New writer in town



  • My first article got published. I’m working on a conference preview now leading up to the match up against UK

    http://kckingdom.com/2016/12/24/kansas-city-chiefs-should-fans-be-worried-after-recent-loss/5/



  • @HawkInMizery Congrats. My Dad had season tickets way back to the Lenny Dawson era and were 29 rows up on the 40 yd line behind their bench. Cold as all get out some games but I came from Minnesota (same town Cole Aldrich grew up in) and born in So. Dakota so am a tough girl. My brother worked for a company who gave him season tickets to the Royals 77-80 and we sat 11 rows behind home plate. I have a picture of Thurman Munson at the batter box looking right at me and that was right before he died. We HATEd the Yankees then didn’t we? Good times at Kaufman were definitely had with my husband.





  • @HawkInMizery

    Good job!



  • @HawkInMizery It’s Ok now since we’re winning - but when we start getting into those nailbiter games it’s going to kick our hineys. Coach needs to spend a LOT more time on free throw shooting with this team.



  • @HawkInMizery

    Sure enjoyed the Chiefs big win yesterday. Especially that last touchdown, to rub Denver’s nose in it.

    I’m a big Chiefs fan, but I just don’t know about Reid’s “system football” for winning in the playoffs. His strategy is largely based on statistics and at time their play-calling gets as predictable as Schottenheimer’s.

    I believe Coach Self would be a good person to interview concerning running a tight system in playoffs.

    Playoffs require “pulling a rabbit out of your hat” sometimes. Predictable play gets punished because the game is played at a higher level. Season-long metrics can (and should) be tossed out the window because the same old structure will rarely (if ever) win it all down the stretch.

    I would like to read a well-written article on the “art of variation” (avoiding predictability). Coaches must address this during playoffs. The counter-argument, especially in pro sports, is that you run the same predictable execution until the other team figures out how to stop it. I’m not convinced that is a good strategy in playoffs (and often during the regular season). I always figure that if you over-use the same plays/structure, by the time your opposition figures it out, you have just played yourself into a big disadvantage. Now your opposition has the momentum, your advantage is gone, and you have no idea if your transition will work, especially against an opposition playing with momentum. Now you are using a “reactive strategy” instead of a “proactive strategy.”



  • @drgnslayr said:

    I would like to read a well-written article on the “art of variation” (avoiding predictability). Coaches must address this during playoffs.

    Great topic! I would imagine the devil is mostly in the details as these situations usually aren’t equatable to something like rock paper scissors. There are clear advantages to certain options even if anticipated, like keeping pitches down and the alternative options are higher risk. So that’s what makes the details fascinating. When do you roll out the triangle and two? How do you adjust if it doesn’t work? How do you manage the psychology of doing something that doesn’t work, like a fake punt that blows up in your face? How do you use time outs effectively to manage psychology? I often wondered about that as I loathe Coach K but always thought he had impeccable timing with timeouts.



  • A story on Bill Self’s move to foreign/non U.S. players. Svi, Udoka, Embiid, Diallo, Wiggins are just recent ones. We had a big break from Sasha to all of those guys. I realize that Udoka, Embiid, Diallo, Wiggins and Sasha all played HS ball in the U.S. but do we have a particular reason we have been able to up our game with foreign recruits lately? Is it our Adidas sponsorship? Is it just happenstance? Is it Bill is a good closer on guys that come on the radar out of nowhere and outrecruits other coaches? It sure seems odd, at least to me. We had such a large gap between Sasha and all of those guys and now Bill has either embraced it or it is a completely random set of events that seem to be related and aren’t.



  • @Kcmatt7

    I am not sure that it happens by design, Like other coaches, Coach Self goes after talented players, the fact that many are now foreign born has no bearing on it. Look at Kentucky, they have had a steady stream of foreign players as well. In the current Team alone you have Mychal Mulder from Canada, Tai Wynyard New Zealand and Isaac Humphries Australia; past teams included Skal Labissiere from Haiti, Jamal Murray from Canada, Karl-Anthony Towns who is Dominican-American. Eloy Vargas from Dominican Republic, Kyle Wiltjer from Canada and let’s not forget about Enes Kanter from Turkey.

    Davidson has 6 foreign players in its current roster, Gonzaga, St Mary’s and Santa Clara have large number of foreign players, particularly Australian. Many of these players are not recruited at all but make good members for the smaller conferences. Foreign players are all over college basketball and this is not going to change.



  • @JayHawkFanToo I guess you’re proving my point. When did this happen? And has Self leaned into this? Clearly Davidson, Gonzaga St. Marys, etc have all leaned into it because they are trying to compete with the big boys. Has Bill learned that this recruiting these foreign players is what keeps us at that Blue Blood level? It is clearly a strategy by other teams. Is it a strategy by us right now? Or is it just that we have had several foreign players at this time just out of coincidence?

    From Sasha until Embiid, Wiggs and Svi, we hadn’t had any international players that I can remember. That is a decade. Then we have 3 and have added two more. Seems to me like Bill is leaning into this foreign player influx.



  • @Kcmatt7

    I think you missed my point; it has been happening all along. All coaches go after top players and some happen to be foreigners and some years have more quality foreign players than others…not really anything new. Now, some programs (Saint Mary’s, Santa Clara) emphasize overseas recruitment since they cannot compete against elite programs and foreign players can be a good solution. don’t believe this to be the case for the elite programs, they simply go after the top players regardless of nationality. Keep in mind that other than Svi, all the other foreign players at KU played HS here.



  • @JayHawkFanToo I didn’t miss your point. They are all over. Got it.

    But why did we have a decade without one? They weren’t the top players? Or we just didn’t go after them?



  • @RockChalkinTexas Born in SD and lived in Minnesota. That is as good as it gets. I of course am prejudiced since I have a similar pedigree. The Vikings were good back in the day because they played outdoors. When you have to wear snowmobile clothing to a game you are in some real weather. Where abouts in SD are you from? Unless it was Sioux Falls or Rapid City we may be the only people who have heard of it.



  • @Kcmatt7

    • 2004-2005 Kaun, Galindo, Niang
    • 2005-2006 Kaun
    • 2006-2007 Kaun
    • 2007-2008 Kaun
    • 2008-2009 None
    • 2009-2010 Henry (Born in Belgium)
    • 2010-2011 None
    • 2011-2012 None
    • 2012-2013 None
    • 2013-2014 Wiggins, Embiid,
    • 2014-2015 Svi
    • 2015-2016 Svi, Diallo, Coleby
    • 2016-2017 Svi, Coleby

    Now, how do you figure a decade without one? Even if don’t count Henry, it makes 5 years without one in the most recent 13 years…



  • @sfbahawk I’ve heard of a place called Peer, South Dakota! Can’t find it on a map.



  • @DanR

    I have been to Pierre, South Dakota…I liked it…



  • @HawkInMizery how 'bout that Chiefs game?



  • @RockChalkinTexas We hated the Yankees then??? I still hate the yankees lol! You had some awesome seats! my season seats are not nearly as good. I’m glad you got to experience so much with your husband 🙂 I’ll bet you guys had some great times during that run.



  • @nuleafjhawk I definitely agree really hope they are heavily working on that over the holiday break.



  • @drgnslayr I completely agree about Reid’s system not being good for the playoffs. Being from Philadelphia and being an Eagles fan in addition to a Chiefs fan it gives me a unique perspective. He always had great regular season success in Philly but shat the bed multiple times in the playoffs.



  • @Crimsonorblue22 That was an awesome game!!! I came home cold and wet but totally worth dipping on work for the night to be there. Still gotta write my story to recap that game as I was too intoxicated and full of joy to even think about typing last night haha.



  • You guys have come up with some wonderful ideas! I’m going to start working on getting in with the right people to make some of this stuff happen. I don’t know how quickly it will come but i’m the person to never say die or quit on something. I knew this would be the right place to ask to get some ideas going. I really really appreciate you guys and gals.



  • @HawkInMizery I thought Reid gave us an awesome Christmas present!



  • @Crimsonorblue22 yes he did! That TD from Poe was such a kick in the teeth tot he Donkey’s and i Loved every second of it though I wish we would have saved it to use against NE or PIT since the game was already decided. I would have preferred kicking the raiders right in the mouth like that. I hate the Donkey’s but not as much as the Raiders.



  • @sfbahawk It was Sioux Falls. My 2 older brothers hawked food and drink during the Fran Tarkenton era and during Twins games with Harlam Killebrew. My cousins on my Mom’s side still are in Sioux Falls. My cousin played for Nebraska when they were the Big Red machine 1969-1971 and was a DT 275# 6’10". Won the Outland Trophy, was Kodak all american and got drafted by the NY Football Giants, played 3 years but slipped at a pool party and hurt his knee and foot so bad that the doctors said he would be crippled if he ever got hurt so he walked away from the game. Saw all his Big 8 games and in 1970 when they went to the first Orange Bowl. There won back to back championships. That was when Nebraska was good with Bob Devaney as coach and Tom Osborne was OC. He was one of the first “blackshirts”. Played with Johnny Rogers and Rich Glover.



  • @JayHawkFanToo Xavier obviously doesn’t count and there is a 9 year gap in recruiting. @Kcmatt7 has a good point. That is not an insignificant gap and it does beg the question if this was a deliberate shift in focus away from international players. I would be very interested to hear the answer to that.



  • I wouldn’t even count Toronto area kids among the foreign born because they’ve pretty much all come up through the AAU system like Americans have as well.



  • @HawkInMizery Here’s an idea for an article for you. What are the odds of Billy Preston ever playing a game for KU. Given the horrible academic track records of Prime Prep and API, an article about the odds of Preston playing for KU given his academic background would be interesting, albeit possibly disappointing for KU.



  • @approxinfinity

    What @Kcmatt7 said was…“But why did we have a decade without one?” which is the question I answered.

    As far as why we did not get more players? I believe it is more happenstance than design, some years there are more top foreign players than others and other years top foreign players pick other schools. If you look at the Kentucky roster as an example, you will see a similar pattern, some years they have 3 some years they have none. It is similar to saying why don’t we have more Kansan players? Some years the state produce a Perry Ellis or Tyrel Reed and some years it does not. The team currently has 2 Kansas born player (Self was born in Tulsa) Tucker Vang that has played a total of 11 minutes and Clay Young that has played 12 minutes and have scored a combined 0 points; basically players used for practice and not recruited to contribute at game time…although their practice contribution is indeed valuable. Since Reed, the only Kansas players that were recruited were Ellis and Frankamp who was a low priority recruit since he basically recruited himself to KU. Had Kansas produce more players like Ellis or Reed KU would certainly have more of them,

    KU typically recruits from the top 100 players and a few diamond in the rough outside that range, Lucas comes to mind, so the opportunities are more limited than those of lesser programs that basically recruit from the top 1,000. Not a lot of foreigners in that upper range although the number has been growing recently. Now, there are programs like Santa Clara and Saint Mary’s that have made it a point to recruit Australian players and have been very successful with them; KU is not and I don’t anticipate it will be in this mode any time soon. Just my take.



  • @JayHawkFanToo There have been kids from Kansas/KC recently that KU never recruited that went to major programs. Willie Cauley-Stein was from Overland Park and Tum Tum Nairn at Michigan St. played at Sunrise in Wichita. There was also Semi Ojeleye who committed to Duke before busting out who was from Ottawa 10 minutes south of KU. I almost forgot about Buddy Hield who played in Wichita as well.

    Thise are four guys in recent years from Kansas/KC who KU never went after despite all 4 being pursued by other major programs.



  • @Texas-Hawk-10

    Willie Cauley Stein made it clear that he did not wantt o go to KU very early on and thus was never recruited. I know several kids who went o school with hm and the consensus is that he was real jerk. Ojeleye was also know to have issues with teammates and that proved to be correct at Duke. More importantly, both players were part of the MoKan AAU team that has a very strained relationship with KU which also prevented players like Alec Burks and Willie Reed from considering KU.



  • @JayHawkFanToo Not the point and I’m well aware of MoKan’s history because I’ve probably posted about them more than anyone else here.



  • @JayHawkFanToo I mean that we haven’t recruited one.

    Henry isn’t a foreign player. We all know that.

    And so we went from 2004 to 2014 without recruiting a foreign player.

    If you want to debunk me, you should build that same list with foreign players we recruited and didn’t land from 2006-2013.

    You also Missed Buke, We have had 3 African bigs land at KU in a 4 year period. That doesn’t seem strange to you? We have only had one (Niang, who was recruited by Roy), that I can remember in my time, and then we land 3 in 4 years. That’s not just something that is random. Either we are recruiting foreign players harder or we have something that really lands with foreign recruits. Either way, this isn’t something that strikes me as ordinary. You don’t have to agree or see it that way, but I definitely am feeling that Self has made a conscious decision to start going after foreign players.



  • Globally Adidas is kicking Nike’s keister. Couple this with Embiid’s success and it’s a model for successful recruiting abroad. @jaybate-1.0 's shoeco war stuff.



  • @Kcmatt7

    The only KU foreign player that did not play HS in the States in recent years is SVi and he kind of fell on KU’s lap. All the others were ranked players that played here. My point is that I do not believe and does not appear to be any evidence that I have seen that Coach Self and his staff sit and say we are going to recruit or not recruit foreign players unlike other schools such as Santa Clara and Saint Mary’s that concentrate on players from down under and have scouts that recruit that part of the world. From what I understand from people that are a lot closer to the program than I am, the various coaches at KU decide on the upcoming needs and prioritize who they would like most but at one time or another visit the majority of the top 100 ranked players since they do not know which player they will get or miss…regardless of nationality and sometimes, while scouting a player they find another that was not on their radar. Players like Emmanuel Mudiay,and Thon Maker, both foreign just to name a couple of recent prospects off the top of my head were high targets, not because they were foreign but because they were highly ranked and neither ended up at KU or anywhere else. You can search for other highly ranked foreign players and you will see that many were KU targets and had KU in their list but did not end up at KU.

    Again, you are trying to find a reason why more foreign players have not played at KU and all I am saying is that there is really no specific reason that I can think of, and much like the other elite programs, sometimes we have 3 and sometimes we have none, If you believe there is a specific reason I would love to hear it but you have not provided one. You believe there is a pattern I believe there is none, let’s just leave it at that.



  • @Kcmatt7 Define foreign players? Guys like Svi and Enes Kanter who played Euroball and never played American HS or AAU ball or guys like Embiid and Azubuike who grew up in Africa, showed some ability at camp and were brought over to the US to play HS and AAU ball?

    The recruitments of Joel Embiid and Udoka Azubuike were no different than how Self and staff recruited Josh Jackson, Frank Mason, or Devonte Graham.

    Svi is the only true international recruit Self has brought in that did not play HS ball in the US, did not play AAU ball in the US. He played pro ball in Ukraine for a local club team and made his name in international tournaments.

    Everyone else Self has recruited to KU played HS and/or AAU ball in the US and went through the traditional recruitment process.



  • @Texas-Hawk-10

    I am not sure what the point is then…

    By the way, Willie Cauley-Stein is not from Overland Park, he is considered to be from Olathe and attended Olathe Northwest HS where he played .basketball and football; KU was never in his list, KSU was. Also, KU indeed recruited Buddy Hield heavily and along with OU they were his two final schools and he chose OU.



  • @JayHawkFanToo Olathe or OP, whatever, they’re 5 minutes apart.

    And no, KU did not heavily recruit Buddy Hield. Bill Self himself has said in the past Hield is the one guy he regrets not recruiting harder so I’ll take Self’s word about the recruitment of Hield over any other source.



  • @Texas-Hawk-10

    This is from The Wichita Eagle…

    ======

    You could say that Kansas coach Bill Self missed on Oklahoma senior Buddy Hield, the reigning Big 12 player of the year. You could say that the KU staff should have been more diligent with an in-state recruit. You could say that they should have seen this coming.

    Self’s response: How many college coaches did?

    Four years ago, Hield was a standout senior at Sunrise Christian Academy, a private prep powerhouse on the northeast side of Wichita. A native of the Bahamas, Hield, a 6-foot-4 shooting guard, had gone to Sunrise to pursue a college basketball scholarship, and after two seasons, he was a top-100 recruit with offers from schools all over the country.

    One of those schools was KU. The Jayhawks’ staff was interested in Hield, Self said. They believed he could be a program player, a nice addition who could help the Jayhawks in time. They did not, of course, think he would one day be an All-American candidate, averaging 24.7 points per game for the No. 3 Oklahoma Sooners.

    “I never thought he would average 25 (points per game),” Self said, “or we would have tried a lot harder to recruit him.”

    Self smiled. This wry concession came Saturday night, two days before No. 2 Kansas’ showdown with Oklahoma inside Allen Fieldhouse.

    =====

    And this from the KC Star…

    =====

    Kruger was new to Oklahoma when he recruited Hield, and quickly made the Sunrise product his primary target. He faced competition from Wichita State, which offered Hield a scholarship, and Kansas, with Bill Self attending many of his AAU games. Colorado and other schools were also in the picture.

    Hield considered Kansas, but said he chose Oklahoma because of his relationship with Kruger and the Sooners’ style of play.

    ====

    It is not that KU did not recruit Buddy Hield, KU did and offered a scholarship to him. Not too many coaches or scout expected him to be that good and Coach Self thought he would be a program player and not the superstar he turned out to be, but keep in mind that it took him 4 years to get there. Remember another players that everybody missed? Ron Baker who had to walk in at WSU because he did not get offers from any other major program and Coach Self said pretty much the same thing about him. Hindsight is always 20-20 as Coach Self is clearly inferring in his comment; KU tried as much as it should have with Hield and Baker (who was invited to try at KU but never did) given their respective standings at the time, wouldn’t you agree?



  • @JayHawkFanToo You claimed KU heavily recruited Hield. Bill Self’s own words contradict that statement and the two sources you just provided also contradict any notion KU seriously recruited Hield. KU recruited him to the level of someone they expected to be an 11th, 12th, or 13th scholarship guy. OU made Hield a much higher priority than KU did because can’t recruit to the level KU does. Hield was a guy 3 hours away from them they expected to be a significant contributor by the end of his career, not to the extent he became, but still a top guy for them.



  • @Texas-Hawk-10

    You are taking Coach Self’s words out of context.

    KU does not offer a scholarship or has Coach Self attend a prospect’s multiple HS and AAU games unless it is serious about it. Coach Self does not have the time to watch every prospects and he watches only those with a high priority as he did with Hield, the rest are scouted by the other KU coaches.

    When Coach Self said…I never thought he would average 25 (points per game) or we would have tried a lot harder to recruit him…he is stating exactly the obvious that if he had thought Hield would be a super star he would have recruited him harder. Obviously he did not think at the time that he would be a super star but a good system player and if you look at his numbers, in his first season when he started only 13 games and averaged less than 8 point per game, it is not not bad but exactly what you expect from a system player, as Coach Self projected, but not a super star like say…Wiggins or Jackson…or how Hield turned out later on.

    KU cannot pursue every player, it just does not have the resources, no program does, so it has to prioritize who, how long and how hard it pursues. Top 20-30 players get a lot more attention than lower ranked players. Players like DeAndre Ayton are pursued early and hard and in that case, he did not even pick KU or Kaleb Tarczewski who assured Coach Self he was coming top KU only to sign with Arizona. In addition to Ayton, in the upcoming class alone KU went hard after Duval, Sexton Trae Young and Billy Preston, all Top 20 and so far it has only signed Preston. Buddy Hield was ranked #86 by Rivals and in that class KU picked up #24 Perry Eliis and #51 Andrew White; ESPN had Ellis at #35 and White at #48 and Hield was unranked…that is correct, unranked. He was pretty much at the level of Lucas or Lightfoot and neither got the star recruiting treatment either and yet they signed with KU. For the record the coaches in charge of recruiting Hield were Self and Manning. Considering his ranking at that time, KU did give Hield quite bit of attentions all things considered, wouldn’t you agree?



  • @JayHawkFanToo KU was recruiting Perry Ellis at the same time so coaches were already going to Wichita to watch Ellis play. That’s why they were spending so much time in Wichita. Hield and Ellis were also AAU teammates so KU coaches saw plenty of Hield while recruiting Ellis. Bill Self made Hield a low priority target even with plenty of access to him.

    You claimed KU heavily recruited Hield, but haven’t provided any evidence to support that claim, just a bunch of stuff that Self didn’t know what Hield would become. Yes, KU did offer Hield, but they didn’t spend much time recruiting him considering how much time the coaching staff spent in Wichita watching Ellis play HS and AAU ball. KU easily could’ve checked out Hield as much as they checked out Ellis, but chose not to do which means they did not heavily recruit Hield like youre claiming KU did.



  • @Texas-Hawk-10

    Again, you are expecting KU to put a full court press on a player that was eventually ranked #85 by Rivals and unranked by ESPN? Coach Self attended several games at his HS which is not the same that Ellis played; just because they went to Wichita to see Ellis play does not mean they could see Hield at the same time…unless they played against each other which I don’t believe they did. Obviously he saw him play and thought that he was a system player and not a future star, no one predicted that…Coach Self admitted that much… and his initial year showed that he was indeed a 4 year player and he exploded only on his junior and senior years.

    Once more, Perry was a 3 time POY in Kansas and a McDonald All American ranked in the top 30 and Hield became eventually a borderline top 100 player…do you really think KU should have spent the same effort on two players that far apart? Considering Hield’s ranking, KU did spend a lot of time on who at the time was a marginal player. If Lightfoot becomes the second coming of Hield in his junior or senior year, Coach Self will look like a genius but it still would not justify KU spending any more time recruiting him than it did. You have not provide one single reason, other than hindsight, why KU should have spent any more effort than it did.

    It does not appear like either one will change the other’s opinion. so maybe it is time to just drop it? You can have the last word. Good discussion any way.



  • @Texas-Hawk-10 @JayHawkFanToo

    I feel like I am stuck in a 15 hour ping-pong rally between two Chinese champions. Both are trying to make killer points, each defends, the aggressor role switches to the other one. Both using so much energy that the audience is even exhausted.

    Can I interject a little something? You both agree that Self recruited Hield–actively, perhaps, but not as aggressively as he would have if he had seen something in his game foreshadowing his 4th year superstar leap. This certainly has to contradict the original point of contention, that HCBS did not recruit foreign players for about a decade.

    Unsuccessfully, but recruited enough to go to his games and offer him. Counts as being recruited if Coleby does.

    Anyway, thanks for all that exchanged info. The details you both added were interesting. But you aren’t really arguing over substance as much as you are subtle language distinctions!



  • @JayHawkFanToo said:

    Also, KU indeed recruited Buddy Hield heavily and along with OU they were his two final schools and he chose OU.

    Your quote. I don’t see you adding any qualifiers about Hield being recruited heavily for a borderline top 100 player. All I’ve said about Hield is that he played HS ball in Wichita, KU’s coaches saw him quite a bit because he played AAU ball with Perry, he was not heavily recruited by KU, and his offer was a token offer.

    You’ve somehow managed to spin that into me saying that KU spent a lot of time recruiting Hield, then spun that into spent a lot of time recruiting Hield relative to him being a fringe top 100 recruit.



  • @mayjay

    Nicely stated.



  • @Texas-Hawk-10

    No, this is what you said…

    ====

    There have been kids from Kansas/KC recently that KU never recruited that went to major programs. Willie Cauley-Stein was from Overland Park and Tum Tum Nairn at Michigan St. played at Sunrise in Wichita. There was also Semi Ojeleye who committed to Duke before busting out who was from Ottawa 10 minutes south of KU. I almost forgot about Buddy Hield who played in Wichita as well.

    Thise are four guys in recent years from Kansas/KC who KU never went after despite all 4 being pursued by other major programs.

    ====

    Do you want to try again? I explained about Cauley-Stein and Ojeleye and frankly, I just don’t remember Nairn, heck. I even added Alec Burks, Willie Reed and Ron Baker, again explaining why they were not recruited. This is not at all the case with Hield, whom based on his ranking at the time, KU recruited a lot harder that it did other comparable players it pursued.



  • No one knew what Hield would become or Kentucky, Duke, KU, and every other team under the sun would’ve been pursuing him hard. The ranking systems had him projected as a starter for a lesser D-1 team in year 2-3 and indicated he may have been a rotation player at a blue blood by his jr. year. Not worthy of spending too much time recruiting with bigger, more likely to produce, fish to fry.

    At this point on this thread its just an argument of semantics.





  • @dylans

    I agree with you 100%.


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