtownHawk (anonymous) on April 2, 2008 at 12:25 p.m. (Suggest removal)
ChicagoJHawk, yeah i saw it live and was litterally Sh**ing a brick. i was like no effing way! and i frantically came here to KUsports.com looking for more on it just hoping and praying it wasn't true. i must say, i'm a gullible person, but they really got me on that one.
Posted by plasticJHawk (anonymous) on April 2, 2008 at 12:56 p.m. (Suggest removal)
I agree robot that he should get in the mix this year without hiring an agent just to get a feel for it. I fully expect him to be back, but it would be good for him to get out there this spring and see where he is and how he can improve his status before summer '09
Posted by woodhawk (anonymous) on April 2, 2008 at 1:40 p.m. (Suggest removal)
A really interesting breakdown by another one of the Fox Sports crazies...
http://msn.foxsports...
Posted by jayhawker_97 (anonymous) on April 2, 2008 at 1:51 p.m. (Suggest removal)
loving every minute watching Chalmers on the floor!
i always wait for his explosive dunks or steals or 3s or blocks - you name them.
but he'll be back next year with even more powerful skills.
hey, FSUJHAWK - that is quite a rap!! thanks for sharing, yo..
go Jayhawks!!
Posted by chuckberry32 (anonymous) on April 2, 2008 at 3:13 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Awesome rap and prank thanks for the links.
Just like everyone else here I love the mario but I think he will stay. I don't even think he's going to consider jumping. Next year he should average more like 20/game and with sherron bringing the ball up the 2 will be the most feared guard duo in the land.
Posted by mr_lawrence (anonymous) on April 2, 2008 at 9:30 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Agreed, chuck berry. I can't wait to see Mario and Sherron lighting it up with Cole and the twins inside. Back to back final fours anyone?
Posted by speedy (anonymous) on April 2, 2008 at 9:41 p.m. (Suggest removal)
saw the april fools people at ESPN thinking they were pulling one on KU. the only problem is tony screwloose does not know the BB rules. why name collins? he should not have been named.
me i,d like to meet the whole worthless PTI crew and deck them. todays follow up was them chuckling about how smart they were in fooling everyone. i wasn,t fooled just irate for following it up with coach self crud about going to OK. ST. NO means no except to those idiots. never watch them again!
meanness is not funny!
Posted by JayViking (anonymous) on April 3, 2008 at 1:57 a.m. (Suggest removal)
he's consistently our best player. hands down.
Posted by KGphoto (anonymous) on April 3, 2008 at 9:22 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Chalmers will definitely be the favorite for Big 12 player of the year next year. Honestly, it'll probably be between Chalmers, Collins and Aldrich. Who else is there?
Everybody is going. Beasley and Walker. Augustine and probably Abrams. Tons of Seniors are gone. That pretty much leaves Blake Griffin, Curtis Jerrells, Damion James and DeAndre Jordan (maybe). A duo from Ok St. may be good, Byron Eaton and James Anderson, but that depends a lot on who coaches them.
When you add the players that Kansas is adding, then deplete the competition like it will be. I don't see why Kansas doesn't complete another 30 win season with Chalmers at the wheel.