Interesting reading on Blake, Henry brothers
There are a couple of fascinating bits out there on the internet involving local basketball players.
First are comments made by Shaquille O’Neal about Blake Griffin. Yes, Kazaam has weighed in on Big Blake. If you haven’t seen the comments yet, you’ll definitely want to check them out.
Second is a story from the Kansas City Star about Xavier and C.J. Henry. Our folks here at The Oklahoman have obviously been following the story of these two talented brothers for years. We have chronicled how their father, Carl, has driven them. We have written about the recruiting madness that swirled around them.
The Star’s story puts all of it together, though, for what is a fascinating read. Be sure to check it out.
Ga-ga over Griffin? Not exactly
The Clippers selected college superstar Blake Griffin with the top overall pick in Thursday night’s NBA Draft.
The reaction in Los Angeles?
Crickets.
OK, that might be hyperbole, but not much. Griffin’s selection by the Clippers didn’t make much of a dent on the local scene in SoCal. Around noon on Friday, the top 10 most viewed stories on the L.A. Times website were:
1. Michael Jackson’s life was infused with fantasy and tragedy
2. Michael Jackson dead at 50
3. Lakers sell two draft picks with an eye on free agents
4. Student’s video puts school cuts on personal level
5. 2 violent episodes raise questions about safety at Angel Stadium
6. TV misses out as gossip website TMZ reports Michael Jackson’s death first
7. Ritzy Newport Beach mall goes on a spending spree
8. Assembly approves budget package, but Schwarzenegger says he’ll veto it
9. Fans worldwide grieve for Michael Jackson
10. The mullahs must go
That’s right — no Griffin, no Clippers. Their story couldn’t even beat out the Lakers selling a couple of their picks. That means a story about who the Lakers didn’t pick was more important than a story about who the Clippers did snag.
Like I wrote this morning, welcome to Hollywood, Big Blake.
Big day for Big Blake
Blake Griffin’s day has already begun.
According to his Twitter account, he’s up and at ‘em this morning with interviews and meetings scheduled. But as you might suspect, tonight’s NBA Draft is front and center in his mind.
Around 8 a.m. Oklahoma time, Griffin wrote: “waking up early for interviews and meetings…. tonight can’t get here fast enough. haha”
By the way, if you haven’t seen the segment that Griffin did on “Late Night with Jimmy Fallon” the other night, it’s worth taking a few minutes. Here’s the link to the show. Griffin’s appearance starts at the 29:20 mark, but the dunk-off between Griffin and Fallon doesn’t start until a few minutes later.
Man-ny of the People
More from The Q&A: Willie Warren
OK, so the Oklahoma point guard has nowhere near the basketball credentials of Magic and Chuck, but after talking to him this week for The Q&A, he sees some similarities. Check it out.
Jenni Carlson: I understand you’re a broadcast journalism major. Why the interest in that field?
Willie Warren: Just watching Charles Barkley and Magic Johnson, I have the same sense of humor they have and I feel like I know just as much about basketball as them. My dad played basketball. My mom was a high school and college All-American. I’ve been around the game a long time, and I feel like I know enough about the game where I can just be on TV.
JC: You’re not going to go all Craig Sager of us if you make it, are you?
WW: I dunno. We’re just gonna have to see.
JC: But he wears pink and purple and crazy stuff.
WW: Oh, no, no, no. Not pink and purple.
JC: So, what are you up to this off-season?
WW: Just working out. Trying to develop different aspects of my game. Making sure all our players are working hard. Making sure they know how important the off-season is individually because we don’t have a Blake Griffin, a Taylor Griffin, an Austin Johnson coming back to our team.
JC: Are you in more of a leadership role this summer?
WW: Blake was the captain last year. He was the best player. The best player has to be the leader. You can’t have the best player being the laziest guy on the team because other people are just going to follow, so I have to be a leader this year. I’m willing to take up that role.
JC: Take me back to last season. What did you learn most?
WW: I learned a lot. I might have played against every top point guard in the country. I played against Sherron Collins. I played against Stephen Curry. I played against E’Twaun Moore from Purdue. A.J. Abrams. Jonny Flynn. Ty Lawson. I played against every style of point guard, and everyone showed me a little something different. Ty Lawson showed me how to run a team. Jonny Flynn showed me how to split the double team and how to create shots for other players. Sherron Collins showed me how to score the ball in certain situations. A.J. Abrams showed me how to score down the stretch. Each one of them did what they had to do to try to help their team win. That’s what I’m going to have to do next year.
JC: Who was the toughest guy to play against?
WW: Stephen Curry. I have to say hands down, it’s Stephen Curry. He can do so much. He’s probably the best scorer in the country, so you couldn’t leave him alone. He can dribble. He can create for his team. He made his team better. Davidson was not a top 30 team in the country without Stephen Curry. He made them like that. That shows just how much of a great player he was.
JC: How do you look back on last season? Success? Disappointment?
WW: I would say last year was a satisfying year for me as a freshman. I have bigger goals next year as a sophomore. I have bigger goals in mind for this team next year. I feel like we can be a better team than we were last year. A lot of people look at losing the best player … but you could say that Blake slowed us down. I feel like we’re more of a run-and-gun team this coming up year because of our guard play. We have so many threats at the guard spot, I feel like we can wear a lot of teams out. I don’t see a lot of teams deep at the guard spot where they can just sub a new set of guards every time. We can have three guards in, and then we can sub in three more guards who can score just as well.
JC: Are you like college students into texting and Facebook and all that?
WW: I’m a Facebook and MySpace guy and a cell phone and text messaging guy.
JC: No Twitter?
WW: I don’t really like the Twitter. That’s more of a blog. I’m not a blog person.
JC: Not interested in everyone knowing what you’re doing?
WW: I don’t mind, but Facebook, I can see if my friends are online. I can IM them back and forth. I’m that type of guy, talking to my friends.
JC: Some people get competitive about how many friends they have on Facebook and MySpace. Are you?
WW: I’m not at all. I like to keep my circle small anyway. The less friends, the better.
JC: Good to know who your true friends are.
WW: I want to be able to count them on one hand.
Big Blake is back … and doing yoga?
Blake Griffin is making a quick stop in Oklahoma. According to his Twitter account, the soon-to-be No. 1 pick in the NBA Draft is only going to be in his home state for a day. I talked with him earlier this week, and he said then that he’d planned to make a quick stop before heading east for next week’s draft.
While he’s in town, though, he did what most folks do while visiting Oklahoma City.
Yoga.
Yoga?
Apparently, the big fellow did a session this morning in OKC. Here’s what he had to say around 10 a.m.: “back in oklahoma for a day. just finished yoga its tougher than u think!”
We’ll take your word for it, Big Blake.
More from The Q&A: Danielle Zanotti
Four years have passed since Danielle Zanotti was honored as our girls scholar-athlete of the year.
I caught up with her last week as we were preparing to celebrate this year’s scholar-athletes. Zanotti, who played basketball and ran track and cross country at Mustang High School, recently completed her basketball career at Kansas State and is one semester from graduating with a degree in psychology.
Jenni Carlson: You know, every year when the scholar-athletes are honored, I think about all of you past winners and how prepared all of you seem for college. Were you ready to go?
Danielle Zanotti: I don’t think I was unprepared, but everybody has to transition from high school to college in sports and in school. It really is a different game. On the court, it’s a lot faster pace, there’s more pressure, expectations are higher, it’s more physical, so you’re transitioning on the court. Then, you come to school. I’ve always enjoyed classes, I’ve always enjoyed reading, but you can get away with not reading a whole lot in high school. In college, it’s just a lot more intense. So to be transitioning in both huge areas of your life, that can be difficult.
JC: Anything you wish you would’ve known then that you know now?
DZ: On the court in high school, you can get away with just maybe being the tallest or the most athletic. Your weaknesses may not be exposed in high school. In college, everything is exposed. Everybody’s athletic. Everybody’s taller and bigger and faster. I wish that I’d had my weaknesses maybe brought to my attention more. I wish that I’d dedicated more time to working on my outside shot. In high school, I was a post player; in college, I was a guard.
JC: You were recently nominated for the Marshall Scholarship, which is like the Rhodes Scholarship. What’s the timeline for the process?
DZ: You have a personal statement. It’s like an essay about your life and how it ties into your academic goals. Basically, I’ve always wanted to work with children with cancer, but now I’ve kind of broadened it to working with children with any type of trauma, whether it be natural disasters or terrorism or sexual assault or cancer. There’s a couple of doctors working over there looking at the cognitive processes behind kids dealing with trauma. I have a couple of study proposals. You also have to have essays for your proposed study at both schools, another essay about why you need to study there, then there’s a very exhaustive interview process. There’s about 200 applicants per region. Then they narrow it down to about 15 to 20 per region. Then they ask you to come to an interview. There’s eight regions. Three (selections) is the minimum. My application is due in September. Now, I’m basically reading the newspaper like a mad woman because current events is a big part of the interview process. Just reading up a lot and working on revising my essay.
JC: One of the things I was going to ask you is what’s next, but it sounds like it’s a little up in the air.
DZ: It is. It’s kind of difficult because I don’t have anything narrowed down, and I’m kind of a type A personality so it kind of bothers me. But I try to think of it as a good thing because I have a couple different options. I have one more semester left until I graduate in psychology, then I’m committed to being a graduate assistant (on the Kansas State women’s basketball team) at least next year. I’ll start a master’s, probably in sports administration because they don’t have a clinical psych program here at K-State. Then, if this GA thing pans out and I can get an assistant coaching position, I’d love to stay at K-State. But I eventually want to get my PhD in clinical psych.
JC: Tell those Marshall judges if they need help, we’ve got Scholar-Athlete judges who can vouch for you.
DZ: I always need letters of recommendation, so that might not be a bad thing. (Laughs.)
JC: Now that you’re done playing, I have to ask what it was like that last game. Playing sports, after all, have always been such a big part of your life.
DZ: It was heartbreaking. It was terrible, really. I was so happy that we made it back to the NCAA Tournament. When I was a junior and we made it, I threw out my back the day before our game. I wasn’t really able to play. When we lost to Vanderbilt that last game … I could barely drag myself up the tunnel. I was just so distraught. I still get choked up thinking about it. You know that life will never be the same. Luckily, I have an opportunity to still be a part of the team. But you know it’s never going to be the same. I know that’s a part of life and things have to change, but if I could beg the NCAA for more eligibility, I would. College sports is really one of the best opportunities anybody can get. I just loved it.
It was rough, but I guess that’s a good thing. To miss it means that it meant something. If it doesn’t mean something to you and you didn’t enjoy your time, maybe you don’t miss it as much. I look at it as a blessing. But yeah, it was hard. A lot of tears. Me and my roommate stayed up all night, I think, just crying and talking and laughing and more crying.
JC: I know your mom was so supportive of you. Was the end of your career harder on you or harder on her?
DZ: My mom and my sister and my mom’s boyfriend and my grandparents, they all came out to Albuquerque. But my sister had school and couldn’t miss, so my mom’s boyfriend and my sister had to go back. My sister had to watch it on TV, and you know in those NCAA games, they don’t play the whole game sometimes. So, they cut away from my game, and I guess my sister was literally sobbing because she did not get to watch her sister finish her career. She took it really hard.
And my mom, bless that woman’s heart. I think in four years she may have missed eight games. Maybe. I think she maybe missed two Big 12 games my whole career. That’s a huge commitment for her.
We were in Albuquerque, and she told me, “Win or lose, I have to get on the road.” She had to be at work at like 7 o’clock in the morning, so she was going to have to drive all the night through. We get to the hotel, and everybody’s parents are there. I’m crying, I can barely get off the bus, and somebody was like, “Your mom is here.” She just couldn’t get on the road without seeing me. She ended up staying the night … and getting up at like 4 and driving. She was sad for me, and she was sad that it was over. Luckily for my mom, my younger sister, Angela, just signed with Southern Nazarene. She’s going to run track and cross country there. The athletics live on in our family.
Kobe has a title … so does Adam Morrison
If you need a Blake Griffin fix
Just in case you haven’t gotten enough Blake Griffin news lately, here are a couple of things that might tide you over until Griffin appears again in The Oklahoman or on NewsOK.com.
(At the latest, that will be Tuesday. My column for Tuesday will be about the former Oklahoma big man.)
Griffin is the subject of “The Rookie,” an ongoing online series at ESPN.com. There are videos, stories, blogs and Q&As. Lots of interesting stuff. Check out the video from the day of the draft lottery. You get to watch Griffin watching the lottery. Definitely worth checking out.
A recent USA Today story gave an inside look at the man responsible for Griffin’s intense pre-draft workouts.
And finally, after Griffin’s less-than-stellar shooting during his workout with the Clippers, ClipperBlog.com asked shot guru David Thorpe to assess the big fellow’s shot. He had some very interesting thoughts about what he saw.
Griffin on Rome Show?
I know Blake Griffin had some bad intel when he posted on Twitter last week that he was going to be on “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” on Friday night, but I’m willing to give the big fellow a second chance.
Griffin has just posted that he’s headed to Jim Rome’s show, “Rome Is Burning,” and that he expects to be on today.
Here’s what he said: “Heading to the jim rome show check it out this afternoon.”
The show airs on ESPN at 3:30 p.m., and I suspect I’ll be tuning in.
