1971 was a long time ago. But a few things still stick in my mind from that period. And one of those sticky memories involved the British invasion, in particular, The Rolling Stones and their new release "Sticky Fingers." Hard to believe, but I have managed to stick on to that album all these years, and the zipper remains functional.

So when Coach Bill Self starts preaching from his Bible about not letting the ball stick, I can't help but think about my zipper album and the 10 songs that caught fire around the world back in '71.
Self made a statement last Monday on something that stuck on him concerning the game of basketball. He (like the rest of us) was impressed by the team effort and ball movement of the San Antonio Spurs in the NBA Finals. I can't recall (in my lifetime) a better example of both team play and team passing from any past NBA Finals from all those great teams that performed in it. Every player on this Spurs team passed the ball well and padded their assist stats.
"βThat was a true team and they did so many great things. To see how three Hall-of-Famers (Tim Duncan, Manu Ginobili, Tony Parker), the three best players on the team, how excited they were when (Kawhi) Leonard won MVP, it makes for a pretty special situation. What Pop (coach Gregg Popovich) and the Spurs have done will make it much easier for college coaches to coach,β Self added, noting he would point out to his players how the champs moved the basketball without it sticking to hands."
Imagine for a second, that a college basketball team could grasp the ability to play and pass anything close to what the Spurs did in the Finals. How bad would that team spank the entire college basketball world? I would imagine even far worse than the Spurs spanked the Heat. We all typically criticize NBA defense, but the Finals usually brings out every team's best defensive effort. The Heat did their best to ratchet up the pressure (especially in Game 5) but they were eventually beat down by the persistent effort of the Spurs.
I may actually receive my recent wish, which involved Self showing NBA Finals game footage to his troops in hopes they absorb how effective the Spurs played and commit to focus a season-long effort to achieve as close to that level of play as they can.
It's summer (almost). We need something to dream about for a few months to tie us over until that first fall jump ball. Why can't the dream include an unselfish Jayhawk team that made crisp passes soaking in PAM (non-stick) to targets that worked their butts off away from the ball to get open and complete the scoring process (at a high rate of effectiveness)?
I want to hold on to that dream. And in the process, I want to flush away all the nightmare dreams from the past where Kansas gave away games because of either clusters of bad TOs or running an offense that "stuck" and didn't produce enough points to win.
We still have a young team, but there is a bright side to youth; they should be able to learn much faster than players older than them. Just look at the NBA. It is a league full of top-notch talent that is older than players wearing a Kansas uniform. No other team in the pros ran an offense even close to what the Spurs did in the Finals. Coach Popovich does not hold any secret weapons or strategies. There was nothing in the Spurs playbook unique to professional basketball. The Spurs just learned how to execute to the level of success they performed in the Finals. It was not a case of a team simply getting hot.
I can't wait to experience the rest of my summer. It will involve picking vegetables from my garden and having ripe dreams about a Jayhawk team that will perform to a legendary level this coming season.
Bill Self finally made his point stick about not letting the ball stick. He now owns several game tapes showing what he is reaching for... can his vision stick into his players' heads? The answer sticking into my head until fall is "yes!"