Saturday, October 12, 2013

LeBron James talks KU's Andrew Wiggins

Andrew Wiggins has been called the best player to come out of high school since LeBron James. While James has not talked to Wiggins, the Miami Heat superstar forward has some sage advice for the KU freshman phenom.

“Just try to be the best student and the best teammate and the best player you can be every day,” James told a few reporters before his Heat played the Charlotte Bobcats in an exhibition game Friday night at Sprint Center in Kansas City.

“Don’t try to prove anything to no one. Obviously, his future is bright, but you can’t live today and worry about the future. You got to live in the present. The only thing he should concentrate on is being a great student and being a great basketball player for his team and everything else will take care of itself.”
That’s what KU coach Bill Self is counting on. Self is thrilled to have Wiggins on his team, yet cautions he’s not a star just yet, despite his many preseason accolades. Wiggins has been named CBSSports.com Preseason Player of the Year, the Big 12 Preseason Freshman of the Year, and a member of the 2013-14 Preseason All-Big 12 Team – a first in conference history that a freshman has appeared on the list. The 6-8 guard also graced the cover of Sports Illustrated’s Oct. 14th issue and was called a “once-in-a-generation” talent by SI.
“He’s very talented and has a ton of potential, but he’s just a freshman,” Self said at KU Media Day in late September. “He’s going to find his way like everybody else. The expectation that have been put on him by outside factors or media members comparing him to this person or that person are really not fair at all. He has a chance to become a great player. I would not say he’s a great player yet; he’s a great prospect. Hopefully he will develop in a way where he can become a great player quickly.”
Self stressed Wiggins needs to play with maximum effort consistently.
“I thing with Andrew is, he showed flashed of dominance (in high school) but he didn’t do it on a consistent basis,” Self said. “He’s a guy that relies on athletic ability and turning it on when it needs to be turned on. But when you get to this level and even at a very high level of high quality ball you have a lot of guys who play that way and you will never get it turned on. And so he has to become a consistent guy that tries to impact every possession in whatever way shape or form he can. 
“He could be our best defender, he could be our best shot blocker, he could be our best lane runner, he could be our best offensive rebounder, he can be a lot of things. But if he doesn’t do it every possession, he won’t be any of those things. He’s got to learn to compete in order to win every possession in the game.”
Self rates Wiggins and the other young players’ coachability as a “10.” Wiggins knows he can improve.
“I need to work on off-ball defending,” Wiggins said. “I’m working on my shooting and ball-handling because nothing is perfect. It’s just all (in getting) repetition.”
KU sophomore forward Perry Ellis loves Wiggins’ work ethic and attitude.
“He knows there’s going to be a lot of attention, but he’s working hard,” Ellis said. “A humble kid. I think he’s going to be fine as long as he keeps working.”
Wiggins is just having fun now bonding with the team and not thinking about his rising fame.
“(I’m) close with all of them,” Wiggins said. “When I took my visit everyone rolled like a unit, even now there are no favorites on the team. Everybody talks to everybody.”

Friday, March 29, 2013

KU's Ben McLemore must come up big in Sweet 16 for Jayhawks to advance



It will be quite difficult for KU to get past Michigan tonight in the Sweet 16 if  Ben McLemore doesn’t have a big game. After struggling the first two games of the NCAA Tournament (he also only had five points against K-State in the Big 12 Championship game), McLemore seems due for a breakout performance. He's definitely a key Jayhawk to watch in tonight's battle at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas. If he hits his first couple of shots, that will be a great sign for McLemore and Kansas.

KU coach Bill Self believes McLemore will have a huge game.

“He's going to play great,” Self said Thursday. “I really believe that. And I think he believes that. ... When he's really good, he's as good as there is.”

This is a story I wrote on McLemore before the Jayhawks met with the media on Thursday at Cowboys Stadium. I got the quotes from McLemore after the North Carolina game last Sunday in the KU locker room at Sprint Center in Kansas City. While he only scored two points and played just six minutes the second half during the UNC game, McLemore was as happy as can be that KU won and now advancing to the Sweet 16. This just shows that he's a star player who's also the consummate teammate.

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Ben McLemore has been the talk of Kansas basketball and college hoops nation all season. The Jayhawks’ best player since Paul Pierce, McLemore has had a record-setting year and dazzled fans with his three-point bombs and high-flying dunks.

He is KU’s leading scorer at 15.8 points per game, the highest scoring average by any Kansas freshman in school history. McLemore’s name is also all over the KU freshmen record books in multiple other categories.

Accolades have already come his way for this rising phenom. The 6-5 guard is an All-Big 12 First-Team selection, a USBWA All-America Second-Team honoree, and a Third-Team All-American by the Sporting News.

Heck, McLemore even recently graced the cover of Sports Illustrated.

But as good as McLemore is, he’s struggled during the NCAA Tournament thus far. In KU’s two wins over Western Kentucky and North Carolina at Sprint Center in Kansas City, McLemore shot just 2-of-14 from the field, including 0-of-8 from beyond the arc. He also committed six turnovers in those two games and played just six minutes the second half in KU’s 70-58 victory over North Carolina on Sunday.

Ask him about sitting on the pine, and the selfless McLemore just smiles and praises the efforts of players like Naadir Tharpe, Jeff Withey and Kevin Young.

“It was great,” he said. “I felt like a fan. I was still supporting my teammates even though I wasn’t out there. I still have a great attitude. They fought the second half and pulled through and we came out with a win, which was great.”

And now McLemore and the No. 1 seeded Jayhawks are headed to the Sweet 16 with a matchup against No. 4 seeded Michigan at 6:37 p.m. (CT) on Friday in Arlington, Texas, at Cowboys Stadium with a seating capacity of 42,000 fans.

“It’s a great feeling,” McLemore said. “I don’t know how to express it.”

While McLemore labored during the opening two games of the tournament, he said he didn’t feel much nerves with his first time in the Big Dance. Still, he couldn’t find the basket, especially against UNC, when he shot 0-9 from the field, including 0-of-6 from three-point range.

“The last couple of games, I’ve been loose and I got the feel for it (NCAA Tournament),” McLemore said. “They really haven’t been my game. I’m still trying to play my game, I’m still trying to help my teammates out and still bring a lot of energy to the team.

“... It’s just a bigger stage for the first time, being a freshman and sitting out last year and just watching, and now to be on the stage, it’s just a different feeling. I really haven’t changed. I still play my game. I try to stay focused and calm.”

McLemore, whose shot has been compared by some experts to one of the best shooters in NBA history in Miami Heat’s Ray Allen, isn’t too worried that this jumper hasn’t found the net quite yet.

He’s still going to keep shooting.

“(Just) don’t rush things, go out there and give my all like I’ve always been doing,” he said. “I just got to be ready, be back in the gym and shoot and stuff like that.”

While KU advanced to the Sweet 16 without much production from McLemore, as the stakes and competition now get bigger on Friday, Kansas dearly needs this super frosh to find his groove.

KU coach Bill Self, for one, believes McLemore will rise to the occasion after seeing limited second-half minutes against the Tar Heels.

“Ben labored this weekend. He’s still our leading scorer. We’re going to go right back to him,” Self said after the North Carolina game.

“There’s not going to be a situation with that. ... It wasn’t hard not to play him because he’s the best teammate on the team. These guys will tell you he’s just happy to win. We’ll get him right heading into Arlington. I’m talking about getting his confidence back. He had some pretty good looks today, but it wasn’t his day.

“... The great thing about Ben, he cares about winning,” Self continued. “He put that ahead of everything else. He’s happy for these guys. For us to be good, to have a chance to advance, we need all our players playing much closer to their ceiling. I think with Ben, it’s just through repetition. He just needs to see the ball go through the hole this week in practice.”

If that indeed happens, he could shoot lights out against Michigan.

And McLemore will again be the talk of KU hoops and college basketball nation.