Tuesday, March 4, 2008
One by one they moved on.
David Padgett left for Louisville and an opportunity to play on the wing. Omar Wilkes transferred to Cal to play closer to home. J.R. Giddens’ questionable off-court decisions paved the way for his exodus to New Mexico.
Jeremy Case, the other member of that recruiting class, lasted through all of it and a redshirt year in the 2004-2005 season. It wasn’t easy. Case would be lying if he told you thoughts of quitting and leaving Kansas never entered his mind.
“The guys in my class,” Case said, “they made me think about it a lot.”
Case may not have ever gained a consistent role in his career, but his perseverance paid off in Kansas’ 109-51 victory against Texas Tech on Monday. In his last home game, Case, a fifth-year senior, made three three-pointers in a stretch of two minutes and helped turn Kansas’ routine romp against the Red Raiders into a record display of senior power.
Case, Russell Robinson, Sasha Kaun, Rodrick Stewart and Darnell Jackson went out with a bang, and led the Jayhawks to their largest margin of victory in a conference game ever. The seniors combined for 50 points.
“I got goosebumps,” Case said. “I can’t even describe it.”
Case came to Kansas in 2003 as a member of Roy Williams’ final recruiting class. Fans heard how he made 45 percent of his treys in high school and immediately thought Case could be the second-coming Jeff Boschee.
Somehow, it didn’t quite work out for Case. He drew iron or sometimes even nothing at all when he checked into the game for short playing bursts his first season.
That act has continued throughout Case’s career. He’s never made more than 14 three-pointers in a season, while getting fewer minutes than any scholarship player.
Case could’ve gone to a smaller school and found more playing time, but that’s just not the type of person he is. He learned he could help the team through practice and during his limited minutes, so he began to embrace the role. Case didn’t want to leave like Padgett, Wilkes and Giddens did.
“Every team is going to have players that don’t play as much as they want to play,” Kansas coach Bill Self said, “but what gives you a chance to be a great team is if those guys are great teammates. If those guys are great teammates, they get the big picture, and Jeremy certainly gets the big picture.”
Case said he couldn’t have scripted a better ending to his career at Allen Fieldhouse. His special day began early this morning. Rita Newton, Case’s mom, made her son pancakes, eggs and bacon for breakfast — the same meal she makes when he’s back home. The day went by slowly for Case until this afternoon. That’s when he started getting nervous for his final game.
Case’s butterflies showed early. He missed his two three-point attempts and said he felt exhausted after playing the first few minutes of the game. But in the second half, as Max Falkenstein said after the game, Case found the zone.
Kansas led 77-36 with 10:31 left in the game. Case proceeded to make a three-pointer on three of the Jayhawks’ next four possessions. After he sunk his last long ball, he handed out two assists. The run sparked by Case extended the KU lead to 93-40 with 7:14 remaining.
Kansas played brilliantly on offense all night. The Jayhawks scored a season-high 109 points, made 14 three-pointers and shot an absurd 59.7 percent for the game. Heck, the walk-ons came in with about six minutes left and still ran up the score.
“I could’ve taken Kobe tonight,” Robinson said, referring to Lakers star Kobe Bryant. “Brennan Bechard could’ve taken Kobe tonight. Everybody was playing today.”
The energy level was high for the second game in a row. Self talked earlier this season about peaking at the right time, in late February and early March. After back-to-back solid performances, Kansas might be doing just that.
“Just in this six day stretch,” Self said, “we’ve looked like a totally different team.”
Regardless of how much he plays in the next month, Case knows the end of his final season will be special. He’s glad he stuck around through the tough times. Now, Case said he was happy to have years of memories and connections that would help him make it in his planned coaching career.
“I’m going to always be a Jayhawk,” Case said. “It’s in my blood now.”
That’s something all five seniors can say. Self said this class, the first one he’s ever coached from the beginning to end at any of his coaching stops, matured in times of adversity to turn into one of the most successful classes in school history.
“To see them go through tough times,” Self said, “and rally around each other, I take great pride in that…We couldn’t have a better group of guys to represent us.”
—Edited by Sasha Roe
Moore: Departed players helped today’s roster
Players leaving may not always make sense but in some cases, it ...
Robinett: Kansas doesn't need Downs
Keefer: Senior Night to remember for Robinson
Russell Robinson scored 15 points and led the Jayhawks to a 109-51 ...
Jackson leads Jayhawks to victory
Seniors take lead this basketball season
Last year, the Kansas men’s basketball team had no seniors. This year, ...
Senior Nights leave lasting impressions
Fans show appreciation for the contributions of outgoing seniors on Senior Night.
Tyrel Reed’s shooting wins close games
Sophomore guard proves reliable finisher with 39.7 percent from the three-point line
Childhood idol influences Little’s game
Taking inspiration from Michael Jordan, Little brings a new element to the ...
An impressive farewell
Six Kansas seniors played their last game in Allen Fieldhouse tonight and ...
Basketball Notes: Nov. 29, 2007
Notes about Wednesday's night's game and the upcoming game
Morningstar's offense pushes Kansas to victory
Brady Morningstar set career-highs in six categories as the Jayhawks beat the ...
Collins comes back for real
Kansas wins 90-60 in its last nonconference game of the season. The ...
Quintet graduates from the Phog
This group is the first senior class Bill Self recruited and coached ...
Offensive Outburst, Defensive Letdown
Kansas beat Siena 91-84, but gave up a season-high 32 field goals.
The road to becoming a true Jayhawk
Nystrom creates his own (hypothetical) Senior Night speech in which he reflects ...
Basketball Report Card
Case Keefer, the University Daily Kansan’s basketball reporter, is fresh off his ...
Players focus on getting playing time
Stewart has slight lead against Case, Morningstar for time
Jackson shows off tweaked shooting skills
Jackson was included in the starting lineup for the first time this ...
Blog: Top ten Border War moments
Sam Kovzan breaks down his 10 favorite border war moments
Jayhawks drive to victory after slow start
Tyrel Reed knocks down five three-pointers to kick-start the Kansas attack
Little retains passion despite adversity
From promising recruit to backstage senior, Little has weathered a challenging career.
Releford wills Kansas to victory
It took a 25-point performance from freshman guard Travis Releford and a ...
Rock Chalk River Walk
The Jayhawks will travel to San Antonio on Saturday for the Final ...
Marcus Morris fine-tuning outside stroke
Forward’s ability to knock down three-pointers keeps defenses honest, takes pressure off ...
Team debuts in Great White North
The Jayhawks showed Canada how Kansas basketball is played, winning all three ...
Goble: Taylor’s play narrowly escapes disaster
Tyshawn Taylor played well despite two mistakes that could have easily cost ...
Momentum rolls on after shaky start
Despite a sloppy first half, Kansas maintains their lead and manages a ...
Game Day: Kent State strikes
The Golden Flashes are the first of five non-BCS games for KU, ...
Collins takes a back seat, Morris brothers ...
Last two games leave Self and team feeling down.
KU 92, Washburn 60, starring: Brandon Rush
Jayhawks dominate on offense during the second half after the defense stuggled ...
Self’s advice helps Hawks overpower Cats
Passes in to Aldrich helped turn the game in Jayhawks’ favor on ...
KU defeats Albany 79-43
Nothing too tough for the Jayhawks tonight. They easily beat the Danes.
LIVE UPDATES: Michigan State 75, Kansas 62
Kansas fought back in the second half, but couldn't do enough to ...
Scrappy Jayhawks battle back
Second-half scuffle drives Kansas as it recovers from subpar start to remain ...
Self sees room for improvement
Despite Kansas’ win against the Cowboys, coach Bill Self doesn’t highlight the ...
Vosburgh: Reed collects threes early on for ...
Three-pointers were key focus in practice, allowing opportunities for Reed.
Feeling Defeat
It took overtime for Syracuse to beat Kansas 89-81 in the CBE ...
Raising Tennessee
Tennessee is the most athletic team in the country, but Taylor Bern ...
One last time at Allen Fieldhouse
Five seniors will celebrate their final game in Allen Fieldhouse tonight at ...
Kansas tops Jackson State, 86-62
Sophomore guard Tyrel Reed is a key player in the Jayhawks’ victory.
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