It's time to drop Michigan State from No. 1 consideration, right? That's the knee-jerk reaction with
Mateen Cleaves out until January with a broken foot.
The player-of-the-year candidate and spirited senior point guard won't be
on the floor when the Spartans play at North Carolina, against Arizona or
even at Kentucky. But slow down. The Spartans aren't dead yet. They actually
planned for this, sort of. David Thomas, a 6-7 (that's right) junior point guard, sat out last season prepping for this purpose.
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We redshirted David Thomas for a reason.
Mateen told him his time came a little quicker. ” |
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— Michigan
State coach Tom Izzo |
The Spartans thought Cleaves was gone to the NBA last season and needed a
Plan B. When Cleaves returned, it gave them a backup and, really, a
wealth of ball-handlers with junior starting wing Charlie Bell and reserve
classmate Brandon Smith.
"Michigan State has been through this before when Thomas Kelley got hurt
two years ago," said former assistant and current Marquette coach Tom Crean.
"Mateen will come back and they'll be ready to roll. We worked Thomas at the
point last year. That was the plan. We never knew if Mateen was going to stay
and when (reserve point) Doug Davis left (for Miami of Ohio) we weren't going
to recruit another point. It was up to Thomas."
The reason it was left up to Thomas and not an incoming freshman was the Spartans' pursuit of prep point guard Marcus Taylor. The Spartans were
focused on signing the top-flight Lansing prospect, and eventually got the commitment. He'll sign in November.
"We redshirted David Thomas for a reason," Michigan State coach Tom
Izzo said. "Mateen told him his time came a little quicker."
Will it be the same as having Cleaves? No. But they're not vulnerable,
either, if Thomas can handle a press and get the ball to Morris Peterson and
Bell on the wings, Mike Chappell from 15 feet in or Andre Hutson and A.J.
Granger inside.
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Feeling their pain
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Michigan State is the second team to lose a critical player early in
practice. DePaul is waiting for sophomore forward Lance Williams to recover
from a broken bone, too.
Georgia Tech coach Bobby Cremins can relate to the madness of losing a
player before the first game. Dion Glover was lost for the season on the first
day of practice after tearing his anterior cruciate ligament a year ago.
"It's horrible," Cremins said. "We knew 24 hours later that it was for
the whole year. We had a big recruiting weekend planned and that was ruined.
It's a little different if a guy is out for 4-8 weeks. Nothing is worse than
what happened to us."
Glover opted to declare for the draft in June, rather than come back for
his junior season. He was taken by Atlanta in the first round.
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Thomas can see over a defender. The 6-2 Cleaves can't. Thomas can post-up
a point. Cleaves can't. Thomas can give the Spartans a fifth rebounder. Cleaves can't be
expected to rebound.
"I just want to assert myself, help lead and run the team," Thomas
said. "My size is a plus. I can look over the smaller defenders to make an
entry pass. I can get rebounds. I just have to learn how to protect the ball
better."
Thomas spent the summer working with Cleaves and former Michigan State
point guard Eric Snow. Thomas is still trying to blow by smaller, quicker
ball-handlers but he's far exceeded the expectations.
Cleaves' inspirational speeches in the locker room and timeout huddle won't be
missed because the two-time Big Ten player of the year will be a fixture on the bench. That role doesn't have to change.
"David Thomas doesn't have to do a lot," Crean said. "It might be
tougher early to compete for the national title but Mateen will be back. You
can't forget that Tom has been national coach of the year. They'll
have tough games early, but they'll find a way to be there in the end."
Hefty precedent
Craig Thompson, the first-year commissioner of the Mountain West
Conference, wasn't going to let any rule slide at the first meeting. But he
didn't think anyone would challenge him, especially the coach in the host
city.
UNLV coach Bill Bayno missed a mandatory coaches meeting last Thursday in
Las Vegas. For the transgression, Bayno was suspended for the MWC opener against Brigham
Young on Jan. 10. The UNLV coach shouldn't bother with an appeal.
"I asked our council if I should cut him some slack and they all said
no," said Thompson, who is chair of the NCAA men's basketball committee this
season. "He didn't commit an NCAA infraction but there wasn't a gray area.
He tested things. There was no excuse for it, especially in Las Vegas."
Bayno said he didn't think it was mandatory and was extremely upset with
the ruling.
"It sends a message to me that the rules will be enforced by our
council," Thompson said. "Hopefully the other 151 coaches in the MWC will
take notice."
Homeless team
West Virginia's plight keeps getting worse. Not only are the Mountaineers technically on the road for every home game because of suspected asbestos at WVU Coliseum, but they're not even in their gym for practice. The Mountaineers have to walk across campus to a shell (used for summer camp)
that houses a floor, little lighting and not much heat. When the temperatures
drop, the team will be even more ripe to develop a cold.
"They may throw a crumb at us and let us practice on our floor for a
while, but not all year long," West Virginia coach Gale Catlett said. "The
acoustics are horrible in the shell but it's amazing how flexible young
people are. They're still practicing well."
The Mountaineers were informed of the decision by the school president
deep in the summer, too late to get one facility for the whole season. Six
games will be in Wheeling at a Civic Center that seats 6,000 (WVU Coliseum
seats 14,000) and is located 75 miles away from campus. Nine games will be at the Charleston
Civic Center, 160 miles away from Morgantown.
Visiting teams will still fly into Pittsburgh, and so too may West Virginia if the Mountaineers can get a
private plane to get them to Charleston. The worst end of the Wheeling deal is the practice schedule.
Both the Mountaineers and visiting teams won't be allowed to practice the day before a game or have gameday shootarounds. West Virginia was only allowed a noon-2 p.m. window to play games at Wheeling because of bingo (no joke) and a minor league hockey team.
Catlett figured out the Mountaineers will be on the road for 17 days in
December, 18 in January and 17 in February.
"I wish someone would have told us earlier," Catlett said of his August
notification. "The EPA still hasn't tested us and closed us down. I think
some professor just called."
All-Big East candidate senior Marcus Goree won't play a game in his own
gym, remaining virtually anonymous among his fellow students.
"This could have been taken care of last spring," Catlett said. "This
was handled really poorly. We had an arena that one of the toughest places to
play in the Big East, winning 80 percent of our games here. We had people
intimidated and we've lost that."
West Virginia would have had a hard time keeping its homecourt streak
intact. The Mountaineers are expected to finish no higher than 11th in the
Big East.
Weekly chatter
Delaware landed a mid-major fab four and possibly a fab five if
6-9 Sean Knitter chooses the Blue Hens over St. Joseph's and Pittsburgh. The
Blue Hens have four commitments: 6-5 Mark Curry (Seton Hall Prep/N.J.), 6-3
Mike Ames (Phoenixville, Pa.), 6-4 David Lunn (Baltimore) and 6-6 Robin Wentt
(DeMatha H.S./Md.). The Blue Hens lose six seniors this season and five next
year. They had 2,500 fans at Midnight Madness last week.
"We had eight my first year in '95," Delaware coach Mike Brey said. "I
had to go to McDonald's and grab them."
Minnesota's one-year postseason ban is a nice gesture. But the
Gophers were a bubble NIT team after losing Quincy Lewis and Kevin Clark. The
one-year ban (which could increase once the NCAA is through with its
investigation) won't affect the program any more or less than the scandal.
The International Basketball League opens camp this week and the
fledgling minor league is trying to hook onto a new concept: keeping college
teammates together. The Albuquerque (N.M.) franchise may land three former
Mississippi players in Ansu Sesay, Keith Carter and Michael White. The intent
is to infuse chemistry immediately into the roster and provide a smoother
transition. It's worth keeping an eye on.
Iowa continues to land top recruits with the expected signing of
6-11 Jared Reiner of Tripp-Delmont, S.D. The Hawkeyes are in a battle with
Wisconsin and Utah for 6-8 Michael Wilkensen (Wisconsin Heights H.S./Mazomanie,
Wis.). First-year coach Steve Alford isn't having trouble selling the school
or himself, even if he was once Indiana's most famous alum. "This is the
best league in the country," Alford said. "We've got a great sell here with
the university and our league. I always respected Iowa when (former coach)
Lute Olson recruited me. We've got no pro teams here and everyone is behind
us."
Despite the bad pub Indiana is getting over Bob Knight's hunting
fiasco, the Hoosiers are still leading on 6-9 Jared Jeffries (North
H.S./Bloomington, Ind.). Jeffries is a must-get for the Hoosiers.
Butler is anticipating the eligibility of 6-10 Oklahoma State
transfer Scott Robisch on Dec. 22. Robisch struggled to find his niche with
the Cowboys. But Bulldogs' coach Barry Collier has Robisch playing more on
the high post for 12-foot jumpers, keeping beef brothers Rylan Hainje and
Mike Marshall inside for rebounds. Collier worked with Robisch during
individual sessions in September. On a good day, Robisch would make 100 out
of 125 12-foot jumpers. "He's much more of a four-man than a five," Collier
said. "He was hoping to be the main cog at Oklahoma State and it never
worked out." He could be the focal point at Butler where the Bulldogs need
any extra edge to beat out Detroit for the Midwestern Collegiate Conference
title.
Detroit got the steal of the Midwest in 6-2
freshman guard Willie Green. The Detroit Cooley High wing stayed home with
Perry Watson to keep the Titans on track for a third-straight NCAA bid. "He
can play the one, two or three," Watson said after one week of practice.
"He's explosive offensively with the ball and without. He can go up for
alley-oops, too. He's just got to learn to be competitive every day."
Miami (Ohio) transfer Jay Locklier made his presence felt at
Washington State's practice. The 6-10 Locklier shattered a backboard on a
dunk. Locklier will be eligible in 2000-01.
What's with the sudden announcement of freshman Ronald
Blackshear being ineligible at Temple? He signed with Clemson and didn't make
it academically. Two weeks ago, Temple told the Word he was sitting out with
the Owls and would be eligible in 2000-01. Then, he was cleared and then not
cleared to play in a week? Blackshear would have had trouble getting time at
shooting guard behind Lynn Greer and Quincy Wadley. He'll be better served
sitting out the season.
Pitt coach Ben Howland doesn't have much hope this season. The
Panthers are down to six healthy scholarship players after the suspension of 6-9
sophomore Chris Seabrooks and Isaac Hawkins' broken right leg. Hawkins is expected to out for six weeks.
The Word is Texas transfer Luke Axtell should make it back in
time for the meat of Kansas' non-conference schedule after breaking a bone in
his left (non-shooting) hand during practice. Axtell was expected to start on
the wing for the Jayhawks.
Connecticut got the insurance it needed in case Khalid El-Amin
leaves early for the NBA with a commitment from St. John's Prep (N.Y.) point
guard Taliek Brown. Brown is one of the consensus top-five point guards in
the nation.
Do you think basketball has caught on in the South? Auburn sold
out its 10,000 tickets for the first time in history. Auburn is one of only
four schools (Kentucky, Ohio State and Michigan State are the others) that sold out
its basketball and football season tickets. Auburn held back 500 student
tickets on a game-day basis. A lottery using wristbands will be needed to
sell those tickets.
Andy Katz's Weekly Word will resume Nov. 11. |