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Posts Tagged ‘Basketball’

Hoops notes: White guys, good guys and too many guys

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

From the because-I-just-can’t-help-myself department, here are a few basketball notes:

1. The Augusta Chronicle tells its readers that an entrepreneur’s plans to launch an all-white men’s professional basketball league in the southeast are meeting with an oddly tepid response.

In a statement, the All-American Basketball Alliance announced that “only players that are natural born United States citizens with both parents of Caucasian race are eligible to play … “.

The league is the brainchild of Don “Moose” Lewis, a professional wrestling promoter, who calls himself the league’s Commissioner and says he seeks to start teams in 10 or so southern cities.

“There’s nothing hatred about what we’re doing,” he told the Chronicle. “I don’t hate anyone of color. But people of white, American-born citizens are in the minority now. Here’s a league for white players to play fundamental basketball, which they like.”

The Atlanta Journal suggests that the whole thing might be a publicity stunt.

For the sake of Moose’s wallet, I hope so, because everybody who wants to sit and watch white guys play catch is over at the softball field.

2. The Washington Post’s Tracee Hamilton holds forth today on the NCAA’s notion to expand the NCAA men’s basketball tournament from its current field of 65 teams to 96.

This from the folks who can’t pull together a playoff system at all on the football side of things.

Writes Hamilton:

What is it about corporate greed that, when a company is making a kabillion dollars, it immediately begins wondering, “How can I make a kabillion and one dollars?” Capitalism is great, as long as you don’t screw up the product. The expanded field would definitely screw up the product.

Since the field expanded to 64 teams in 1985, has there ever been a year when you watched the Selection Show and thought, “Man, 31 teams got hosed.” No. There have never been 31 teams who deserved to make the field but didn’t. One or two, maybe. Not 31.

3. Former Western Carolina star Kevin Martin, a Sacramento King, is one of the top scorers in the NBA. But he gets a lot of his points at the foul line, and all that foul-drawing has been tough on his 6-7, 185lb. frame. He’s been injured for great swaths of each of the past three seasons.

He’s back on the court now, trying to form a cohesive backcourt with rookie sensation Tyreke Evans.

Moreover, he’s trying to add to, not disrupt, the chemistry that got the young and dynamic Kings off to a hot start. So far, not so good: the Kings have lost four straight since his return. To be fair, the losses were on a tough eastern road swing, but the team’s chemistry problems are evident.

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SPORTS: WCU rises in polls again, faces no. 24 Clemson

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

CULLOWHEE–Western Carolina’s men’s basketball team rose another two spots to number six in the CollegeInsider.com mid-major poll this week  — despite having had the week off for finals — and resumes action tonight at AP no. 24 Clemson.

According to the Asheville Citizen-Times the Catamounts will be one player short, due to a practice injury over the weekend, but the WCU coaching staff did not divulge which player would likely miss tonight’s game.

Western has been off since its Dec. 12 win at Louisville.

Sports Network preview here.

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SPORTS: Sporting News interview with WCU’s Jake Robinson

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

CULLOWHEE–Ryan Fagan of the Sporting News has a long question-and-answer session with Catamount senior forward Jake Robinson.

Here’s a snippet:

SN: You guys received a couple of votes in both the AP and coaches poll after beating Louisville. Is that pretty exciting for the school?
JR: It is. The students and faculty are really buying into what we’re doing now. The last couple of days here at school, everywhere I go, it’s “Oh, what a great win guys, you guys are unbelievable,” or, “We saw it on TV.” It really is good for the school, for the recognition. It’s not historically a great basketball school or a great basketball program, so for us to get some recognition and some attention is good.

Here’s the piece.

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SPORTS: WCU basketball jumps to eighth in poll

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

CULLOWHEE–Western Carolina’s red-hot basketball team has ridden a nine-game winning streak and Saturday’s upset of Rick Pitino’s Louisville Cardinals to a number eight spot in the most recent CollegeInsider.com mid-major poll, released Monday night.

The Catamounts are up from 15 the week before.

Western has also risen to number 10 in the national RPI rankings.

A variety of national polls are reflecting the success of coach Larry Hunter’s team. Read more here from the university’s sports site, catamountsports.com.

Read a feature from Tyler Norris Goode in Tuesday’s Asheville Citizen-Times here.

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WCU sports notes: Men’s basketball

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

2009-12-08Slam Online’s Joey Whelan’s take on Western’s win at Bradley:

Western Carolina out of the SoCon took down Bradley last night, significant because the MVC is looking stacked this season and because the Catamounts are now looking pretty at 8-1, their only loss coming to Texas. The rest of the early season schedule includes the aforementioned win over the Braves, solid victories over conference opponents Furman and Wofford and the win to hang your hat on for now, an 83-77 squeaker over Duquesne. This is an offense by committee with six players averaging between six and 11 points and five averaging been four and six rebounds. It’s always hard to gauge how these hot starts can carry over into the near year, but with the type of balance Western Carolina is showing, I like them in the SoCon to make some noise.

2009-12-08 – WCU beats Bradley.

2009-12-07 -Western Carolina’s mens basketball team enters tonight’s game against Bradley University in Peoria, Illinois, with six straight wins in its back pocket, and a 7-1 overall record.

The Catamounts rose today to 15th in the collegeinsider.com mid-major poll.

The Cats are coming off of consecutive league victories over Wofford and Furman, and Western is ranked 97th in the Sagarin college basketball rankings from USA Today. Bradley, which competes in the Missouri Valley Conference, is 93rd. On the other hand, the Cats are 32nd in the national RPI rankings, Bradley 86th.

Western is playing a steady — and luxurious — ten-man rotation, and has had six different high-scorers in eight games. The Catamounts have shown flashes of potential on offense, including a record-setting night from three-point territory in a victory over Duquesne, but have hung their hats on their defense. Western is forcing 21 turnovers per game, good for a nationally fifth-best turnover ratio of 7.8. The Catamounts are ranked eighth in steals.

Tonight’s game is the first of a three-year three-game series with the Braves; two in Illinois, one in Cullowhee.

2009-11-29 – WCU at #52 in the national RPI, one spot behind Bradley, who Western plays next week.

2009-11-29 – Western Carolina forced 29 turnovers in a comfortable 75-59 win Saturday at Gardner Webb. As the the Shelby Star reported, Western beat the Runnin’ Bulldogs at their own up-tempo game. Brandon Giles, a senior all-conference selection, had 24 points after a quiet start to his season. This was Larry Hunter’s first win in four tries against Gardner Webb.

2009-11-26WCU tops Duquesne (post)

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Catamounts top Bradley, rise in poll

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

Western Carolina’s men’s basketball team had a pretty good Monday — the Cats jumped ten spots to number 15 in the collegeinsider.com mid-major poll, then jumped all over Bradley in the second half for a 75-67 win in Peoria, Il.

Western got 21 points from Jake Robinson, and after trailing 56-46 midway through the second half, tore off a 23-4 run to secure the win.

Read the game story here from the Peoria Star-Journal

Read the game blog here from the Peoria Star-Journal

Another note or two here

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WCU tops unbeaten Duquesne, goes 4-1; Williams is MVP

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

Mike Williams

Mike Williams

CULLOWHEE–Western Carolina’s mens basketball team got 25 points from former Pisgah star Jake Robinson and broke a record with 17 team three-pointers en route to a 83-77 win over previously unbeaten Duquesne Wednesday at Ramsey Center.

The game was the third in three days for Western in the O’Reilly’s Auto Parts CBE Classic, a subregion of which the Catamounts hosted.

Western won convincingly over Arkansas-Monticello and Binghamton in games on Monday and Tuesday.

Duquesne came in with a win over Iowa under its belt, but needed overtime to put away the Boll Weevils of Div. II Arkansas-Monticello Tuesday.

Western’s Mike Williams, a junior guard who transferred from Jackson State, was named tournament MVP.

Pittsburgh Tribune-Review (staffed the game)
Coverage from ESPN
Duquesne athletics writeup
WCU athletics writeup

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SPORTS: SLAMonline.com features WCU’s Mutombo

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

CULLOWHEE–The online basketball publication SLAM features WCU sophomore Harouna Mutombo in this Sunday post.

Mutombo, nephew of NBA great Dikembe Mutombo, was named Southern Conference Freshman of the Year last year, as well as to the SoCon All-Conference second team.

Here’s an excerpt from the story:

Playing in a mid-major conference, Mutombo’s exploits were regularly outshone by the bright star that was Stephen Curry at Davidson last season. Regardless, Harouna made a huge splash in the Southern Conference leading the Catamounts in both points (14.4) and rebounds (4.6) while placing second in assists (68), steals (56) and blocks (16) and minutes (30.4).

And it didn’t stop there. After he finished up his college season, Canada Basketball invited him to train with the National Team as they prepared for the World Championship Qualifying Tournament where he would be under the tutelage of not only Team Canada’s head coach Leo Rautins but also Raptors’ Maurizio Gherardini and Cavs assistant coach Mike Malone learning the international game, even playing a few exhibition games in Spain for Canada.

In a related matter, a Texas blogger wondered last week whether Harouna would adopt his uncle’s famous finger-wagging “no-no” after blocking an opponent’s shot. That remains to be seen, we suppose.

No-no.

No-no.

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SPORTS: Back to earth: WCU loses big at Texas

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

This Western Carolina men’s basketball team starts the season with the highest expectations in decades, but after a frigid start offensively and an absolute pounding at the hands of no. 3 Texas Wednesday, it’s clear that the Catamounts (1-1) have some work to do.

In fact, the early Southern Conference darling would have to be surprising Wofford, of the South Division, which has a last-second loss to Pittsburgh and a win over Georgia under its belt.

Western showed some defensive bright spots against the mega-talent at Texas — the Cats forced 21 turnovers — but Western shot an abysmal 26.2% from the floor. Even adjusted for Texas’s overwhelming defense, that’s bad. The Catamounts are a combined 6-of-39 from behind the arc, an area where Western expects to perform well.

WCU has the chance to work on its issues in a Thanksgiving week basketball intensive in Cullowhee: Western hosts Duquesne, Binghamton and Arkansas-Monticello next week, in the O’Reilly’s Auto Parts CBE Classic tournament.

Read about the Texas game in the Austin American Statesman here.

See highlights from ESPN here.

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A championship hoops contender in Cullowhee

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

CULLOWHEE–While Western Carolina’s men’s basketball program has had its moments, those moments have most often been related to individual performances, or nice late-season runs.

The Catamounts beat Nebraska, Tennessee, Florida State, Georgia Tech and Kansas State over the years. Danny Manning’s 1988 national championship Kansas Jayhawks team topped Western by only five points that year in Cullowhee. And Western once made a torrid run through the SoCon tournament and on to within a hair’s breadth of becoming the first 16th seed NCAA tourney team to knock off a number one seed, losing to Purdue by two in 1996.

WCU was also the first white southern school to admit African-American athletes (basketball players, in 1964); and a few pro players, including one of the NBA’s top current scorers, played college ball in Cullowhee.

Still, not since Western’s earliest years in the Southern Conference, some thirty years ago, have the Catamounts been regular, solid contenders, and never has a Western team been a preseason pick to win the league.

Finally, things have changed in Cullowhee. Coach Larry Hunter, one of the winningest coaches in college basketball, enters his fifth year at Western with a fully-stocked pantry of talent, and the Cats, coming off their first winning season in over a decade and a SoCon north division co-championship, are picked as the team to beat.

The Catamounts opened with a 23-point home win last weekend over NAIA St. Catherine, but leap directly into the fire tonight, when they visit number three Texas, in Austin.

Here’s a season preview from the WCU media folks:

Coming off its first winning season since 1996-97 and the program’s second conference divisional title a year ago, Western Carolina was today tabbed as the preseason favorite in the Southern Conference’s North Division as voted upon by the league’s 12 head coaches.

Western Carolina returns all five starters from a team that tied for the North Division Championship last season with an 11-9 mark in league play. The Catamounts earned 10 first-place votes and finished the balloting with 64 points, the most of any squad in the conference.

According to available records, WCU’s preseason first-place pick in the North Division is the first in program history since joining the SoCon in 1977-78. The media preseason poll will be announced next week as a part of the SoCon Preseason Head Coaches’ Teleconference.

Additionally, senior guard Brandon Giles and reigning conference freshman of the year, red-shirt sophomore Harouna Mutombo, were named to the preseason All-SoCon team as three teams put two teammates on the 10-man honorary squad.

Giles, who became the 37th different Catamount to eclipse the 1,000-point career plateau a season ago, earned third team All-SoCon plaudits from the media a season ago after ranking 13th in the league in scoring at 13.3 points per game. He led WCU in scoring on nine occasions including scoring 20-or-more five times.

Mutombo became the fourth different Catamount all-time to garner SoCon Freshman of the Year plaudits, and the first since Jarvis Hayes in 2000. The Pickering, Ontario native was the top-scoring freshman – and only one of three in the top 30 in the SoCon – with a 14.6 point per game average. He posted 24 double-digit scoring outings in his first season, reaching the 20-point plateau six times including a career-best 29 in the home win over UNC Greensboro.

Behind the first-place Catamounts, Appalachian State earned the remaining two first-place votes in the North Division and finished with 55 points. Samford (44) was chosen third while last season’s tournament champion, Chattanooga (39), was slotted fourth. Elon and UNC Greensboro tied for fifth place with 22 points apiece.

Opposite WCU in the South Division, the College of Charleston – led by preseason Player of the Year, Andrew Goudelock – was selected by the head coaches to finish first, garnering eight first-place votes. The Cougars finished 15-5 in league play a season ago and advanced to the tournament championship before falling to the Mocs.

Wofford picked up three first-place votes and finished second in the preseason balloting with 54 points. Davidson, which has won the South Division each of the past three years, earned the final first-place vote in the South Division and came in third with 48 points. The Citadel (36) finished fourth, followed by Furman (24) and Georgia Southern (21).

In addition to aforementioned Giles, Goudelock and Mutombo, the preseason all-conference team included Tony White, Jr., from the College of Charleston; Noah Dahlman and Junior Salters from Wofford. Other members of the preseason team included Will Archambault (Davidson), Kellen Brand (Appalachian State), Willie Powers (Georgia Southern) and Cameron Wells (The Citadel).

The regular season opens Friday, November 13 when nine teams hit the court with 11 of the 12 SoCon teams will begin play over that weekend. Western Carolina takes to the hardwood for the first time on Saturday, Nov. 14, as it hosts St. Catharine’s College at 7:00 pm in the Ramsey Center.

SoCon Men’s Basketball Predicted Order of Finish

North Division

Team (1st Place Votes) Total

1. Western Carolina (10) – 64

2. Appalachian State (2) – 55

3. Samford – 44

4. Chattanooga – 39

5. Elon – 22

UNC Greensboro – 22

South Division

Team (1st Place Votes) Total

1. College of Charleston (8) – 63

2. Wofford (3) – 54

3. Davidson (1) – 48

4. The Citadel – 36

5. Furman – 24

6. Georgia Southern – 21

2009-10 Preseason All-Conference Team

Will Archambault, Davidson

Kellen Brand, Appalachian State

Noah Dahlman, Wofford

Brandon Giles, Western Carolina

Andrew Goudelock, College of Charleston

Harouna Mutombo, Western Carolina

Willie Powers, Georgia Southern

Junior Salters, Wofford

Cameron Wells, The Citadel

Tony White, Jr., College of Charleston

2009-10 Preseason Player of the Year

Andrew Goudelock, College of Charleston

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SPORTS: Southern Conference hoops life without Stephen Curry

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

CHATTANOOGA–David Uchiyama at the Chattanooga Times Free Press writes about the legacy of Stephen Curry, who earned all-America stripes while leading tiny Davidson to the elite eight of the NCAA men’s basketball tournament.

Curry left Davidson a year early, was drafted way up the NBA list, and now plays for Golden State.

Uchiyama talked to multiple SoCon coaches for the piece, which discusses Curry’s impact on the league.

A snip:

“Players like that graduate, he just went a year early,” Western Carolina coach Larry Hunter said. “Somebody else is going to fill those shoes this year, next year or down the road.

“Hopefully for the conference, there will be a few and they’ll come quick.”

Read the whole piece here.

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UPDATED: Sports: Sacramento’s Martin opts for surgery

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

Sacramento Kings swingman Kevin Martin, a Western Carolina University product and currently the National Basketball Association’s third-leading scorer, suffered a hairline fracture of his non-shooting wrist in a collision with Allen Iverson during Monday’s win over Memphis.

Kevin Martin (PAUL KITAGAKI JR., Sacarmento Bee)

Kevin Martin (PAUL KITAGAKI JR., Sacramento Bee)

Martin, who scored 48 points in that game and another 29 in Wednesday’s loss to Atlanta, must decide today whether to wear a soft cast and continue playing — risking further injury — or to treat the injury with surgery or a hard cast.

Martin wasn’t given a choice by the team, he announced Friday, and will undergo surgery for the injury. He’ll miss at least two months.

Martin’s career has been dogged by injuries, and he’s sometimes criticized for being “soft”.

Read more here from the Sacramento Bee on Martin’s response to the “soft” accusation.

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Sports: A hot ticket in Cullowhee for college basketball fans

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

CULLOWHEE–It’s probably been a quarter-century since basketball tickets were as hot in Cullowhee as they’re going to be this year, and folks at the Ramsey Center are making sure everybody who wants them gets them.

The Western Carolina athletics department has announced broad discounts on season ticket packages, including a $125 family pack (2 adults, 2 kids) that’ll get your entire brood into any men’s or women’s game all season long.

A single adult season ticket for all games is $75.

Western’s men’s team is as deep and talented as it has been in the Ramsey Center era, and has been picked to win the Southern Conference’s north division and compete for a league championship. Western shared the north division crown with Chattanooga last year.

The Catamount women went 21-12 and won their second league tourney crown in five years last year. They went on to a 13th seed appearance in the NCAA tournament, where they fell to Vanderbilt.

Western lost three starters who combined for some 29 points and 15 rebounds a game to graduation, and coach Kellie Harper moved on to become head coach at NC State. But Western landed a strong recruiting class and a quality coach in Karen Middleton, formerly an assistant at Illinois.

After opening with St. Catherine’s (KY) in mid November, the WCU men travel to Texas and then host Arkansas-Monticello, Binghamton and Duquesne as part of the O’Reilly Auto Parts CBE Classic.

Read more about the programs, and about the season ticket offer here.

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WCU/Evans case: NCAA LOI’s “might not stand up”

Friday, September 18th, 2009

NATIONAL-The Raleigh News and Observer follows up today on the impact of a Raleigh basketball player’s refusal to honor her letter of intent to attend Western Carolina University.

Evans changed her mind about Western after the coach who recruited her left. The university at first refused to release her from her letter of intent, and Evans’s family initiated legal action.

The N&O’s lead:

Many of the best high school senior basketball players in the country will sign national letters of intent with colleges beginning Nov. 11.

But for those under the age of 18 who sign, the letters might not be legally binding, at least in North Carolina.

Read the entire piece here.

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Updated: Recruit knocks heads with WCU, sues NCAA

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

CULLOWHEE–Last year, Raleigh high school basketball star Kelsey Evans signed a national letter of intent to play womens basketball for dynamic coach Kellie Harper at Western Carolina.

But when Harper left for a job at NC State in late spring, Evans, who is very good, but presumably not good enough to play at State, decided to go to school closer to home, at Elon.

Here’s the catch, though: Western hasn’t released Evans from her letter of intent. And Evans, interestingly, has sued the National Collegiate Athletic Association.

The implications for the NCAA could be far-reaching, because it is under growing pressure to reconcile its lofty ideals of student athleticism with the high-dollar, often tawdry realities of college athletics.

The impact at Western could be substantial … Both the Raleigh and Asheville daily newspapers have taken Western to task for making things difficult for this young athlete. Keith Jarrett, the senior sportswriter at the Asheville Citizen-Times, was apoplectic yesterday, winding up his opinion piece with a rhetorical question that shouldn’t have made it past any editor who’d ever even met a lawyer.

The impact at Western could be substantial, too. Both the Raleigh and Asheville daily newspapers have taken Western to task for making things difficult for this young athlete. Keith Jarrett, the senior sportswriter at the Asheville Citizen-Times, was apoplectic yesterday, winding up his opinion piece with a rhetorical question that shouldn’t have made it past any editor who’d ever even met a lawyer.

My first take on the subject was this: why on earth would WCU risk the bad publicity of playing tug-of-war with a kid who was obviously never going to attend Western Carolina? It wouldn’t be good for the young woman (who should be the priority) and certainly nothing good could come of it for the school. I wrote as much.

Well, nothing good will come of it for the school, that’s for sure, but the story is a little more nuanced than it might seem.

Here’s a simplified version: when a scholarship student-athlete wants to leave one college for another, that athlete must petition his or her current school for a release. When a student is enrolled, this is a relatively straightforward process. The athlete petitions the athletics department for a release, and if the department says no, she makes her case to a school committee, and ultimately a final decision is reached. It’s been implied by other sources that these releases are most often a formality, but apparently not so.

Complications, one of them being that a transfer to a rival school is a no-no, can interfere.

Things are a little more murky when a student — like Evans — signs a national letter of intent, but has a change of heart before she enrolls. She’s free to go to school wherever she chooses, of course, but unless WCU gives her a release, and if she goes to another NCAA Div. 1 school, she has to wait a year to play basketball. And she loses a year of eligibility. This is a NCAA rule.

Evans, her attorney and her parents are taking exception to this rule, saying, in essence, that if coach Kellie Harper can break her contract, Evans should have the right to do the same. Evans’ lawyer says the rules are geared to protect college athletics departments, not kids. This point of law is where the NCAA has its work cut out for it.

Meanwhile, WCU Athletics Director Chip Smith would argue that a lot of time and money is spent recruiting players, and that the letter of intent is a contract, reserving the student a place on the team and a desk in the classroom.

Evans asked to be released from her obligation to Western because the coach she wanted to play for was gone. But she wants to play for Elon — in fact is already enrolled there — and the Phoenix are in the Southern Conference along with WCU.

That’s why Western said no.

Newspaper coverage has implied that Western more or less forced the frustrated Evans family to sue. It is possible, though, that after the initial “no”, the family’s contact with the university has been minimal — the appeals process for non-enrolled students is through the NCAA, not the school. This being the case, it is clear that the newspapers are taking the student’s family’s word that Western is being difficult.

Maybe, maybe not. WCU isn’t talking, playing once again its familiar role of an ostrich in the media headlights.

But if it is true that the Evans asked only once, the suggestion that WCU is going out of its way to make things difficult for Evans is a trumped-up charge. In fact, if it is true, and if Evans and her parents expected to be automatically released from their agreement no questions asked, then we’re left to wonder whether they were taking their obligation a little too lightly.

More reading …
Here are some earlier excerpts from the Raleigh News and Observer:

Kelsey Evans filed a lawsuit Wednesday in Wake County Superior Court asking for her letter of intent to be thrown out because she signed it as a minor and it was not approved by a Superior Court judge. Without that approval, North Carolina law allows the minor to back out of certain contracts upon turning 18, as Evans did in May.

The intent of the statute is to protect precocious performers — actors, singers, dancers — from unscrupulous parents and talent agents. But it also applies to agreements to “render services as a participant or player in a sport.”

Evans’ lawyer:

“It would seem to me, looking at the letter of intent and the manner in which the NCAA works, it’s pretty clear the emphasis of the NCAA in the letter-of-intent system is to protect colleges and not the kids. That’s why we have laws in North Carolina to protect minors, and we intend to take full advantage of those laws.”

News and Observer staff writer Luke Dedock:

Evans’ legal argument aside, there is a bigger issue in play here. A letter of intent is an agreement between a player and a school, not a player and a coach. But given the mobility and role of college coaches today, holding that line seems a little predatory. It’s hard to pretend that players are choosing schools only for that school at the same time coaches are being paid seven-figure salaries to convince those same players to attend.

Evans’ mom:

“It has been extremely hard for me to believe that someone would hold back a 17-year-old girl from pursuing what she feels is in her best interest and her future,” Lisa Evans said. “It’s extremely hard to grasp and believe. I could never have imagined it would be this long a process.”

Read the story at the N&O here.

Read the Asheville Citizen-Times piece here.

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WCU sports notes: Womens basketball – the recruit that walked away

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

2009-07-23 - At Raleigh Wakefield, reports the Burlington Times News, Kelsey Evans was a member of teams with a four-year record of 108-8. As a senior, she averaged 18.5 points and 10 rebounds per game and was selected as the CAP-7 Conference Player of the Year. She signed with Kellie Harper at Western, but when Harper moved on, so did Evans. She’s now enrolled at SoCon rival Elon, but is still trying to work out a release from Western. Apparently that may or may not happen, and nobody at Western has commented.

• After a 21-12 campaign that ended with a Southern Conference tournament championship and a trip to the NCAA tournament, Western Carolina’s womens basketball team pulled down further accolades recently by finishing in the national academic top-25 for the third straight year. The team’s combined GPA during the 2009 academic year was 3.428.

• On a different note, first-year coach Karen Middleton released Western’s schedule for the 2009-2010 campaign. In addition to a full SoCon slate, the Catamounts will tackle a lineup that includes an appearance at the Great Alaska Shootout as well as matchups with Richmond, East Carolina, James Madison, Charlotte, Western Kentucky and Florida State.

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Karen Middleton to coach Lady Catamounts

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

CULLOWHEE–Karen Middleton, an assistant coach at the University of Illinois, will replace Kellie Harper as head coach of the Western Carolina women’s basketball team.

Karen Middleton

Karen Middleton

Western has announced a press conference for 1:30 on Friday.

Middleton has been an assistant at Illinois for the past two years, where she played a prominent role in recruiting the nation’s third-ranked class in 2008.

She coached for the previous ten years at Stanford University under head coach Tara VanDerveer. While Middleton was at Stanford the Cardinal won eight Pac-10 conference titles and made 10 consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances, including four Sweet Sixteens and three Elite Eights. At Stanford, she coached three Kodak All-Americans (Candice Wiggins, Nicole Powell and Kristin Folkl), two Pac-10 Players of the Year (Wiggins and Powell), and 11 players that went on to play in the WNBA.

Prior to Stanford, Middleton coached at Eastern Washington and the University of South Carolina.

A native of Jefferson, NC, Middleton was raised in McBee, SC and played college basketball at the University of South Carolina.

More from:

Asheville Citizen-Times

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Avery leaves WCU basketball program

Monday, May 11th, 2009

CULLOWHEE–The Findlay (OH) Courier reported today that Western Carolina guard Greg Avery has transferred to Div. II University of Findlay.

Avery, from Newark, OH, played in 30 games and started four for Western. He averaged 6.6 pts. and 3.9 rebounds per game in just over 21 minutes playing time.

The U of F Oilers are coming off a 36-0 record and a Div. II national championship.

Wrote Courier reporter Brian Lester:

You can’t blame the guy for his decision to transfer.

I mean, why not play for a team that has a chance to contend for a title year in and year out rather than a Division I school that might be fortunate enough to play one or two games in the NCAA Tournament?

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Dillsboro’s Hartbarger to coach Franklin Lady Panthers

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

DILLSBORO–Dillsboro resident Scott Hartbarger, who coached the Smoky Mountain High School boys basketball team for several years before Jimmy Cleaveland’s arrival, will take the reins of the Franklin High girls squad.

Hartbarger replaces Jay Brooks, 2008 MAC coach of the year, who stepped down to become co-athletics director.

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… and he rebounds like he’s stealing cheese from peasants.

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

NATIONAL–An ESPN announcer, praising Paul Pierce’s jump shot during the recent Celtics series against the Bulls, said “he looks like he’s shooting out of a phone booth”, thereby surely baffling half to two-thirds of the viewing audience.

Here’s a public service image:

phone booth 150x150 ... and he rebounds like hes stealing cheese from peasants.

Learn more about the mysterious phone booth here.

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