I haven't watched a ton of tape on him yet, but this kid reminds me of a left handed Bazz! He has that swagger and plays with a chip on his shoulder just like Napier.
This was the 'dam breaker'?? The surfboards have been put away for the season.
Diarra doesn't have basketball in his future, he'll be on a scholarship other than bball. The question is do we use the scholarship on a big for this year, use it on a very good player like Ntambwe who can't play until the following season like RJ, or take the best available talent who can play right away regardless of position.The flip side of all this, of course, is that we will have 11 scholarship players next year (as things stand now). If that number includes Diarra, we're dangerously close to starting the season with 10. Which puts is in all sorts of trouble the moment anyone suffers even a minor injury or catches a cold.
Diarra doesn't have basketball in his future, he'll be on a scholarship other than bball. The question is do we use the scholarship on a big for this year, use it on a very good player like Ntambwe who can't play until the following season like RJ, or take the best available talent who can play right away regardless of position.
Yes, I'm just giving you our options. Diarra won't be playing, we'll either go into next season with 11 players who can play games next season or 10 players who can play games next season depending on what the staff does.Same point, isn't it? If you're taking a transfer who can't play, and Diarra is retiring, then you're still down to 10 scholarship players nexxt year. If you don't care if you're good or decent, fine I guess, but it's a very risky formula to go into a season with that few players because your roster only shrinks from there.
Same era, not memorable?Chuck. Bruce was Kuczenski.
And not all stiffs, but just one opinion yet UConn really has not had a huge difference maker of a transferIf by "overrated" you mean "big stiff", I agree.
Aleksinas' first name was Chuck.
Alive and well, still living in Morris.You speak of him in the past tense. Is he dead?
His nickname...the Morris Mountain.
Ever since I found out that he only lists playing for Kentucky and not UConn, he's been dead to me.You speak of him in the past tense. Is he dead?
His nickname...the Morris Mountain.
Ever since I found out that he only lists playing for Kentucky and not UConn, he's been dead to me.![]()
Seriously I went to school with Chuck and he was great guy. I'm not sure what his deal is with UConn.
Couldn't have been Dom Perno; he was supposed to be a nice guy. However, Chuck joined UConn towards Perno's end ...He won a natty at Kentucky under Joe B. Hall. If he was disenchanted enough to leave Kentucky after his freshman year, it seems weird that he now only acknowledges having played there. Somebody in Storrs must have pissed in his Cheerios.
Couldn't have been Dom Perno; he was supposed to be a nice guy. However, Chuck joined UConn towards Perno's end ...
No, he didn't. Chuck joined in Perno's prime, his 4th year of a 9 year stint. In fact, landing Chuck was the height of Perno's UConn tenure. It was all downhill from there. Much of it due to Chuck.Couldn't have been Dom Perno; he was supposed to be a nice guy. However, Chuck joined UConn towards Perno's end ...
Clearly, my memories of Chuck are immemorable. On the other hand, it's challenging to identify a transfer to UConn who had a massive positive influence for the Huskies. Chuck was massive.No, he didn't. Chuck joined in Perno's prime, his 4th year of a 9 year stint. In fact, landing Chuck was the height of Perno's UConn tenure. It was all downhill from there.
My first memory of him was walking behind him getting dinner at Putnam. I'm a relatively tall guy but I was looking at his shoulder blades. Like I said though, he was a great guy,.Clearly, my memories of Chuck are immemorable. On the other hand, it's challenging to identify a transfer to UConn who had a massive positive influence for the Huskies. Chuck was massive.
I remember being on the court with him as a skinny teenager, he is a monster.Clearly, my memories of Chuck are immemorable. On the other hand, it's challenging to identify a transfer to UConn who had a massive positive influence for the Huskies. Chuck was massive.
No, he didn't. Chuck joined in Perno's prime, his 4th year of a 9 year stint. In fact, landing Chuck was the height of Perno's UConn tenure. It was all downhill from there. Much of it due to Chuck.
I think Chuck's turn is just a matter of his trying to cash in on UK's current hoop cache.
Mike McKay, state kid from Harding High, was also on the team. Pure scorer in HS who ended up having a decent collegiate career.UConn had a nice team during the Alexinas, Thompson ,McKay years.When you think about Perno landing Corny Thompson as well, people around the country must have been shocked.
While those teams underperformed, people tend to forget that UConn finished in the upper half of the league for several years when the Big East started, and it didn't go to the bottom until the mid to late 1980s.
Mike McKay, state kid from Harding High, was also on the team. Pure scorer in HS who ended up having a decent collegiate career.UConn had a nice team during the Alexinas, Thompson ,McKay years.