Why would Kentucky fans ever cheer against their own team? Isn't the motivation behind fans all about their team dominating their sport?
Simply put, yes it is. But let's face it, our drive for supremacy isn't a realistic one. Does anyone in here really believe Kansas can win, say, 5 out of the next 10 National Championships? Don't be silly... of course not. But Kentucky can.
I know I don't want Kansas to win 5 of the next 10 National Championships. That would turn our fan base into the biggest bunch of ego-bloated maniacs on the planet. I'm not making a character slam on Kansas fans... but fans in general... because that is what happens to humans who win too much. Then fans like me walk away. I will not be a member of a group filled with sloths. Or in the case of Kentucky, being a member of the organisation that killed dreams for future generations of children.
At this point I need everyone to reach up with both hands, firmly grip the crimson/blue glasses you are wearing, and remove them from your eyes so you can see where I am about to go because we will be departing Jayhawk basketball land for just a minute.
Kentucky is on the edge of destroying college basketball. If they can win two more games this weekend, they will advance their future dominance on the game. There is so much more to this than the actual game being played... however... everything happening behind the scenes is a drive to win games being played in March. The goal is to dominate March. The goal is to monopolize March Madness trophies at any cost, including removing the magic of the game.
Over the last few weeks, even though our Jayhawks failed to advance past the first week, we've been blessed with true basketball euphoria; upsets all over the place; monumental programs falling to small ball and a record-breaking amount of games going down to the wire to decide a winner. We could hardly ask for more had our Jayhawks advanced beyond week one!
Once again, mainstream media is asleep to the real story of March this year. The story isn't WSU setting record wins, a record number of close games, Wisconsin advancing to the Final Four or Florida back in the spotlight. The story this year is a question: Will Kentucky advance their dominance agenda?
First. I want to explain what I see as the damage caused by Kentucky building complete dominance in basketball. If the future of basketball involved Kentucky owning every other National Championship the entirety of college basketball will suffer devastating consequences.
Kentucky has already become the quintessential broker of the OAD. This year's class of Kentucky freshmen not only own their starting five positions, one five-star recruit sat most of his year on the bench as a reserve. We only have to go back to yesterday's game with Michigan to realize that a bench player like Marcus Lee can step onto the court and totally dominate the game. Kentucky's one main contributor non-freshman is sophomore Alex Poythress. This IS the best group of freshmen ever to play on one team, hands down! Their shortest starter is 6'6" with excellent ball skills and they have (had) two legitimate 7-foot skilled players in the post. The only hope of beating Kentucky rests in the hope that Kentucky beats Kentucky.
Winning another National Championship from play of basically all freshmen is a step forward to the thinking that the future of college basketball dominance will not come from players who work hard through years of effort in a college program and by developing ultimate team cohesion. The future of college basketball dominance will be focused on 90% recruiting and 10% coaching ability (to basically get out of the ego-way of your all-stars so they can develop just enough team bonding to win a title). I've been sickened lately by hearing media people talk about all the trials and tribulations Kentucky has suffered over the past few months and how their sacrifices has earned them a real shot at another title. What about all the teams stocked with 4 and 5-year seniors? What about going through 5 years of trials and tribulations, effort and sacrifice, only to lose to a team of all-stars thrown together for a few months? This John Calipari formulation for winning, if successful now and in the future, will tear apart the very fiber of what makes college basketball great. The fiber of college basketball isn't just about winning (we have pro ball for that). It is the character stories it provides us to teach our children. That is what college basketball is truly about. Our society needs examples to show children what are the right and just paths to take with their lives, along with stories of loss and sacrifice and all things that build character and drive to become victorious.
I know some in here don't care too much for Wichita State University basketball... but we should all appreciate their hard work and determination that helped them accomplish the season they had. Their story is one to be told to children everywhere... how a team of juco players rose to the quality level of top D1 programs. They deserved better than to go down in a loss to an all-star team thrown together for a few months. Just like two years ago. We didn't have one of our most-talented teams, but we made it to the championship game largely because of the heart of a group of guys who came together because of the loss of Thomas Robinson's mom. That was the chip we needed to drive us to the promised land. They deserved winning that championship. Both of these stories are ones that build the character of college basketball itself, but we all were robbed of those stories becoming immortalized because those stories never went to completion due to a bunch of one-and-dones who will leave absolutely no mark on the game of basketball. The only mark they can leave is "best recruitment class ever." The Kentucky class of 2012 are long forgotten, even (for the most part) in Kentucky. I can only recall one word from that class... unibrow! Wow.. what a story to tell our children... success is created when you recruit a unibrow.
I have a son and I've been hopeful, from day one, that my little tike will grasp all the magic of basketball. I'm not sure I care anymore. I'm looking at him being thrown into a future where he either is in that very top elite recruit status and on his way to another cookie-cutter Kentucky Championship team, or he is nothing. His story, and efforts, will die on page-10 after falling into the shadows of another illustrious Kentucky recruiting class.
Many of you (and I put myself into this group), believed Calipari would be brought down eventually for cheating, like his past history infers. I don't believe that any longer. Calipari has too much to lose now to induce a player with a Rolex Presidential watch. And to be honest, he doesn't have to. Let's now look at Calipari's sales pitch moving forward.
Why the top talent in college basketball should attend the University of Kentucky:
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You will play for a coach (and a system) that is geared towards the maximizing of showing your talents for the next level. Look at how many successful Kentucky players have gone in the NBA first round over the past years.
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You will have the best chance of winning a National Championship in the one year you will give to the college game.
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You will be playing with a team full of the who's who in your class. You will improve your game most by practicing every day with players of the same caliber that will be headed off to the pros with you.
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You have the very finest dorm facility, custom-built to accommodate our basketball team. You'll even have your own trained chef to whip you up your favorite foods anytime you want.
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You'll soon play in the most-modernized, decked-out arena in all of college basketball. Imagine bringing your family to the NEW Rupp Arena!
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You'll train in the very best, new, state-of-the art training facilities specifically tailored for basketball.
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You'll play for a colossal basketball fan base that is huge, completely committed, and growing faster than any fan base in America!
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You'll be playing for one of the few elite blue-blood programs in America. Look at our history and compare. We lead the nation in most-wins of any program!
No program can compare with Kentucky's offer.
I'm not totally sure about #7 right now.. but give it a few more years. There are two types of fans; those that support underdogs and those who support proven winners. As Kentucky builds their new dominance, what percentage of new and fair-weather fans will jump on their bandwagon? I'd say... a HUGE number! I've experienced it right here in Kansas and have run across a lot of Kentucky fans right here in Kansas. These aren't Kentucky alumni... just fans drawn to the top talent shelf. Even I watched most of their games this season to see how the greats advance.
We need to wake up from our dream. Leave the Jayhawk glasses off our heads. This isn't about Kansas falling back a distant second or third behind Kentucky. This is about our game of basketball, brought into existence by one Doctor James Naismith, falling into demise after one entity becomes owner of the crown. Gone are the lost examples of character (which has always driven college basketball), replaced by a grouping of top talent playing together for only a few months.
We should change the University of Kentucky Wildcats to the Franchise of Kentucky Wildcats. Their future will be guaranteed an entire team full of McDonald's All-Americans... they might as well sell french fries from their huddle.
If this continues to go in the direction I lay out here... I'll advise my son to play baseball. Why would I direct him into a sport that is removed from the principles of building character? It's all about recruiting the most talent now and you can kiss all the character and character-building stories good-bye. Immortalized stories exist in our country only from winners, and we define college basketball winners as one team going all the way in March.
Calipari has had this plan ever since he landed on the Kentucky campus, probably sooner. He's slipper. Am I the only one who noticed how Calipari pulled off us in 2012 to make it a modest win for the National Championship? He has intentionally manipulated the game to not attract too much attention until they completely own college basketball. It has worked perfectly so far. If they win this year, and they dominate the championship game, you will see Calipari throttle down the finish once again, to stall media attention away from his dominance plan. Mainstream media isn't talking about the story I've posted here today. They will come around after it is too late.
I've removed my Jayhawk glasses. I have mixed feelings about recruiting OAD players to Kansas, but to this point, we do not possess the Calipari plan of recruiting 6 or 7 OAD players and having a revolving door policy every year. But I do believe Bill Self is convinced that the Calipari method is now the future, or maybe he is just trying to slow down the Wildcat surge to complete dominance. Just imagine now if Wiggins had chosen Kentucky? If Kentucky can win this year without Wiggins, Calipari will be glad Wiggins didn't pick Kentucky, because it helped keep the spotlight off of his plan for future complete dominance. I'm glad we are not Kentucky. We won't be the program that destroys college basketball. We built college basketball.
I'm not against OAD players. They represent a bunch of talented kids who are just looking for the right path for themselves and they operate in a system that forces them into playing a year of college basketball. I'm against any team (not just Kentucky) who want to send a different message to our kids; either suddenly grow to 7' and become dominant, or you can forget the big dream, because the future is owned by just a few recruited on one team, and once the recruiting period is over for a year, the game has been decided. This is different than what we did this past year. At the most we will lose 2 players as OADs in a year where we were forced to rebuild our entire starting five that was lost with only one player being a one-and-a-half and done. However... I'm not sure our future direction will differ from Calipari's. If we ever get to the point of replacing our starting five every year with OADs, I'm gone from KU! As we stand today, sprinkling in a couple of top talent players won't create total dominance of college basketball and, more importantly, won't eliminate dreams for those who aren't in that exclusive top shelf.
"Danny and the Miracles" wasn't just about winning a National Championship. What was special is the story of what earned them a National Championship. I said "is the story" because their story has been immortalized and will be told to Jayhawk kids and all kids who read their story for generations to come. We may have owned the #1 pick in the 1988 NBA draft, but we were not the most-talented team that year and it showed in our record leading up to March. Our story was about adversity, and what those kids had to do to win it all. And 4 years of adversity and fortitude went in to building our #1 draft pick. He didn't get there in a couple of months dribbling a ball. That is the magic behind "Danny and the Miracles." The magic is the story you can tell your kids to never give up, fight hard and you can beat the Goliaths of the world.
I am holding onto a thread of hope that my future view of college basketball is wrong, and my son will have the same opportunities the game offered before the Calipari-Kentucky marriage. But I'm doubtful. It will take a vast majority of our population of all college basketball to come together to defeat one common enemy. We want the game back the way it was, where a group of juco players from a city university could win it all, or a team without a single McDonald's All-American player could win it all because the players' hearts were driven for the love of one of their players who tragically lost his mother. Those are the stories that help build character in future generations... not the story of who can collect the most OADs. These character stories are the stories I want to tell my son. I guess for some of these stories I'll have to dig back to page-10 in the press to find them, or will I even be able to find good print stories about Thomas Robinson and his story that brought a team, fan base and nation together through his loss. Heck... do WE still remember Thomas Robinson and the tree dedicated to his mother that is planted on campus? I will take my son to that tree with plenty of time to tell the story.
Maybe I have to focus on another sport that will continue to offer those kinds of stories to my son.
Batter up!