Mizzou Men’s Basketball – ZOUNation Magazine https://zounation.com The Stories, The Moments, The Legends Thu, 18 Oct 2018 02:36:44 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.7.28 https://zounation.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/cropped-favicon-32x32.png Mizzou Men’s Basketball – ZOUNation Magazine https://zounation.com 32 32 For the Missouri basketball program, it’s only the beginning https://zounation.com/only-the-beginning/ https://zounation.com/only-the-beginning/#respond Fri, 10 Nov 2017 01:07:15 +0000 http://zounation.com/?p=1823 From all indications, the career college stat line will read 2-2-2: two minutes, two points, two rebounds. And yet the legacy of Michael Porter Jr. in Missouri basketball lore is secure. How so, you ask? How can a kid who played all of 127 seconds have that kind of an impact? Let us count the […]

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For the Missouri basketball program, it's only the beginning

From all indications, the career college stat line will read 2-2-2: two minutes, two points, two rebounds. And yet the legacy of Michael Porter Jr. in Missouri basketball lore is secure.

How so, you ask? How can a kid who played all of 127 seconds have that kind of an impact? Let us count the ways. Look down the Mizzou bench: brother Jontay, Jeremiah Tilmon, Blake Harris, Kassius Robertson. How many of those talents would be in Columbia if not for Porter? Look back to the season opener against Iowa State, when Mizzou Arena was packed to the gills for the first time in years. Look at the uptick in recruiting, and listen to the buzz around the country about the program. Questions about Porter’s future are followed by speculation about how good this team can be without him.

Let’s get this out of the way up front: Michael Porter Jr. isn’t coming back for another year of college basketball. Sure, he’d love to play a full season for his father and with his brother, and yes, he’d like nothing more than to take Mizzou basketball to places it’s never been. This, however, is a business decision. No doubt, Porter had the surgery when he did so he can show NBA teams he’s healthy and still a worthy top-five investment in the draft. Talk all you want about his love for Mizzou and Columbia. Backs can be tricky — just ask Tiger Woods. What happens if Porter does return, and the back goes out again? You can bleed black and gold to the bone, but if this were your son, you’d make the same decision.

I trust that Porter will be back on the bench at some point, flashing that contagious grin and being as vocal and supportive as ever. From a competitive standpoint, however, it’s time for both sides to move on. In games against Utah and Emporia State, the Tigers played like a team that was bracing for the inevitable. Sloppy turnovers. Poor shot selection. Waning energy. But at the Advocare Invitational in Orlando, Mizzou showed what’s possible. Despite what some media outlets have written, this team never was going to be known as Michael Porter Jr. and his Band of Basketball Joes. Take Porter out of the equation, and this year’s class still would have ranked 11th by at least one recruiting service. Jontay, Tilmon, Harris and Robertson would be welcome at most every Division I program in the country. They were drawn to Columbia by a megastar who also happened to be a pretty good recruiter.

There will be rough stretches, no doubt. The one thing Mizzou loses without Porter is not having a player who can take over a game, who can create a shot and score points by the boatload when the offense goes in a funk. Witness what happened against Utah and for a stretch of the second half against St. John’s and West Virginia. The good news is that the rest of the non-conference schedule isn’t particularly daunting. There is time over the next month to develop chemistry, to solidify the rotation, to settle on a point guard.

When things get tough — and fasten your seat belts when watching a team playing so many youngsters — I suggest that players and fans look across the street from Mizzou Arena in the direction of Faurot Field. In mid-October, on the same weekend the basketball team was kicking off formal practices with a rollicking public exhibition, the football Tigers were licking their wounds after a 53-28 loss at Georgia. It was their fifth consecutive defeat. Barry Odom was on the hot seat. Recruits were decommitting. The program was heading into the abyss.

Look at that team now.

The fans had pretty much given up as well, a mindset not unlike the one adopted by too many in the wake of the Porter news. (One poster on PowerMizzou went so far as to ask if there was any interest in filing a class-action suit against the athletic department, claiming it misled the public by hawking season tickets while knowing Porter was injured and would never play for the Tigers. You can’t make this stuff up!) I get it. All of college basketball has been cheated of an opportunity to watch one of the young stars in the game, and this was an especially cruel gut punch for a fan base that has been tortured too many times before. Yes, the notion that a program that has never been to the Final Four could be the seventh betting favorite to win the national championship was whimsical — the things people do with their money! — but no one in the basketball program was turning out the lights at Mizzou Arena when the Porter news came down. Least of all Cuonzo Martin.

In the early 1990s, Martin walked around the Purdue campus on knees so bad that doctors wondered whether he’d ever play college basketball. Then he beat cancer. More than once he has made it clear that he never saw this job as a one-year mission. He’s here for the long haul, to rebuild a proud program into a title contender. I expect these Tigers will take on the same mentality as their coach. I expect we’ll see the same kind of fight they exhibited in a victory over St. John’s, when they went from 16 points up to eight down to winning by eight. (A victory like that against a potential tournament team can go a long way.) And I expect we’ll see plenty of entertaining basketball from a long, athletic and deep squad. For all of these reasons, I’d like to think this talented team will continue to play in front of packed houses at Mizzou Arena. At some point, Michael Porter Jr. will be there, leading the cheers.

Where will you be?

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March Madness comes early for Tigers against longtime rival https://zounation.com/march-madness-comes-early-tigers-longtime-rival/ https://zounation.com/march-madness-comes-early-tigers-longtime-rival/#respond Sat, 21 Oct 2017 18:59:08 +0000 http://zounation.com/?p=1725 What happens when Missouri and Kansas square up on the hardwood for the first time since 2012?

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March Madness comes early for Mizzou against longtime rival

 

The calendar said October, but the atmosphere in the afternoon glow of the Sprint Center shouted a matchup deep into March. For at least one exciting day, what once was the oldest rivalry west of the Mississippi roared back to life during Showdown for Relief, a charity exhibition basketball game between Mizzou and Kansas. The capacity crowd brought The Border War back to life, with more than 18,000 seated in Kansas City’s Sprint Center and another 16,000 streaming online. Together, the fan bases and programs of a rivalry that hadn’t played since 2012 raised more than $1.7 million for hurricane relief efforts.

“The atmosphere here was crazy. It seemed like an NCAA tournament game,” senior forward Jordan Barnett says. “It was amazing to hear the energized fans. They just made it that much more fun to play.”

 

 

The box score read a six-point defeat in an exhibition game (93-87), but what seemed more important was a Missouri program competitive on its biggest stage since moving to the SEC — and its fans reenergized, there for it all.

“I think it’s great for both teams,” coach Cuonzo Martin said after his Missouri debut. “To be able to play a team of that caliber on this stage was great, and with the atmosphere and the energy behind it. Michael Porter Jr. is a talented guy, but he has never been on a stage like this. Now as you move forward, you know what it looks like, and you’re not so consumed by the atmosphere as opposed to what’s going on on the floor.

“I think it will really help us as a team. It’s a win-win. Unfortunately, we didn’t win the game, but I think we can only get better from it.”

Mizzou fans were eager to see their most highly touted recruit since Steve Stipanovich — or perhaps ever — and they didn’t have to wait long. Porter scored on a dunk just two minutes into the game — And One. He was fouled and sank the free throw. A minute later, he drained a three-pointer from the right corner. Despite a team-high 21 points, however, Porter looked entirely distraught, disappointed with his 6-for-20 field goal shooting.

“First of all, it was great to get out there and play,” Porter says. “I was pretty disappointed with my personal performance. I felt there were a lot more things I could have done for the team. I put it on myself. Although there was stuff the whole team could have done better, there was a lot more I should have done for my team.”

Was the freshman forward too hard on himself? Possibly. But when you’re Michael Porter Jr., you’ll have to dig deep in a rolodex of memories to come up with losses. And few of this caliber.

“I don’t think he takes it any harder than his teammates,” Martin says. “They want to win the game. When you’re a competitor, there’s no such thing as an exhibition game. They’re all real games. I think he took it personally from the standpoint that he didn’t feel he played as well as he could have with his field goal percentage. But for me, that’s not the real gauge: It’s whether you rebound, play hard and put pressure on the basketball. Those are the things we can control every night.”

 

 

The showdown game provided a rare opportunity to match up against a powerhouse team — one of those blue bloods, who under Bill Self, has typically found a spot deep into March Madness — before the results would even count in the standings. “Kansas is an established program and a great team,” Porter says. “One thing I take away from the game is how much better we can get. We are a very talented team, and we had spots in the game where we showed that, but if we keep working hard every day in practice, we will be there at the end.

“It’s a huge rivalry, and we knew that coming into the game. We knew it meant a lot to a lot of people. But we came up short. It’s time to go back to practice and work hard to get ready for our first real game of the season.”

Barnett agrees. “We expected it to be a really good game,” he says. “We knew it would be a challenge. We came up short, but we played with them for a large part of the game. I learned that we can compete with the best. We had some defensive issues, and once we shore those up, we will be one of the top teams. Being part of a game like that helps us get ready to play in an atmosphere that is neutral and electric on both sides.”

The game provides a barometer for the coaching staff as they prepare for the season opener against Iowa State on Nov. 10. They’ll hold two closed scrimmages before then.

“I thought the effort was there, but I thought we had a lot of breakdowns defensively,” Martin says. “I thought we didn’t do a very good job until the last five or six minutes of the game. That’s fine, because in a game like this, there is a lot of film to look at, a lot of things to learn and also things that we as a staff need to spend more time on.”

Of course, the inevitable question is whether the Tigers and Jayhawks will square up on a regular basis. “I thought you were going to let me out of here without asking that,” Martin joked at his post-game press conference. “Of course, we would love to play the game. It’s a great program, and Bill has done a tremendous job. But both sides have to agree upon something like that. We saw the energy behind it. We’ll see. I think we did enough on both sides that it possibly could happen.”

Stay tuned.

 

Photos by Nick Mebruer

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Sunday’s Mizzou-Kansas Showdown for Relief will be televised https://zounation.com/sundays-mizzou-kansas-showdown-relief-will-televised/ https://zounation.com/sundays-mizzou-kansas-showdown-relief-will-televised/#respond Wed, 18 Oct 2017 15:09:58 +0000 http://zounation.com/?p=1714 The Border War is back. Even for those without tickets. Both universities announced Friday that Showdown for Relief,  the sold-out charity exhibition game between Mizzou Men’s Basketball and Kansas will be available via pay-per-view for $40. The game, which is scheduled for a 3 p.m. tipoff on Sunday, October 22, will be accessible to fans at www.ShowdownForRelief.com. Both universities suggested that those intending to watch […]

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Showdown for Relief

Sunday's Mizzou-Kansas charity game will be available via pay-per-view.

The Border War is back. Even for those without tickets.

Both universities announced Friday that Showdown for Relief,  the sold-out charity exhibition game between Mizzou Men’s Basketball and Kansas will be available via pay-per-view for $40.

The game, which is scheduled for a 3 p.m. tipoff on Sunday, October 22, will be accessible to fans at www.ShowdownForRelief.com. Both universities suggested that those intending to watch the telecast subscribe as soon as possible.

The exhibition game will be called by familiar voices, veteran Kansas City broadcaster Leif Lisec will be on play-by-play, with Fran Fraschilla and Holly Rowe serving as analyst and sideline reporter respectively. All three announcers are donating their time and talent to the cause.

As with ticket sales, all proceeds from the telecast will benefit hurricane relief.

“Our first objective was to sell out Sprint Center,” the two schools said jointly Friday in a press release. “Once we achieved the sellout so quickly, our fans who could not get tickets expressed tremendous interest in having the game televised. We wanted to make sure that the charities we’ve identified would be the only entities to derive revenue from this game. Sidearm Sports has provided the platform to allow us to create a second stream of revenue via this telecast.”

On Tuesday, Mizzou’s student ticket allotment sold out in two minutes. Mizzou students were allowed to purchase two tickets each, and Tiger Scholarship Fund  members were each allowed to purchase up to 12 tickets.

On Wednesday, at SEC Media Day, Michael Porter Jr., Kevin Puryear and Cuonzo Martin were all on hand to talk about the excitement.

“Bill and I came together and thought it’ll be a tremendous opportunity to raise money,” Martin said. “It wasn’t so much about the two teams playing and competing. That’s a bonus part in my opinion. It’s just coming together and generating revenues for some families that have been hit in a tough way.”

“I don’t think either team will be clicking on all cylinders,” said Martin, understanding that neither teams will have practiced for more than two weeks by Sunday. “To expect to see a team that you would probably see in December or January, I don’t think you’ll see anything like that.”

On Thursday, Self told media that players will be allowed seven fouls.

“It’s Mizzou and Kansas, there is no bigger rivalry in college basketball,” said Michael Porter Jr. “I know both teams are going to go out there, and even if it’s a scrimmage, we’re going to play our hardest. And we’re going for the win.”

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Perspective has helped shape the career of Mizzou’s Cuonzo Martin https://zounation.com/perspective-shaped-career-of-cuonzo-martin/ https://zounation.com/perspective-shaped-career-of-cuonzo-martin/#respond Sat, 29 Jul 2017 18:25:38 +0000 http://zounation.com/?p=1493 Through adversity and a cancer diagnosis, one unwavering theme persisted in Cuonzo Martin’s life: continued perspective.

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Perspective has helped shape the career of Mizzou's Cuonzo Martin

Through adversity and a cancer diagnosis, one unwavering theme has persisted in Cuonzo Martin’s life: continued perspective.

 

When you’ve been tasked with rebuilding a major-college basketball program, it’s important to have perspective. Cuonzo Martin has a Ph.D. in it. He grew up on the crime-ridden, drug-infested streets of East St. Louis, Illinois. In 1991, he arrived at Purdue on a knee so unstable that the medical staff questioned whether he would ever play for the Boilermakers. And at 26, he wondered whether he’d live to see his next birthday after a doctor diagnosed him with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.

“For me, losing was tough, as a player and a coach,” Martin says. “Then you understand there are bigger things in life. Learn from the losses and keep moving. Applaud the wins when you get them. Value life itself, and don’t take the little things for granted. Every birthday is important because there’s no guarantee there will be one next year.”

Resurrect a program that over the previous three seasons was 27-68? No sweat. That’s the job facing Martin, who on March 20 was introduced as the 19th coach in Missouri basketball history. After head-coaching gigs at Missouri State, Tennessee and California, he is essentially coming home to a team that is on NCAA probation, has APR concerns and is lean on talent. Or at least was.

Basketball programs are rarely turned around in the spring and summer, but the Tigers are making an awfully good go at it. Already, the resurgence has been nothing short of remarkable — think a snowball rolling down the mountain, as Missouri athletic director Jim Sterk puts it.

On the morning of March 15, PowerMizzou.com reported that the Porters — Michael Sr., Michael Jr. and Jontay — were yearning to come home. They had left Columbia in 2016 for the Pacific Northwest. Dad had accepted a job as an assistant coach at the University of Washington; Michael Jr., the No. 1 recruit in the 2017 class, had signed a letter of intent with Washington; and Jontay, a five-star talent in the ’18 class, had committed to the program as well. On that March afternoon, Missouri announced Martin’s hiring; hours later, Washington fired coach Lorenzo Romar. In a matter of days, Washington released Michael Jr. from his letter of intent, Michael Sr. accepted a job as an assistant coach on Martin’s staff, and, as Missouri fans waited in anticipation, Michael Jr. announced his commitment to the Tigers, tweeting: “Mizzou Nation, I’m coming home!!!” (Jontay, a 6-foot, 11-inch power forward, took his official visit on April 24-25 and committed soon thereafter. On August 9, he announced he was reclassifying and would join his brother on the court this season.)

The good news kept coming: On April 3, combo guard C.J. Roberts, a four-star prospect from North Richland Hills, Texas, said he would not ask out of the letter of intent he had signed in the fall of 2016. Six days later, at the end of his official visit, point guard Blake Harris, a three-star recruit from Raleigh, North Carolina, committed to the Tigers. Harris, like Porter, had originally signed with Washington. On May 3, Kassius Robertson, a sharp-shooting graduate transfer from Canisius College in Buffalo, New York, came on board.

Meanwhile, Porter Jr. put on his recruiting hat, encouraging other elite players to join him in Columbia. Jeremiah Tilmon, a four-star center from East St. Louis, was granted his release from Illinois. He committed to Mizzou on May 15. The biggest surprise involved Kevin Knox II, a 6-foot, 8-inch wing from Tampa who was on the same visit with Harris and Porter Jr. The ninth-ranked recruit in the country, Knox had been courted for two years by bluebloods Duke, Kentucky and North Carolina, along with Florida State, where his father played football. Missouri had been in the picture for a mere three weeks when Martin, with an assist from Porter Jr., persuaded Knox to use his last official visit on a trip to Columbia. He was in town with his parents on the same weekend as Harris and Porter, and the welcome the three stars received from students was overwhelming. Although Knox tweeted on May 6 that he would attend Kentucky, Harris, after indicating that a decision wasn’t imminent, came away so impressed that he committed before the weekend was over.

“I’ve never seen anything like that on a campus I’ve been a part of as a player or a coach,” says Martin. So what’s the attraction? What about Cuonzo Martin is so appealing to the players and their parents?

Roberts is an interesting case study. He had fallen in love with Mizzou and Columbia during a visit last year. “I know you want me to visit Georgia and LSU,” Craig Roberts recalls his son saying. “I’ll go, but I know I’m coming here.” C.J. signed his letter of intent in November.

But he signed on believing he would play for Kim Anderson. Craig Roberts has met a lot of college basketball coaches during the 22 years he has worked on the AAU summer circuit. Martin wasn’t one of them, so Roberts understandably had his reservations. Like any good parent, he conducted background checks. Everyone kept saying the same thing: Cuonzo is going to be great for your son. (Some coaches even reached out unsolicited.) Still, Roberts needed more reassurance that he could trust Martin. So he convened a meeting with Martin at Richland High School and invited, among others, C.J.’s coach, Richard Bacon, and his long-time trainer, Donny Beacham. Martin got his message across.

“He was very straightforward, very matter-of-fact,” Craig Roberts says. “He did not waver. He told C.J., ‘There are going to be some days when you don’t like me too much because I’m going to be all over you. But I know, and you’re going to know, that I still love you. I’m not afraid to put my arm around you and hug you and tell you I love you.’

“He told C.J. he was going to get what he earns. If you earn 30 minutes, you’re going to get 30 minutes. If you earn 20 shots, you’re going to get 20 shots. If you don’t earn it, you don’t get it.”

 

 

Going back to early 2017, it was the worst-kept secret in college basketball that Missouri might be in the market for a new coach. Never mind the run of defeats. The program was bleeding money. As recently as two years ago, the empty seats at Mizzou Arena had resulted in a $2.3 million loss in ticket sales alone. The Tigers were 5-7 and had suffered home losses to North Carolina Central, Eastern Illinois and Lipscomb when Sterk issued a press release on January 4. “I clearly understand where our program is currently, and rest assured that we are all disappointed with where we stand entering SEC play,” he said.

As he kept one eye on the basketball court, Sterk began working behind the scenes, putting together a list of prospective candidates. He leaned on a couple of coaches at his previous stops — Steve Fisher at San Diego State and Tony Bennett, then of Washington State and now the coach at Virginia. He used a family connection to pick the brain of Mike White at Florida; White’s brother, Brian, is a senior associate athletic director at Mizzou. The preliminary work gave Sterk a better feel for the market. Research in hand, he went to the Board of Curators and outlined what kind of money he’d need if he decided to make a change. It wasn’t going to be cheap.

“I knew we had to have that done ahead of time, otherwise, we might not get somebody,” Sterk says. He recalls the message he delivered to the board and university leadership: “We’re going to have to get out of our comfort zone a little bit if we want a sitting Power Five [conference] coach.”

Though it wasn’t announced until the end of the regular season, Sterk informed Anderson he was out after a February 25 loss at Ole Miss. The wheels were set in motion. And as he began his covert search for what would be his first significant hire at Mizzou, Sterk knew what his budget was.

“Once you’re in the middle of it, there are piranhas out there,” he says. “It’s a good thing we did [get approval], because we were able to put our best foot forward with Cuonzo. I had the security of knowing the board was supportive of what I was doing. I knew what my offer could be. That helped us beat Illinois. Cal came back at him as well.”

Martin didn’t come cheaply: $21 million over seven years. It’s what the market dictated. Plus, the fact that the Board of Curators authorized Sterk to spend that kind of money spoke to the university’s commitment to making basketball relevant again.

Naturally, Sterk kicked the tires on other candidates, but his search kept coming back to Martin. He came highly recommended by his peers and those for whom he had worked. Sandy Barber had hired Martin at Cal in 2014. She’s now the athletic director at Penn State. Close friends, she and Sterk had started together as associate athletic directors at Tulane. As the president at Missouri State, Mike Nietzel had given Martin his first head-coaching opportunity, in 2008. The two remain friends to this day. The more people Sterk contacted, the more sold he became. Most appealing was that he never ran across anyone who had a bad thing to say about Martin.

“I was really impressed that he had been a head coach at three institutions, and he had a great background,” Sterk says. “Every place got better. Every place wanted to keep him. He had been hardened under some adversity. He had gone through some personal stuff, with cancer and where he grew up. He was giving back to the community.”

Then there were the intangibles: Martin was born and raised in the shadow of the Arch. He has local recruiting connections. “That was an added bonus that could really help us begin to make better inroads into the St. Louis area and all of Missouri,” Sterk says.

David Lee, Tyler Hansbrough, Brandon Rush, Bradley Beal, Otto Porter, Ben McLemore, OG Anunoby, Jason Tatum: You could field a pretty salty team with the litany of stars who have escaped the state over the past 15 years. Martin and his staff will recruit nationally if not globally, but the foundation can be built by persuading talented kids to stay close to home.

Enter Michael Porter Jr. When the family packed up and moved to Seattle, all indications were that Mizzou had let the biggest of stars escape. But time away helped the family realize just how much they missed Columbia. That news was relayed to Sterk in February by women’s basketball coach Robin Pingeton. It was yet another family connection: Pingeton’s sister, Lisa, is married to Michael Sr.; Pingeton also coaches Bri and Cierra Porter, and Michael Sr. had previously worked on her staff as an assistant coach.

Because the Porters had left town before he came on board, Sterk had never seen Michael Jr. play. Google became his friend. “I got really excited about that possibility,” Sterk says. “I couldn’t imagine this working out as well as it has. I had hoped we would create some momentum and an opportunity to get Michael, but I didn’t know what kind of recruiter he was. To have someone of his stature is great — No. 1 recruit in the country, McDonald’s All-American. He’s just a real genuine kid, and he understands how he can be better by having better players around him. He was the wild card I didn’t envision.”

As of mid-April, season ticket sales were up almost 1,500, a number that has been growing daily. Based on feedback from the Board of Curators and others in St. Louis and Kansas City, Sterk senses a really good feeling around the state.

Gabe DeArmond, the publisher of PowerMizzou.com, has the numbers to quantify the spike in enthusiasm. From March 5 to March 30, average page views on his site doubled over the week before Anderson stepped down. March saw a 41 percent increase in page views, and subscribers spent 72 percent more time on the site than in February. As for message posts — because, after all, everyone wants to tell Sterk and Martin how to do their jobs — March had 21,000 more posts than February and 10,000 more than any other month in the past year. It’s been good for business too. “I can tell you that in the calendar month after Kim Anderson’s resignation, we’ve never added more subscribers over a 31-day period,” DeArmond says.

The draw, of course, is Porter, a fluid 6-foot, 10-inch wing who can do it all. Among other things, scouts rave about his length, the elevation he gets on his jump shot, his ability to play inside and out and his three-point range. He is the first overall pick in more than one 2018 NBA mock draft.

“First and foremost, as far as his off-the-court attributes, you have to give a lot of credit to his parents,” Martin says. “They put him in a great position to be a successful young man, not just in sports but in life. You can see his humility, his ability to embrace other young guys. He understands how to have love and compassion for other people. As far as his ability to play the game, again his mom and dad did a great job of putting him in the position, working on his shot. Here’s a guy, 6-10 or 6-11, the way he shoots the ball, the way he handles the ball — obviously his parents did a great job in his development.”

The Tigers will play fast, because that’s the way kids want to play these days. Assistant coaches Cornell Mann and Chris Hollender will oversee the offense. Most recently an assistant at Oakland (Michigan), Mann plans to install a system not unlike the one run by Iowa State when he was an assistant in Ames from 2011-15. Martin chuckles at those who label it an NBA-style offense.

“Everybody says NBA-style because it sounds good, but what does that really mean?” he asks. “We’re playing with a 30-second shot clock, so when you hear ‘NBA-style,’ you say, ‘Which NBA team is that?’ We’ll try to generate more offense, put guys in position to score in the first seven to 10 seconds of the shot clock. If not, execute your offense.”

With the assistance of Porter Sr., Martin will coach up the defense because, well, that’s what he does best. It’s a mindset and toughness he undoubtedly adopted growing up in East St. Louis and as a disciple of Purdue coach Gene Keady. It wouldn’t be a stretch to say that Martin even has a little Norm Stewart in his philosophy. “I get so consumed with the defensive side of the ball,” Martin says. “That part will never change. You have to have that to be successful.”

How does he measure success? Martin is not a goal-setter in the strict sense of the word, but he knows what the expectations are: Get into the NCAA tournament, then play late into March, if not April. He believes the Tigers aren’t far off, that even on a team that finished 8-24 last season, there are pieces to build around. Throw in the influx of talent and the fact that the SEC gauntlet is not overly daunting, and the turnaround can be swift. Look at TCU, which went from 12-21 in 2015-16 to an NCAA tournament bubble team and NIT champs under first-year coach Jamie Dixon. Craig Roberts points to the dramatic resurgence at SMU. So at the same time he preaches patience, Martin doesn’t want the fans, and especially the students, to temper expectations.

“Our fans have had some tough times in the past several years,” he says. “So we want those people to be excited about what we’re doing, because that means there’s passion and enthusiasm. It’s our job to be entertainers on the court. We need to work as hard as we can to be consistently successful. The energy [among fans] is good. That’s the same thing we talk to our players about. We’re better people with more energy and enthusiasm.”

 

 

Martin would have loved to come to Columbia when he was a candidate for the job in 2011, and who knows what state the program would be in had that happened. Now he arrives with six more years of experience, 205 games on his résumé, and lessons learned on and off the court.

“The experience and the wisdom of going through something over the course of time helps you develop as a coach and a leader — making mistakes when you coach in games, learning from those mistakes, beating big programs early in your career and understanding how you beat those programs, developing young men, and allowing your staff to be a part of what you’re doing, not just recruiting, but the whole piece: the video recording, scouting, watching film, developing student-athletes. You need everybody to be successful,” Martin says.

It helps when you can maintain perspective. Martin was a sophomore at Purdue when he walked into an Arby’s in West Lafayette, Indiana, on the first weekend of the 1992 school year. It was by chance that he bumped into Roberta Jones, the woman who would become the love of his life. “I like to tell the story that she came up to introduce herself to me, but she tells it totally differently,” he says with a laugh. “So we’ll take her version.”

Wooing Roberta was his first — and biggest — recruiting coup. The courtship lasted almost three years; they were married on June 14, 1995. Son Joshua arrived two years later. Martin was doing what he loved most — playing basketball. Life was good. And then came the cancer diagnosis, the discovery of a four-inch tumor, the news that his odds of beating the disease weren’t good, and four months of strength-sapping chemotherapy treatments. Martin might not be one for setting goals, but he made one then: to see his son turn 18. Joshua was four months old.

“If you listen to that story and aren’t inspired,” DeArmond says, “then you’ve got no soul.”

Martin had his last treatment and was declared cancer-free on April 20, 1998. You remember the dates. “Those dates are like Christmas to me,” he says. “I remember them vividly.” Today, Joshua is a 19-year-old freshman at Purdue. Chase is 15, and daughter Addison is 9.

“I’ll never forget when the doc said it’s life-threatening,” Martin says. “And you’re sitting there wondering, Will I be here tomorrow? That’s why I said you try to applaud those little things in life. Often you can’t get them back.”

The first game of the Cuonzo Martin era at Mizzou is still three months away, but in a short time he has electrified a fan base and put Missouri basketball back on the map. It’s remarkable when you think about it. He and his staff have hit the recruiting trail hard. He has traveled around the state conducting countless interviews while spreading his message. Not everyone has the talent of Michael Porter Jr., so while Martin talks about basketball, he also stresses the importance of developing young men and enriching their lives. Authentic — that’s the word that comes to mind.

And perspective.

 

Photos: Mizzou Athletics 

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Laurence Bowers brings basketball glory back to Columbia https://zounation.com/1446-2/ https://zounation.com/1446-2/#respond Tue, 23 May 2017 15:59:29 +0000 http://zounation.com/?p=1446 Laurence Bowers was nervous. It’s rare for Bowers to feel angst by the way he embraces change. He prefers one-year contracts because he wants to explore different cities around the world. Two days ago, he inked a deal overseas with his fifth team in the past five years. The upcoming season in Italy is a […]

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Laurence Bowers brings basketball glory back to Columbia

Laurence Bowers was nervous.

It’s rare for Bowers to feel angst by the way he embraces change. He prefers one-year contracts because he wants to explore different cities around the world. Two days ago, he inked a deal overseas with his fifth team in the past five years. The upcoming season in Italy is a new experience — he doesn’t know what to expect, but that’s part of what keeps him excited.

But a day before the first ever Carroll and Bowers Alumni Game, Bowers didn’t know what to expect and it was making him anxious.

“I’m nervous,” he says. “I don’t know why.”

The attendance of the game wouldn’t necessarily dictate how Bowers felt about the event, but it was the biggest thing on his mind the day before tip-off. He sacrificed time with his wife, Feven, and their five-month-old daughter, Fiyora, to organize the alumni game after he and fellow alum DeMarre Carroll thought up the idea a few years ago.

“We tried to think of a way to get guys (alumni) to come back and support the university,” Bowers says. “I love Columbia, and I feel like there’s a lot of kids here that need excitement.”

Bowers was born in Tennessee and, as he says himself, “You can take me out of Memphis, but you can’t take Memphis out of me.” He’s played professional basketball in Italy and Israel for the past four years, but Columbia, Missouri, is home for the Tennessean during the offseason. He feels the need to give back to the city that shaped him into who he is today.

“I literally grew into a man at Mizzou,” Bowers says. “During my five years here, I received an unbelievable amount of support from fans to students that I went to school with. They embraced me as a man, not just as a basketball player.”

Bowers credits Columbia for his growth, and he knows a lot of his fellow Tigers feel the same way. It’s why he felt compelled to organize the game for local non-profits like the Boys & Girls Clubs of Columbia and Granny’s House, along with The Carroll Family Foundation. It’s also why he felt nervous a day before the event — he had an opportunity to help his community and had no idea what the response would be.

“I’m nervous that the turn out is not going to be what we expected or whatever.”

Bowers didn’t put an exact number on how many people he thought would attend, but minutes after the game, it was obvious whether or not his expectations were met.

“I’m just overwhelmed with joy that all these people showed up to support us,” Bowers exclaimed after the final whistle. “I’m so excited right now, I’ve got to calm down a little bit.”

The thousands in attendance shared the excitement with Bowers and his 26 fellow alumni, which included both former basketball and football players.

The game was the first of its kind, but it was filled with classic memories. Former guard and University of Missouri Hall of Famer Melvin Booker received a standing ovation during his introduction and hit three’s that reminded fans of when he led Missouri to a 14-0 conference record in 1994. Former guard Ricky Paulding threw down a vicious tomahawk, flashing signs of his dunks from the early-2000’s. Former forward Ricardo Ratliffe scored a game-high 39 points, grabbed 13 rebounds, took home the game’s MVP award and showed us the strength he used in his senior season to lead Mizzou to a Big 12 tournament championship.

Mizzou’s football alumni also provided moments fans wouldn’t have a chance to see on Faurot Field. Former wide receiver Jerrell Jackson caught lob after lob, throwing down dunk after dunk. Meanwhile, former linebacker Sean Weatherspoon handled point guard duties and threw up jumpers.

As the game came to an end, the players cleared the floor for Bowers, who threw down a vicious dunk for the final play of the contest.

Team Carroll beat Team Bowers 137-116, but the final score didn’t mean as much to the players as the impact of the game itself.

“It wasn’t about the win or loss for me,” Bowers, who finished with 21 points, says. “Ultimately, we all won. I’m just overwhelmed with joy that all these people showed up to support us, that all these guys came back and helped me and DeMarre put on this event.”

“Missouri is my home,” Carroll, who didn’t play, says. “We need to show other young individuals that you can be great coming to Mizzou. You can achieve your dreams, you can be in the NBA and the NFL, and that’s what we’re doing right now.”

“I became a man in this city, and the fans embraced me,” Booker says. “I was just a small kid from Mississippi, and they pretty much raised me here.”

“The whole city of Columbia, we’re still one big family,” former center Steve Moore says. “When I was done playing, the people here [in Columbia] didn’t just tell me, but they showed me that they’re here for me.”

“There were a couple of professors I saw, a couple of people in the athletic department that I knew really well, and just seeing a lot of guys that I haven’t seen in a long time. Laurence said it best — this is definitely a second home for all of us,” former guard Jarrett Sutton says.

Joining the thousands of Tiger fans in attendance were most of the current men’s basketball team, including incoming freshman Michael Porter Jr., a Columbia native who is also the highest-ranked player nationwide in his class. Bowers has known Porter Jr. and his brother, Jontay, since he was ten years old — he calls him his “little big brother.”

“They [Michael and Jontay] used to literally be in the gym too much,” Bowers says. “There were times where I’d be like, ‘Who are these kids? Get them off so I can shoot’ But, hey, it’s paying off for them.”

It’s also paying off for Mizzou men’s basketball. After the hiring of head coach Cuonzo Martin and the recruitment of several freshmen standouts, Mizzou basketball fans are holding their breath and hoping for the Tigers’ first appearance in the NCAA Tournament since 2013.

But months before anyone in town knew this program would be back on the map, Bowers teamed up with Carroll to craft a way to do it on their own.

“This game was well thought out before the Cuonzo era and before the basketball gods blessed us with a 6’11, No. 1 overall recruit,” Bowers says. “Cuonzo Martin came, then Michael Porter, Blake Harris, all that stuff happened, and now, I think we’re more so adding to what’s already there, and that’s good. It’s a great time for the school.”

“I’m glad that DeMarre and I got together to do something like this because our university needed it. This is what it’s all about. It’s not the glitz and the glam, but it’s about what we can do for the University of Missouri and the city of Columbia.”

As Bowers admits, the excitement for the resurgence of basketball in Columbia was already looming. But the success of the first Carroll and Bowers Alumni Game remind fans of the passion that’s always surrounded this program. Bowers is just glad that he could be a part of its resurgence.

Photos by Emil Lippe

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The Kim Anderson Era Comes to a Close in Nashville https://zounation.com/kim-anderson-era-comes-close-nashville/ https://zounation.com/kim-anderson-era-comes-close-nashville/#respond Sun, 29 Jan 2017 18:03:43 +0000 http://zounation.com/?p=1306 “If you would have asked me when I knew I was going to get fired, I would have said the first day."

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The End of an Era

Kim Anderson was asked to stabilize the Mizzou program. Although he didn't produce wins, he reflects on the task at his final press conference.

 

Kim Anderson knew from the moment he was hired at the University of Missouri that he would be fired. It’s been a long three years, shackled with unwanted inheritance, but, alas, it has come to a close.

“If you would have asked me when I knew I was going to get fired, I would have said the first day,” he said, deep in voice, at his final press conference last night in Nashville, Tennessee. “I knew it was going to be challenging.”

Challenging is a program routed with internal cuts, bruises and an NCAA investigation; it’s a roster left vulnerable from Haith’s band-aid recruiting approach; it’s retaining a staff not your own; it’s a team in constant flux, with 13 players either dismissed or transferring after his acceptance and seven of 11 scholarship players in his first season disciplined to some extent.

“I maintain when I was hired I was pretty much asked to kind of stabilize this program,” he said. “It took a while. Obviously, it took too long. But I’m proud of what we’ve done.”

Anderson is someone you want to root for. He’s the good guy. His players praise him. Coaches across the conference commend his leadership. He’s loyal, poised and, if nothing else, honest. But he didn’t win, and when your teams are 27-68 overall, 9-47 in the SEC, nothing else matters.

“Obviously we didn’t win enough games. And we didn’t generate enough money,” he said at the Bridgestone Arena podium. “And when you don’t do that in college athletics, you don’t get to do your job. And I’m not bitter. I certainly understand that.”

There’s nothing that hasn’t already been said of the last three seasons on the court. They were dismal, and the end came last night. Like the majority of the season, it lacked suspense. The 86-74 loss to Ole Miss was sealed with foul trouble — 29 personal fouls on the Tigers to be exact. The Rebels shot 47 free throws, and the end got chippy, if not to add drama to a frustrating season. The typically calm-demeanor Anderson even got slapped with his first technical of the year, let that set in. The Tigers finished 8-24 on the year.

“I saw a game that got a little bit physical, a little bit rough. We made some fouls that weren’t very smart,” he said. “These guys have always played hard. They probably haven’t always played smart.” But there’s no one questioning that they’ve played hard for their Sedalia-native coach. Last night’s locker room was emotional, “We have a great deal of love for him,” said Kevin Puryear, who tallied 45 points over the past two days, with a career-high 30 and a game-winning buzzer beater on Wednesday night. “He always has and always will have our best interests. It’s never easy saying goodbye.”

“I think Coach A’s leaving this program in great shape with some great guys,” said Terrence Phillips. Puryear chimes in, “I think we can do something great if everyone sticks together. I’m confident we’ll stick together.”

After Wednesday’s overtime win against Auburn, Anderson was happy for another day to be the coach at Mizzou. Today, that dream is gone, and reality once again sets in, as Athletics Director Jim Sterk, who was in Nashville for each game, searches for a replacement.

“This decision has been very difficult for me personally because of the tremendous respect I have for Kim,” Sterk said in a statement following the announcement. “I know how hard he and his staff have worked to turn the program around over the last three years. However, the lack of on-court success has resulted in a significant drop in interest surrounding our program, and we could not afford for that to continue another year.”

As Anderson concluded last night, “I certainly hope that whoever the coach is that we have provided a little bit of a building block for them.”

Anderson, in the third year of his five-year contract, will receive $450,000 in a negotiated lump-sum buyout, as well as an additional $200,000 for ‘meeting or exceeding’ an academic accomplishments and social responsibilities incentive.

 

Photo Credit: Timothy Tai-USA TODAY Sports

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Mike Kelly Inducted Into Missouri Sports Hall of Fame https://zounation.com/longtime-broadcaster-mike-kelly-inducted-missouri-sports-hall-fame/ https://zounation.com/longtime-broadcaster-mike-kelly-inducted-missouri-sports-hall-fame/#respond Sun, 29 Jan 2017 17:39:35 +0000 http://zounation.com/?p=1141 For his listeners, Mike Kelly has become more than a harmonic representation of Mizzou sports. He is The Voice of a fan base.

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Longtime Broadcaster Mike Kelly Inducted into Missouri Sports Hall of Fame

For his listeners, Mike Kelly has become more than a harmonic representation of Mizzou sports. He is The Voice of a fan base.

It’s a Tuesday evening. Or maybe a Saturday afternoon. You’re dialed in, and one voice, like clockwork, is there waiting over the radio airways to greet you.

Mike Kelly is one of those rare Missouri members of an entire state’s athletic community who belongs to us just as deeply as anyone who has ever dressed for a game. For 26 years, he has met you on the road, dialed in to KTRS, KMOX or stations across I-70. And for nearly 1,000 Missouri basketball and football games, he has been there — a companion through wins, losses, the good and the bad.

At any given moment, Kelly manages to narrate and expound every formation, every adjustment, every move — left, right — every interaction and emotion as if to place his listeners in the thick of the game. He makes sense of it all over the airways, but he does so with a play-by-play consistency that engages. Because although the content is important, the presentation and expression of the voice plays a crucial role in influencing the way in which an audience perceives the game. As Kelly puts it, at the end of the day, someone has to think you sound good.

And sound good he has. There is no built-in pace that lends itself to radio with  football and, at times, basketball. But the best broadcasters tell the game’s story with such rhythm that you find yourself gripping the steering wheel, eyes wide open, bobbing to the narrative of a player’s movement as if it were set to music. The eloquence and style, the softness and excitement, and the ebbs and flows of a voice are to a sports broadcaster as a paint brush is to an artist.

After 283 consecutive Mizzou football broadcasts, Kelly will be inducted into the Missouri Sports Hall of Fame on Sunday alongside 14 other individuals, including the St. Louis Cardinals’ Vince Coleman and Kansas City Chiefs’ quarterback Bill Kenney.

“When you get that phone call, honestly my first reaction was ‘why?’” Kelly says. “When you’re a broadcaster, it’s a little harder to understand the value that you bring. And when you look at the nature of the Missouri Sports Hall of Fame, there’s so many great athletes who have had an impact on the legacy of sport in the state of Missouri. I was humbled — still am; honored, and actually a little emotional when I heard.”

The Voice of the Missouri Tigers has spoken mostly to those in their cars and in their homes, like a soundtrack for fans who have felt the highest of highs and the lowest of lows. But unlike coaches, players or athletic directors, Kelly’s voice has been a constant.

In his early days, the fundamental lessons of broadcasting were learned by listening — to Jack Buck in St. Louis; to then-Chicago Bears analyst Wayne Larrivee in Champaign, Illinois; to Kevin Harlan in Missouri. His voice was shaped, applying techniques and influences that he still hears in his broadcasts today.

Joe Buck was Kelly’s first color analyst when he took the role as the play-by-play voice of Missouri basketball in ’91. Tom Dore left for a 17-year career in Chicago as the voice of the Bulls during the bulk of the Michael Jordan championship era, and it was those moves on the chess board, as Kelly describes it, and the confidence of Roger Gardner and Joe Castiglione at the time that led him to the seat. Three years later, he would take over the lead football spot when Bill Wilkerson left for the Arizona Cardinals.

“I could have never foreseen this,” he says. Kelly’s first audio affiliation with Missouri came back in 1989 when he was asked by CBS and KMOX legend Robert Hyland to drive to Columbia and host Tiger Talk alongside Bob Stull. “It’s something that you’re hopeful for — you get in a career, and you hope to be able to do it as long as possible. Again, I go back to the subjectivity and the nature of what we do — at the end of the day, someone needs to think you sound pretty good.”

The players don’t hear the Dupo, Illinois, kid on the court. Nor do the coaches. His work is for us, the listeners, as it has been for nearly 30 years. Accuracy and objectivity still king.

“Jack Buck said to me years ago, before I first started, he said ‘Understand this: you’re going to call some good games, you’re going to call some bad games. You’re going to call some very good teams, but you’ll also call some teams that are going to struggle. Call the play. Just call the play.’ I think it’s incumbent upon me to just call the play,” Kelly says. “I try to have an equal amount of excitement for whatever happens, but as a fan — and when you become the voice of a team — you also understand that you’re talking to a group of fans that cannot be at the game that day. So you try to accurately communicate as well as you can the good, the bad and the ugly, but also be tactful about it.”

The fan in Mike Kelly wants to see Mizzou pull off every win. But the broadcaster in Mike Kelly keeps Buck’s words close, understanding his obligation to accuracy and objectivity. That might explain why he hasn’t tried to rank, in any form, the most memorable games that he’s been a part of. From his point of view — “If I’ve done the game justice, others will decide in terms of where it may rank.”

His list does, of course, include the Armageddon game at Arrowhead. As well as the 1995 NCAA Tournament loss to UCLA, the eventual national champions, on a late run to the basket. Even the 2009 loss to Kansas on a 4th-quarter, 30-yard touchdown pass from Todd Reesing to Kerry Meier.

“I’ve always believed that college sports is about kids making plays,” Kelly says. “And at the end of the day, whether it be Tyus Edney or Todd Reesing or Kerry Meier from Kansas or Danario Alexander or Chase Daniel, kids made plays. That’s really the special nature in which this profession provides you the opportunity to watch these young student athletes do remarkable things.”

On Sunday, he’ll be inducted next to other athletes and legends who did remarkable things — Stan Musial, Norm Stewart, Phog Allen, Payne Stewart, the list goes on. Remarkable things happen in sports, as Kelly suggests, but those remarkable plays are etched into memories with the help of remarkable calls.

Listen to Kelly call Zaire Taylor’s 2009 game-winning jumper against Kansas. It will do nothing short of give you chills, remembering the life that existed in the arena that year. Missouri was 20-4 heading into that game, and Kansas was undefeated in conference play. It’s tied at 60, and well, you know the story.

“Missouri playing for the final shot here in regulation … Lions left wing. Flip it outside Tiller. Right wing Taylor. Head and shoulder fake.” The words flowed like an orchestra leading to its grandest of finales. “Taylor. 15-footer for the win off the rim. GOOD.”

Lucky for Kelly’s listeners — the Missouri faithful — there should be plenty more tomorrow’s, next season’s and grand finales left in his broadcasting career. Maybe a few more Zaire Taylor’s as well.

Photos: Courtesy of Mike Kelly

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Terrence Phillips: ‘I’m not letting basketball use me’ https://zounation.com/terrence-phillips/ https://zounation.com/terrence-phillips/#respond Mon, 12 Dec 2016 22:36:34 +0000 http://zounation.com/?p=234 Terrence Phillips was laying in bed in Italy after an international men’s basketball game when he got an email that would change the course of his life at home — he just didn’t know it yet. That was in August, when Phillips had been chosen as Mizzou’s representative to the Southeastern Conference Men’s Basketball Leadership […]

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Terrence Phillips:

‘I’m not letting basketball use me’

Terrence Phillips was laying in bed in Italy after an international men’s basketball game when he got an email that would change the course of his life at home — he just didn’t know it yet. That was in August, when Phillips had been chosen as Mizzou’s representative to the Southeastern Conference Men’s Basketball Leadership Committee. In September, his peers would vote him Chairman of the committee.

“I’m not a quiet person; I can talk all day,” Phillips says. “At the first committee meeting, I kept talking about ideas and things we’d like to change, not knowing I’d be picked to be head chairman. It was an honor, not just for myself, but to represent Mizzou.”

The sophomore from Orange County, California, has been a standout player since joining the team last year, making his mark with a recorded 107 assists and as one of only two players on the team to start all 31 games. But, as shown by his nomination, he’s also been a strong leader off the court. Phillips still can’t believe how far the sport has taken him, especially since he almost decided to pursue football instead.

“If you ask my family and friends, I’m forever stupid for giving up football,” he says.

Phillips’ dad, uncle and two older cousins played football but always said he was the one with a “real chance” at playing varsity, and ultimately college. Although he loved the game, Phillips was presented with the chance to play basketball at Oak Hill Academy in Virginia, a “road-to-the-NBA” school with a list of notable alumni that includes Rajon Rondo, Kevin Durant and Carmelo Anthony. Phillips’ brother, Brandon Jennings, who currently plays for the New York Knicks, also graduated from Oak Hill. If you ask Phillips, he’ll admit it factored into his initial hesitance.

“Growing up, I was always ‘Brandon’s little brother,’ so I really wanted to keep it separate and try to do my own thing,” he says. “But in the end I chose basketball. I can’t really say why. I’ve always had a passion for it, and I’ve worked hard to get where I am.”

Much of that work happened at Oak Hill, a small boarding school with only 150 students in grades 8-12. Phillips said the remote campus is “in the middle of nowhere,” with no cell reception, so he had no choice but to focus on improving his game.

“The only thing to do was play basketball and go to school,” he says. “I just kept working and didn’t look back.”

Terrence Phillips - Mizzou Basketball Guard

During his time at Oak Hill, Phillips became known for his speed and smart decisions on the floor, leading him to shed the title of “Brandon’s younger brother” quick. He always looked ahead to play ball in college, and, when it came time to make a decision about where that might be, considered Mizzou and Loyola Marymount University, which is right on the beach in Los Angeles.

“I told both schools I wouldn’t commit right away,” Phillips says. “I visited LMU, and it was right by my family and friends, and they had chicken and waffles right down the street.”

But even the lure of good food just a few sandy steps away couldn’t keep him from Mizzou, which he says felt like home.

“I visited over Christmas break and no one was there.” he says. “But within five minutes of stepping on campus, I knew.”

Although the Tigers were coming off their worst two-season stretch since 1966-1968, Phillips came out of the international games this summer with a feeling that the team was brand new, and perhaps even good. But even he, with his high energy and love for talking, knows he needs to step back—he learns the most by listening to other people’s opinions as he leads the team.

“As a leader, you’re not always going to be correct,” Phillips says. “Being able to listen and adapt and take what you learn into action is important to bringing the team together.”

He’ll also be listening in his role as as chairman, where Phillips will work to improve players’ lives both on and off the court. As part of his role, he’ll meet with Commissioner Greg Sankey, as well as other officials and head coaches to discuss issues including transfer regulations and summer league rules.

“One thing I’ve brought up so far is that we should let the off season be more of an off season,” he says. “This year we were only really off a week and a half, and that’s a big concern with resting your body before the season.”

But when he’s not resting, Phillips is planning for the future, and hoping that his career in basketball might lead him to the NBA.

“That’s a lot of work and I’m all for that,” he says. “But wherever this game takes me, I’m not letting basketball use me. I’m using the game of basketball to get to where I’m supposed to be.”

Photos: Travis and Jenn Smith | ContentAllStars.com

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Norm Stewart Unveiled His Thoughts on Kim Anderson’s Coaching https://zounation.com/norm-stewart-unveiled-his-thoughts-on-kim-andersons-coaching/ https://zounation.com/norm-stewart-unveiled-his-thoughts-on-kim-andersons-coaching/#respond Sun, 11 Dec 2016 21:19:35 +0000 http://zounation.com/?p=809   Kim Anderson tipped off the season on Nov. 13 with a career record of 0-0 as head coach of the Missouri Tigers. No, that’s not a typo – it’s the way former Coach Norm Stewart views his longtime player, protégé and friend. Stewart believes Anderson’s 19-44 record in his first two seasons with the […]

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Norm Stewart Unveiled His Thoughts on Kim Anderson’s Coaching

 

Kim Anderson tipped off the season on Nov. 13 with a career record of 0-0 as head coach of the Missouri Tigers. No, that’s not a typo – it’s the way former Coach Norm Stewart views his longtime player, protégé and friend. Stewart believes Anderson’s 19-44 record in his first two seasons with the Tigers says far more about the hand he was dealt than it does about his coaching ability.

“I think Coach Anderson now has the program where he wanted it two years ago,” Stewart says. “So this is kind of like his first year as far as I’m concerned. Kim Anderson is a winner. I have known him since he was in eighth grade. He is probably one of the ten-best players ever to play at the University of Missouri, but nobody ever talks about that, because he never talks about it.

Stewart understands the challenges of reviving an alma mater’s floundering program. The Tigers finished 3-22 under Bob Vanatta the year before Stewart took the helm for the 1967-68 season. His first two teams finished an uninspiring 24-27, but he went on to post a career record of 634-333 over 32 seasons.

One difference between pupil and mentor is their court side demeanor. Fans rarely see Anderson storming on the sidelines of Norm Stewart Court. “He’s a John Wooden-type,” Stewart said. “You’re not going to see a lot of expression.”

Anderson is using that professorial style to teach the players he recruited to play the style of basketball he wants to play.

“I think we have some guys who understand what it takes,” Anderson says. “We’ve recruited them, we know their families and we know their backgrounds. I hope we will make improvements, and I think we will. I don’t think we’re ready for the Final Four yet, but I do think our guys are excited about the season.”

Whatever the record, he expects to bring back something that has been missing all too often in the seasons since Stewart retired: F-U-N.

“We had a lot more fun when we coached, but we didn’t make any money,” Stewart says. “Now I hope they’re having some fun, because they’re making a lot more money. Either way, it’s still a great game, with great kids playing and great coaches coaching. But when you’re running the shop and you’re making a little money, you have to do a little better.”

Anderson is more than ready to relax a bit and enjoy his dream job.

“I probably haven’t had as much as I did the few years before when I was at Central Missouri and we won a lot of games,” he says. “When we came in, we had to make some adjustments and change the culture a little bit. That’s part of the profession. But we’re going to have some fun this year. We’re excited.”

kim-anderson-terrence-phillips-univesity-of-missouri-basketball
He expects the fun to be contagious.

“We want to play faster. We went to Italy, played faster and scored more points. Everybody wants to play fast, and I think we have guys now who can score better and are a little better defensively. Come on out. We’ll be exciting.”

Stewart understands the journey. “[Anderson] won the national championship over at Warrensburg, and he’s going to win games at Missouri. He will be an outstanding coach, and this season is the start of it.”

Photos: Courtesy of Mizzou Athletics

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For Kim Anderson, More Wins are the Only Option https://zounation.com/kim-anderson-wins-option/ https://zounation.com/kim-anderson-wins-option/#respond Sun, 11 Dec 2016 19:50:00 +0000 http://zounation.com/?p=773   It’s no real secret that Missouri basketball needs to get better. But there’s no one who knows that more than the man in charge of getting it done. “I think we’ve probably got to win more games,” Kim Anderson deadpans. “What that number is, I don’t know.” In Anderson’s first two years, the Tigers […]

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For Kim Anderson, More Wins are the Only Option


 
It’s no real secret that Missouri basketball needs to get better. But there’s no one who knows that more than the man in charge of getting it done.

“I think we’ve probably got to win more games,” Kim Anderson deadpans. “What that number is, I don’t know.”

In Anderson’s first two years, the Tigers had won only 19 games. They had lost 44. The regular seasons have been a mixture of troubles on and off the court, and the off seasons have been a revolving door — players leaving the program to be replaced by new, hopeful faces. In Anderson’s third year, all he knows is that it’s time to end the cycle.

“We have to be able to be competitive, more competitive in games — in every game,” says the Sedalia, Missouri native, who knows the reality. “You lose to Kentucky by 100 and you lose to Arkansas at home. We have to make significant improvements from both offensive and defensive standpoints, and I think we have to change the culture of the program, which we’ve tried to do for two years.

“I think we’re getting there.”

If the Tigers are to make that leap, it will be on the backs of a four-man sophomore group that Anderson has lauded since it arrived on campus in the summer of 2015. Kevin Puryear, the team’s leading scorer as a freshman; Terrence Phillips, a dynamic if sometimes erratic point guard; K.J. Walton, a slashing guard who is looking to become a more balanced player; and Cullen Van Leer, a sharpshooter who never really found his shot as a freshman. It’s that group, along with senior big man Russell Woods, who will try to lead yet another fresh-faced, inexperienced roster of Tigers.

“I think the success of the culture of this program is on those guys,” Anderson says. “Those four guys — it’s important that they’re good.”

It’s Phillips whose optimism is lauded. “We have our core here for the next three years, and we’re going to turn this program around,” Phillips adds. “Every guy’s going to compete this year, and that’s just who we are.”

Woods is Missouri’s main man in the middle, at least to start the season, and he’s the only player listed at taller than 6 feet, 7 inches who has played a Division 1 game.

“Russ has made the most improvement on and off the floor of anybody,” Anderson says. “We need him to play and do the things that he can do — and that’s score around the basket, block some shots, play good defense, make the hustle plays.”

Woods will particularly need to be good early on, as the Tigers try to break in freshmen Reed Nikko and Mitchell Smith. Nikko has been back in action since mid-September after having hip surgery following his senior season, and Smith, at 6 feet, 10 inches, needs to add lots of bulk and muscle to his frame.

Missouri also brought in a recruiting class headlined by a pair of high school teammates from Ohio, Frankie Hughes and Willie Jackson. Hughes is a combo guard who can score in clusters, while Jackson is a wing player who can guard any position but center.

“Playing defense is number one,” Jackson says. “I’m not the who came in as a scorer. I come in, they look for me to rebound and take my guy that I’m guarding, and basically give him hell. I’m not that ‘go to’ guy, but I can come off a screen, and I can make that open shot. I’ll be ready at all times.”

Along with Jackson, Missouri will await the ability of using fellow wing man Jordan Barnett. Barnett was a star at Christian Brothers College High School in St. Louis and signed with Rick Barnes and Texas. Midway through his second season in Austin, and after a coaching change, Barnett transferred back to his home state. He will be eligible at the start of the second semester, with his first game December 17 against Eastern Illinois.

“Jordan Barnett is a trump card,” Anderson says. “He’s played at the highest level, so he understands how hard you have to play when you start playing. The one thing I’ve been encouraging is that he needs to dominate practices. He needs to step up his game in practice because he has a tendency to hide sometimes. I’ve told him this: you should know that Jordan Barnett was at every practice.”

The Tigers opened the regular season on November 13, and have gone 3-3 since.
“We’re a lot further ahead this year than we were the last two years,” Anderson says. “I think it’s important that we start off and play well early and have a chance to win some games in the non-conference. Three or four games makes a difference, and it gives you the confidence [needed].”

Anderson says they have to avoid the long droughts that cost them games last year. “Can’t go 10 minutes without scoring; can’t go five games or six games without winning,” he says. “That’s the key. I’m excited about this group, and I think we’re headed in the right direction. Are there going to be ups and downs? Absolutely. There are with every team. Hopefully we’ve got enough experience that we don’t let the downs prolong themselves.”

Missouri will fight to move up the ladder in a wide-open Southeastern Conference. The league has taken its lumps over the past two years and could again this season.

“There are a lot of new players,” Anderson says. “I think there are a lot of teams that probably have question marks like we do. It will be a very competitive league, and I think it’s probably pretty wide open, at least at the beginning, with the exception of Kentucky.”

While the Tigers hope the results change, the goals never have.

“Your sophomore year is supposed to be a better year,” Phillips says. “If we win 25 games or whatever it is and make the tournament, I don’t care if I start. I just want to make the tournament, I want to win, I want to put people back in these seats.”

Photos: Travis Smith | ContentAllStars.com

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