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Thread: Athlete (1987-91) Kevin Brooks

  1. Default Kevin Brooks

    TNT wasn't fair to USL's Brooks after he was picked

    LOUISIANA La. -- Kevin Brooks defied all the odds and was drafted in the first round in the annual NBA draft Wednesday.

    Brooks, 6-foot-8 and 200 pounds, will be a shooting guard or small forward in the NBA. The lad who went from Dorseville Junior High to White Castle High School was taken 18th overall by the Milwaukee Bucks.

    TNT (Turner Network Television) carried the draft live from Madison Square Garden in New York City. The network used one announcer and two so-called "experts" to try to anticipate each pick and to then tell the audience how each selected future star would fit in with the picking team.

    That went along quite well until Brooks was selected by Milwaukee. The experts had not even mentioned the name of the University of Southwestern Louisisiana star for four seasons.

    NBA commissioner David Stern got flabbergasted and said Brooks was from "Southwest" Louisiana. I guess the czar was just reading what the Bucks had sent to the podium on the famed selection sheet.

    Of course, I cannot believe that Bucks vice-president of basketball operations and head coach Del Harris would make such a mistake, since he is familiar with former Ragin' Cajuns star Dwight Lamar.

    Talk about another reason to get the school's name changed! How much good can it do to get mentioned on national TV and have the name pronounced wrong?

    But that was just the start. On every player picked before and after Brooks, the experts discussed the "strengths" and "weaknesses" of the player.

    Unless my eyes deceived me, and I do not believe they did, I believe I saw written under one of the weaknesses listed were the words "weak schedule."

    Now that line was only half visible on my television and I was not going to write anything about it, but I got a call from some viewers in California and they had seen the same thing.

    But as I noted above, the experts never got around to analyzing Brooks' attributes. They cut to Oakland, Calif., to talk to Don Nelson of the Golden State Warriors out in the Bay Area, their guest "picker." Golden State had taken the 16th and 17th players in the draft and TNT seemed more interested in that than they did about Brooks.

    That weak schedule notation means simply that Brooks had to go to the various camps and demonstrate he had enough ability to go in the two rounds of selections. One must keep in mind that the NBA only goes two rounds in its draft because there are not many rookies past the first 54 picks making the rosters in October.

    The NBA has various camps for "on the border" players to show their worth and apparently Brooks was able to do this. Nonetheless, the Bucks have announced that they will trade Brooks. He may end up in Denver soon.

    Brooks, while performing at USL for four seasons, played every position but point guard and probably could have played a little of that had he been asked to do so. He averaged around 20 points a game and 8 rebounds and was deadly on his jump shots from the 10-foot to 20-foot range.

    Brooks went to all the camps and was impressive. At a recent camp in Indianapolis, he was ranked first out of 64 "tryouts." Most everyone knew he would go in the top 54, but few expected him to be among the 27 taken in the first round.

    While USL's run-and-gun offense is sometimes a yolk around the Cajuns' necks in collegiate games, it does get the players ready for the NBA, if they have the other skills, that is. And Brooks has those abilities to have a long career in the NBA. He needs to put on a little weight and get some overall body strength and he will be ready.

    But he knows how to run the lanes and shoot the jump shot and that is something that is hard to teach in the pros.

    Brooks was robbed out of player-of-the-year honors in the American South Conference after last season but he has his destiny in his own hands as far as making it in the NBA is concerned.

    If weak schedule was one of the "knocks" against Brooks in this draft, it will not be able to be used against the Cajuns who will be seniors next year.

    Eric Mouton, Marcus Stokes and company will go out against an excellent schedule put together by coach Marty Fletcher and staff, under the guidance of athletic director Nelson Stokley.

    Fletcher got rid of the Southwestern Athletic Conference opponents on his schedule and will be playing a very formidable card during the upcoming season.

    The Ragin' Cajuns will play the obligatory exhibition games against the Arkansas Express (Nov. 4) and Newcastle, Falcons of Australia (Nov. 14).

    USL has changed the format of the Louisiana Classics Tournament. USL will play Ole Miss on Nov. 29 and Southeastern Conference regular-season co-champion Mississippi State on Nov. 30. he fourth team in the tournament has not been announced as of yet, but will play the Mississippi schools on the nights USL does not. Ole Miss will not play Mississippi State and the Cajuns will not meet the team that has not been announced as of yet.

    In addition, USL will meet always tough Northern Iowa, Memphis State and McNeese State in home-and-home non-conference encounters.

    The "American Sun Belt Conference" becomes a reality Tuesday, so USL will have a 16-game conference schedule. The home-and-home series will be with Arkansas State, Louisiana Tech, Central Florida, Lamar, South Alabama and New Orleans.

    The Acadiana school will have single league home games against Western Kentucky and Texas-Pan American and will have conference road games with Jacksonville and Little Rock.

    USL will also play Florida International and Nicholls State at home and Southern Mississippi on the road.

    No one can accuse USL of playing a weak schedule this year.

    J.C. HATCHER
    THE BATON ROUGE MORNING ADVOCATE

  2. Default NBL news: The Pirates snares Kevin Brooks

    Former NBA player, NBL-Championship winner and multiple-finals-series MVP Kevin Brooks (203-F-69, college: Louisiana) has today agreed to a one-year contractl to play with the Hunter Pirates.

    The Pirates second import, Brooks is a six foot nine inch swingman who brings a wealth of experience from leagues around the world, as well as leadership and pointscoring power.

    “Kevin is a genuine A-list star, who I know the people of the Hunter will love coming to see play,” Pirates General Manager Butch Hays said.

    “Recruiting a player of KB’s calibre shows just how much faith there is in this new club, and puts us a giant leap closer to being ready to play October 1.”

    Brooks has had a stellar career after starring for his College, the University of Louisiana, becoming 18th pick overall in the NBA draft and traded to Denver.

    The rest of the story

    - Jun 30, 2003 - by Gauthier Gerard


  3. UL Basketball 1991 NBA Draft

    Saints banking on new import to rescue season

    Saints chief executive Nick Mills could hardly believe former Denver Nuggets forward Kevin Brooks had arrived yesterday to try and rescue the Wellington team's National Basketball League season.

    Mills, an authority on the New Zealand game, said the American was the most distinguished basketballer to play here.

    Brooks was the 18th pick in the 1991 NBA draft, and only the second player with NBA experience behind Tony Bennett to play in the New Zealand league, Mills said.

    There was also a strong element of luck in securing Brooks's services, Mills said, with little competition from other national leagues at present.

    Brooks had previously priced himself out of the higher profile Australian league after playing with the Adelaide 36ers, who he led to back-to-back titles, and Sydney Kings, Mills said, which indicated Saints were fortunate to secure him.

    Brooks, 32, arrived fresh from resuscitating the season of the Sodertalje Kings in Sweden, just what Saints needed to hear as they sat at the bottom of the national league for the first time in 20 years.

    The Kings just scrambled into the Swedish playoffs, Brooks said, and they knocked out a series of higher-ranked teams before losing to the top qualifiers 3-2 in the best-of-five finals.

    Brooks was voted the forward of the Swedish league and, according to Kings coach Jan Enjebo, was the reason they reached the finals.

    "If you hire him (Kevin) you will get a player with great shooting skills," Enjebo said in an e-mail to Basketball New Zealand.

    "He will play the team game and has the ability to take over a game. He is also a money player who will take the clutch shot."

    It was suggested that Brooks was capable of scoring 50 points for the Saints in a couple of games.

    Brooks said he knew little about New Zealand or the standard of basketball, but after talking to Saints coach Dean Vickerman, he was eager to perform despite being drained after a tough season in Sweden and having little time to get over jetlag.

    "I know what the coach expects of me. He wants me to lead a young team by example," Brooks said.

    "I'll also look to bring experience and consistency and try and do it the right way. I'm not the type of player to come in and try and tell everyone how to play. That doesn't work very well."

    Brooks said he liked to think he could turn Saints' season around. They have just one win from four outings and have 12 more matches in the regular season.

    Vickerman, an Australian, was well acquainted with Brooks's attributes, having seen him perform for Adelaide. The coach said he had the ability to fill any position and he would have different jobs depending on the opposition.

    "Kevin is an exciting player and I'd expect him to put bums on seats where ever he plays in New Zealand," Vickerman said.

    "We got Kevin a little bit by chance through his agent."

    Brooks will practice his individual skills today and have a team session tomorrow ahead of Saturday night's away game to North Harbour.

    The source of the story

    By PETER BIDWELL
    01 May 2002

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