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Changing Addresses
By Jim Johnson
Posted: 5:00 am PDT 2006-11-01 |
Courtesy Of Wager
Web Sportsbook |
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Most college basketball fans keep
track of the top incoming freshmen each season, but transfers and junior college players
are another thing entirely. Transfers have had to sit out a year, and junior college ball
receives very little attention, so it's easy for these stars to be out of sight, out of
mind. Nonetheless, the odds are some players in this group will have a big impact on
their teams' success this season. Here are some names you should get to know:
Toney Douglas, Florida State: As a freshman at Auburn, Douglas scored 16.9
points per game. He will see plenty of time at point guard for the Seminoles,
bringing a dimension to their attack they haven't seen since Sam Cassell played in
Tallahassee. Coach Leonard Hamilton told the ACC Basketball Handbook: "A lot
more scoring ability at the point will give us the chance to maybe have the ball in his
hands when the game is going down, whether he's creating for himself or for his
teammates."
End-game situations have been a major problem for Hamilton's teams at Florida State.
Expect Douglas to help change that this season.
J.R. Giddens, New Mexico: He received plenty of playing time in his two years
at Kansas, but Giddens wanted to play where he had a chance to be "the man."
That led him to Albuquerque, where he will improve on his 10.1 scoring average as a
sophomore. Giddens, when he becomes eligible in mid-December, should become one of
the best players in the Mountain West Conference. He has a set of NBA-level skills --
good range on his shot and the ability to finish at the rim, often with some flair.
Giddens will quickly become a fan favorite at "The Pit,"New Mexico's famous home
court, this season.
Gary Erwin, Arkansas: Unlike many transfers, Erwin won't have a great
learning curve, because he already has two seasons of SEC play under his belt. He
ran the point for Mississippi State and was considered the conference's best penetrator by
Street and Smith's. Erwin was third in the SEC in 2004-05 with 4.7 assists per game
and had the league's seventh-best assist-to-turnover ratio.
Erwin is the first pure point guard Stan Heath has been able to count on since arriving in
Fayetteville. He should be the perfect fit for a team designed to get most of its
points from the frontcourt. Erwin is not much of a shooter, but he can get the ball
to his teammates in the right spot at the right time. He is also considered a
tenacious defender who should force some turnovers for the Razorbacks.
Mike White, Indiana: Ranked the No. 2 JuCo player in the nation in 2005-06 by
The Sporting News, White should step right into the Hoosiers' starting lineup this season.
He earned the nickname "King Kong"before losing 50 pounds during his two
years of junior college. As a sophomore, he led Lee College (Texas) with 19.4
points, 7.4 rebounds, and 2.0 blocked shots per game. He was a force in the low
post, making 55 percent of his shots.
White is now listed at 6-foot-6, 232 pounds, a tad undersized for a major college player
in the paint, but Coach Kelvin Sampson will expect him to anchor Indiana's inside game and
hold up well under the physical rigors of Big Ten play.
Cincinnati's JuCo crop: Former Bearcat coach Bob Huggins got a lot of mileage
from junior college players while at Cincinnati and has already turned on that pipeline at
Kansas State. New Bearcats coach Mick Cronin has continued that tradition; the Bearcats
could start as many as four former JuCo players this season.
The best of the bunch is center Hernol Hall, Juco Junction's fourth-ranked JC player last
season. The 6-foot-10, 245-pound center from Costa Rica was an NJCAA All-America at
Lon Morris College (Texas), where he averaged 14.3 points and 10.0 rebounds per
game. He also has international experience on Costa Rica's national team.
Another key player for Cincinnati will be point guard Tim Crowell. He also played in
Texas last year at Midland College, where he led his league by dishing out 7.5 assists per
game. Crowell added 3.0 steals and 11.0 points per game. He also brings strong
leadership skills to the Bearcats, something Coach Cronin desperately needs to pull
together a roster full of newcomers.
Texas Tech's JuCo crop: Bob Knight's recruiting class this year includes
Rogdrick Craig, a potential starter at forward, who is the son of former NFL star Roger
Craig. He is joined by forward Jay Mitchell, who played three years of pro baseball
in the Colorado Rockies' organization, and Esmir Rizvic, a 7-footer who once broke his leg
in the first half of a game yet managed to play the entire second half.
I'm not sure how good this group is, but it's got to be one of the more interesting ones
in the nation.
Patrick Ewing, Jr., Georgetown: After two nondescript years at Indiana (3.4
ppg, 3.7 rpg), Ewing transferred to his dad's old stomping ground. He is unlikely to
see much playing time for the son of his dad's old coach, John Thompson III, because the
Hoyas' frontcourt is stacked with talent this year, but this move is still an interesting
footnote to the season.
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