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Post by Fastbreak on Apr 11, 2006 18:41:43 GMT -5
“There’s a lot of movin’ and shakin’ this time of year,” said former UNC-Wilmington assistant coach Marty McGillan, who has an offer to join Brownell’s staff at Wright State. McGillan seems secure in the fact that he’ll land somewhere solid, but he knows it won’t be Wilmington. This is life in the nomadic profession known as coaching. “It beats working and having a (real) job,” McGillan, 42, said. He’s been in the profession 18 seasons. He may join Brownell in his new gig, but he’s looking at other undisclosed options. Assistant coach Billy Donlon will be joining Brownell at Wright State, which competes in the Horizon League. Paperwork still must be completed, but Donlon, like McGillan a UNCW graduate, will wear Raiders green on the recruiting trail. www.wilmingtonstar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060411/NEWS/60411001/1005It sounds like we will probably get both McGillan and Donlon as assistants. I hope we get a third assistant here in a hurry. The late signing period starts tomorrow.
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Post by Fastbreak on Apr 2, 2006 8:32:15 GMT -5
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Post by Fastbreak on Apr 1, 2006 16:05:34 GMT -5
I know coaches usually bring in their own people, but that's not guaranteed. Having someone with a tie to the current players would help the transition. With Donoher's ties to the community and his daughter's recent health problems, I wouldn't be surprised to see him retained. It would be a nice PR move by our new coach.
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Post by Fastbreak on Apr 5, 2006 21:06:44 GMT -5
OK, were exactly is Marist? Poughkeepsie, NY
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Post by Fastbreak on Mar 26, 2006 9:40:16 GMT -5
It's great to know our beat writer is completely out of the loop at WSU. I was thinking the same thing when I read that article.
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Post by Fastbreak on Apr 11, 2006 19:05:28 GMT -5
Tuesday, March 28, 2006 All-Star basketball tryouts will be full of Louisville players By Jody Demling jdemling@courier-journal.com The Courier-Journal Ten boys' high school basketball players from the Louisville-area are among the 40 that will receive invitations to try out for the Kentucky All-Star team. Officials from the Kentucky Lions Eye Foundation released the list yesterday to the media. Tryouts will be conducted April 21-22, and the teams will be announced April 26 in Bowling Green. The All-Star games against Indiana will be played June 17 in Bowling Green and June 24 in Indianapolis. Among the locals invited are Jeffersontown's Ceedrick Ware, the Sweet 16 MVP, and Shelby County Mr. Basketball candidate A.J. Slaughter. Also receiving invitations: Kevin Allen, North Oldham; Terrance Britt, Fern Creek; Robert Buckner, Eastern; Chad Byron, Trinity; Vincent Crutcher, Pleasure Ridge Park; Tra'h Moore, Manual; Leroy Nobles, Central and Forrest Smallwood, Male. Walt Allen, South Laurel; Daniel Ard, Marshall County; Todd Atcher, Elizabethtown; Brandon Bland, John Hardin; John Bonnewell, Barren County; Brian Calhoun, Bardstown; Randon Cavette, Graves County; Antonio Davis, Union County; Chase Denson, Lone Oak; Doug Denton, Apollo; Aaron Dunaway, Henry Clay; Pat Elliott, Pendleton County; Dustin Fothergill, Pulaski Southwestern; Cody Gilbert, Wolfe County; Jay Ivey, Owensboro Catholic; Jeremy Jones, Trigg County; Brad Lowe, Pike County Central; Josh Mack, University Heights; Blake McCowan, Morgan County; Brett Miller, Carroll County; Stuart Miller, Middlesboro; Antonio Owens, Boyd County; Travis Owsley, Owensboro Catholic; Dan Penick, Ludlow; Brian Staed, Boyle County; Maze Stallworth, John Hardin; Jeff Vories, Highlands; Tyler Wilkerson, Lafayette; Chris Williams, Woodford County; Deontay Wright, Paul Dunbar. www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060328/SPORTS02/603280427/1028
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Post by Fastbreak on Apr 10, 2006 19:59:21 GMT -5
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Post by Fastbreak on Apr 8, 2006 16:49:51 GMT -5
The game is on April 15.
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Post by Fastbreak on Apr 8, 2006 8:50:05 GMT -5
HOOPS STARS - Three 9th Region high school basketball players are on the rosters for the Ohio-Kentucky All-Star Games scheduled for April 15 at Thomas More College. The Kentucky girls' roster includes seniors Rachel Lantry of Holy Cross and Ashley Griffith of Boone County. The local senior on the Kentucky boys' roster is Dan Penick of Ludlow.The girls' game will begin at 6 p.m. followed by the boys' game at approximately 8. Tickets will be sold at the door beginning at 5 p.m. A slam-dunk contest and 3-point shooting contest will be held next Friday beginning at 7 p.m. Nell Fookes of Boone County will coach the Kentucky girls' team. Seven of the players on her roster are Division I college recruits. The Kentucky boys' coach is Mike Clark of Shelby County. BOYS' ROSTERS Kentucky - Walt Allen (South Laurel), Daniel Ard (Marshall County), Lawrence Brown (Millersberg), Vincent Crutcher (Pleasure Ridge Park), Aaron Dunaway (Henry Clay), Antonio Owens (Boyd County), Joshua Mack (University Heights), Dan Penick (Ludlow), A.J. Slaughter (Shelby County), Forrest Smallwood (Male), Brian Staed (Boyle County), Johnathan Uchendu (Millersberg), Cedrick Ware (Jeffersontown), Chris Williams (Woodford County), Tyler Wilkerson (Lafayette). Ohio - Nick Aldridge (South Webster), Mike Bardo (Oak Hills), Javonte Clanton (Reynoldsburg), Nate Davis (Bellaire), Dennis Gagai (Ironton), Donald Garth (Buchtel), Adrian Graves (Hughes), John Guiler (Johnstown), Marcus Johnson (St. Vincent-St. Mary), Jimmy Langhurst (Willard), Chris McKnight (Lancaster), Steve Pogue (Oak Hills), P.J. Rase (Chesapeake), Cam Thoroughman (Clay), Brigham Waginger (South Webster). news.kypost.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060407/SPT01/604070376/1014/NEWS02
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Post by Fastbreak on Sept 15, 2006 18:05:54 GMT -5
NCAA's crusade against prep schools should include due process Sep. 15, 2006 By Gary Parrish CBS SportsLine.com Senior Writer I have no way of knowing what the NCAA is up to next week. I couldn't begin to guess. They didn't return a call. But if our friends in Indianapolis aren't too busy and are looking for a way to spend a few days, I have a suggestion. They should just follow these steps. Step 1: Go to Expedia.com. Step 2: Find a flight from Indianapolis to Charlotte. Step 3. Book that flight. Step 4: Board that flight. Step 5: Land in Charlotte. Step 6: Exit the plane. Step 7: Go to baggage claim. Step 8: Look for Colin Stevens. "They don't even have to get a rental car; I'll meet them in Charlotte, pick them up and drive them back to our campus," said Stevens, headmaster of the Patterson School, located about 80 miles north of Charlotte. "I welcome them. I want them to come and visit us. We have nothing to hide." If Stevens sounds frustrated, that's because he is. The Englishman has been in education for 33 years, even spending some time representing the British government in the Caribbean and Canada. Now, he's running Patterson, an institution that happens to have a top-tier prep basketball program, which these days is akin to being a muscle-head slugging home runs at an astonishing rate. Even if everything is on the level, people can't help but be suspicious. So when the NCAA released, in July, a list of 22 prep schools it planned to further review as part of its well-documented crackdown on "diploma mills," it was no surprise that Patterson was on it. Stevens wasn't even that upset. He figured it just went with the territory, was merely the cost of having elite players, and that the NCAA would send a representative some time soon, check things out and subsequently remove his school from this list. Then came August. Now it's September. The NCAA is yet to visit. So the label remains. And it's costly. Sure, Patterson will still field a nice team this season. It has Tennessee pledge Cameron Tatum, Seton Hall pledge Jeremy Hazell and Rutgers pledge Earl Pettis, plus one of the top juniors (James Tyler) and sophomores (Karron Johnson) in the nation. But, according to coach Chris Chaney, things could have been better. Patterson was close to landing Rivals.com's No. 1 player in the Class of 2007 (Michael Beasley) and No. 14 player in the Class of 2008 (Devin Ebanks). However, with the NCAA's list essentially warning that attending Patterson could leave prospects in a situation where their core work won't be recognized next fall, each prospect opted to enroll elsewhere. "That's two McDonald's All-Americans, probably two pros," Chaney said. "We're still going to be fine. But we won't have the team we could've had." What NCAA president Myles Brand is trying to do is good. Let's be clear about that. Over the past few years, one fraudulent prep school after another popped up across the country, and many of them were more irresponsible than that ABC miniseries The Path to 9/11. Something needed to be done. It was time for a crackdown. Far as I'm concerned, the more phony institutions the NCAA exposes, the better. Along the same lines, if Patterson is a sham it should be shut down, too. Make no mistake, this is not a column vouching for Patterson. Rather, it's a column about due process, and the fact that Patterson should not be left under a cloud of suspicion for months -- well into the semester, now -- without the NCAA making a genuine effort to find out whatever it is it intends to find out. So far, according to Patterson officials, everything the NCAA has requested has been provided. First, there was a questionnaire. It was filled out and returned. Then months passed with no response before the NCAA suddenly asked for text books. So Stevens overnighted three boxes of text books. Next they asked for yearbooks. So Stevens overnighted four different yearbooks. The office of Rep. Patrick McHenry of North Carolina has even called the NCAA, pleading on the school's behalf. That has happened three times, Stevens said. Still, there has been no change in status. Still, Patterson remains on the list. "I thought this country carried a similar philosophy to Britain, that you are innocent until proven guilty. But that is obviously not true," Stevens said. "I have no problem with them doing anything they can to make sure everybody is providing our young people with the best standard of education. I welcome it because it makes us stronger and weeds out the bad prep schools. But they need to come see us and take us off that list." If, and when, the NCAA ever does accept Stevens' offer, what they'll find might be surprising because Patterson is not some fly-by-night factory run by a former AAU coach in a one-room building. Quite the opposite, actually. The school was founded in 1909. Today, it sits on a campus of 1,438 acres featuring trees, streams and -- no kidding -- a mountain range. There are three dormitories, a state-of-the-art computer lab, a cafeteria with a commercial kitchen, an outdoor pool and 49 acres of pasture where 18 horses graze. Why horses? Because Patterson has an equestrian team, too. See, it's not just about basketball at this place. There are some great basketball players. No one is disputing that. But there's also this girl who is a first chair violinist, and these two guys who are taking a math class designed specifically for them because calculus was just too easy. All 16 teachers at Patterson have bachelor's degrees, Stevens said. He added that two of the coaches have master's degrees. There are students from Mongolia, Vietnam and Croatia. There's a German class. There's an American Sign Language class. I could go on forever, but surely you get the point. "We even have Saturday school," Chaney said. "Who else has school on Saturday?" The Breakfast Club? Beyond that, I'm not sure. Even if you want to disregard all this as an elaborate cover-up, there's still one bit of information that seems to suggest Patterson isn't the "diploma mill" the NCAA claims to be after. Consider that last year there were 15 seniors on Chaney's team, but only nine actually graduated. That's six non-graduates. So if Patterson is really a diploma mill, somebody should fix the mill. "If we were a diploma mill, those players would've been straight A students," Stevens said. "But they didn't walk across the stage, and some of them didn't even make it through the year because they couldn't live up to the Patterson demands. So they left, or at the end of the year they didn't receive their diploma because they didn't fulfill the criteria. End of story." You'd think so. In reality, this story has no end in sight. Consequently, Patterson officials are forced to sit and wait and wonder, perhaps even mull a lawsuit and proceed with legal action. But all they really want is something much simpler -- for the NCAA to catch a plane from Indianapolis to Charlotte, ride 80 miles north and give them their so-called day in court. "We just want them to come here because once they see this place it will be a no-brainer," Chaney said. "They might not even have to get out of the car." www.sportsline.com/collegebasketball/story/9662400
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Post by Fastbreak on Mar 28, 2006 21:29:46 GMT -5
Just Hugs being Hugs? Practice not illegal, but not right March 28, 2006 By Gregg Doyel CBS SportsLine.com Senior Writer Tell Gregg your opinion! Less than a week on the job at Kansas State, and Bob Huggins is already being Bob Huggins. In other words, he's doing whatever it takes to win. Win at all costs? No, not quite that -- but close. Awfully, awfully close. Huggins' staff composition already has one package deal in the makings -- hire a coach, get a player -- with the mother of all package deals in the works for one year from now. As far as the NCAA is concerned, there's nothing illegal about the kind of package deal Huggins is blatantly pursuing by hiring Dalonte Hill away from Charlotte. Hill, a nondescript assistant for the 49ers, is joining Huggins' staff for one reason, and one reason only: Hill is tight with Michael Beasley, one of the top five players from the high school class of 2007. How tight? Beasley is a 6-foot-9 small forward -- think Carmelo Anthony, only bigger -- who could play anywhere in America, and last year he committed to play for little ol' Charlotte. That tight. Beasley won't go to Charlotte now, of course. He'll go to Kansas State. Nothing has been announced, and nothing is official, but that's what the hiring of Dalonte Hill really means. It has nothing to do with Dalonte Hill. It has everything to do with Michael Beasley. Worst of all? To get Beasley, Huggins stuck a metaphorical knife in Bobby Lutz's back. Lutz is the coach at Charlotte, and when Huggins was run out of Cincinnati in August, Lutz was immediately rumored to be one of the candidates that Cincinnati would consider. Lutz took care of that in September when he attended a roast for Huggins in Cincinnati and took a shot at UC president Nancy Zimpher. "America is a great country," Lutz said, "because if Nancy Zimpher can be president of the University of Cincinnati, anything is possible." That was Lutz sticking up for Huggins at Huggins' lowest point. So how does Huggins repay Lutz? By hiring away Dalonte Hill, which means stealing -- yes, stealing -- Charlotte's most highly regarded recruit in program history, Michael Beasley. With Beasley in two years, Lutz has the kind of Atlantic 10 team George Washington had this season: dominant. But this isn't about Lutz. This is about Huggins. A Kansas State spokesman told CBS SportsLine.com that Huggins was on the road recruiting, and unavailable for comment. Hill also was unavailable. Kansas State athletics director Tim Weiser was available, and while he didn't embrace the notion of a package deal (Hill and Beasley) he defended Huggins' right to hire his staff as he sees fit. "We're always going to be concerned about perception, but it's the issue of perception vs. reality," Weiser said. "Every head coach I've hired (in every sport), I've allowed them to hire who they want as assistant coaches unless they have NCAA baggage. Unless there's NCAA violations or criminal history with an assistant coach, I allow my head coaches to make that hire." Weiser went on to point out that "package deals" -- or the perception of them -- happen all over college basketball. Indeed, it happened last year at Kansas State, when Jim Wooldridge tried to hire at least two junior college coaches (who had recruits available) before hiring Detroit high school coach Ben Kelso ... and then signing Kelso's best player, Deilvez Yearby. Down the road, Kansas has a history of (perceived) package deals -- from Larry Brown hiring Danny Manning's father in 1983 to Bill Self hiring Mario Chalmers' father last year. Package deals happen. They're not illegal, though they should be. Here's why: A college coach cannot give a recruit $5 without being guilty of a recruiting violation. But a college coach can hire a staff member for $120,000, knowing full well that the staff member will help bring a blue-chip recruit? That's not illegal, but it's ugly as hell. But Huggins isn't done. The same people who told CBS SportsLine.com about Huggins' pursuit of Dalonte Hill last week also confirm Huggins' next package deal -- and it's enormous. Next year Huggins plans to hire Dwaine Barnes, probably as his director of basketball operations. Who is Dwaine Barnes? He's the AAU coach and legal guardian of 6-4 point guard O.J. Mayo and 6-5 shooting guard Bill Walker of North College Hill (Ohio), two future NBA All-Stars who will spend one year on campus -- at Kansas State, once Huggins hires Barnes. Mayo is the best point guard prospect since Jason Kidd. Walker is a Vince Carter-like athlete. In two years, Kansas State could have a starting lineup of 7-2 Jason Bennett at center, Beasley and 6-9 Herb Pope at forward, with Mayo and Walker at guard. Five years from now, that lineup could win in the NBA. Huggins is no joke. He didn't go to Kansas State to win a little. He went there to win big, and if he can stay out of trouble, he'll do just that. His hiring was controversial, but at his introductory news conference Huggins defended himself with his misleadingly soft voice. "I don't think I'm a bad guy," Huggins told the Kansas City Star. "If you go and talk to people who know me, you won't find anybody who says bad things." Really? Anyone got Bobby Lutz's number? www.sportsline.com/collegebasketball/story/9343554
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Post by Fastbreak on Aug 22, 2006 21:03:11 GMT -5
Big Transfer Mauldin Officially Added To Panther RosterSix-foot-nine Alabama native will be eligible immediately Aug. 22, 2006 MILWAUKEE - Sam Mauldin of Wedowee, Ala., has officially enrolled at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and annouced his intention to play basketball. The 6-foot-9, 245-pound Mauldin spent last season at Birmingham Southern College but will be eligible immediately because BSC announced its intention to drop from Division I to Division III competition. Mauldin, who will have two years of eligibility remaining, was expected to be a starter on a BSC team that was likely one of the favorites to win the Big South Conference. "Sam is a great addition to our program," Jeter said. "He is a skilled big man who will fill a need and should fit very well into our lineup. He is an aggressive player and will provide a very physical presence. Sam also has a tremendous work ethic and has very high character. It is a thrill to welcome him to Milwaukee." Mauldin played two seasons at Shelton State Community College before sitting out last season at BSC with a knee injury. He averaged 12 points and seven rebounds per game in his second season at Shelton State Community College, helping the Buccaneers to a 30-8 record and the Alabama Community College State Championship. The team then finished eighth at the National Junior College Athletic Association National Tournament. Shelton State also finished second in the state of Alabama during his freshman year. At Woodland High School, Mauldin averaged 29 points, 21 rebounds and five blocks per game as a senior. He earned first-team all-state honors and was named a Super 12 Senior by the Birmingham News. He was also a finalist for Class 2A Player of the Year. Mauldin averaged 21.7 points and 15 rebounds per game as a junior while earning all-district and all-conference honors twice and all-area honors three times. The addition of Mauldin brings to eight the number of redshirts, transfers and newcomers that will be eligible for the Panthers in the coming season. UWM has won the last three Horizon League regular-season titles and, last season, advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament. In other roster news, Derrick Wimmer will not return to UWM for his senior season. The Milwaukee native played in 32 games in his two-year career at Milwaukee. Wimmer was slated to be on scholarship in the coming year, so his departure frees another scholarship for the Panthers. That scholarship could be used in time for the 2006-07 campaign or be held for the 2007-08 signing class. Newcomers and Redshirts Expected To Be Eligible For The 2006-2007 Season (as of August 22) Kaylan Anderson (6-5, Fr., G; Toronto, Ontario/West Hill/Central Park Christian) - Redshirted the 2005-06 season ... led his prep school team in scoring in 2004-05 at 19.7 ppg ... helped Central Park Christian to a 29-6 record ... earned honors as one of the top guards in Canada during his high school career ... named to the Toronto East All-Region team following his senior season. Ricky Franklin (6-1, So., G; Milwaukee, Wis./Riverside) - Sat out the 2005-06 season due to NCAA Initial Eligibility Standards ... will be listed as a sophomore on the 2006-07 roster, but could earn a fourth year of eligibilty with satisfactory academic progress ... Milwaukee City Conference Player of the Year in 2005 ... also earned first-team all-state recoginition from the Wisconsin Basketball Coaches' Association and the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel ... rated as the third-best senior in the state of Wisconsin in 2005 by the Wisconsin Basketball Yearbook ... averaged 20 ppg during his senior season. Roman Gentry (6-4, Fr., G/F; Sioux City, Iowa/East) - Named the 2006 Iowa Class 4A Player of the Year ... earned first-team all-state honors from both the Des Moines Register and the Iowa Newspaper Association following his senior season ... also earned those same first-team all-state honors following his junior year ... third all-time leading scorer in the history of all Sioux City high schools ... averaged 20.6 ppg and 11.3 rpg as a senior ... led Sioux City East to the state semifinals as a senior ... as a junior, averaged 19.0 ppg and 10.8 rpg. Sam Mauldin (6-9, Jr., F/C; Widowee, Ala./Woodland/Shelton State CC/Birmingham Southern) - Comes to UWM after sitting out this past season at Birmingham Southern College ... will be eligible immediately because BSC announced its intention to drop to NCAA Division III competition ... was expected to be a starter on a BSC team that was one of the favorites to win the Big South Conference ... also played two seasons at Shelton State Community College in Alabama ... Averaged 12 points and seven rebounds per game as a sophomore at Shelton State Community College ... averaged 29 points, 21 rebounds and five blocks per game as a senior in high school ... earned First Team All-State honors ... named a Super 12 Senior by the Birmingham News ... finalist for Class 2A Player of the Year. Paige Paulsen (6-7, Jr., F; Custer, S.D./Custer/Northern Illinois) - Sat out the 2005-06 season after transferring from Northern Illinois University ... played two seasons at NIU ... averaged 7.5 ppg and 3.7 rpg in 21 games in 2004-05 ... named South Dakota Mr. Basketball following his senior season of high school ... also named the South Dakota Gatorade Player of the year and the Player of the Year by the South Dakota Basketball Coaches' Association ... three-time first-team all-state selection ... scored a school-record 1,790 points in his career. Marcus Skinner (6-6, Jr., F; Flint, Mich./Southwestern Academy/Mott CC) - Played the last two seasons at Mott Community College in Flint, Mich. ... earned All-Michigan Community College Athletic Association Eastern Conference honors this past season ... averaged 13.4 ppg and 7.0 rpg while helping Mott to a 25-6 record ... in his two seasons at Mott, the team compiled a 55-9 record and advanced to the District 8 title game his freshman year ... earned all-tournament honors during the district tournament that year. Charlie Swiggett (6-1, Fr., G; Chester, Pa./Chester/Notre Dame Prep) - Played this past season for highly-regarded Notre Dame Prep ... Notre Dame wound up ranked #1 in the country in the final Prep School poll of the season ... helped Chester High School to a Pennsylvania state title his senior year ... earned second-team All-Deleware County honors in his only season at Chester ... averaged 10.3 ppg ... started his high school career at American Christian, averaging in double figures as a freshman ... then moved to Village Charter for two years, earning all-area honors while averaged 15.1 ppg as a junior ... moved to Chester High School for his senior year after Village Charter closed. Ryan Thornton (6-7, Fr., F; Chillicothe, Ill./Illinois Valley Central) - Starred at IVC this past season, helping the team to the state championship game ... considered one of the premier outside shooters in Illinois ... made 117 three-point field goals as a senior, shooting 43.8 percent from three-point range ... averaged 17.5 ppg and 6.4 rpg as a senior ... earned third-team all-state honors from both IllinoisPrepHoops and the Associated Press. uwmfreak.proboards5.com/index.cgi?board=Games&action=display&n=1&thread=1156278297
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Post by Fastbreak on Aug 5, 2006 13:30:37 GMT -5
Men's basketball recruit Forrest Smallwood has requested and been granted a release from his commitment to Butler University. We have been robbed of a 4-year opportunity to make bad jokes about Butler's underdeveloped male organs. ;D
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Post by Fastbreak on Jul 13, 2006 18:48:46 GMT -5
July 13, 2006, 5:35 p.m. By Bobbi Roquemore Hoops transfer Mauldin enrolls at UWMSam Mauldin, a 6-foot-9, 245-pound junior, has officially enrolled at UW-Milwaukee and will be on scholarship and eligible to play during the 2006-'07 basketball season. Mauldin left Birmingham Southern, which dissolved its Division I basketball program effective immediately to become part of Division III. Therefore, all players were released from their obligations to the school and allowed to transfer elsewhere without penalty. Division I transfers usually have to sit out a year before being eligible to compete again. Also courted by Louisiana-Monroe and Farleigh Dickinson, Mauldin visited the UWM campus in late June and decided to join the Panthers. He arrived at UWM on Saturday to enroll in summer classes. Because Mauldin will not be considered a full-time student until the fall, Panthers coaches cannot comment on his status. Mauldin has not played college basketball competitively since midway through the 2004-'05 season at Shelton State (Ala.) Community College, as he tore the ACL in his right knee. He redshirted the 2005-'06 season at Birmingham Southern. Mauldin, who hails from Wedowee, Ala., scored 713 points and grabbed a state-best 511 rebounds as a senior at Woodland High School. He was a finalist for Alabama's 2A state player of the year in 2003. www.jsonline.com/watch/?watch=2&date=7/13/2006&id=8522
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Post by Fastbreak on Jun 11, 2006 9:24:32 GMT -5
I hope we never hear WSU and Morehead St mentioned with the samerecruit in the future. I like what I have read so far on the 2007 recruiting thread. The players Brownell is going after are ranked higher than our recruits from the past and they are also being pursued by good mid-majors and some majors. If we can sign a few of them, WSU should be headed in the right direction.
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