Wednesday, December 3, 2008
These are the kinds of moments a basketball player lives for.
Tyshawn Taylor found himself alone with the ball sprinting toward the basket four minutes into Kansas’ game against Kent State on Monday. He leapt from the floor to throw down a statement dunk.
But apparently Taylor didn’t jump high enough.
Freshman guard Tyshawn Taylor leaves a shot short during a fast break layup attempt during Monday night's game against Kent State
The ball clanked off the rim and a Kent State player grabbed the rebound. Opportunity missed.
“Now, I think I should have laid it in,” Taylor, a freshman guard, said. “At first, I thought I had it. Then I got up there and was like, ‘I’m not even close.’”
Freshman forward Marcus Morris committed a similar gaffe in Friday’s game against Coppin State. Near the beginning of the second half, Morris spotted an open path to the basket.
He drove in from the side and elevated for a one-handed jam. But the rim got in the way and rejected his shot.
“I don’t know what’s coming over me,” Morris said. “I just know I need to start finishing a lot more above the rim.”
Shots from close proximity have baffled the Jayhawks lately. They’ll try to fix the problem in tonight’s game against New Mexico State.
It’s not just dunks. The players have also missed an alarming number of layups early in the season.
Kansas coach Bill Self and his players like to call them “bunnies.” But they haven’t made the Jayhawks feel anything close to warm and fuzzy in the first six games of the season.
Taylor missed eight shots in the game against Kent State and four of them came right under the basket.
“I felt like it was going in every time,” Taylor said. “I’m getting there, but I’m just not hitting them.”
Morris missed a couple of layups in the game against Kent State. His most noticeable failures below the basket, however, came against Coppin State.
In the first 10 minutes, Morris missed three layups. Each time, he was able to corral the rebound and convert on his second chance.
Self said that he was happy Kansas still came away with points on the possessions, but that Morris must stop missing so much to begin with.
“I think it was something on the rim, because every time I put the ball in, it came back out,” Morris said. “I don’t know what it was.”
Although Marcus Morris and Taylor have specifically struggled with “bunnies,” it’s been an issue for the whole team.
Kansas’ two leading scorers, junior guard Sherron Collins and sophomore center Cole Aldrich, both missed layups early in the 89-81 overtime loss to Syracuse last week.
Sophomore guard Brady Morningstar has also missed a couple.
Of course, the issue didn’t play a significant role in the game against Kent State or Coppin State because Kansas won by 27 and 32 points, respectively.
But the Jayhawks are eager to improve their close-range accuracy immediately. The belief is that if they keep missing, it could hurt them in a game against a better team.
And actually, it already has. Self and Collins point towards numerous missed free throws down the stretch against Syracuse to explain the defeat.
But five missed shots from right below the basket in the opening 10 minutes are just as much at fault.
Make only one of those five and the game doesn’t go into overtime. Kansas wins. The Jayhawks, however, aren’t dwelling on that now. They know the importance of “bunnies.”
“It’s something that needs to be taken seriously,” Collins said. “We can’t be missing those shots. Especially in a game like Texas — we’ve got to have those shots.”
— — Edited by Mary Sorrick
Syracuse defeats Kansas 89-81 in overtime
Jayhawks lose first game of the season in the final of the ...
Thomas Robinson struggles to get double-double against ...
Robinson had to pull out a secret weapon on Monday: his free ...
Game Day: Kent State strikes
The Golden Flashes are the first of five non-BCS games for KU, ...
Morningstar's offense pushes Kansas to victory
Brady Morningstar set career-highs in six categories as the Jayhawks beat the ...
KU defeats Tennessee 92-85
Kansas gets its first quality victory of the season.
Women miss layups, open shots
Kansas struggled on offense against Pittsburg State Sunday, shooting 32 percent during ...
Marcus Morris impresses at Late Night scrimmage
The festivities of the night, including Bill Self’s appearance as Vanilla Ice, ...
Kansas tops Jackson State, 86-62
Sophomore guard Tyrel Reed is a key player in the Jayhawks’ victory.
One and done
No. 9 seed Baylor upsets top-seeded Kansas, winning 71-64 in quarterfinal round.
Jayhawks’ defense keys narrow victory
Kansas holds Tigers to 35 percent shooting.
Taylor efficient on both ends of floor
Tyshawn Taylor quietly helps Kansas roll Kansas State.
Self not worried about early miscues
The team struggled in portions of Tuesday's 90-59 victory, but coach Bill ...
Jayhawks fight back
Jayhawks score 32 points from the line in physical game.
Kansas falls out of rhythm in Oklahoma
The men’s basketball team has lost three of its last four road ...
Kansas vs. Siena
Kansas holds on against Siena 91-84
Goodrich finds a niche on stat sheet
Freshman on pace to shatter Big 12 assists record
Reed’s defensive play crucial in win against ...
Before Sherron Collins’ overtime heroics, junior guard Tyrel Reed provided a crucial ...
Morris shining in second half
Junior guard is making a habit of playing much better in the ...
Tyshawn Taylor energizes Jayhawks
The freshman guard made big plays against Washington to build momentum for ...
Kansas defense saves game from Memphis
Men’s basketball team struggled on offense but managed to scrape through with ...
Kansas-Oakland live blog
Follow The Kansan's live blog of No. 1 Kansas playing host to ...
Kansas bench makes up for slow starters
Collins, Taylor, and Henry didn't make any shots in the first 16 ...
No. 2 Kansas victorious in overtime against ...
Marcus Morris fouled out with five minutes left as the Wildcats tied ...
Jayhawks rally around bench in Columbia
Reed, Robinson and Markieff Morris played big roles in Kansas' 77-56 victory.
Kansas denies Dayton 60-43
Cole Aldrich recorded Kansas' first ever triple-double with 13 points, 20 rebounds ...
Kansas starts slow but picks up 2,000th ...
Poor shooting kept the game close at halftime, but Kansas' talent helped ...
Game Day: A different kind of tiger
Get ready for this Saturday's men's basketball game against Jackson State.
Sprint Center Stunner
Kansas dropped its second game of the season in a 61-60 upset ...
FINAL SCORE: Kansas 87, Kansas State 71
Aldrich, Collins and Taylor combined for 59 points to oust the Wildcats.
Women turn to transition game on offense
Kansas uses the fast break to advance to the WNIT third round ...
Jayhawks lose it at the end
After maintaining the lead, letting go of free throws and possessions leads ...
Kansas basketball shuts down Florida Gulf Coast ...
The Florida Gulf Coast Eagles made only 13 of 55 shots from ...
Team comes together, shows strong defense
Jayhawks shut down OSU’s Riley in first Big 12 road victory in ...
Morris Twins possess varied on-court talents
Philadelphia brothers willing to play on the wing and inside
Markieff loses pre-game jitters, posts record rebounds
The freshman forward grabbed more rebounds in his first game than any ...
Spartans escape with 67-62 victory
Sherron Collins missed a one-and-one free throw with 19 seconds left that ...
Late Night brings recruits, fans in droves
A packed house — including five five-star recruits and six four-stars — ...
Jayhawks overcome scrappy Golden Flashes to win ...
Aggressive play dominates Kansas victory against Kent State.
Kansas sets its sights on Oklahoma
Tonight’s Big Monday matchup pits together the Big 12 Conference’s top two ...
Despite early foul trouble, Kansas trounces Towson ...
The Jayhawks gained an early lead with a balanced attack and never ...

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
KUnited presidential candidate Libby Johnson and vice presidential ...
1 comment
Comments
Use the comment form below to begin a discussion about this content.
Sign in to comment
Or login with:
OpenID