Tyler Hansbrough

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Apr 22, 2005
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From wral.com

UNC's Hansbrough No Ordinary Freshman


College coaches in all sports have a standard remark about freshmen, and
it usually comes out when things aren't going particularly well on the
court or the field.

"The best thing about freshmen," the coaches say, "is that eventually they
become sophomores."

Some freshmen violate that law. A few, including North Carolina rookie
forward Tyler Hansbrough, require an amendment.

Rule of thumb: If you're doing something unprecedented in the history of
the UNC basketball program, where the superlatives have been blooming
like flowers in springtime for the last 50 years, you're an absolutely
phenomenal player.

Hansbrough, a 6-9 prep All-American from Poplar Bluff, Mo., is on pace
to lead the Tar Heels in both scoring (17.5) and rebounding (7.3) this
season. No first-year player has pulled that double at UNC. Ever.

Want more? Despite receiving as much defensive attention in the low post
as any ACC rookie in recent memory, Hansbrough has managed a 61.0
field goal percentage. That's right on the heels of the best figure ever for
a Carolina freshman, 62.6 by Sam Perkins.

If the 2005-06 season ended today, Hansbrough would be a lock for ACC
rookie of the year and a very strong candidate for the All-ACC first team.

How's this for more good company? UNC's six ACC rookies of the year
were named Perkins (1981), Michael Jordan (1982), J.R. Reid (1987), Ed
Cota (1997), Joseph Forte (2000) and Marvin Williams (2005). The last
freshmen to make the All-ACC first team were Georgia Tech guard
Stephon Marbury and UNC forward Antawn Jamison, both in 1996.

Clearly, this first-year stuff ain't easy. N.C. State freshman Brandon
Costner, a 2005 McDonald's All-American, couldn't make the Wolfpack's
top eight this season, even before his injury problems. Duke rookies Greg
Paulus and Josh McRoberts have cracked the starting lineup, a major
accomplishment in itself, but both continue to go through very difficult
(and normal) adjustment periods. The same goes for highly touted
newcomers at Florida State (Uche Echefu), Georgia Tech (Lewis Clinch) and
Miami (Denis Clemente), among others.

Hansbrough had no such luxury. He signed with UNC in November 2004,
then watched the Tar Heels' ultimate good-news/bad-news scenario
unfold before his eyes. The Tar Heels won the national championship,
then became the first team in NCAA history to lose its top seven scorers
without a war, plane crash or natural disaster being involved.

Perhaps the most amazing thing about Hansbrough is that he has
completely avoided the typical rookie pitfalls.

His trademark aggression never seems to waver, whether he's at home or
on the road, whether his team is ahead or behind, regardless of the
opposing team or his own personal matchup in the post. That alone
hasn't happened with a rookie very often in the almost 20 years I've been
covering ACC basketball.

"(Hansbrough) is very focused. He works extremely hard," UNC coach Roy
Williams said. "He battles as hard as any freshman I have ever been
around. Ever. ... You usually don't find freshmen with that kind of attitude
and work ethic. That's a great quality."

Hansbrough also has a very high basketball IQ, responds extremely well
to coaching and somehow manages to keep an even keel emotionally
despite taking a beating almost every night. He recognizes that he's a
post player (no 3-pointers), and he doesn't try to be anything else. He
seems to enjoy physical contact, rather than settling for fadeaway
jumpers, a habit many talented big men can't shake after 10 years in the
NBA, much less as a college freshman.

Since Williams told him in the preseason that he needed to be more
selective with his aggression defensively to avoid foul problems,
Hansbrough (whose backup is limited senior Byron Sanders) has executed
the plan almost perfectly. When Hansbrough struggled from the free
throw line early this season, he practiced on his own time. His percentage
soon went from 65 percent to 85 percent in more recent games.

These things typically don't go so smoothly with college basketball
players, much less first-year players.

Clearly, Hansbrough is no ordinary freshman. He turned 20 years old in
November. Perhaps that has something to do with his advanced levels of
strength, maturity, poise and performance.

One last thing: Hansbrough's mother, Tami Wheat, is a former Miss
Missouri. His dad, Gene Hansbrough, is an orthopedic surgeon. They say
that Tyler's typical reaction when he reads or hears about his own
excellence is to point out those parts of his game he still needs to
improve.
 

ocaamikedm11

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Jan 8, 2006
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Hansbrough is an amazing talent, and is very efficient. He doesn't miss many shots and is constantly taking on double teams and still able to succeed. It is rare for UNC to have any white guys, let alone there best players being white. I look forward to rooting for Frasor and Hansbrough for the next couple of years in the ACC and hope Williams will continue to bring white players to UNC.
 
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"Rare for UNC to have any white guys" just isn't true. UNC had a ton of
white players who went to the NBA under Dean Smith:
Bobby Jones, Mike O'Koren, MItch Kupchak, Pete Chilcutt, Larry Miller,
Eric Montross, Billy Cunningham, Larry Brown, George Karl, John Kuester,
Doug Moe, Bobby Lewis, Joe Wolf, Tommy LaGarde.
 

whiteCB

Master
Joined
Apr 14, 2005
Messages
2,282
Yeah UNC isn't bad at all especially when you compare them to an Alabama or Ole Miss and schools liek that. Though this Hansbrough looks liek the real deal. I mean come on look at the names in the article who he's played better than for a freshmen.
 

ocaamikedm11

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Messages
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Smith retired about a decade ago and it's been pretty downhill for UNC under other coaches. The case can be made for any team to have had whites if you dig enough, we need these big time schools to return to recruiting whites now, because a lot ofbig timeprograms have gone to mostly recruiting blacks (UNC, Kentucky, etc)
 
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Actually, UNC made the Final Four under Bill Guthridge. The new coach,
Roy Williams, recruited two white McDonald's All-Americans last year,
Hansbrough and Bobby Frasor. He may have had more white first-round
white draft picks while at Kansas than any other coach -- Raef Lafrentz,
Kirk Hinrich, Scott Pollard, Greg Ostertag, Nick Collison, Rex Walters (half
Japanese). So if you look at UNC's history and it's present, the Matt
Doherty years are an anomaly for an elite program that has been fair to
white players for 50 years.
 

guest301

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He's putting up some awesome tough rugged type of numbers for a freshman. We need a white american to break through in the nba and get most of his points in the post. I hope kevin bookout from oklahoma will be that type of guy as well.
 

white lightning

Hall of Famer
Joined
Oct 16, 2004
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Tyler had another great game last night against a tough Arizona Team.It was his 8th game of over 20 points and the kid is only 18.He is the favorite to get ACC Player of the Year.I guess he helps to disprove the theory that whites take longer to develop physically.He is a star in the making.
 

ocaamikedm11

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Jan 8, 2006
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Well he may get ACC Freshmen of the year and 1st team all ACC, but I believe Redick will be ACC player of the year...
 
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