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Friday, October 17, 2008

Gary Bedore’s KU basketball notebook

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Kansas basketball preps for season

The national champs can officially begin their title defense starting Friday. Of course, Bill Self's squad will do so minus the entire starting lineup from the 2008 title team.

Past Event

Late Night in the Phog

  • Friday, October 17, 2008, time TBA
  • Allen Fieldhouse, 1700 Naismith, Lawrence
  • Not available / Free

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Audio clips

2008 KU men's basketball media day

Shoot the moon

Kansas University's basketball team is in more of a reloading than rebuilding mode this season.

"If I came in here and told you I thought we'd finish fifth in the league, that's a great message you are sending to your constituents," KU coach Bill Self joked Thursday at Media Day in Allen Fieldhouse.

"We won't change what our goals are. Every year our goal is to win the league. At the end of the day, we want to play as close to our ceiling as possible. There's nothing wrong with setting the bar high."

That's despite KU losing five starters off its title team.

"I don't know what the ceiling is," Self said. "We had a motto at Illinois when we started three freshmen and a sophomore: Youth is no excuse. We lost the Big Ten championship in the last second of the season. Just because we are young doesn't mean we can't be good. How good I have no idea. We don't want to bail guys out of lofty expectations just because we are young."

It could be like the freshman year of Brandon Rush, Mario Chalmers and Julian Wright.

"I had a great time in Maui when we couldn't get the ball across halfcourt with the game on the line," Self said. "But we did beat Chaminade."

KU fell to Arizona and Arkansas in the early-season tourney. KU tied for the league title that season.

Watch your step

Doors open for tonight's Late Night in the Phog at 5:30 p.m., with proceedings to start at 6:30. Because of ongoing construction, fans are asked to enter through the east and north doors. The construction - part of a $38 million renovation project to KU's facilities - should not affect the fans once in the building. Tonight's Late Night will be televised by Metro Sports (Cable Channel 37). Portions will be shown on ESPNU (Ch. 141), starting at 8 p.m.

Appleton questionable

Junior guard Tyrone Appleton is questionable for tonight's Late Night scrimmage because of a hip-flexor injury.

Collins speaks

Sherron Collins was asked again about reporting to school overweight: "Coach told you all (media) in a nice way. He told me the other way," the 5-foot-11, 200-pound Collins said with a smile. "I looked at him and told him I'd get it done. That's what I did, and I'm here today."

Women's recruits visit

Kansas University's women's basketball program will play host to several top recruits at tonight's Late Night in the Phog.

Chynna Brown, a 5-9 guard from Lincoln High in Dallas, is considering KU and Texas Tech. Marisha Brown, 5-9 out of Kansas City Center High, currently at Arkansas-Fort Smith Junior college, also has Texas A&M, Oklahoma State and Wichita State on her list.

Tania Jackson, 6-2 out of Lawrence High, and Monica Engleman, 5-10 from James Madison High San Antonio, who have orally committed to KU, will also attend.

Markieff on his court date

Markieff Morris has no public take on his Dec. 12 court date for allegedly shooting an Airsoft BB gun out of his university dorm room, allegedly hitting a woman in the courtyard below. Morris has entered a not-guilty plea in the case.

"That is in the past," he said. "I'm looking forward to the year."

Rutgers on tap next year?

The Bridgewater (N.J.) News quotes Rutgers officials as saying they hope to play KU in a home-and-home series starting next year.

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Comments

robot (Robin Smith) says...

Yes! Rutgers! I hope it happens because I live 3 blocks from Rutgers.

October 17, 2008 at 6:04 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

CBaller13 (anonymous) says...

http://basketballrecruiting.rivals.co...

October 17, 2008 at 9:38 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

jaybate (anonymous) says...

"Coach told you all (media) in a nice way. He told me the other way. I looked at him and told him I'd get it done. That's what I did, and I'm here today."--Gunnery Sergeant Sherron Collins, kusc (ku Self Corp)This quote says tons about Sherron Collins. He is truly like a gunny in the Marines. It is why even the vets on the last two teams followed his lead when he hit the floor.There are times when his foibles get the better of him. He got too many tatoos one night in Honolulu. He has survived things that the rest of are not sure we could survive. He is battle hardened and just plain tough. There are times when the warrior in him is too coarse for civilians. But when the war is on, everyone follows the gunny.Sherron even has the quality that the best of the gunnies has. He's officer material. He's smart. He's a natural born leader. And he understands the war of basketball, out between the lines, like lawyers and doctors understand how to fight in the trenches of courts and hospitals.But true gunnies, true warriors, see all the ass-kissing for career advancement that goes on among the officers, and shrug. Not for me, they think. True gunnies already know what they are and what they do. And they have a taste for battle and adventure and the world outside the HQ where battle happens. Part of them just wants to be left alone to be what they already are superior at. But some, a very special cut of gunny, know that though they prefer being gunnies, their duty to the Corps, to their buddies, and their destinies are to be much more. These gunnies become officers--one of the things they loath the most--because they understand the Corps cannot be the Corps without officers that have a pair, without officers that are real warriors, not just book-taught wannabees, not just military bureaucrats with ribbons and medals on their chest that they didn't earn.Go ahead, Sherron, become an officer and a gentleman.Losing Lieutenant Rush, this platoon needs an officer who was a gunny, more than anything.Little, or Tyshaun, can become the gunny.Take the promotion like a man, Sergeant Collins. Don't complain.Get it done.This Corps needs you.

October 17, 2008 at 10:29 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

JayCeph (anonymous) says...

What a great read on Robinson. Nice!

October 17, 2008 at 10:39 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

kvskubball (anonymous) says...

CBall...Thanks for the link on TRob!

October 17, 2008 at 10:54 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

jaybate (anonymous) says...

Note to Gary Bedore:My two favorite print journalists of all time were Bill Vaughn, who wrote Star Beams for the Kansas City Star (when it was still a real newspaper) and Herb Caen, who wrote a daily three-dot social column for the San Francisco Chronicle, when that newspaper still chronicled what happened in San Francisco. Why? They informed the heck out of me while seeming to entertain me with minutia. They revealed a living, breathing side of their cities and the worlds they covered that the hardest-hitting, best-written major stories could not. And they did it with wit.I know you can't make a living only doing Basketball Notebook, but it is my favorite part of what you do. Traditional stories give a reader a sense, sometimes even a nuanced sense, of particular events, but they cannot convey the simultaneity of life--the tendancy for many things to be going on everywhere at the same time, or in a very short time. I wish you used more humor, but I also know you are a pro and make experienced choices based on what you know you are good at and on what you know best serves the material.Basketball Notebook, and its genre of collage reporting, is the sort of writing that emerges out of simple necessity in hard copy journalism. A reporter collects lots of bits and pieces, while covering the big stories that do not deserve their own full-length stories. But there are column inches that need filling regardless in print. Why not fill the blank parts in the paste up with these odds and ends? "Great idea, kid, can ya do it without a raise?" Think Ben Hecht here. :-) But when good professional journalists do something day in and day out, even something that starts out as small potatoes, it is their nature to begin to notice small ways in which the small potatoes read better--ways to organize and report the small potatoes in a more interesting way than just random scatter. They discover that these odds and ends make an instrument that can be played.There is great professional skill in stringing together bits and pieces to give readers a sense of the college basketball culture they love so well...and to do so in an interesting way.Thanks for being professional enough to learn to play the instrument better than just the pragmatics require.

October 17, 2008 at 11:05 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

kusayzone (anonymous) says...

I have a problem with Sherron. Sometimes they cant handle truth......or the pressure.....or the fact all doors are not automatically open just because you wear a KU basketball uniform. Time will tell to see if he is the MAN we want to respresent this BB team.

October 17, 2008 at 11:18 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

kranny (anonymous) says...

kusayzone,He already represents us and already is the MAN. He proved that with the steal, the other 3 point shot, and the assist. Mario took us to overtime but Sherron got us to that point.

October 17, 2008 at 1:14 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

CBaller13 (anonymous) says...

Sherron is the best player to ever live! yay! go sherron! yay!

October 17, 2008 at 2:10 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

ku98 (anonymous) says...

I want to see THAT Sherron this year...http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kSicFi6r0BU

October 17, 2008 at 4 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

kvskubball (anonymous) says...

In case people didn't see the note, KU Athletics is going to simulcast late night. I'm glad, b/c I otherwise couldn't see it here in GA!

October 17, 2008 at 4:10 p.m. ( | suggest removal )