Big Ben Speaks

Ben McCauley reinforces much of what SFN has said about last season, in a surprisingly candid interview with GoPack.com. There are several notable passages, but we’ll start with:

I have been here in Raleigh all summer, getting my body right. I have lost 10 to 12 pounds. Last year, I started the season a little heavy. So now I feel good. I had an ankle problem from something that happened in the Clemson game, but it is 100 percent now. I am really looking forward to the season.

Obviously, that’s great news. It was overshadowed by Costner’s lethargy, but Big Ben was clearly a step slower last season. Next:

There are two things, besides the chemistry and the style of play, which was significantly different, that not a lot of people talked about. One was not having Engin Atsur back at the point and then losing Farnold Degand. We were doing well at the beginning of the year with Farnold. We won the Old Spice. We went on a little winning streak for a little bit. We beat Davidson at home, which turned out to be a really good win. When he went down, we had a freshman in Javi Gonzalez and essentially a freshman in Marques Johnson. That is one thing that was overlooked a lot, because everyone was concentrating on everyone not getting along or not playing the right way. That may have been the case sometimes, but we also had some bad luck with injuries and that had some impact on how we played.

Although the line for public consumption last year was that the chemistry was fine, McCauley finally confirms on the record that there were problems. As we said, problems 1A and 1B were PG play (after Farnold went down, went from a C-minus to an F) and the huge rift based on a personal situation. Ben does talk about “style of play” – which can only be a thinly-veiled reference to the “feed Hickson” strategy. But note that even though he was the player most affected by Hickson’s role in the lowpost, Ben paints it as clearly secondary to overall team chemistry and lousy PG play. On that note:

Farnold is lifting, doing a little bit of running, which is good. He’ll be ready come practice time. He is itching to get back and playing. We are itching to have him back.

Like Coach Lowe, Ben is seemingly putting all of his eggs in Farnold’s basket. My contention remains that the fans’ like for Javi’s scrappy style is clouding their judgment on his actual level of play – which was pretty awful. He’s a backup at best, and may not be capable of being a solid backup until his junior season. A good sign for the backcourt? Read on:

The younger guys that are now moving up to be older guys, specifically Trevor and Dennis, are doing really well. Trevor got a lot of confidence at the end of the year. That has given him a lot of confidence.

Confidence is key to Ferguson’s ability to provide passable play at SG. We think he’ll be the starter, and it’s good that his mind seems right going into the season. Here’s a warning flag:

Brandon is playing this summer the way he played in the ACC Tournament. He’s not completely there, but he is on his way. He has lost weight. He is in the gym, lifting, getting stronger. I can personally tell his attitude is different than last year. You can tell there is a little fire in his eyes. He wants to play well for his fellow teammates, specifically Courtney and me.

Maybe I’m seeing too much black cloud and not enough silver lining – but that sounds like evidence of continuing divisions on the team. Fells, Costner, and McCauley are really the last remaining “Sendek guys” – unless you count Dennis Horner. Still, Costner needs to play with fire to be good. But he also needs to be a good teammate, and not just to the guys that were on his side last year. I also interpret this as a veiled shot at Gavin Grant:

We have great guys on the team this year. They have a positive attitude.

Of course, your mileage may vary.

About BJD95

1995 NC State graduate, sufferer of Les and MOC during my entire student tenure. An equal-opportunity objective critic and analyst of Wolfpack sports.

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65 Responses to Big Ben Speaks

  1. crackdog 08/16/2008 at 9:38 AM #

    If you had mentioned Karl Malone, Bruce Bowen, and Mutombo instead of a who’s who of troublemakers you’d have probably had a bunch more people agree with you.

  2. Bynum State Fan 08/16/2008 at 10:26 AM #

    I do not post looking for affirmation on my stance on things. I post what I think. There are times when most agree, and there are times when most disagree, it just comes with the territory of being honest about what you think. I do not have any harsh feelings towards anyone who might disagree with me on this subject. Hell, on another thread they may be singing my praises. I just say what I think. I still stand by my assessment that getting those calibur players will better our basketball program. Of course, I don’t like to see kids demean their opportunity in life by messing it up. But going after finess type players just because some perceive it as taking a moral high-ground is not the answer to improving our wins to losses ratio. Heck, even Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant had off-court issues. Most consider Kobe a prototype finess player. And a lot of those physical kids that are deemed untamable kids are still manageable in the college ranks AKA Rasheed Wallace. But this has been a great subject to ponder, and I am sorry if I have offended/persecuted anyone regarding it. You are all my NC State brethren.

  3. Noah 08/16/2008 at 11:59 AM #

    Charles Shackleford and Chris Washburn were tough? And feared?

    By whom exactly? I remember both of them being extraordinarily skilled and extraordinarily lazy players.

    If you want to bring in guys like that, fine. If Sidney Lowe wants to bring in guys like that, I’m very hopeful that someone will be standing behind him with a 2×4 and a list of new coaches.

  4. Bynum State Fan 08/16/2008 at 3:35 PM #

    We need to have that 2 X 4 you speak of behind him NOW. We have a choice. Either be complacent with the status quo and continue to accumulate L’s, or we can take a different route and get some kids with some guts in this program and see what happens. I really doubt we would go downhill trying different types of kids than we have right now, at least no more than we are already undergoing. I would lay off of him for a while if he were to get better kids in here, and work on this pansie attitude that we cohesively have here. Why would you want to wand a 2 X 4 towards him for trying different measures to make NC State successful, as the way I see it things aren’t working well up to this point.

  5. Wolf Dog 08/16/2008 at 5:04 PM #

    Shackelford and Washburn were so lazy they took us to the final eight and had we not been playing Kansas at Kansas, we probably would not have not blown the lead in the second half and gone to the final four.

    This game was a good example why the NCAA does not schedule home games anymore in the trournament.

    Rock chalk jayhawk…beat us!

  6. DuPack 08/16/2008 at 7:49 PM #

    Noah is spot on with his assessment of Washburn and Shackleford. They had flashes of absolute brilliance, but that was all flashes. The success that we enjoyed while they were at State was probably due more to Valvano’s drive to succeed than any drive they had. I saw them each at Reynold’s about 4 times sitting just behind the visiting bench and NEVER got the since that anybody feared either one of them.

  7. highstick 08/16/2008 at 9:24 PM #

    Just give me a Rodney Monroe, Chris Corch, Googs, DT, and Tommy Burleson and we’ll take on anybody!

  8. Wufpacker 08/17/2008 at 8:38 PM #

    Unfortunately no player of DT’s caliber will ever set foot on a college court again.

    As for the rest, I could definitely settle for that lineup, maybe with a Hodge or Del Negro type player added in for good measure.

    Regarding the tough vs finesse argument… I don’t think a player necessarily needs to be feared to be considered a tough player. Of course I’m talking about both physical and mental toughness. Players like Grundy, Gugliotta, Del Negro, Hodge or even a Todd Fuller all come to mind. They’ll take the other team’s best shot, won’t back down, and especially won’t be rattled out of their own game by anything the opponent does.

    Another way of saying this more simply is to get players that play aggressively, that play to win. Players that have a killer instinct and when they are up by 5 they want to make it 10, when up by 10 they want to make it 20. We’ve been playing NOT TO LOSE for way too long. Any lead seems almost to be considered a fluke and the team strategy seems to become playing to hold the lead rather than to build upon it. Playing tentatively like that, no matter how much talent is on a team, takes a team out of its rhythm and will result in mediocre results at best.

    Earlier in the thread (at least I think it was this one) someone made the comment that when we win its by close margins and when we lose its by a lot. This is exactly why that occurs. I for one don’t believe that this attitude is a product of the current staff and I fully expect that we will see it change as some of the current players cycle out of the program and new ones come in. I am hopeful that we will see this attitude change even sooner, as we did see flashes of it in Lowe’s first season as head coach. Last year was HOPEFULLY a fluke season that can be written off as an outlier or fluke or whatever due to personnel conflicts or team chemistry or injuries or whatever else might have been ailing last season’s team causing them to underachieve. Whatever the problems last season I don’t think it can be used as a good guage, although it certainly seemed that Lowe wanted, but most of the time was unable, to assert his will for the team to play more aggressively (of course this inability might end up being more than a fluke as well, in which case we’ve got bigger problems).

    Also, the attitude of a team on the court is going to start with whomever is running the point. I believe we are only one talented and aggressive PG (a la Corchiani or Lowe or Towe…someone not afraid to take control) from seeing this type of aggressive team attitude return. Hopefully Degand can be that guy, but I suspect we won’t see it happen fully until Lowe is able to recruit a top drawer PG into the program.

  9. ushum 08/18/2008 at 7:14 AM #

    I am not going to be fooled by any small talk this offseason…last year was too much of an eye opener…

    I can not explain clear enough how truly terrible i believe this years team will be…

  10. Rick 08/18/2008 at 7:16 AM #

    “Only you know if that is the case or not. Now I personally don’t think you are trying to play the race card here, but some may view it as that, which is something you will have to deal with should any of the offended opine. ”

    You accuse me of being racist again and you will not be posting on this site anymore.

  11. Rick 08/18/2008 at 7:17 AM #

    “Charles Shackleford and Chris Washburn were tough? And feared?

    By whom exactly? I remember both of them being extraordinarily skilled and extraordinarily lazy players.”

    Noah is spot on and it just shows how little this Bynum character knows. I am leaning towards a troll.

  12. nycfan 08/18/2008 at 12:09 PM #

    Testing to see if my posts show up … if not, could some one at SFN shoot me an email so I know why I seem to be on double-secret probation?

  13. Bynum State Fan 08/19/2008 at 8:55 PM #

    If you can read Rick, I said I didn’t think you were, but your responses speak for themselves.

  14. Rick 08/20/2008 at 7:36 AM #

    “If you can read Rick, I said I didn’t think you were, but your responses speak for themselves.”

    ??
    So I’m not but I am? Logic is obviously not your strong suit.

  15. redfred2 08/25/2008 at 11:34 AM #

    I definitely have mixed feelings about it, especially since it’s still happening when considering the results on the court last season, but it’s late August, and we’re still on the radar screen of the #1 big, and also the #1 point guard, recruits in the nation. Like I said, I’m kind of confused right now as to what this actually means regarding NC State’s BB program in the long run, but it’s definitely a good thing, and it’s great to see NC STATE continually popping up on all of the recruiting sites.

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