ChiefsPlanet

ChiefsPlanet (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/index.php)
-   Nzoner's Game Room (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/forumdisplay.php?f=1)
-   -   KU **** OFFICIAL NEW 2011-2012 Kansas Basketball Repository Thread **** (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=257765)

Fritz88 03-28-2012 08:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lzen (Post 8498378)
Yeah, that game sucked. We missed soooo many FTs is was disgusting. I just posted that because it was the same site (New Orleans) as this year's Final Four.

How many'd we missed? 13? ****.
Posted via Mobile Device

Lzen 03-28-2012 08:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fritz88 (Post 8498409)
How many'd we missed? 13? ****.
Posted via Mobile Device

If memory serves, it was something like 18 out of 30.

Lzen 03-28-2012 08:36 AM

Time to shine: Withey’s long wait, hard work paying off
 
Wednesday, March 28, 2012


By Tom Keegan




The college basketball dream Jeff Withey lives — preparing to go to the Final Four after swatting so many key shots that helped his team reach New Orleans — started more like a nightmare packed with cruel teases.
His signed out of Horizon High in San Diego to play for Lute Olson at Arizona, and when the Hall of Fame coach retired, Withey wanted out. The school initially told him he would not be granted a release from his scholarship. His father, Mike, was five minutes from hiring an attorney to try to make it happen when his son finally was set free in December 2008.


Because he had enrolled at Arizona, Withey was not eligible to join the Kansas basketball team on the court until second semester of his redshirt-freshman year, on Dec. 29, 2009 against Belmont. Already playing behind Cole Aldrich, Marcus and Markieff Morris and Thomas Robinson in the frontcourt, Withey’s workout time lost that fall because of a right-knee stress fracture didn’t help. He appeared in 15 games and played 45 minutes in the 2009-2010 season, showing promise by totaling 19 points, 21 rebounds and six blocked shots. Other than in an eight-point, five-rebound effort in 12 minutes of a victory in Ames, Iowa, he never played double-digit minutes.


The departure of Aldrich to the NBA that summer gave Withey a shot at significantly more playing time as a sophomore, but bad luck again hunted down the 7-footer. He broke the metatarsal in his right foot during individual workouts in late September 2010, had surgery and spent several weeks on crutches while his teammates became better.


He needed to gain weight but lost 15 pounds.


“I was stuck in bed,” Withey said. “I couldn’t really move. It was hard to get to the kitchen. It was hard to get anywhere. My armpits were sore just from crutching everywhere. Coming into that year, I thought I was going to be a big contributor, and then I had the foot problem, and it set me back so far I felt like I just kind of lost my chance to contribute and play. It was really depressing.”


Withey reached double-digit minutes in six games and never scored in double figures. He didn’t play in two of the four 2011 NCAA Tournament games and played two minutes apiece in the other games, both blowouts.
Now look at him. Midway through Withey’s junior season, in February, the U.S. Basketball Writers Association named him the Oscar Robertson national player of the week after he scored a career-high 25 points against Baylor and had a career-best 20 rebounds against Oklahoma State. In his next game, he had 18 points, 11 rebounds and nine blocked shots against Kansas State.


Withey earned Big 12 defensive player of the year honors. Not many 7-footers shoot technical free throws for their teams, but Withey does, thanks to a .794 percentage from the line.


In playing Kansas into the Final Four, Withey blocked 10 shots in a three-point victory against North Carolina State and had 15 points, eight rebounds and three blocks in a 13-point victory against North Carolina’s ballyhooed front line. His defensive dominance played a big part in UNC making one of its final 14 shots and none of its last seven. His two blocked shots in the final minutes triggered fast breaks. He earned first-team All-Midwest Region honors, along with Thomas Robinson and Tyshawn Taylor.


Withey credits his volleyball experience — starting on the beach in his middle school years and progressing to indoor volleyball on a club team (which cost his parents $500 a month) — for developing the timing to block shots. He not only blocks shots, he sometimes uses the blocks to start fast breaks by tapping the ball forward. He even has been known to block a shot, catch it and toss it ahead to get KU’s speedy guards on their way.
All the setbacks along the way to becoming such a force in college basketball were not time wasted, according to Withey.
“It definitely made me a lot tougher,” he said. “When I come out and play, I don’t take it for granted at all.”


He credited his coach with playing a role in his increased toughness as well.


The most publicized instance of Bill Self’s fury aimed Withey’s way came in a practice after the center went scoreless in the loss to Missouri in Columbia on Feb. 4. Self made Withey run every step of Allen Fieldhouse, just before the center went on a tear that earned him national honors.
“It definitely makes you pretty upset,” Withey said. “After that, I had something to prove to him.”


Self still finds ways to prod his center into a foul mood.
“He definitely challenges me all the time, in practice, before the game,” Withey said. “He knows how to get me hyped up before a game. Sometimes, I definitely need that. That challenge gets me going. Sometimes it’s hard to jump-start my motor. I’m laid-back, so it’s hard for me to get, I guess, super angry and ready for games. It’s kind of easy now that we’re in the tournament.”


Self starts the motor. Withey’s dunks and blocked shots spark it to a higher speed.


“Those are really emotional plays and those get me fired up and get the fans fired up,” Withey said. “Whenever the fans get fired up, that helps me too. I feed off the energy of the crowd.”


And the team feeds off his defensive dominance.

FishingRod 03-28-2012 09:21 AM

We were 12 for effing 30 . It sucked

Lzen 03-28-2012 09:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by FishingRod (Post 8498574)
We were 12 for effing 30 . It sucked

Which is what.....40% FT shooting in that game. That is pathetic.

Bearcat 03-28-2012 09:43 AM

I started the game thread that day. I'm sorry!!! :deevee:

Thig Lyfe 03-28-2012 09:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bearcat (Post 8498661)
I started the game thread that day. I'm sorry!!! :deevee:

Bears are better at driving cars than you are at starting game threads.

Chiefs Pantalones 03-28-2012 09:59 AM

I was having a great morning until an MU fan told me KU sucks while I was getting gas. Ruined my day. I couldn't think of a comeback that could possibly match or beat that. One day KU will be good and I'll be able to hold my head up high.

Ceej 03-28-2012 09:59 AM

Don't forget... McDonald's American game is on tonight. First glimpse at Perry Ellis.

Any idea what time?! 7PM CST?

Dr. Johnny Fever 03-28-2012 10:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Vanilla Thunder (Post 8498710)
I was having a great morning until an MU fan told me KU sucks while I was getting gas. Ruined my day. I couldn't think of a comeback that could possibly match or beat that. One day KU will be good and I'll be able to hold my head up high.

LOL.... I'm wearing my '08 championship tshirt today and a guy here at work... MU fan (good guy anyway heh) walked past me in the hall and made a face at it and said "you guys can't beat Kentucky." I just said "Norfolk State" and kept walking. I heard some type of low, grumbly sound coming from his general vacinity but I couldn't make it out. Maybe he was hungry.

Bearcat 03-28-2012 10:23 AM

Crazy people, heh...

Quote:

8-year-old hopes Jayhawk jersey is as lucky as it is skunky
Second-grader hasn’t taken off ‘lucky jersey’ since KU’s first March Madness game

By Suzanne Perez Tobias
The Wichita Eagle

Published Tuesday, March 27, 2012, at 6:54 p.m.
Updated Wednesday, March 28, 2012, at 10:26 a.m.


Eight-year-old Palmer Kiefer put on his University of Kansas jersey nearly two weeks ago, the night before KU’s first game in the NCAA men’s basketball tournament.

Kansas beat Detroit the next day – thanks in part, Palmer thinks, to the lucky blue jersey.

So he kept wearing it. Day and night.

The Jayhawks won the next game, too, a come-from-behind nail-biter against Purdue. Score one more for the lucky jersey.

Palmer – his family calls him “Poppy” – wore the jersey all through spring break. He wore it to Tanganyika Wildlife Park and the Sedgwick County Zoo.

He bathed but kept the jersey out of the hamper, away from the washing machine. He didn’t want to wash away the luck.

Palmer spilled some ketchup on the jersey during dinner at Freddy’s. There’s another stain he thinks might be sloppy joe, and a smudge of vanilla ice cream. The jersey started to smell bad. He didn’t mind.

He wore it last weekend when Kansas beat North Carolina State, though his mother made him change the T-shirt underneath.

He was still wearing the jersey – No. 15, like Elijah Johnson and Mario Chalmers – when KU beat North Carolina to get to this weekend’s Final Four.

Rock Chalk, lucky jersey!

Palmer’s mom, Susan, a KU graduate, started to worry. Palmer had to go back to school at Hyde Elementary on Monday, and she knew he’d want to wear that disgusting shirt. She posted a warning on Facebook:

Dear Hyde students and staff:

I apologize in advance for Palmer wearing his KU jersey every day until they play again. … I have been instructed not to wash it or it will mess with KU’s winning streak.

Yes! It is getting a bit dirty since he has worn it daily since the 16th. But I have been informed “rules are rules” and this is a BIG RULE and I can NOT be responsible for single-handedly ruining KU’s winning streak by washing THE jersey.

Friends and fellow Jayhawks fans supported Palmer.

“Don’t you DARE wash that jersey!” one posted.

“Just think of it as less laundry,” wrote another.

Somebody suggested spraying it with Febreze.

“No Febreze!” another friend wrote. “That could mess with the juju!”

Susan Kiefer shakes her head and laughs.

If the Jayhawks keep winning, “I’m stuck in a parenting nightmare,” she said.

“Do I let my son walk around town and go to school every day looking like a child whose mother doesn’t know how to operate a washing machine?

“Or do I just shut my mouth and hope to chant that awesome chant two more times and stand the jersey up on its own in a corner when it’s all said and done?”

So far, feedback seems to favor superstition. Palmer wore the jersey to school again Tuesday.

He brought his second-grade class picture home, and his mom laughed when she saw it: There was Palmer in the front row, wearing red shorts and the KU jersey. She remembers him asking to wear it for picture day months ago, and she agreed because “It’s just so … him.”

At least it was clean back then.

He plans to wear the jersey at least until Saturday night, when he hopes the Jayhawks will beat Ohio State. If that happens, he’ll wear it all weekend and through Monday’s national title game.

“I can’t be the only mom going through this,” Susan Kiefer said. “Or maybe I’m just that lucky.”

Read more here: http://www.kansas.com/2012/03/26/227...#storylink=cpy

Pants 03-28-2012 10:37 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bearcat (Post 8498769)
Crazy people, heh...

****in love it!

Ceej 03-28-2012 10:53 AM

The McDonald's game is at 6pm.

Thanks, ****ers.

Dr. Johnny Fever 03-28-2012 10:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bearcat (Post 8498661)
I started the game thread that day. I'm sorry!!! :deevee:

Dammit Bearcar

Dr. Johnny Fever 03-28-2012 11:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bearcat (Post 8498769)
Crazy people, heh...

That... is.... awesome. Don't you DARE take that thing off young man!


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 07:41 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.