Looking for the Good Times

pelphrey-missou

My holidays were going just swimmingly until last weekend, when I caught a nasty little cold that knocked me flat on my ass for a day or so. My halting recovery didn’t get much help when I forced myself to sit through that thoroughly miserable Cotton Bowl. Add in a return to work - with the attendant mountain of e-mails and voice messages that had piled up during the break - and I’ve definitely been fighting a case of the post-holiday blahs.

Unfortunately, I’m not sure the basketball team will be providing help anytime soon.

Until the last year or so of the Nolan Richardson era, few things were more anti-blah for me than Razorback basketball. And after John Pelphrey took control of the program last spring, I couldn’t help but believe that the Hog hoopsters, seemingly so talented, would immediately start providing liberal amounts of feel-good therapy once again.

I remain very confident about the future of the program under Pelphrey. But the team’s performance so far makes me worry that the 2007-08 season will be yet another ho-hum (or worse) year. The trademarks of the Stan Heath Razorbacks - the turnovers, the boneheaded late-game decisions, the constant heaving of bricks - are still on display, and I’m afraid they will continue to be until Pelphrey’s highly-rated first recruiting class arrives next year.

The season is still somewhat young, and several moons ago, I cautioned against making too much of the early part of the schedule. However … the season is not that young anymore. Thirteen games of largely uninspiring play is legitimate reason to scale back one’s optimism; perhaps this current crop of Razorbacks just isn’t that good.

The conference season is almost upon us, and the accompanying increase in regionally and nationally televised games will make it easier for me to follow the team. And watch I will, hoping for that big win or two that might finally get this team on track. But I will tune in with adjusted expectations, with the realization that it likely won’t be until next year that Razorback basketball is once again a steady source of good times.

Filed under: Stan Heath, John Pelphrey, Nolan Richardson, Basketball — Stephen at 10:06 pm on Friday, January 4, 2008

2 Comments »

Comment by Tab Prewett

January 5, 2008 @ 8:12 am

You need a vacation from the vacation.

I’m in agreement on the bball team. They look talented. They jump and run and have size and experience, but they can’t shoot. Scotty Thurman couldn’t jump, run, and wasn’t very big, but he and Dillard and Beck and Stewart and McDaniel and even Darnell Robinson could make 3s.

And what’s up with Hill? He just gets worse each year.

Maybe Pelphrey will get them going. Let’s hope so. Got to get rid of these blahs, myself.

Comment by Ken

January 21, 2008 @ 1:00 am

Please, Coach Pelphrey…. Please play Jerald Ridgway. I know he is just a walk on but a walk on with many talents. He plays a great off guard with great ball handling skills. He can jump with the best and his defense is second to none. In JR. college he was 1st team all conf. small forward and played against Sonny Weems and held him below his average. You see him in practice and even said he was a big bodied guard just a 2 days before the Bulldog game. Some of your seniors need to be benched with their lack luster play and Jerald can and will make the change you want and deserve. He’s 6′5″ and 220lb and can run the floor. Please bench some of your lazy and hard headed seniors and give your self the joy you so deserve and watch Jerald make it happen for a coach who needs to send a lesson to his team. I know you watch him in practice and he brings back flashes of your skills while you were at Kentucky. Don’t be afraid to make a change and send that lesson you have spoken about. Please save the man hood of Razorback basketball program and put in a player who cares about the game and will leave it on the floor with the extra hard pass, cutting into the lane, picking up the charge, boxing out and bangs the boards. That’s something this current team and starters have no idea what it’s like, to play the game with pride and honor. Thank you for your time Coach..

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