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American Education: An Associated Press veteran’s takes on five Europeans in NCAA basketball

October 17, 2012

Auda “will be a big factor” for Seton Hall

European, NCAA and youth basketball fans will definitely want to check out episode five of heinnews/ BallinEurope’s “Taking the Charge” podcast series posted today; in short, it’s a ton of information on prospects and the NCAA game courtesy (in the first half) of Jim O’Connell.

O’Connell has written for NCAA basketball for the Associated Press since 1978 and has just recently completed his 3,000th game writeup for the wire service. His CV is way too long to detail here, but let’s just say it culminates with entry into the U.S. Basketball Writers Association’s Hall of Fame in 2002.

So who better, BiE figured, to get some insight from on a handful of European prospects in American college basketball in 2012-13? Below run O’Connell’s insights into Patrick Auda of the Czech Republic; Patrick Heckmann and Elias Harris of Germany; Deniz Kilicli of Turkey; and Will Yeguete of France – plus video clips!

(Teaser: O’Connell reckons one of these guys is destined for an all-American-level year…)

Patrick Auda, Seton Hall: “I saw him play probably 10 times in person last year, and he was one of those guys who improved throughout the season … he’s gonna be a big factor for Seton Hall this year. They lost their inside player [Herb Pope], they lost their guard [Jordan] Theodore – they’re gonna have to change the way they play and [Auda’s] going to be a big factor for them … he’s a great outside shooter.”

Patrick Heckmann, Boston College: “[BC] is coming along. They brought in a coach with such a different style: Steve Donahue, who came in there from Cornell after they fired Al Skinner. It’s almost as though they have to wait for Skinner’s players to leave the program, because none of them fit in with what Donahue wants to do.

“I think Heckmann’s going to get a lot more minutes [this season], but what’s going to hurt him is that a lot of those minutes are going to come in the ACC, with so many good players. I think you’re gonna have to give him another year to adjust … I think next year you’ll see BC playing Donahue’s style and [Heckmann] fits into that style.”

Elias Harris, Gonzaga: “A big-time player. There were games last year when he took over for them … he’s that kind of Gonzaga player [about whom] everyone says, ‘How’d we miss him?’” The Gonzaga program is really one of learning and Harris has done that. I’m looking for him to have a big year, maybe getting on to one of the three All-America teams.

Deniz Kilicli, WVU: “He’s a big tough kid who probably shoots the three a little bit more than [coach] Bob Huggins wants, but … he’s such a tough guy and he fits Huggins’ program perfectly. West Virginia moving to the Big 12 out of the Big East [is important]. I think the Big 12 is going to be a better conference for a kid like [Kilicli] because everybody in the Big East tends to have that banger, that big guy that can go after people. The Big 12 doesn’t play that kind of game — the Big 12 is more of an open-court game and i think a kid like Kilicli can get open and hit some shots and then go inside and use his strength to do things that way … when you’re an individual inside/outside guy, you make your team so much better … I think he’s improved his basketball and his English-language skills.”

Will Yeguete, Florida: “He didn’t get a whole lot of minutes last year, but this year [Florida] is in transition … if a guy like [coach] Billy Donovan brings you in because he sees something in you, I’ve got to trust that. I didn’t see a lot of [Yeguete] last season, so I don’t want to comment on him too much…”

Oct 17, 2012ballineurope
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This post was published on October 17, 2012
On Panionios BC and the future of Greek basketballEnes, Ersan, Ömer and Hedo: Turkey’s quartet in the NBA preseason
Comments: 1
  1. Phileus
    12 years ago

    Nice write-up, though I have to say Harris seems to be the only one who looks like he has serious long-term pro prospects in the US (right now). A good season this year could probably bring him into the first round of the draft.

    Why do foreign players come to the US anyway, though? Unless you go to a top-profile program, it seems like you would do better even playing in second- or third-tier pro competition in Europe, put up gaudy stats, and get noticed by an idiot NBA GM who wants to look clever (Darko Milicic! Jan Vesely!).

    Even if you go to a top school, what guarantee do you have that it makes sense long-term? Did Martynas Pocius gain anything professionally by riding the pine in Duke, or would he have been better off playing in Lithuania?

    From another perspective, if Nick Calathes were Greek (and not Greek-American) and had come up in domestic youth leagues with the exact same skill set as he had coming out of the NBA, I bet he would have been a first round pick.

    For players from countries like Canada, UK or even Germany, with less-developed basketball infrastructures, it makes sense, but I wonder why young players would turn down a pro contract in Europe to play in the NCAA.

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  1. BallinEurope, the European Basketball news site » Blog Archive » March Madness: Three teams (and nine players) to support in the 2013 NCAA Tournament
    12 years ago

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ballineurope
12 years ago 2 Comments Features, More, NBA/NCAAbasketball highlights, Billy Donovan, Bob Huggins, Boston College, Czech Republic, Deniz Kilicli, Elias Harris, France, Germany, Gonzaga, Jim O’Connell, NCAA, Patrick Auda, Patrick Heckmann, Seton Hall, Steve Donahue, Turkey, University of Florida, West Virginia University, Will Yeguete
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