Trent Johnson is a glass half-full kind of guy.
The Stanford coach could be full of pessimism because his most talented player,
sophomore 7-footer Brook Lopez, is ineligible for the first semester.
``We're as healthy as we've ever been," Johnson said. "In my 16 years, I've
never gone into a year with a full complement of guys."
It was also be different for Brook Lopez from a year ago, when he was injured
and missed the first five games after offseason back surgery. After missing
about 10 practices, Brook has been able to practice with the team since last
Friday.
Johnson told FOXSports.com that he anticipates Lopez being cleared to play
after grades are posted - which will be somewhere mid-December. That would mean
he misses the first nine games and could return at home against Santa
Clara on Dec. 19.
``What we're talking about with Brook are maturity and accountability issues,"
Johnson said. "It is what it is and Brook's fully aware. He's not going to let
the NBA talk get to his head."
``He knows what's at stake," Johnson added. "He knows he has to mature and be
held accountable. There's no grey area."
Johnson said he's hopeful that the Cardinal can take care of the ball more
effectively than a year ago, when they had just one more assistant than turnovers
as a team.
``It was a team-wide problem last year," he said. ``It wasn't just the point
guard."
Look for Mitch Johnson and Drew Shiller, who transferred from San
Francisco, to get the majority of the time at the
point guard spot with Fred Washington filling in at times.
HOKIE POKIE
No ACC team lost as much as Virginia Tech.
Hokies coach Seth Greenberg will have to find a way to replace the backcourt tandem
of Zabian Dowdell and Jamon Gordon, who helped lead Virginia Tech to a 22-12
record last season.
Greenberg knows what he has with athletic wing Deron Washington
and shooter A.D. Vassalo. The rest is somewhat of a mystery as the Hokies open
up tonight against Elon.
``We're getting better, but I still don't know what we have," Greenberg said.
The Hokies biggest question mark comes at the point guard spot after Nigel Munson,
who was slated to run the team, surprisingly transferred out of the program.
Diminutive freshman and Las Vegas native Hank Thorns (5-9, 140) hasn't been
overwhelmed in two scrimmages against Jonathan Wallace (Georgetown) and Devan
Downey (South Carolina), two of the better floor leaders in the country.
``He's been solid," Greenberg said.
The Hokies will need some post production out of the combination of 6-foot-9
junior Cheick Diakite and sophomore Lewis Witcher. Expect 6-foot-7 freshman Jeff
Allen to produce immediately at the power forward spot.
Freshman forward J.T. Thompson will give the team energy off the bench - and Greenberg
is hopeful that Thompson's cousin, Dorenzo Hudson, will be able to join the
team after the first semester - maybe in time for the Dec. 16 contest at Old
Dominion. Hudson is a talented
scoring wing who wasn't academically cleared in time to join the team for the
first semester.
GRAND MARSHALL
A day after Kentucky lost to
Gardner-Webb, 7-foot senior Garrett Stutz committed to Wichita
State despite heavy interest from
the Wildcats and SMU.
Believe it or not, Stutz actually committed to new Wichita
State coach Gregg Marshall's
11-year-old son, Kellen.
According to one source, the pair played a game of Pop-a-Shot (an electronic
basketball game) while Stutz was on his official visit this past weekend. Stutz
called up last night and asked the younger Marshall
if they could play the game for the next four years.
This was a huge get for Marshall, who has a trio of seniors - P.J. Couisnard,
Matt Braeuer and Phillip Thomasson - leaving the program after this season.
Marshall said he's excited about
the future. He has long, 6-foot-8 freshman Aaron Ellis, who has been a pleasant
surprise, and then Stutz and 6-foot-4 guard Toure Murray out of Houston
will come in next season.
Marshall is also waiting to hear
whether athletic 7-foot Nigerian Ehimen Orukpe will be eligible and play second
semester this season. Orukpe, the perfect complement to Stutz, is still trying
to pass his exit exam in Nigeria.
However, Marshall isn't looking
past this year, either. It's just that the ex-Winthrop coach goes in not
knowing much about the Missouri Valley Conference.
RANDOM NOTES: LSU coach John Brady's
team will be more perimeter-oriented after losing Tyrus Thomas and Glen "Big
Baby" Davis in the last two years. ``We'll run the ball more than in the past,"
Brady said. "For this team, an 18-foot jumper may be better than an 8-footer." ...
Tennessee guard J.P. Prince had
shoulder surgery yesterday and is expected to miss the next month or so. That's
not a huge hit for the Vols because Prince wasn't eligible to play until
mid-December after transferring from Arizona
in the middle of last season.