Gopher Season Focuses on Tubby Time
Although Gopher seniors Dan Coleman,
Lawrence McKenzie and Spencer Tollackson may emerge as Big
Ten Conference stars this season, the biggest storyline for 2007-08 will
be new head coach Tubby Smith. The Minnesota “triplets” are
beyond comparison as the team’s best players. But Smith, the former NCAA
champion coach at Kentucky, is a national story now that he’s in
Minneapolis.
The Gopher season starts next week with a
home exhibition game against Minnesota State University Mankato on
Thursday. Last season the Gophers were 9-22 overall, 3-13 in
the Big Ten and lost their last nine
games. If the Gophers make improvements, Smith will be lauded. A poor
season will be explained away by most observers as not Smith’s fault
because the roster lacks talent and depth.
Wanting to embrace Smith, this town is impressed
by his 1998 national title, four elite eight NCAA teams, three national
coach of the year awards, five SEC regular season championships and 14
consecutive 20-win seasons. The Smith personality endears him to people
quickly, too. Particularly one-on-one, Smith is friendly, engaging and
more like a next door neighbor than a high powered college basketball
coach.
But talking to the media earlier this week
Smith provided a glimpse of the intensity and determination that his
players see everyday in practice. “There’s a lot of question marks
about what we’re capable of doing but I expect us to be very
competitive,” he said.
Make no mistake, Smith is in charge of the
Gophers and he expects his players to be disciplined and grateful. He
said players who are too questioning of how they fit in as individuals
will receive a direct answer. “Be grateful” to be on the team because
there are others on the outside who want the opportunity.
Smith wasn’t specific about predicting
wins and losses for the coming season, and offered some humor on the
subject. “I am not Nostradamus,” he said.
His team is sorting out who the starters
will be beyond the “triplets.” Most challenging is the point guard
position where McKenzie, freshman Al Nolen, and sophomore
Kevin Payton are candidates. Ball handling is a top priority, Smith
said, as the Gophers work on limiting turnovers that helped spoil their
last season.
The “triplets” are the highest returning
scoring trio in the Big Ten. McKenzie averaged 14.9 points per game,
Coleman 14.2 and Tollackson 12.0. McKenzie and Coleman made honorable
mention all-conference, but there’s plenty of potential for improvement
from all three as they try to help the Gophers to the post-season world
of the NCAA or even NIT.
Smith wants McKenzie, more a shooter than
a playmaker, to make his teammates better, too. He refers to
Coleman as a “workaholic” and mentioned that his 6-9 forward
arrives at practice 30 minutes early to start work. Smith said Tollackson,
the 6-9 center, has a “ton of talent” and is a leader.