Salute the Sooners for offer to Tyler Neal

In spring 2004, an OU basketball scholarship came open. Kelvin Sampson decided to take a flier on David Godbold of Douglass High School.

Godbold was an excellent high school player but was not heavily recruited. The summer before his senior year, Godbold had been contacted by Arkansas-Little Rock, Colorado State and North Carolina-Wilmington but had no scholarship offers. The next spring, he had offers from Idaho, Oral Roberts, Wichita State and Texas-San Antonio. Godbold was getting ready to take a trip to Southwest Missouri State when Sampson called with a scholarship offer.

Putnam City West's Tyler Neal (15) tries to work around the defense of Greg Austin (23), left, and Trael Colbert (33) of Midwest City during the Class 6A boys high school basketball state tournament. Photo by Nate Billings, The Oklahoman

Godbold made the starting lineup as a freshman, played four years, was in the rotation his entire career and played in five NCAA Tournament games.

Sometimes you need a David Godbold. The Sooners need one now. Jeff Capel’s roster is ravaged, and one remedy is to give a scholarship to a player you know wants to be on the Sooner campus.

Enter Putnam West’s Tyler Neal, a 6-foot-6 forward who had been recruited by Oral Roberts. Neal kept his options open, and an OU offer came this week.

In recent years, we’ve taken to critiquing the in-state football recruiting practices of both Oklahoma and Oklahoma State. But we might have been looking at the wrong sport.

Football is a sport in which roster stability is inherent. A couple of transfers, a couple of early pro entries, a couple of troublemakers. Experience them all and still they do not make a wasteland of the roster. They can hurt your chances of winning. They can affect depth. They do not make coaches head down to the rec center looking for walk-ons.

But that exact scenario can occur in basketball. Which is why a coach is wise to build a base of solid citizens who want a degree from that coach’s school and wants to play hoops while doing so.

Even a program as popular as Kansas, which can recruit just about any player it wants, makes a place for a guy whose talent might not be up Jayhawk standards but whose devotion to the school is unquestioned. KU’s Brady Morningstar is a Lawrence kid whose dad played for the Jayhawks.

I have no idea what kind of player Tyler Neal will be. Heck, everyone figured Taylor Griffin was one of these kind of glue guys, a guy recruited to get his brother on campus, yes, but also a guy who would be solid in the classroom and the locker room, and if he turned out to be a ballplayer, that was a bonus. Taylor Griffin currently resides on an NBA roster.

So this is not a pronouncement that Tyler Neal can’t play. It is a pronouncement that sometimes prospects are strangers in their own land. A pronouncement that all kinds of players from around these parts prove to be valuable players, they just need a chance. Terry Evans was that for Billy Tubbs. Godbold and Griffin were that way for Sampson and Capel.

Cade Davis is that way for Capel now.

Both OU and OSU should try to sign the best Oklahoman (or two) every year. Guys who care about the place they’re at can rub off on others. Guys who are invested in their school can help change the culture.

-------------Berry Tramel can be heard Monday through Friday from 4:40-5:20 p.m. on The Sports Animal radio network, including AM-640 and FM-98.1. You can e-mail him here and follow him on Twitter @BerryTramel. Visit Berry's website here.
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Comments

There is no Southwest Missouri State since 2005 … Can you please correct this?

David Godbold was recruited in 2004 (Berry mentions this) when there WAS a SWMSU.

This kid has a chance to be pretty good. He can really shoot the 3 and is fairly athletic. If he doesn’t get intimidated and plays tough he’ll have a chance to make an impact.

that is one of the better artical that barry has written.

When I was at basketball camp after I finished 8th grade and Tyler finished his freshmen year I was the first kid he ever dunked on. not really something to be proud of but still

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