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Showing posts with label College. Show all posts
Showing posts with label College. Show all posts

Monday, January 25, 2010

Born Ready - Lance Stephenson is growing up quickly at Cincinnati


he high school basketball player they called "Born Ready" was anything but, at least away from the basketball court. The amazing thing about that was he was the first to realize it. "I needed to be away from New York to learn how to be a man,'' Lance Stephenson said this week. "I was glad to come out here to change my life.''
Out here is Cincinnati, a small place compared to where Stephenson is from. They'll give him elbow room in Cincinnati, everywhere but in the lane. The locals are respectful of their sports stars. They're grateful enough to let their heroes breathe.
When Deion Sanders played center field for the Reds in the mid-'90s, he marveled at the space he got from fans. Prime Time was "household,'' as he liked to say. He was a two-sport jock, a bejeweled celeb who dabbled in hip-hop and was among the most recognizable sports people on the planet.
In Cincinnati, he could go to the mall. He could eat at a restaurant and not need VIP seating.
Stephenson could not have known any of that when he agreed last June to play quasi-amateur basketball at the University of Cincinnati. What he did know was that New York was starting to smother him. Breathing was a problem. So was being the next Next. New York is always looking for the next Next. That was Stephenson, who got Next from Sebastian Telfair, who inherited it from Stephon Marbury by way of Kenny Anderson. And so on.
When your high school team wins four city titles and you break the state's all-time scoring record (held by Telfair, who took it from Anderson), you are going to be pampered. Or as Stephenson put it, "respected too much.''
"In New York, everything was given to me. Out here, they keep me grounded. It's not like, 'Oh, he's a superstar, let's treat him different.'
"If everything is given to you, you feel like, 'I can do whatever I want and get away with it.' Out here I can't get away with everything.''
Either Stephenson talks as good as he plays, or there was a whole lot of misjudging going on the last few years.
Hoop junkies know his story: A legend at Coney Island's Lincoln High who had the Born Ready nickname applied to him by a Rucker Park announcer during a summer league game in 2006. The star of an Internet TV series of the same name, for which he received much attention from the NCAA, whose sleuths wanted to know if he got paid.
Stephenson took a tour of an Under Armour warehouse in Baltimore, while on an official visit to Maryland. The company's founder and CEO is also on Maryland's Board of Trustees. Oops. On top of that, Stephenson was charged with sexual assault for groping a 17-year-old girl.
All that happened in a two-year span. Many college coaches were scared off, seeing more risk than reward, even as recruiting experts proclaimed Stephenson to be the next Next. After Cincinnati signed him, the Bearcats had to sweat an NCAA tooth-combing. Stephenson was cleared just before UC's first exhibition game in November.
A kid could get exhausted from all that hype.
"You like it in the beginning,'' Stephenson said. "You feel like you're different than other people.''
Different was good for awhile: The press, the fawning, the awe when he entered a playground or a gym. Look at me.
That changed when the NCAA started looking at his film career and the press went south after the sexual assault charge. Different was no longer good. "It was a negative thing in my life and I wanted to change it,'' Stephenson said.
Stephenson pleaded guilty to a lesser charge in the assault case and was sentenced to community service. He wasn't paid for Born Ready. He's no longer on the NCAA's hit list. He has adapted to college life in a way that delights him.
Stephenson earned a 3.5 GPA in his first college quarter. He never achieved better than a 2.0 in high school. Skeptics would suggest he excelled at Dick and Jane and never missed a Connect-the-Dots class. His academic advisor, Sara Piepho, said Stephenson's courses were legit: "They're not basket-weaving and Yoga 101,'' she said. In fact, Stephenson's schedule included an English class and a paralegal course.
When Piepho told Stephenson late last quarter that the 3.5 was a possibility, he wanted to call his parents. Their reaction was, "Are you serious?''
Piepho was wary of Stephenson when he arrived. Blue-chip recruit, not expected to stay more than a year or two: Another guy she'd have to run down and introduce to study hall. "Any time you have a kid who could be one-and-done, you wonder,'' she said. It hasn't happened that way. "If I could clone him, I would. He's disciplined and driven. He makes good decisions.''
Stephenson hasn't been the me-first playground player some suspected he'd be, either. If anything, he has held back. He leads Cincinnati in scoring at 12.7 points a game, but that's only slightly better than Deonta Vaughn's 11 points a game and Yancy Gates' 10.
"In high school, I could just go. Take over,'' Stephenson said. "I do that here, (defenses) collapse on me, I get a turnover.''
The one game he did take over on Dec. 30, the Bearcats upset Connecticut. Stephenson had 21 points, including the game-winning free throws. Still, he's not a finished product. Stephenson is not Kentucky's John Wall. He's still learning when to pass and when to shoot, and how to fight through screens on defense.
"Sometimes, he's in the all-pass mode,'' said Cincinnati coach Mick Cronin. "Sometimes, he's in the all-drive mode. When he (learns) when to pass, when to shoot, when to drive and take what the defense gives him, he's going to be a special offensive player.''
In the meantime, the learning continues for Born Ready. He'll be back in New York on Wednesday night, in Madison Square Garden against St. John's. Stephenson refers to Cincinnati as "out here.'' Either he sees it as the small-town outback, or an out from the unique burdens of being a New York schoolboy basketball prodigy. Maybe both.
It's nice to go home, Stephenson figures. But only for short time. By:
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/paul_daugherty/01/13/stephenson/index.html

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Lance stephenson scores career high !

Seven players on the No. 22/24 University of Cincinnati men's basketball team scored in double figures, leading the Bearcats to a 94-57 victory over Texas Southern University on Tuesday night at Fifth Third Arena. The 37-point win is the largest margin of victory in head coach Mick Cronin's tenure at UC.
Rashad Bishop led all UC scorers with 14 points, while Dion Dixon and Steve Toyloy added 13, Deonta Vaughn scored 12, and Yancy Gates and Jaquon Parker contributed 10 points. The last time UC won as a ranked team was on March 17, 2005 when the Bearcats defeated Iowa, 76-64, in the NCAA Austin Regional. UC was ranked No. 23 at that time.
Cincinnati won the tip and held the Tigers scoreless for the first 4:02 of the game, jumping out to a 7-0 lead. Texas Southern drained back-to-back three pointers until Parker hit Darnell Wilks with a mid-court alley-oop, stopping the 6-0 run by Texas Southern. TSU responded with another 3-pointer, tying the game at nine, but that would be as close as the Tigers would get.
Toyloy connected on two free throws that started a 20-1 run over 4:57 and gave UC a 29-10 lead with 8:13 to go in the first period. Gates had two dunks and Anthony McClain had a fastbreak jam during that span. Texas Southern went on a 9-4 run and pulled within 14, but Vaughn hit one of three Bearcat 3-pointers and Wilks slammed a dunk over the final 3:39 to give UC a 44-22 halftime advantage.
Nine Cincinnati players scored in the first half and UC outscored TSU, 24-2, in the paint. The halftime advantage of 22 points was Cincinnati's largest halftime lead of the season. Bishop poured in 11 points in the first half and was perfect from the field (5-for-5).
No team jumped out offensively to start the second half and Texas Southern did not getting closer than 19 with 16:12 to go. A 3-pointer by Vaughn started a 7-0 run for UC and Cincinnati pushed out to 59-32 lead. Stephenson grabbed a rebound and handed out back-to-back assists to give UC a 30-point lead and a Wilks 3-pointer 28 seconds later put UC up, 69-38, with 11:27 to go. It took 1:09 before the next bucket and then UC went on a 12-4 run and held a 39-point advantage, 81-42, with 6:20 left to play. The Bearcats continued to push and Toyloy scored eight of UC's last nine points, two off of feeds from Alex Eppensteiner, as Cincinnati rolled to the victory.
Lance Stephenson grabbed a game and career-high 11 rebounds and scored seven points with a game and career-high seven assists.
After nine days off, the Bearcats return to the floor at U.S. Bank Arena for a home game vs. Miami University (OH) on Dec. 10 at 8:30 p.m.

Lance stephenson scores career high !

Seven players on the No. 22/24 University of Cincinnati men's basketball team scored in double figures, leading the Bearcats to a 94-57 victory over Texas Southern University on Tuesday night at Fifth Third Arena. The 37-point win is the largest margin of victory in head coach Mick Cronin's tenure at UC.
Rashad Bishop led all UC scorers with 14 points, while Dion Dixon and Steve Toyloy added 13, Deonta Vaughn scored 12, and Yancy Gates and Jaquon Parker contributed 10 points. The last time UC won as a ranked team was on March 17, 2005 when the Bearcats defeated Iowa, 76-64, in the NCAA Austin Regional. UC was ranked No. 23 at that time.
Cincinnati won the tip and held the Tigers scoreless for the first 4:02 of the game, jumping out to a 7-0 lead. Texas Southern drained back-to-back three pointers until Parker hit Darnell Wilks with a mid-court alley-oop, stopping the 6-0 run by Texas Southern. TSU responded with another 3-pointer, tying the game at nine, but that would be as close as the Tigers would get.
Toyloy connected on two free throws that started a 20-1 run over 4:57 and gave UC a 29-10 lead with 8:13 to go in the first period. Gates had two dunks and Anthony McClain had a fastbreak jam during that span. Texas Southern went on a 9-4 run and pulled within 14, but Vaughn hit one of three Bearcat 3-pointers and Wilks slammed a dunk over the final 3:39 to give UC a 44-22 halftime advantage.
Nine Cincinnati players scored in the first half and UC outscored TSU, 24-2, in the paint. The halftime advantage of 22 points was Cincinnati's largest halftime lead of the season. Bishop poured in 11 points in the first half and was perfect from the field (5-for-5).
No team jumped out offensively to start the second half and Texas Southern did not getting closer than 19 with 16:12 to go. A 3-pointer by Vaughn started a 7-0 run for UC and Cincinnati pushed out to 59-32 lead. Stephenson grabbed a rebound and handed out back-to-back assists to give UC a 30-point lead and a Wilks 3-pointer 28 seconds later put UC up, 69-38, with 11:27 to go. It took 1:09 before the next bucket and then UC went on a 12-4 run and held a 39-point advantage, 81-42, with 6:20 left to play. The Bearcats continued to push and Toyloy scored eight of UC's last nine points, two off of feeds from Alex Eppensteiner, as Cincinnati rolled to the victory.
Lance Stephenson grabbed a game and career-high 11 rebounds and scored seven points with a game and career-high seven assists.
After nine days off, the Bearcats return to the floor at U.S. Bank Arena for a home game vs. Miami University (OH) on Dec. 10 at 8:30 p.m.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Born Ready in Cincinnati Unversity college shruggles

Stephenson being 'Born Ready'

Filed Under: Freshmen, Big East
It’s a good thing Lance Stephenson moved on from his “Born Ready” nickname. It didn’t apply in his debut.

Cincinnati’s 6-5 guard is billed as one of the nation’s impact freshmen (fell for it), but there are no words for opening with a 7-point, 4-rebound performance against Prairie View A&M. The Bearcats won the game (barely), otherwise you’d be reading about UCLA and Cincy stumbling on Monday.

As for Stephenson – 2-10 from the field, 0-3 beyond the arc and 1 turnover in 22 minutes – there’s an explanation.

“He was a nervous wreck,” Cincinnati coach Mick Cronin said. “He’ll get better. I’ve got to make sure he’s not putting too much pressure on himself. When we were struggling, he was the one guy in the huddle trying to fire everybody up. You could see his frustration. You could see his desire to win.”

Nervousness in your college hoops debut is understandable. Only a chosen few can open with a memorable night.

But it seems odd for Stephenson to have those jitters. He’s one of the most celebrated players from NYC. He’s been on the AAU circuit and played in high-pressure situations before. What’s going to happen when the Bearcats play better teams or get into Big East play?

Perhaps Cincy now has a player who’ll stick around for more than one season.

Friday, June 26, 2009

Lance going to Kansas Or ???

Video Posted from Lance's Gallery on Takkle.com


Lance Stephenson to choose college soon; Kansas is likely destination
By I. Begley and M. Lelinwalla
DAILY NEWS SPORTS WRITERS




Lincoln's Lance Stephenson is expected to pick Kansas over Maryland and St. John's when he makes his college commitment.

While Lincoln hoops star Lance Stephenson was scheduled to announce his college commitment Tuesday morning as part of the McDonald's All-American High School basketball game's media day at the BankUnited Center in Coral Gables, Fla., the Daily News has learned he likely will hold off on that announcement a little longer.

Sources still strongly expect Stephenson to choose Kansas, one even adding that he's "99.9% sure" the Coney Island product will join the Jayhawks and pass on St. John's and Maryland. Sources believe Stephenson will choose a college if he is academically eligible and not follow prep star Brandon Jennings and play in Europe.

Stephenson's father vows his son has taken the SATs and will be eligible to play in college next season.

An announcement this week would end months of speculation over Stephenson's college plans. Stephenson originally told reporters as early as December that he was going to announce his commitment at the Garden after Lincoln captured its fourth consecutive PSAL championship - which it did - but he never did.

His career at Lincoln ended abruptly Saturday, in a 77-50 loss to Rice for the State Federation Class AA championship.

Kansas currently has 14 scholarship players for next year and Sherron Collins has hinted at returning for his senior season. That means Kansas would need Cole Aldrich to go pro and a player to give up his scholarship or leave school to make room for Stephenson. It is likely Kansas will accomodate Stephenson if he makes a commitment to the school.

Monday, June 1, 2009

Will you invite Lance Born Ready to your College ?

His stock has fallen farther than General Motors. Once the most-hyped recruit in the country, Lance Stephenson enters June without a school, without much hype and with many in recruiting circles saying he's not worth the trouble. This begs the question: Does anybody still want Lance Stephenson?
Steve Yanda asked as much in The Washington Post this morning. It's partial hyperbole -- of course somebody will still take Stephenson, but for a guy whose college choice commanded national attention two months ago, Yanda argues that the suitors are far less in number than they once were. It's not as much where Stephenson wants to go, but which program will take him.
The questions aren't about Stephenson's game, but about the off-court issues. He seems to be the guy that every coach would rather be somebody else's problem. Between the pending criminal charge, questions about amateur status and the general sense that where Stephen goes drama follows, he just might not be worth it. Gary Williams, for instance, is desperate to sign a big-time national recruit. Will putting up with a possible Stephenson-headache be worth it for next season?
Probably not, when you consider quotes like this from a USA Basketball official. Speaking about Stephenson not making the under-18 men's national team last June:
"[Lance] was worthy of being on [the under-18 men's national team in 2008], but what you deal with is it would have taken too much energy for the coaches to maintain Lance playing less minutes and being on the bench, and it would have diverted [them] from working with the top five to seven guys to win a gold medal."
Translation: Stephenson is a chemistry killer. Taking one-and-done guys (as Stephenson is likely to be) is always a crapshoot, but there always seem to be more danger with the ones whose feet are already out the door before they step foot on campus. That doesn't lead to Final Fours, it leads to first-round NCAA tournament exits and a difficult recruiting situation in the fall.
Headed into the off-season, there were three main recruiting questions to be solved. Xavier Henry committed to Kansas back in April and John Wall signed with Kentucky before Memorial Day. The other dominoes have fallen and it's now up to Stephenson to finish off the major '09 signings. Or, more appropriately, it's up to whichever team decides to welcome him and his circus to town.
yahoo.com


Friday, May 1, 2009

Where is Lance Stephenson going to college ?

St. John's, once rumored to be the front-runner for the services of high school superstar Lance "Born Ready" Stephenson, is officially out of the sweepstakes.

According to the New York Daily News, sources on both SJU and Stephenson's side say there's virtually no chance the 6-foot-6 guard from Lincoln HS (Brooklyn, N.Y.) will choose Norm Roberts' wallowing program. Maryland, which the Coney Island native made an official visit to in April, is also an afterthought at this point.

That leaves Kentucky (which shelled out a fortune for John Calipari, who'll help ressurect the once-prosperous program) Memphis, and Arizona as the three remaining teams on Stephenson's list.

"At this point (St.John's is) out," a legit source said in an interview with the Daily News.

"They're not a priority for us. Maryland coach embraced Lance, but for some reason that wasn't the right move."

The late signing period ends May 20. Stephenson, however, will not be reprimanded in any way if he makes his decision after that date.

So, the Lance Stephenson saga and sweepstakes continues....With yet an another example of St. John's failing to keep homegrown talent.

They hounded Stephenson throughout the big city of dreams. Stephenson flirted with the notion of staying local and helping the program flee from obscurity.

Stephenson's been an explosive scorer during his stay at Lincoln (he became New York State's all-time leading scorer this season), so it made sense that he would select school that would immediately feature him as the go-to-guy.

Not so fast.

"Roberts and his staff have waited patiently but time is growing short. They still want Stephenson but are now fearful that waiting much longer means missing out on others," states the Daily News, paraphrasing the source.

St. John's fans who have called for Roberts' job the past year have grown tired of it. In the heart of a city filled with talent and hoops hotbeds, SJU diehards see no reason why Roberts can't seem to keep homegrown talent.

It's become a pattern during the Norm Roberts era.

“We’re going to try to recruit the best kids in New York no matter what,” said Roberts in the fall.

Roberts received a major off-season boost when 6-foot-4 New York guard Omari Lawrence committed in late August, following his visit to the Queens, N.Y. campus.


“We’re always going to try to. The key is, the kids are not always going to stay home. I think people tend to forget that they don’t look at it from the opposite side. You know, sometimes kids that live in a rural area will say, ‘I’m sick of living in this rural, country area. I want to go somewhere in the metropolitan area.’"

Roberts continued, "Sometimes you have the city kids say, ‘I’m sick of living in the city, I want to go somewhere else.’ And that’s what happens. What we’ve got to do, is get the guys that are the best, the guys that want to stay home, that want to be here and make them as good as they can possibly be.”

So, another city hoopstar leaves the urban confines. This cat is likely headed for the beautiful blue-eyed beauties and country-side somewhere, as his choices would indicate.

For More on Lance Stephenson, please go to:

http://www.nydailynews.com/


Stephenson was featured on the cover of SLAM when he was 14, was the star of an online reality show, and has been celebrated as the epitome of a hip-hop hoopster. Which is all well and good, except that the kid also happens to be a jerk. Last fall, Stephenson was arrested on a Class B misdemeanor charge of sexually harassing a 17-year-old girl on the school grounds. Midway through his junior season, he was involved in an in-school altercation with a teammate that drew blood. The outcome of his arrest has not yet been decided, but Stephenson was suspended from school for five days (and two ball games) for the fight. OK, youngsters sometimes get into trouble. But consider his behavior late last month during a game in upstate Glens Falls, N.Y., that matched the Big Apple's public school champions (Lincoln) vs. the private school champs (Rice). Late in the first half, Stephenson executed a power dunk, but instead of letting go of the rim he chose to swing-and-sway to emphasize his accomplishment. This led to one of the refs' tooting him for a technical foul, which under local rules simultaneously counts as a personal foul — Stephenson's third. Much to Stephenson's displeasure, his coach, Dwayne Morton, quickly — and appropriately — yanked him from the game. Stephenson responded by loudly cursing the coach — something he's done all season-long — and sitting himself on the floor beyond the end of Lincoln's bench. Still cursing. Morton has put up with his star's antics for two reasons: The kid's extremely talented and has helped Lincoln to four straight PSAL championships. Like most very successful high school coaches, Morton is undoubtedly yearning to graduate into a college job. Rice won the game 77-50, with Stephenson — the state's career scoring leader — scoring only 14 points. According to reports, if Stephenson doesn't choose to pursue a hefty contract overseas — good riddance! — he'll pick Kansas, St. John's or Maryland as his next stop. But why would any self-respecting college coach want anything to do with Stephenson? Especially since he'll only be around campus for one season before declaring for the NBA draft. Just what the NBA needs — another spoiled, self-indulgent, knuckleheaded player who thinks he already belongs in the Hall of Fame. So what's wrong with the game? Too many colleges recruit players on the basis of their talent. Ditto for the NBA's draft process. And hardly anybody recruits/drafts on the basis of a player's character. The truth that so many recruiters/drafters don't get is that talent and character are not always mutually exclusive.

Lance Stephenson will make his college announcement April 1 at the McDonald’s All-American Game in Miami and will likely choose from between defending NCAA champion Kansas and St. John’s.

The 6-foot-5 Stephenson, ranked No. 1 in the Class of 2009 by Hoop Scoop and No. 9 by Rivals, had initially said he might announce after Saturday’s PSAL championship game at Madison Square Garden.

Top-seeded Lincoln is seeking its fourth straight PSAL title and will face No. 2 Kennedy at noon at the Garden.

Instead, Stephenson will wait until April 1, with Kansas or St. John’s the likeliest destinations. Kansas assistant Danny Manning and St. John’s head coach Norm Roberts have been tracking Stephenson in recent weeks.

Stephenson has taken an official visit to Kansas and has seen St. John’s unofficially on numerous occasions.

He also took a much-discussed official visit to Maryland but a source with knowledge said Maryland is basically out of the picture.

Saturday, January 3, 2009

Born Ready, to play for St. John"s ??

Lance Stephenson, Lincoln get help in win over Jefferson
BY M. LELINWALLA

With St. John's coach Norm Roberts on hand to see Lance Stephenson and Lincoln host Jefferson in Coney Island Thursday night, the Railsplitters' senior phenom didn't disappoint.
Fierce dunks, NBA-range three-pointers and commanding drives inside were all part of Stephenson's 20-point finish, but it was Lincoln's supporting cast that powered the Railsplitters past Jefferson, 87-83.
Lincoln senior Anthony Allen led all scorers with 25 points, and junior Raymond Oloughlin chipped in 18. Keith Spellman and Joel Wright had 19 apiece for Jefferson.
"Those were a couple of secrets I had," said Lincoln coach Dwayne Morton of Allen and Oloughlin. "I didn't know they were going to shine so early. They go hard. Now, Lance has two more guys."
Yes, Lincoln's supporting cast is no longer a secret. Allen and Oloughlin helped Stephenson force Jefferson into costly turnovers late to push Lincoln.
"Coach told us to step up and we did what we had to do," said Allen.
Still, Jefferson didn't back down.
After Stephenson hit a three to lift Lincoln's lead to 81-72 with 1:19 remaining in the game, Jefferson roared back in the final minute and came within to two points. However, Lincoln senior Allen West was able to hit a pair of foul shots and ice the game with 14.9 seconds left.
"Huge," said Morton of West's clutch free throws. "He's the MVP of the game."
Having defeated Boys & Girls and Loughlin last week, Jefferson was expected to give Lincoln (5-0) its biggest challenge. And it did, but the Orange Wave (5-1) wound up leaving Coney Island with its first loss.
And even with the help of his supporting cast, Stephenson had the opportunity to show Roberts what he's made of.
"I'm surprised he came in the building," Stephenson said. "St. John's is on my list."