I got to Lafayette in November 2007. Before that I worked for 2 1/2 years as the high school sports editor for a newspaper in Jackson, Tenn. In addition to covering some of the best prep ball in the country in the Memphis area, I got to cover the Memphis Grizzlies and University of Memphis and staff two Nike Hoop Summit events that included the nations elite prep players and coaches.
Again, playing at a high level doesn't automatically make anyone more qualified to talk about the game. In many cases it might, but not all former players are students of the game. I am a student of the game.
I'm not just a rec player. I dedicated years of my life to playing and studying the game. I went to college to be a walk-on and goofed it up. Instead of transferring, I continued studying to be a coach and later decided instead to become a journalist.
Since then, I've picked the brains of NBA and DI players and coaches while in this profession. That includes Shane Battier, Steve Nash, John Calipari and Bruce Pearl. Somehow I held my own in those conversations about Xs and Os.
So just assuming that you're automatically more qualified to talk about the game is quite narrow-minded. At last count, most of the people on this board have the same number of years as a full-time DI assistant and a head high school coach as you do: zero.
Not a knock on your work or "hatin'." Just saying.
igeaux.mobi
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