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Hall of Famer [22966]
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Not Good News For Tiger Basketball (c/p)
Jul 14, 2012, 10:37 AM
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Skills rise with heat Summer league begins Sunday at Heathwood Hall By CHRIS DEARING - Special to The Stat
Carey Rich understands the struggles of finding challenging competition during Division I basketball’s offseason. The former South Carolina point guard and two-year captain during his playing days (1992-1995) spent his summers playing against the older talent that was relevant in Columbia in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
He was lucky.
Coaches today struggle with finding viable skill-level opponents for their players to compete against during the summer months. That is where Rich, a radio host on the 560 The Team sports talk station, is stepping in.
For the first time, Columbia will play host to an NCAA-sanctioned South Carolina Pro Am League. Rich has used his contacts in the basketball community to secure college players from nearly every college team in the state along with several top-level high school talents. Add in former collegiate greats such as Devan Downey, Carlos Powell and Brandon Wallace, and Rich believes he will field a competitive 10-team league.
“I was presented with this idea and took it to every coach in the state and they were instantly on board,” Rich said. “With these relationships and support from the coaches, it gives the league instant credibility.
“Now, logistically, we were not able to get players from each school just because of the travel. But I reached out to everyone and they embraced the idea from the beginning.”
The league is tailored toward college players. In the past, players would have to travel to Atlanta, Charlotte or Raleigh to find quality opponents.
Each roster will have nine players. Per NCAA rules, they can have playing together no more than two players from the same college team that has college eligibility remaining. All coaches must be approved in accordance with the guidelines established by the NCAA Basketball Certification Staff. Division I coaches cannot attend.
The season begins Sunday with four games at Heathwood Hall. Admission is free. They will feature four games each Sunday and Thursday through Aug. 9 and then hold a single elimination tournament from Aug. 10-12. Each game will consist of two 16-minute halves.
Collegiate officials will be on hand thanks to sponsorships secured from the likes of Founders Federal Credit Union and Steadman Hawkins Clinic. Adam McDowell, a former manager at USC under Dave Odom, has assisted Rich in getting the league running.
“The sponsorship we received has been unbelievable,” Rich said. “There is no question that South Carolina is a football state but there is enough room for basketball and I think we are seeing that with the type of excitement level we have created.”
Nearly every USC player who is enrolled in summer school is playing in the league.
Rich also has gotten high school talent such as Keenan’s Marcus Stroman, Oak Hill’s Sindarius Thornwell (formerly of Lancaster), A.C. Flora’s Matt Howard, Gaffney’s L.J. Peak, Irmo’s Justin McKie and Cardinal Newman’s Austin Ajukwa to commit.
“This gives high school kids — along with everyone else in the league — the opportunity to gauge where they will be in two or three years,” Rich said. “It shows the speed, strength, skill set and effort needed to play at the next level. It should be a great month of basketball with a very, very high skill level being played.”
Read more here: http://www.thestate.com/2012/07/14/2353730/skills-rise-with-heat.html#storylink=cpy
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Ring of Honor [22334]
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Not sure how this is bad news for us
Jul 14, 2012, 10:57 AM
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it's good for basketball in SC as a whole. It won't have a big influence on recruiting as most players are in college already. The high school players are still going to go where they feel they have the best opportunity and fit. Playing in Atlanta or elsewhere didn't influence them to go to Georgia Tech. Playing in a private school gym in Columbia won't have an influence on them going to SCU
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TigerNet Champion [121484]
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Re: Not sure how this is bad news for us
Jul 14, 2012, 10:59 AM
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it is bad for scu if anyting. recruits will get a first hand look at what a crap school it is.
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110%er [8681]
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Hall of Famer [22966]
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I probably should've included an analysis of why
Jul 14, 2012, 11:34 AM
[ in reply to Not sure how this is bad news for us ] |
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this could spell big trouble for Clemson basketball.....most Clemson fans are not familiar with the minutiae of big time college basketball---AAU leagues and these "pro-AM" summer leagues as well. Having lived in the Raleigh-Durham area for over 20 years and witnessed one of the most famous summer leagues on the East Coast, I can tell you first hand they are huge recruiting and developmental tools
I doubt the one in Cola will ever get as big or well-known as the one in Raleigh, but to elaborate some---former, current, and future unc players show up every summer for the league along with former and current players from NCSt, NCCU, and other schools including some ACC schools AND--most importantly-- high school players. They play much of the summer against each other under the tutelage of coaches many of whom have NBA experience but ALL of whom have college experience and ties with major college programs.
Its basically a continuing education basketball school which gives HS players a chance to impress, a chance to be seen and an opportunity to improve skills. And it gives college-roster players an opportunity to continue basketball school while they're making up classes in summer school--where they have access to proper diets and weight rooms. Even the audience is filled with recognizable faces from the basketball universe---and filled with HS players who want to get in on the action. The results of each game--along with regular features on the league--were usually carried in the local rag.
I'd long hoped Greenville would establish a similar league to entice and develop surrounding HS talent (what little there is) and give some Tigers a chance to continue competing against talent, but the Upstate is so football and baseball-centric, there apparently was never any interest.
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Ring of Honor [22334]
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You mention Raleigh
Jul 14, 2012, 12:42 PM
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and see, that's the difference. It's Duke and North Carolina that make that league. NC State too. In Columbia, we're talking basically in-state schools. SCU will have an advantage on some players, we will on others, just as it's always been. Other than that it's mid to low majors. I just can't see where any opportunity for our players to improve and build bonds with high school players is a bad thing just because it's in Columbia. It's not on SCU's campus, not that that is a minus anyway. While Littlejohn is a smaller venue, it's a far superior arena than this generic disaster in Columbia. With our added practice facilities and offices nearing completion, it will be even more so. ACC still has more cache than the SEC.
And I'll add this. Yeah, Carey Rich is a coot. But he's also an active ambassador for basketball as a whole in SC. He regularly condemns the AAU circuit for it's abuses. He highly supports high school basketball in the state. We need that in SC. We're a football state through and through and anything that can be done to improve the overall state of basketball in the state will be to our benefit in the long run.
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Re: Not Good News For Tiger Basketball (c/p)
Jul 14, 2012, 11:12 AM
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??????????????????????????????????
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