Tag Archives: Rodney McGruder kansas state

What He Built

2 Mar

SeniorsSenior Night sneaks up on you. It does. Believe me, I know.

Tuesday is the last night Kansas State fans will see Rodney McGruder, Martavious Irving and Jordan Henriquez play in Bramlage Coliseum. All have contributed greatly to this year’s team, but most of the focus – and understandably so – will be on McGruder.

In a time of transition, McGruder has been a constant. Looked to by his teammates as a leader, McGruder quickly bought into the system of first-year coach Bruce Weber and his staff. Weber is fully aware of how crucial McGruder’s cooperation was to the progress of this year’s team and the success the Wildcats (23-5, 12-3) have captured so far.

“When you’re the face of the program – which he is, I don’t think that’s saying something out of the realm of the truth – for him to buy in and really just right from the get-go accept what we believe in and what we do and not really rebel at all – if anything he just jumped on board, and that was so important,” Weber said. “You’ve got to appreciate that.”

Unlike some of the other (and younger) players, McGruder never wavered on the question of whether to stay at Kansas State after former coach Frank Martin’s departure to South Carolina. He had to see what could happen in Manhattan.

“I fought here for three years, and I think that would have been messed-up to leave what I built in this program,” McGruder said. “I wanted to finish what I started.”

Not surprisingly, all the other players followed suit. Now the team is tied with Kansas for first place in the Big 12 with three games remaining in the regular season. The senior class now has more wins (97) than any other class in Kansas State history, and Weber is tied for the most wins ever by a first-year Kansas State coach (23).

McGruder will hold all kinds of records at what will shortly be his alma mater, but that’s not what people will remember. They’ll remember the way he floats in the lane, the way he knocks down free throws, the way he drains 3s, the way he took ownership of a program going through a major transition. Mostly, if they read a little bit about him, they’ll remember the way he always had faith in what he and his teammates could accomplish at Kansas State, even after the departure of the popular, successful, fiery Martin.

“When that happened, a lot of stuff is going through your mind,” McGruder said. “You don’t know what to expect. When Frank first left, you didn’t know who your coach was going to be, but then the program went into Bruce Weber’s hands, and you saw the things that he accomplished at Illinois. You knew that big things could happen because I knew we were a pretty good team last year, but we had some plays that slipped away from us, so I knew that we could be good, and Bruce has proved that this year.”

The Resurgence of Rodney

17 Feb

Photo by Rich Sugg, Kansas City Star

Off the court, Rodney McGruder is a great personality, and people migrate to him. On the court, he is all business. According to coach Frank Martin, the more serious mentality is exactly what young Kansas State needs.

“Ain’t no time for games,” Martin said. “Basketball’s his life, his passion.”

The unwavering intensity during practices as well as games is something the Wildcats lost from last season. Martin goes back to the guys whose work ethic he holds as a benchmark: Jacob Pullen, Denis Clemente, Luis Colon and Chris Merriewether.

“Clemente would throw a ball off your face in a heartbeat if you were joking around in practice,” Martin said. “Chris Merriewether would pick you up and slam you if you were joking around in practice. Now off the court, those guys were awesome. They were awesome. If Luis Colon saw me get mad in practice because somebody took a shortcut, I felt bad for somebody in practice. I’m just telling you. I’m being honest with you.

“That’s what this team has missed this year. We don’t have that. We’re trying to find that.”

His teammates have noticed. In practice, if you do not match his intensity, you will end up getting burned and looking bad.

“If you go soft in practice, that day that you don’t feel like practicing, and you’ve got to guard him, he’s going to score on you all the time because he’s always in attack mode,” freshman guard Angel Rodriguez said. “I think it kind of pushes you to play hard, especially if you always have to guard him.”

Before taking on Kansas in Bramlage, the Wildcats grinned like kids as they laughed and danced in the tunnel before emerging for warmups prior to the Big Monday matchup. Shane Southwell and Angel Rodriguez joined in the pre-game tradition that was usually dominated by Martavious Irving and Jordan Henriquez.

McGruder, on the other hand, came onto the court without a smile. He played 38 minutes in the game and finished with 12 points and 8 rebounds. It was not his best performance by any stretch, but it spoke again of the consistency and work ethic he brings to the floor.

Pullen, Clemente, Colon and Merriewether demonstrated the single-minded focus during their time at Kansas State, and then-young McGruder paid attention. Now, the point guard has come to exemplify that same approach this season.

“When Rodney was a freshman, he learned from those guys,” Martin said. “I’d sit back and I’d watch him. He’d chase those guys around. He wanted to find out why those guys had all the success that they had. He wanted to be one of them.”

This year, he has indeed become one of the team’s leaders, but recently that new role took a backseat because of a painful infected callous on the guard’s toe. It kept him out of practice for two weeks, forcing him to devote most of his attention to his own performance.

Martin understands this shift and expects that as McGruder gets back in tune with his own game, he will put increasing emphasis on holding his teammates accountable for their performances as well.

On Thursday, the coach seemed optimistic that the time would come soon.

“As a player, you can lead all you want, but you have to do your part too, and he was struggling with himself and his game, so it was hard for him to lead others because he was trying to find himself, trying to do something that he’s never done, which is play without practice,” Martin said. “As soon as he starts feeling comfortable with himself again, which I saw today, then he’ll start trying to lead the others also.”

Wildcats stunned by Cyclones, 72-70

31 Jan

MANHATTAN, Kan. – The Wildcats had won five in a row in Hilton Coliseum. Frank Martin had coached Kansas State to victories in seven of eight games against the Cyclones. Many thought this matchup would be one of the easiest on the Wildcats’ schedule.

All that changed as Royce White scored 22 points to lead the Cyclones to defeat Kansas State 72-70 in the waning seconds of the game.

With the Wildcats in front 70-69, Rodney McGruder dribbled determinedly down the middle of the lane and rose to shoot. Despite contact from two different Cyclones, the referees stayed silent. In contrast, the announcers called a foul immediately. When they had to rebuke themselves, they did so with astonishment.

“Are you kidding me?” “That was a mugging!”

Coach Frank Martin berated the referees mercilessly for the apparent oversight, but the game continued unaffected.

Chris Babb made a free throw to tie the game 70-70 but missed his second attempt. Melvin Ejim rebounded it. Scott Christopherson – who went 1 of 6 from the field – shot and also missed. Ejim rebounded it again. He put the ball back up and could not convert either. Yet again, the Cylones came away with the ball. This time they took a timeout.

With 22 seconds left to play, Iowa State had possession. Eventually, the ball wound up down in the paint in the hands of none other than White.

His bucket with 1.8 seconds remaining gave the Cyclones a 72-70 lead, and the Wildcats did not get off a shot before time expired. The loss marked the second time in a week’s span that a win has eluded Kansas State by just one basket.

Early in the game, Martavious Irving stepped up for the Wildcats, hitting three 3-pointers on his way to an 11-point performance in the first half. Thomas Gipson finished with 13 points and 7 rebounds, and Victor Ojeleye had 3 points and 10 rebounds.

McGruder scored only 5 points in the first half, but he hit three baskets to open up the second half. As he finally starting getting comfortable, the Wildcats amassed a 53-49 lead five minutes after the break. The tables turned when the Cyclones scored seven unanswered points, cutting Kansas State’s advantage in half.

With a little less than seven minutes to play, Iowa State trailed by just three points, 63-60. A pair of free throws by Gipson gave Kansas State five points of breathing room, but the Cyclones quickly closed the gap again.

They would not retake the lead until that final sequence, making it all the more devastating for the Wildcats.

In the first half, Kansas State and Iowa State traded leads continuously. With the Wildcats down by two, Gipson scored back-to-back baskets at the rim to ignite a 13-4 run that starred three consecutive buckets by Irving and put the Wildcats ahead 31-24 with two and a half minutes until the break.

Kansas State would build on its 36-29 halftime lead, but it could not stop Iowa State’s slow and steady comeback in the final minutes.

Picked sixth?

13 Jan

In a preseason poll of Big 12 coaches, the Wildcats were picked to finish 6th out of 10 teams in the conference. Even though Kansas State is 1-2 in conference play, surely those coaches – and others  – are now ditching their original doubts about the 2011-2012 Kansas State team.

Everyone questioned the caliber of the team going into this season because of the absence of Jacob Pullen. What would the team be like in the first year without him since Frank Martin became head coach?

To compound that worry, the Wildcats opened Big 12 play against three top 25 teams: No. 15 Kansas at Allen Fieldhouse, No. 6 Missouri in Bramlage, and No. 4 Baylor in Bramlage. But lo and behold, Kansas State ran right over previously undefeated Missouri, and even in losses to Kansas and Baylor, the Wildcats made it clear they were not going away easily.

  • At Kansas – well, let’s stop there. Hardly anyone other than the Jayhawks wins in Allen Fieldhouse, so let the record show that it is a difficult place to play. Regardless, the Wildcats could have won that game. Behind 35-20 at halftime, they had clawed within three points in the second half. If they had not allowed Kansas to get so far ahead early, who knows what would have happened? Also, the Jayhawks outrebounded the Wildcats 50-26. That is inexcusable. I am no statistician, but I do not think you will ever find a game in which a team got destroyed on the boards like that and came away with a win. Here’s the thing, though: Jamar Samuels, Jordan Henriquez and Thomas Gipson are strong, talented players. They can handle Kansas down low. They did not do so in that game, but to count the Wildcats out on Feb. 13 – the Big Monday rematch in Bramlage – would be silly.
  • Heading into the next game, against undefeated Missouri, not many outside the team seemed optimistic. In Dallas, about to head home from the Cotton Bowl, a fellow Kansas State fan in the elevator said to me, “This might be a rough weekend.” Then, of course, the Wildcats proceeded to completely blow out the Tigers in Manhattan. Six players scored seven or more points; four were in double digits. Kansas State blocked more shots, grabbed more rebounds, had more assists and absolutely shot the cover off the ball – as Martin might say. They got the lead early and stayed on the throttle well enough to get the win by a large margin. Sure, it might have been an off-night for Missouri, but that win was a huge confidence boost for Kansas State and a big step to showing that the Wildcats can contend for the Big 12 championship, regardless of what happened in the first game of the conference season.
  • Versus Baylor, the Wildcats just lost control. They went up by double-digits halfway through the first half, but their 20 turnovers simply killed them. The Bears went on 18-4 runs in both the first and second halves. That happened because the guys wearing K-State jerseys threw the ball to the guys wearing Baylor jerseys so they could go down and dunk it – that was how Martin explained it to me after the game. He was in disbelief that the team could not a defend its lead at the end of the game to close out a win at home. The positive takeaway from this game was an incredible performance by Rodney McGruder. He scored a career-high 30 points. While it was not enough, it gave an indication of what he can be to this team. Also, the Wildcats were this close to knocking off the No. 4 team in the country. They could have done it. The fact they didn’t – at least from where I sit – does not mean that they can’t in the future. It just means they have a little more growing up to do.

Wildcats open season with Charleston Southern

11 Nov

Checking out Charleston Southern Last season, the Buccaneers went 9-9 in the Big South Conference and won 16 games, the most the team it has had in 14 seasons. On the road, though, the team went 3-12.

While the Buccaneers graduated leading scorer Jamarco Warren, they return guard Kelvin Martin, a senior who last season snagged the Big South Conference Defensive Player of the Year award. Overall, this year’s team is young. Of 17 names on the roster, 13 have “freshman” or “sophomore” behind them.

A team that plays with four guards and works to spread out defenses so it can drive on them or shoot three-pointers, Charleston Southern’s setup reminds Kansas State coach Frank Martin of a few Big 12 teams.

“A little bit like Nebraska,” he said. “I mean, Nebraska had Ryan Anderson at the 4, and they just spaced you and drove you, and they looked to shoot threes from four different spots. I guess Colorado, to a certain extent last year, who obviously gave us tons of problems.”

Going on the offensive Last season, Kansas State backed away from the box-and-one offense it had used to take advantage of size near the rim in favor of the pinch-post, which featured players’ athleticism and created favorable player mismatches. This season, the Wildcats plan to combine the two.

“We can take advantage of Thomas Gipson playing the low post, where he’s efficient, he’s very good; take advantage of Jamar in there, who’s gotten a lot better; and even Jordan because of his size, and now he’s gotten to the point where he can score in there,” Martin said. “But at the same time, the pinch post was very good to us. We’re trying to implement an offense where you kind of combine both. Sometimes we go straight into the pinch post, other times we want to utilize that size at the rim, that strength at the rim, so we’ll start with the offense that we’ve always had and try and flow it to the pinch post.”

Personnel updates This is the year of the major-minutes-players becoming the guys for the team. Jacob Pullen and Curtis Kelly were the go-to players for the past couple years, but now the Wildcats need others to step up. Among those will be forward Jordan Henriquez and guard Rodney McGruder. According to Martin, Henriquez has been coachable and grown in his game as a result. McGruder, on the other hand, recovered from a knee surgery and is doing better because of it. Of course, how they perform in actual games has yet to be seen … at least for a few hours.

Here’s what Martin had to say about Jordan:

“Up to now, he’s been as good as we can ask of him in preseason, and now the games count, so let’s see how he reacts to being a front-line player on a consistent basis during the course of the season. I think he’ll do well in it because he’s prepared himself for it, but that’s a little bit of an unknown.”

Here’s what he said about Rodney:

“Today he had a dunk in practice that he had no chance of ever having last year because his legs are under him. He shot the cover off the ball the whole preseason, and then in the exhibition game, he just missed some shots, but he took some good ones. He’s been better defensively because he’s not playing on one leg so he can go both ways. That’ll come. You guys will see Rodney as the year progresses and we start doing things to give him angles, get shots and make plays, you’ll see what I’m talking about.”