Morning Five: 01.18.11 Edition
Posted by rtmsf on January 18th, 2011
- Illinois freshman forward Jereme Richmond sought to put to rest rampant rumors surrounding a possible transfer by releasing a statement on Monday that, despite some personal issues that caused him to miss two practices last week, he will remain “an Illini for life.” He also sat out the Wisconsin game over the weekend after driving to Madison from his Waukegan, Illinois, home rather than taking the team bus from Champaign with the rest of the players. Like many freshmen, Richmond has found the college game much more difficult than anticipated — his minutes and offensive output have dropped since Big Ten play began (in part due to a nagging Achilles injury), but he’s certainly capable of producing (8/5) for Bruce Weber in limited minutes. He just needs to keep his head up and continue to work hard; his time will come.
- The Nike Hoop Summit team was announced over the weekend, with Kentucky and Duke as the big winners. This team will face the World Select team on April 9 in Portland, and generally tries to choose the ten best high school seniors in America. The complete list: Anthony Davis, Michael Gilchrist & Marquis Teague (Kentucky); Austin Rivers & Quinn Cook (Duke); Rakeem Christmas (Syracuse); Tony Wroten (Washington); Bradley Beal (Florida); James McAdoo (UNC); Adonis Thomas (Memphis).
- Jeff Goodman describes the current state of Sean Miller’s Arizona Wildcat program in year two of its rebuild. Everybody knows from his time at Xavier that the guy can coach, but despite the Wildcats’ current 15-3 overall record (4-1 in the Pac-10), he’s still lacking the across-the-board talent that Arizona teams in years past became accustomed to. At one time in the mid-2000s, for example, UA had produced more current NBA players than any other collegiate program in America. With the hope that super-soph Derrick Williams returns for his junior season and a top recruiting class featuring point guard Josiah Turner from Sacramento on the way, Miller believes that Y3 of the renaissance in the desert could be the season that gets the Wildcats back into the national consciousness.
- Seth Davis’ Hoop Thoughts discusses the Trevor Mbakwe and Wesley Witherspoon situations from last week, as well as what will happen with Missouri’s Tony Mitchell and of course a host of other interesting notes. We gave our opinion on the Mbakwe situation a few days ago, and it appears that Tubby Smith’s analysis came down in a way similar to what we thought (big mistake, but learn from it).
- It’s not often that you’ll read a rival school write so fondly about a place where its basketball program took it on the chin to the tune of a 7-52 (.119) record the last half-century, but this piece from Steven M. Sipple discusses how much he’ll miss visiting Allen Fieldhouse as a member of the press corps for Nebraska basketball after the Huskers move permanently to the Big Ten next season. But that’s what happens when you’re a football school playing a basketball game — you refer to things like “charm” and “fun” while getting waxed over and over again. We dare say that Husker fans won’t find the Big House or Horseshoe quite so endearing if they win 12% of their games there over the next 60 years.
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on Tuesday, January 18th, 2011 at 5:00 am by rtmsf and is filed under morning 5, Regular Features. Tagged: Allen Fieldhouse, arizona, duke, illinois, jeff goodman, jereme richmond, kansas, kentucky, nebraska, nike hoop summit, seth davis, tony mitchell, trevor mbakwe, wesley witherspoon. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
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