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D.J. Richardson hustles for a loose ball during Tuesday's victory against Northern Illinois. The freshman had five points and three assists in the victory. By Robin Scholz

College Basketball Stats

Basketblog

Tisdale adds another USA Basketball invite

Mike Tisdale's participation in a USA Basketball training camp developed into something else: an invitation to another USA Basketball training camp.

There were 20 college players on the select team that trained with and against the national team last week in Las Vegas. Ten of those college guys will practice against the national team in New York City from Aug. 10-16. Tisdale's one of them.

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Tate: Illini offense needs McCamey

By Loren Tate
Tuesday, November 17, 2009 11:14 PM CDT

Photos of Tuesday's victory against NIU

CHAMPAIGN – The shot-making of precocious leaper Brandon Paul is the talk of the town – 42 points in his first two games – but it still appears the Illini will go only as far as remade point guard Demetri McCamey takes them.

Playmakers are always the key because they make their teammates better. We saw this with Bruce Douglas years ago, and with pass-minded guards like Larry Smith, Kiwane Garris, Frank Williams, Deron Williams and, in recent years, Chester Frazier.

And so it was on Tuesday night as Illinois downed Northern Illinois 80-61. McCamey kept the operation moving when the newcomers cooled (Paul had 20 points in the first half, none thereafter) and the slow-starting Mike Tisdale struggled. McCamey single-handedly got Mike Davis rolling with setup passes at 25-20 and 27-20, and followed shortly with a behind-the-back bounce pass to Tyler Griffey at 36-22.

When NIU closed to 49-46 after halftime, McCamey countered with a breakaway and a blind pass to Davis as the spread returned to 55-46. McCamey closed with eight assists, contributed 10 points with his clever crossover dribble and helped Tisdale come alive late.

"When Demetri got fouls and had to come out, the offense didn't run the same," coach Bruce Weber said. "Demetri is the key to our team."

Leading the way

Compounding point guard concerns is the fact that while D.J. Richardson has many developing assets, he hasn't yet become a take-charge penetrator-feeder.

This may create an opening for Jeff Jordan when he returns Saturday night against Presbyterian. Even with McCamey's newly tightened body, he can't be expected to go 40 minutes, and Jordan has qualities that might work in short stints.

Tisdale, Davis (17 rebounds Tuesday), Alex Legion and the freshmen are deadeyes, but they need direction. They need a facilitator. McCamey is that guy because, while he is not hesitant about shooting – he fired the first two in Tuesday's game – his mental approach is to create for someone else. Richardson had three assists against NIU, and no one else on the club had more than one.

With the game in the bag, Weber substituted liberally but kept McCamey in until the final minute. He's that valuable in keeping order on the court.

Tate's tidbits

– Former Illini Rob Judson, now a third-year assistant at Illinois State, was 74-101 in six seasons at NIU, and another former Illini, then-AD Jim Phillips, removed him after a 7-23 campaign in 2007. Huskies coach Ricardo Patton was 6-22 and 10-20 the last two years.

– Lou Henson will return to the sidelines with the Orange Krush when the former UI coach returns from New Mexico in December. The Krush produced $240,000 for various charities last season and is back in the fundraising business again this season.

– Illinois received no spots on the 50-man John Wooden preseason squad even as the Big Ten landed eight players.

– When Warren Carter lands a basketball job, assuming he hasn't already, that'll make 20 former Illini drawing pro basketball salaries. One of those, Cory Bradford, attended Tuesday's UI game. His season in Colombia, South America, is over, and he'll begin again in Venezuela in a couple of months.

Loren Tate writes for The News-Gazette. He can be reached at ltate@news-gazette.com.

Comments

Loren - - I like your work and admire your knowledge, but to mention Chester Frazier (and all of his "energy") in the same group as point guards Douglas, Garris, Smith, Frank and Deron Williams........is a slap in the face to point guards everywhere!

Posted by CecilColeman on November 17, 2009 at 11:15 PM  |  Suggest Removal

Yeah because none of those other guards came close to playing defense like chester except maybe Deron.

shut up larumby!

Posted by larueisbrumby on November 18, 2009 at 1:22 AM  |  Suggest Removal

The list was of guards that have a pass first mentality, not just "greatest guards of all time". However I disagree that none of them played defense like Chester. As I recall, Douglas could have stolen the ball from fort knox.

Posted by squad33 on November 18, 2009 at 6:05 AM  |  Suggest Removal

test

Posted by joytrade on November 18, 2009 at 8:32 AM  |  Suggest Removal

Loren,

Like the article but, Kiwane and Frank are "passing" guards? 3-4 assists per game does not a passing guard make. I couldn't count the times when a pick and roll created a wide open teammate, but Kiwane didn't even look his way, intent on finding a crease where hecould dribble drive. And Frank? I thought Kruger would pull out all his hair trying to get him to pass the ball. Teams where the point guard is the leading scorer are beatable; the teams of Bruce and Deron, those were superior teams because they had great passing guards who thought pass-shoot-dribble, not dribble-shoot-pass.

Posted by joytrade on November 18, 2009 at 8:57 AM  |  Suggest Removal

I agree with your comments on McCamey, Loren; however, as much as I loved Kiwane (especially what he did to Cris Collins and Duke in Cameron), he was no passing PG.

Posted by ekane555 on November 18, 2009 at 9:30 AM  |  Suggest Removal

Let's see. Who's that with the 9th highest single season assist average in Illini history? Why it's Kiwane Garris at 5.63 per game. Only 4 Illini ever averaged more per game - Deron Williams (twice), Tony Wysinger, Bruce Douglas (4 times) and Dee Brown. Garris was a scorer first, no doubt, but also a fine set-up man. That being said, because he was a scorer first I probably wouldn't call him "pass-minded."

Posted by MisterMoose on November 18, 2009 at 10:06 AM  |  Suggest Removal

Not sure how this team will end up, but at least the basketball coach knows how to line up his people. His teams look prepared! And, he knows how to coach the talent when it arrives!

Posted by vreato on November 18, 2009 at 1:07 PM  |  Suggest Removal

Loren: In your words, then won. So..........stop whining.

Posted by IlliniHimey on November 18, 2009 at 1:24 PM  |  Suggest Removal

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