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Kidding, right? Exactly what UConn needs right now.I might get blasted for this, but I still hope/expect either Novel Poole or Michael Chandler to committ here. Academic and character issues, but we're desperate.
Kidding, right? Exactly what UConn needs right now.
lol @ Michael Chandler, you can't be serious. Is that kid even eligible to play college ball with all that went on with him landing at UCF?
Mick Cronin is a fine coach.
But he coaches in Cincinnati.
http://www.cincinnatiusa.com/attractionsandevents/
I just went to that site and within 90 seconds, I was trying to climb into the oven. Thank God my wife was here to remind me that we're not actually in Cincinnati. I'm sure Cronin's pitch to recruits is "Hey, we play almost half of our games on the road! You know, not in Cincinnati!"
And I'd say we should pass on the academic risks at this particular time. I'm sure we have a little wiggle room with the APR, but then again, taping a grenade to the side of your head is perfectly safe until the pin somehow falls out.
I think we should endeavor not to blow up our heads or the APR for now. No taping grenades to our head and no Mikey Chandler.
Best thing in Cincinnati is their chili and that Kentucky is just over the Ohio River. It is the armpit of America
UConn can afford to take a risk on a player at this point in time. They've got a tight lockerrom, and their APR scores are well above the cutoff.
These kids are both big, athletic, shotblocking type big men, which is exaclty the type of player UConn needs at this moment. We'd be two deep at every position. It's a risk, but one worth taking IMO.
I might get blasted for this, but I still hope/expect either Novel Poole or Michael Chandler to committ here. Academic and character issues, but we're desperate.
If the past year or three haven't sunk in that success for UConn is more than just winning, I don't know what will convince some folks. This is exactly the worst possible time to take chances with kids with known issues of either grades, character or both. Good luck to those kids, I sincerely hope they get to a good personal place. Give me kids with the character of Kemba, Omeka, Neils, you name 'em, and if they don't have the goods to be anything but decent college players, that's how it goes. We all like to win, but even if how the NCAA handles things is a load of dung, the only thing that makes me proud right now is that we seem to be working out of the hole the right way.
I might be in the minority, but personally, I've never had a problem with Calhoun taking chances on questionable characters, so long as it's kept to one kid. Sometimes a kid with a rocky upbring just needs a place where he can work hard, get some help, and be granted the opportunity to become a man. Sometimes it works out, sometimes it doesn't. But I don't have a problem with Calhoun giving kids a chance.
Interesting, isn't it, that the kids who are "given a chance" are usually relatively well regarded for hoops talent and not much else? In general, JCs attempts at reclamation projects have failed. For example, Miles, Kellogg, and Wiggins all had high school issues and things pretty much didn't go the way one would have hoped when they arrived at UConn.
Interesting, isn't it, that the kids who are "given a chance" are usually relatively well regarded for hoops talent and not much else? In general, JCs attempts at reclamation projects have failed. For example, Miles, Kellogg, and Wiggins all had high school issues and things pretty much didn't go the way one would have hoped when they arrived at UConn .The biggest success people talk about is Caron, who was pretty much on the road to recovery before he hit Storrs. But, all that aside, this really is not the time for the program to be playing around the fringes even if it means a longer recovery on the floor.
I totally favor giving people a chance. My wife and I have taken in kids from troubled homes and taken in kids who are troubled themselves. We have one living with us now and he is straightened out enough to have earned a scholarship to a respected university. It's pretty rewarding when things go well. But that isn't the purpose of an athletic scholarship. Kids with issues almost always need a hell of a lot more help than a basketball coach or an academic advisor can give them. Even more than that, they have to actively buy into wanting the help.
I seem to recall some sort of off the court situation, but I don't remember if it was during his senior year or a prior one. I talked to his coach a few times back in the day, he said that Dougie was a real nice kid but immature. I interviewed him before he went to UConn and he was a very polite and respectful kid. He just seemed to one of those kids that simply had the habit of making bad decisions.What issues did Wiggins have in high school? I knew the AD at East Hartford High School and she said he was a good kid. I don't remember him having any problems.