Friday, April 4, 2008
Darrell Arthur has played against Tyler Hansbrough — well, once.
In the summer of 2003, Kansas’ sophomore forward shared the floor with Hansbrough — then a high school junior — at the Nike Hoop Jamboree. Arthur might have trouble recognizing that Hansbrough today. That Hanbrough was a little lighter, a little shorter and his skills a little less polished. But the faint memory Arthur has of Hansbrough includes the one skill that made Hansbrough the face of college basketball.
“He had the same motor,” Arthur said.
Nearly five years later, Arthur will step back on to the floor with Hansbrough, and the player they call Psycho-T needs no introduction. No longer the baby-faced kid at Nike camp, Hansbrough has morphed into a rebound grabbing, body banging, basketball Tazmanian-devil.
North Carolina's Tyler Hansbrough, right, dunks over Juan Palacios during the second half of the NCAA East Regional final basketball game in Charlotte, N.C., in this March 29, 2008 file photo. Hansbrough has played every possession of his career with the unbreakable determination that he would one day lead North Carolina to a national championship.
A first-team All-American and likely National Player of the Year, Hansbrough could give Kansas its toughest defensive test of the season. Hansbrough’s raw strength and athleticism combined with an unflappable will make Hansbrough an opposing coach’s nightmare.
“What don’t you know about Hansbrough?,” Kansas senior forward Darnell Jackson said. “He’s a great player.”
Jackson, along with Arthur, senior Sasha Kaun, and as Self noted, freshman Cole Aldrich, will all be counted on to defend Hansbrough, who comes into Saturday’s National semi-final averaging 22.8 points and 10.3 rebounds per game.
There might not be a definitive way to defend Hansbrough. Don’t believe it? Ask the coaches in the Atlantic Coast Conference. Although they might not want to talk about it.
Not after the way Hansbrough gashed Miami for 35 points in on Jan. 23.
“He just completely dominated,” Miami coach Frank Haith told reporters after the game.
He ran up 39 points on Clemson in an overtime victory on Feb. 10, and toyed with N.C. State to the tune of 32 points on Feb. 20.
Still, his best performance of the season might have came against Louisville last weekend, as Hansbrough drove the Tar Heels to the Final Four with 28 points and 13 rebounds.
“He’s plays harder than probably anybody in the country,” Arthur said.
The legend of Psycho-T is still growing in Chapel Hill, N.C., and leading the Tar Heels back to the Final Four for the 17th time in school history hasn’t hurt. Some Hansbrough legends have even made their way back to Lawrence.
“I hear stories about how when they’re on off days,” Jackson said “and he’s in the gym, five hours, working on his own.”
He’s from Missouri
They’ve been saying it since he was in high school. He’s all grit and intensity and heart. He just outworks people. The insinuation? Hansbrough isn’t particularly skilled. It’s a stereotype Hansbrough scoffs out.
“I think some of my other skills are overlooked,” Hansbrough said.
Of course, he was dominant in high school. Hansbrough, with the help of his little brother Ben, who now plays at Mississippi State, won two Missouri 5A state championships at Poplar Bluff High School.
Poplar Bluff, a town of about 16,000, sits in the Ozark foothills about 30 miles from the Arkansas border.
“Who would have ever thought, starting out in Poplar Bluff,” Hansbrough said, “I would end up playing at North Carolina, and then go play at a Final Four.”
By the time Hansbrough was a senior in high school, Kansas coach Bill Self already knew all about the Missouri high school star. As Hansbrough’s profile was rising, Poplar Bluff played a nationally televised game against Greg Oden’s high school team. Poplar Bluff lost, but the nation saw Hansbrough — and so did Arthur, who recalled the Hansbrough versus Oden matchup before practice on Tuesday.
It’s no secret, Kansas wanted Hansbrough – bad.
“We recruited Tyler very hard,” Self said. “He visited here. Back then you knew that he would be something special.”
North Carolina, Kansas and Kentucky were all hot in pursuit.
Williams and North Carolina won out.
Hansbrough won National Freshman of the year in 2006, but a young North Carolina team fell to upstart George Mason in the second round of the NCAA tournament. Last season Hansbrough was named an AP first team All-American, but again the Tar Heels fell short of the Final Four by giving up a late lead to Georgetown in the Elite Eight.
This season Hansbrough lifted North Carolina over the Final Four hump.
“We just want to keep on moving,” Hansbrough said.
Guarding Hansbrough
If Kansas has any advantage in finding a way to stop Hansbrough, it can thank ESPN.
Bill Self said Kansas’ players were able to watch North Carolina play at least 10 times this year, because North Carolina seems to play every game on national television.
The theory goes like this: The more times you see a team play, the most familiar you are with its tendencies and style of play.
Self said Kansas saw Davidson play maybe once before it played the Wildcats in the Elite Eight. That alone put Kansas at a natural disadvantage, Self said.
Unlike Davidson, North Carolina is a media darling. The Tar Heels play on ESPN regularly, and Hansbrough seems to spend more time on television than Anderson Cooper.
“Their whole team has been the talk of the town, the talk of the national news,” Arthur said. “We’re just going to have to come bring our ‘A’ game and play.”
Arthur said Kansas will throw everybody they have at Hansbrough.
As for specific match-ups, Self said Kaun would be the Jayhawks’ best option to contain Hansbrough.
“If you just look at it on paper, Sasha’s standing height and size would be as good a match-up as we would have with him,” Self said.
But Kaun won’t play the entire game, which will leave Jackson and Arthur to guard Hansbrough at times.
Nearly five years ago, Arthur was a high school sophomore, guarding Hansbrough at the Nike Hoop Jamboree. Now the stage is a little bit bigger.
But for Arthur, the key to Hansbrough has stayed the same. It’s all about the motor.
“The whole team,” Arthur said, “is going to have to match his intensity.”
— Edited by Jared Duncan
Rewind: A look back at this weekend's ...
The high/low, prime plays, notebook and more.
Morning Brew: Gurley to provide insight, humor
Aldrich to the rescue
After Sasha Kaun and Darnell Jackson found themselves in trouble with early ...
Kansas defeats North Carolina, 84-66, advances to ...
Kansas held off a rabid North Carolina comeback to survive and advance.
See you on Monday
The Jayhawks use an early run and a late run to put ...
Final Four breakdown
It’s the battle of the No. 1 seeds in the Final Four ...
Players don’t get sidetracked by past
Although fans may see this game as the ultimate payback against Roy ...
Jayhawks surprise skeptics with underdog upset
The Jayhawks did exactly what they were told they couldn’t do. The ...
Keefer: Final Four, not the Roy Game
Kansas should just focus on the Final Four game instead of calling ...
Self's defensive switch and big plays from ...
According to coach Bill Self, the victory over North Carolina showed how ...
Matson: Taking a look at the Midwest ...
Kendall Marshall's right-wrist injury could affect the outcome of the Midwest region.
A clash of two different styles
North Carolina scores in bunches and plays fast, while Kansas banks on ...
The best of the Final Four
Who has the best scorer? The best rebounder? The best mascot? All ...
Sarraf: Looking to the future
Through strong recruiting and consistent coaching, Bill Self is ensuring that the ...
Why 2K: Next victory a milestone for ...
Kansas might join Kentucky and North Carolina with 2,000 all-time victories if ...
Kovzan: Kansas, usually the hunted, becomes the ...
Past Kansas teams have cracked and buckled in the tournament under the ...
Robinson signs on to play for Jayhawks
Washington, D.C. product joins standout Elijah Johnson in Kansas’ incoming class
Jayhawks attempting to make rebuilding a smooth ...
After losing eight key players from last year’s team, Kansas looks to ...
Jayhawks top Tar Heels, advance to Final ...
Taylor, Robinson lead effort against former coach Roy Williams.
Self strives to make first trip to ...
Leading three different teams to the Elite Eight, Kansas coach Bill Self ...
Beecher: Reimagining the win
Kansas’ 2008 national championship cannot go down as having been a one-sided ...
Men’s basketball undaunted in Final Four
Although Kansas doesn't have any All-American players, they're confident against other Final ...
Defensive switch seals victory
Kansas only allowed three points in final nine minutes.
Morning Brew: Top seeds have historical edge
In last 20 tournaments, 95 percent of winners have had one of ...
Arthur's eligibility called into question
Darrell Arthur may not have been academically qualified to play basketball at ...
Pay heed when entering Phog, Roy’s ghost ...
The Grading Scale: Jayhawks to the Final ...
The Kansan sports staff issues grades to the Jayhawk squad — guess ...
Kansas baseball falls short in Regionals
The Jayhawks lost to North Carolina in the Regional finals.
Colaianni: March may reveal weakness
Matchups with Florida, Georgetown and North Carolina may prove to be too ...
Breaking down Self’s triangle-and-two defense
If Bill Self out-coached North Carolina’s Roy Wiliams Sunday, his defense strategy ...
Freshmen play to impress
Stellar freshmen athletes from around the country seek to shine in this ...
Morning Brew: 2008 Jayhawks best team in ...
The championship Jayhawks beat both the 2007 and 2009 champions.
Tennis squad features ranked doubles team
Junior Maria Martinez and sophomore Alessandra Dzuba are ranked 44th in the ...
Basketball great Maurice King dies
In 1954 King became the first black starter in Kansas basketball history. ...
Arthur injures leg, out at least a ...
Stress fracture in lower leg will cause sophomore to miss FIBA U19 ...
Two coaches, differing opinions, one outcome
Bill Self and Roy Williams used different tactics in Sunday’s game. Some ...

From left: Kimberlee Hinkle, Libby Johnson and Hannah ...
1 comment
Kansas Jayhawk fans hold aloft a reproduction of ...
2 comments
Erin Saupe, a Ph.D. student from St. Cloud, ...
1 comment
0 comments
Armed robbers continue to threaten.
3 comments
Comments
Use the comment form below to begin a discussion about this content.
Sign in to comment
Or login with:
OpenID