Rock Chalk Diss-appointment!



  • And, I would add, that Chenowith’s 98-99 and 99-00 teams were probably the least interesting teams in the past 25 years.



  • @DanR you need to read ralster’s post regarding Chenowith.



  • @Crimsonorblue22 I’m really not a Chenowith hater (I’m a dissapoint-er). Pierce was gone, playing for the Celtics, during Chenowith’s decent Sophomore season, so that “offense is going in a different direction because of Pierce” excuse is total revisionism. Roy really didn’t expect much from his centers (exhibit A: Ostertag): block shots, rebound, hit the putbacks and make a shot from the free throw line once in a while. And Chenowith could actually jump at least a foot higher than O’s 3" vertical. There was so much potential, and so little development. in hindsight, maybe it was Roy’s coaching staff’s blame. In comparison, Withey seemed destined to follow that mold and he reached another level.

    I just remember thinking back in the summer of 1999, well, with a solid junior center in Chenowith, maybe he’d be able to help carry those three new guys (Gooden, Collison and Hinrich) in 1999-2000. Nope. California dreamin’.



  • @DanR I wasn’t arguing, just thought you might want to read ralster’s take.



  • @drgnslayr Oak Lodge was a “club” about 10-12 miles South of Lawrence on 59 Hiway. Technically the address is Baldwin, KS. It also has been a restaurant among other things trough the years. Haven’t driven by it in some time so don’t know if the building is even still standing.



  • @Crimsonorblue22 Sorry – that came across a lot harsher than I intended. The idea that Roy reigned him in was news to me. It would be interesting to hear more from Chenowith’s perspective about his last couple of years at KU. @Ralster: Source?



  • @DanR no problem, ralster read it from “beyond the phog”



  • @DanR

    Read Beyond the Phog. Chenowith was interviewed and his side of the story is there.



  • The Michigan and VCU losses sting. Hell, they all sting. I don’t ever think we’re going to lose. Then we do, and it sucks.



  • @DanR Dan, I may have mistaken about who exactly Roy would be focusing on offensively, because to me the roster of a lackluster team has faded into history (Pierce gone by then)…but the quote is directly from Eric Chenoweth saying that Roy actually told him the “offense would be going in another direction”. He didnt say who, so it leaves us to speculate on who got more touches by design…?. That is a direct quote if you can find that passage. Its a 400+ page book of nothing but the players own words. Now of course Eric Chenoweth may have ‘revisionist memory’, but nobody but he+Roy know the accuracy of Eric’s words. But that definitely is his quote.



  • How about the player that led to the most disappointment?

    Easy — Brady Morningstar.

    I still, without hesitation, believe that if Brady Morningstar had simply never played at Kansas, we at least visit the final four once during three seasons between 2008 and 2012, where he played, and we didn’t. The completely speculative opinion is that we win the 2011 national title if future NBAer Morningstar had chosen to play elsewhere.

    Like a governor on an old school bus …



  • @ralster

    Loved your response to me.

    I like how this team is talking about toughness… and realizing they didn’t have it last year.

    I like how Wayne is talking about something to prove… it smells of a chip forming. Something we never get to enjoy as Jayhawks.

    This group of guys seems like they could be special. There are several guys on this team that have plenty of individual toughness. If they can come together as a group and form toughness synergy, watch out!

    They’ve got to want to win it all… they’ve got to turn it from a want into a need.

    Take no prisoners.

    Personally… if I could have a dream come true it would be that one of these guys found a bunch of old VHS tapes marked “1989 NBA Finals.”

    I’m not saying we play “thug ball.” But I am saying we develop the toughness that Detroit Piston team had. They were never supposed to win it all… they were never supposed to come between the power teams of that time period… LA and Boston. No one liked them except Detroit fans. But the pushed and they fought and they didn’t give up. Isiah Thomas had proven his toughness the year before… when he went for 25 in a quarter with an ankle that had exploded. It was one of those few moments in the NBA where everyone should respect, even non-basketball fans.

    I wish we still had Black… he would fit perfect with this crew.



  • @HighEliteMajor he truly is the only jhawk I can’t stand! Mostly because of off court behavior and how he carries himself. I wonder what he will be doing in a few years?



  • @drgnslayr – “I wish we still had Black… he would fit perfect with this crew.”

    I think Black is perfect with any crew. Wish we would have had him as a freshman.

    And @ralster, great stuff above.

    @Crimsonorblue22 - I don’t know what he will be doing in a few years, but I know what he won’t be doing – playing in the NBA. Just a continued (playful) jab at those that professed that he would get to the league because of his famous (or infamous) intangibles. I do love crisp ball rotation and post entry passes – of course I do – who doesn’t? But I also like what I saw from EJ and Releford in the 2012 title game run. And somehow, without Brady, we were able to rotate the ball and get some entry passes. I’ll stop now.



  • @HighEliteMajor agree on Black, wish we had him as a grad asst on bench, but I hope he finds a place to play that deserves him!! How many on here bitched about him last year??? We are so quick to judge!



  • @Crimsonorblue22 To be fair, Black did play terribly for a good chunk of the year. How many times did we hear something along the lines of “Tarik Black has as many fouls in this game as he does minutes.” Take your choice. There were a lot to choose from.

    I agree with @HighEliteMajor , if we had Black from the start, he could’ve worked with Danny, gotten better infused with the system, etc. The guy had heart. He was a nice guy, sure (as @ralster noted above), but what I saw from him in the game against Stanford especially was enough to wish we had him for longer than we did. It’s amazing what programs can (or cannot) do with certain players.

    And @HighEliteMajor …I could not possibly agree with you more about Brady. I remember when I first moved to Lawrence and people trying to convince me that he was such an asset. Saying things like “he’s the best passer on the team.” I couldn’t believe what I was hearing…



  • @MoonwalkMafia I know, just wished we would have given him time to learn our system, and mainly adjust to the new foul system. I hated the mean remarks, he could have gone anywhere.



  • @HighEliteMajor JayhawkinNebraska would be busting at the buttons over this one…LOL. He got hammered as much as any troll I remember from the old days at kusports. Forgive me but I just have to chuckle because he was Brady basher # 1 & guys just ate him alive for it, & the more they hammered the more he complained. Kinda like old JRoss & jaybate going back & forth. That was funny schtick virtually day in & day out.



  • @Crimsonorblue22 Brady is a wanker. That perimeter lineup with him and Tyrell was as quick as Jethro Bodine’s mind.



  • @KUSTEVE WHOA Brother! Remember, Jethro graduated at the top of his class at Oxford.

    His sixth grade class at Oxford, Mississippi. And he was " at the top " because he was the tallest student in his class.

    Just sayin…



  • @KUSTEVE jethro, can’t include Brady in the same sentence w/Tyrell. Tyrell is a fine upstanding young man!



  • Just answered a couple questions on the old site to read article on Brady Morningstar!!!

    Former Kansas University basketball guard Brady Morningstar had what he called “a great experience” playing in Finland’s top professional league this past season.

    “It was good competition, nice people, nice culture,” said the 6-foot-3, 28-year-old Morningstar.

    He averaged 14.1 points off 57 percent shooting (49 of 127 threes for 38.6 percent), with 4.1 assists and 3.9 rebounds for Tapiolan Honka in Helsinki.

    He would be a perfect fit for the Spurs!!!



  • @nuleafjhawk I though Jed said he learned to sipher (add) at Oxford, as in where the Ox ford the stream.



  • @VailHawk I’m curious as to what capacity he would fit with the Spurs?



  • @HighEliteMajor me too!!



  • @HighEliteMajor

    He would be the glue-guy, of course … 🙂



  • @HighEliteMajor: Agree on Brady. While I understood that in those moments in time Self started him because he defended better, fed the post better (than the talent that rode pine)…but if he simply wasnt at KU, that talent might have developed faster. And I mean Releford and EJ. Guys we all thought had higher ultimate ceilings, if they developed properly…. If given the non-fleeting chance of necessity. Kind of like Teahan on the 2012RunnerUp team: He really only got his mpg because there was no one else. Selby should have been splitPG with Tyshawn, and splitSG with EJ that year. And Teahan could have backed Releford.

    My point is what if EJ was given first-off bench mpg even in his frosh season? He could have been one confident dude by the time his Sr. season came…

    (100% speculation).



  • @HighEliteMajor

    Just having fun! I’m Switzerland when it comes to Brady…but I think the Spurs make everyone look good.

    They are a pleasure to watch. They embarrassed the Heat and pretty much toyed w them on offense.

    I used to live in Florida and have been to a couple Heat games…so I was pulling for them especially bc of Mario…but they looked HORRIBLE! Ball stuck, no movement, no passing…poor D after six or seven passes…Spurs pass up good shot, then pass for better one then that guy often passes once more for dunk.

    Brady has no business playing in the nba but I’m convinced the Spurs would make him look like he belongs.



  • @VailHawk I suspected sarcasm font … I was wrong, there, too. I will note your neutrality on Brady. That’s safe.


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