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2008-09 KU-Emporia State basketball
Kansas vs. Emporia State: Postgame
Signing day
Thomas Robinson, one of the two blue-chip basketball recruits who have committed orally to Kansas University, will sign a national letter-of-intent with KU today, the first day of the weeklong early signing period.
Robinson, a 6-foot-8, 220-pound power forward from Brewster Academy in Wolfeboro, N.H., chose KU over runner-up Memphis on Oct. 10.
Elijah Johnson, a 6-foot-2 point guard from Cheyenne High in Las Vegas, will sign his letter Monday in a ceremony at his high school.
Robinson is Rivals.com's No. 18-rated player; Johnson is No. 27.
"Signing date is tomorrow. Hopefully we'll sign one tomorrow," KU coach Bill Self said.
"I don't think we'll sign a second tomorrow based on availability with family as far as a press conference," he added, apparently referring to Johnson. "I don't anticipate any surprises."
The November signing period runs from today until Wednesday. Michael Snaer, a 6-4 shooting guard from Rancho Verde High in Moreno Valley, Calif., is expected to have a news conference Thursday or Friday to pick either KU, Florida State or Marquette.
Thomas' shoulder OK
Freshman forward Quintrell Thomas had his left shoulder whacked late in the game and left the court in pain.
"It slipped out of place a couple weeks ago. It's not that bad unless somebody hits it. It'll be fine by our first game," Thomas said of Sunday's 7:30 p.m. home game versus UMKC.
He started and had five points and four rebounds in 13 minutes.
"It was fun coming out and having them call my name, especially at a place like Kansas," Thomas said of the introductions.
Of Thomas, Self said: "He was active tonight. He had a good carryover from last week."
Collins hits elbow
KU guard Sherron Collins went down hard after getting hammered by ESU's Doug Moore on a lay-up try with a second left in the first half.
"I hit my elbow on my funny bone. It went numb so I was a little scared. I was cool after that. It was all right," Collins said.
Jayhawks sizzling
KU hit 24 of 30 shots the first half for a sizzling 80 percent.
"I hope every game we're going to make every shot. That would be the best picture. I'm being sarcastic," Self said, acknowledging, "We made everything we looked at."
Tidbits
Emporia State coach David Moe's daughter, Lyndi, sang the national anthem to the delight of KU's crowd. ... In all, 16,300 seats were sold, but there were no-shows in the northwest corner, which is the student section. Fans began leaving in droves with 10:25 left ... Self today will be one of several dignitaries to speak at the Get Motivated Seminar at Sprint Center. Others include Colin Powell and Rudy Giuliani.
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Comments
leonard (anonymous) says...
-- KU guard Sherron Collins went down hard after getting hammered by ESU's Doug Moore on a lay-up try --You're off to a good start this season...if this type of unabashed homer reporting is any evidence.Collins was not hammered by Moore. Collins was out of control and crashed into Moore...who had his hands down...a sorry piece of officiating...and reporting.
November 12, 2008 at 6:58 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
joedavis (anonymous) says...
Uh, leonard, unless Moore had his feet set before Collins supposedly "crashed" into Moore, then your point is moot. Just because his hands were down doesn't mean you can't foul with your body.
November 12, 2008 at 7:08 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
leonard (anonymous) says...
-- unless Moore had his feet set -- joedavisUh, joe...you don't have to have your feet set to draw a charge...simply an old wives tale believed by old wives.I didn't say that Collins should have been called for charging...I said the description of the play was bogus.Those that actually saw the play know that Collins was not hammered by Moore. The suck up TV announcers...who were more intent on visiting between themselves than calling the game...got it wrong, just like the JW report.
November 12, 2008 at 7:33 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
justanotherfan (anonymous) says...
I agree with leonard. In watching the replay, you could see that Moore actually tried to avoid Sherron, who was looking to draw contact. It was a scary play, but I would have rathered Sherron not take it at Moore in that situation and just finished the play with no contact.
November 12, 2008 at 8 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
jchief40 (anonymous) says...
yeah Collins hammered himself because of his momentum going up for the basket and subsequent crash onto the padded pole to the floor. Moore had little to do with it. Moore was in bad position and deserved the foul call though as leonard said.
November 12, 2008 at 8:07 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
Sparko (anonymous) says...
Hmmm. Homerism. Project much, Leonard? The NBA even puts a little horse shoe up to protect the driving player. Honestly cowering under the basket with Sherron going to the rim with your arms down is no way to go through life. . .
November 12, 2008 at 8:08 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
dagger108 (anonymous) says...
Quintrell - Make certain you do those band exercises the trainers give you to strengthen/tighten your shoulder. Once the ligaments get stretched by a shoulder coming out of joint, it becomes very sussepible to popping out and then you are headed toward surgery. Choose the preventive medicine. We/you don't need you getting cut for something as preventable as this.Congrats on starting. Keep up the good work.Rock Chalk
November 12, 2008 at 8:52 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
joedavis (anonymous) says...
Blocks/Charge: A block/charge foul occurs when a defender tries to get in front of his man to stop him from going in that direction. If he does not get into a legal defensive position and contact occurs, it is a blocking foul. If he gets to a legal position and the offensive player runs into him it is an offensive foul. In both situations, if the contact is minimal, no foul may be called. To get into a legal position defending against the dribbler, the defender just needs to get in front of him. On a drive to the basket, the defender must get to his position before the shooter starts his upward shooting motion. For most other cases, the defender must get into position and allow enough distance for the offensive player to stop and/or change direction.
November 12, 2008 at 9:22 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
KUFan90 (anonymous) says...
QT - listen to dagger. We don't need another Simien.Leonard - If my man Gary says Moore hammered Collins, then by golly he hammered him!!Students - Grade D- for not filling the student section. Come on get out there an support your defending national champs, even if it is exhibition!
November 12, 2008 at 10:27 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
kufankam (anonymous) says...
Joe davis...Your assesment (9:22am) is correct. However, your assertion above that the defender needed to have his feet set is incorrect. I am not speaking as a KU fan (though I am a KU fan) or as an ESU fan. Speaking as an official, the Block/Charge call is just like any other call, in that, the foul is on whoever initiated the contact. I know that it is not always called that way, but the correct way to call any foul is by who initiated the contact that occured. It doesn't matter if the defender is back pedeling.... If the ball handler initiates the contact, the foul is on the ball handler. The key, as you stated in your most recent post, is to obtain legal gaurding position. Legal gaurding position has nothing to do with feet set or not, but is based on where the defender is located in relation to the ball handler. I did not see the game last night but just wanted to clarify.
November 12, 2008 at 10:29 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )