ISSUE 1: CONDITIONING – Now there is reason for Bulldog fans to be hopeful. Sidney lost 23 pounds over the summer while working out with former NBA star John Lucas. The weight loss has helped the 6’10” power forward improve his conditioning so far this year. He is actually finishing conditioning drills, according to Stansbury. “That doesn’t mean he was winning every race,” his coach says, “but he made it through it. For him, that’s a step in the right direction. We’ve just got to keep stepping the right way and not step back.”
Midnight Madness* (9 PM Madness just doesn’t have the same ring to it) brings excitement and fanfare, but more importantly, it symbolizes the beginning of the college basketball season. Two-a-days have officially begun, and the only thing sweeter than the return of basketball is knowing that you don’t have to run wind sprints tomorrow at 6 AM. And if by some odd circumstance you do find yourself running drills early in the morning, at least you don’t have to do it again in the afternoon like all twelve of our SEC basketball teams. Here is an initial report from basketball practices around the SEC:
Florida coach Billy Donovan has been impressed with the decision making from 6’6” Casey Prather. Donovan said, “He’s made more of an impact the first two days of practices and really hasn’t even looked to score. He’s actually been more productive in practice offensively by taking a whole less amount of shots.” He also believes that 6’7” Will Yeguete’s rebounding skills will be key for the Gator’s frontline this year. Donovan said, “Will continues to be a guy that’s going to have to help us on the backboard rebounding-wise. I think I said the first day I thought one of my concerns was losing Chandler (Parsons), Vern (Macklin) and Alex (Tyus), we lost a lot of rebounding. And we’ve got to be scrappy around the glass.”
Kentucky coach John Calipari stressed using the floater as an effective tool in the UK offense. Even in the case of a miss, it draws the defender up and leaves a big man open for the rebound. Cal said, “It’s the best shot in the Dribble Drive. That’s a great shot for us.” Everyone knows the Cats have athleticism, but it sounds like Kentucky will be blessed with some good shooters as well. CoachCal.com editor Eric Lindsey wrote, “Saturday was the best I’ve seen Michael Kidd-Gilchrist shoot the ball. During a timed drill, he frequently strung together streaks of five or more 3-pointers.” And even more encouraging for Cat fans, Lindsey wrote, “in that same drill, Darius Miller hardly missed. I didn’t see what the clock was set to -– it was only a few minutes -– but it sounded like Miller led everyone with 61 makes.” And if you like watching players get “posterized,” then there’s UK’s athletic freshmen Anthony Davis and Kidd-Gilchrist taking turns dunking on each other. First Davis dunks on Kidd-Gilchrist:
The Fresh Start series will profile a new coach or eligible transfer who will make an impact in the Southeastern Conference this season. The first in the series is former University of Texas El-Paso player and current Mississippi State center/power forward, Arnett Moultrie.
Arnett Moultrie has never been the talk of the town. He was overlooked coming out of Raleigh-Egypt High School in Memphis, Tennessee. He did not rank in Scout’s Top 100 recruitment rankings in 2008, Rivals Top 150, or ESPN’s recruitment rankings. How does Moultrie respond to the lack of chatter about him? “It’s been that way my whole life,” he said, “I use it as motivation.”
Moultrie's Long & Lean Frame Complements Sidney's Bulk Underneath
Moultrie played two seasons at the University of Texas El-Paso averaging 8.8 PPG and 8.2 RPG in his freshman year (2008-09) and 9.8 PPG and 6.7 RPG in his sophomore year (2009-10). When then head coach Tony Barbee left UTEP to begin a rebuilding project at Auburn, Moultrie decided it was time to transfer after a relationship clash with new Miners coach, Tim Floyd. With steady improvement and the benefit of an extra year of practice, Moultrie has the potential to make the Mississippi State Bulldogs one of the best teams in a tough SEC in 2011-12. Despite the attention on troubled big man Renardo Sidney, the emergence of MSU as an SEC contender is more contingent upon the development of Moultrie.