Abdul Gaddy

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Ryan Petitt / UDubSports.com

A bunch of links to share this morning. Up tomorrow, a preview of the Dawgs biggest test to date on Thursday at Texas Tech.

Interesting piece yesterday in the LA Times about Dwayne Polee, Jr., a 6’6″ (ESPN says 6’7″) wing player out of Westchester HS in LA. Polee had committed to USC years ago, but announced this week that he was reopening his recruitment and was considering five schools, one of them being UW.

Well, if Romar Math says we could conceivably fit Desmond Simmons, Enes Kanter and Terrence Jones into next year’s plans, does it also compute that we could fit in another prospect? My sense is that Polee, a top 100 prospect, is a backup to Jones for the Dawgs. Still, interesting to hear him put UW in his final five. . .

Speaking of Terrence Jones, you’ve got a chance to see him play at Hec Ed on Monday, January 18th, at the King Holiday Classic. Jones’ Jefferson HS will take on Federal Way at 6 PM. No word on how to get tickets in advance yet, but tickets were available at the door for last season’s event.

Mike Seely from Seattle Weekly did this piece linking what he feels is an inflated rank for the Huskies with Abdul Gaddy being, essentially, overrated. I left a comment on this story because I felt it was a bit unfair to base his assessment essentially on one game, and not to even mention Gaddy’s sweet showing against San Jose State.

It’s apparent to me, at this point, that Gaddy isn’t instantly going to be either a big scorer or an All-American caliber point guard until he gets some more experience. But, to ignore the good things Gaddy has done so far is, I think, short-sighted and based on what may have been unrealistic expectations on the part of fans and media following the team.

The Dawgs climbed to #10 in the ESPN/USA Today Coaches’ Poll, and #12 in the AP Poll. If we’re the #10 team in the country, we should win four of the next five games (at Texas Tech, vs. Cal St. Northridge, vs. Georgetown in Anaheim, vs. Portland, vs. Texas A&M), which are all tougher (except Cal State Northridge at home) than any we’ve played so far. Winning less than four won’t be cause for alarm, but will say that the Huskies are ranked slightly too high at this point.

That’s all for now! Thanks for coming!

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Zone defense 2-3 copyWatching last week’s game against San Jose State, it’s apparent that the Huskies are going to see a lot of zone defense this season. I’m a little concerned about how effective the Spartan defense, employed by clearly less talented players, was so effective in keeping the Dawgs’ offense leashed last night.

Zone defenses will neutralize one of the things the Huskies do best: an up-tempo attack with plenty of guard penetration, and it will force them into more outside shooting, still a question mark for the team.

The good news is that this idea of teams trying to beat the Dawgs with a zone has been apparent since training camp, and the Huskies have been preparing for it. Coach Lorenzo Romar mentioned yesterday that Quincy Pondexter quickly becomes scoring option #1 when teams drop out of man-to-man defense. Quincy’s big game last night (including the first 13 Husky points of the second half, all against a zone) was a big part of the reason San Jose State’s upset dreams never came closer to fruition.

While Quincy will continue to find success working out of the high post against the zone, Isaiah may have his difficulties at times, particularly if his jumper isn’t falling.

In my opinion, there is a lineup the Huskies can employ that’ll be set up for dismantling the zone. However, it will at times require Lorenzo Romar to shorten his bench and take a leap of faith with his three best defensive players (Overton, Holiday, and Gant) all on the bench for certain stretches.

The “Zonebuster” squad looks like this: Abdul Gaddy, with his precision passing and more controlled tempo is necessary when the Huskies find themselves playing against a defense that neutralizes their athletic advantage. Isaiah Thomas is too good not to find a way to be successful against the zone, but will need to temper his urge to drive, and look more to dish once the defense has collapsed on him. Elston Turner is the perfect wing to receive these passes. Clearly more comfortable without a defender in his face, Turner could shoot 40%-45% from deep if most of his shots were the open ones often earned against the zone. Quincy Pondexter moving freely between the high post, or making back door cuts along the baseline, gives the Huskies a zonebusting specialist. And, Tyreese Breshers, who can receive the ball and get a shot up even against double coverage, rounds out my Zonebusters lineup. Breshers is enough of a presence not to get swallowed up even when outnumbered in the post.

What do you think? What will the Huskies do to combat the zone this season? Are you concerned? Let me know below, and thanks for coming.

Which of these best describes your thoughts about the Huskies' ability to run their offense against a zone defense?

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I’m not sure how often Coach Romar will reevaluate which point guard he’s going to start this season. He could start Venoy Overton for a few games, see how it works, and make a switch if it’s not. He could also choose to go back and forth, starting whichever player is doing best at a given time. But, I think promoting Venoy Overton from super-sixth-man to starting point guard this early is a mistake, given that Abdul Gaddy will now be the player to come in and spell Venoy, instead of the other way around.

Venoy has always played with an untamed mindset at UW, or at least that’s the mindset I’ve inferred from his play. As last season wore on, everyone watching the team saw Venoy carve out a role for himself — instant energy and hard-nosed defense. It wasn’t that the recklessness we sometimes saw really went away, it was just that the good stuff (defense and intensity) started to outweigh the bad (turnovers and too many ill-advised razzle-dazzle passes).

If our highly-touted freshman point guard was cut from the same mold, it’d make perfect sense to start Venoy. But Abdul Gaddy is being billed as something of an anti-Venoy: more disciplined with the ball, a better floor leader, and with less need to find his own shot. Going from a frenetic, potentially more mistake-prone pace early on to what we assume will be Gaddy’s slightly more deliberate, careful running of the offense seems odd to me, like solving a problem before it exists. 

It’s early, and my opinion will most certainly change after seeing both play a few games. But, for the moment, I think Coach Romar is selling short his own brilliant stroke from last season in creating the role he did for Overton, and also risks alienating Gaddy, billed as such a unique talent with a ceiling higher than Venoy’s.

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Tweet st marys copyThe Dawgs held a closed scrimmage with the St. Mary’s Gaels on Sunday. No official word from on what went down, but I thought I’d share some of the player’s Tweets made during their trip back to Seattle.

In case you were wondering, a closed scrimmage is generally an exhibition game played behind closed doors (no fans, no media), so teams can assess how they function as a full unit after playing only against themselves in practice up to this point.

Sounds to me, based on the Tweets below, like the scrimmage was hardly a cake walk for the Huskies. But, hopefully it was a learning experience. I’m not going to read too much into what the players report on Twitter, or get too concerned about anything (other than injuries) that happens so early on in the preseason. But, just for fun, here’s what the players had to say on their Twitter pages:

Tyreese Breshers:

Just landed …. watchin film wit Coach the whole flight … learned a lot of stuff … I got a lot to work on

Just got done wat our scrimmage … We figured a lot of things about ourselves and I figured out a lot about me. . .

Abdul Gaddy:

On way to airport!! Learned a lot about our team!! Time to get back n the lab and improve on weaknesses…

Isaiah Thomas:

We gotta take what we did wrong 2 heart and build on it and get better plain and simple. We good, still early I aint worried at all. Go time. . .

On the bus headed to the airport.. We played horrible the 1st 20min but after that we played like Washington basketball suppose to play!

NOV 13th 1st regular season game. We gon be ready, mark my words! We was alil rusty today playin wit each other bcuz we basically had 2 days…of practice where we had enough guys to go up and down and scrimmage alil bit. So were good we jus gotta get some chemistry! That’s all!

Matthew Bryan-Amaning:

ok so on the way bk 2 the 206…the trip as a learning curve we’ll see in practice if we leant anything!!

Thanks for coming!

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Few sasquatch copyNow that the college basketball preseason is getting into full swing, we’re going to start summing up the past week in Husky basketball each Sunday*. And what better week to start than with such an eventful one? Here were the major stories in Husky Hoops from October 19th through October 25th.

Big Foot not pregnant with coach’s baby: In a little bit of Northwest basketball drama, Washington proposed a series of games to Gonzaga, all taking place at Key Arena, and alerted the media. Gonzaga fired back, saying “not so fast,” first through its athletic director, then with some tough talk from coach Mark Few, who seems to have given more thought to the idea of sasquatch/human copulation than may be healthy.

Dawgfluenza: More than half of the Husky roster came down with the flu, starting with Darnell Gant shortly after the team’s Midnight Madness event on October 16th. While it’s likely the afflicted players put in an impressive amount of virtual court time on NBA 2K10, the illnesses preventing the team from starting their real practice regimen until late in the week. Here’s our post on the outbreak, and here’s the wire story from the AP (national coverage!) picked up by ESPN.

LoRo wants you!: The flu bug seemed to trigger Coach to reconsider his reluctance to add a walk-on or two to this year’s squad, likely to warm the bench during games, but push players in practice (and, ensure enough healthy bodies to run a full-court scrimmage). Eight players showed up to Thursday’s walk-on tryouts, and Coach planned to call any lucky winners on Friday. No word in this recap from The Times as to whether one of the contestants was UW tight end, Kavario Middleton.

Sports Illustrated <Hearts> the Huskies!: CNNSI picked the Husky backcourt as the sixth best in the nation, but left out Scott Suggs when they listed the Dawg’s guards. Montlake Madness is channeling Shaq and suggesting the nickname “The Big Oversight” for Suggs this season. We also sincerely hope Scott makes Luke Winn feel stupid by season’s end. (Cal was picked fifth.)

Sports Illustrated <Hearts> the Huskies!, part II: CNNSI also picked Isaiah Thomas as the ninth most exciting player in the country, ranked ahead of Michigan State’s Kalin Lucas and NCAA Tournament opponent, Jarvis Varnado, but behind Willie Warren, and number-one pick, Greivis Vasquez of Maryland.

In case you missed it: We caught up with Husky legend Jon Brockman to talk about his NBA experience so far. . . We spoke to Abdul Gaddy. . . And, check out Doug Haller’s blog. He covers Arizona State for The Arizona Republic, but often does a good rundown of what’s going on around the Pac-10. . . And, here’s another great college hoops blog as well, called March Madness All Season.

Thanks so much for coming!

*We may move these to Mondays once the season gets going, so they can cover the weekend’s games as well.


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Gaddy close copyAbdul Gaddy is the highest-rated recruit to come play basketball for UW since Spencer Hawes. Billed as a poised, pass-first point guard, Gaddy should compete for a starting spot next month when the Huskies tip off the 2009/2010 season.

What can’t come through in an interview, but is clear when you watch him work out, or speak with him in person, is that Abdul has a presence about him. I was glad to catch up with him recently. Here’s what we discussed:

Montlake Madness: What’s your philosophy on leading a team? How do you approach the game to make the players around you better?

Abdul Gaddy: You just gotta come out, play basketball, make the right plays. If somebody has an easier shot than you, you just gotta give them the ball and make plays for them.

It’s all about reading the defense. I like to say that I can read plays three or four steps ahead. That’s what my coach tried to teach me to do: try to see the play before it happens. So, that’s what I try to do. I just go out and try to make the right plays. I’m not trying to get my points or anything like that.

MM: When is the time on the floor that you say to yourself “It’s time for me to score now”?

AG: When it’s time to score is, honestly, if I see my team struggling and nobody’s scoring and everything, I say, okay now I gotta turn it up and be more aggressive. If I make more plays then it makes their shot easier where they just get layups now. They don’t have to worry about making a tough jump shot or anything. I could worry about taking that shot. So, I try to relieve the pressure off my teammates.

MM: When you’ve got the ball in your hands and you’ve got, say, a teammate down low, and, say, Isaiah to your left, and maybe another option too, what’s the thought process for you as far as ball distribution? Is it a conscious thing? Or is passing done completely within the flow of the game?

AG: Well, Isaiah is a good enough player that he can score whenever he wants to. Our offense is like kind of generated around him and Quincy. So where those guys are. . . Defenses are gonna key on those two, but they’re good enough players where they’re making plays for us too. So, if they see somebody is wide open because they haven’t been getting touches or anything, defenses are going to be on them, and they’re going to be able to pass the ball for us to have open shots. They’re good enough players to make all of us better.

MM: What’s more important to you starting games or finishing games?

AG: Finishing games. Because that’s where the games mostly are won. Y’know, a lot of people will say a lot of stuff, like “who’s gonna start?” Honestly, I really don’t care if I start or not. A lot of people have expectations…

MM: You really don’t care? Opening night, there’s no part of you that wants to be…?

AG: Nah… I mean, there’s gonna be people who would say something like “Oh, why didn’t you start?,” but this is a team thing between us. This is our brotherhood. I feel like I’ve earned my respect to get playing time. It don’t really matter if I start or not. I deserve playing time. That’s what I’m playing for. I’m playing for playing time. And, to help the team win.

MM: Finishing games, though. That makes a difference?

AG: Yes. I wanna be in the game at the end of the game when Coach is like “I need somebody that’s gonna help me win this game.” And I wanna be like “Coach, I’m gonna help you win this game.”

Thanks for coming!

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Quincy Dunking at MMadness copy If you haven’t read it yet, here’s the post with my impressions of yesterday’s Midnight Madness event — focusing mostly on the 10-minute team scrimmage.

Wanted to share some video I took before and during the event. I had a great time, and wanted to give anyone who wasn’t there a little taste of what went down, and give even those of you who were there a little look behind-the-scenes.

Here are a few videos (mostly dunks) of the team warming up while they waited for the UW/UCLA volleyball game to end:

Watch the background of this video for a nice slam by Abdul Gaddy.

A series of dunks and dunk attempts.

A little shooting contest between Matthew Bryan-Amaning and Scott Suggs.

More pre-event warmups.

A couple of nice dunks by MBA.

And, here’s a windmill dunk by Tyreese Breshers, who didn’t participate in the Slam Dunk contest.

Slam Dunk Contest:

Here’s one long clip from the Dunk Contest.

Thanks for coming!

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MMadness on ESPNIn the fan’s first look at this season’s UW Husky Basketball Team, the PurpleDawgs defeated the GoldDawgs, 35-20, at Bank of America Arena on Friday night.

The Basics:

The PurpleDawgs team consisted of Abdul Gaddy, Quincy Pondexter, Darnell Gant, Tyreese Breshers, Elston Turner, and C.J. Wilcox.

The GoldDawgs Team consisted of Scott Suggs, Venoy Overton, Isaiah Thomas, Matthew Bryan-Amaning, and Clarence Trent.

Hec Ed was crowded, but not full. Our women’s volleyball team is very, very talented. Anytime you have the opportunity to see the 3rd-ranked team in any sport, it’s worth the time.

The scrimmage was only 10 minutes long, played with a running clock that only stopped for free throws.

Here’s an (unofficial) box score I put together based on my notes, and consulting a couple of other stories, all which seem to disagree on the scoring:

MMadness Boxscore copy

Impressions and Extras:

Poised Purple and Go-go-Gold: Not sure how the teams were chosen, but there was a clear contrast in styles between the PurpleDawgs poised, structured attack, and the run-and-gun effort by the GoldDawgs. The more controlled team won, but the lopsided-ness was due mostly to the best guy on the court playing for the PurpleDawgs.

Elston Turner: Sure, it was only a scrimmage, but Elston Turner looks good. Real good. Turner, Gaddy and Pondexter kept the ball moving at midseason form, finding the open man and taking advantage of Elston’s hot shooting (he went either 5-6 or 5-7 from the field, with three three-pointers). Based on the small hints Coach Romar gave during his Media Day press conference, I have to believe Elston Turner may contend for a starting role on this team (likely with two smaller guards, Quincy Pondexter, and one traditional big man).

The Venoy/Gaddy Matchup: This was the marquee one-on-one battle of the evening, and, if only for the final score, the slight edge goes to Abdul Gaddy tonight. Venoy had one nice steal which started a fast break, ending with a redonkulous dunk by Clarence Trent. Otherwise, though, Abdul controlled the tempo and was able to run the offense despite Venoy’s pesky D.

Gaddy had one jaw-dropping, thread-the-needle pass out of traffic from right under the basket to a wide-open Quincy Pondexter.

Clarence Trent: Trent is very active, but doesn’t look as big as I’d expected. Maybe it’s seeing him next to Breshers, Gant and MBA that’s throwing me off. Time will tell, but his frame, and his game, are reading more to me like a small forward’s than a big man’s.

Scott Suggs: I’m hoping we’ll get early evidence that Scott Suggs is going to be more aggressive and take control of whatever minutes he’s given on the court. It didn’t happen tonight, but hopefully tomorrow when real practices begin, a terrific sophomore year will start to take shape for Suggs.

Justin Holiday: Justin didn’t compete in the scrimmage, the dunk contest, or the three-point shootout, as he’s still recovering from hernia surgery. However, I did see him warming up in the gym before the event, and he’s moving pretty well.

Overheard after Tyreese Breshers missed two free throws: “Maybe he’s taking those Jon Brockman comparisons too far.”

The Dunk Contest: Isaiah took the slam dunk event, despite some tough competition from MBA and Venoy. According to Assistant Coach, Raphael Chillious, this was the first time he’d ever seen Clarence Trent lose a dunk contest.

The Three-Point Shootout: C.J. Wilcox defeated Elston Turner, but each was paired with a UW student as a teammate. I watched C.J. shoot for a bit in the gym beforehand, and his form is just so consistent. It’ll be interesting to see whether he can create his own shot this season though, or whether he’ll need some seasoning before he can show off his stellar form consistently in games.

ESPN2′s coverage: ESPN2 did a couple of minutes on the program as part of their 30-minute Midnight Madness show. They highlighted Coach Romar, (calling him a “rising star”) and the Huskies perimeter players. ESPNU isn’t available in my area, so I have no idea how much of the two-hour show was devoted to the Dawgs.

Coach Chillious on what ESPN choosing UW for its Midnight Madness program means to the team: “I think what it does is validate the successful season we had last year. And, hopefully, it gives us momentum moving forward. We know that’s not what’s going to make us a good team. And, y’know, the rest of the nation doesn’t get to see the teams in the Pacific Northwest that often, so this is just a jumpstart.”

Terrence Jones and Tony Wroten: Both stud recruits were there. Jones was on his official visit and sat on the Husky bench. He didn’t look too enthused, but I’m not going to read much into the facial expressions of a 17-year-old kid.

Real Practice Starts Saturday at 1 PM: With 31 days until the regular season opener at home against Wright State, the Huskies get back to full practices tomorrow afternoon.

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press pass copyI’m going to post my player interviews from Media Day gradually over the next few days. Since you can get the major soundbites elsewhere (like Percy Allen’s nice roundup of the event), I’d rather share my one-on-one interviews in their entirety, one at a time, instead of pushing to give you just the highlights this morning.

I’m trying to make sure that Montlake Madness always gives you the fan’s perspective on Husky hoops, even when we’re invited to events like Media Day. So, I wanted to write about the event in a way that would hopefully give you a sense of what it was like to be there. As I said, we’ll get to everything I heard soon. This is what I experienced (and what I gathered about the team from being there).

The Scene: Media Day took place at The Founder’s Club in Hec Ed. I’d estimate that, between print, TV, internet, and radio, there were about 25 members of the media on hand. Here’s what the scene looked like as I walked in:

Room shot 1

It’s always strange seeing individuals in person whose faces or voices you know, like Art Thiel, Percy Allen, Don Ruiz, and Softy Mahler. I knew very few of the people there and kind of just hung out by myself until the event started. Here’s a shot I took just before things got going — you can see Coach and Softy shooting the breeze:

Romar with Softy

Everyone associated with the university wears UW gear to media day – players, coaches, athletic department guys. All of them.

Lorenzo Romar’s 30-minute press conference: Media Day started with a 30-minute Q&A between the press and Coach Romar. Up close, you realize just how unflappable Coach is. We all know that he’s a smooth, charismatic guy, but sitting five feet away from him, you can really get a sense of how that translates so easily into: “Yes, I’d like my kid to play for that guy.”

Coach didn’t drop anything close to a bombshell, but did talk a bit about the rotation (saying he could maybe see 10 men getting playing time, but likely only nine), filling the leadership void (“Quincy’s doing a heck of a job as the leader of this basketball team.”), and the change on the coaching staff (he called Coach Chillious “special”).

I threw a few questions out myself during the press conference, asking what he would consider a “successful season.” Coach didn’t even pretend he was going to give me specifics, telling me that I was going to be unhappy with his answer, then going on to say, basically, that he’d consider the year successful if everyone came out to play hard every day, regardless of the results.

Here’s Coach during the press conference:

Romar during PC

And here’s what Coach sees when he’s up there (minus some of the media members, who hadn’t taken their seats yet when I took the picture):

Romar's View

Tyreese Breshers: Coach also spoke glowingly about Tyreese Breshers. In fact, everyone seems to love Tyreese Breshers. LoRo said “Tyreese Breshers is someone who can be just as physical, if not more physical than Jon Brockman.”

Tyreese is also the guy whose name came up most often when talking to other guys on the team. For instance, Matthew Bryan-Amaning said Tyreese was definitely the toughest matchup for him in practice because of his strength.

Today confirmed for me that there’s definitely a buzz developing around Breshers. Maybe it’s because he projects, stylistically, as the player who could be most similar to Jon Brockman. But, people are raving about his power and how quick he is for a big man. Apparently, he isn’t 100% healthy yet, but he is ready to play in games, and I can’t imagine that he won’t be seeing major minutes at some point this season.

Abdul Gaddy: I met Abdul for the first time today. The kid does not seem like he’s 17 years-old. All of the guys on the team are nice guys, but Abdul reads more like a nice man. He comes across as THE guy you want leading your team on the floor in big games. You’ll see when I run our interview in a couple of days how thoroughly Gaddy thinks through the game of basketball, and how well he expresses those thoughts.

If you’ve ever heard Chris Paul, Steve Nash or Jason Kidd interviewed, there’s just a confidence in the demeanor of great point guards, even off the court. A way of carrying themselves. Gaddy’s got it.

I haven’t written a lot about Gaddy so far, because I want to see him to prove himself at this level first, but if someone’s going to lead us to the promised land, it just might well be Abdul Gaddy.

Quincy Pondexter: Speaking of leadership, and the void left by Jon Brockman, there’s no doubt that this is now Quincy Pondexter’s team. While Isaiah kept everyone laughing and had a big circle around him for much of the event, Quincy was the star of the show.

From a friendly familiarity with members of the media to his willingness to make time for even silly questions, Quincy is clearly the veteran on the team. Not sure how things are when the media isn’t around, but Quincy’s describing himself to me as “pretty much like another member of the coaching staff,” seemed accurate based on who he mingled with and how he carried himself at Media Day.

Team chemistry: This is clearly a team that likes each other. They record hip-hop songs together. They laughed and hung out with each other when not engaged in interviews yesterday. One player referred to the team as a “brotherhood.” I don’t know how different this is from other top programs, but I would guess that whenever we lose, it’s not going to be because of any locker room problems this season. My impression is that this is a very happy, upbeat, and confident squad.

More from Media Day over the course of the next week. And, plenty of other big stuff coming up, including Bobby Jones’ reaction to some of the criticism of his blog post comparing NCAA basketball to modern-day slavery, and plenty more.

As always, thanks for coming!

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dawg pack 1013UW opens the doors to its first men’s basketball practice this Friday night, allowing fans their first glimpse at the 2009/2010 hoops team. The event, which begins around 7:15, will include a dunk contest and a team scrimmage. Here are five reasons you need to be there:

1. Because we can be better than Bluegrass. (Or, maybe, just as good.) ESPNU will be there covering the event as part of a four-hour Midnight Madness special. Among the other schools featured will be North Carolina, Kansas and Kentucky. Wildcat fans, who slept in tents to make sure they weren’t shut out of Midnight Madness, had to buy their tickets and sold out Rupp Arena in 45 minutes. If we want to be thought of in the same breath as the top teams in the college basketball world, we shouldn’t have any empty seats glaring back at the ESPN cameras.

2. You say “Terrence,” I say “Jones.” You say “Tony,” I say “Wroten.” In attendance Friday night will be prized Husky recruit Terrence Jones. We’re one of six schools in the running for the top-25 prospect who will be fresh off a visit to Oklahoma, and heading to Kentucky for their (sold-out) Blue/White game later this month. Showing Terrence a good time probably won’t clinch it for the Dawgs, but this is our opportunity to make our case that he doesn’t have to go across the country to find the best fans in college basketball.

Tony Wroten is also scheduled to be in attendance, and, while he’s seen first hand what a Husky crowd can do, let’s reinforce the mantra that Tone should stay home.

3. It’s non-fan friendly too. Hopefully, if you’re in a relationship, it’s a solid one. You have trust, mutual admiration and respect, and both have a healthy love for Husky athletics. But, let’s just say that last piece is missing, or lacking a little bit. Maybe your wife, husband, boyfriend or girlfriend just isn’t big into sports, or (gasp) has a childhood allegiance to a faraway team, and it’s hard to get them to commit a couple of hours to watching a game.

Midnight Madness is the perfect event to start chipping away at that frosty veneer. There will be a dunk contest which includes this guy, and honestly, who doesn’t love a slam dunk contest? And there will be “special non-basketball performances by players and coaches,” the thought of which kind of horrifies me, but could be the perfect way for your loved one to make that personal connection to Husky basketball necessary for a season (or lifetime) of mutual hoops-viewing bliss.

4. Bring the kiddies. Similarly to #3 above, you’re trying to build a relationship with your children that will perservere through a lifetime of conflict opportunities. No matter what happens later, at least you can say you gave them Husky basketball. Plus, if you get your kid interested now, you’ve got more than a month to teach them the basic rules of the game before the season tips off. Perfect timing.

5a. It all starts NOW. Of course, there’s no way to know how this season goes. The Dawgs will compete for the Pac-10 title again, and should wind up playing in the NCAA Tournament for a second straight year. They’ve got the horses to make some noise. Real noise. Don’t you want to say you were there from day one?

5b. In all starts NOW (Abdul Gaddy edition). Maybe Abdul Gaddy is just going to be a decent, pass first point guard, who will play a few ho-hum seasons at UW and then go on to play professionally in the NBA or elsewhere. Or, maybe, he’s going to be so much more awesome than that.

I’m betting on “so much more awesome than that.” And, I’m psyched to get my first look on Friday night. See you there, Dawg fans!

Thanks for coming!

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