First Exhibition: Mason Was The Star



  • @DanR

    CDC in Atlanta (a private not for profit, not a government organization at all) indicates the viral hair growth is attributable to Louisianan via Lost Vegasian Kelly Oubre introducing the team to java spiked with something called Creole Hyper-Chickory.

    CDC informs that it IS NOT, REPEAT IS NOT an Ebola Outbreak!!!

    Certain team members were particularly susceptible to the virus carried in the root of Chickory grown in the northern hemisphere (Oubre and Traylor), while others like Mason and Ellis, though less susceptible, must still fight the spread of the XTReme Symptoms with sheep sheer cuts four times a day.

    Selden and Svi appear to be succumbing next.

    CDC says their interviews with Bill Self indicate the KU coach sees it as a plus, making the team appear taller than it is.

    Said Self, “You should have seen us before the outbreak. We looked like a bunch of pygmies in silks.”

    Developing…



  • I’m kind of giddy about Svi too. Smooth all around. Beautiful passer–catches and redirects it as if the ball never changes speed. He looked comfortable and moved effortlessly, whereas Greene still seems to be out of control. Figure skater vs. hockey player.





  • @globaljaybird Was the Hornets when I was there



  • I was at the game in the cheap seats, up high and out of breath.

    • We have a point guard this year.
    • Cliff is an explosion in a sea of calm.
    • I thought Hunter played better than Lucas.
    • At whatever height Svi is, he is a better ball handler than Greene or Oubre.
    • Traylor is Self’s favorite player.
    • Small ball is better this year.
    • Seldon needs to find a position.
    • Playing in the World Games, Svi was the least nervous 17 year old on on the court.
    • Listening to the wrap up on the way home, Norm Roberts was asked about the great shooting technique of Svi, Norm said, “we like how he handles and distributes better.”
    • True fans were there last night with the Arena packed except for the Leather chairs in the middle. Well, just an exhibition.


  • @jaybate-1.0 There you go…makes sense about Oubre. Let me ask you this- did Wayne look much slower to you than in the Red/Blue exhibition game? Where was this human dynamo we saw last game?

    @HighEliteMajor** “Don’t mistake quickness, and speed, and flow for finesse. The 2008 team was much the same way. Guys were scrappers, But they were basketball players. Of all of our teams since 2008, this has the same “look” of our 2008 team.”**

    Hubba, hubba. Music to my ears. Can’t wait to see the look on crybaby’s ( Harrison twins) face when he’s matched against a 6’8" guard on the perimeter.



  • When Svi signed, my concern was that we could lose White and Greene due to Svi’s presence (The timing was obvious with White), and that Svi, being from overseas, was a greater risk to bolt after one season (home sick, Euro or other pro ball). Looks like Svi might have had just a little to do with CF’s departure, too.

    Seriously, Svi threatens Greene’s PT and thus his presence on this roster. That could twist Greene’s nose a bit. A situation to watch for sure, but is that being too dramatic?



  • @HighEliteMajor yes to dramatic!



  • I was not able to see the game last night but from what you guys have said, Self has done a good job of teaching the x axis to the team, which certainly bodes well for the season. Definitely looking forward to watching the replay.



  • How much do you guys read into the starting lineup from last night? I know it is super early and the starters will change a lot throughout the season but does it seem like these may be the starters for the UK game? That is only 2 weeks from today. Honestly, I know it is only one game and it was against Washburn but Cliff looked like a starter to me. I would like Jamari’s hustle and energy as the first guy off the bench. That would be the one change I would make even after only watching one game.



  • Unfortunately I was only able to listen to the game on the radio since a lot of the on-line streams have gone out of business and the only ones left seem to be way to dangerous to use and I did not have the inclination to do what I have in the past; I simply went out to the decks and cursed Sheahon Zenger loud enough for the entire neighborhood to hear. I thought I heard other neighbors do the same thing.

    Below is a good summary of the game and the after game interviews.

    Game summary and interviews…

    The things that I got from this game.

    1. Mason is the starting PG and played well. Graham is a very capable PG with a high ceiling. Overall, the PG position is much improved over last year.
    2. Selden playing PG is not something we will see often; coach Self did not think it worked well.
    3. Cliff is coming along nicely. Washburn did not have height inside to stay with him, so we don’t know how well he will do against better competition. While he only had one foul, it appears that fouls might be an issue going forward.
    4. Svi is the real deal. He moves the ball quickly which Coach Self likes.
    5. Greene apparently still not playing enough defense and this is why Graham started in his place. He better shape up quickly or he will be the next man out.
    6. Like I predicted, Lucas is now ahead of Mickelson although I can see where the situation could reverse down the road. I see them both playing substantial minutes until one pulls away.
    7. Perry and Jamari had quiet games and I cannot really draw any conclusions yet.
    8. Selden will be solid and he will be part of any line up big or small.
    9. I wish Coach Self would emphasize the positive more than he does the negative, but then this is and has always been his style and gives us more ammo for comments. You can catch more flies with honey than with vinegar…but then, you can catch even more flies with a pile of steaming $hit. His method obviously works motivating players, or at least most of them, but as Alexandre Dumas would say…nothing succeeds like success…so it is hard to argue with him.


  • @joeloveshawks

    Coach Self said that he was going to start all returning players but Greene did not play enough defense in practice so he was replaced by Graham. I am pretty sure this will not be the starting lineup for long and it will be several game in the future before we see coach Self settle on a starting five.



  • @KUSTEVE

    The combination of the-will-to-efficiency scheme of play and Self practicing them into the ground (they looked like they had had a full practice the day of the Washburn game), plus all of the wraps this early the season, explains the step-slow appearance of Selden and of all of the guys.

    Self and staff must really be bearing down on these guys. He has committed to getting them ready not just for UK, which they probably can’t beat unless UK shoots it very poorly, but to try to give this team the best possible shot at beating UCSB, which has a big man and a maturity that is going to give this young, undersized KU team problems IMHO.

    Self correctly perceived that this team’s only hope is efficient passing constantly trying to get the ball into scoring position, not just into impact position. Frankly, this team appears most closely patterned off some of Bobby Knights lean-talent teams. They reminded me a hole lot of Knight’s last 4, or 5, Indiana teams. Strictly business. Told from the beginning that their only prayer is toughness and efficiency. There is not a schred of ebullience and celebrating out there, even though several of these guys were joy juicing smiley face types last season along with joking Joel and easy going Andrew. This season? It is all grim focus on business.

    Selden, ironically, is having the most difficulty hitting perfect pitch among the starters. But, again, I think that’s because of tired legs and because Self is ramming this team into an efficiency form language starting with Ellis and Mason.

    Ellis plays this way naturally, whenever he isn’t going against tough defenders that send him into finesse spin mode. Self has clearly told Perry to cut back on the spin moves and cut straight to the score. Self is saying in essence, “Perry, you are my man. If you can’t learn to be an extroverted razor edged fanatic on a team of exploding athletic freaks, then I am going to ram earth this team into a form of stoic, methodical, Perry Ellis walls of focus and hard work.” To rob from “Chinatown,” as I so often have lately, Perry, if we cannot bring the water to LA, we’ll bring LA to the water, which is another way of saying if we can’t bring Perry to the team, we’ll bring the team to Perry. Perry’s scoring is the water. Every team needs water. But Perry himself has to be rammed into the wooden team form as well, because Perry tends to stop playing this way, i.e., to his own strength, whenever someone, even some scrawny Ichabods muscling cause him to jump out of the ram earth form Self has rammed him into, and start spinning and finessing. But Perry is doing better at being Perry, something he has never been given a chance to get better at, as Self spent Perry’s first two seasons taking him not just out of his comfort zone, but out of Perry’s known universe.

    And the cool thing is: ram earthing this team of hyper athletic freaks like in no particular order Mason, Oubre, Alexander, Traylor, Selden and Greene, is like connecting a bunch of coil springs together and then compressing them in the a wooden form of a highly efficient team that will, once Self eases up on the practice load, and pulls away some of the forms, be extremely efficiently formed to then begin exploding out of the form. It is a paradoxical approach to crafting a team, only to the extent Self is taking it, but Self is paradox in sneakers, so what else is new. He is the Tumble Weed Buddha. He is the Red River Vishnu restoring the Eddie Ball Order that he got too far away from last season. But frankly he is going beyond Eddie Ball here. He is going beyond Bill Ball here. The ghost of Henry Iba is lurking in this zealous, fundamentalist quest for un-ornamented efficiency.

    (Note on the ram earth metaphor in the midst of all the metaphor mixing I am doing and about to take outside the envelope: just got done reading an arcane book on building the old ways with adobe brick and ram earth forms, and so that is where this ram earth form metaphor is bubbling up from for what Self is doing with this retro-team thing. For the uninitiated, ram earth building is setting up a wooden form of a wall space to be filled and packed and filled and packed with a sand/gravel/dirt mixture with about 10-20% clay content, so that when the wood forms are removed you have a strong, long lasting earthen wall that, if covered with a well drained roof with a 2-foot overhang and some stucco surfacing ought to outlast your own time on this mortal coil by quite awhile and meet building codes in some states, anyway.)

    So, @KUSTEVE , what we were witnessing last night was a team with only parts of its forms temporarily removed (enough to let the team practice playing a game), so that it could move a bit, while still being held tightly in place. We saw a fully compressed, not yet fully dried team that had has been being driven so hard into its forms that it had no explosion in its legs and looked a step slow, make that two steps slow.

    Mason gets what is going on and can do it, because it takes him completely out of his unconscious narcissism of using his awesome speed and afterburners first (the antithesis of being a point guard) and instead focuses him on the wholistic goal of running the team. Once the team cures fully into Self’s desired form of maximum efficiency in all things, and Mason’s habit of resorting first to his athleticism is permanently broken and reformed, THEN we will see Self have him begin to uncoil when appropriate. And when Mason begins uncoiling, so will the other players follow his lead.

    This is particularly good for Alexander, who would foul out immediately, if he were not rammed into the form right now. Alexander is a big talent with a big man presence and attitude that will eventually allow him to be very dominant, but right now it would just foul him up to let him operate form free.

    And though Oubre could benefit a lot from getting out of the form right now offensively, the fact is he is wearing the dreaded black knee wraps that signal sore knees in freshman stressed to unprecedented degree by learning Self Grade sliding M2M, after always getting by before with raw athleticism.

    And so back to Selden.

    Selden has a lackadaisical streak. He is naturally only focused intensely and coiled when he is about to do something and doing it. He has a problem with losing focus the minute what he is trying to do goes wrong. You can see his entire body language turn into an indifferent glide, instead of the intense uncoiling force that he was just a moment ago. Selden frankly needs this ram earth team form as much, if not more than the rest. And like Ellis he showed several times that whenever he comes out of the form and things don’t go right, he reverts to losing focus and gliding, just as Ellis reverts to spinning and finessing.

    E-F-F-I-C-E-N-C-Y.

    E-C-O-N-O-M-Y.

    E-N-E-R-G-Y.

    E-N-G-A-G-E-M-E-N-T.

    These are the 4 E’s on the X-Axis this team must master to be able to then E-X-P-L-O-I-T athleticism on the Y-Axis at the D-E-C-I-S-I-V-E moments.

    This team has to make efficiency its theme and athleticism its variation.

    It aint sexy at AAU meat markets. And Cal will surely use it as a negative in talking to OADs (note: he seems not to have to actually recruit; that seems to be done for him, Cal is just a hostess seating players at his basketball restaurant that appear to have been driven their for him by a Nike bus. But I digress.)

    The immediate danger forming a bunch of A-type athletics into a T-type team efficiency mold is that they will reverse the ordering of those two concepts not long after the forms are removed.

    Why shouldn’t these A-Types rely on athleticism first, last and always?

    Because this group lacks the size inside, especially the dominant post man and rim protector, to get into a 40 minute campaign of athleticism vs. athleticism with any of the long and talented teams it will meet intermittently throughout the season. In terms of athleticism, it is a donut with a hole in the middle. It dare not play a style that emphasizes that hole in the middle. Instead, it must become controlled and highly controlling. It must confront teams with collective security, communal efficiency, so as never to expose the hole in the middle. And of course, being a Self team, it must also do so while being willing to play it any tempo the other team gives it.

    Yet, fast or slow, or in between, this team must never play reckless, gambling high pressure perimeter defense, even though almost every player is well suited to playing exactly that way. Why not? Because of the hole in the middle. Every step, every pass, every dribble, every defensive position and every defensive slide, must obscure and shield the hole in the middle, while every savvy opponent will be scheme to get exactly there–to the hole in the O in Oz.

    The great athleticism of the players must be turned to simultaneously guarding the trey stripe and the passing lanes, while at the same time masking the hole in the middle. Thus, you never want guys running and gambling on steals from over pressuring and over pinching someone far from the basket, unless the opponent has no big man. You want always to divide the great athleticism between stretching out and reaching backwards. This team is really going to play amoeba defense–stretching outward, but never breaking connection and the ability to flow backwards. Devonte Graham’s steals were the ideal of this form of Amoeba defense. He was not gambling. He was seizing the opportunity of the amoeba being stretched in the right position to simply step in the lane and steal the pass. He was not at all out of position to recover and flow backwards to protect the hole in the middle.

    This is no mean feat to pull off.

    To the players credit, they appear to be buying in…so far.

    And the guys that can do it best are playing most. Devonte Graham is not starting because he is a good distributor, or ball handler, or a great defender that can fight through D1 ball screens. He is going to have problems with all three of those things at D1 speeds against good D1 defenses. He is starting because the amoeba style of play is something he can do comfortably; that kind of fits his neutrally balanced court personality.

    And the guys that struggle the most with amoeba style, Greene and Mickelson, the most either or guys on the team, are bringing up the rear despite their considerable abilities that both showed variously in the exhibition game.

    Amoeba style is not for everyone. No style is. Pick a style and there are winners and losers. But everyone can learn to play a new style a little better all the time. It just may take some longer. Greene and Mickelson will get it.

    And then there is Selden and Ellis. Both get the amoeba style of play. Selden can play it, whenever he does not get lackadaisical about something going wrong, or the flow of play going elsewhere. Ellis can play it whenever there is no blue meanie.

    But things will go wrong, and play will flow away from Selden.

    And there will be blue meanies for Ellis.

    So: the real key to whether Self and this group can pull this style of play off, is whether Selden and Ellis can break their bad habits during their period of being ram earthed into the early season wooden form Self has erected, and just say no to their bad habits when he takes the wooden forms off and says, start uncoiling when its the decisive moment.

    There is never a dull moment with Self and his basketball.

    Now Self is going back to the future.

    God only knows how he is going to pull this off against really good teams. Everything in my experience tells me it won’t work against really good teams; that the team will not be able to execute this way when everyone is longer, stronger, faster, and without a hole in the middle.

    But persons thought the same thing about some past teams with holes in the middle that went on to become terrific teams.

    How long can he hide the hole in the middle of the doughnut; that is the question?

    Knight pulled it off once.

    Wooden pulled it off twice.

    What else is there to say, but…

    Go, Bill, go!!!



  • @HighEliteMajor

    If this were to come down to a choice between Svi and Greene, it might threaten Greene.

    But I don’t think it is going to come down to that choice.

    What I saw last night was a glimmer of what might be the team KU uses frequently against really big inside teams.

    I think Svi on one wing and Greene on the other wing, stretch hell out of an opposing defense.

    I think when you don’t have a legitimate big down low either to score, or to rim protect, against a big inside team, then the only counter is to be tall and good shooting on the wings.

    The key here is not just that they are good shots, but that they are both so tall!

    Opposing teams will have to double Svi and Greene standing on the trey stripe to stop them from taking the minimum distance trey, which either player could conceivably ding at a 40-45% rate, if the rest of their games’ permit them to settle down and shoot confidently.

    So: when the opposing team doubles outside to stop the short, high percentage trey, Svi and Greene float back a step and the double has to make a snap decision. To really shut off the long Svi and Greene, the double has to follow out. But to follow out means Svi, a terrific passer, especially, is going to pass it to cutter into the weakened middle, which is going to force the rim protector to commit quickly which will allow a dish by the cutter to a wide open man.

    This is really the way for this KU team to play UK, too: Svi and Greene on the wings, if both player’s defenses were good enough.

    They may not be good enough defenders early in the season, but I suspect they can get their by early February.

    Its not a starting pair of wings. Its a first substitution pair of wings, as the opponent resorts to shorter, less athletic backups of its starting wings. Capice? Or caprice? 🙂



  • @wrwlumpy

    What Svi brings this year is “THE WING POINT” that Self often resorts to by moving his point to the wing. He did this occasionally with Sherron, Tyshawn, Elijah, and Tharpe.

    With Svi, he can leave his speed demons out front, put Svi on a wing, and have his cake and eat it, too.

    Avi could wind up playing a lot of back up at the 2 and 3, depending on which wing Self wants to wing point attack from in any given situation.

    And as I said to @HighEliteMajor above, putting Svi on one with with both his trifecta AND his wing point ability, and putting Brannen Greene at the other wing, absolutely stretches the spandex to its breaking point–always a good thing in Self Ball, but especially good when the opponent has a rim protector and this KU team does not.



  • @jaybate-1.0

    I think it was you who said that Kelly had issues with his knees because he was wearing those “dreaded black knee wraps.” Looking at the pictures on the other site that will go unnamed, all of the other players except Landen, Perry, Svi and Hunter have the black stretch stockings on. If I am mistaken, please clarify. Thanks.



  • @jaybate-1.0 We get Swee for 2 years. How good will he be by the end of next year?



  • @RockChalkinTexas

    I meant to say he might be having issues, because he was wearing knee wraps. I have no insider knowledge, nor have I read anywhere that he is injured.

    About the other players, good eye and thanks for alerting me to them. I haven’t looked at any still photos of the players and that is one of the best ways to find out this sort of thing. Assessing the injury status of a team, when they are trying to conceal such, is one of the fun things to try to do as a fan, at least it is for me. Checking the still photos after the game, plus keeping your eye peeled for players favoring limbs obviously, but less obviously NOT doing things that they usually do, or should be capable of doing, in the videos of the games, often reveals quite a lot that is not being reported.

    I tend to think the more wraps you see, then the more guys are probably battling injuries; that the wraps are supposed to manage injuries. I know a lot of folks make the argument that players wear these wraps preventatively, and I suspect a few that have had prior problems do just that. But wraps to me are also often a tell that guys are actively battling some kind of leg problems. And I recall reading somewhere that players with one leg injured often wear two wraps to help camouflage which is the injured leg.

    My hypothesis is that there are costs to playing “tougher” and practicing “harder” and playing more “physically.” The cost logically should be increased wear and tear. And wear and tear involves, among other things, actual injuries. And a bunch of players wearing wraps this early in the season tells me one of two things:

    a.) practice intensity in terms of speed, length, contact, and loose ball drills is ramped up and wear and tear and injuries are spiking; or

    b.) players are not injured, but are trying to minimize the expected wear and tear occurring from the tougher practices.

    Of course, I can’t recall how many guys on last year’s team were wearing knee wraps in the first exhibition game, so maybe its the same number or less this year. This is where QA comes it. QA lets one support, or refute hypotheses like I am proposing.

    On a slight tangent, recall that the new six camera technology with proprietary software some pro teams are using allow them to track an incredible array of basketball statistical categories. I wonder if this technology would also allow a pattern recognition software designed to isolate and recognize a percentage probability of opposing players being injured in various ways and extents, so that you as a coach could then scheme to exploit those injuries? What a huge edge it might give.

    Rock Chalk!!!



  • @KUSTEVE

    Seems like he could be the wing point hub of the team by end of next season, barring injury and his shot coming to full bloom. I don’t know if that makes him a super star, or the top scorer, or just the hub of our team that things run through. But he seems to have a little something extra.



  • We have to take this game for what it is worth… about 2 cents.

    What it exposed more than anything was the foot speed this team has. They get the ball up and down the floor fast, but what stuck out was their lateral quickness. This should be a great CS defensive team by the end of the year. I know… we are missing the big shot blocker. It would be nice to not need one to clean up bad guard defense for a change!

    Frank “the Mole” Mason is going to burrow through players and defenses this year and they won’t know how to stop him. Other teams really can’t mimic his play for preparation anymore than they can mimic a player like Embiid.

    I hope Svi can get it together this year, because he is going to be an outstanding player and very helpful when we need to find more offense. If he doesn’t stand out this year then he surely will next year.

    Cliff is a friggin’ beast. The comparisons are not fair with TRob unless you are comparing TRob’s final year with Cliff’s freshman year. Cliff is clearly the stronger of those two. I’m sure other teams will go at him and try to get him in foul trouble. He’ll have to play smart and aggressive. His teammates will have to help protect him from fouling by hedging the defense to stop the interior pass.

    Perry… I don’t know what to think. I’ve been buying in to all these improvements on his game and his desire to step up and lead this team, but it certainly wasn’t on exhibit in this exhibition. Well… Perry will be tested soon enough. He’ll have to earn his keep versus Kentucky. That will be the game that really shows us where he is (or isn’t). 1 rebound in 20 minutes. Are you serious? Perry had nerves to deal with his first year and now he seems like he may be too comfortable out there.

    I couldn’t recognize Wayne. His body has changed a lot. He is a lot more trim and cut. He moves so much faster than he did last year. His numbers weren’t outstanding in this game but I think he wanted it to be about our freshmen in this one. As long as he can stay healthy, he is going to romp some serious backside this year!

    I know we played nobody, but Lucas is for real. He’s steady and he has the best fundamentals on the team. He is going to have a productive year!

    Bam-Bam was a bit too psyched up. However, his energy was there and he is laying down the law that he will be our Kevin Young this year. He is going to have some big number games this year. He may not be the model of consistency, but he was a steal catch for us because he will definitely contribute big for us this year.

    Devonte is going to be outstanding. He’s the first real PG we’ve had in a long time… He showed us he is capable of playing above his age and experience level already.

    Brannen looked good at times. He still needs to lower his center of gravity and use his athleticism to a lateral advantage. That will free him up for wide open shots that he can bury if he does it.

    Kelly… he is going to be really something this year. I love his energy level and the kid can flat out ball!



  • @drgnslayr

    Just about the only things we can infer from this game is that Mason will likely start at PG and that SVI will be special. Other than that, there is not much else we can say. Yes, cliff had a good game, but considering the level of competition, that should have been the minimum expected; we will have to see how he handles himself against more talented and physical competition. I would guess that practice provide a much better competition and exhibition games such a this help you get acclimated to the court under actual game conditions. other than that, not much.



  • All these loooooong posts; must be “sweeps week” at KUBUCKETS… 🙂



  • @drgnslayr Love the post but you may be a bit ahead of yourself with the love for Cliff. He looked great but against practically a high school team in Washburn. To compare him to TRob’s achievements his Junior year is a lot to ask. He was a candidate for National POY all year and if it wasn’t for a freak like Anthony Davis he would have been POY. He was an All American who lead us to a National Title game. I will wait for Cliff to come close to that before I think any comparisons are even close.



  • Cliff is a beast. He’ll be a beast on most (or all) of D1 competition.

    The question with him is fouls. Self relates him to an early Tar.

    You guys are right… and the comp was small. I still think Cliff will make a huge impact immediately. But against real comp his propensity to foul will be an issue.

    The guy is clearly stronger than TRob was, even in his last year at KU. I’m not comparing achievements. TRob had a freakish motor that continually sucked up rebounds like a hoover. I’m just saying Cliff is stronger. The potential is there.



  • @drgnslayr

    I respectfully disagree. Cliff is listed at 6’-8" 240 and TRob was listed at 6’-10" 237. Maybe freshman Cliff is slightly stronger that freshman TRob, hard to tell since we did not see much of TRob in his Freshman year, and maybe in the future Cliff becomes stronger that TRob; however, there is no way that current Cliff is stronger than Junior TRob. TRob’s weight was just about all muscle while Cliff still has a lot of baby fat; see the photos I posted of both players flexing in the same pose and you will see the difference, You might want to go back and watch some TRob videos and remember what a specimen he was then and still is now.



  • @drgnslayr no way! TRob is a force!! He would have dunked all those last pm!



  • I respectfully disagree with you guys.

    TRob was a toothpick until he pumped iron for a couple of years. Cliff’s strength is mostly natural. I’m a big fan of TRob, but those are posing muscles. Pumping iron for a couple years isn’t going to match natural strength. Not even close. Cliff is shorter and heavier, and he’s already trimmed off the baby fat.

    I’m not talking about dunking or whatever… I’m just talking about strength. Self has already discussed his monster strength.

    Go to a gym and look at the poser guys. These aren’t guys that are going to challenge weightlifting records. You do a bunch of reps and build size and get the Hercules look.

    We used to call them “air muscles.” If TRob was so strong he would be dominating in the league. Tar is stronger, because, once again, he has more natural strength. It is his strength that is earning him a career in the league.

    TRob’s claim to fame is not his strength… it is his motor.



  • Something is wrong with this thread. I can’t edit my post.

    TRob isn’t known for his strength (except with KU fans), he is known for his motor.

    test



  • @drgnslayr Weird - I can edit it - hence the “test”.

    What you wanna say bro - I’ll be your editor in chief.



  • @nuleafjhawk

    Awesome!

    So let’s see what happens. Go up to that post and rewrite it the way you see it. I’m cool with that!

    I want to know what you think about it.



  • @drgnslayr It’s perfect the way it is - I wouldn’t change one damn word.

    Well, maybe I would change it to say " TRob isn’t known for his strength (except with KU fans), he is known for his motor**/heart**."



  • @drgnslayr

    Once again, I respectfully disagree and I have the numbers to back up my position.

    Robinson is rebounding very well in the League. Look at his rebound per minutes and you will see what I am talking about. In last night’s game against Cleveland the leading rebounder for Portland was Batum with 9 rebounds in 36 minutes, second was TRob with 8 rebounds in 11 minutes, Lopez, the center had 6 in 29 minutes and Aldridge, the only other PF on the team had 4 in 37 minutes. In comparison, Kevin Love had 10 rebounds in 36 minutes. So far for the season he is averaging 9 mpg and 5 rpg, which translates to a ridiculous 20 rebounds per 36 minutes, a statistic commonly used by the NBA. In comparison, the leader for the entire previous season among players with at least 20 games was Andre Drummond who averaged 14.7 rebounds per 36 minutes; TRob was 12 with 12.7 rebound per 36 minutes 2 places behind Dwight Howard who averaged 13.0; he is well ahead of that pace so far this year.

    In short, while not a big scorer, TRob is a superior rebounder, a position that definitely requires strength, and something that Coach Self indicated is what he should concentrate in the NBA.



  • http://www2.kusports.com/news/2011/may/11/jeff-withey-thomas-robinson-putting-pounds/

    TRob is known for his strength and motor! What hurts him, length and shooting away from basket. Tweener.



  • @JayHawkFanToo

    Xavier McDaniels was an excellent rebounder. He lead in college and did well in the pros. He was strong, but he wasn’t known for his strength like he was for his motor. TRob is a taller version of the “X-man.” Rebounding is a lot more than just who is the strongest. It is a factor, but it isn’t everything. You think the X-man was the strongest guy in college ball back in his day?

    I’m not saying TRob is weak. Simply… he isn’t as physically strong as Cliff.

    We can argue forever. It doesn’t matter because we all just have our opinions and we have nothing to prove it on. But I’ve seen a million guys who built air muscles like TRobs. If he lays off weightlifting for a few months he’s shrunk down to his old self. Sure, guys with air muscles have strength, just not as much. It’s more than just building muscle size. Plus… Cliff has a lot more weight on his frame. I heard he is 20 lbs heavier and two inches shorter. That is a huge difference from TRob and he’s cut.



  • @drgnslayr so Hudy builds air muscle ? I’d like you to tell TRob and or Hudy that!!



  • @drgnslayr “air muscles” is that what you get from playing air guitar?

    What is an “air muscle”, do you have to keep an air compressor or an old bicycle pump near by to inflate them?

    Or is an “air muscle” what Dick Vitale has? he just keeps getting louder and louder and just keeps blowing hot air out?



  • @Crimsonorblue22

    You beat me to it. TRob is pure lean muscle. No basketball player or athlete that relies on speed would build big “air” muscles, they slow you down; lean muscles give you power, speed and endurance.



  • @JayHawkFanToo you always say it better!



  • @Crimsonorblue22

    “so Hudy builds air muscle ? I’d like you to tell TRob and or Hudy that!!”

    The air muscles was TRob’s doing. Anyone can do that. I’ve done it and looked like the Hulk in a year. Hudy directs guys to improve strength for playing. A few guys do extra to build air muscles. AW3… same thing. Probably the guy who improved his strength most under Hudy was Withey… where was his bulk? Right… he didn’t have it because he wasn’t doing all those extra volume reps pumping up air.

    You really don’t think all that mass is backed up equal to someone who built the same mass their entire life, do you?

    Haven’t you guys ever pumped weights? In a week I can look huge, so can you.

    I’m not saying TRob doesn’t have strength. Or that he didn’t improve his strength.

    Has anyone in here ever gone to a gym? I really have to explain this?

    Back in my college days we’d go to the gym at 5pm on Friday just to pump up before hitting the bars.

    Selden is another guy like Cliff. Both arrived on campus with big time strength. I’m sure they both pumped some weight in HS but those guys mostly have the right genetics… or they’ve been pumping the right kind of iron since 7th grade. Selden is a beast in the weight room. I bet he can out dead lift TRob by a huge margin.

    TRob picked up most of his size over two summers of lifting. Air muscles. Same with AW3. If we could judge strength by muscle mass, AW3 would have left for the NBA by now.



  • @drgnslayr

    Athletes that rely on speed and endurance don’t do heavy weight lifting and I seriously doubt TRob does that. Athletes such as TRob that need the power but also the speed and endurance would be crazy to do heavy weight lifting, they normally do lighter weights with more reps. No air muscles on TRob, Hudy would not have it.

    BTW, TRob was measured at the NBA combine at 6’-7.75" without shoes and 244 pounds. Cliff Alexander was measured at 5 different camps at between 6’-8" and 6’-9" without shoes and between 240 and 254 pounds; KU currently lists him at 6’-8 and 240 pounds which means he has lost close to 15 pounds since arriving at KU and I expect him to lose another 10 before the end of the season. In other words, they are almost identical in size. Also, the X-Man is about the same height as TRob but 25 pounds lighter; he was a very strong and fast player and one of the very few that could actually play SF and PF…which he did.



  • @Crimsonorblue22

    Thanks, I try.



  • @JayHawkFanToo

    Maybe I read wrong on their size. Literally, everyone on here and KUSports has said TRob was taller by a couple of inches.

    Guys training for strength don’t do big reps. That builds mass, not strength. Where was that clip showing Selden’s monster clean and jerk? Big time reps build mass. So you think Arnold Schwarzenegger had the strength to match his size? That guy was pumping reps of 250 lbs on the bench… a weight more than half of HS football players press.

    I played with X for the most part of a summer and I’ve stood beside TRob. TRob is clearly taller by a couple of inches. X was strong… but like TRob, it was his motor that made him a good rebounder.



  • @drgnslayr

    TRob is 0.75" taller than Xavier, but keep in mind that nowadays, shoes make players at least 1.5" taller…



  • @JayHawkFanToo

    Hey… thanks for going deep with me today! I definitely respect your posts and those from @Crimsonorblue22 .

    I know we all respect each other and we can sometimes disagree and we can do it still liking each other and respecting each other!



  • @drgnslayr

    When everything else fails, we can always agree to respectfully disagree.

    We are the Jayhawk extended family and like most families at time somewhat dysfunctional, but at the end of the day still a family…we even have a crazy uncle…I guess I will stop there. 🙂



  • @drgnslayr Respect?



  • LOL. Slayr. “Air muscles.” I totally get what you’re saying about muscle mass vs. strength. It’s more about physics/leverage, not muscle size. Torque vs. power. Shoulder width. Some guys can bulk up to freakish bicep size and never be “strong.” Cliff probably won’t ever have TR0b’s superman body, but he does have a naturally strong frame. Hudy is no dummy, so I suspect she is working on his hops/foot speed rather than his upper body strength. (Motor/heart to be determined.)



  • Svi on D has length, keeps on his toes with an impressive active bounce and he consistently swivel’s his head which all conveys fantastic court presence. I couldn’t stop watching him on defense when he was on the court while thinking “this is why he was subbed into the game before Oubre”. HCBS commented a few days prior to the game that Kelly was taking chances on defense at bad times, particularly late in the possession. Greene did not start due to lack of Defensive vigilance in practice. Svi has been guarding men all summer, getting coached up by Mike Fratello, and there is a physicality that Svi possesses naturally though there was a composure, a polish to his defensive form that was surprising, exciting.

    @HighEliteMajor I agree that CF left because he calculated Svi’s tools with what Self teaches, demands. Plus Graham keeps being described as the only natural 1 which means CF was feeling the crush of the sickly stacked 2 spot devouring his vision of what his college career was going to be. Svi, after being a late arrival to the team, is clearly competing with Greene and Oubre for playing time. Svi is not sharing the rotation pattern that Mickelson is earning. Mickelson seemed to be slotted into the rotation to get the role Lucas had last year. Svi was getting opportunity minutes in the Washburn game to earn a rotation role.

    I felt clarity on CF’s departure while watching Svi. Is Svi’s mental retention going to out perform Oubre’s mental retention? Who’s light goes on fastest and brightest between now and the start of Big XII play? Does Svi loosen up and drain shots from beyond the arc consistently or do we see 3-point shooting in the 20 percentile range or low 30’s like we saw this summer on the international circuit?

    Following the minute distribution of the 6 backcourt contenders, and watching who plays together and when, will most likely be a long winter’s novel of developing 3 Freshmen and blending them with 3 Sophomores.



  • For what it’s worth, here was the sub pattern (until all 11 scholarship players were in the game):

    Starters: Mason, Graham, Selden, Ellis, Trayor

    First Sub: Greene for Graham; Alexander for Traylor

    Second Sub: Graham for Mason, Svi for Selden, and Lucas for Ellis

    Third Sub: Mason for Graham, Oubre for Greene, and Traylor for Ellis

    Fourth Sub: Mickelson for Lucas

    Greene and Alexander were first off the bench.

    Next, Svi and Lucas.

    Then Oubre.

    Finally Mickelson.

    Not sure what that says. But for those that look for changes, or patterns – which I do – I’ll be interested to see what Self does in Exhibition #2.

    By the way, welcome @KJD … always good to add to the crowd here. In the sub pattern above, and based on Self’s comments, Greene seems to be ahead of Oubre and Svi at the moment. “At the moment” seems to be the operative phrase here. Small sample vs. Washburn. But even in the scrimmage, Svi was really active. Self even commented how well he did, but that the ball just didn’t go in the hole that night.



  • @HighEliteMajor

    In the after game presser, Coach Self indicated that he started all the returning players except Green because he did not pay defense in the previous practice and Graham took his place. Much like Senior night where all seniors start, I would not read much into the starting line up that he used for the Washburn game. My 2 cents.


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