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MENS BASKETBALL
Wiggins focuses on improving, not fame
Andrew Wiggins hears people
talking about him. He chooses not
to listen.
No matter how bright the lights
get, the demeanor of Kansas star
freshman remains the same.
I know he had a GQ photo
shoot last week, Rob Fulford,
Wiggins high school coach said. I
can promise you unless somebody
hands him the magazine, hell nev-
er see it. He just wants to play bas-
ketball.
Some might be at newsstands
waiting for the issue to stock the
shelves, while others tweet out
links. Not this kid.
Because Andrew Wiggins knows
the truth: he still needs to get bet-
ter.
I need to work on of-the-ball
defending, Wiggins said during
Kansas media day before an elon-
gated pause. Nothing is perfect.
Its not that Wiggins cant be the
best player, or that he hasnt shown
he may already be. Te truth about
Wiggins is that he hasnt been able
to do it for a complete game. In-
stead, the grand hype is matched
in spurts. At various points hell
show of his mixtape-worthy tal-
ent. And at others hell get by on
his athletic ability.
Te truth about Andrew Wiggins
is that he morphs into a phenom
for short sprints. Fortunately for
the Jayhawks, Bill Self coaches
marathons.
Everyone would like for him to
have that switch on all the time,
Fulford said. Tats one of the
things that we worked on with him
here, but thats why Self makes the
big bucks. It will come. Its going to
take some time.
Self acknowledged Wiggins tal-
ent, saying he could be the best
scorer, or the best rebounder, the
best ball handler, the best team-
mate, he just hasnt been able to
put it all together.
In West Virginia, Grant Traylor
got an up close look at Wiggins
while covering Huntington Prep
for the Herald-Dispatch. During
his senior season, Wiggins aver-
aged 23.4 points, 11.2 rebounds
and 2.6 blocks. Traylor witnessed
the bursts as
well as the rest
of the game.
Hes got to get
it into his mind-
set that hes go-
ing to dominate
for a full 40
minutes, Tray-
lor said while
acknowledging
the most im-
portant aspect.
Its not an efort
issue.
Nope. Wiggins can dominate
when he chooses, and as Traylor
says, once the switch is fipped its
game over. Te issue is more men-
tal than anything else.
Fulford calls
it exposing the
Alpha Dog, Self
says He sees it
in fashes, and
Traylor notes
when he maxes
out its a mis-
match for every-
body.
But Wiggins
said it best.
I think its
something I
have to work on a lot this year.
Te excitement that Wiggins cre-
ates comes from his abilities, not
his potential. Many have seen that
talent exposed. Few have seen it
stretched out. Learning the men-
tality to dominate an entire game
is the biggest adjustment Wiggins
will have to make at the college
level.
Hell need to get bigger and
stronger as he prepares for a like-
ly NBA career, but there are more
pressing matters at the moment.
He has a ton of potential but
hes just a freshman, hes going to
be fnding his way just like every-
body else, Self said. He can do a
lot of things but if he doesnt do it
every possession, he wont do any
of them.
Tis is not to say that only when
Wiggins is playing at his best does
he afect the game. He prides him-
self on being as good of a team-
mate as a player. With his talent,
coasting is not equivalent to oth-
er players doing the same.
And there are those who mis-
judge Wiggins for just that.
Andrew is so smooth that I think
we take that as him not playing
hard or playing with as much ef-
fort as possible, Huntington Prep
coach Rob Fulford said. One thing
I know about Andrew is when the
lights are on, he brings it.
Edited by Hannah Barling
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located above Antique Mall
Te founding father of 20th-cen-
tury bronze casting, Elden Tef,
will have his work displayed at the
Lawrence Arts Center starting Oct.
25.
Te exhibit is a theme show titled
Gossamer: Before and Afer the
Sculpture Moses, and is the frst
time Tefs work will be displayed
at the Arts Center.
At 93 years old, Tef has created
his own foundry and studio where
he still works. He built foundries
in Central and South America and
instigated foundries in Tailand
and the Philippines. Tef returned
sculpture founding to China and
founded the International Sculp-
ture Center and its conferences. He
taught at the University for 40 years,
and was awarded the frst Gover-
nors Arts Life Time Achievement
Award in Art Education in 1997,
according to documents by Tef
Terra Studios.
When Tef was in school, bronze
was practically outlawed as a fne
arts media by the carve direct
school, Eldens son Kim Tef said.
Sculptors had to send plaster mod-
els of to foundries in Europe where
they would be casted. Te problem
was, once the model was placed
out of the sculptors hands and into
someone elses, the carve direct
school didnt see it as fne art.
Tef was frustrated by this tech-
nical boundary and afer learning
techniques of the lost wax process,
created his own foundry. He taught
sculptors how to do the process
themselves. Lost wax techniques
were practiced in a Mexican found-
ry in Mexico City, where he visited
with his mentor, Bernard Poco
Frazierthe sculptor of the Memo-
rial Campanile bronze panel doors
on campus.
Trough the progression of his
work, Tef found inspiration from
Frazier.
Most people dont realize that the
term solid bronze does not actu-
ally mean the bronze is physically
solid, Kim Tef said. Tis is a type
of revelation for people. When
bronze is cooled it shrinks, which
makes it difcult to cast. A physi-
cally solid bronze would be far too
heavy.
Te term gossamer means goss-
like, or see-though. Tefs mission
has been to open up the interior
of a sculpture and create negative
volume as a form of art. Negative
volume lets viewers see how bronze
is truly hollow.
Pieces in Gossamer: Before and
Afer the Sculpture Moses will dis-
play an exterior form, interior form
and interior-interior form.
Most recently Ive been doing
some tests that puts a little form in-
side of the form, Tef said.
Te fgure is casted and heat-
mold material called investment
is bound plaster. A spatula can be
used to create a core form, direct
wax model is formed over that and
a complete mold is created and
molded. So, its a casting around a
casting.
Tef said he felt delighted when
the frst casting around a casting
came together in his sculpture,
Nymph, which is one of the most
recent editions to the gossamer se-
ries.
Tef said he believes in con-
cepts of contemporary art, which
demonstrate an honesty of materi-
als and an honesty to process. An
honesty to material is when a ma-
terial looks like its original form.
Honesty of process resembles how
the piece was madefor example,
Moses (in front of Smith Hall) has
modeling tool marks that were
used to defne the waxs form.
Te gossamer series will feature
18 diferent sculptures. Two sep-
arate photos will resemble Moses
(statue outside of Smith Hall) and
the Fourth #2 (a sculpture at Tefs
residence), both of which are too
large to relocate for the show. But,
the rest of the sculptures will be in
original form, or maquette form
small-scale model.
Tefs goal is for the show to turn
into a traveling exhibit where all of
the pieces are kept together.
Te exhibit Gossamer: Before
and Afer the Sculpture Moses will
begin Oct. 25 at Final Fridays at 5
p.m. It will continue to be shown
in the front gallery of the Lawrence
Arts Center for a month.
Edited by Hannah Barling
Lawrence Arts Center to feature local sculptors work
ART
GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN
Sculptor Elden Tefft is pictured in his Lawrence studio. Tefft, who taught at the University for 40 years, will have a series of 18
sculptures on display in the front gallery of the Lawrence Art Center for a month, beginning Oct. 25.
ASHLEY BOOKER
abooker@kansan.com
Volume 126 Issue 25 kansan.com Thursday, October 3, 2013
S
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
sports
By Kory Carpenter
kcarpenter@kansan.com
COMMENTARY
Pressure on
program builds
A
Bill Self-coached
team with talented
players is always
going to be good (and even-
tually, usually great). Te last
decade has shown us that. But
the last three seasons have
shown us that Self s magic
cant overcome talent dispari-
ties, at least when comparing
his Jayhawks to the best of the
best, whether it be Kentucky
two years ago or Louisville
last season.
And like the last few sea-
sons, the Jayhawks were going
to enter this season without
national title expectations.
Self was going to work his
magic, win 30 or so games,
win the Big 12 Tournament,
and earn a high seed in the
NCAA Tournament. Tats
just what he does.
Tat was before May 14,
however, when Andrew
Wiggins decided to take his
talents
to Allen
Fieldhouse.
Te No. 1
player in
the 2013
recruiting
class and
one of the
best recruits of the last decade
transformed a young, talent-
ed, needs-time-to-grow team
into real contenders.
Finally.
With players like sophomore
forward Perry Ellis and su-
per-freshmen Wayne Selden
and Joel Embiid, the Jayhawks
might have been better than
the past three seasons teams
anyway. But Wiggins arrival
puts real pressure on a pro-
gram and fanbase that should
always haveand welcome
real pressure. Te last three
teams didnt face that kind
of pressure, at least not from
the national media or realistic
fans. Te last two teams to be
scrutinized all season, 2008
and 2010, were defned by
their successes and failures in
March, and this team will be
no diferent.
Bill Self will never have a
more highly-touted recruit
than Wiggins, who will be
in the NBA by next summer.
Self may never have more
raw talent on a team the rest
of his career. And for a coach
who has convinced me he
could win the Big 12 with fve
students picked of Jayhawk
Boulevard between classes,
this teamlike 2008 and
2010will be remembered
by everyone for its success or
failure in March.
Embrace the pressure. Who
wants to root for an under-
dog, anyway?
Edited by Madison Schultz
Wiggins
GAMEDAY PREVIEW
WOMENS MEDIA DAY
PAGE
8-9
PAGE
5
MICHAEL STRICKLAND/KANSAN
GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN
I
ts that time of year again, the most
wonderful time for Jayhawks around
the world: this Friday is Late Night in
the Phog. Te beginning of the basketball
season has fnally arrived and, like other
years, there are plenty of expectations for
the upcoming season. Although this always
seems to be the case, this year is special,
and there is a diferent level of expectation.
Two years ago, we had Tomas Robinson
and Tyshawn Taylor leading the Hawks,
taking us to become runner-ups in the Na-
tional Championships. Last year was Ben
McLemore and Jef Withey guiding Kansas
up to the Sweet Sixteen. Tis year, no one
knows what the result will be, but its going
to be one heck of a year.
Bill Self was able to recruit one of the
best classes in all of the country. He stole
the number one pick, Andrew Wiggins,
away from both the Kentucky Wildcats
and Florida State Seminoles. Alongside
Wiggins, he also recruited Wayne Selden,
Conner Frankamp, Brannen Greene and
Joel Embiid, who were all part of the Top
50 recruits in the country. Frank Mason
was added to be a key player of the bench.
Tis freshman class for the Jayhawks is
insanely good, and many sports writers are
picking Kansas to go all the way. Well done,
Bill Self.
Although the focus is primarily on the
mens basketball team, lets not forget about
the womens team. Two years ago, many
people believed that head coach Bonnie
Henricksons job was on the line. I was one
of those people as well, but she was able to
push the girls into the NCAA tournament.
What did they do with that opportunity?
Tey surpassed everyones expectations and
made it all the way into the Sweet Sixteen
before losing to the dominant Tennessee
Vols in a game that was close for most of
the time until the very end. Tat years
tournament run helped save Bonnies job.
Last year, the womens team had their
ups and downs throughout the season and
many were worried that they wouldnt
make it into the postseason. Luckily, they
did, and once again surpassed fan expecta-
tions. Tey made it all the way to the Sweet
Sixteen again, before being demolished
by the No. 1 seed, Notre Dame. Te Irish
had an unbelievably great team and the
Jayhawks knew how difcult it was facing
them. Tis year, the bar has been raised
even higher.
Will Bonnie be able to lead the team all
the way?
Belonging to the University of Kansas is
something every student should cherish.
Whether its for academics or athletics,
be proud of the crimson and blue. So, this
Friday, show your school pride at Late
Night in the Phog and watch our mens and
womens basketball teams show of their
skills and see how our history is a part of
the rich tradition that occurs at this great
school.
Edited by Sarah Kramer
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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013 PAGE 2B THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
!
?
FACT OF THE DAY
TRIVIA OF THE DAY
THE MORNING BREW
This week in athletics
Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday
Cross Country
Rim Rock Classic
TBA
Lawrence
Volleyball
Oklahoma
6:30 p.m.
Lawrence
Soccer
Iowa State
7 p.m.
Ames, Iowa
Late Night at the Phog
Doors open at 5:30 p.m.
Starts at 6:30 p.m.
Allen Fieldhouse
Womens Swimming
Intrasquad
3:30 p.m.
Lawrence
Soccer
Texas
1 p.m.
Lawrence
No Events Football
Texas Tech
11 a.m.
Lawrence
Volleyball
Baylor
TBA
Waco, Texas
Rowing
Head of Oklahoma
Day one
Oklahoma City, Okla.
Rowing
Head of Oklahoma
Final Results
Oklahoma City, Okla.
Q: What year did Bill Self appear as
Vanilla Ice at Late Night?
A: 2011. Ice, Ice, Baby
This is the 29th annual Late Night in
the Phog
Late Night nears amid high expectations
By Michael Portman
mportman@kansan.com
No Events
In the face,
Rob Riggle
at Late Night in 2011
QUOTE OF THE DAY
For 28 years Kansas fans have
gathered at Allen Fieldhouse for
Late Night In Te Phog in early
October to catch a frst glimpse at
the latest addition to the Jayhawk
history books. Year 29 will most
certainly rival all of those that came
before it.
From what I can tell this is prob-
ably the most anticipated start of
the season since Ive been here,
Kansas coach Bill Self said. Teres
as much hype this year as any.
Tat might have something or
all to do with a freshman class
that, on paper, can compete with
any in the nation. Highlighted
by number one overall recruit
Andrew Wiggins, the Jayhawks
welcome new members such as
Conner Frankamp, Joel Embiid,
Frank Mason, Brannen Greene and
Wayne Seldon as well as transfers
Tarik Black and Hunter Mickelson.
Weve had other good players,
Self said. But theres still the un-
known of having a good recruiting
class and that has everybody pretty
excited.
Or maybe its the dance moves
the players will bust out on James
Naismith Court on Friday night at
6:30 p.m. More likely, its the team
scrimmages and skits capped of
with a speech to the crowd from
Self.
Te event is free to the public and
seating is frst come, frst serve.
Former Kansas guard Greg Gurley
will help host the television broad-
cast, which can be seen on ESPN3.
In the past Late Night has ofered
a fun look at the new teams for both
the mens and womens squads and
has even brought celebrity cameos
with the likes of comedian Rob
Riggle helping out the Jayhawks in
previous years.
With all the hype surrounding
this season, the University might
have to pull out something special
to match the intensity of the mens
dunk competition. Ten again, that
might just be enough.
Edited by Jessica Mitchell
Hype for season highest in Self era
BLAKE SCHUSTER
bschuster@kansan.com
BASKETBALL
ASHLEIGH LEE/KANSAN
Coach Bill Self talks to the fans during last years Late Night in the Phog on Oct.
12 in Allen Fieldhouse. Late Night marks the frst practice of basketball season.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 3B
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5TH, 2013 AT 11:00 AM
KU VS. TEXAS TECH
DURING HOMECOING!
#BETHETRADITION
DONT HAVE A SPORTS COMBO?
You can still purchase a combo for $150 and get into all
remaining football games and mens basketball games.
Visit the Allen Fieldhouse Ticket Office M-F 9:00-5:00.
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(800) 34-HAWKS
/KUAthletics @KUAthletics
ROWING
Jayhawks begin season in Oklahoma
NICK CHADBOURNE
nchadbourne@kansan.com
GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN
Coach Rob Catloth talking to his rowers at a morning practice. The Jayhawks frst race of the season, the Head of the Oklahoma, will take place this weekend on Oct. 5-6.
SWIMMING
Kansas opens season
with intrasquad meet
With fve weeks of practice and
training under their belt, the Jay-
hawks rowing season starts this
weekend. Te Kansas rowing teams
frst race of the season, the Head
of the Oklahoma, is this weekend
from Oct. 5-6. Te team registered
boats in eleven races, including fve
womens open-class events. As of
Oct. 2, the events and number of
boats Kansas will be racing with is
as follows:
Womens Collegiate 1x (six boats)
Womens Collegiate 8+ (four
boats)
Womens Collegiate Novice/Frosh
4+ (one boat)
Womens Open 2x (four boats)
Womens Collegiate 4+ (four
boats)
Womens Collegiate 8+ 500m
Grand Final (two boats)
Womens Open 2x 500m Grand Fi-
nal (two boats)
Womens Collegiate 4+ 500m
Grand Final (two boats)
Womens Open 2- (four boats)
Womens Open 4+ (four boats)
Womens Open 4x (three boats)
Te Kansas rowing team will face
familiar Big 12 foes K-State, Texas,
and Oklahoma along with compe-
tition from fellow Conference USA
schools (Kansas belongs to both
the Big 12 and Conference USA
for rowing). Washington Univer-
sity, Winnipeg Rowing Club and
the University of Massachusetts are
some of the long-distance travelers
that Kansas will race against. In to-
tal, 47 clubs and 776 rowers will be
on the Oklahoma River this week-
end.
Coach Rob Catloth says while fall
races tend to be focused on im-
provement rather than winning, he
said hes seen a lot of improvement
since the teams frst practice in late
August.
Weve seen good improvement
on ftness levels and I think their
rowing and understanding how to
move the boat is improving, Cat-
loth said.
Last year at the Head of the Okla-
homa, the team had mixed success
but remained competitive in its
races. Kansas had three fnishers in
the top 10 for womens collegiate 1x
and two of the top fve for womens
open 4+. Te team was less than
a second of the winning time in
womens collegiate 4+ 500m petite
fnal, securing second place in the
race.
Te Jayhawks are also registered
to participate in one of the four
Row for the Cure featured races
in the womens collegiate 4+. Kan-
sas will race with four boats in the
race.
Te Row for the Cure foundations
goal is to provide rowers a way to
honor family or friends who have
been diagnosed with breast cancer.
Te organization also acts as a sup-
port network for rowers who have
been diagnosed with breast cancer.
Ofcial boat line-ups will be re-
leased the day of the event. For live
results on race day, visit www.head-
ofheoklahoma.org.
Edited by Jessica Mitchell
While Kansas Crimson and Blue
squads are the only teams compet-
ing at this afernoons intrasquad
meet, today marks the beginning
of the swim and dive teams sea-
son.
It is usual for the team to start its
season of with more conditioning
workouts because of the long du-
ration of the season, but this years
preseason workouts have includ-
ed more variation than previous
years.
We are for-
tunate that our
championship
season isnt un-
til February, so
we have a long
build-up peri-
od, said Clark
Campbell, head
coach of the
womens swim-
ming and div-
ing team.
On Tuesday and Tursdays,
coach Campbell likes to get the
girls out of the water with Cross-
Fit-style workouts inside Memori-
al Stadium.
Weve been doing a lot of tech-
nique and lower-intensity swim-
ming to get them ready. But weve
been working hard in the stadi-
um, Campbell said. We do a
stadium circuit on Tuesdays and
Tursdays and its defnitely get-
ting some fsh out of the water.
Weve also been hitting the weight
room and doing some running
and things like that.
Tis meet will start the swim
careers of the 11 freshmen on
this years team, including Yulduz
Kuchkarova, who swam for Uz-
bekistan in the 2012 Olympics.
Alongside the freshmen, the
team returns six sophomores, two
juniors and seven seniors. Te
team includes fve divers and 21
swimmers, most of whom special-
ize in only one or two of the four
strokes.
Tis is the 12th season Campbell
has coached at Kansas. Te shared
goal of coach Campbell and his
team this season is to be one of the
top two teams in the Big 12 Con-
ference.
Our teams goals are to place top
two in the Big 12 and to have a
winning dual meet record, senior
Alison Moft said.
Seniors Ali-
son Lusk and
Morgan Sharp
both return
this season and
are current re-
cord holders
for the 200-yard
br e as t s t r oke
and the 500-
yard freestyle,
respectively.
One of our main team goals
this year is we are trying to get
second at conference this year,
Lusk said. We are going in with
a diferent outlook and a diferent
mindset.
Te team placed fourth at the Big
12 Championships last year, with
540.5 points, and had an overall
record of 6-4 in dual meets last
season.
Te meet starts at 3:30 pm at
Robinson Natatorium. Te Jay-
hawks go on the road next on
October 12 to compete against Air
Force. Te teams next home meet
is November 11 where they will
compete against Nebraska-Oma-
ha and North Dakota.
Edited by Sarah Kramer
MIRANDA DAVIS
mdavis@kansan.com
Its going to be 12
seconds or less coming up
to the line and making a
decision.
CASSIUS SENDISH
Junior safety
Kansas defense prepares
for Texas Techs offense
FOOTBALL
EMILY WITTLER/KANSAN
Junior linebacker Ben Heeney, left, and senior linebacker Darius Willis chase down Louisiana Tech running back Kenneth Dixon in the Sept. 21 victory against the Bulldogs.
MICHAEL STRICKLAND/KANSAN
Kansas football players celebrate with fans in Memorial Stadium after a 13-10 victory against Lousiana Tech on Sept. 21.
THURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 6B
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STARTING LINEUP
OFFENSE
Usually, a potent offense and a freshman walk-on quarterback dont
mix but thats exactly what Kliff Kingsbury has done. Texas Tech starts
Baker Mayfeld, but its not like he is that much under the radar. Hes
one of the many quarterbacks that hail from Lake Travis High School in
Austin, Texas (Todd Reesing included). Mayfeld hasnt had any trouble
moving the ball coupled with a pair of athletic receivers in Eric Ward,
Jace Amaro and Bradley Marquez, which have amounted for third in the
country in passing yards with 408.5 yards per game. Like most Texas
Tech teams in the past, they love to sling the ball around and will be a
stiff test for the Jayhawks secondary.
SPECIAL TEAMS
Texas Tech kicker Ryan Bustin so far has connected on 9 of his 10
kicks and Techs punter is current 31st in the country with a 44.7-
yard average.
PLAYER TO WATCH
With the Kansas secondary showing off their ballhawk skills each week,
Saturday provides another tough matchup and it likely will be assigned
to nickelback Victor Simmons, and thats tight end Jace Amaro. One of
the top tight ends in his class, Amaro looks like a tight end, but runs
like a wide receiver. While Simmons looks to get the initial matchup
against him, look for Dave Campo to mix it up and try to throw off the
robust receiver off guard with different matchups.
AT A GLANCE
Texas Tech is 13-1 all-time in Kansas and with a new head coach
this year they look to stack on another victory. The only loss came
when Kingsbury was the quarterback in 2001. COACHING
Kingsbury, who Weis coached for one year with the New England
Patriots, is well-connected with Weis. After serving as the offensive-co-
ordinator for Texas A&M for one year, Klingsbury has brought back the
high-powered offenses in Lubbock. Saturday, however, is his frst Big
12 road test of his head-coaching career. Kingsbury, who is just 34
years-old, and has brought his fery attitude to the team as a whole.
POSITION NAME NO. YEAR
QB Baker Mayfeld 6 Fr.
HB Kenny Williams 34 Jr.
WR Jace Amaro 22 Jr.
WR Jakeem Grant 11 So.
WR Bradley Marquez 4 Jr.
WR Eric Ward 18 Sr.
LT LeRaven Clark 62 So.
LG Alfredo Morales 56 So.
C Jared Kaster 75 So.
RG Beau Carpenter 72 Jr.
RT Rashad Fortenberry 71 Sr.
BY THE NUMBERS
1
408.5
215
Passing yards per game for Texas Tech
Losses that Tech has against Kansas
Pass attempts for Texas Tech this season
Edited by Jessica Mitchell
CONNOR OBERKROM
coberkrom@kansan.com
DE Kerry Hyder 91 Sr.
N Dennell Wesley 96 Sr.
T Branden Jackson 9 So.
LB Pete Robertson 10 So.
LB Will Smith 7 Sr.
LB Sam Eguavoen 13 Jr.
LB Terrance Bullitt 1 Sr.
DB Bruce Jones 24 Sr.
FS Tre Porter 5 Sr.
SS J.J. Gaines 3 So.
DB Olaoluwa Falemi 29 Sr.
POSITION NAME NO. YEAR
The Red Raiders are no do-nothings either. Currently 10th in the
country in points allowed, returning eight starters on defense has been
a big part of that. Their big showing came against TCU yielding only 10
points and will be far the biggest test Kansas has encountered.
DEFENSE
MOMENTUM
Texas Tech has gone from picked in the middle of the pack in the
Big 12 to suddenly a Big 12 contender, currently ranked 20th in the
country and is coming off a breezy 33-7 win over Texas State.
BABY JAY WILL WEEP IF
Texas Tech puts up more than 40 points. The Texas Tech offense while
highly formidable still has some kinks to work out with their quar-
terback. A walk-on freshman quarterback shouldnt be able to put
up that many points on the road against what we know as a capable
secondary, so far.
QUESTION MARKS
Can the secondary continue its path in becoming a threatening
defense? Albeit a new secondary, they have performed their tasks
dutifully thus far and Saturday will either be an indictment or another
validation that this group can be an adequate force.
ASHLEIGH LEE/KANSAN
Junior quarterback Jake Heaps throws a pass during the Sept. 14 game against
Rice. The Jayhawks lost 23-14.
MICHAEL STRICKLAND/KANSAN
Kansas Jayhawks kicker Matthew Wyman (28) kicks a 53-yard feld goal with 2 seconds remaining on the clock to win 13-10 against LA Tech on Sept. 21.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 7B
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KANSAS
KANSAS
2813
PREDICTION
TEXAS TECH KANSAS
CHRIS HYBL
chybl@kansan.com
STARTING LINEUP
OFFENSE
Kansas has the tools, but has yet to fnd the instruction manual.
Despite a diverse running game, a legitimate quarterback and switches
at the wide the receiver position, the offense has paid for a weekly
ticket on the struggle bus. Going against an up-tempo and high-scor-
ing Texas Tech offense, Kansas will have to put up 20 points at the very
least if they want to have a chance in this one.
SPECIAL TEAMS
Two legs make the special teams unit arguable Kansas best unit.
Punter Trevor Pardula has well exceeded expectations, dropping
bombs on 4th down, including a 78-yarder against Louisiana Tech
two weeks ago. Topped off by a kicker Matthew Wymans 52-yard
game winning feld goal in the same game, special teams is a unit
that has proved itself week after week. On paper, Texas Tech has
a considerable advantage in Saturdays game, so setting up the
offense and defense with good feld position is a crucial objective.
PLAYER TO WATCH
Cassius Sendish. Sendish has been an incredibly active and effective
piece in the Kansas secondary so far. Sendish being able to maintain
that effectiveness against the third best passing offense in the nation
will be a factor that ultimately decides the success of the defensive
unit on Saturday.
AT A GLANCE
Texas Tech is a team turning heads and climbing up the national
polls. Picked to fnish seventh in the Big 12 preseason poll, Texas
Tech is proving a lot of people wrong, now ranked No. 20 in the nation
at 4-0. Its easy to think that that kind of team would overlook the
lesser-on-paper opponents. Kansas defnitely fts the bill there.
Against a productive but prone-to-turnover offense, Kansas does
have a shot at an upset. In that case, it would be because of the
defense and not the offense.
The pressure is on. A relatively untested secondary will be tested
against an offense that throws the ball almost 80 percent of the time.
Texas Tech will score, but it is a huge task to keep that scoring in a
range that Kansas offense can keep up with. And with the way things
have been going for Kansas, 18.33 points per game, thats a tall order
for the defense.
DEFENSE
MOMENTUM
Texas Tech has gone from picked in the middle of the pack in the
Big 12 to suddenly a Big 12 contender, currently ranked 20th in the
country and is coming off a breezy 33-7 win over Texas State.
BABY JAY WILL CHEER IF
The offense shows it can score points. Plain and simple. The offense
put Kansas fans through an extremely miserable frst three quarters
two weeks ago against Louisiana Tech and if that continues Satur-
day, seats will start to get a lot emptier.
POSITION NAME NO. YEAR
QB Jake Heaps Jr. 9
RB James Sims Sr. 29
F Tony Pierson Jr. 3
Z Tre Parmalee So. 11
X Rodriguez Coleman Jr. 1
TE Trent Smiley Jr. 85
LT Adam Sterling Sr. 77
LG Ngalu Fusimalohi Jr. 63
C Dylan Admire So. 66
RG Mike Smithburg Jr. 65
RT Zach Fondal Jr. 72
LE Kevin Young Sr. 90
N Keon Stowers Jr. 98
RE/T Keba Agostinho Jr. 96
BUCK Ben Goodman So. 93
MLB Ben Heeney Jr. 31
WLB Samson Faifli Jr. 51
NB Victor Simmons Jr. 27
FS Cassius Sendish Jr. 33
SS Isaiah Johnson So. 5
RC Dexter McDonald Jr. 12
LC JaCorey Shepherd Jr. 24
POSITION NAME NO. YEAR
QUESTION MARKS
Can the Kansas secondary keep the Jayhawks in striking distance?
If the Kansas secondary is the least bit unorganized in the opening
quarters, Tech will fnish the game before the halftime show. Kansas
needs to keep it close in the opening quarters and simply outlast the
Red Raiders. Thats the only way Kansas could pull this out. If its a
Kansas victory, its a come-from-behind second half win.
ASHLEIGH LEE/KANSAN
Freshman placekicker Matthew Wyman kicks the game-winning 52-yard feld
goal on Sept. 21 to beat Louisiana Tech. It was Kansas frst win against an FBS
opponent in 23 games.
COACHING
Keep an eye on the defensive gameplan. It will be interesting to see if
defensive coordinator Dave Campo will be calling an aggressive frst
couple quarters against Tech. Players will have to get each call from
Campo in less than 10 seconds when Tech is running the hurry-up
offense. Campo has taken criticism for playing defensive backs to
deep, but if Campo and crew can fgure out Tech early, the Jayhawks
will have a chance.
BY THE NUMBERS
13
54.3
5.1
The number of touches Tony Pierson had on the
ball last game.
Jake Heaps completion percentage this year.
Yards per carry averaged by James Sims.
Edited by Jessica Mitchell
Follow @KansanSports for updates
from Saturdays game
Te team is young, but the ex-
pectations are high for the Kansas
womens basketball.
With fve freshmen on the squad
and only two returning starters, the
team is looking for an identity while
also looking to live up to the expec-
tations that come along with back-
to-back Sweet Sixteen appearances.
Te expectation would be to
win, Bunny Williams, a junior for-
ward from Duncanville, Texas, said.
Personally, I want to do better than
what we did last year and in the past
two years. Just win and work hard.
Coach Bonnie Henrickson, now
in her 10th year,
said that it will be
a process to put all
the parts togeth-
er, and the teams
identity right now
is like Silly Putty.
Tis process in-
cludes fnding out
who the leaders on
the team will be
and what role the
freshmen will play.
Te team has not chosen captains
yet, but Natalie Knight, a junior
guard from Olathe, is expected to
fll one of those leadership roles.
Knight, who started the frst 19
games of the season last year, is re-
turning from an ACL tear in her
right knee that sidelined her for the
rest of the
Natalie does everything the right
way, Henrickson said. From a
lead-by-example standpoint, Na-
talie is spot on.
Knight was leading the country in
assist-to-turnover ratio at the time
of her injury last year. While she
is still not back to the level of play
she wants to be, Henrickson said
Knights mind is in a good place and
will return to pre-injury form soon.
Knight continues to rehab her knee,
but says she will be ready for the
frst game.
Junior forward Chelsea Gardner
is the other returning starter. Gard-
ner averaged 8.8 points and 6.9 re-
bounds a game last year. She is ex-
pected to take on a bigger role in the
post, and might become one of the
top post players in the league.
Other players who can infuence
and be leaders are senior guard
Cece Harper, junior guard Asia
Boyd and Williams. Henrickson
said she expects
the leadership to
be by committee
from the upper-
classmen on the
team.
Leadership
will be import-
ant in mento-
ring the teams
freshmen. Te
newcomers in-
clude twins Da-
kota and Dylan Gonzalez, guards
from Pocatello, Idaho. Te Gonza-
lez twins, who were both three-star
recruits, come to Kansas with many
high school accolades. Dylan was
a 2013 McDonalds All-American
nominee.
We want to come in and contin-
ue to go of of what theyve started
here, Dylan said.
Tey have a great foundation and
a great team. Everybody wants to
work hard and compete with each
other.
Dylan and Dakotas mom played
at Kansas and was an All-American
honorable mention during her time
on the team. Te twins had plenty
of Kansas gear at home and ofen
attended games at Allen Fieldhouse
growing up.
Te Jayhawks also added fresh-
man forward Jada Brown from Las
Vegas to the team.
Henrickson said Brown has speed
and quickness and has a knack for
pulling down ofensive rebounds.
We are not looking at the big pic-
ture right now and are just trying to
win every day,
Brown said. If we do that and put
the pieces together, well be fne.
Freshman guard Keyla Morgan
from Rancho Dominguez, Calif.,
can get to the rim, and has im-
pressed with her ability to shoot
pull-up jumpers. Henrickson said
freshman forward Caelynn Man-
ning-Allen has been the most im-
proved so far. She is strong and can
shoot and run
Te Jayhawks look to put the piec-
es together and continue its success.
For us to have had the success
these last two years, its been noth-
ing but a positive for us, Henrick-
son said. We continue to present it
as a positive from an expectations
standpoint.
Tat junior class has done nothing
but go to two Sweet Sixteens. Tats
all they know. Tats a really good
thing.
Edited by Jessica Mitchell
Afer losing its three leading scor-
ers from last season, Kansas will
lean on its returners to compete
against the top teams in the coun-
try and in the Big 12, which Coach
Bonnie Henrickson refers to as the
best league in America.
Forward Carolyn Davis and guard
Angel Goodrich, who both gradu-
ated last season, together averaged
nearly 30 points a game and were
forces on both ofense and defense.
Davis led the team averaging 15.8
points per game with Goodrich av-
eraging 14.1 points per game. Guard
Monica Engelman ranked third
on the team with 9.9 points a game.
Goodrich is Kansas all-time lead-
er in assists and was a fnalist for the
Lieberman award
that recognizes the
best point guards in
the country. She led
the Big 12 last year
with 3 steals per
game and ranked
second in assists.
She now plays in the
WNBA for the Tul-
sa Shock.
Davis ranked 8th
nationally in feld goal percentage
with 55.4 and set a Kansas record
with a 61.8 career feld goal per-
centage. She is one of four players in
the programs history to notch 1800
points and 700 rebounds.
Four players in particular will be
counted on to
lead the team
and fll the
void.
Junior for-
ward Chel-
sea Gardner
stepped into
the national
spotlight as
a freshman
in the 2012
NCAA Tournament afer replacing
Davis, who tore her ACL in Febru-
ary and was out for the season. She
led the team in rebounds during the
NCAA Tournament that year aver-
aging 11 per game.
With Davis back in action the
next season, Gardner averaged 8.8
points, 6.9 rebounds and 1.5 blocks
per game in 2012. While she will be
called upon to score and rebound
more, Gardner didnt place all of the
emphasis on improving statistics.
Ive worked on being more of a
leader and stepping up to the plate
and communicating, Gardner said.
Gardner led the team in rebounds
last season.
Helping Garner down low will
be 64 freshman forward Cae-
lynn Manning-Allen. While Man-
ning-Allen doesnt have the strong
post game Davis was known for, her
jump shot will give the Jayhawks a
better chance to spread the foor.
She shoots a 15-foot jump shot as
well as any 64 freshman Ive ever
had, Henrickson said.
Junior guard Natalie Knight, com-
ing of ACL surgery in which she
missed the second half of the sea-
son, returns as the focal point of the
team.
Capable of knocking down the
open three and playing lockdown
defense, Knight will also take on
more of a leadership role than in her
frst two years.
Ive worked on being more vocal,
and I know I cant be afraid to speak
up in certain situations, Knight
said.
While she plays at a diferent style
and pace than Goodrich, Knight is
the best on the team at protecting
the ball.
Shes not going to turn the ball
over, Henrickson said. Shes going
to take care of the ball and run a
good half-court ofense.
Before going down with an injury,
Knight was among the best in the
country in assist-to-
turnover ratio. Midway through
February, Knight had totaled just 13
turnovers while averaging around
35 minutes a game.
Henrickson believes sophomore
guard Lamaria Cole is ready to step
in and take on a bigger role, too.
What she brings to the table is
unmatched speed and quickness
that Angel had, Henrickson said.
Henrickson noted that sometimes
her speed can work against her.
It can be an asset, Henrickson
said. But it can be a detriment be-
cause she exceeds her speed limit at
times and is forced to make a bad
decision.
Kansas isnt the only team losing
its scoring punch from last season.
Baylor and Iowa State, who fn-
ished frst and second in the Big 12
last season, each lost two of their
leading scorers. Most notably, the
Associated Press Player of the Year
Brittney Griner will be gone, mak-
ing it easier for all opponents to
score in the paint.
Edited by Jessica Mitchell
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 8B
WOMENS BASKETBALL
Kansas looks to live up to expectations with young team
STELLA LIANG
sliang@kansan.com
FILE PHOTO/KANSAN
Senior guard CeCe Harper attempts to steal the ball from a West Virginia player in a game on Feb. 9.