Happy Birthday!: HoopsHD interviews Western Michigan legend David Kool

David Kool finished his high school career in 2006 as Mr. Basketball of Michigan, then arrived at Western Michigan and became Mr. Everything. In 2007 he finished 5th in the nation with 91.7 FT% and was named MAC ROY, in 2008 he was named to the All-MAC 1st-Team, and in 2010 he graduated as the leading scorer in school history with 2122 PTS. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with David about being a great FT shooter and a great student. Today is David’s 35th birthday so let us be the 1st to wish him a happy 1!

In addition to basketball you played soccer/track/football in high school: which sport did you like the most, and when did you first realize that your future was in basketball? My favorite sport other than basketball was soccer. I realized that my future was in basketball when I was a sophomore in high school. I got some advice from a person I trusted that if I wanted to play D-1 basketball then I would have to give up my other sports. Basketball at the D-1 level was always my dream so it was an easy decision.

Many big-time colleges passed on you after you tore your ACL prior to your senior year, even though you became your high school’s all-time leading scorer and were named Michigan’s Mr. Basketball in 2006: what school was highest on your wish list, and why did you choose Western Michigan? If I had not torn my ACL then I would have ended up at Michigan State. I was in close contact with them throughout high school and it would have been a dream come true to play for their program. I chose WMU because they always stayed with me even after my ACL tear: that made me feel really good. They said they would take me anyway and did not care about my injury and I really appreciated that. Also, it was close to home so my family could come and watch all my games, which was very important to me.

After sitting out the start of your college career due to a hamstring injury, you ended up scoring 11.4 PPG and being named MAC ROY: how were you able to bounce back from the injury, and how were you able to come in and contribute as a freshman? Hard work and perseverance is how I live my life. I have been blessed with many gifts and I could not succeed without my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. I always lean on Him when I get into trouble and need help (which is every day), so I just put my faith in Him, as I did with my ACL. I had faith that I would come back strong as long as I worked hard.

You finished your freshman year 5th in the nation with 91.7 FT%, which also set a conference single-season record: what is your secret for making FTs? My secret for FT shooting is being confident and consistent and just practicing. I shot close to 100 FTs everyday and always kept the same motion/rhythm. I always made them so I was confident. When getting into games it is important to rely on muscle memory and know that you will make every shot because you have practiced like that.

You ended your college career with a career-high 39 PTS/12-21 FG in a loss to Akron in the 2010 conference tourney semifinals: was it just 1 of those scenarios where every shot you put up seemed to go in because you were “in the zone”, and what was it like to play your best game in your last game? The Akron game is unforgettable. I remember hitting my 1st shot from the corner and after that it was like I was out there by myself: I literally could not see anything else on the court besides the bucket. I was in a rhythm that had never happened since high school and I thought that every shot was going in. The basket was enormous and I was “in the zone”. Playing my best game in my last game was great because I went out with no regrets and gave it my all. I could not have done anything different, which makes me feel so good inside!

In 2010 you were named conference POY/All-American: what did it mean to you to win such outstanding honors? It just goes to show that all of my hard work and all of those hours in the gym paid off. It made me feel as though all of my decisions dating back to high school and everything I have done in my life has paid off. It feels great to be rewarded after working so hard.

You remain the all-time leading scorer in school history: did you realize at the time how prolific a player you were? I think I will realize more of what it means when I am older. It was kind of surreal back then and remained that way for a long time. After I stopped playing I had time to think about what happened at WMU and realized how special it really was and what it all meant. I know that WMU is such a special place with people who love the basketball program: they will always have a soft spot in my heart. I could not have ever imagined a better career than the one I had.

You were a 3-time Academic All-MAC performer: how did you balance your work on the court with your work in the classroom? The academic honors are just as important to me (if not more important) because that was my future. I was going to play basketball for a little longer, but after I was done I was going to fall back on my education/degree from WMU. That is my bread maker so academics were always #1 in my life. Basketball was great, but I was at WMU to receive a quality education and set myself up for success in the real world…and that is what happened.

You participated in the 2010 Portsmouth Invitational, where you only had 1 turnover in 3 games: what did you think about your performance, and which player impressed you the most? Portsmouth was really interesting: I did not know what to really expect from it. It was basically an open gym where players were very, very selfish and tried to do things that they simply could not do. I went in with the attitude to just play my game and control what I could control and I did that. My goal was to have 1 NBA team/scout/GM watch me and say that they wanted to give me a shot to make their team in training camp. I continued to work hard and hoped that I impressed at least 1 team. I wish I would have shot the ball better but I did everything else well: I played good defense, talked on the floor, got rebounds, and took care of the ball. I was most impressed with Jerome Randle from California: it was amazing to me how easy it was for him to get into the lane and score over bigger defenders even though he is so small. He is a great competitor who is extremely talented.

How do you want people to remember you the most, and what do you hope to do in the future? I want people to remember that I played the game of basketball the right way and worked as hard as I possibly could to win every single game. I was a fierce competitor on the court and did everything it took to win, but off the court I was a kind/caring person who tried to help everyone that I knew.

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Independent Media Day Recap and Response

CLICK HERE for All of Hoops HD’s Continued and Extensive Preseason Content

Okay, there was no Media Day for the two independent teams, but I did not know what else to title this.

COMMENTS FROM DAVID

-Hartford is in year 3 of reclassifying as a D3 school.  They are still technically D1…but only technically.  They were a rather sub-par 12-20 last year (although they were a respectable 9-9 in America East play), and nearly every player who saw regular minutes is now gone.  This has been a rather unfortunate story.  It was only two years ago that we saw Hartford make the NCAA Tournament.  The decision for them to transition down to D3 is questionable at best, unbelievably stupid at worst, and if you follow them on Twitter is not a decision that has been widely accepted by those who support the program.

-Chicago State will also be an Independent this year after playing in the WAC and finishing in last place for about the last nine or ten years.  It has been a while since Chicago State was considered to not be one of the ten worst programs in all of D1.  Their 30-game schedule this year has them playing just eight games at home, and only four of those are against other D1 opponents.  They did win seven games a year ago, which was a seven game improvement from what they had done the previous year (to be fair, the previous year was the COVID year where they only played nine games and cancelled all the rest)!!  They have a lot of new transfers, many of whom saw limited minutes at other D1 programs.  The optimistic way to put this is to say that it is a roster of guys who will have the opportunity to see more minutes than what they did at their previous programs and become contributing players!

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Season preview: HoopsHD interviews Columbia women’s coach Megan Griffith

We are still a couple of months away from the tip-off of the college basketball season this fall, which means that we have plenty of time to start preparing for the action ahead. We will do so via a series of season previews featuring the best players/coaches in the country. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel continues our coverage with Columbia women’s coach Megan Griffith, who talked about breaking the school record for most wins in a season last year and her expectations for this season.

You were a 3-time captain/2-time All-Ivy player at Columbia: what is the key to being a good leader? I believe in consistency and an unwavering confidence in yourself. I learned it from experience but have also been around some great leaders. You need to be even-keel without getting too high or too low.

You graduated with a degree in economics and then played pro basketball for 3 years in Europe: what is the biggest difference between basketball in the US vs. basketball overseas? The 1 thing I learned is that the game is much faster overseas, due mostly to using a 24-second shot clock. Europeans also move differently, such as the patented “Euro-step” that goes east-to-west rather than north-to-south. There is also less isolation/high ball-screens overseas: they are tactically sound.

In 2015 as an assistant to Coach Courtney Banghart at Princeton you finished the regular season 30-0 before eventually losing to Maryland in the NCAA tourney: how was your team able to stay focused for the entire season, and what was it like to have President Obama in the stands during the tourney to support his niece (Tigers forward Leslie Robinson)? That was a special season. When we beat Wake Forest in Cancun over Thanksgiving in a convincing fashion the assistants looked at each other and felt it was going to be a good season. We had mature players who had been in our system for a while and a strong leader in Blake Dietrick. We had a special group that followed our leader and trusted the system. Leslie is such an amazing human being. We had a chance to meet Barack/Michelle Obama when we played at American before heading to Cancun: I think they sold out the arena that day! He is just another person looking to support his family…but it was amazing.

You were hired as head coach at your alma mater in 2016: why did you take the job? It was a chance to come back home and be a head coach. I like to defy the odds and be the 1st to do things so I had a lot of motivation. I also like building things: I was talented but was not the very best player so I learned the importance of everyone rowing the boat in the same direction.

In January of 2017 you got your 1st Ivy League win by 3 PTS in quadruple-OT at Dartmouth (tied for the longest game in Ivy women’s history): I am sure that the players were exhausted, but how was your own blood pressure doing by the end of the night?! That was a very long night…but we sure earned it! What made it even more special was turning around the next day and taking Harvard to the wire. It was neat to see us come together and try to accomplish a hard task. Even though we lost it showed the potential of what can happen if you have the right people around you.

After getting the 1st WNIT bid in school history last March you overcame a 17-PT deficit to beat BC and set a record for the largest comeback win in school history: how on earth did you do it?! A lot of people would say it was great coaching but all of the credit goes to the players for handling the adversity. That is when they really learned how to adjust during a game. We were a great 3-PT shooting team…but went 0-21 that night, so we totally flipped and made it about defense. We had total buy-in to our game plan and also some nice heroics by some of our returning players.

You finished the season with 25 wins (shattering the school record for most wins in a season, which had been 21): can you keep the momentum rolling this year or is every season so unique that you have already moved on? I think it is a little bit of both: you have to remember in order to progress. We want to build on that but we have a lot of seniors so we can take it on as a new opportunity. We were right there and could have qualified for the NCAA tourney, but now we know what it takes. To have the target on your back is valuable: you need to take those lessons when trying to win a title.

At the Women’s Final 4 in Minneapolis you were named the Asian Coaches Association Women’s Basketball COY (presented by CBB Analytics): how crucial are analytics to your success, and do you have a favorite metric? Analytics have been a huge part of our success. We have found a way to drill down: our Director of Video & Analytics (Kyle Hutson) has been phenomenal. We have invested in software and looked at various websites. It helps our shot-selection by rating shot-quality but the 1 thing we hone in on is net rating: as long as we are in the green for efficiency that is a good thing. We have become more efficient on offense and our defense is finally getting out of the red. There are always better ways to do things if you are more sound. It has really helped us shave off some of the time needed to get to this point.

You have had 3 straight players be named All-Met Women’s D-1 ROY (Sienna Durr in 2019/Abbey Hsu in 2020/Ivy season canceled in 2021/Kitty Henderson in 2022): how were they all able to come in and contribute right from the start? I want to credit my staff here: recruiting is so important and we are always thinking about the future. Just having the same message and being able to go out and find the right people for our program is important. When they arrive they start to get game experience, which is what helps make you a great player. They are all coachable and have a great work ethic.

What are your goals for this season, and what are your expectations for this season? Our largest goal is to continue on this championship mission. The by-product is winning championships/going to the NCAA tourney, but I strongly believe in being a response-driven team. We will not take shortcuts because every day matters. It is critical to hold ourselves accountable to our high standard so we just need to take care of the little things along the way.

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Season preview: HoopsHD interviews Auburn coach Bruce Pearl

CLICK HERE for All of Hoops HD’s Continued and Extensive Preseason Content

We are still a couple of months away from the tip-off of the college basketball season this fall, which means that we have plenty of time to start preparing for the action ahead. We will do so via a series of season previews featuring the best players/coaches in the country. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel continues our coverage with Auburn coach Bruce Pearl, who talked about his team’s trip to Israel last month and his expectations for this season.

You spent about 15 years as a student-manager/assistant coach for Tom Davis at BC/Stanford/Iowa: what made him such a great coach, and what was the most important thing that you ever learned from him? He had a real system of how to play/coach the game. It was 94 feet: he believed in full-court pressure defense. He was very committed to up-tempo basketball so we made our opponents get back in transition. He taught me how to be patient and told me to be myself (so that I would always be authentic) and recommended that the foundation of my head coaching experience come from him (because I knew it and then could tweak it to make it my own, which I did).

In the 1995 D-2 title game as head coach at Southern Indiana you had an 8-PT win over UC Riverside: what did it mean to you to win a title, and did you ever think you would see the day that the Screaming Eagles would become a D-1 program? I thought/hoped that I could be a successful head coach after working for Tom at several different schools. I was unsure if I could do it but we had success right away at Southern Indiana and won a title during my 3rd year there. They LOVE their basketball in Indiana and I am very excited for “Superman” Stan Gouard to lead them into D-1. The campus/school/community are all ready for it.

In the 2019 NCAA tourney as coach at Auburn you became the 2nd team ever to defeat the 3 winningest programs in college basketball history (Kansas/North Carolina/Kentucky) in the same season: how did you do it?! We are the only team to beat them 3 in a row: Arizona beat them all in the 1997 NCAA tourney but not in a row. It was not just those 3 schools, it was Bill Self/Roy Williams/John Calipari: talk about a mismatch! We were a more talented team and played like it. I believe we averaged about 12 3PM in those games thanks to shooting the ball extremely well. I also had great guard play, which I think translates into championships. We had to beat UNC at their own game because nobody is better at fast-breaking than they are. They say it is hard to beat a team 3 times and Kentucky had swept us during the regular season with several future pros including Keldon Johnson/Tyler Herro/PJ Washington. Chuma Okeke was hurt but our guards outplayed their guards, as Jared Harper/Bryce Brown combined for 50 PTS. We respected them but were not afraid of them even though we were the “Cinderella” team who was playing with house money.

Last year you finished the regular season with 27 wins and just 4 losses away from home by a combined 16 PTS en route to being named 2022 SEC COY: do you feel like you are a better coach now than ever before, and if so is it based on wins/losses or some other factor? I would base it on championships/consistency/graduation. The reality is that I have had great players/coaches/staff. We have had tremendous player development, particularly at the big guard position.

You have won more than 600 games despite being 1 of the few D-1 basketball coaches who never played high school basketball: do you think that more guys who were not high school players should be given a chance to coach since you have proven that it is not a prerequisite for success? I would have played in high school had it not been for a career-ending injury as a freshman. I was around the game my whole life so you have to be in it to win it. I stayed in it by being a manager/assistant coach: God just had a different plan for me.

You had 2 players selected in the 1st round of the NBA Draft last June (Jabari Smith/Walker Kessler): how will you try to replace all of that talent? You cannot replace a pair of guys who were drafted #3 and #22…but that being said, the 2 big men we added (freshman Yohan Traore/Morehead State transfer Johni Broome) will play a lot for us this year and both have the potential to play professionally. The question is how good our other newcomers are and how much our returning players have improved. I think we will be picked around 5th in our league, which should put us in the top-25 nationally. We were picked 5th in our league last year…and ended up winning an SEC title. I love our depth, but the cream will need to rise to the top.

In August your team played 3 exhibition games in Israel: what was the best part of the trip for you either on or off the court? The best part was getting 5-6 of our players baptized in the Jordan River. The 2nd best part was for our players to see what a beautiful country Israel is. The fact that they got to see their Judeo-Christian roots was very special.

The SEC is 1 of the toughest conferences in the nation and you also have USC/Washington/West Virginia on your non-conference schedule: what is your philosophy when it comes to scheduling? Our players deserve to play against the best: there is no better message you can send them than showing that you believe in them. Our fans also deserve to see great players/coaches in Auburn Arena. This is the toughest non-conference schedule that I have ever had: we also have a tough tourney in Cancun in November. We will have 2 games against each of Alabama/Tennessee/Texas A&M: I think they will all finish in the top-7 of our league.

What are your goals for this season, and what are your expectations for this season? Over the past 5 years we have won more games than anyone else in the SEC. I would like to be able to say that after 6 years…but it will take some doing.

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Name, Image, and Lots of money: HoopsHD interviews Adam Fleischer of the Illini Guardians NIL collective

The marketplace for college athletes to engage in Name/Image/Likeness (NIL) deals was created last year after the NCAA v. Alston case and now it seems like every college is ready to start spreading the wealth. There are already more than 100 “collectives” either in operation or being formed. They allow alumni/fans/whoever to donate money to assist a specific school in creating opportunities for student-athletes to make some money off of their celebrity. We have reached out to many collectives and will try to interview representatives from as many of them as possible to see how each of them operates. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel commences our coverage with Adam Fleischer of the Illini Guardians NIL collective, who discussed what his group is about and what it has accomplished so far.

 

You and Tom DiSanto co-founded an NIL collective called “Illini Guardians” last January: how complicated was it to create (if at all), and why did you do it? It was very complicated! The 1st factor is that the law was changed in Illinois during the summer of 2021 to allow college players get paid for their name/image/likeness. The 2nd factor is that it had never been done before so each legal conclusion was new ground: it has been described as the “Wild, Wild West” due to the uncertainty involved at the time. It was a careful/complex undertaking.

How much of your focus is on basketball compared to football? At Illinois the fan base is driven by basketball as the most visible part of the athletic program and football as the biggest revenue-generator. Our NIL effort begins with those 2 sports but by no means ends with those 2: it is the hook that will allow us to bring in the widest swath of donors but we are aiming to focus on our female student-athletes as well. It will be a holistic effort with basketball/football as the most visible flags to start, but we have top-rated golf/tennis programs so there is a lot of interest in spreading it out through the entire athletic department. We are committed to developing a broad-based fan collective.

What kind of connection does your group have with former players like Kendall Gill or current people like Coach Brad Underwood/Athletic Director Josh Whitman? The most important relationship we have is with the university and people like Brad/Josh as well as football coach Bret Bielema. The reason is that we need their tacit support and ensure we are pushing the fan base in the direction that matches their vision within the parameters of the law. A lot of collectives do not always match the vision of the university with the vision of the fans, such as at places like USC/Miami. That relationship with those individuals is really important/collaborative. It is also “unofficial” because they cannot/do not direct our collective but help create a system of mutual support.

What kind of deals have you been able to work out so far? The most innovative example that stands as a guidepost is the contract called “Help Tackle Hunger” (https://illiniguardians.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/Tackling-Hunger-Press-Release.pdf). We worked with some benefactors to raise money and have 9 linemen who are coordinating a food drive. The NIL contract will pay those linemen for various uses of their celebrity. They met with the food bank to educate themselves, then met with some schoolchildren to explain how to set up a food drive. We had them sign some glossy photos to promote the food drive and will also promote it on social media. The schoolchildren will get to attend a practice and take photos/get autographs…and the players will get paid for all of that. Every donation will help buy meals for an Illinois family. It has a lot of different tentacles but you can see how a group of student-athletes can make money in a permissible manner while also helping to engage the community and give back to it. It is a really cool example of how it can/should work.

People are obviously free to do whatever they want with their hard-earned money…but do you ever have any second thoughts about whether you should be encouraging your donors to do something else like fight cancer/reduce homelessness? Very broadly, the concept of paying student-athletes is a difficult concept to understand/accept. Anyone who was in college prior to 2021 earned their own money with the sentiment that college athletes could not get paid for their celebrity. There is a mental hurdle to get over based on the revolutionary change that has happened. Josh Whitman has called it the biggest disruption in college sports since athletic scholarships, which was a mind-blowing concept at the time. It is uncomfortable…but it is here and here to stay. All student-athletes can leverage their celebrity, so the question for a fan base becomes do you want to take a stand that the laws should not exist or find a way to embrace the change and bring it to your university so that you can remain competitive and carve out an area that makes you feel proud/ethical? Our basketball program is a top-10/top-15 program: if these kids do not have NIL opportunities here then they will have them somewhere else. You might not like it but that is the reality of college sports in 2022. We are trying to take it/embrace it and have it become a centerpiece of what the school offers, along with some of its top academic programs. It is a necessary evil in today’s college world so we are trying to build some long-term strength.

You had a “Meet the New Guys” event earlier this month: how excited is everyone about newcomers like Matthew Mayer (who won the 2021 NCAA title with Baylor)/Terrence Shannon Jr. (who made the NCAA tourney with Texas Tech each of the past 2 years)? The excitement is crazy/palpable! It was a great event where the players met some fans/signed some autographs. When you see the fans circling around them you start to really feel the expectation/camaraderie. The school has a new tagline of “FamILLy” for our people who bleed orange/blue. You see very small children crowding around these student-athletes…next to 75-year old ladies with autograph pens in hand. The conversation starts off with, “What position do you play?” and continues to, “You better win this year because I am a long-time season ticket holder!” It connects fans across the country to engage the players in a way that was impossible before NIL. My wife came to the event and wondered who would attend…and then 500 people showed up and were thrilled to meet the new guys. Coach Underwood has recruited players with a common character that you can see: when Terrence/Matt are there with 3-4 freshmen who have never done this before, you get the feeling that they are building a program that lends itself very well to NIL programming. They are not arrogant/upset that they have to be there or afraid to look a fan in the eye and thank them for coming. I think you can connect the dots in a very powerful way. In an era of social media/TV it is sometimes hard to connect them but you see the power of it via NIL.

An article on your website from last March said you were “ready to rock” if Kofi returned: how disappointing was it to learn that 2-time All-American Kofi Cockburn decided to declare for the NBA Draft last April? It was disappointing in the way that you see a child go off to college. You are sad to lose the relationship but still have pride for your kid’s next steps. The university got a lot out of Kofi and the fan base had a lot of great experiences with him. You could see that he was not going to be there forever so it was somewhat expected but folks were still sad to see him go. People are excited to see what lays ahead both for him as well as the “new slate” for the current team. When you have a 7-footer in the center the program is literally/figuratively built around that! When he leaves a place like Champaign you can see immediately the next page with a group of run-and-gun athletes, but it is always disappointing to lose an All-American.

Your website also says that your focus is not on 1-2 high-profile student-athletes but rather all student-athletes: why did you choose the latter over the former? To build our collective’s continuity you need people to buy into it as an ongoing effort, otherwise you define it as a group that is only about the next star athlete. When Kofi leaves you have to figure out a new sales effort. It means that you have to constantly redefine the organization, which we do not want to do. We want to be a figurehead organization working in partnership with the athletic department that goes beyond the identity of a student who will be gone in 4 years (or less). If you are a female basketball player or male swimmer, you have to know that there is an NIL group that is not just focused on Kofi but has a broad foundation to benefit all student-athletes. Just do the math: if you pay 1 athlete $100,000 to be on your billboard, it is a hard pill to swallow when you could pay 20 athletes $5000 each to do 20 different things. We wanted to build something more programmatic since that would be most advantageous to the fan base/athletic department.

Last Sunday former top high school prospect Emoni Bates was arrested after sheriff’s deputies found a gun in a car he was driving: how concerned are you about entering contractual relationships with teenagers who might end up behaving badly? The concern is no more/less present than with any other contract involving a teenager: you have to gear opportunities toward who they are. As a teenage student-athlete you should have opportunities that do not put any extra spotlight on you: they already have tremendous pressure AND an academic schedule AND a significant athletic commitment. We want to hold them out to the public as the shining student-athlete they are, rather than a role model for your own family: they are just kids. The expectations are already higher due to their profile, but it should not be so high that it creates undue pressure.

What kind of cool stuff do people get if they contribute over $10,000/year as part of the Illini Championship Circle? The nice thing about collaborating with a university is that we have access to a lot of cool events. If someone wants to engage at that level then we have such relationships that we can set up dinners or private Zoom events. Depending on the sport/season we can even give someone access to practices, which you can only get an insider.

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The Hoops HD Report: An Evening With Barry Hinson

Barry Hinson, the current Associate Athletic Director at Oklahoma State, former head basketball coach, and story telling legend joins Chad, David, and Zach.  We discuss his new role as the NIL Director at Oklahoma State and how the new legislation, along with the transfer portal, are impacting college basketball across the country.  We also look back at his career at Missouri State, Southern Illinois, Kansas, and Oklahoma State.  And, of course, we ask about his legendary barbecue sauce . . . and find out whether or not it may be coming back!

And for all you radio lovers, below is an audio only version of the show…

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