HB Arnett’s

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West 800 South –
Vol. 33,
Issue 33 – March 11, 2013
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Time to Evaluate
BYU Done For the Year
Even if BYU gets an NIT bid, this year is over.
The finale came via a face flop by the Cougars in a 72-69 loss to
Of course, despite a deceptive 21-11 and 10-6 record, BYU was definitely heading downhill in the last three weeks. It was the Toreros that simply gave Dave Rose and his team the final push to a discouraging and disheartening season.
In case you haven’t been keeping track, BYU was just 3-5 in its last 8 games and an even worse 2-5 in its last seven league games in the WCC.
BYU had some bright spots in the loss to
Actually, there was only one bright spot. That was Brandon Davies who had 20 points, 9 rebounds and 8 assists. Tyler Haws also threw in 20 points, but as Rose said in his post-game comments, there wasn’t enough help from the rest of the team to get a win.
I agree. To play Rose’s preferred style of play, there simply wasn’t enough talent surrounding Davies and Haws.
Here is my summation of the season, players and Rose followed by a preview of what I expect to see next season.
Current Roster
NCAA Basketball Teams are allowed 13 scholarships to allocate each year. Below is the allocation of those scholarships this past season.
Obviously the overall on-court-performance of those 13 grant-in-aids was definitely sub par.
One of the major reasons for the lack of productivity can be traced to the loss of Chris Collinsworth and Stephen Rogers due to career ending injuries. Unfortunately, their scholarships could not be used on other players.
That was moot, however, because there were no other recruits available at the time Collinsworth and Rogers were proclaimed damaged goods
Here is my evaluation of the quality of production per scholarship for this year’s roster. I will rate each scholarship awarded based on performance for this season as either non-producing, poor, average, good and very good.
Cooper Ainge, G, Redshirt Freshman (non scholarship)…non-applicable
Agustin Ambrosino, F, Junior (scholarship)…non-producing; wasn’t as advertised; couldn’t shoot, rebound or defend
Nate Austin, F, Sophomore (scholarship)…non-producing; for his size can’t post up or score inside and has major problems defending post players in the paint. No improvement over freshman season. Just an observation, but when on the court, he spent almost as much time off his feet than on his feet.
Cory Calvert, G, Freshman (scholarship) non-producing; shows promise, but because he saw limited minutes in the season, his scholarship was wasted. He should have redshirted or not enrolled until after his LDS mission
Matt Carlino, G, Sophomore (scholarship) average; was either very good or very bad. Put the two together and that equals very average
Craig Cusick, G, Senior (non scholarship) non-applicable
Brandon Davies, C, Senior (scholarship) very good; the only season-long scoring threat for BYU. Also the only dependable rebounder that could be counted on
Raul Delgado, G, Junior (scholarship) poor; for a guy touted as a three-point shooters, he was just 8-of-31 on the year
Ian Harward, C, Freshman (scholarship) non-producing; chalk it up to injury issues or not being strong enough, but for a team that was in drastic need of big men, Harward’s lack of minutes, for whatever reason, qualifies as a wasted scholarship
Tyler Haws, G/F, Sophomore (scholarship) very good; constant production in spite of mugging, hugging and defensive mayhem made Haws well worth the scholarship
Bronson Kaufusi, C, Freshman (football scholarship) non-applicable…the fact that he was the first big off the bench late in the year is confirmation that the two biggest guys on the team vastly underperformed
Josh Sharp, F, Sophomore (scholarship) poor; undersized on defense, non productive offensively. Good rebounder for size
Anson Winder, G, Sophomore (scholarship) poor; zero offense, decent defense, but not good enough to compensate for lack of scoring abilities
Brock Zylstra, G, Senior (scholarship) average; give him credit for advancing each season from wasted to poor to average this season.
Chris Collinsworth, F, Junior (scholarship) non-producing; when you can’t play, it’s a wasted scholarship
Stephen Rogers, F, Senior (scholarship) non-producing; when you can’t play, it’s a wasted scholarship
Dave Rose, BYU coach…poor; of 13 scholarships, over half were non-producing based on the results from this season. Two of those wasted were unavoidable due to injuries to Collinsworth and Rogers. The two jucos brought in appear to be serious evaluation mistakes by Rose and his staff. They got zilch from these two guys.
The biggest evaluation mistake, however, in my opinion, is Rose’s hanging on to the hope that Matt Carlino could be a consistent playmaker and point guard.
By hanging on to that hope until late in the year, it caused him to waste a year of eligibility on Cory Calvert. He should have never invited him to play this year and never burned his redshirt year late in the year. That was caused by desperation to find somebody coming off the bench to put performance pressure on Carlino.
Next Year’s Roster
Here is my projection for players next season.
Agustin Ambrosino, F, Senior…The fact that BYU is trying to recruit a similar type player from the same school, SLCC, is an indication that either Ambrosino needs to get with it or get going out the door
Nate Austin, F, Junior…Rose needs to redshirt
Matt Carlino, G, Junior…A streaky player who is either very hot or very cold. When the cold spells hit, Kyle Collinsworth and Skyler Halford will give Rose viable options and alternatives at the point.
Raul Delgado, G, Senior…The Ambrosio projection also fits Delgado. BYU has a commitment from another juco with the same attributes that Delgado was supposed to have as a shooter. Either Delgado will show what he was recruited for or continue his tenure on the bench.
Ian Harward, C, Sophomore…This next year is put up or shut up time. It is time to show that he is a player. If he can’t because of injury or lack of ability, then shut the scholarship down and move on to another option.
Tyler Haws, G/F, Junior…Definitely needs a better supporting cast around him. If that doesn’t happen for next season then mugging will be a very mild description of how teams will defend him. If it wasn’t basketball, opposing players would have to be charged with assault and battery. Besides Dave Rose, nobody should be praying more for an influx of better talent for next season.
Josh Sharp, F, Junior…A tweener who has trouble scoring. Big heart and a good rebounder for his size, but BYU is looking for an upgrade from a juco that can rebound, has a big heart and actually is an offensive threat.
Anson Winder, G, Junior…While lots of BYU fans like to think Winder is a good player, the bottom line is that he is a marginal Division I guard at best. I don’t see that assessment changing next season.
Eric Mika, F, Freshman…BYU played this whole past season with
just one front court scoring and rebounding option. That was Brandon Davies.
When BYU was good, they had two front court options with Davies and Noah
Hartsock. The Cougars will be back with two options up front next season. Mika
is the most touted, but we look for him to be the 4 and
Luke Worthington, C, Freshman…Lunch Pail, Blue Collar and tough.
Kyle Collinsworth, G, Sophomore…Can play the 1, 2, 3, or at times, the 4. Is a slasher to the basket, will be an outstanding rebounder and very efficient in putting back shots on offensive rebounds. Won’t impress with his ball handling skills, but I am willing to bet that he will have the least turnovers of any of next seasons’ guards. Outside shot is marginal, but if he can continually improve, this guy is absolutely the real deal and a serious upgrade for the program next year. The question on him is how long will it take to get in shape after returning from LDS mission?
Skyler Halford, G, Junior…Committed to BYU last week. Is a
shooter and scorer and led his
One More to Give…BYU and Dave Rose still have one more
scholarship to use next month during the signing period. The Cougars have
offered Sai Tummala, a 6-6 swing player from
He averaged 14.5 points per game and 5.9 rebounds per outing. Like his teammate Halford, both shot .413 from beyond the arc. Halford was a .922 free throw shooter and Tummala shot .717 from the charity stripe. Click here and here for more on Tummala.
SLCC finished the year at 28-4 after a late Saturday night loss on the
road to Central Arizona in Coolidge in the District I playoff game for a
chance to go to the Juco National Championship tournament in
There is still a chance that SLCC could get an at large bid to the juco championships, but don’t count on it. That might be good news for BYU because other schools that always attend and recruit from the tourney won’t get a look at Tummala and become interested.
SPRING SPORTS SYNOPSIS
Men
In volleyball, the No. 1
ranked Cougars defeated Cal Baptist in two matches over the weekend. That
should maintain BYU’s top national ranking. Next up will be Cal State
Northridge and
The BYU baseball team took
two of three games from No. 21 UC Irvine in
In tennis, BYU defeated
In golf BYU men's golf
team shot an eight-under-par final round to finish in third place at the Fresno
State Lexus Classic last Tuesday. They next play today and tomorrow, March
11-12 at the Triumph at
Women
Gonzaga popped BYU women’s basketball
dreams last Saturday in
It hasn’t been a spectacular start for softball for the BYU women. With the start of league play, the competition won’t be as tough as the premier teams the team faced in preseason. Currently the Cougars are 9-15 on the season.
The women’s tennis
team is coming off three straight losses to
SPRING VERBIAGE RIGHT ON SCHEDULE
You will never hear any negatives coming out of spring practice. Everything is all good.
This team is playing harder and faster than ever before.
According to players and coaches in all contacts with the media, BYU has had its hardest practices ever. Taysom Hill looks Heisman like even though nobody can hit him.
New coaches are going to make the receiving unit the best ever at BYU. Michael Alisa is planning on joining Jamaal Williams to form the next tandem of Eric Dickerson and Craig James.
The offensive line is somehow going to miraculously transform into a good unit even though at least four potential starters are not even dressing out for spring
That is what happens in spring football. Injuries, surgeries and protection mode for key players never give a true picture of what this team will actually be in the fall.
What is being accomplished is an introduction and adaptation offensively to a totally new staff and an understanding of their expectations.
The mantra has been that every position is open for competition. Maybe, but with the exception of the offensive line, don’t expect any major breakthroughs by any unknown or unheralded players.
The coaching staff has had a major turnover, but don’t expect the player pecking order to change.
Except for the downer news that Trent Trammell, the juco cornerback expected to start at the field corner for BYU in the fall, tore his ACL and will miss the coming season, the rest of what is emanating from spring camp is upbeat and positive.
The problem with spring football and fall camp is that stories that are positive and optimistic are written by newspapers, web sites and all other media to compete with each other. Positive is what sells and is easier to sell because there are no games played against opponents that will truly evaluate what kind of football team BYU really has.
Athletics is almost like academics these days for the media. Publish or perish and you better do it at least once or twice a day to feed and fuel the eternal hope that BYU football will once again be good to great. Such is the digital revolution.
Spring football is like spring training in baseball. There are lots of new names and faces in camp, but managers and coaches know almost exactly in March what their starting lineup will be in April.
Despite talk about open competition, coaches also know where their bread will be buttered and which players will be doing the buttering in the fall.
Spring and fall practices are certainly entertaining and full of hope,
but check back after the result of the
Meanwhile, after one week of hope springs eternal and spring practice, here are some of my picks that are keeping hope alive for the fall.
Taysom Hill…The good news is that physically Hill looks sound after coming off knee surgery. He looks as athletic as before. He is the quarterback and barring his knee not holding up in the fall, he will be the guy.
Cody Hoffman…There will be lots of names mentioned as receivers playing well this spring, but those names will disappear come fall. Hoffmann is sitting spring out with shoulder surgery.
Jamaal Williams…There
has been some buzz about the return of Michael Alisa as a running back this
spring. He is healthy and recovered from his broken arm of last season. Adam
Hine is making another run at playing time this spring, but Williams is still
the featured back and needs to be. Whether it is playing hard and fast or using
some sort of read option Robert Anae picked up while at
The Middle Makes it Work…Uani Unga, Manoa Pikula, Tui Crichton and Eathyn Manumaleuna will determine if BYU’s defense this fall will be as good as it was last season. Unga and Pikula will be the inside linebackers and Manumaleuna will be the nose replacing Romney Fuga. Coming off knee surgery, he will be protected from contact this spring. Crichton is the hope of the spring. He has the size to be a real force at nose guard, but it is a wait and see game with him.
2013 Spring Football Roster
42 Michael
Alisa 6-1 220 RB SR
70 Terrance Alletto 6-3 262 OL SO Parker, CO Ponderosa HS
1
Ross Apo 6-3 207 WR JR
26 Scott
Arellano 6-1 190 P JR
24 Trevor
Bateman 5-9 178 DB SO Palm
50 Nathan
Bayles 5-11 230 LB SO Green River, WY
43 Tyler
Beck 6-1 220 LB SR
20 Craig
Bills 6-2 209 DB JR
21 Kevan
Bills 6-3 245 LB SO
76 Jordan Black 6-6 298 OL FR Draper, UT Jordan HS
58 Justin Blackmore 6-1 290 DL JR
57 Devin Brewer 5-10 200 DS SO Hattiesburg, MS Oak Grove HS
26 Nate Carter
59 Ben Chapple DS SR
27 Cameron Comer 6-0 192 DB JR
53 Tanner Cox 6-4 226 LB JR Pleasant View, UT Weber HS
68 Andrew Crawford 6-5 284 OL SO
52 Tui Crichton 6-3 343 DL SO
85 Dallin Cutler 5-9 173 WR SR Draper, UT Alta HS
63 Parker Dawe 6-3 250 OL FR Pleasant Grove, UT Pleasant Grove HS
15 DJ Doman 6-0 186 DB FR Lindon, UT Pleasant Grove HS
94 Michael Doman 6-4 240 DL FR
86 Michael Edmunds 6-4 215 TE FR South Jordan, UT Bingham HS
97 Jordan Egbert 6-3 220 TE FR
12 JD Falslev 5-8 184 WR SR
89 Travis Frey 6-2 187 WR FR
82 Kaneakua Friel 6-5 250 TE SR
5 Alani Fua 6-5 215 LB JR
Levi Gifford 5-11 185 DB FR Alpine, UT Lone Peak HS
10 Billy
Green 6-2 196 QB FR
1
Spencer Hadley 6-1 227 LB SR
32 Mike
Hague 5-10 190 DB SR
33 Jacob
Hannemann 6-1 190 DB FR
66 Chris
Hardinger 6-7 290 OL FR
2
Kurt Henderson
3
Taysom Hill 6-2 218 QB SO
Pocatello, ID
26 Adam
Hine 6-1 201 RB SO
98 Toloa’i Ho Ching 6-0 225 LB FR Sandy, UT Alta HS
2
Cody Hoffman
16 Adam
Hogan 5-11 180 DB SR
50 Austin
Holt 6-5 250 DL JR
11 Terenn
Houk 6-4 213 WR SO
47 Tanner Huber 6-0 205 LB FR Loomis, CA Del Oro HS
31 Tyler Jackson 5-10 165 K SO Oxford, MS Itawamba JC
4
Jordan Johnson 5-10 185 DB JR
67 Kyle
Johnson 6-3 285 OL FR Sandy, UT
99 Marques Johnson 6-2 321 DL JR
65 Cole Jones 6-5 280 OL FR
34 Austen Jorgensen 6-2 239 LB
73 Solomone Kafu 6-2 305 OL JR Rio
78 Tuni Kanuch 6-1 285 DL FR
90 Bronson Kaufusi 6-7 270 DL SO
25 Teu Kautai 6-1 216 LB SO
97 Theodore King 6-3 252 DL FR
87 Taggart Krueger 6-2 185 WR FR
32 Daniel Lacey 6-1 180 WR FR
91 David Laird 6-2 250 DL JR
33 Paul Lasike 6-0 227 RB JR
61 Quinn Lawlor 6-4 278 OL JR
43 Jherremya Leuta-Douyere 6-0 236 LB SO
49 Blake Lord LB FR
84 Devin Mahina 6-6 247 TE JR
12 Tanner Mangum 6-3 193 QB FR Eagle, ID Eagle HS
55 Eathyn Manumaleuna 6-2 288 DL SR
92 Josh Marquardt 6-1 248 DE SR
80 Marcus Mathews 6-4 236 TE JR
10 Mitch Mathews 6-6 213 WR SO Beaverton, OR Southridge HS
72 Ryker Mathews 6-6 292 OL SO American Fork, UT American Fork HS
28 Jordan Miller P SO
34 AJ Moore 5-9 200 RB FR
19 Blake Morgan 5-11 184 DB SR Greeley, CO
11 Jason Munns 6-5 249 QB SR
38 Connor Noe 6-2 193 DB FR Mason, OH Mason HS
96 Kevin O’Mary 6-4 240 LB JR
15 Ammon Olsen 6-3 209 QB SO Draper, UT SUU
35 Joey Owens 6-2 215 LB FR Pleasant Grove, UT Pleasant Grove HS
44 Remington Peck 6-4 240 DL SO South Jordan, UT Bingham HS
22 Manoa Pikula 6-1 235 LB SO South Jordan, UT Bingham HS
29 Skye PoVey 5-11 200 DB SR
5 Iona Pritchard 6-0 244 RB JR
31 Cody Raymond 5-9 175 WR SO Sandy, UT
83 Stehly Reden 6-4 250 TE SO
36 Drew Reilly 6-3 183 DB SO
39 Matthew Relei 6-0 230 LB FR
78
64 Ryan Reynolds 6-4 275 OL FR
17 Skyler Ridley 6-0 182 WR SR
23 Jordan Smith 6-4 203 WR SR
9 Daniel Sorensen 6-2 215 DB SR
37 Justin Sorensen 6-1 232 K SR
7 Christian Stewart 6-2 190 QB JR
74 Brock Stringham 6-6 290 OL
95
19 Brett Thompson 6-3 220 WR JR
88 Eric Thornton 5-10 180 WR SO Renton, WA Meridian HS
1 Trent Trammell 6-0 190 DB JR
93 Darin Tuttle 6-4 245 TE FR
41 Uani ‘ Unga 6-1 233 LB SR
79 Manaaki Vaitai 6-3 317 OL SR
3 Kyle Van Noy 6-3 235 LB SR
30 Michael Wadsworth 6-1 182 DB SO Orem, UT
75 Brad Wilcox 6-7 285 OL FR Edmond, OK North HS
21 Jamaal Williams 6-0 190 RB SO Fontana, CA
18 Richard Williams 6-3 240 TE SR Spanish Fork, UT Spanish Fork HS
54 Robert Wood III LB FR
77 Michael Yeck 6-8 288 OL JR
22 Jake Ziolkowski 6-0 185 WR FR
Television
Timetable
BYU vs.
Tuesday, March 19 at
First Pitch: 6:00 pm Mountain Time
TV: BYUtv
BYU vs.
Wednesday, March 20 at
First Pitch: 6:00 pm Mountain Time
TV: BYUtv
BYU vs.
Thursday, March 21 at
First Pitch: 6:00 pm Mountain Time
TV: BYUtv
BYU vs.
Friday, March 22 at
First Pitch: 6:00 pm Mountain Time
TV: BYUtv
BYU vs.
Saturday, March 23 at
First Pitch: 1:00 pm Mountain Time
TV: BYUtv
BYU vs.
Pepperdine (Volleyball)
Thursday, March 28 at
Start: 7:00 pm Mountain Time
TV: BYUtv
BYU vs.
USC (Volleyball)
Saturday, March 30 at
Start: 8:00 pm Mountain Time
TV: BYUtv
Radio
BYU vs.
Thursday, March 14 at
First Pitch: 7:00 pm Mountain Time
KOVO 960 AM |
BYU vs.
Friday, March 15 at
First Pitch: 7:00 pm Mountain Time
KOVO 960 AM |
BYU vs.
Saturday, March 16 at
First Pitch: 2:00 pm Mountain Time
KOVO 960 AM |