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Video: One shining moment 2008

April 8th, 2008 · No Comments · Videos

Here are the lyrics to One Shining Moment:

The ball is tipped
and there you are
you’re running for your life
you’re a shooting star
And all the years
no one knows
just how hard you worked
but now it shows…
(in) ONE SHINING MOMENT, IT’S ALL ON THE LINE
ONE SHINING MOMENT, THERE FROZEN IN TIME

But time is short
and the road is long
in the blinking of an eye
ah that moment’s gone
And when it’s done
win or lose
you always did your best
cuz inside you knew…
(that) ONE SHINING MOMENT, YOU REACHED DEEP INSIDE
ONE SHINING MOMENT, YOU KNEW YOU WERE ALIVE

Feel the beat of your heart
feel the wind in your face
it’s more than a contest
it’s more than a race…

And when it’s done
win or lose
you always did your best
cuz inside you knew…
(that) ONE SHINING MOMENT, YOU REACHED FOR THE SKY
ONE SHINING MOMENT, YOU KNEW
ONE SHINING MOMENT, YOU WERE WILLING TO TRY
ONE SHINING MOMENT….

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A Sports Camera for the Shot You Missed?

April 4th, 2008 · No Comments · ACC Basketball Photos

Reported in the New York Times -

The F1 ($1,000 list price) is the world’s fastest camera.A typical shirt-pocket camera, if you’re lucky, can snap one photo a second in “burst mode.” A $1,000 semipro model will get you 3 shots a second. But this Casio can snap 60 photos a second. These are not movies; these are full six-megapixel photographs, each with enough resolution for a poster-size print.

After such a burst, you’re offered three options: delete all 60 shots, keep all 60, or review them and pluck out the individual frames worth keeping. The whole batch begins to play like a flip-book movie; you control playback with a back-panel control dial. As you watch, you press the shutter button once to identify each frame you want to keep; the rest will be discarded.

You can parcel out the 60-shot maximum in different ways: 30 shots a second for two seconds, 20 for three seconds, 15 for four seconds, and so on. You can even adjust the firing rate in midshot by turning the lens barrel.

So who would ever need to take so many pictures in one second? Sports fans, of course; imagine having the luxury of plucking out a photo of exactly the bat angle, soccer-leg swing or basketball jump height you want.

The F1’s second trick is that business about photographing a moment after the fact. In pre-record mode, you half-press the shutter button when you’re awaiting an event that’s unpredictable: a breaching whale, a geyser’s eruption or a 5-year-old batter connecting with the ball. The camera silently, repeatedly records 60 shots a second, immediately discarding the old to make room for the new.When you finally press the shutter button fully, the camera simply preserves the most recent shots, thus effectively photographing an event that, technically speaking, you missed.

As a final time trick, the F1 can display, on its 2.8-inch screen, a slow-motion version of what the camera is “seeing.” Your preview falls further and further behind real time — but you now have the luxury of patience as you decide precisely when to snap the shot.

The F1’s movie mode is one of the most powerful ever. It has stereo microphones, and even a jack for an external mike. It has separate triggers for stills and videos, so you can snap stills right in the middle of filming a movie. It can zoom in midmovie, a rarity in still cameras. And it can film in either standard or high definition; there’s even a mini-HDMI jack for connecting the camera straight to an HDTV set.

Most stunning of all, this camera can film at outrageously high frame rates: 300, 600, or even 1,200 frames a second. The result is incredibly smooth, extremely slow motion, like something in an Imax nature movie. No still camera has ever offered anything like this feature.

The downside, alas, is that at faster rates, you get smaller movies. At 1,200 frames a second, you’re dealing with a Triscuit-sized video in the center of your TV screen, surrounded by oceans of black margin.

Still, when you’re trying to pinpoint problems with your golf swing, your tennis serve or your industrial equipment, slowing time down to this extent is like a keyhole into a previously invisible world. You might not care about the size of the keyhole.

Unfortunately, this highly unusual, almost experimental piece of equipment includes nearly as many downsides as breakthroughs.

First, even though it’s nearly as big and bulky as a digital S.L.R. like a Canon Rebel or Nikon D80, the F1 is, at its heart, an amateur camera. It contains a tiny light sensor (about half an inch diagonal, versus 1.1 inches in a beginner S.L.R.). As a result, its light sensitivity is poor. Except in bright sunlight or studio lighting, those burst-mode shots are often disappointingly dim or disappointingly blurry.

Casio was obviously aware of this weakness, and so it engineered one of the brightest and fastest flashes ever on a consumer camera: it can fire an amazing 7 times a second for up to 3 seconds. That superflash generally solves the light-sensitivity problem, but of course you might not want the characteristic harshness of flash photos.

There’s even a second “flash” right above the first — actually a very bright video-light L.E.D., which can maintain steady illumination on nearby subjects when the main flash’s 7 frames a second still isn’t fast enough. Clever.

But there are other problems. The eyepiece viewfinder is electronic (a tiny, relatively coarse video screen), not optical (pristine, see-through glass). Start-up is slow.

The 12X zoom is nice to have, but it’s slow to react. And during video capture, when you turn the lens ring to zoom, it jerks spastically through the zoom range, effectively ruining your shot. The camera has great difficulty changing focus during filming, too.

The F1 is also complicated. It has two different mode dials and two different “shutter” buttons (one for stills, one for video). All those high-speed features, and all the attendant settings, had to go somewhere.

There are long lists of limits, too. You can’t use the lens ring to zoom during high-definition filming. The flash won’t operate in pre-record mode. Face detection doesn’t work during video capture. There’s no sound in high-speed videos. You can’t change focus, zoom or exposure during high-speed filming. And so on.

Now, it does seem ungrateful to criticize such an astonishing camera; it’s like complaining that your 7-year-old violin virtuoso is lousy at sports.

But make no mistake: no camera has ever offered anything like the F1’s high-speed stills, high-speed videos or high-speed flash for anywhere near its price. Everybody who sees this camera in action winds up slack-jawed with disbelief.

Casio deserves congratulations for innovating in so many big, bold, industry-defying ways. Instead of pushing misleading metrics like megapixels, the company went its own defiant way and came up with a camera with an extremely clearly defined identity.

In the world of consumer electronics, it’s an eye-opening first step.

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Get Smart

April 2nd, 2008 · No Comments · Videos

Yes, I know this has nothing to do with ACC basketball, but as a kid I was a big fan of Maxwell Smart and Agent 99. Based on a couple of trailers I have seen, I’m actually looking forward to this movie.

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Carolina Tar Heels vs Louisville Cardinals postgame press conference

March 30th, 2008 · No Comments · ACC Men's Basketball, Carolina Tar Heels

Posted Sunday, March 30, 2008

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Charlotte, NC - Tyler Hansbrough scored 28 points and had 13 rebounds to lead the Tar Heels over the Cardinals and into their 17 th Final Four. After their 83-73 win over the Louisville Cardinals in the regional finals of the NCAA Tournament at Bobcats Arena, Carolina’s head basketball coach Roy Williams and players Tyler Hansbrough and Marcus Ginyard talked with the press.

UNC basketball coach Roy Williams

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: Folks, Ty is in the locker room getting some ice. I know you all have deadlines. I’m not going to make an opening statement. I’ll tell you we’re ecstatic.

Q. Tyler, could you talk about the 12-point second half lead gets away from you. I’m sure Georgetown might have been on your mind but you looked like you were not going to be denied the trip to the Final Four this time.

TYLER HANSBROUGH: Yeah, I mean, you know, it was in the back of a lot of our minds. One thing about tonight there was that point where they went on that run and I think the difference this year is we handled that run better and stayed poise and came back. Got some points and kept fighting back until eventually we had a run.

Q. Tyler, just what your raw emotions knowing the buzzer sounded that after three hard years, you’re finally going to the Final Four?

TYLER HANSBROUGH: My feelings right now are great. Definitely I’ve never been — it takes all of those past experiences away. But also, at the same time I feel like we want to accomplish more. Marcus said something to me as we were walking in here, it feels like we did something big, but we can also do something bigger.

Q. Coach, could you talk about the pump fake and shot that Tyler hit on the left side and does it sometimes seem like the things he does are larger than life in those big moments?

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: I’ll answer that but I think we want the questions to go to the student-athletes.

Are you talking about when the score was tied at 59? The reason he made that shot is he’s made it hundreds of times already. Just like that television commercial, the young man shoots extra shots before every practice, every off-day, he’s made that shot hundreds of times.

Q. Marcus, I know you in particular were really affected by last year, it’s kind of been on your mind, and this is something that you wanted to do. Your emotions right now? And could you describe the way you guys picked up your defense with about sixth and a half minutes to go and caused some turnovers, forced them to miss shots?

Marcus Ginyard

MARCUS GINYARD: It feels good right now. I’m just going to piggy back on what Tyler said. You know, coming to the press conference right now, Tyler said we just won a tournament in a tournament. So we know that this is not our last step. We’re very excited to get to this point but we continue to have that same attitude that, you know, we have more work to do.

But this team has continued to show that when we need to dig deeper and play better and play harder and play smarter, we do. And I think that just shows how good this team really is. Every time we get into those sticky situations we always get ourselves out. And that’s what you need, you need a team that’s going to be tough enough to not give in, and to continue to push forward.

Tyler HansbroughQ. Tyler, if you could address the two big jumpshots down the stretch that you hit. I think the clock was winding down on both of them. And Marcus, if you would also talk about those and just what that did as far as momentum and everything else.

TYLER HANSBROUGH: Well, to be honest with you, I kinda felt like they were both going in when they left. I was confident. But, you know, in that situation, the clock was winding down, so I knew it was a good shot. And I felt confident. We work on it every day in practice. The bigs do, and it’s nothing that — it just carried over to the game.

MARCUS GINYARD: And, you know, I’m just going to say the same thing Coach Williams says, he’s made that shot each and every day hundreds and hundreds and thousands of times. He shoots that shot every day before practice. Every off-day he’s in there shooting those shots. And everybody on this team feels confident when Tyler shoots those shots. And I told him during the game, at halftime we were talking about using the screen on the ball and having Tyler pop up and knock that shot down. Everybody is confident in it. He’s confident in it and we know he can make it.

Q. Marcus, what was going through your mind when Clark hit that second free-throw to tie the game with a little over 10 minutes left?

MARCUS GINYARD: I don’t remember that free-throw.

Q. It tied the game, what was going through your head.

MARCUS GINYARD: You know, Coach tells us not to look at the score, and just to go out there and play, and to be honest with you, I never saw the score tied, so I don’t know. I don’t know how I was feeling at that point.

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: That shows he’s a very coachable player. I don’t look at the score a lot. When Steve and I were walking down here, he said, They tied the score, and I said, What was it? Was it 64? And he said, No, it was 59. Because I want to play everything possession the best you can, and I think that’s what the kids do.

Q. For Marcus, I was hoping you could talk about how in last year’s regional final it was outside shots, and, yes, Tyler hit some outside shots, but how you found him and how important that was down the stretch?

MARCUS GINYARD: You know, Tyler is a big-time player obviously. So you’ve got to find a way to give a player like that the ball to give him the opportunity to make those big-time shots like that. It says even more about Tyler, the fact that he’s ready and the opportunity presents itself, he’s there and he’s got the guts to knock the shot down.

Q. Tyler, when it was tied up at 59, I think you scored seven points in a row. Did something go through your mind where you said, all right, Wayne is not hitting it, Danny is not hitting. I got to put it on my shoulders?

TYLER HANSBROUGH: Not necessarily, I think there were times when I became more active and my teammates got me the ball. Certain times when things aren’t falling outside we try to get the ball inside, and I just happened to demand the ball and got some looks.

Q. Tyler, I would like to get your reaction about what Coach Pitino said about you because I thought he gave you one of the ultimate compliments: He mentioned a lot of the great players he’s coached against in the NBA and college, Michael Jordan and a lot of different people, and he’s never seen any player play every possession as hard as you play it. To hear a guy like that say to you, what does that mean to you?

TYLER HANSBROUGH: It means a lot. Coach Pitino, if you know basketball, he’s one of those guys that everybody kinda knows. His teams are always great, so I know that he’s seen a lot of players, and it’s an honor to be considered in that category that he’s put me in.

Q. Marcus, could you just speak a bit about Louisville’s defense? I guess you could consider this the first really tight game you all have played in some time, particularly in the second half.

MARCUS GINYARD: Louisville did a great job of pressuring us, and forcing us to make bad plays, I think, for a good stretch there. We weren’t taking care of the ball, and they were capitalizing on those opportunities that they created for themselves. So they did a great job of fighting back and just staying on top of us. But in the end it gets back to, you know, this team getting put in that situation, we’ve got to step up and we did a great job of stepping up tonight.

Q. During the tournament how much were you all able to watch what was going on? Like Davidson has been a big story in the tournament, do you see those games or the Kansas games? How much time do you allow for that?

TYLER HANSBROUGH: A lot to be honest with you, because a lot of times during breaks and things we’re laying around the hotel, and it’s hard not to turn on the TV. And you hear about Davidson and Curry, what he’s doing. You see all these other teams. So I’m aware of it. I mean, I can’t talk for Marcus, but that’s just my take.

MARCUS GINYARD: We’re definitely aware of it. We see it on TV, but nothing that is going on on TV while we’re not playing is really that important to us. Obviously we enjoy watching it to see what happens, but we’re more focused on what we’re going to do what when we get on the court.

THE MODERATOR: Thanks, guys. Congratulations. Questions for Coach?

Q. Coach, it just doesn’t seem like this team has ever really been rattled in the last few weeks, even when the game was tied. The team’s focus seems like it’s at an all-time high.

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: They are focused young men. They have dreams and hopes. I’ve said many times this year, we don’t deal in other people’s expectations. They don’t have anything invested in it like these kids do. When the score did get tied, Tyler came down and he got a layup. And he showed a lot of poise because he faked, and guys were flying around, and I think this is the right one, and he ended up laying the ball up. And then we go down and get a stop, and he comes down and he scored again. And we go down and they miss, and we come down and I think we’re up four, and we pass it around and it gets knocked out of bounds. And it was our ball out of bounds underneath. And it’s one of the times Louisville was playing man to man. And I called a set play for Ty to get a shot from the corner, and he stepped up and knocked in the three.

So it was something where the kids were able to step up and make plays, they are focused, they’re tough kids. We still don’t guard people as well as I would like for us to guard, with Louisville shooting 50% for the game. But we did get some stops down the stretch, and they had some turnovers and things that helped us as well.

Q. You all played Davidson in the first game, are you surprised at all by the run they’ve had and what they’ve been doing in this tournament?

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: I would say I’m a little surprised, you beat a 2 seed and a 3 seed, and I think that’s what they’ve done. I think Georgetown is a 2, Wisconsin was a 3. That’s been sensational. I think Steph Curry’s accomplishments in the games that he’s played have been phenomenal. I really haven’t watched a lot of other games but I’ve seen the highlights on Sports Center, and he’s just been phenomenal. I knew they were an extremely good basketball team. You know, they had UCLA by 18. They played us and lose a close one. They lose a close one to us by 4, a close one to Duke by 6. So when you think about that, you shouldn’t be surprised, but maybe I’m just not as big of a fan of the other teams or the Selection Committee or what’s going on. I’m so focused on our club, but to beat a 2 and 3 seed to get to the final 8 is amazing.

Q. Roy, we’ve talked about Tyler for three years and watched him do a lot of stuff, but to hear a guy like Rick say he’s never seen a player play every possession the way he does, as his coach, could you comment on that.

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: You guys have heard it before, he does the same thing in practice every day. I mean, the young man is the most driven, most focused youngster I’ve ever seen in my life to try to be the best player he can be and to help his team win. And twice during a late time-out he yelled, “Hey, come on, let’s finish this off.” One other time he said “Come on guys, let’s go.” He’s not a rah-rah individual. When he says something like that, they listen to him. But, I mean, 28 points and 13 rebounds and being willing to take those shots. But he does, last week, I forget which day it was that we had off, he was in the gym two and a half hours on the off-day. So for Rick to say it, it was fantastic. I compliment Rick for making a youngster feel like that, I think that’s great. But that’s Tyler Hansbrough. And that’s Tyler Hansbrough at practice every day. That’s Tyler Hansbrough in the off-days. It’s what he is.

And I’ve said that when that young man takes the Carolina blue uniform off and doesn’t put it on, I’m going to sit on top of the Smith Center or whatever and sit there for an hour and realize how lucky I am to have coached that youngster.

Q. Before we go you might want to describe that play and give us an injury report on your left hand, when Tyler pitched that ball over there to you. It didn’t look like you were ready to receive that pass.

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: No, I wasn’t. I slammed it to the floor. I wasn’t mad at the officials by any means, I was mad at our offense. Two possessions in a row. And I really jammed the dickens out of my finger here, but sometimes you’ve got to suck it up and not be a baby.

Q. Obviously you have a great love for Kansas, when you watch that game tomorrow, knowing if they win, what will your emotions be like?

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: I have the greatest love for a place I gave my heart, body and soul for 15 years. I have no idea what my emotions are going to be. I know when I was at Kansas and we played North Carolina in ‘93 and ‘94. I said I hated it, but if I was ever going to play North Carolina and Coach Smith, I wanted it to be at the Final Four.

I will never play the University of Kansas in a regular season game. It will have to be a tournament, whether it’s NCAA Tournament or a holiday tournament. But nobody could have more love and try to give more to that place than I did for 15 years and they gave me a chance. They gave me a chance when I had Bob Frederick, and a chance when not exactly a household name. I was barely a name in my own house.

So I have no idea what the emotions will be. I’m ecstatic for this club right now to be going to San Antonio and enjoy what’s going on, and enjoy the accomplishments that they have made.

THE MODERATOR: Thank you.

Louisville basketball head coach Rick Pitino came out with players David Padgett and Terrence Williams.

COACH RICK PITINO: Well, we congratulate North Carolina on making it to the Final Four, it was a much-deserved victory. Real proud of our guys. They played their hearts out, made a few turnovers down the stretch that really shot us in the foot, but I couldn’t substitute as much as I wanted. And I had some guys giving everything they had, their heart and soul to try and get a victory.

Tyler Hansbrough made two shots that you prayed they were going to take, and shows you what an All American he is to make those shots, because they were both challenging — I was following the flight of the ball; he couldn’t even see the basket. That’s what an All American does, makes those shots and he’s a heck of a basketball player. First time I’ve seen him up close, and some pro team is going to be very lucky. I haven’t seen a guy play every possession like that in a long time. I’ve never seen it, actually.

So we congratulate North Carolina. I’m real proud of our basketball team. They’ve had a very good season and I’m real proud of them.

Q. For David and Terrence, if y’all could talk about Tyler Hansbrough after seeing him firsthand, because it’s one thing to see a kid on TV, and you guys know better than us what it’s like when you actually guard someone.

DAVID PADGETT: Yeah, I mean, he deserves every accolade and all the success that he gets. Like Coach said, I’ve never played against somebody who plays that hard, and the kid is just absolutely determined to be a great basketball player. And big-time players make big-time plays and he made two big-time plays at the end of game.

TERRENCE WILLIAMS: I agree with David. I’ve never been on the court where someone goes hard for every position, every rebound, dives on the floor and do whatever to make his time win. He deserves everything that he gets.

Q. Where do you think things went wrong for you in the last ten minutes of the game? Because you were drawn even at 59-all.

DAVID PADGETT: They hit some big shots when they counted. You got to give them credit, they’re an outstanding basketball team. And they made big shots when they counted. You’ve got to give people credit when they make big plays, and that’s what they did.

TERRENCE WILLIAMS: Like he said, they made big shots, and we had a couple of key turnovers, and they got a couple more rebounds than we did.

Q. What do you think went into them getting their lead, what were they doing well and you not doing well, and what went into you pulling back even with them?

DAVID PADGETT: Well, they’re one of the best offensive teams in the country. They played well tonight and did a good job rebounding the basketball. And we came out after halftime and I thought we dug in and slowly chipped away at the lead and tied it up, but it’s tough when you dig yourself a hole like that. But I thought our guys did a good job of battling back in and not giving up and trying to get out of here with a win. They were just a better basketball team.

TERRENCE WILLIAMS: Our team didn’t lay down but they fought back hard. For everybody watching, that speaks volumes for their team, and they happened to make more shots than we did.

Q. Guys, you got back and did a good job in transition defense a lot of the night, but they still had speed and were able to hurt you with that. Can you talk about the way they were relentless in pushing the ball?

DAVID PADGETT: That’s their style, but I didn’t think they hurt us that bad in transition. They’re going to score in transition once in a while because that’s how they like to play.
But like we’ve been saying, when it came down to it, they made big-time shots.

THE MODERATOR: Guys, thank you. Questions for Coach.

Q. Rick, do you feel like the pace caught up with you at all? Did you guys lose your legs at the end?

COACH RICK PITINO: No, I don’t think when you make a post move and you get called for two travels that’s losing your legs. I think they pulled the chair and played good defense on him. He learned a valuable lesson from that. He thought he was getting fouled in the beginning, and then they pulled the chair on him twice, and he had two. Turnovers hurt us down the stretch, but like I said, they made some real difficult shots. I don’t think the transition game was a factor for them. I think they made some very difficult shots, made all their free-throws and we turned it over at some crucial times. But we did a lot of good things offensively tonight, really some good things, shot a good percentage, but they were a little bit better than us, and our guys hung tough in a tough environment.

Q. Rick, you’ve seen so many great basketball players and been around so many, to say you’ve never seen someone play quite like Hansbrough is a little astonishing. I realize I’m getting you to talk about the same thing over again, but if you could elaborate on why he catches your eye in such a way?

COACH RICK PITINO: Because I’ve coached against Michael in his prime, Barkley in his prime, Kareem when he left, Magic, all the great ones I’ve been fortunate to watch and observe those guys. Certainly he doesn’t have those abilities of those superstars, but just like shooting, rebounding, playing defense, passing, skills, working hard is an acquired skill. Every NBA coach would love to have a player not only because he works hard, but he has a lot of talent. Imagine that. You know, we have an old saying as an offensive rebounder, “treat every shot as a pass to you.” And it’s a good saying, except most players can’t do that. He does that.

But the shots he made, I mean, I was right there, were unbelievable shots because they were under duress, and he had very little time to get it off, and he came up big. And obviously I don’t like to lose, but you’ve got to give credit to a great basketball player.

Q. Coach, did you change anything up at halftime to get you back in?

COACH RICK PITINO: We were just turning the ball over too much and we were shooting a good percentage, we were turning it over. You know, turnovers hurt us against Tennessee and turnovers hurt us against Carolina a little bit. You can’t work that hard and force turnovers. Some of my great teams would force 23 turnovers, but most of the season we would only turn it over 13, 14 times.

The second half the reason we came back because we weren’t turning it over. And then we got those two travel violations. And that type of turnover doesn’t bother me as much because it’s a great defensive play by a guy who pulls the chair on him and he traveled. The other turnovers when T Will turned it over on a pass, he was just dead on that play. When our guys did a much better job in the second half. The elements caught up with us in the second half, but our guys did a wonderful job. They’re a terrific basketball team. You’ve got two teams going to the Final Four right now that are both great on defense, terrific on offense.

Q. They were pretty much good in any style on offense whether you dropped back or pressed. How much did you weigh whether to come after them with full-court pressure or drop back?

COACH RICK PITINO: We played exactly the way we needed to play to beat them. We tied it up, had a chance to win, and they overpowered us down the stretch. We played exactly the style of play we needed to win. Very difficult sometimes for people to admit when the other team is better but we’re a very good basketball team this year, very good, and they were better tonight, made big shots. So we played exactly the way we needed to play, they just played better.

Q. Coach, there was a time back in December where I don’t know if you thought your team would get to this point. What changed from then to now?

COACH RICK PITINO: You serious?

Q. Yeah.

COACH RICK PITINO: We got healthy, we had no Padgett, you want me to repeat all that?

Q. Sure.

COACH RICK PITINO: We had no Padgett, we had no Palacios, we suspended Caracter for a game against Purdue. We didn’t get healthy until the first Big East game another two weeks later. I used Georgetown as an example, if you don’t have Hibbert and you don’t have Patrick Ewing, Jr. or you don’t have Tyler Hansbrough, and you don’t have one of their big guys, how good would they be? It’s very simple. This is a players’ game and you win with talent.

The worst thing about everything that we went through and all the things we had to overcome is we had to play Walter McCarty in practice for three weeks. That was the most difficult thing. We couldn’t even practice. On top of all our problems, the NCAA clearinghouse never cleared two of our freshmen. One had open heart surgery and the other was declared ineligible. So it was difficult times. So for us to get to the Elite Eight and come back and do this…

What every coach wants is for their team to reach their potential, and that’s when you give the players credit because they reached their potential. And they played a tough team tonight. And I’m real proud of the fact that they came back and fought in the second half.

THE MODERATOR: Thanks, Coach. Congratulations on a great year.

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Carolina Tar Heels press conference

March 29th, 2008 · No Comments · ACC Men's Basketball, Carolina Tar Heels

Posted Saturday, March 29, 2008
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Charlotte, NC - On Friday, at the regional finals of the NCAA Tournament at Charlotte Bobcats Arena, Carolina’s head basketball coach Roy Williams and players Ty Lawson, Wayne Ellington, Marcus Ginyard, Tyler Hansbrough and Deon Thompson talked with the press.

UNC basketball coach Roy Williams

Q. Coach, your team has been so good from beginning to end. Can you talk about how you maintain that? People are talking about teams peaking at the right time. Seems like you’ve been there for a long time.

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: We’ve got great kids who enjoy playing the game and have a goal of trying to get better. We believe that the best way to get better is work as hard as you can every day, and over the course of time you will be better in January than you were in December, and better in February than you were in January.

And then the other thing is, I’ve always — it’s been humorous to me, I’m not that bright, but I’m not the dumbest guy with a whistle around my neck either. And people talk about peaking at the right time, and I always think if we were all peaking at the same time, how would you know who was peaking? So there’s a little bit of that with me.
We just try to do the best we can every day and see what happens.

Q. Coach, the guys talked before the season about making amends for what happened last year in the Elite Eight. This day, 365 days ago how different is your team from where they were then as far as maturity goes and being able to handle the situation that they dealt with last year against Georgetown?

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: You know, the kids, you’ll have to ask them, I think they used that as a motivation to work hard over the off-season, myself. I don’t think necessarily myself that we played Davidson here and the first game of the season and put your hand together and said “final 8.” I don’t think we played the first ACC game against Clemson and started thinking about Georgetown. I do believe that it was motivation for us to work harder in the off-season, but I don’t think that’s what’s driven our club. It may drive our club after last night’s game, but, still, you’ve got to be great on game day. And we could play really, really well and not win.
And I guarantee you my players, and the old coach, are not going to jump off the top of the building. The motivation for me is my dream, the motivation for me is not what happened last year, the motivation for me is to have the best team that we can possibly be, and I would think that’s what the kids have used it for more than anything.

Q. How different is the group now than a year ago, in terms of being here?

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: I think we’re more mature, we’re more experienced. Last year Ty, Wayne and Brandon, three of our starters were freshmen, so this run through the NCAA Tournament was their first. So I think the experience has been worth something to us. I think we played several close games that year and our team has been very, very tough. Last year in close games we lost a lot of those games that we won this year. So I think the experience and the maturity is the biggest difference.

Q. Roy, can you talk about the challenges that Louisville’s size presents, particularly when they’re in the zone and if there is another team you’ve faced that has had four or five guys 6′8″, 6′9″ or bigger?

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: They do present a lot problems with the zone, and part of it is because of their size and part of its because of their speed that they can close on you. Defensive backs in the NFL they talk about “closing speed,” how close either off the guy but on the pass they close quickly. And I think that’s what Louisville does a great job of in their zone. Because of their size and their athleticism both, I don’t know that we’ve faced a team that plays this style. Clemson is probably closer but, you know, Louisville may be a little more athletic than Clemson and maybe a couple inches taller at almost every spot, too, so they are a bigger, quicker challenge for us.

Q. Coach, has what Louisville done flown over or under the radar this year, getting the slow start?

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: I will answer this question, but you’ve got five bright young men up here that are dying to answer those questions. They are dying to answers those questions. Ty says I’m doing all right, but I’d rather listen to him.
The basketball people don’t think Louisville is flying under the radar, because the basketball people that know the game and the coaches — if I’m not mistaken, they’ve got nine guys back from their team last year. If I’m not mistaken, they were picked 5th or 6th or 7th in the country in the preseason polls.

They went through a time period without Padgett, without Palacios, that’s their two biggest guys. That’s a lot of adversity to face. And even during that time period they lose to BYU by two. They lose to somebody else by one. They lose in overtime. At the end of the season they lose to Georgetown. They lose to Pitt in overtime. All their games, I don’t have the stats in front of me, but I think they only lost one game all year long that was a double-digit loss. So to me they didn’t fly under the radar. I thought they were going to be an extremely good basketball team before the season started.

When we were in Vegas with them, you could tell they had some problems because of the big guys that were out. When they got those guys back, I saw them play on TV a couple of times and they were really, really good.

The only time I saw them when they didn’t play that well is when Rick had on his white suit and he changed at halftime and they played their tails off in the second half. (Laughter.)

Q. Marcus and Wayne, could you guys discuss the attention to detail and the way this team seems to be focused in on doing everything that’s been asked of it, especially of late? Y’all seem to be, it’s like your attention has risen.

MARCUS GINYARD: I think that we just understand at this point that it’s the little things that’s going to get us over the top. You know, like you said, paying attention to the little details that’s going to make this team that much better and get us to our goals. Last year I don’t think that we really were as focused on that as we needed to be and I think that’s why we felt like we came up short. So this year I think this whole team understands that it’s the attention to detail, you know, it’s the little effort plays, the mental things that we have to stay sharp on, you know, in order for this team to succeed.

WAYNE ELLINGTON: As Marcus said, you know, we all been to this point and, you know, only people that have been past this point is Coach Williams and Quentin on our team. So for us not to pay attention and do exactly what he says wouldn’t be very smart of us.

Q. Tyler, could you talk about David Padgett and his play, since you just won last time, I’m not sure how detailed you could be, but what you have seen in him?

TYLER HANSBROUGH: In the clips we watched this morning, it showed on film and he’s a great passer, seems like they run through their offense a lot through him and he runs the floor well.

Q. For Ty and Tyler, what does it say about this team — it just seems like if either one of you guys aren’t on top of your game there is somebody else like Tyler, if you’re not making shots, Deon or Wayne or Alex are, or Ty, if you’re not, somebody else is stepping up, Danny or Q. How much pressure does that take off you guys? And what does it say about this team that you’re able to do that?

TYLER HANSBROUGH: Yeah, I think a lot of guys have been stepping up. I think Q came in and has been playing really well since Ty was hurt. And I think it just shows our depth. I think last night in the first half I wouldn’t say I had my best first half ever and Danny came in, hit some big shots and I think he really stepped up. I think that’s the thing about this team is, when some guys aren’t playing well some other guys can come in and play well, too.

TY LAWSON: Like Tyler said, we have great depth, if we don’t have a good game, other people pick it up, Marcus, Wayne, Al stepped up and got big plays down the stretch. I feel like we have tremendous depth, and that’s one of our assets.

Q. Does that take pressure off you guys that you know that you don’t have to be on top of your game?

TY LAWSON: I think so. It’s not like — we would have pressure if one of us had to score all the points. We know that somebody else can come in and score, and our teammates can come in and help pick us up. There’s no pressure on any one person to score.

Q. Wayne, if they play a zone, have you gone against a zone this year that’s given you trouble?

WAYNE ELLINGTON: No, I don’t think so. In fact, I think, you know, we like to play against a zone. We worked on a lot of zone offense this year and I think we’ll be well prepared.

Deon ThompsonDeon ThompsonQ. Tyler and Deon, Louisville scored over half their points in the paint in the last two games. What kind of a challenge does that possess for you guys on the defensive end?

TYLER HANSBROUGH: I think that’s due to a lot of their penetration. I don’t think it’s necessarily their big men, I think they penetrate and run the floor well, but also, you know, they have a good inside presence and it just shows where they like to get the ball. The guards or the bigs like to get the ball inside and score.

DEON THOMPSON: It’s going to be a war on the glass when we play. Defensive and offensive boards, that’s where the game is going to be determined.

Q. Last night you obviously had to play a different style, Louisville likes to run, also, they like to press. Ty, starting with you and Marcus, Wayne could y’all talk about the prospect of being able to go wide open tomorrow and play the kinda game that y’all like to play? And what you’ll have to do to combat their press and not turn the ball over too often?

TY LAWSON: That’s the way we like to play, up and down, and for the press, you’ve got to take care of the ball and make sure we get the ball in the middle and run our lanes, run how we’ve been doing the whole year, I think we will be all right.

Q. I was going to ask the same question, I will pose that to Roy. You say you would rather win in the 80s or 90s. This seems like an opportunity to do that more so than the Washington State game, where they were going to slow it down and beat you up physically.

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: I think it will be and one of the things that Marcus was going to add there, too, was that we do enjoy playing that way, but we realize it’s very difficult because Louisville’s press is really, really good. But we are going to try to run. They’re going to try to run. It could be one of those 80, 90-point games, but it also could be a 65-point game because both teams are struggling so much because the other team has a hand in that as well.
We played Tennessee in the preseason NIT and it was in the 90s, but at the same time we’ve got to make sure we don’t turn the ball over because you don’t get points for turnovers. We are going to attack. I feel like they’ll attack. They attack with their defense in a full court, we attack with our defense in a half-court more, but it could be one of those ugly games, who knows?
I think Coach Pitino and myself like the ball going up and down the court, but both of us like teams that play defense, too.

Q. Take us back to the Kentucky game, 150-95 game, what do you remember about that?
COACH ROY WILLIAMS: It was a great day for us, but it was 100 years ago. Rick didn’t have anything — that was his first year, he didn’t have any of those players that he had, but it was a great day for us.

Q. Any of the players, you are in the Elite Eight where your tournament run ended last year. Are you thinking about that Georgetown game and how important it is to vindicate yourselves?
TYLER HANSBROUGH: Yeah, I think it’s been motivation for us, like Coach said before, during the off-season and once again this is a new year. It seems like each year our goal is not just to get to the Elite Eight, it’s farther, but that’s basically all there is to that. Yeah, I mean, the Georgetown loss is still on our mind but each year we try to do different things and want to go farther than the Elite Eight.
TY LAWSON: Like Tyler said, it’s in the back of our minds, that’s what gave us the motivation throughout the summer to work hard and get back to this position and hopefully past this position. So that’s where our hard work came from and we’ve been waiting for this moment since last year, since we lost.

Q. Coach, has David Padgett developed into the kind of player you envisioned he would be when you were recruiting him many years ago? And talk about the challenges he presents.
COACH ROY WILLIAMS: I thought David was one of the best running big men that I’d ever recruited and he had great hands, and I think he’s proven that he’s still doing that after double knee surgery and broken kneecap, and there may have been another surgery in there. So I still think he’s able to do those kinds of things. He’s probably developed even to a better floor game by seeing the whole court and being a good passer.
As one of the kids said, Tyler said, running their offense through him. I don’t know that I envisioned that but I thought he had a chance to be a big-time, big-time player and I was ecstatic when he decided to sign with us.

Q. Coach, can you talk about coach Rick Pitino and the success he’s had on the college game?
COACH ROY WILLIAMS: I think Rick is really one of the great, great coaches in the game, not just in the college game. He had a very unfortunate situation in the NBA. Like most college coaches, the teams they get are not very good. And beside that the Ping-Pong balls didn’t come up properly for him he might still be in the NBA if they had gotten Tim Duncan instead of a 4th or 5th pick that year.
I love watching Rick’s clubs play. I wish I was good enough to be able to play a full-court pressing defense and drop back into a zone. I have trouble trying to do those things. I’ve seen his clubs in many different ways. I’ve seen him play a Pac 10 zone. I’ve seen him play a very aggressive zone. I’ve seen him play a full court man-to-man, a half-court man to man. I’ve seen him play set offense. I’ve seen him play freelance offense. So he has the whole package. He’s one of the guys that I have a great, great deal of respect for, and know that if we try to do some things tomorrow that we’ve done more than once this year, they’re going to know about it, and his team is going to be prepared.
Like I say, he’s one of those college guys that got a bad NBA job or he would still be in there, maybe.

Q. I know that ‘89 game was a long time ago, like you said, but you and Pitino exchanged words during that game. Did that have any effect on your relationship? Did you guys make amends after that? Forget about it?
COACH ROY WILLIAMS: No, Rick and I have talked about that. It was unfortunate things and probably my fault more than anybody’s, but we’ve had discussions many years ago about that and put it behind us. We’ve played golf together. He was the first guy that got me on Shadow Creek in Vegas, so I owe him one big time because I haven’t been able to do anything like that for him. But when we played out there it was me and Rick and Gene Keady and Nolan Richardson and, I have zero, zero problems with Rick. The only thing I have for Rick is a great deal of respect and I mean that sincerely.

Q. Marcus, how would you describe the chemistry of this team? How has it evolved in the two years that this group has been together?
MARCUS GINYARD: I think that this team has done a great job of really coming together and knowing that we have to go forward, you know, in our quest for our goals together. I think that we’ve done a great job of everybody just putting their personal things aside, and just coming together and just playing well as a team. We all understand that this is going to be a group effort. The National Championship that this team wants, you know, is awarded to the best team, and right now we’re just doing everything that we can to be that best team.

Q. For Tyler and Coach Williams, because you guys score so much, do you think your defense is sort of overlooked? It looked to me like you played good defense last night.
TYLER HANSBROUGH: We like to think that we can play both ends. It’s something that we work a lot on in practices, our defense. We knew last night we were going to have to play defense for a longer period of time than we’re usually forced to, and we practiced for it. Also we practiced Louisville style, up and down, and that’s the way we like to play and I think it’s a big key for us.
COACH ROY WILLIAMS: I think it does get overlooked. We try hard defensively and we’ve worked harder on the defensive end of the floor probably more this year than the offensive end, but the kids have accepted that and I think they have gotten better and better.

Q. Ty, you might have answered this already about Louisville’s press. Watching them against Tennessee it seemed like Tennessee had a lot of length and you think they would be able to break the press because of that. You have quickness, talk about going against that.
TY LAWSON: The press is tough like Coach said, but we’ve got to run to our spots in or organized press break and get the ball out fast, and hopefully stop them from scoring so they won’t be able to set the press. Those are the main things we want to try and do to be successful against the press.

Q. Tyler and Marcus and Wayne, North Carolina and Louisville, this could easily be a National Championship game with two programs of this stature. This will probably be the marquis match-up in the round of 8. Could y’all talk about playing them in a game this big, being a part of it?
MARCUS GINYARD: I think that it’s every athlete’s dream to be put in the position to play on the big stage like this. So it’s no different for I think any sport. So this is the position that we’re put in. This is what we’ve put a lot of time and effort and hard work into. It’s is something that everybody on this team is looking forward to. It’s exciting for us players to play in a big-time game like this. And we understand that the winner of this game goes to the Final Four.
So, you know, you’ve got to be prepared to play a big-time game to get to a place like that. So we’re ready for it. We’re excited about it. I just think it’s something that everybody has been looking forward to.
TYLER HANSBROUGH: Well, I think to get to the Final Four I think every team has to see a team that’s really good. And I think Coach said something to us today, they in ‘05 they had to play Wisconsin, that was really good, to get to the Final Four. And I think Louisville is a great team and it’s not an easy road.
THE MODERATOR: Thanks, guys. Questions for Coach.

Q. Could you tell me what year was that you golfed with Pitino, if you can remember? How is his golf game? Were you just in a difficult situation in that ‘89 game that you were getting pressed, so you gotta break the press and get layups?
COACH ROY WILLIAMS: I’m going to guess ‘92 or ‘93, something like that, and that’s probably going to be pretty close. Yeah, we had more players than Rick had. I think he only had about eight guys, but they kept pressing and we kept running through it. And he had some guys foul out, and it was a fortunate day for us and an unfortunate day for them. But it was wild. I hadn’t been involved in anything like that. But it has absolutely nothing to do with tomorrow’s game. It had nothing to do with our game we played them at Rupp the next year, except it’s the only time I’ve been booed by 24,000 people in harmony.
As many games as Rick and I have coached it’s way, way down the list right now.

Q. His golf game?
COACH ROY WILLIAMS: Rick can be a good golfer. When you talk about guys who have a handicap 10, 11, 12, in that neighborhood there, that means you’re pretty doggone good because most people can’t break 100. But I think we switched around partners that day, with Gene and Nolan and Rick and myself. But I was so thrilled to be at Shadow Creek. It was the first time I’d played there.

Q. Have you had any conversations at all yet with NBA people about Tyler’s prospects? Whether it’s this year or next year, does it surprise you at all that his name ends up being so low down on the list?
COACH ROY WILLIAMS: I haven’t had any conversations with a very pointed purpose of trying to determine where he is. I have discussions with the NBA people all the time about players, different players, our players. You know, I guess it depends on what you say about “very low” because whenever the young man decides to go, he’s going to be a No. 1 draft choice. And whenever the young man chooses to go, if you’re a No. 1 draft choice who works as hard as he does, the way I know him, and he’s going to work 10 to 12 years and probably make 25 to 30 million dollars. And he’s got a bad road in front of him, probably the kind of money that sports writers make. So that kind of deal.

Q. After all these years, how close has coming home and coaching in your home state and your alma mater met your expectation when you arrived here?
COACH ROY WILLIAMS: That was not a huge thing with me at all, when I made the decision to leave Kansas and come back. It was just things didn’t feel as smooth and comfortable at Kansas as they had been before, and I had another opportunity on the horizon at the same time. And I even told my wife the week before I said, “Heck, North Carolina is the only place I would leave this place for.” I’ve said no to the Lakers three times, no to the Celtics, no to Miami, 11 or 12 different NBA teams. So it wasn’t a big reason for coming back, but it was in some ways really a huge positive for me because I had a chance to spend some time with my dad. We’ve been pretty much separated for a long, long time because of the situation. I got to see him 15 times in the 13 months that I came back before he died. And I hadn’t seen him 15 times in 15 years prior to that. And it enabled me to be back here with my sister, who was struggling a little bit. I could do some things for her and she passed last year. So those family things, it was really, really good for me. There’s no question about that.
It’s been special; North Carolina was my school for 15 years. Kansas was my school and I loved it. There is no question about that, but North Carolina was home. And whenever I stopped coaching I was going to be in North Carolina because the North Carolina mountains and the North Carolina coast, it’s pretty hard to beat both of those. But it’s probably been even more appealing than I realized it was going to be when I made the decision.

Q. (No microphone).
COACH ROY WILLIAMS: You get the same kind of scrutiny at Kansas as you do at North Carolina, it really is. Being in Denver you know probably better than anybody in here, that Kansas basketball is pretty doggone big. The toughest thing is I’ve got more cousins and friends that want tickets than I ever imagined, is probably the only negative.

Q. Roy, since you came here, this will be your third Elite Eight tomorrow and chance to go to the second Final Four, won a national title. Even the year after ‘05 when you lost everyone, you still got back with Tyler’s freshman year to the tournament. Why has it gone so smoothly since you got here?
COACH ROY WILLIAMS: Well, I’ve got two answers, one of them is it’s pretty doggone good players and there were good players at North Carolina that needed to get focused toward winning. We added Marvin Williams, which was a huge plus. It gave us a guy that could do so many things. More mature in my first year, and really more mature my second year.
And then Tyler and his group came in. David Noel was one of the best leaders that I’ve ever been around that led a bunch of young kids to get focused on what was important. I think to me, that’s the biggest reason is really, really good players that — you know, when we go recruiting we try to recruit good players, but also kids that are going to be willing to focus on how the team does. I’m old-fashioned. I tell ‘em if the team does well, everyone else is going to do well also. And these kids buy into that. And I think it’s been proven. We won in 2005, four guys were drafted in the lottery.
So I think very good players, and very good character kids and, you know, for me it hadn’t gone as smoothly as it probably appears from the outside. I know that I’m looking out there, and Bobby has gone down, Ty has gone down, Q out there and I’m bringing Marcus to play the point guard that he’s never played. So a little adversity for somebody else is bigger adversity for us.
And Danny’s situation over the last couple of years has been hard to deal with. But I guess from the outside looking in, when you just talk about winning we’ve been very lucky. I don’t mind saying that, I believe that we have been very lucky.

Q. You mentioned playing golf with Nolan and those guys. There was a time back with Nolan and Chaney, there were a lot of coaches who tend to stand up for coaches when it was against the NCAA or whatever. I wonder as you’ve gotten older, do you see yourself in that role, or is there an absence of issues? Or do you see yourself as a Dean now, and maybe as part of your responsibility as a stand-up?
COACH ROY WILLIAMS: You know, I think we still have issues. We don’t have — I’m trying to put this in the right way. I don’t know that we have as many issues that are really crucial to kids. We had some things that were really just wrong, and I look out there now and I see we have some problems but I don’t see as many things that are just flat out wrong. And I think the test score, the racism, you know, those things were really just wrong. Now I’m big now. I stand up and talk about we’ve got to get the doggone slippery logos off the courts. So that shows how much power I have that they already decided to do it.
But with John Thompson, John Chaney, Dean Smith, those guys were the leaders in our game for such a long time. And with Coach Thompson and Coach Chaney and those guys, what went on through a time period there, they were so much better than Roy Williams, in seeing things and seeing a big picture and seeing things. And they were great to me, I tell you.
I was on a conference call one night and I told them, and I told my athletic director, I would boycott. And don’t tell him this, he’ll laugh when you tell him, but one of the great thrills in my life was John Thompson standing up in front of a bunch of coaches saying, this was not just African-American coaches standing up and saying what they would do, it’s a little, old white dude from the mountains of western North Carolina willing to stand up with us, and that was a great thrill for me because I did make the decision that something was wrong and I was going to be willing. I told my athletic director, who told my chancellor, that that is what I was going to do. They didn’t necessarily like it but they understood, and they were going to support me because it was something that I really did feel was wrong, was the prop 14 and all the things that were going on during that time period.
But now since I’ve been around so long I do have a lot of young coaches come to me regarding problems in the game, and I do try to make my feelings known to the right people. I do try to go through the channels that we’re supposed to go through. And sometimes I’m just a loud mouth and say things that I maybe shouldn’t say. But I don’t think I have the stature of John Thompson or Dean Smith, or maybe not intelligent enough or seeing the big picture as well as they do, but I do believe that we still have some problems but not of the magnitude that what we had at that time. Again, I mean, my athletic director is sitting back there, I tell him all the time I try to base my life on “is this right?” That’s just not right, and then I’m willing to stand up for anything. But somebody telling me I can’t bring a Coke in here, I’m just going to have fun with that.

Q. Coach, the ripple effect of you leaving Kansas comes full circle with David. Even though he wasn’t a part of your program, how much did he remain a part of you?
COACH ROY WILLIAMS: You know, like Andy said, how smoothly it’s gone — I mean there are sometimes, maybe you’ve had these things yourself that in life there is a decision that somebody will say, boy, this is a win-win. Well I felt like that was a lose-lose, because I was going to disappoint some people that I cared about regardless of what I did. It was a horrible decision in 2000 when I decided to stay. And was it a horrible decision in 2003 when I decided to leave. Roy Williams has felt, you know, pretty doggone good about Roy Williams most of my life, but when I stood up in front of those kids at Kansas and told ‘em that I was leaving, and the feeling that I had when I walked out of that room, that’s a feeling I hope I never have again. Because I felt like I was — I felt like I was dirty. I felt like there was — I don’t know how to describe it. If I had known that I was going to feel that way, and knowing how smoothly things have gone, I wouldn’t have left. Because that’s the worst feeling I’ve ever had in my life.
So it wasn’t about the buildings, it was about those players sitting in that locker room. And I know this may sound corny to you, but the ones of you that know me, hell, I’m pretty corny. But that was hard. And David, Omar Wilkes, Jeremy Case, J.R. Giddens, those four kids had already signed with us, and they were going to play at Kansas. It was a great, great place but I wasn’t going to be there. And Christian Moody, who went to my high school, who came to Kansas because I was there, and played for me for one year, you know, Wayne Simien, Aaron Miles, Keith Langford, all those guys. That was a hard, hard time for me, and I really have tried to keep those kids in mind, not just the ones that actually played for me, but kids like David Padgett.
And I was interested in recruiting David. I think David made a great decision because he decided to break away from the Kansas-North Carolina confusion, if you will let me use that word, and start completely new with Louisville. I think it was a great decision. But I did want him, let’s make sure you understand that. It’s not that I said, oh, David, I don’t want you, because that’s not true. I really wanted him.
I’m so pleased. In fact I’ll put it to you this way, this year I’ve seen two of probably the greatest stories in college basketball for Roy Williams, one them is Quentin Thomas. A kid who has seen so much adversity, two or three surgeries. Any time he’s been given a chance, he’s taken a step back, either by injury or by poor play. All of a sudden now we needed, and boy, does he step up great.
The other one is David Padgett. I’m standing on the court in Las Vegas in November. Thanksgiving weekend. Talking to him, this is a week after he’d been told that it was going to be 10 weeks into the season. And he told me, “Coach, I’m going to bust my tail and do everything I can to get back in January. If I can get back in January, I’m going to do it. I’m not going to wait and petition the NCAA for a sixth year. So when I turn on that TV in early January and he’s playing that soon, I mean, if you don’t feel good about what that kid has gone through, there is something wrong with you.
So I’ve been fortunate this year. There are two great stories. I’ve had close involvement with Q and whether I’m able to do it or not I’m feeling very close to David and what he’s done.

Q. David was up here earlier and asked about the things that you were talking about. He said that he has no hard feelings for you and he feels like everything happens for a reason, do you agree with that?
COACH ROY WILLIAMS: Well, there is no question I have no hard feelings toward him, but I could understand if he felt betrayed by me. That’s the reason I said I just felt dirty.
But I agree, and I really think that he and his family and the decision to go to Louisville was a great decision for him, because if he had come to North Carolina there would have been some more friction because North Carolina-Kansas, and I think they were very bright in what they did. And needless to say it has shown up. It wasn’t a bad year for the youngster, if I’m not mistaken, wasn’t he the Big East Player of the Year? That’s pretty doggone good and they’re in the final 8 and we’re in the final 8. But I think he’s right there, I feel fantastic if he feels — and I think he does feel that way about me.

Q. A moment ago you alluded to Danny’s situation and obviously none of us can imagine what he’s been through but how has he handled it away from the cameras, away from everything in private? What have you done or how have you been able to try to help him through this?
COACH ROY WILLIAMS: You know, no one knows how he handled it in private because he’s been very private about it. He really has. He and I have had some discussions and it’s been a situation which nobody can imagine. You know, Bill Guthridge had a great line, “Do not condemn thy neighbors unless you’ve walked in his moccasins for two full moons.” Which means you shouldn’t criticize somebody unless you’ve been in their shoes for a long, long time. And you don’t know their situation unless you’ve gone through it. So it’s impossible for anybody to understand what Danny has gone through.
But our relationship, I tried to say, hey, I don’t understand, I don’t know, but I’m here. And I tried to give him outlets to try to talk about things. Tried to give him some opportunities to stay focused on basketball. Tried to make some special arrangements for him if I needed to, to take care of understanding his situation.

Q. Has it affected his play in any way? Can you see ebbs and flows because of things that are happening off the court?
COACH ROY WILLIAMS: In my opinion, and nobody knows, that is the biggest problem that Danny had to fight all year last year. Because after his freshman year, I’m one of these guys that thinks you should be better as a sophomore, better as a junior, and he struggled a big part of last year. And he’s played better this year because he’s played better. Whether or not that’s because he has handled the stuff off of the court or not, it’s been a great situation for me to see that youngster succeed.
And I’ve been tough on him. I didn’t want him to think that I was pampering him or anything like that. But I was really pleased with the way he played last night, for example.

Q. Louisville brings a guy off the bench who led them in scoring all three NCAA Tournament games. What have you seen of Earl Clark? And how do you anticipate matching up with him?
COACH ROY WILLIAMS: I think Earl is one of the big-time players in our game. You’ve got a guy 6′8″, who can play inside, play outside, shoot, put the ball on the floor, block shots, rebound. He truly is one of the elite players. Rick has decided that’s the best way to use him. And he comes in the game, he played 28 minutes I think it was last night. He’s a terrible match-up for almost anyone. If we try to play with post players, he takes you outside. If we try to play him with little guys, he takes you inside. So he’s a match-up nightmare for you.

Q. A lot has been made about you not having to leave the state for an NCAA Tournament game and a lot of North Carolina fans out there last night. Rick said he offered to play this game in Freedom Hall. How much of an advantage is it? Is it an unfair advantage?
COACH ROY WILLIAMS: I would not have taken that deal, I would rather stay here in Charlotte. I’ve talked about this with the ACC guys for three weeks because three weeks ago they said, if you win, you get to the ACC tournament here and you get this here and there, and I kept saying, we’ve got to play. A great thrill for me was Louisville. We go there and play in the NCAAs in ‘91, first year we go to the Final Four, we win two games in Louisville, because we played well. We went to St. Louis in ‘93 and we played great and won two games to go to the Final Four. Somebody said something about the atmosphere of tomorrow, North Carolina against Louisville. In 2003, we played in Anaheim, Notre Dame, Kansas, Duke, Arizona, that could have been a Final Four, but that was the regional. And we played great and we ended up winning.
So, again, I’ll go back to this. We’re going to have more people than we’ve got in the forest, but we had 21,750 people yelling for us, and we lost two games at home this year. Yeah, I guess it’s got to be an advantage, but if it’s that big of an advantage, why in the dickens did we lose at home? The opposing team gets 75 tickets, so we had 21,675 cheering for us, and we still got our butts kicked twice.

Q. Roy, you have players from California, Philadelphia, Missouri, you’ve got guys on their way from Virginia and Indiana. When you literally can recruit anybody anywhere, how do you decide who to recruit?
COACH ROY WILLIAMS: I think there’s got to be a couple of things. One, is what you need to fit into, you know, when you’re putting your puzzle together, and where is that person that fills that need the most? In ‘95 or ‘96 we had Jacque Vaughn, Jerod Hasse, Scot Pollard and Raef LaFrentz. We had no small forward. The best person that filled that spot was Paul Pierce in Los Angeles. So there has to be a need, where is that person?
And does that person fit what you need to coach? There are guys every year that I really make them happy because I decide not to recruit them, because I wouldn’t like to coach them. Which means they sure as the dickens wouldn’t like me to coach them. So it is a situation of you try to determine where is the best player that can fill your needs, and then does he fit what you want to deal with?
And the other thing is, it’s like getting married, both parties have to agree, they’ve gotta like me, too. So it’s a little bit of all that.
Distance, is the biggest factor in recruiting with very good families. And when I say “very good families,” it doesn’t have to mean two parents. But you have to understand that in recruiting, and I try to find out pretty doggone quick is distance going to be a huge factor, because I can’t make our school be any closer. But I’ve had some wonderful kids with single parents, moms or dads, but most of the time if it’s a really good family, that distance is even more of a factor and you have to make that decision pretty quick, too.

Q. Quentin has been the keeper of the comparisons of 2005 because he’s asked about it so much, and one of the things he said was one of the similarities was the bond between the players on both teams. Do you see that as well? And what are the similarities and differences you see between these bunches.
COACH ROY WILLIAMS: Both really good kids with high character all the way through it. Both had kids who were willing to make sacrifices, this year Danny Green, Quentin Thomas, those guys made sacrifices. And Marvin Williams coming off the bench, ended up being the second player picked in the draft, but he didn’t care. He just wanted to win. That’s been the common denominator with both those teams. Quentin said in the locker room the other day, the common denominator is how close the teams are, the fact that everybody wanted to win and the old gray-haired guy. And I told him I didn’t like the “old gray-haired guy” part of it, but then I started thinking about it, I do like that part of it. It’s something that’s been pretty fortunate for me. It’s two different years, who knows what the outcome is going to be. We’re all sitting here thinking, boy, Roy, you’re doing great, things are so smooth, and that’s what was thought last year after we came from 16 down in the second half to beat USC. Great game. And two days later they were finished.

Q. Roy, you mentioned how you felt dirty. As the media, what don’t we understand when Bobby Petrino abruptly leaves Atlanta goes to college, when Huggins leaves to get this job? And routinely we may criticize. What is it that we don’t understand about that, the mindset that, there must be something different that makes that legitimate?

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: With me, and if you will allow me to answer without comparing other situations, because I can tell you what mine was, I had been there 15 years. I had started recruiting Wayne Simien as a 7th grader. He told his parents after our camp in seventh grade that he wanted to come play for me.

Again, I’m corny, it’s that bond that you have with the student-athletes. I have been offered more money. I was offered more money several times to leave Kansas. I’ve been offered more money to leave North Carolina. I wanted to be like my high school coach. That’s all I dreamed about. I was a high school coach in my fifth year before I really started thinking about, you know, I would like to be a college coach. Then I got into college coaching and I saw the bond that you could have, the relationships that you could have, and I felt like that I was sort of abandoning those guys. And perhaps it was even worse because I’d said no three years before. I’d even surprised my own son. My son says he thought I was going to come to North Carolina in 2000 and I didn’t, and in 2003 he thought I would stay and I didn’t, so who knows what goes through your own sibling’s minds.

My daughter gave me a little Plexiglas thing that said, “Statistics are important, but relationships last a lifetime.” And that’s still on my desk at home right now. To me that was the biggest thing. No one from the outside knows actually what that person is going through. My last couple years at Kansas, things hadn’t been as smooth. We had changed athletic directors and his fault, my fault, nobody’s fault. That’s a line from a John Wayne movie, too. “Your fault, my fault, nobody’s fault. I’m going to blow your head off in just a minute.” John Wayne and Richard Boone. It was. That was a good movie, too.

But I think, with me, that relationship that you can have is hard to put into words. And my situation changed. But those faces that I was looking at in that room, they hadn’t changed and those were the same kids. For two years I was ecstatic for two and a half hours every day, and that’s when I was on the court with my team.

Q. You said stature and John Thompson, Chaney, what would it take for you in your mind to achieve that stature? Winning another National Championship?

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: I don’t think Roy Williams is ever going to get to where John Thompson, Dean Smith and John Chaney was. They’re true giants in my mind, because they all weren’t just basketball coaches. They got involved in things more than just coaching. Coach Smith sitting at the counter in North Carolina in the civil rights movement. What Coach Thompson and Coach Chaney pushed through the NCAA and got people to be more aware of what the dickens is going on. So, again, maybe there’s not that big — maybe somebody’s got one that I don’t understand or am not thinking of right now, but I think those guys were intelligent, they were strong, and they understood people maybe more so than — I think John Thompson, Dean Smith they could have been successful, they could have been CEOs of any company in the world, and got people to do what they wanted them to do. And Roy Williams, I think I’m just a basketball coach that — I’m very fortunate, I care about my kids and I think they care about me, but those guys to me are giants. Bobby Knight, I’ll throw him in there. Dean Smith, Bob Knight, John Thompson, I learned so much from those guys on the court but off the court, too.

Q. Roy, coaches and players who won their first title, both in amateur sports and pro sports say, it’s surprising because it increases their motivation to win a second one, they love that feeling so much. Have you found this the last the few years or does nothing match the drive for that first title?

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: I think I’m just as hungry. In fact I think sometimes I work even harder because I would like to do it again. Part of the drive for me, if we were to ever, this year, 2020, if we were to ever do it again, I would enjoy it more. I made some mistakes, I didn’t enjoy it enough. I didn’t allow my staff to enjoy it enough. We win Monday night April 4th, went home Tuesday April 5th, took my staff out to dinner, finished at 10:00. Six a.m. the next morning I met Coach Holladay In the parking lot and we went on a recruiting trip. I would enjoy it more.

Q. David Stern was quoted in Time magazine a couple of weeks ago saying he’s going to push for the increased age limit in the NBA when the collective bargaining agreement comes up. Is that something you think will be good for college basketball given Brandan and Marvin?

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: I do think it would be good for college basketball, and I think it would be good for most kids, but I’m want sure it’s great for — I’m one of those guys, I don’t think you need to have a completely iron clad rule. I don’t think that was a mistake for what Kobe did. I don’t think it was a mistake for what LeBron did. I don’t think they would have necessarily hurt themselves by going to college, but, you know, Marvin Williams, he did what he should have done. Financially he needed some help. Financially he could help his family and it was right there, right in front of him and he didn’t want to go. He would tell you today that he would have loved to have stayed in college.

So I’m not one of those coaches that say we’ve got to have that rule. It’s killing the college game, because I think you also have to think about the individuals. And Sean May scares me to death. Sean May played for us. He was the best player in the country. He wasn’t the Player of the Year, but he was the best player in the country. The media got caught up into it, and didn’t realize until it was too late what he had done the second half of the season. But Sean May played, he went NBA, and next year he got hurt. I tell you what, that scares the dickens out of me.

Q. Some of the guys were talking about the importance of your scout team guys and what they provide to your program. Just how important is it to you to have a full line of guys to be able to use? And is there any sense of fulfillment for you as a coach to be able to get those guys into as many games as they’ve gotten into this year?

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: I would have loved to have been one of those guys. I have that feeling for them. They’ve been great for us. They work extremely hard. They listen. They pay attention to what the other team does, and take it out on to the court and try and do it. They’re great fans and cheerleaders over there. So to get those guys at the end of game, I really enjoy it.

I’m tough on them, too. I don’t want them to go out there and slap it around. I expect them to do what they’re supposed to do, but it’s fun to see their success.

THE MODERATOR: Thanks, coach.

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Carolina Tar Heels vs Washington State Cougars postgame press conference

March 28th, 2008 · No Comments · ACC Men's Basketball, Carolina Tar Heels

Posted Friday, March 28, 2008

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Charlotte, NC - After their 68-43 win over the Washington State Cougars in the regional semifinals of the NCAA Tournament at Bobcats Arena, Carolina’s head basketball coach Roy Williams and players Ty Lawson and Danny Green talked with the press.

UNC basketball coach Roy Williams

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: For the first time in my life I thought the media was so powerful, it’s unbelievable, and now we have more evidence of how powerful you guys are. Tyler was one of our players to be drug tested, and they said, “He has to talk to the media before he can use the bathroom.” You guys are powerful.

Other than that we’re ecstatic, we played really, really well during stretches. Defensively we thought we were really good but, let’s be honest, they missed some open shots. We felt like we missed some open shots. Well, first play of the game we missed a dead layup, and some after that, but Washington had some shots they would normally make and they missed some shots tonight.

I thought on the backboards, we were really good on the backboards, and when you looked down they only had four points after second-shot opportunities, and we usually make a better living there than the seven we made.

UNC's Danny GreenBut we’re ecstatic about still playing. We felt Danny Green gave us a huge lift in the first half shooting the ball in the basket, and he hasn’t been shooting the ball that well recently to say the least. I think he was 3 for 17 or something like that from the three-point line. That’s not perfect, I’m not far off, but he came in the first half and gave us a big lift when we were having trouble scoring against a very good defense.

You’ve got to congratulate Washington State. If you’re playing when there is only 16 teams left, you gotta feel really good about that. And I saw Tony before the game and told him I waved at his dad because there couldn’t be anybody in the arena happier than his dad tonight. And he’s one of the great coaches of the game, and it doesn’t feel good for them right now but they had a great year.

Q. Danny, with what Coach just said, you did struggle a little bit up in Raleigh. What helped you get going tonight?

DANNY GREEN: I think just making one basket really, kinda gets me going. That shot gives me the confidence to knock down the next one and getting into a rhythm in the game and playing good defense, diving on the floor, doing the little things to get the butterflies out. And once I got going things started working toward my way.

Q. For either of the players, a lot of attention was paid to how many points you guys scored last week. Because of the nature of this game, the way you played it and the way they wanted you to play it, was this more impressive to you than the two last week?

DANNY GREEN: I would say so. I mean, they played really good defense. They slowed the ball down, but once we started going a little bit, getting out, pressuring defensively and getting some stops and running them, I think we started getting on a little rhythm and getting some easy baskets for ourselves.

TY LAWSON: I feel like it’s more impressive because it’s a tough game, it was a grind-it-out game. They played good defense. We had to make tough shots and things like that to score, and it was kind of hard for us to score in the beginning of the game. But I started playing and loosening up and started running, that helped us get the lead and win the game.

Q. Ty, looked like you were jetting up and down the court as well as you have all year long. I know you probably get sick of being asked this, it looked like you felt pretty good tonight. Is this the best you felt since before Florida State?

TY LAWSON: I think so. I was able to do everything I normally was able to do. I was going to the basket, pulling up. My ankle felt really comfortable, I was able to jump off of it to make right hand layups. So I feel like I’m back to 100% or close to it.

THE MODERATOR: Thanks, guys. Questions for Coach.

Q. Roy, you talked about them missing open shots but that was pretty good defense out there. What was the point of emphasis tonight? And were you just trying to contest everything?

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: Well, we were trying to contest everything. I think one of the things we wanted to be is, I put up on the board, “tough enough, patient enough, poised enough.” And talking about guarding for 35 seconds. What they do they sort of walk the ball up the court, and they get it across the 10 second line with 7 or 8 seconds already lapsed, and they don’t necessarily try hold the ball down till the end. But they want to hold it until they get exactly what they want. So I said to Marcus and Danny and Wayne, “You’re going to be hit by a screen. You have to be tough enough and patient enough to get through it. You’re going to be hit by another screen. You’ve got to be tough enough and patient enough to get through it. Guys are going to cut on the baseline. He’s going to stop and cut in the other direction. You’ve got to be tough enough and patient enough to continue to play the defense for 35 seconds.”

It was a huge emphasis tore us to keep them off the backboards and not let them get second-shot opportunities, and we wanted to do a better job on our offensive boards than we did. Defensively we wanted to really try to challenge everything, but you look at it and they shoot 29% in the second half, and we shoot 38% percent. And a lot of that is the NCAA tournament, kids wanting to do so well that they pressure themselves. But I was pleased with our defense tonight.

Tyler HansbroughQ. Roy, in the first half or at halftime did you feel like you had to say anything to Tyler to help him through that tough first half?

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: You know, in the Florida State game at Florida State he didn’t score in the first half, but he was doing a great job defensively and rebounding, and in the second half he owned that part of the game. I did say one thing to him, I told him, “You’ve got good shots, just relax, don’t press yourself, just relax and play the way you’ve played all year long.” And the other emphasis at halftime was that half is over with. We can’t do anything about that, but we could do something about the second half. “Let’s be focused and try and go out and do better in the second half.”

Q. What does it say about your offense that you had six points less at halftime than Notre Dame had against this team in forty minutes without Ty scoring?

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: You know, I watched Notre Dame, they struggled getting the ball in the basket. Seemed like they were out of sync the whole game. We were struggling getting the ball in the basket, but I felt like we were okay. We were getting pretty good shots. We just weren’t making them or we were rushing the shots we had. So I felt pretty good about that.

I do feel good about our offense, there is no question there. I think we had great balance, but you look down and Ty is 5 for 11, Wayne is 4 for 13, Tyler is 6 for 15. We don’t have those kind shooting nights very often. But I do think in the NCAA Tournament we have to relax a little more.

I said something about putting things up on the board, first thing I put was “attack.” We want to be aggressive. We don’t want to say, well, it’s going to be a low-scoring game and not play the way we like to play. And we did attack, we just didn’t finish the play by making shots. First play of the game Marcus gets a layup and misses it. Late Wayne drives the length of the court and lays it up and misses it. Tyler had the jump hook he makes all the time and missed it. But I do think at times that offensively we have a chance at times to put pressure on people.

Q. Roy, with their style of play, was this a game that you had to get through? Did your players kinda feel that way, that they knew this might be the one game that might be different from all the others?

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: You know, we didn’t look at it like that. We looked at it as we have to get through it because it’s the next game. We didn’t look at their style of play. We didn’t look at our opponent. It was just the next game in front of us. And you guys have heard me say a lot, I’d rather win in the 80, 90, and 100s, but sometimes you have to win in the 50s and 60s. And you have to be tough enough to understand that, and you have to be tough enough to make the shots and tough enough to guard for 35 seconds.

I personally don’t feel like our staff or players looked at it that way. This was the next game and that’s the way we were trying to play.

Q. You know Derrick Low very well from high school and this season he had 24 points in the second half at UCLA last week, 11 in the first 10 minutes of the second half against Winthrop. Was he one guy you were paying attention to in the second half to make sure he didn’t score in bunches like he has in the past?

COACH ROY WILLIAMS: Well, their whole team — they may have missed that, but not by a lot. Seven threes in 85 seconds against UCLA, so they can score quickly when they start making them.

I grabbed Derrick and Weaver both and told them, “It doesn’t feel good right now but congratulations on what you’ve done and great careers and great year.” But we were concerned about Derrick and Weaver both of those guys from three. But Derrick has, I watched the Winthrop game, was it Winthrop or Stanford in the Pac 10 Tournament, where he made three just like that early in the second half. So we had seen that and talked about it, but we just tried to get focused for every possession.

Washington State Cougars head basketball coach Tony Bennett and players Aron Baynes, Derrick Low and Kyle Weaver spoke to the media.

COACH TONY BENNETT: Well, it was not the way we wanted to go out. But I told these guys in the locker room after the game, what a run, for their careers. These two seniors, especially. I’m very thankful for that. We so desired to get to this point, and played a heck of a team, and they certainly exploited us. We had some trouble against them, and we’ll learn from it. Obviously I want to focus on now, what they did for our program. It meant a lot to me and I’m sure you guys will ask questions about that, but Robbie, Derrick and Kyle especially came in when nobody wanted to give us the time of day, and they went through a lot to get our program to where it’s at, and I’m just thankful for that.

Again, I’m thankful for what we learned. It was hard out there. It was disappointing because I think we’re better than what we showed, and North Carolina is excellent and well coached and tremendous talent and all that. And we thought we could play better than that, but we just didn’t do the job tonight.

Q. Aron, Hansbrough had no points in the first half, how were you able to limit him? And conversely in the second half what did he do differently to get his points?

ARON BAYNES: I don’t know, I just tried to make him play over a body the whole time. I tried to stay between them in the basket the whole time. I knew he was going to score points, but I tried to do the best I could to stay out of foul trouble and make it tough on him. The second half, he’s a great player and great players are going to get shots off and they’re going to get some of those to go down. So he came out and scored a few more points in the second half, but still just tried to stay — I got a few calls, a few fouls called on me and that kinda made me sit out. And it was a struggle down there. But, yeah, I don’t know, just tried to play the best D we can.

Q. What is it that you normally like to do that you were able to do when you were successful that you did not feel that you could do tonight, and then related to that, what did North Carolina do to take that away, if, in fact, it was something they did?

KYLE WEAVER: I think it was our team defense. We really didn’t play the team defense that has gotten us here all year. We broke down a lot of times, each time down the floor, you know, someone was out of position and we just didn’t cover each other. That’s the type of team defense that we needed to play. We just didn’t get it done and I think that’s a bit due to the way Carolina played. Every time down the floor they pushed it at us, and tried run it go down our throat, and they tried to force us into making mistakes in defensive transition. And a couple times that happened to us and they hit some big shots, and they were able to stretch the lead out.

DERRICK LOW: I thought we were pretty good at transition defense, but tonight I thought that was lacking a little bit. I thought for the most part we got back most of the time, but when you’re going up against a quick guard like Lawson, you know, you’ve got to get everyone back and build the wall and stop him. And I thought, you know, it was partly my fault in the second half — I mean, yeah, second half, Lawson got a few in a row when he drove the lane through the court and just zig-zagged his way to the rim. But I thought last couple games we were successful at that and tonight it wasn’t.

Q. Can you guys talk about shooting tonight? Was it something they did defensively or was it just sometimes in basketball you get cold?

KYLE WEAVER: Yeah, it was freezing out there. I thought we got a lot of good looks offensively. Pretty often I thought we got a lot of good looks, we drove and kicked a few times. It just wouldn’t go down for us tonight, even inside. We missed a few bunnies, a few put-backs that we usually put down, so I think it was more of us than them at times.

Sometimes it just doesn’t go down and tonight was one of those nights.

Q. Derrick, you’ve had games like this when you struggled in the first half, even last week, 0-5 in the first half against Winthrop and you were able to turn it around and score 11 in the second half. At UCLA 0 in the first half, 24 in the second. Tonight was there any sense that you could get that roll going in the second half at all?

DERRICK LOW: I was trying to, but I thought offensively I thought I got all the looks, you know, that I could get and that I wanted. A lot of them were good shots but like he said, it was just hard to get it to drop, and, you know, in most games I would have my teammates making shots and it would probably just be me missing. But it was pretty much offensively us tonight and we just didn’t shoot well as a team. That’s how it goes sometimes, but, you know, you can’t stop shooting. I thought I just kept trying to get them down and a couple of times I had to switch it up and go to the basket, but it was just one of them nights that it didn’t want to fall.

Q. Kyle and Derrick, could you talk about the last night of your senior year and the thoughts as you came off the court and what you talked with Tony about as you left the court.

KYLE WEAVER: It’s hard, you know, right after you lose a game like that. Like Coach said, you don’t expect to lose or go out in that type of style, but, you know, to take it to where we’ve — to get it to where we are now, you know, to where we started, being last in the Pac and, you know, every year being a struggle to get it to where we are now. I mean, it’s kinda hard to say that now but it was pretty — it’s pretty satisfying now that it’s over to just look at it from a big picture.

Like I say, it hurts to lose, especially like this, being our last game as seniors, but I think we can look back at this, and I think we can say we left a mark at Washington State.

DERRICK LOW: I’ll answer that one, too. Walking off the court, like Kyle said, it was kinda hard not to feel disappointed to end our college career like that. But then again, after that it just kinda made me reminisce back to the beginning and, you know, how it was back then when we first got here and the adversity that we went through, maybe being injuries or just being the last in the Pac 10, and no one believing in you and then, you know, to look where we were now walking off the court coming out of Sweet 16 game. And you just gotta smile at that and even though we lost, we just thank Washington State and the coaching staff for taking a chance on us. Just kinda stuff like that.

THE MODERATOR: Thanks, guys. Congratulations on a great year. Questions for Coach Bennett.

Q. You’re an NBA point guard. Certainly people around here think the X-factor for them is Lawson. How good is he? And everybody talks about them being their engine.

COACH TONY BENNETT: Yeah, he was good tonight. I asked Derrick in the waiting room, how fast is he? Because in the second half we stopped him two or three times, but then we scored a couple of baskets and he’s right on top of you. And I mean, we worked so hard preparing for this and sprinting back and trying to build a wall, but you can’t mimic that in practice, and his ability to change directions and use his strength.

He certainly is a significant guy, because that’s our strength, transition defense, it was our strength against Notre Dame and Winthrop and throughout the season. And he found some holes in it and he would get so deep. You know, you try to get out there and pick him up and get the ball off him, but he gets so deep. That was impressive, it certainly was. He’s healthy no