Season preview: HoopsHD interviews UMBC head coach Ryan Odom

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We continue our season preview coverage with UMBC head coach Ryan Odom. There were 3 things that I used to think were inevitable: death, taxes, and the #1 seed making it to the 2nd round of the NCAA tourney. The Retrievers might die someday, and their 1040 form is due to the IRS next April, but they crossed #3 off the list last March with a 20-PT upset of #1-seed Virginia. UMBC won all of 7 games in 2016, then Coach Odom came in and won 21 games in 2017, led his team to a final-second victory over Vermont in the 2018 America East tourney title game, then showed the country that perhaps the Cavaliers should not have been 20 1/2-PT favorites after all. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Coach Odom about what is quite simply the greatest upset in the history of the NCAA tourney.

You were a 4-year starter at Hampden-Sydney and team captain as a senior, where you set a school record for 3PM: what is the key to being a good leader, and what is the key to making shots from behind the arc? The key to making shots is having good teammates who can find you at the right time when you are open. Repetition/practice are also important: you cannot be afraid to take a shot at a key time. Sometimes you get into a slump or get hot, which are 2 extremes that you need to navigate.  If you are labeled a “shooter” then the other team will focus on not letting you get open. People do not always realize all of the work that happens before the shot ever gets taken to make it happen. You need to have the mentality that your next shot will go in. It is an honor for any player at any level to be named captain: it means that the staff has a lot of confidence in you and that you understand the culture of the program. “Captain” is not just a label: it is used for someone who is deserving and can deliver the coach’s message to the team when he is not around. I had a great coach in Tony Shaver: you know that he had a good program because he always had the upperclassmen as leaders after they had been shown the way.

Your father Dave was a 3-time ACC COY at Wake Forest and won 3 NIT titles in a 7-year span from 2000-2006: what made him such a great coach, and how much of an impact did he have on your own decision to become a coach? I was not planning on going into coaching early in my college career: 1 reason is that my father was gone all the time due to recruiting. The rules have changed since then but he was literally gone for months at a time. I loved playing the game but did not view myself as a coach. My brother was a coach at the time and my dad had just won back-to-back ACC titles so I was not ready to give up basketball. I did an internship with Bank of America but realized that it was not what I wanted to dive into. Seth Greenberg gave me a chance and I have not looked back since.

In the 2007 NCAA tourney as an assistant to Greenberg at Virginia Tech you had a 2-PT win over Illinois: how were you able to overcome a 10-PT deficit in the final 4½ minutes without allowing the Illini to score a single point? That was a crazy game! We were in trouble but we had a good team that season. Our guards were fantastic and their leadership was spot-on. We were not afraid of anyone we played against due to our success in the ACC. We had a tough draw against Coach Bruce Weber’s team: they were beating us pretty handily throughout the game. Seth made a decision to press toward the end of the game and we were pretty good at that, which helped us get some timely steals/baskets after changing our game plan. It was a fun game…and then we ran into a tough Southern Illinois team.

You were hired in April of 2016 to take over a 7-win UMBC team and proceeded to win 21 games in your very 1st year: how were you able to turn things around so quickly? They were primed to win so the players should get a lot of credit for buying in right away. 1 word I use to describe them is “unselfish”. There have been both bumps and major highs along the way and we want to continue to grow. We had good talent when I arrived and then added some good pieces. We have moved into a brand-new arena and the recruiting footprint is very strong in this area. We tried to establish a winning culture: you cannot win every game but you can try to win every day and give your best while holding 1 another accountable. We have great character/good leadership due to guys who have come back every year and have a taste for more.

After your school had lost to Vermont 23 straight times dating back to 2008, Jairus Lyles scored 27 PTS in the 2018 America East tourney title game including a 3-PT shot in the final second of a 3-PT win over the Catamounts: did you think the shot was going in, and what did it mean to you to win a title? It was very emotional both during and after the game: we had to fight and claw because Vermont was playing good basketball. They were an experienced team who knew how to win in tight situations: their expectation is always to win. To go into their gym and get a win at that moment was very special for our players/program. I just wanted Jairus to have the room/rhythm to do what he does. It was a shot he worked on every day after practice: he would literally go around the horn and make the same move over and over again. It was fitting that he had the ball at the end after so many things that led up to that moment. Our guys hung in there, which is what champions do.

In the 2018 NCAA tourney Lyles scored 28 PTS in a 20-PT win over #1-seed Virginia (a 20½-PT favorite) to become the 1st #16-seed to ever pull off the upset: how on earth did you score 53 PTS in the 2nd half against a team that led the NCAA with only 53.4 PPG allowed, and how did that win change your life (if at all)? The 2nd half was obviously incredible for us but the 1st half was also key. You have to just be in the game at halftime, which was our goal. Virginia does not typically blow out teams by 25 PTS but if they get any kind of a lead it is a problem because they are so hard to score on. We knew that we would have to take some shots that were more guarded than usual. Vermont is a good defensive team so that helped prepare us for Virginia as well. I walked in at halftime when we were tied at 21 and the guys were pretty pumped up. The positivity was evident and our key to the start of the 2nd half was to attack/score in transition. When Virginia gets set in the half-court they are really tough to score on, but we did a great job of finding ways to score and stretch the lead while also getting 1st-time rebounds on the defensive end. We knew our best chance was to dominate the 3-PT line and pressure them on defense, and we were able to do that and then get loose in transition. It certainly changed all of our lives: when you have a historic upset that has never happened before then attention will come your way. It was just 1 game…but it meant a lot to a lot of people who just love basketball and wanted to see a #16-seed finally beat a #1-seed. A lot of people will remember where they were when it happened so to be the team that accomplished that was really special. I want us to be proud of it but our goals are bigger than just that: we want to create new and exciting moments because we will always have that 1.

Your non-conference schedule includes games against Marquette/Penn State: which of these games do you feel will present your biggest test? Those are the 2 high-major teams we are playing and they are both really good. Penn State won the NIT and Marquette has a ton of guys back so both of them will be challenging. However, we have some other tough games as well: FGCU has a lot of guys back, Manhattan is always a tough out, Towson is in our community, etc. We are also going to the Bahamas for 3 games against teams we do not usually face so we are looking forward to that as well.

Grad student Joe Sherburne was a 2018 1st-team Academic All-American: how proud are you of all that he has accomplished both on and off the court? That is what it is all about! He has never even gotten a B and is a tremendous representative of our university. I look forward to seeing where he is at in 10-12 years and I know that he will continue to represent us so well.

You lost each of your top-3 guards from last year (Lyles/KJ Maura/Jourdan Grant): how will you try to rebuild the backcourt? Ricky Council is a transfer from Providence but played against those guys last year every day in practice, which was big. He can handle the ball and is 1 of our best shooters: I think that he will be a major-impact guy for us this year. We also recruited KJ Jackson from Texas who scored 28 PPG and has a really bright future and an opportunity to help us. We signed 2 other PGs who have international experience in Jose Placer (who played for the Puerto Rico U-18 national team) and RJ Eytle-Rock (who played for the Great Britain U-20 national team). We feel good about who we have in the backcourt, and we also have a lot of forwards with guard skills.

What are your goals for the upcoming season, and what are your expectations for the upcoming season? Our expectations do not change: we want to compete for a championship every year. We are still thinking about the Kansas State game but this is a new year and everything starts over. We are just working hard to earn the right to be in the mix for a conference championship. We have to handle the bumps along the way but you want to have high expectations because it means that your program is in good shape.

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The Hoops HD Report: September Season Tip-Off Edition!!!

It is now officially college basketball season!!  Practice has officially started!!  Practice!!  Which means that teams are finally allowed to scrimmage against…well…themselves.

Chad and the panel begin by taking a quick look around the country with live look-ins on the first day of practice!  Chad and David then discuss/debate the NCAA’s stance on allowing teams to have one of their two exhibition games to be a charity game against another div1 team, but not be granting waivers for a third exhibition game.

We then move on to our main topic, which is looking at the rivalries in college basketball.  We talk about what we think the biggest rivalries are in terms of both importance and bitterness.  We then look at some of the lesser known rivalries, and finally we end by talking about series that would be rivalries if the two schools would just decide to play each other…

 

And for all you radio lovers, below is an mp3 version of the show….

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Season preview: HoopsHD interviews new UNC Asheville head coach Mike Morrell

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We continue our season preview coverage with new UNC Asheville head coach Mike Morrell. 15 years ago he was leading his college team in FT%, 5 years ago he was working for Shaka Smart as a VCU assistant during the NCAA tourney, 6 months ago he was working for Smart as a Texas assistant during the NCAA tourney…and now he is running the show in Asheville. The only downside: the Bulldogs lost each of their top-7 scorers from last year’s team. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Coach Morrell about how to succeed on the golf course as well as on the recruiting trail.

You played basketball/golf in college: which sport were you best at and which 1 did you enjoy the most? I was better at basketball but was also a decent golfer because I grew up working at a golf course. I can assure you that I enjoy playing golf more now even though I do not have much time to golf. I used to be a golf coach at King University in Bristol, TN…which just meant that I drove the van! Your life changes when you join a Power 5 school and I have only played golf about 3 times since coming here: I miss it a lot.

You led the basketball team in FT% multiple times: what is the secret to making FTs? You just have to be a good shooter! People used to ask Coach Oliver Purnell about it when I worked for him at Clemson: he said that he just needed to recruit some better FT shooters.

You spent the past 7 years as an assistant to Coach Shaka Smart at VCU/Texas: what makes him such a great coach, and what is the most important thing that you have ever learned from him? I cannot pinpoint any 1 specific thing but he has the innate ability to infuse his players/staff with a tremendous amount of confidence. He gets kids to believe in themselves more than they even thought possible. He is the best that I have ever been around at having kids literally believe that they were the best version of themselves. I worked with him at Clemson too so I have known him for about 15 years: he always challenged me to not put as much pressure on myself. He does a great job of looking at everything holistically and trying to see the good no matter what the situation is.

In 2015 you were named the top recruiter in the country under age 35: what is the key to recruiting? Just work. People put too much insight into it: the better recruiters spend more time at recruiting because it is more important to them. I have always enjoyed it, as did the head coach I worked for, so we were able to recruit some really good players. Recruiting is the lifeblood of your program.

In April you were named head coach at Asheville: why did you take the job, and how is it going so far? It was a great opportunity at a great place that has had a lot of success built on the backs of many good coaches including Nick McDevitt/Eddie Biedenbach. I grew up about 1 hour away from here so I am very familiar with the area. When I interviewed here I saw that it was a tremendous place with great support: we do not have football so basketball is very important here.  It is not the “stepchild” like it is at other schools so it is important that we are good.

You lost each of your top-7 scorers from last year’s team: where are you going to find some offense? If I knew that then I would be probably be making a lot more money playing poker! We are very young but will have 8 guys out there who have never played college basketball before. We only have 2 guys who even played in a game at Asheville last year so it goes deeper. We have really good young players who I am excited about but there is a maturation process so I am glad we do not play our season opener tomorrow.

Your non-conference schedule includes games against NC State/Auburn/Vanderbilt: which of these games do you feel will present your biggest test? All of them! Schools at our level have to go out and play those kinds of games: it is a great opportunity for our guys to go to a great venue and play some good teams. We will approach it the way that we approach every game and just try to control the things that we can control.

Your assistant coach Kyle Perry was head coach at South Carolina Upstate and a 4-time member of the All-Academic team as a walk-on for Bobby Cremins at Georgia Tech: how nice is it to have a former head coach on your staff, and how smart is he?! He is a smart guy and a tremendous member of our staff: I hired him because I have known him for a long time. He has a wealth of experience at this level and know what it takes to succeed. However, it is not like I give him tests every other day: I just try to hire bright/motivated people.

What are your goals for the upcoming season, and what are your expectations for the upcoming season? Just to move forward and get better every day. It is not about being result-oriented early on since we have 6 true freshmen and 2 redshirt freshmen. We also have 2 transfers sitting out this year who I am excited about so the future is bright. I am only holding them accountable to what they can control, which will enable us to grow up quicker.

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Season preview: HoopsHD interviews Penn State head coach Pat Chambers

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We continue our season preview coverage with Penn State head coach Pat Chambers. When you play/work for a Hall of Fame coach like Herb Magee at Philadelphia University and then work for 2-time NCAA championship coach Jay Wright at Villanova, you learn what it takes to succeed as a coach. Coach Chambers made the NCAA tourney in his 2nd year at head coach at BU in 2011, then after 6 years of hard work in State College it was lucky year #7 that resulted in a 26-win season and an NIT title game victory over Utah. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Coach Chambers about winning a title and having an experienced coaching staff.

You were a player/assistant for Hall of Fame coach Herb Magee at Philadelphia University: what makes him such a great coach, and what was the most important thing that you ever learned from him? He is 1 of a kind and an offensive genius. Even if the other team knew where the ball was going, he would get our guys a good shot at the basket. My teammates and I had a great relationship with him. We did more 5-on-5 drills than I ever recall doing with another coach: he let his guys play and then coached them up.

You made the 2009 Final 4 as an assistant to Coach Jay Wright at Villanova (who has won 2 NCAA titles in the past 3 years): are we going to see the Wildcats on your schedule anytime soon? Hopefully in the NCAA tourney! Or maybe in the Gavitt Games if we continue to show improvement.

As head coach at BU in 2011 you were 10-13 entering February: how did you flip the switch to win 11 in a row (including the America East title game by 2 PTS in OT), and how did you enjoy facing the Morris twins of Kansas in the NCAA tourney? My memories of BU are incredible: I cherish those times and it really shaped me as a coach. We had a very difficult non-conference schedule but after getting punished on the road 1 night that season (a 60-48 loss at New Hampshire on 1/29) we resolved to never let it happen again. The guys believed in the game plan vs. Kansas and we were right there with them into the 2nd half. The Morris twins were great: I had recruited them to Villanova so it was a lot of fun to see them again.

Last January at Ohio State Keita Bates-Diop made a deep 3-PT shot with 5 seconds left to to tie the game, then Tony Carr banked in a shot at the buzzer to beat the Buckeyes: did you think Tony’s shot was going in, and where does that rank among the most exciting finishes that you have ever seen? It is up there: Scottie Reynolds hit a last-second shot to beat Pitt and help get us to the Final 4 in 2009 when I was at Villanova. We were also losing the 2011 America East tourney title game until the very end when John Holland made some big shots. I wanted a timeout after Keita’s shot and was wondering what on earth I would say in the huddle. That win in Columbus propelled us to new heights.

In the 2018 NIT title game you beat Utah to win the title: what did it mean to you to win a title, and what do you think your team learned from its postseason run that will help them this year? We beat a very tough Temple team at home and then won road games at Notre Dame/Marquette. Beating Mississippi State in the semifinals was a huge step because it taught us how to win. We wanted to be in the NCAA tourney but we showed that we deserved to be there. The NIT was a steppingstone and a great experience for our team: I take great pride in winning championships.

Your team was top-10 in the nation in STL/BLK: how much importance do you place on defense? That is our foundation: if you come to our practices you will see that is exactly what we are built upon. I do not think that our staff got enough credit for what we did but defending/rebounding is who we are. We bring back a lot of great shot-blockers this year (including Mike Watkins’ 2.3 BPG) so I like the cornerstones that we have.

You have a great set of assistant coaches including Kevin Freeman (UConn’s all-time leader with 140 games played) and Jim Ferry (2011 conference COY at LIU): do you find yourself leaning on different assistants for different things based on whether they were a successful player vs. a successful coach? They all have their own strengths. I put this group together over the past 2 years to help make me a better coach. Keith Urgo is my go-to guy who worked with me at Villanova and has been a staple for us. Jim is someone I can lean on to help me through some of the tough times due to his 30 years of coaching experience/wisdom. He is also an offensive genius: our spacing has gotten better and we are sharing the ball more. Knowing Kevin’s background as a champion was huge: I wanted a winner and someone who can coach big men and develop them.

Your non-conference schedule includes games against DePaul/Virginia Tech/NC State: which of these games do you feel will present your biggest test? North Florida…because we open up with them. I know what I will get from the 3-5 guys who produced for me last year but I need to see what we can get from our freshmen. I am excited about the potential lineups we will be able to play but I put together a very difficult non-conference schedule because we want to take the next step.

You lost a pair of great guards from last year in Carr/Shep Garner but have great frontcourt depth including Lamar Stevens/Mike Watkins/John Harrar: how is the backcourt looking at the moment? It is looking terrific. You will like this kid Jamari Wheeler because he makes everyone around him better and distracts his opponent on defense. I love all of our freshmen: they have bought in both on and off the floor and are coachable so I just need to see who will start because they are all capable of doing so.

What are your goals for the upcoming season, and what are your expectations for the upcoming season? When I 1st got here I would answer that question by saying we want to win 20 games and make the NCAA tourney…which has only led to me getting a stomach ache, so now I just want to get 1% better every day and take it 1 day at a time. It is a totally new team so we just need to have faith because we want to take the next step.

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Season preview: HoopsHD interviews Penn State F Lamar Stevens

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We continue our season preview coverage with Penn State F Lamar Stevens. 2 of last spring’s postseason MVPs have left college basketball (NCAA tourney MOP Donte DiVincenzo from Villanova was a 1st round pick of the Milwaukee Bucks and CIT MVP Andre Spight from Northern Colorado is playing pro basketball in Europe) but 2 decided to stick around (CBI MVP Roosevelt Smart is still at North Texas and Stevens remains in State College). The Nittany Lions have not made the NCAA tourney since 2011 but with a stacked frontcourt this just might be the year that they break the streak. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Lamar about a sad Selection Sunday but a powerful postseason performance.

You grew up in Pennsylvania: what made you choose Penn State? Just the coaching staff: I had so much faith in them and their ability to develop the team. I had other offers but wanted to blaze my own path rather than go somewhere that already has a lot of history.

You play for Coach Pat Chambers: what makes him such a good coach, and what is the most important thing that you ever learned from him? His ability to get the best out of all of his players. He can relate to players from different backgrounds and brings the fire out of us. He holds everyone accountable, which is huge for a coach, and he expects the most out of us. The thing I learned is that every detail matters: you cannot take anything for granted.

In February 2017 you scored 26 PTS in 42 minutes during an 8-PT 3-OT loss at Indiana: how exhausted were you by the end of that game? It was a hard-fought battle. I was a little tired but our strength and conditioning coach has prepared us well.

You started 33 games as a freshman and averaged 12.7 PPG: how were you able to come in and contribute right from the start? I took a lot of pride in preparing my body/game during the offseason. I look back and wish I could have done more but it was a good learning experience.

After an 8-PT loss to Purdue in last year’s Big 10 tourney semifinals your record stood at 21-13: how hard was it to sit through Selection Sunday, and what was your reaction after your team’s name did not get called? It was difficult because we all believed that we could have made an impact in the NCAA tourney, but we just looked at the NIT as a chance to prove ourselves. We were hungry/excited to keep playing.

In the 2018 NIT title game you scored a game-high 28 PTS/11-15 FG win over Utah en route to being named NIT MVP: how were you able to play your best when it mattered the most, and what did it mean to you to win a title? My coaches/teammates believed in me, which pushed me to play so well. IT meant everything because it is hard to win a championship. To go out on top was great.

Your team was top-10 in the nation in STL/BLK: how much importance does your team place on defense? That is our staple and something that Coach continuously talks about: defending and rebounding. Our best defenders bring the best out of all of us.

Your non-conference schedule includes games against DePaul/Virginia Tech/NC State: which of these games do you feel will present your biggest test? I think our biggest test will just be our 1st game since we have so many young guys on the team. Each game will be a test but we will take it 1 game at a time.

You lost a pair of great guards from last year in Tony Carr/Shep Garner but have fantastic frontcourt depth including yourself/Mike Watkins/John Harrar: how is the backcourt looking at the moment? It is looking really good. Freshman Rasir Bolton has stepped up big-time throughout the summer and he is ready to play at this level right now. We have some other freshmen as well who can score at a high level so I am excited to see them shock a lot of people.

What are your goals for the upcoming season, and what are your expectations for the upcoming season? Our goal is to just win every day, be the best team we can be, and get 1% better each day. I do not know exactly where it will lead us but the sky is the limit.

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Season preview: HoopsHD interviews Georgia State G D’Marcus Simonds

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We continue our season preview coverage with Georgia State G D’Marcus Simonds. D’Marcus was D’Man last season: he had the 1st triple-double in school history, averaged 21.2 PPG, and was named conference POY/conference tourney MVP/All-American. He can also turn it up when the stakes are highest: he scored 27 PTS in the Sun Belt tourney title game win over Texas-Arlington and 24 PTS in the NCAA tourney loss to Cincinnati. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with D’Marcus about being conference ROY and what it takes to win in OT.

You grew up in Georgia: what made you choose Georgia State? There were a couple of things that led me to Georgia State. Obviously at the top was the coaching staff: it felt right being around them. I knew what my goals were entering college and I had seen what they did with RJ Hunter. I also loved the thought of living in Atlanta and still being close enough to home for family and friends to come out and watch me play.

You play for Coach Ron Hunter: what makes him such a good coach, and what is the most important thing that you have learned from him? I think he is such a good coach because he will always be honest with you. There are times were players do not always want to hear that but in the long run honesty is the only way to get better. I do not know that there is just 1 thing I could pinpoint that I have learned from him. I have grown up so much under him the last few years and I know I still have a lot to learn this year as I try to help our team win another championship.

As a freshman you averaged 13.4 PPG and were named conference ROY: how were you able to come in and contribute right from the start? The funny thing is that the first 10 games or so of that year I was coming off the bench and only played limited minutes in a few games. I needed to have the game slow down a bit for me and when it finally did so in December I felt like I could really make an impact. Coach Hunter runs a complicated style of defense that it takes everyone some time to learn, but once you do the fans can see why we are so good defensively.

In November 2017 you had a triple-double with 20 PTS/10 REB/10 AST in 28 minutes in a win over Carver Bible: where does that rank among the best all-around games of your career? Honestly, that was pretty cool! It was not something that I set out to do and I did not know it was the first one in school history until after the game. It does rank as 1 of the cooler things I have been fortunate enough to accomplish in basketball. The number I love the most is the 10 assists: I take great pride in getting the ball to my teammates and that night I was able to do it better than I ever have before.

Last year you averaged a school-record 21.2 PPG and were named conference POY/All-American: what is the key to being a good scorer, and what did it mean to you to receive such outstanding honors? The key to being a good scorer is taking the right shots as well as driving to the hoop for an easier shot whenever possible. I think one of the biggest things I learned between my freshman and sophomore seasons was knowing when to shoot and when to pass. I felt like I started to take smarter shots last year even though my shooting percentage went down: hopefully I can continue to improve on that this year. As for the awards, they are great but none of them would be possible without my teammates help. We truly came together as a group of brothers last year and I want that bond to continue this season.

In the 2018 Sun Belt tourney title game you scored 27 PTS in a win over Texas-Arlington en route to being named tourney MVP: how were you able to play your best when it mattered the most? Before the tournament even started our team was truly focused and came together. When I struggled in the semifinals of the tournament they really picked up me and I was ready for that championship game. I think that was what led me to having a great game against UT-Arlington. I was able to refocus and prepare to win a conference championship. As I said earlier, none of this would be possible without them.

In the 2018 NCAA tourney you scored 24 PTS in a loss to Cincinnati: what did you learn from that loss that will help you this year? My teammates and I learned a lot in that game. The thing that we took out of it is that even though we lost, we can still play with anyone in the country. We had the lead in that game with about 10 minutes to play before Cincinnati wore us down. We have used that as motivation in the offseason to come back even stronger this year. We want to get back into the NCAA Tournament in March and take our program deeper in the tournament that it has ever been before.

Your team was 0-3 in OT games last year: what is the key to success in OT? That is a really good question…and one that if we can figure out will hopefully lead us to having a better record if we play any overtime games this year! With the short amount of time you have in OT it is important to get off to a quick start. Looking back on those three games last year, I do not think we ever got off to a good start and that definitely hurt us in those games.

Last year you led the conference in turnovers: did you do any specific kind of work this summer to try to cut down on your turnovers, or is it not that big a deal because it did not prevent your team from making the NCAA tourney? I have always played an aggressive style of basketball, which has probably led to some extra turnovers over the years. It is definitely something I always work on as no one wants to turn the ball over. However, I think my aggressiveness also leads us to more opportunities to score. It is something I have to balance as it is not a category you ever want to be leading.

What are your goals for the upcoming season, and what are your expectations for the upcoming season? Our goals and expectations at Georgia State basically remain the same every season: win conference championships and get to the NCAA Tournament. My teammates and I have worked extremely hard so hopefully those opportunities will occur once again this season. Our coaches have put together a demanding non-conference schedule that will hopefully get us ready for success when the time comes.

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