Over/Under on Shaka



  • @BShark I trust you on this, because you seem to be invested in following these guys and recruiting. But, I guess for hopes sake, I just want to disagree. Where are you seeing Graham is going pro? Just a hunch because he is picked as the 40th pick?



  • @Blown

    He could still stay, it’s just unlikely.



  • Any chance Mack comes to KU? We pursued him at the same time as Vick knowing he leaned towards staying with Shaka.



  • Anyone else find themselves wondering what could’ve been with Jarrett Allen during the two KU/UT games? I don’t do that often, but for sure have with him.



  • @focojayhawk NO, bet he wonders though!



  • @CaptnMo

    He’d have to forfeit a year of eligibility and only have 1 year left to play instead of 2 somewhere else.



  • @Blown

    You won’t find anything officially. But people around the program started saying it last summer. Mostly rumors.

    He’s old for his class (just turned 22) last week. There’s always the question, will he improve his stock next year at 23 or should he just leave now?

    I wouldn’t read too much into the draft sites right now. What’s consistent is he’s viewed as a 2nd rounder. He could be following in Selden’s footsteps from last year where he left regardless of stock



  • Any scuttlebutt out there on why Mack was suspended?



  • @focojayhawk probably wouldn’t have beat Lucas out 👍



  • @Blown

    Mack was suspended to start the season so I think he was already on thin ice. Not sure this one gets released to the public. Seemed to be fighting with teammates during games as well. Might not have been good for the team



  • @BeddieKU23

    Mason will turn 23 in April so there is really not that much of a difference. I never understood why age is that important, it is not like the team that drafts him will have him his entire career. So what if he is 23? Likely it means he is more mature and with more experience and many years away from retirement anyway. Yes, I get it that a young player means he was likely a OAD with higher ceiling but do you rather have a young inexperienced player or a slightly older player with more maturity and more ready to contribute? just sayin’…



  • @JayHawkFanToo Part of it is about how much you can get for your money. If you draft a stud that is 19, you can get 3 contracts with him before he is 30. With the first 2 contracts usually being on the cheaper side. A 23 year old you only get 2. And it is much easier to retain players on your own team than get a free agent in the NBA. So if you are building through the draft you want to get a player that will be with your team for 11 years instead of 6 or 7. And the draft is set up to go for superstars because you are the only one with their rights (which is why you have seen the foreign players start to go up. Draft and stash is the best value in the NBA). When you can get a Frank Mason, Ron Baker, Harrison twin type as an undrafted FA every single year. It is a superstar league and that is what teams draft for.

    All of this applies to everyone except the Spurs.



  • @Kcmatt7

    My question is…how many players stay with one team for 11 or more years? I don’t know the answer but I would guess not many. Also, most of the players drafted are 20 or older, only 7 active players in the NBA under 20 and most of those are almost 20. Ever since the age requirement went up and players had to be a9 and remove one year from highs school, the age has gone up. Also. many OAD go and extra year to prep school so they come to college 1 year older.

    My point is that age will not be the deciding factor on whether Devonte comes back or leaves.



  • @ralster

    Yeah… we won’t have to wait too long to see if Shaka can cut it or not. I give him two more years to show that he is on the right path. If he can’t by then he still may not be fired yet but we will know he doesn’t have what it takes.

    Heck, we need Texas to be a good team, for the strength of our league.

    I’m not a Shaka fan and think he is a one-trick pony who has already showed us his “magic.” But I still want Texas to be respectable. I don’t care if it is with him or someone else. I will be happy if Shaka can get it together, just as long as we still own their Longhorn arses. We do need other decent teams to hang losses on WVU, ISU and Baylor.



  • @JayHawkFanToo

    I’ve never understood it too be honest as well but the NBA operates differently then other professional leagues that value maturity and experience. Hield was amazing last year but has strugged in the league and was already traded. The NBA doesn’t care who you are unless you are young enough and good enough to build around.

    Mason seems like he has more going against him then going for him in regards to getting drafted. It’s likely that being POY will inflate his status enough (without the POY he probably wouldn’t be drafted) to get looked at but his size will always be a something he will have to overcome. We’ve seen Mason improve a lot this year to the point where maybe he’s the type that can overcome being small. He seems like a driven individual with the ability to score in a lot of ways.



  • @BeddieKU23

    Being small can come handy sometimes…



  • @BeddieKU23

    Don’t forget his ability to rebound! Frank is an excellent rebounder. And I’m sure he would snag quite a few rebounds in the league. He is a quick leaper and he has the strength and mass to not get pushed around too much.

    He is also a respectable defender, especially when comparing to most D1 PGs.

    Frank will get drafted and will get a hard look by some teams. I think he is going to make someone’s roster. I will be surprised if he doesn’t.

    Frank’s biggest setback is his reach. I’d feel much better of his chances if he had 4 more inches on his reach (over 4 more inches of height). His reach is pretty standard for his size while so much of basketball today has players with freakish reach. I don’t think anyone would be talking about his height if he had a longer reach.

    Reach helps more than height. It ends up being the same thing on vertical when arms are straight up… but the advantages with reach are extreme at everything else. It allows players more reach in to defend. It also extends distance on protecting the ball from the defender by offering more separation inches from the body.

    The fact that Frank is doing what he is doing, and he is doing it without an extended reach says a lot about his athleticism and abilities. Look how well he scores in the paint even against the trees. He finally figured out how to shield the ball with his body, but he is doing it with just an average reach. Remarkable!



  • @drgnslayr

    Good points. His advanced statistics should also paint a pretty good picture with teams. Analytics has become an increasingly big factor in judging players.

    It’s hard for me to say anything but positive things about Mason. He’s going to be a beloved Hawk forever and we all want to see him succeed after his days here. It’s an uphill battle and realistically his battle might be harder than past hawks trying to make it.



  • But the Austin press AND FANS (only 7 comments and this was posted yesterday!!!) are already turning on Shaka. And they just posted that Tevin Mack is being let out of his scholarship so he is gone.

    Here is Exhibit “A”.

    sss-texas-basketball22.jpg Golden: Texas’ lost season rests at Shaka Smart’s door

    Posted February 26th, 2017

    Shaka Smart believes it’s his job to breathe life into his team.

    Of course it is, but the question has to be: Who is breathing life into Shaka?

    “Nobody, really,” he said after Texas’ fifth straight loss, this one coming 77-67 to a soon-to-be-top-ranked Kansas team which clinched its 13th Big 12 regular season title. “It’s about the guys.”

    Smart’s team has played with commendable effort the whole season but the familiar refrain has been one of hanging in there early, but not being good enough to close the deal at the end. Commendable effort is nice, but this is a bottom-line business and the results are unacceptable at 10-19 overall and 4-12 in Big 12 play.

    “All of us are obviously disappointed in our how season has gone so far,” he said. “But playing hard is the first step. The next step is understanding what the right play is to make.”

    Smart hasn’t been through a season like this, at least not as a head coach. Now he never experienced a winning season in four years as as the point guard at Kenyon College where he finished as the career leader in assists, but dishing out dimes in Gambier, Ohio had to feel like child’s play compared to the demands of winning ballgames at a major program at a salary of $3 million per year.

    It’s been a historically awful season. Smart hasn’t come right out and said it, but this lost season rests at his door. The old cliche’ rings true: players win games and coaches lose games. This team realized long ago that this wasn’t going to end with the team gathered around a flat screen, munching on pizza while waiting to hear their name called on Selection Sunday.

    For now the head coach has to keep his chin up and not give any indication that his confidence is shaken, even if it’s obvious that it is.

    “He’s handling it good,” said guard Andrew Jones. “He keeps the spirits high in the locker room and makes sure we are motivated in every way possible. He hasn’t killed anybody’s spirits on this team.”

    With two games and what is likely a brief stay in the conference tourney — Texas is 0-13 in games played away from the Erwin Center — Smart needs to find a way to avoid spending the offseason with a long losing streak in the final month of the season hanging over this team’s head. It may not seem like much, but improving to 11-19 and 5-12 with a win is much more important than it looks on the surface.

    “It’s my job as a coach to get these guys to own this,” Smart said after quoting Alabama coach Nick Saban, who famously said “it takes what it takes,” to win games.

    He’s right on both counts. He also understands that there is plenty of blame to go around for what we’ve witnessed this season.

    Above all else, ultimate responsibility starts with the dude in his bathroom mirror.

    press.JPG press2.JPG



  • @RockChalkinTexas

    Wow. That doesn’t read well for Shaka.



  • He’s putting his own evidence in the books–and now he’s going to get judged by his own body of work. No conf championships in that VCU conf. Ever.

    Gregg Marshall would have been twice the hire. Rick Barnes would have done better than Shaka. As said earlier, for the Shaka hire to be a positive for TX, he must surpass what Barnes did, or else firing Rick was totally pointless.



  • @ralster Texas didn’t want Marsha, acquired taste!



  • @Crimsonorblue22 Ya, I was just speculating, as there was speculation in Wichita, just rumor-mill stuff really. I think Alabama had a hard offer, but $Koch$ matched it, making Marshall a top10 paid coach in Div.1…and he has little pressure at WSU. Just win their conf and get into the Dance.

    I still think he’d do better than Shaka.



  • @RockChalkinTexas “Surely there’s another Bill Self out there…” lol.



  • @ralster Texas may not have put up w/the fit he threw in Canada.



  • @ralster

    Marshall did confirm that UCLA contacted his agent while WSU was in the Final Four but he would not talk to them while WSU was still playing in the tournament. MU also approached him and I am sure he got a good laugh out of it.



  • @JayHawkFanToo Yes, I recall Marshall’s statement after the UCLA offer of $1.1million, which was no real raise due to the cost of living in SoCal, compared to the WichitaCowtown, but he’d have the weight of the world on him with a struggling blueblood’s fanbase angst, and trying to recruit. Recruiting is his one weakness. Maybe he knows it, and thats why he passed on UCLA. But he used the leverage of the UCLA and Alabama offers to get his $ from Koch.


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