Make-or-break month: Division I hopeful Zac Nuttall finishes July on a high note

01 Aug
2012

To provide a window into the pressure facing borderline recruits trying to earn their first Division I scholarship offers, Yahoo! Sports will track guard Zac Nuttall during the July evaluation period. This is the fourth installment in the series.

Unlike most people when they return home from a long weekend in Las Vegas, Zac Nuttall left with no regrets.

More from the Make-or-break month series

July 10: Zac Nuttall has three weeks to prove he's good enough for Division I

• July 17: Zac Nuttall's first week on the road features bad food, good memories

• July 25: Rigorous schedule doesn't give Zac Nuttall time to stress

• August 1: Division I hopeful Zac Nuttall finishes July on a high note

In his final event of the July evaluation period this past weekend, Nuttall helped lead BTI Select all the way to semifinals of the prestigious Fab 48 tournament by playing aggressive defense on one end and making smart decisions whether to shoot or pass at the other. It was an ideal way for 6-foot-1 point guard to prove to the college coaches who watched him in Las Vegas how much he has improved the last few months.

"I think I played really well," Nuttall said. "I was really consistent. I tried to direct traffic, run our offense and make the extra pass to set up my teammates. I think I led the team really well."

A strong finish to the July evaluation period leaves Nuttall confident he'll have the chance to play college basketball and optimistic he may yet receive scholarship offers from some lower-level Division I programs. Since most Division I coaches use July to pair down their list of top Class of 2013 targets, Nuttall treated the last three weeks like they were his last chance to prove he could compete at college basketball's highest level.

The next phase of the recruiting process for Nuttall and his family is to wait for feedback to arrive from the coaches who have watched him the past few weeks. Once they're able to gauge which schools merely gave him a cursory look and which ones appear genuinely interested, they'll decide which elite camps to attend in August and where to set up visits for later in the summer or fall.

"We'll kind of see where we stand at that point," mother Kristy Nuttall said. "I know coaches are talking to (BTI Select coach Craig Stover) about Zac and I know Coach Stover did get some texts asking where Zac is playing and how he was doing and that kind of thing. We've tried really hard to not have those conversations with Zac to not put more pressure on him, but I think it will be interesting in the next couple weeks to see who's there and who's not."

At this point, the Nuttall's believe there are three possible paths their son could take.

• He could accept an offer from a lower-tier Division I program if one shows sufficient interest in him in the coming months. Schools such as Cal Poly, Yale and San Diego have watched him this summer, but their level of interest is unclear. It would be a dream come true for Nuttall to play at college basketball's highest level, yet he also wants to make sure he's at a school where he'll have the chance to make an impact during his four years there.

• He could attend a Division II or Division III school with a strong basketball program and a good academic reputation. Again Nuttall cannot be sure which schools will take him, but it seems likely he'll have plenty of options at this level. Among the programs that showed the most interest during the July evaluation period were Whitman College, Connecticut College and Pomona Pitzer.

• He could bulk up and improve his game for a year at an East Coast prep school in hopes of attracting greater interest from Division I programs the following year. This is an option that is more attractive to Nuttall and his parents now than it was a month ago because they were able to learn more about what prep schools can offer during their trip to Boston three weeks ago. Nuttall and his mom visited Northfield Mount Hermon and spoke to coaches from various other prep schools.

Stover, Nuttall's coach with BTI Select, plans to advise Nuttall to attend elite camps at Division I Loyola Marymount and Division III Point Loma this month to get a better understanding of what level he'd thrive at in college.

"That gives him the spectrum of both ends," Stover said. "It gives everyone a chance to see what level he'll fit in the best. You're going over here at LMU against Anthony Ireland and all those guys. Can you really handle that? Or the Point Loma point guard, are you taking advantage of that guy? Is that the better fit?"

Nuttall's college basketball future is only slightly clearer today than it was entering July, but the West Ranch High School senior-to-be believes it will work out for the best. From shooting and ball handling drills by himself, to grueling workouts with trainers, to dozens of practices and games, Nuttall knows he did all he could the past few months.

"I don't really have any regrets," he said. "I think I played well. I think the mistakes I made were mistakes I needed to make to learn from. I'm satisfied with how I did. There's always room for improvement, but what I've done I'm happy with it."

Tags: , BTI, , , , Division I programs, Kristy Nuttall, Make-or-break, , Nuttall, , Zac Nuttall
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Mike D’Antoni is considering coaching college basketball

31 Jul
2012

After his tabloid-ready tenure with the New York Knicks, Mike D'Antoni is not exactly the most respected coach in NBA circles these days. That's not to say that he's disliked, but teams are no longer knocking down his door to make contract offers as they were when he left the Phoenix Suns in 2008. His fast-paced offense just doesn't have quite the same reputation these days, even as it serves as the structure for everything Team USA does at the London Olympics.

D'Antoni, then, would do well to look into all his options. Oddly enough, that could also include coaching in college. From Dan Bickley for The Arizona Republic (via SLAM):

D'Antoni, 61, never envisioned himself as a college coach. He can be stubborn and headstrong, and he badly wanted to prove his system could work in the NBA. But in the process of taking his son on college visits, his perspective began to change.

"You think about it," D'Antoni said. "You look at it and think, 'Oh, that could be fun.' One thing I do know from taking my son around is that anytime you step on a college campus, you feel energy. You feel an excitement that's not there, normally, where the business (of basketball) takes over. And obviously, when you feel the excitement; things go through your head."

Bickley supports this idea without reservations, specifically as it applies to Arizona State, where current coach Herb Sendek could lose his job. He has enough of an interest in D'Antoni coaching, in fact, that it's easy to see D'Antoni responding to a particular line of questioning rather than any special desire to coach in the NCAA. Sometimes, comments seem shocking when they're really just perfectly normal answers to leading questions.

However, that doesn't mean that this isn't a good idea. While D'Antoni likely wants to prove that his system can work in the NBA, the right opportunity may not present itself when he next looks for a job. College basketball is actually very well-suited to a system-minded coach, because staffs can recruit players specifically to fill predetermined roles without worrying about salary caps. While recruits don't always perform as expected, the NCAA world is a little more predictable. Coaches are allowed to build systems over time, creating destinations for particular kinds of players. D'Antoni's fortunes wouldn't be tied to having the right point guard — as a coach with a strong reputation, he'd identify good fits and recruit those players for years.

It's easy to see college basketball as a step down from the pros, and in many ways it is. But coaches have different strengths, and sometimes being good at one level doesn't preclude someone from being great at another. For all we know, D'Antoni isn't serious about the collegiate option. But it would make a lot of sense for him to at least consider the idea, because it could be his calling.

Tags: , , , , college coach, , D'Antoni, , , Mike D'Antoni,
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To celebrate the 50th anniversary of one of the landmark moments in the integration of college basketball, Michigan State athletic director Mark Hollis invited Mississippi State and Loyola to play a commemorative game at old Jenison Field House in East Lansing.

Neither the Bulldogs nor the Ramblers were willing to venture off campus to play at the site of their historic 1963 NCAA tournament matchup, so they found another way to commemorate that game.

Mississippi State and Loyola have agreed to a two-year home-and-home series that will begin Dec. 15 when the Bulldogs visit the Ramblers. That will be the first meeting between the two programs since an all-white Mississippi State team defied its state's unwritten laws of segregation and sneaked out of Starkvile to face predominantly black Loyola in the 1963 Mideast Regional semifinals in East Lansing.

"The 1963 SEC champion Bulldogs were given the opportunity previous Mississippi State teams were denied — to compete for a national championship against the best teams in the country," Mississippi State athletic director Scott Stricklin said in a joint statement from the schools.

"To do so, they had to defy a sitting Governor, avoid a court injunction and sneak out of the state. We're excited to join Loyola over the next two seasons in celebrating this historic occasion. Loyola won a national championship; Mississippi State helped to make for a better way of life."

It would have been a treat to see Mississippi State and Loyola play in aging Jenison Field House, but the home-and-home series is a good compromise. Credit Mississippi State for recognizing that it was worthwhile to agree to play on the road at a Horizon League school because of the attention the game will bring to a matchup of historical significance that deserves more spotlight.

The only downside to next season's game is that both teams are rebuilding. Mississippi State lost stars Dee Bost, Arnett Moultrie, Renardo Sidney and Rodney Hood off a team that underachieved last season, while Loyola welcomes eight newcomers after going 7-23 a year ago and finishing last in the Horizon League.

So yes, the quality of play won't be what it was in 1963 when the Ramblers went on to win the national championship, but that won't be the storyline anyway when the two programs meet for the first time in nearly a half century.

"We are thrilled that Mississippi State was willing to partner with us to recognize the historical significance of this contest," Loyola athletic director Dr. M. Grace Calhoun said. "Loyola's 1963 NCAA Tournament game versus Mississippi State served as a vehicle to challenge segregation and helped to forever change college basketball and civil rights in this country."

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Make-or-break month: Zac Nuttall has three weeks to prove he’s good enough for Division I

10 Jul
2012

BELLFLOWER, Calif. — Zac Nuttall admits he hasn't spent as much time with his girlfriend this summer as he'd like.

Anytime she asks him to ride roller coasters at Six Flags or sunbathe at the beach, the 17-year-old senior-to-be usually has to decline in favor of lifting weights, sweating through speed and agility drills or hoisting up hundreds of shots at the gym.

Nuttall, a guard at West Ranch High in Valencia, Calif., doesn't have the free time most of his classmates do this summer because he's preparing for maybe the most crucial stretch of his basketball career. At events in Long Beach, Boston, Anaheim and Las Vegas the next three weeks, he'll showcase his game in front of college coaches from across the nation in hopes of impressing them enough to earn his first Division I scholarship offers.

"July is what I work for," Nuttall said. "It would be disappointing not to go Division I because that has been my goal since freshman year. Sometimes I'll put too much pressure on myself, but I've talked to my parents and they remind me all I can do is go out there and give it my all. I'm under-the-radar. I've got nothing to lose."

Although Jabari Parker, Julius Randle and other highly ranked future college stars will hog most of the spotlight during the July evaluation period, it's actually lesser-known recruits like Nuttall who have the most on the line. A 25-point performance against a talent-laden opponent can catch the attention of coaches who previously hadn't shown interest. Conversely, too many forced shots and turnovers at such a critical time can cause schools that were once paying attention to back away.

To provide a window into the pressure facing recruits trying to take advantage of the only time each summer that the NCAA allows college coaches to evaluate prospects in person, Yahoo! Sports will track two players during the July evaluation period.

One is Sheldon Blackwell, a guard from Rancho Cucamonga, Calif., who has offers from a handful of mid-major programs but hopes to attract some higher-profile options. The other is Nuttall, the quintessential borderline Division I recruit.

Since most Division I coaches will have a pretty good idea who their top Class of 2013 targets are by the end of July, Nuttall believes this is likely his last chance to prove he can compete at college basketball's highest level. He has received interest from UC Irvine, Cal Poly, Yale and a handful of lower-division schools, but no coaches are ready to offer a scholarship without seeing how a kid generously listed at 6-foot-1, 167-pounds fares against bigger, stronger guards in July.

"Once teams see all the work he has put in to improve his game, I think he's going to get the D-I offers he needs," said Craig Stover, Nutall's AAU coach with BTI Select. "The key thing for him is being confident and being coachable. He's got to just play and do what we taught him."

Basketball was once more hobby than obsession for Nuttall, but that began to change when he joined BTI his freshman year. Bursts of sporadic success against older, stronger boys convinced him that playing college basketball was an attainable goal, leading him and his parents to spend almost as many hours at far-flung high school gyms the past three years as they have in their own home.

If Nuttall fails to achieve his dream of playing Division I basketball, it won't be a result of a lack of effort. Although his slender physique is hardly head-turning, he compensates by maximizing the physical tools he does have in workouts and games.

Nuttall practices year-round with both West Ranch and BTI Select. Three times a week, he also makes an hour-long drive from Valencia to Altadena for 90 minutes of plyometric training to improve his speed and explosiveness. And for the last year and a half, he has worked to revamp his shot with shooting coach Mike Penberthy, a former Los Angeles Lakers guard.

In addition to the sessions with coaches and trainers, Nuttall also works diligently by himself. Even though he studies enough to maintain a solid 3.4 GPA, he rarely allows a day to go by without lifting weights at home and practicing his shooting and ball handling skills at the gym.

"He's a harder worker than anyone I know, and I'm not just saying that because I'm his mom," Kristy Nuttall said. "He really does work seven days a week. He's all over the place every day. I would say he's putting 25, 30 hours a week easily. We told him a long ago he doesn't need to get a part-time job because this is his job."

It's too soon to determine if the hard work will result in a Division I scholarship, but there's no doubt Nuttall is a better basketball player because of it. What he lacks in size and strength he makes up for with quick hands on defense, a steady jump shot and an improved ability to attack the rim off the dribble.

He helped West Ranch win its first league championship and match its deepest playoff run last season. He averaged 14.0 points, 4.5 assists and 2.0 steals per game for BTI Select during the April evaluation period. And he has added newfound burst and bounce thanks to his workouts, dunking with ease, getting to the rim and even nearly out-sprinting an Oregon State corner from his area who ran a 4.5-second 40 meters in high school.

"This kid was ridiculously fast, and Zac was right there stride for stride," said Niko Fontanilla, Nuttall's trainer at The Performance Edge. "You look at the guy, and he's not some 6-6 monster that you can tell has the ability to go D-I. He doesn't seem like he's much at all until you start to see him move, and then you realize, 'Holy crap, this kid is tenacious and he can go.'"

If Nuttall doesn't manage to earn a basketball scholarship, he'll still have the opportunity to get a college education. His parents have money to pay for him to go to a four-year school, though his mom admits basketball could open up options they can't afford.

A quality Division II or Division III program where Nuttall could get a good education is one option he'd consider. A year of prep school is another since it would give him another 12 months to get stronger and earn a scholarship offer.

Nonetheless, there's no question what his motivation will be the next three weeks each time he looks into the stands and sees dozens of coaches in the bleachers.

"I want to play D-I," Nuttall said. "D-I is the highest level possible. If I can get a good education at a D-II or a D-III, I won't hang my head, but going D-I is definitely something I'm shooting for."

On nights last winter when he'd already lifted weights, practiced for two hours and sank a few hundred extra shots at the gym, Nuttall didn't stop pursuing his goal even after he returned home and flipped on the TV. He'd select a game from his vast DVR library of college hoops, often rewinding moves he wanted to incorporate into his own game and emulating them on the living room carpet until he mastered them.

Watching high school friends play in college inspired Nuttall to work harder. This time next year, he hopes to be preparing to join them.

Although Jabari Parker, Julius Randle and other highly ranked future college stars will hog most of the spotlight during the July evaluation period, it's actually lesser-known recruits like Nuttall who have the most on the line.

A 25-point performance against a talent-laden opponent can catch the attention of coaches who previously hadn't shown interest. Conversely, too many forced shots and turnovers at such a critical time can cause schools that were once paying attention to back away.

To provide a window into the pressure facing recruits trying to take advantage of the only time each summer that the NCAA allows college coaches to evaluate prospects in person, Yahoo! Sports will track two players during the July evaluation period. One is Sheldon Blackwell, a guard from Rancho Cucamonga, Calif., who has offers from a handful of mid-major programs but admits he'd like some higher-profile options. The other is Nuttall, the quintessential borderline Division I recruit.

Since most Division I coaches will have a pretty good idea who their top Class of 2013 targets are by the end of July, Nuttall believes this is likely his last chance to prove he can compete at college basketball's highest level. He has received interest from UC Irvine, Cal Poly, Yale and a handful of lower-division schools, but no coaches are ready to offer a scholarship without seeing how a kid generously listed at 6-foot-1, 167-pounds fares against bigger, stronger guards in July.

Tags: BELLFLOWER, , , Kristy Nuttall, , Nuttall, Zac Nuttall
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Report: ESPN may have Jalen Rose replace Hubert Davis on ‘College GameDay’

22 Jun
2012

With Hubert Davis trading his seat behind the "College GameDay" desk for one on the North Carolina bench last month, ESPN has an opening to fill on its popular weekly college hoops pregame show.

The network has yet to officially announce its choice, but TheBigLead.com reports that Jalen Rose has emerged as the front runner.

Primarily an NBA analyst for ESPN the past five years, Rose is nonetheless a recognizable face for college basketball viewers. The former Fab Five member helped lead Michigan to back-to-back appearances in the national game in 1992 and 93, accomplishments that no longer are acknowledged by the NCAA as a result of rules violations.

The always opinionated Rose might be more apt to spar with fellow analysts Jay Bilas and Digger Phelps than Davis was, but the question will be whether he's knowledgeable enough about the college game. As Turner Sports' Charles Barkley and Kenny Smith have proven the past two NCAA tournaments, all the charisma in the world doesn't make a show worth watching if its analysts aren't familiar with the players and teams they're talking about.

The other option for ESPN would have been to reward one of its young, up-and-coming college basketball analysts with a more high-profile role.

Doug Gottlieb, who is always knowledgeable, opinionated and well-prepared, would have been an obvious choice. Jay Williams, who has improved considerably during his ESPN tenure, also seemed like a strong candidate. Even someone like Sean Farnham, a lesser-known but sharp, candid analyst, might be worthy of consideration.

Ultimately, however, it appears ESPN will go with Rose. And as he grows more acclimated to the college game again, that may not be a bad choice.

Tags: , , , , , College GameDay, , Hubert Davis, Jalen, Jalen Rose, , , Rose
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UConn headlines list of 10 teams banned from postseason next year

20 Jun
2012

Inadequate classroom performance will keep one of college basketball's heavyweights from participating in the NCAA tournament next season.

As expected UConn was among the 10 men's college basketball teams banned from next year's postseason on Wednesday as a result of four-year Academic Progress Rate scores that fell below a 900. The Huskies scored 909, 844 and 826 during a three-year period from 2007-10 as a result of a flurry of players transferring or leaving early for the NBA without being in good academic standing.

The nine other men's basketball programs ineligible for the postseason next year are all lightweights compared to UConn. They are Cal State Bakersfield, Jacksonville State, Mississippi Valley State, Texas A&M Corpus Christi, Towson, Arkansas Pine Bluff, UC Riverside, UNC-Wilmington and Toledo.

The APR, now in its ninth year, measures eligibility and retention, rewarding programs for keeping players in school and on track to graduate. The premise is well-intentioned yet flawed since it doesn't do a sufficient job taking into account players who turn pro and often penalizes coaches or kids who weren't around during the academic issues that took place years earlier.

In the case of UConn, however, this appears to be an example of the APR making a positive impact.

As detailed here thoroughly by The UConn Blog, Connecticut suffered during a three-year period from transfers and early defections but also did a poor job adjusting to the new rules and making sure players were passing classes. In the past two years, the Huskies have corrected that problem and placed a greater emphasis on academic compliance but it was too late to avoid scholarship reduction penalties and ultimately a postseason ban.

What has to be frustrating for UConn is the penalties are taking effect after the Huskies appear to have solved the problem. It's not Ryan Boatright, Shabazz Napier or DeAndre Daniels who are at fault here, yet they will not play in the Big East tournament or in the NCAA tournament next season because of their predecessors.

Tags: , Mississippi Valley State, NCAA tournament, , The Huskies, UConn
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