Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Using Courage to Fight Adversity

By Ray Glier

On a Sunday afternoon recently, it was interesting to see the two reactions to failure by kids on the baseball field.

There were the kids who grounded out and ran back to the dugout.

Then there were the kids who grounded out and had to be told to run back to the dugout.
They were weeping, or angry, or just sullen.

It was the twin face of courage/resilience and despair/hopelessness. Kids need to be reminded that failure comes with the territory in baseball and basketball.

We played on a Decatur Rec team this winter that won 11 straight games and then lost to a Henry County All-Star team. It was too much for one player. He stormed off the floor after the game and would not shake hands with the other team.

It’s not just sportsmanship. It’s more than that. It’s having Courage to face adversity.

We’re going to see examples of how to handle defeat in these NBA playoffs. There are going to be games when one side collapses down the stretch and has to pick itself up…or doesn’t.

These are the guys who have trained themselves to fight back and show some courage. Keep playing. That should be the motto. If you get down 20, keep playing. Respect the game and respect yourself by not laughing about the deficit or playing lazily.

A scout told me about a college baseball game recently where a pitcher who has a lot of ability was hit hard and gave up a bucket of runs. He left the game in dismay and was greeted by a swarm of teammates near the third base line and was told, “Get ‘em next time. It’s ok.”

That’s no way to teach courage.

The pitcher should get a quick pat on the back from the coach for his effort, but he also has to be reminded that he will get another chance and to keep his head up so he sees that next chance when it arrives. Learning courage is not about being coddled. It’s about being guided in the right direction.

Monday, March 14, 2011

The Nigerian Sensation

By Ray Glier
 
I saw a fascinating player in the Georgia Dome during the SEC Tournament. A Nigerian. He is 6-foot-11 and his name in Festus Ezeli. Remember him. Cheer for him.

Ezeli plays for Vanderbilt and his ego will fit in the toe area of his shoe. You know how some tall kids are too good to play in the post? Not this guy. He doesn’t want to bring the ball up; he doesn’t want to shoot 3s.

He gets in the low block and he stays there. He moves side to side, he hunts for position. Ezeli is a center. He knows he’s a center.

I mentioned his name to an NBA scout and before I could say another word the scout said, “Love him.” I turned around on press row to see the scout’s expressions behind me after he would make a play and they smiled and nodded.

That was it. Why? Ezeli has not been spoiled by summer basketball or ESPN highlights. He grew up playing soccer___”I was mediocre,” he says____and he didn’t get brainwashed into thinking he was something he was not.

When the Commodores lost to Florida in the SEC semifinals, Ezeli made 7 of 9 shots and nine points and no turnovers in 25 minutes. Usually when a big man is getting nine shots, his team is looking for him and he will fumble the ball.

Not this guy. He has big, sure mitts.

The thing is Vandy’s outside shooters were tired playing their third game in three nights. They should have thrown him the ball more inside. Instead, they shot 3s, instead of throwing it to their tree, and they lost.

Ezeli did not pout about not getting the ball more. That’s just another thing to like about him.

He is a junior; he’ll probably stay another year at Vandy. When he does come out, Ezeli will be a first-round pick and you will cheer all day for him.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Cleaning up the game

By Ray Glier

Three years ago, the NCAA coordinator of officials, John Adams, had seen enough of the defender putting two hands on the dribbler to slow him down. Adams was tired of the tactic of the defender on the high ball screen throwing a hip into the dribbler coming across the top of the lane.

He started something: automatic fouls.

If you use two hands, if you throw a hip, it’s a foul. Don’t even complain. College basketball officials have a mandate on some plays on the floor. Blow the whistle if you see it. No questions asked.

You know what, slowly but surely, the game is being cleaned up. The Freedom of Movement Rules are taking away the rough stuff that had crept into college basketball 8-10 years ago.

Now, you don’t see the two hands on the dribbler to keep him at bay. You don’t see the hip into the dribbler. Coaches have adjusted. They have taught their players not to do those things because it is an automatic foul.

There is also a mandate to keep things civil in the post where most bad behavior tends to break out.

When I talked to him last week, Adams said he wasn’t through. The next thing to go is the subtle little arm bar in the back of the defender. Try it on a dribbler. It doesn’t have to be too rough, but on a young dribbler an arm bar will make them stand up a little. Instead of being in an attacking mode, the dribbler has slowed down.

It won’t be a legal play soon.

What’s interesting is that the Freedom Of Movement rules have not led to more scoring in college basketball.

Two things could be happening. Kids are paying attention to defense. They are ball hawks and moving their feet and making plays with their hands in the passing lane.

It could be, the cynic in me says, that kids can’t shoot the short jump shot anymore. They drive for the dunk or shoot the 3.

It’s probably some of both. What’s clear is that the game is more fun to watch without the grabbing, clutching, and pushing. Defense is meant to be played with your feet.

Officials understand this now. They want to officiate the Final Four. They know John Adams is watching and he decides who officiates the Final Four.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Unrealistic Expectations

By Ray Glier

It is difficult to understand what has transpired at North Carolina this season, until we realize the expectations heaped on young players are sometimes simply unrealistic.

Larry Drew did not have the offensive skill for the ACC, after all.

Harrison Barnes clearly does not have the explosiveness to be an All-American as a mere teenager.

It’s not their fault. It’s ours. They were going to North Carolina, a holy place in basketball, so we assumed great things. The Tar Heels are 16-5, which is a nice record, but this is far, far from among the best Carolina teams.

I watched Drew in a dreadful game the Tar Heels played against Georgia Tech and all he could contribute was above average man-to-man defense. That’s fine, except he is a point guard and need to keep the floor spaced and get the ball to the right shooter.

Drew could not do that. He tried. There was no chemistry on offense and he was not relevant to any set the Tar Heels ran.

Recently, Drew was getting assists, but the scoring wasn’t there and his minutes shrunk. He lost his starting job. Three weeks ago, a sportswriter colleague predicted that as soon as Roy Williams, the Carolina coach, pulled Drew from the starting lineup, Drew would be done for the season.

He was right. Drew is transferring. He didn’t let anybody down; he’s just moving on.

Then consider the case of Barnes, the freshman forward from Iowa. He was the subject of an intense recruiting battle before choosing Carolina over Duke.

Barnes was picked as AP All-American at the start of the season. That was a mistake. He is not among the top 20 players in the country, even with a recent scoring outburst (51 points in two games).

That’s not his fault. It’s ours.

Barnes over-matched high school players, but in the ACC there were athletes that could stay in front of him and get on the rim with him. He was shooting 40 percent from the field. He looks less explosive than advertised.

We were expecting robots in Carolina blue and we got kids with flaws. Drew and Barnes not playing up to our expectations is not their fault.

It’s ours.

Friday, January 14, 2011

"Always Be Ready"

By Ray Glier

I was just watching a 6-foot-10 center stand in the middle ofa zone defense. I don’t mean actively stand, such as bending his knees and being in some sort of ready position, or looking for an opponent to box out, and maybe getting his hands in the air.

I was looking at Mississippi State’s 6-10 Renardo Sidney stand with his hands to his side and shuffle his feet without energy.

It was all wrong. A shot would go up and Sidney would leap at the rebound thinking it was all skill and length to rebound. It wasn’t. A smaller man, with better position, got some rebounds before Sidney.

It was the same on the offensive end. Sidney’s hands were down at his side. He was not ready for a pass and several times passes he wasn’t ready for passes.

He has gifts. He hit a fall away jump shot from the foul line. He slammed home a few balls when he had a chance.

Sidney had 24 points. He was 9 of 12 from the field shooting the ball. Mississippi State beat its rival Mississippi.

Sidney will play in the NBA.

But it was disappointing to see some of those things.

Sidney missed a year of basketball for eligibility issues. He got in a fight with a teammate and was suspended. The teammate was the one who left school, not Sidney, who was reinstated.

The big guy is somewhat out of shape; at least that’s the way it looks.

Still, there is significant talent and, after all he has been through, Sidney will likely be in the NBA next season, especially if he strings together more games like Thursday night.

There has to be more from him. Ole Miss does not have a true center and he will not get away with a lot of these things. He has long arms and a big body and is hard to handle on the offensive end for a smaller team, but there better be more effort.

You can bet the NBA guys are thinking the same thing. It is difficult for 270-pound guys to be bouncing up and down like guards, but at least reach toward an opponent in the paint and turn and pin them behind you so you rebound better.

He should get his hands ready for the pass, not draped to his side. The ball can come quick and through a maze of hands.

Be ready, that’s all.