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Emma Coburn Named A Semifinalist For USTFCCCA special honor

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NEW ORLEANS – Recent University of Colorado graduate Emma Coburn has been named one of 10 semifinalists for the prestigious USTFCCCA’s The Bowerman, which is given out annually to the top male and female collegiate track and field performers of the year.

 

Coburn won the 2013 NCAA 3,000-meter steeplechase title with the fifth-fastest time in NCAA history less than two weeks ago, crossing the finish in 9:35.38. Overall it was Coburn’s third individual championship. She won the steeplechase in 2011 before redshirting the 2012 season and during the indoor season she won CU’s first NCAA mile title. During her five years at CU, she has been an All-American on six different occasions.emma

 

The 2012 Olympian was also named the 2013 USTFCCCA Mountain Region Indoor and Outdoor Women’s Track Athlete of the Year, and for good reason as she ran the fastest mile, 1,500 and steeplechase times by an NCAA athlete in 2013.

 

The Bowerman takes into account an athlete’s complete season and Coburn got a great start to her final campaign. She was invited to compete in the indoor mile at the 106th Millrose Games (in a field full of professional athletes) and ran a PR of 4:29.86 to become the fifth fastest NCAA athlete ever in the mile. A few short weeks later, she ran another sub-4:30 mile to win CU’s first NCAA indoor mile title in 4:29.91 and also became the first American to run a pair of sub-4:30 miles in the same season.

 

During the outdoor season, Coburn continued to impress. She ran the then-fastest steeplechase time in the world at the Payton Jordan Cardinal Invite (9:28.26) in Stanford, Calif. just two days after her 2013 1,500-meter debut (4:11.36) at the 104th Drake Relays in Des Moines, Iowa. Coburn won her first Pac-12 title in the steeplechase in May (9:55.67).

 

Instead of taking a week off between outdoor conference and the NCAA West Preliminary Championship, she took to the track again in a field of professional athletes at the OXY High Performance meet in the 1,500 and cruised to a PR of 4:06.87 while becoming the fifth-best performer in NCAA history.

 

This past April, Coburn was named CU’s Co-Female Athlete of the Year for the third time, as well as winning CU’s Co-Female Career Athletic Achievement Award.

 

The 10 semifinalists will be cut down to three finalists, which will be announced July 10. Voting for the final winner, including an online fan vote, will take place from late July to mid-August. The ultimate winner will be revealed at the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) Convention in December.

 

ABOUT THE BOWERMAN

The Bowerman, which debuted in 2009, is presented annually by the USTFCCCA to the most outstanding male and female collegiate track & field athletes in the nation. Southern Utah’s Cam Levins and LSU’s Kimberlyn Duncan are the reigning winners of The Bowerman, which is named for legendary Oregon track & field and cross country coach Bill Bowerman. Past winners include Olympic gold medalist and decathlon world-record holder Ashton Eaton (2010), 10,000-meter Olympic silver medalist Galen Rupp (2009), and 2011 IAAF World Champion at 1500 meters, Jenny Simpson (2009). Bowerman served the sport of track and field in numerous ways. His leadership in the USTFCCCA’s predecessor organization, the National Collegiate Track Coaches Association, and his contributions to NCAA track and field and the running community as a whole are among his many lasting legacies. For more information on The Bowerman, the award, the trophy and Bill Bowerman himself, visit TheBowerman.org.

 

ABOUT THE USTFCCCA

The U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) is a non-profit professional organization representing cross country and track & field coaches of all levels. The organization represents over 8,000 coaching members encompassing 94% of all NCAA track & field programs (DI, DII, and DIII) and includes members representing the NAIA as well as a number of state high school coaches associations. The USTFCCCA serves as an advocate for cross country and track & field coaches, providing a leadership structure to assist the needs of a diverse membership, serving as a lobbyist for coaches’ interests, and working as a liaison between the various stakeholders in the sports of cross country and track & field.

 

 

 

Linda Sprouse

Assistant Sports Information Director

Volleyball/Cross Country/Track & Field

University of Colorado

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Highest graduation rate ever for CU athletes

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NCAA Annual Report Issued Tuesday

CU Athletics Records Highest NCAA APR Rate For Third Straight Year

 

BOULDER — The University of Colorado Academic Progress Rate (APR) report based on information for the four year period between 2008-09 and 2011-12 was released by the NCAA Tuesday with those of all other Division I schools, with CU reporting good news for all 16 of its intercollegiate athletic programs.

 

For the third consecutive year, the APR rates are the highest in school history since the program was created nine years ago.  In this latest report, the scores of CU’s teams are unparalleled over the history of the APR program, recording an average multi-year score of 979 out of 1000.

 

“In my role as Faculty Athletics Representative, I am gratified to see another strong academic performance, as measured by the NCAA’s APR standard,” said Dr. David Clough, CU’s Faculty Athletics Representative after examining the APR scores released for the 2011-12 academic year. “These results, coupled with the improvements in grade-point average, portend high graduation rates in coming years.  We are now approaching a steady level of high performance in APR with normal ups and downs from year to year.  I am most pleased by the dramatic improvement in APR for men’s basketball over the past four years, accompanied by unprecedented competitive successes.  This documents that athletic and academic success can go hand in hand.”

 

Clough is widely considered one of the nation’s experts on the NCAA’s APR program and its intricacies.

 

Men’s basketball showed the most improvement in the multi-year score, improving 22 points from 962 (2010-11) to 984 (2011-2012). The team has shown steady progress over the last four years. In 2008-09 the team recorded a score of 897 but then rose to 926 the following year (2009-10). The football program has also continued to improve and increased its multi-year score from 919 (2008-09) to 946 in the most recent report. It is an eight-point improvement from last year’s score of 938. The team has shown steady improvement over the course of the last four reports rising above the new 930 penalty threshold.

 

For the ninth consecutive year all of CU’s other 14 programs are in good standing overall, none ever having been subject to any penalties, with seven showing improvement and four teams virtually holding steady in the four-year APR rate from the last report to this one and all with scores of 961 or above.  Three teams did not improve, but those are teams with smaller squad size and are susceptible to such changes with the loss of single retention or eligibility point. Women’s golf had the largest drop going from 1000 to 971.  The four that did not improve had very minor drops; women’s skiing from 966 to 961, men’s golf from 993-987, women’s basketball from 994 to 993 and volleyball stayed at 977.

 

“I am extremely gratified at the continued progress of our student-athletes in the classroom,” said CU-boulder Chancellor Philip P. DiStefano. “I echo professor David Clough’s contention that this progress demonstrates that academic success and athletic achievement are not mutually exclusive. Indeed, our university and our conference prove that every day.”

 

Overall, three programs earned perfect 1000 scores for the 2011-12 annual report. The women’s cross country team recorded their third consecutive 1000 score, fourth overall since the programs’ inception. Volleyball earned a perfect score for the fourth time overall and women’s basketball recorded its third perfect score.

 

That brings the total to 39 times that CU programs have earned a perfect score since the APR came into being.  All one-year scores for all 16 of Colorado’s programs were 941 or above (14 above 964), with football showing the largest increase, jumping 39 points from 930 to 969, followed by women’s volleyball (22 points, 978 to 1000) and women’s basketball (21 points, 979 to 1000). Women’s skiing also showed improvement increasing its score by three points (971 to 974).

 

Although the annual average dropped some, it does show consistent improvement in multi-year average over the past four years. There are some drops in annual scores for certain sports where improvement is anticipated next year and beyond.

 

Though the NCAA doesn’t release data for all sports combined at every institution, Colorado’s overall APR picture is outstanding.  The average APR for all CU student-athletes stands at 977 in the latest report.  The annual figures was 943 in the 2006-07 report, and it has improved each year since, growing to 961, 967, 980 and 989 last year.

 

Now nine years into the APR report card system, numbers continue to stabilize statistically as program histories take firmer roots.  The NCAA instituted the APR in 2004, with member schools supplying information first for the 2003-04 academic year for an initial look at how schools fared across the country.  The system analyzes a four-year period, thus new data for the most recent year replaces that on the front end of the previous year’s research.

 

The reporting covered all 16 of CU’s intercollegiate sport programs; team-by-team statistical data (Column A—denotes number of perfect 1000 annual APR scores in program history out of a maximum seven; number in parenthesis is program’s high score if no 1000 scored as of yet; team GPA is cumulative value as of Fall 2012 and is listed for reference but is not strongly correlated with APR):

 

Program

 

 

2011-12 APR

 

Four-Year APR

2008-09 to 2011-12

A

Team GPA

(Cumulative)

Men’s Basketball

MBB

979

984

2

2.710

Men’s Cross Country

MXC

983

988

3

2.746

Football

FB

969

946

(962)

2.683

Men’s Golf

MGF

949

987

4

2.723

Men’s Skiing

MSK

941

964

2

3.544

Men’s Indoor Track

MIT

989

978

1

…………

Men’s Outdoor Track

MOT

990

983

1

2.665

Women’s Basketball

WBB

1000

990

3

2.796

Women’s Cross Country

WXC

1000

991

4

3.235

Women’s Golf

WGF

964

981

4

2.986

Women’s Skiing

WSK

974

961

2

3.269

Women’s Soccer

SOC

975

981

1

3.239

Women’s Tennis

TEN

966

991

6

3.232

Women’s Indoor Track

WIT

976

977

1

…………

Women’s Outdoor Track

WOT

977

977

1

3.169

Women’s Volleyball

VB

1000

977

4

3.002

CU athletic media release

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Emma Coburn is as good as GOLD!

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Coburn Finishes Storied Career With NCAA Title

 

EUGENE, Ore. – Emma Coburn finished her outstanding career at the University of Colorado with a bang when she won her second NCAA 3,000-meter steeplechase crown on Saturday afternoon at the NCAA Championships.

 

The 2012 Olympian was the overall favorite heading into the race as she has the best time by an American this year (9:28.26) and she did not disappoint, winning the race in 9:35.38. Her finishing time was the fifth best in NCAA history and coincidentally all five of those times belong to the Buffs.emma

 

The race was a lot closer than most of Coburn’s previous NCAA races despite her typical race strategy of going right to the front to get out of traffic. Heading into the bell lap, she had about a 50-meter lead on the field and the NCAA title was hers to lose. Coburn continued to lead the race, but Florida State’s Colleen Quigley started to regain some ground and finished less than three seconds behind Coburn in 9:38.23. After Quigley, Weber State’s Amber Henry was the next to cross the line in 9:43.39.

 

Heading into the race, there was a lot of hype surrounding Coburn about whether or not she would go for the NCAA record in the event (9:25.54), which is held by former CU standout Jenny (Barringer) Simpson. Ultimately Coburn did not break the record, but she didn’t seem too upset since she came away from the meet with another championship.

 

“On a day like this I have to look at the conditions and competition and think about if it is wise to shoot for the record and today I decided to be more conservative,” Coburn said. “I had to be smart. I‘d rather have an NCAA title and I didn’t want to risk not getting that. Today was just about winning the title and its fine with me.”

 

Overall this is Coburn’s third NCAA championship. She also won the steeplechase in 2011 and the 2013 indoor mile crown this past March.  She is also a six-time All-American for the Buffs, three times in the steeplechase, twice in the indoor mile and once in cross country.

 

This is the sixth steeplechase title the Buffs have won in the last eight years. Simpson won in 2006, 2008 and 2009 and Shalaya Kipp, who is redshirting this season, won in 2012 while Coburn was redshirting.

 

The title caps off an amazing season for the Crested Butte, Colo. native. She started her senior year last June by winning her second USATF Steeplechase crown to earn a spot at the 2012 Olympic Games in London. There, she made the final and finished ninth in a personal best of 9:23.56.

 

She didn’t have any eligibility remaining for the cross country season, so Coburn was able to focus on the indoor season. She was invited to compete in the mile at the prestigious Millrose Games (in a field full of professional athletes) and ran a PR of 4:29.86 to become the fifth fastest NCAA athlete in the mile. A few short weeks later, she ran another sub-4:30 mile to win CU’s first NCAA indoor mile title in 4:29.91 and became the first American to run a pair of sub-4:30 miles in the same season.

 

During the outdoor season, Coburn continued to impress. She ran the then-fastest steeplechase time in the world at the Payton Jordan Cardinal Invite (9:28.26) in Stanford, Calif. just two days after her 2013 1,500-meter debut (4:11.36) at the 106th Drake Relays in Des Moines, Iowa. Coburn won her first Pac-12 title in the steeplechase in May (9:55.67).

 

Instead of taking a week off between conference and the NCAA West Preliminary Championship, she took to the track again in a field of professional athletes at the OXY High Performance meet in the 1,500 and blazed to a PR of 4:06.87 while becoming the fifth-best performer in NCAA history.

 

This past April, Coburn was named CU’s Co-Female Athlete of the Year for the third time, as well as winning CU’s Co-Female Career Athletic Achievement Award.

 

Coburn finished the 2013 indoor and outdoor season with the fastest time in the NCAA in the indoor mile, 1,500 and steeplechase.

 

Although the NCAA season is now complete, Coburn and several other current and former Buffs will compete at the USA Track & Field Championships, June 19-23, in Des Moines, Iowa.

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CU’s Van Halen is 1st team All American

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Van Halen Earns All-America Honors

 

EUGENE, Ore. – Aric Van Halen finished his track and field career at the University of Colorado by earning All-America First Team honors with an eighth-place finish in the 3,000-meter steeplechase on Friday night at the NCAA Championships at Historic Hayward Field.

 

Van Halen, the 2013 Pac-12 Champion, finished in 8:44.50 to earn his best placing at nationals; his previous best finish was 10th in 2012 when he was named to the All-America Second Team.

Aric Van Halen made All American First Team

Aric Van Halen made All American First Team

 

The top three finishers went to the start from the gun and immediately pulled away from the rest of the field. The other nine racers ran together for the majority of the race and Van Halen was right near the front of that pack and led the group for four laps until just before the field entered the bell lap. It was right before that lap that he dropped down to around eighth which is where he would finish.

 

COBURN COMPETES FOR THE STEEPLE CHASE CHAMPIONSHIP at 3:57 MT on ESPNU

 

The top three competitors in the men’s 3,000-meter steeplechase finished very closely. UTEP’s Anthony Rotich won in 8:21.19 and Texas A&M’s Henry Lelei, the overall favorite, ended up second after taking a spill in the final water jump (8:23.16). Arkansas’ Staney Kebenei was third in 8:24.45. Curtis Carr (BYU) was the next to cross the finish in 8:40.87. The following four finishers were separated by less than 1.5 seconds. Dakota Peachee (High Point) was fifth in 8:43.04, Louisville’s Mattias Wolter was sixth (8:43.59) and Eastern Kentucky’s Ole Hesselbjerg was seventh (8:43.80). Van Halen beat out Wichita State’s Tomas Cotter for the eighth position by .60 seconds (8:45.10).

 

In the high jump, Mark Jones made his first attempt over the bar at 6-8.75, but missed all three tries at 6-10.75. He tied with two others for 21st overall as all three made it over 6-8.75 on their first attempt. He’s the first Buff since Jason Dudley in 1990 to qualify for the NCAA Championships in the high jump.

 

Emma Coburn will wrap up the championships on Saturday afternoon for the Buffs in the women’s steeplechase. She will be going for her second title in the event as she won the championship in 2011 before redshirting the 2012 season. Coburn’s final is at 2:57 p.m. PT and will be broadcast live on ESPNU. Live stats will also be available at www.flashresults.com.

 

NCAA Outdoor Championships Schedule (CU Events Only)

Historic Hayward Field (Eugene, Ore.)

 

Track Events

Men’s 3,000-Meter Steeplechase Finals: (1. Anthony Rotich, UTEP, 8:21.19) 8. Aric Van Halen, 8:44.50

 

Field Events

Men’s High Jump Finals: (1. Derrick Drouin, Indiana, 7-8) t21. Mark Jones, 6-8.75

 

 

 

- release by Colorado track & field –

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CU’s Emma Coburn is running for the gold–again

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 EUGENE, Ore. – Emma Coburn will have a chance to win one last NCAA 3,000-meter steeplechase title for the University of Colorado after cruising to an easy win in the semifinals on Thursday night at the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships at Historic Hayward Field.
Emma chasing steeples

Emma chasing steeples

 

The 2012 Olympian clocked a time of 9:46.76 to win not only the first heat, but the semifinal round as well. She outran the rest of the field by more than nine seconds as Cornell’s Rachel Sorna had the next fastest time at 9:55.84. (Sorna was also in the first heat with Coburn.) The second heat was won in 9:58.82 (Weber State’s Amber Henry).

 

 

The finals are on Saturday at 2:57 p.m. PT and will be broadcast live on ESPNU.

 

Coburn went to the front of the pack at the start and put about 10 meters between her and the rest of the field. After that, she was able to run a very smooth and controlled race as she continued to put distance between her and her competitors. Entering the bell lap, Coburn had built up a commanding lead, approximately 50-meters, and was able to cruise to the finish.

 

Earlier in the afternoon, senior Joe Morris competed in his second event of the championships as he raced in the third section of the 200-meter semifinals. Morris ended up seventh in the heat and 22nd overall with a time of 20.81. Pac-12 Champion Bryshon Nellum (USC) won the semifinals in 19.99.

 

Although Morris did not advance to the finals in either event, he wrapped up one of the best sprinting careers at CU, finishing as the second best performer in the outdoor 200 (20.45) and tied for third in the 100 (10.27). He is also CU’s indoor 60-meter record holder (6.57) and won a pair of 2013 Mountain Pacific Sports Federation indoor track and field titles in the 60 and 200 in February. This past May he was named CU’s Male Career Athletic Achievement Award winner. He also became the first Buff since Devlon Dunn in 1988 to qualify for both the 100 and 200 races at nationals.

 

Action at the NCAA Championships will continue on Friday for the Buffs, starting with sophomore Mark Jones in the high jump which starts at 3:20 p.m. PT and the beginning of the meet will be streamed on the Pac-12 Live Stream (pac-12.com/live/goducks). Senior Aric Van Halen will be on the track at 5:40 p.m. PT for the finals of the men’s steeplechase. That final will be televised live on ESPNU. Live stats will also be available at www.flashresults.com.

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Buffs send 5 track and fielders to National Championships

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BOULDER – CU Seniors Emma Coburn and Aric Van Halen will compete in the 3,000-meter steeplechase and Joe Morris will race in both the 100 and 200-meter dashes. The Buffs will also be sending a pair of athletes to compete in the field events; junior Emily Hunsucker in the hammer throw and sophomore Mark Jones in the high jump.

 

This will be Coburn’s fourth trip to the outdoor championships in the steeplechase and she has been quite successful. In 2009, she finished 11th, but the following year she was the runner-up. Finally in 2011, Coburn won her first NCAA individual steeplechase title. She redshirted the 2012 season, but is back and looking to finish her collegiate career strong. The 2013 Pac-12 Champion has the top time in the country and ranks ninth in the world (9:28.26).

Emma Coburn

Emma Coburn

 

Emily Hunsucker

Emily Hunsucker

 

Aric Van Halen

Aric Van Halen

 

Joe Morris

Joe Morris

 

Mark Jones

Mark Jones

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Van Halen is also no stranger to nationals. He finished 10th at the 2012 championships to earn his first All-America honor. Earlier this season, Van Halen won his first individual Pac-12 title and he ran a season-best time of 8:38.23 at the NCAA West Preliminary Championships, which was seventh overall.

 

The final three athletes will all be making their first appearances at NCAAs. Joe Morris is just the second Buff to compete in the 100 and 200 at nationals. The only other CU athlete to do the double was Devlon Dunn in 1988. Morris finished eighth at prelims in the 100 and was ninth in the 200. His season and personal bests are 10.27 (100) and 20.45 (200).

 

Hunsucker had a standout season, breaking a 15-year-old school record in the hammer throw. Not only did she break it, but she has continued to reset it several times since, most recently at the NCAA West Prelims on May 23 when she recorded a mark of 207-10. That throw placed her seventh in the west to advance to NCAAs.

 

Jones has also had a good season. He was the runner-up at the Pac-12 Championships with a jump of 7-2 ½, which also put him third all-time in CU history, just behind Bill Jankunis (7-4) and Jason Dudley (7-3). Jones has had two meets with jumps over 7-0 this season. He tied for 11th at the west prelims to advance to NCAAs.

 

The entire meet will either be streamed live or televised. Wednesday will be streamed on the Pac-12 Network (pac-12.com/live/goducks). Thursday’s events will be available via ESPN3.com, and Friday and Saturday’s events will be televised on ESPNU in a window beginning at 4:30 p.m. on Friday and 2 p.m. on Saturday. Prior to those times on Friday and Saturday the meet will be on ESPN3.com. Live results can be accessed on NCAA.com and flashresults.com.

CU press release

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CU Championship Steeplechaser Emma Coburn named regional track athlete of the year

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NEW ORLEANS – University of Colorado graduate Emma Coburn was named the USTFCCCA Mountain Region Women’s Track Athlete of the Year on Monday afternoon.

 

Coburn, a Crested Butte, Colo., native owns the NCAA’s fastest times in the 3,000-meter steeplechase and the 1,500-meter run this season. She raced to an eighth-place finish in the 1,500 as the OXY High Performance meet on May 17, finishing in 4:06.87, which also placed her second all-time in the NCAA. Coburn was the only collegiate runner in the race.

Emma Coburn

Emma Coburn

 

The steeplechase has been her signature event, and she has continued to dominate it throughout the season. Coburn debuted in the steeplechase at the Payton Jordan Cardinal Invite on April 28 and finished the race with the then-fastest time in the world at 9:28.26; just two days after running a 1,500 (4:11.36) in the elite section at Drake Relays. Currently her steeplechase time is the ninth-best in the world and leads the U.S. It is also second all-time in the NCAA.

 

Coburn won her first Pac-12 individual title in the steeplechase on May 11, crossing the finish in 9:55.67. She won by almost 13 seconds in front of Washington’s Marie Lawrence (10:08.19). At the NCAA West Preliminary Championships, Coburn had the best time (9:55.30) to automatically advance to the semifinals at NCAAs.

 

The 2013 NCAA Outdoor Championship is June 5-8 in Eugene, Ore.

 

 

- Colorado –athletics media release

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Dinwiddie Invited To USA Basketball Men’s World University Games Training Camp

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COLORADO SPRINGS – University of Colorado junior-to-be Spencer Dinwiddie is one of 29 players invited to attend the 2013 USA Basketball Men’s World University Games Team training camp at the U.S. Olympic Training Center, June 24-30 in Colorado Springs.

The USA Basketball Men’s Junior National Team Committee issued the invitations.

Dinwiddie, a 6-6, 200-pound point-guard is one of three players selected from the Pac-12 Conference and the first CU player to invited as an undergraduate since Chauncey Billups at the 1995 COPABA under 21 World Championship Qualifying Trials.Dinwiddie joins fellow conference players Josh Huestis and Chasson Randle from Stanford.

 

dinwid

Dinwiddie, a 2013 All-Pac-12 Conference first team selection has played every game (69) and was a key contributor this past season helping the Buffaloes to their second consecutive NCAA Tournament appearance. He averaged a team-best 15.3 points per game, in addition leading CU in assists (99, 3.0) and free throw percentage (82.5%).

His 505 points during his sophomore campaign ranks ninth among all CU sophomores.  Of Dinwiddie’s 505 points, 198 of them came from the free throw, the second most total from the charity stripe in school history. In his two years, Dinwiddie has helped CU to a 45-24 record (.652) with a pair of NCAA Tournament appearances and the 2012 Pac-12 Tournament championship.

CU head coach Tad Boyle is also one three court coaches selected for the training camp along with Jim Kessler of Grace College (NAIA) and Matt Matheny from Elon University.

“The committee has assembled one of the strongest World University Games training camp rosters USA Basketball has ever had,” said Jim Boeheim, head coach at Syracuse University and chair of the USA Men’s Junior National Team Committee. “It includes some of the top players in college basketball, several of whom have international experience. Selecting the players for the final roster is going to be a real challenge.”

The 2013 World University Games (WUGs) are scheduled to be played July 6-17 in Kazan, Russia. Davidson College’s Bob McKillop will lead the USA, with assistant coaches John Beilein of the University of Michigan and the University of South Carolina’s Frank Martin.

Twenty-four players took home end of the year conference honors and 29 players represent 24 schools featuring teammates from Duke (Cook and Hood), Indiana (Ferrell and Sheehy), Iowa (Marble and White), New Mexico (Kirk and Williams), Notre Dame (Atkins and Grant) and Stanford (Huestis and Randle).

The Big East has six schools with players expected to compete at training camp; five schools from the Big Ten list on the roster; the Atlantic Coast is represented by three schools each; the Big 12, Mountain West, The Pac-12 each feature two schools participating in training camp; and represented by one school apiece are the Atlantic-10, Missouri Valley and West Coast conferences.

 

Finalists for the team are expected to be announced on June 27 or 28, and the 12-member roster will be announced prior to the team’s departure for Russia on July 1.
In addition to chair and NCAA representative Boeheim, the 2013-16 USA Men’s Junior National Team Committee includes NCAA appointees McKillop, Matt Painter (Purdue University) and Lorenzo Romar (University of Washington), as well as athlete representative Curtis Sumpter, a member of the 2011 USA Pan American Games Team and the 2004 USA U20 National Team.

 

World University Games
The United States has claimed 19 medals in the World University Games since beginning play in 1965, and has captured a record 13 golds, three silvers and three bronze medals in the 20 WUGs in which a USA Basketball men’s squad has competed. The USA men own a stellar 138-9 record in WUGs play, and the U.S. captured six of the first seven gold medals awarded in the WUGs basketball competition, including six consecutive gold medals from 1989 through 1999. In 2001 the USA fell to host China, which featured half of its 2000 Olympic team, including Yao Ming, Menk Bateer and Wang ZhiZhi, by a single point in the semifinal and finished with the bronze. The USA again captured the gold medal in 2005 and most recently, finished in fifth place with a 7-1 record after falling to Lithuania 76-74 in the 2011 quarterfinals.

Eighteen players who have represented the USA in the WUGs have gone on to compete in the Olympic Games, including Ray Allen (1995), Stacey Augmon (1989), Charles Barkley (1983), Larry Bird (1977), Bill Bradley (1965), Quinn Buckner (1973), Tom Burleson (1973), Ken Davis (1970), Tim Duncan (1995), Phil Hubbard (1977), Allen Iverson (1995), Mitch Kupchak (1973), Karl Malone (1983), Michael Redd (1999), Mitch Richmond (1987), Michael Silliman (1967), Steve Smith (1989) and Jo Jo White (1967).

 

USA Basketball
Based in Colorado Springs, Colo., USA Basketball is a nonprofit organization and the national governing body for men’s and women’s basketball in the United States. As the recognized governing body for basketball in the U.S. by the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) and the United States Olympic Committee (USOC), USA Basketball is responsible for the selection, training and fielding of USA teams that compete in FIBA sponsored international competitions, as well as for some national competitions.

During the 2009-12 quadrennium, 1,273 men and women players and 235 coaches participated in USA Basketball, including USA Basketball teams and trials, and USA Basketball 3×3 FIBA championships.

USA Basketball men’s and women’s teams between 2009-12 compiled an impressive 264-35 win-loss record in FIBA and FIBA Americas competitions, the Pan American Games, the World University Games, the Nike Hoop Summit and in exhibition games.

USA teams are the current men’s and women’s champions in the Olympics; men’s and women’s FIBA World Championships (Basketball World Cup); women’s FIBA U19 World Championship; men’s and women’s FIBA U17 World Championships; men’s and women’s U18 and U16 FIBA Americas Championships, and FIBA 3×3 Women’s World Championship and FIBA 3×3 Women’s U18 World Championship.  USA Basketball also currently ranks No. 1 in all five of FIBA’s world ranking categories, including combined, men’s, women’s, boys and girls.  USA Basketball also currently ranks No. 1 in all five of FIBA’s world ranking categories, including combined, men’s, women’s, boys and girls.

For further information about USA Basketball, go to the official Web site of USA Basketball at http://www.usabasketball.com and connect with us on https://www.facebook.com/usabasketball,https://twitter.com/usabasketball and http://www.youtube.com/usab.

CU press release

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A CU basketball “giant,” maybe the best player ever, passed away

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CU Hoops Family Has Lost A True Legend, His effect  off the court may have been as significant as life off the court, as he counseled youth in the DPL about life skills. His rebound from substance  abuse gave him street cred with many students who listened to someone who hd been there.

By B.G. Brooks, CUBuffs.com Contributing Editor

 

BOULDER – Cliff Meely could never be described as a stranger to Colorado basketball, but as the Buffaloes’ recent ascent began three years ago Meely became a more frequent visitor to practice.

 

Having retired last spring from his post-basketball work of instructing and counseling in the Denver Public Schools system, Meely appeared at Tad Boyle’s practices “at least once a month,” CU’s coach recalled on Wednesday.

cliff

 

Moreover, Meely, who lived in Boulder and was a passionate season ticket holder, rarely missed a game.

 

Next season will be different; Meely won’t be there.
The CU icon – arguably the best basketball player the school has produced – died on Tuesday night. He would have celebrated his 66th birthday on July 10.

 

I never saw Meely play, and neither did Boyle. But those who were treated to any of his minutes in a CU uniform (1968-71) swear there were none better before Meely or since.

 

Meely was aware of the debate, but never immersed himself in it. “Whatever I did, I did it so our team could win,” he told The Denver Post in one of his last interviews. “They retired my uniform (one of only two at CU), and that was a great honor. I don’t decide how good I was compared to others. Somebody else will have to decide that.”

 

I turned to Dan Creedon, the longtime former sports editor of the Boulder Daily Camera who told me Wednesday morning without reservation that Meely “is the greatest player CU ever had . . . he was such an unbelievable scorer and rebounder.”

 

Boyle deferred to Creedon, as well as Meely’s numbers: “I would trust Dan’s judgment on that . . . he’s seen more than most. I certainly wouldn’t argue against that. I never had the opportunity to see Cliff play. But I look at the numbers and they’re pretty eye-popping.”

 

Eye-popping to the point of being nearly unreal. The 6-8, 215-pound Meeley played before freshmen were eligible, so his career stats encompass his final three seasons. He still holds the top two single-season scoring averages in school history – 23.8 as a sophomore, 28.0 as a senior. His career scoring average of 24.3 points remains a school record. His career rebounding average: 12.1.
More Meely numbers of note: 54 double-doubles in his 80 career games. And in a 30-point blowout of Oklahoma in 1971, he punched up 47 points with 25 rebounds.

 

Said Boyle: “When you look at those numbers over a three-year period, they’re even more impressive.”

 

Ceal Barry had no problem weighing Meely’s numbers and eventually nominating him for the Pac-12 Men’s Basketball Hall of Honor – a duty she had as a CU associate athletics director overseeing basketball and SWA (senior women’s administrator).

But until 2005, when she was doing color work for FSN at CU men’s games, Barry had never met Meely.

 

“I kept seeing this big, tall guy sitting behind me in the front row (at the Coors Events Center) and he always got there early,” said Barry, who now is serving as CU’s interim athletics director. “We had to be there early too (for FSN) and during the course of this game, that game we started talking.

 

“Eventually, I go, ‘Duh, that’s Cliff Meely.’ I started asking him what he thought about the night’s game and we started to get to know each other. He was just delightful, an awesome guy.”

 

When the paperwork crossed Barry’s desk to nominate a CU alum for the Pac-12 Men’s Basketball Hall of Honor, “Of course, I had to nominate my new best friend, Cliff Meely.”

 

Boyle’s introduction to Meely was less by chance, and Boyle said he got to know the former CU star “pretty well, although we never did anything together socially.”

 

But Meely’s place in CU basketball was never lost on Boyle. When Meely showed up at practice last season as the Buffs worked toward a second consecutive NCAA Tournament berth, “I always tried to make him feel welcome,” Boyle said. “It was always good to see him.”

 

As Boyle’s young team searched for cohesion, unity and leadership, Boyle asked Meely to address the Buffs. “It wasn’t about him, it was about us coming together and being a team, one unit,” said assistant coach Rodney Billups.

 

Meely, said Boyle, also urged the Buffs to maximize their college careers: “He talked about how special a time this is in their lives, how they had to make the most of their opportunities as student-athletes and play for each other.”

 

“Basketball is what I love, always have,” Meely told the Camera. ”One of the hardest things is when you can`t play anymore. But I can go up to CU and see some of the best players in the country up close and personal, and also support the young men that attend school here at CU. I`m always very positive with them.”

 

Boyle said Meely emphasized that the majority of CU’s players wouldn’t play at the next level and that they should “take their time on this campus seriously and enjoy it.”

 

Rodney Billups might have been more well-acquainted with Meely than most of CU’s coaches. Meely steadfastly supported Rodney’s older brother Chauncey – a verifiable contender with Meely for CU’s top all-time player.

 

Chauncey, said Rodney, “was devastated” Tuesday night when he was informed about Meely’s death. “Cliff always supported Chauncey’s career,” Rodney said. “Every time they saw each other they gave each other a big hug and laughed. He came to all the games, knew everybody by name . . . he was unbelievable.”

 

Although Meely was from another generation of basketball, Boyle wanted his players to be aware of what Meely meant to CU. He said he believed the current Buffs respected Meely’s accomplishments: “In today’s game, if there’s one thing about the players, it’s incumbent on us as coaches to make sure they respect the history of the game.

 

“And Cliff Meely was a big part of the game of basketball and certainly Colorado basketball. I don’t know if our players appreciated him as much as I did, or our coaching staff did, and the numbers he put up and the impact he had on this program. But I know true Buff fans, the fans who were around when Cliff played, certainly appreciated him and what he meant to this program.”

 

Meely, who was born in Rosedale, Miss., was a first-round draftee (No. 7 pick) and played six years in the NBA (Houston, Los Angeles). Life after pro basketball toughened, with a battle against substance abuse presenting a difficult hurdle to overcome.

 

Meely, said Rodney Billups, “didn’t talk about that to our guys . . . but I’ve heard through different sources that he came through a lot and prevailed.”

And he didn’t try to hide his past. In a 1985 interview with the Post, he said, “The game didn’t put me in a position like this, but things that occurred during my life while I was involved in basketball had some cause and effect.

 

“In the pros I didn’t achieve certain goals I had set for myself. Not obtaining those goals gave me sort of a bitter taste in my mouth about how I was dealt with in professional ball. I had a personal goal of being one of the best ballplayers to play the game. Coming out of college, I felt I had that capability. But circumstances and situations dictated otherwise.”

 

In that interview, Meely’s genuine love for basketball was evident.

 

“I never played basketball for money,” he said.

 

“Money wasn’t the most important thing to me, and it’s still not. The most important thing to me was basketball. There was an inner drive in me to perfect my basketball game. People sometimes think money solves all problems, but I never had any problems until I started making major money. I let the wrong people get up on me, for the wrong reasons. That’s what happened with the cocaine. It cost me.”

 

Rodney Billups called Meely “the epitome of a Buff for life . . . he brought himself to tears talking about his experience here and how he came here. He said (CU) was a family the day he got here and it’s still a family.”

 

Today, the family mourns.

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Legendary CU women’s b-ball coach Ceal Barry named “interim” AD as Bohn “steps” down

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BOULDER—University of Colorado Boulder Chancellor Philip P. DiStefano has named Adele Cecilia “Ceal” Barry interim director of intercollegiate athletics for the university, effective Monday, June 3.

 

Barry currently serves as associate athletic director for student services and senior woman administrator (an NCAA designation) in the department.  She replaces Mike Bohn, who submitted his resignation today.

BARRY METOYER JOHNS-RICHARDSON WIRT

 

Hired as the women’s head basketball coach in 1983 by then-athletic director Eddie Crowder, she has a 30-year history of involvement in CU athletics.  She retired from coaching in 2005 as CU’s winningest coach ever in all sports (427 victories), leading her teams to 12 NCAA tournament appearances, including six Sweet 16 and three Elite Eight appearances.  Over 95 percent of her student-athletes graduated and 85 of her players earned Academic All-Conference honors.

 

“Ceal’s experience, leadership and credibility with our athletic staff and stakeholders make her an ideal person to assume this important role as we search for new leadership,” said DiStefano.

 

EDITOR’S NOTE:

DiStefano will host a short media availability tomorrow on the CU-Boulder campus at 4:30 p.m. at Regent Hall (room TBD); Ceal Barry will also be present to answer questions at that time.

 

 

David Plati

Associate AD/Sports Information

University of Colorado Buffaloes

357 UCB / Fieldhouse Annex #50

Boulder, CO 80309-0357

303/492-5626 (office)

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CU’s AD Mike Bohn mysteriously quits or is fired

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By nearly every measure (except football), Bohn’s tenure has been successful

University of Colorado Boulder Chancellor Philip P. DiStefano today announced he has accepted the resignation of CU-Boulder Athletic Director Mike Bohn, effective June 3.

“Mike Bohn led CU-Boulder athletics in a time of great transition and change,” said DiStefano. “We are grateful to him for his vision, passion and commitment, and for his key role in revitalizing men’s and women’s basketball, helping us to join the Pac-12 Conference, and in taking important steps to upgrade athletic facilities at CU-Boulder. We wish him well.”

bohn

 

DiStefano said he will in the coming days appoint a search committee to conduct a national search for Bohn’s successor.

DiStefano said the university will be seeking “a dynamic leader” as athletic director – someone who, he said, “can focus on our key goals of fundraising, building a dynamic organization, and creating long-term sustainability in the athletics mission.”

The university in February announced a $50 million facilities fundraising campaign as the anchor of a $170 million multiphase, multiyear upgrade of CU athletics facilities at Folsom Field and the Dal Ward Center, and the development of an indoor practice facility.

“We are seeking a talented leader who can build on Mike’s vision and make it a reality,” said DiStefano.

Bohn was named the university’s sixth athletic director on April 13, 2005, five months after CU Athletic Director Dick Tharp stepped down.

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CU football: Gehrke signs letter of intent to attend CU

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Junior College Quarterback is MacIntyre’s 21st Recruit

 

BOULDER — Jordan Gehrke, a second-team All-Region performer at Scottsdale Community College as a freshman last fall, has signed a letter-of-intent to attend the University of Colorado this fall, becoming the 21st recruit in the first class inked by head coach Mike MacIntyre.

 

Gehrke, who won’t turn 19 until late July, will have four years to play three in eligibility.  He joins 20 other recruits, all of whom were high school seniors, as a member of CU’s 2013 recruiting class.

jordan

 

He helped Scottsdale CC lead the nation in passing yards (355.2 per game), completing 174-of-366 passes for 2,388 yards and 22 touchdowns; he completed 51.8 percent of his passes and threw 14 interceptions.  He was sacked just twice all season and also scored one rushing touchdown.  His top game came in the season finale, a 71-29 win over Phoenix College, when he was 29-of-43 for 384 yards and seven touchdowns (three interceptions).

 

“He’s very athletic, extremely accurate, can make all the throws and is a bright young man in regards to football and in the classroom,” MacIntyre said.

 

               At Scottsdale’s Notre Dame Prep, Gehrke was a second-team All-State and a first-team All-II Section III performer as a senior, when he completed 134-of-250 passes for 2,012 yards and 23 touchdowns (with just 10 interceptions).  He also rushed for 133 yards (on 24 attempts) and scored twice.  As a junior, when he was also a first-team All-Conference selection, he was 124-of-183 (a 67.8 percentage) for 2,358 yards with 24 touchdowns against only four picks; his long pass covered 78 yards and his passer rating was 141.

 

His top games as a senior included a 33-14 win over Salpointe Catholic, when he completed 13-of-25 passes for 271 yards and five touchdowns; in a 41-14 win over Cactus Shadows (15-of-28, 279, 3 TDs), in a 41-10 win over McClintock (11-of-15, 175, 3 TDs with a 6-yard TD run) and in a 28-24 win over Desert Mountain (10-of-21, 109, 3 TDs).  As a junior, his best games included a 49-48 loss to Williams Field, when he was 14-of-18 for 359 yards and two scores (the 4A state semifinal game where he was stopped just short of the end zone on a 2-point try with 19 seconds remaining); and in a 42-14 playoff win over Mingus the previous week, he was 10-of-14 for 235 yards and four touchdowns.

 

 

David Plati

Associate AD/Sports Information

University of Colorado Buffaloes

357 UCB / Fieldhouse Annex #50

Boulder, CO 80309-0357

303/492-5626 (office)

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CU men’s golfs team in sixth at NCAA Central Regional

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Buffs ten swings away from first place

 

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — The University of Colorado men’s golf team opened strong here Thursday in the NCAA Central/Fayetteville Regional, with the Buffaloes in sixth place and definitely in contention for a top five finish and the berth into the NCAA Finals that comes with it.

 

No. 33 Illinois leads the pack with a 6-under 282 score, thanks to the efforts of two true freshmen that combined to go 11 strokes under what some call the “happy side of par.”  No. 4 Texas is second (285), followed by No. 11 Oklahoma State (286), No. 22 Kent State (288) and No. 12 and host Arkansas (290).

golf swing

The Buffaloes, ranked No. 58 by GolfStat and No. 67 by Golfweek, turned in a 4-over 292 to stand in sixth.  No. 20 SMU is five back of CU, with the remaining seven teams in the field all at 300 or higher.

 

The top five teams out of 14 competing will advance to the NCAA Finals, set for May 28-June 2 in Atlanta, Ga., as will the top two individuals not associated with the five teams that qualify.

 

The four Buffs who contributed to the team score made the turn at 1-over; they had a collective hiccup on the first four holes on the front side (4-over), but played the last five at 1-under.  The end result was Colorado placing four in the top 25 through 18 holes, matched only by Texas, Oklahoma and Arkansas, three of the nation’s top 12 teams.

 

“It was definitely a good start, which we chalk up to our primary focus today being was to be patient and have a great attitude,” head coach Roy Edwards said.  “The guys were phenomenal with that.  I’m really proud of them, and that’s really the main reason we enjoyed a solid round.

 

“We need to do the same thing for tomorrow,” he continued.  “That’s to be patient, take it one shot at a time.  Right now, they’re only thinking about their first tee shot (Friday).  You cannot get ahead of yourself here.  It rained overnight and the course was really soft, so it played as easiest as it’s going to get today.  The scores are likely not going to be as low, so the emphasis will be on the importance of being patient.  That’s what we’ll stress.”

 

Sophomore David Oraee led the Buffaloes with a 1-under 71, which has him tied for ninth individually.  He had a steady round with four birdies and 11 pars against three bogeys; the four birds tied for 10th most in the field.  Playing to even par much of the round, he finished with birdies on Nos. 7 and 9 with a bogeys sandwiched in-between to get it into red numbers on the 7,251-yard, par-72 The Blessings Golf Club course layout.

 

Freshman Philip Juel-Berg continued his stellar rookie season, posting a 1-over 73, which has him tied for 20th.  He had three birdies, 11 pars and four bogeys on his day, as he made the turn at 3-over but played the front side at 2-under, thanks to birds on Nos. 6 and 9.  There are 14 freshmen in the field; Juel-Berg finished currently is seventh among them, with three of the six ahead of him recording even-par rounds of 72.

 

CU’s No. 1 player and stroke average leader, senior Jason Burstyn, fashioned a 2-over 74, tying him for 25th; he had four birdies like Oraee, along with nine pars, four bogeys and one double.  The latter came on No. 6, a 418-yard, par-4 that played as the day’s fourth toughest hole; that pushed him to 4-over on the day, but he bounced back and closed with birdies on Nos. 7 and 9.

 

Senior Derek Fribbs also shot a 74, with three birdies and 11 pars against three bogeys and a double.  He got off to one of the hot starts of the day, standing 3-under after he birdied Nos. 12, 13 and 15 – a par-5, a par-4 and a par-3, respectively – but came back down to Earth with bogeys on No. 17 and then on Nos. 1 and 4.  He was cruising along at even par until his final hole of the day, the 535-yard, par-5 No. 9, where he doubled after hitting his drive into a hazard.  It was his first double bogey in six rounds.

 

“I was hitting it in their close and utilizing the slopes,” Fribbs said of his start.  “But after a while, the putts weren’t falling.  I still had opportunities on the back nine, I just couldn’t make any putts to take full advantage of things.  The course played a little easier today than expected because you could hold your shots better than we thought, but we also had good course management today.”

 

Junior Johnny Hayes shot an 8-over 80, tying him for 60th, as he recorded two birdies and nine pars against five bogeys, a double and a triple.  He scored the latter two in his first four holes to get to 5-over quickly, but settled down over the final 14 holes.

 

“Johnny had a rough start, but regrouped and then held it together pretty well for a bad start,” Edwards said.  “For the most part, any time anyone made a mistake, they worked hard to make a bogey and nothing worse.”

 

Hayes certainly wasn’t alone in his struggles; the average score by the non-scorer for all 14 teams on Thursday was an 81.6; he actually tied for the fourth lowest as only three managed to break 80.  Despite his troubles, he played the par-3 holes at a collective 1-under, tied for eighth best in the field.

 

Illinois freshman Charlie Danielson turned in the best round of the day to take the individual lead, as the 2012 Wisconsin state high school champion opened on the back nine and shot a 30, including five birdies over a seven hole span; he added two more birdies on the front side to finish with a 7-under 65.  Freshmen dominated the top of the leaderboard Thursday, with Oklahoma State’s Jordan Niebrugge tied for second (67) and Illinois’ Thomas Detry fourth (68).

 

The field has been re-paired according to score for the second round; Colorado, the No. 10 seed here, will tee it up off the No. 1 tee beginning at 7:20 a.m. MDT with Kent State (No. 5 seed) and Arkansas (No. 2), who occupy the fourth and fifth spots ahead of the Buffs.  The final round is set for a 7:50 a.m. start on Saturday.

CU media release

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Buff Golfers are hungry for NCAA championship

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FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — The University of Colorado men’s golf team is back in the NCAA Championships for the first time since 2009, as the Buffaloes are ready to go in the Central/Fayetteville Regional which begins here Thursday.

 

Colorado, ranked No. 58 in the nation (GolfStat; No. 67 Golfweek) is the No. 10 seed in the field is looking to advance to the NCAA Championship Finals for the first time since 2002.

golf

 

The Buffs have been idle since May 1, when they finished 10th at the Pac-12 Championships in Los Angeles.  CU was in position for a first division (top six) finish, but had a disastrous final day that dropped it from seventh into 10th.

 

“We really haven’t practiced since the Pac-12 Championship,” said head coach Roy Edwards.  “That is by design. These guys are students first and they had their semester projects and finals until (last) Thursday.  So they were all in with those responsibilities.  Now they can clearly and fully focus on the task at hand.

 

“We’re absolutely hungry to get back out there,” he continued.  “We had a really odd weather month leading up to the Pac-12 Championships and couldn’t get in the kind of practice we needed, yet we were still in decent position for an upper division finish.  Most of the guys got a solid competition round in for U.S. Open Local Qualifying (Monday) to get the rust off.  They’re anxious to get out there and prove that the final round (at Pac-12’s) was a blip on the season.”

 

The four Buffs who have played in all 12 tournaments (38 rounds) this season, seniors Jason Burstyn andDerek Fribbs, sophomore David Oraee and freshman Philip Juel-Berg along with junior Johnny Hayes will represent Colorado in the regional.  Only Fribbs, as an individual last year, and Hayes, with his former school Towson State in 2010, have played in the postseason before.

 

For the Buffaloes to have a chance to advance to the Finals, which run May 28-June 2 in Atlanta, its No. 1 golfer this season, Burstyn, needs to rebound from an uncharacteristic poor performance at the Pac-12s, where he just wasn’t able to get anything going; he tied for 66th with a 33-over score of 313. Edwards expects him to back to his old self.

 

“He was a little off, and he’s no different than most in that he needs to keep learning to adapt to different situations,” Edwards said of his team’s stroke average leader (72.8).  “He normally does that, and in this case, I think he’s ready to move on.  History shows that the few times he has played poorly, he’s bounced back to play really well.  I don’t think it will be any different this week.”

 

As for the team to have overall success, he pointed to what the Buffaloes did when they won the Air Force Falcon Invitational last September and the Bandon Dunes Championship in March.

 

“We have to minimize our mistakes, the focus has to be on being as smart as possible,” he noted.  “We haven’t seen the course yet, but I understand it’s very difficult.  It’s an event where you don’t care if you finish first or fifth.  We need to be patient, make good decisions and overall manage our individual games.  When we’ve done that, we’ve played our best, and if we can do that here, we have a great shot at advancing to the Finals.”

 

“If we are disciplined in our decisions at all times we have a great shot.  The five teams who make the least number of controllable mistakes will advance.  This has more to do about us doing our job than anything else.”

 

Arkansas is the host school, with The Blessings Golf Club serving as the host course; BGC has a 7,251-yard, par-72 layout (37-35 configuration) that was designed by Robert Trent Jones, Jr.  It opened in 2004, and its rating (79.1) and slope (153) makes it one of the most difficult courses in the U.S., as its topography is characterized by hilly terrain creating numerous sidehill lies, dramatic elevation changes, forced carries over ravines and valleys, and large, undulating Bent grass greens, with Clear Creek in play on several holes.  The fairways/roughs are Zoysia.

 

Colorado will tee off at 8:10 a.m. (MDT) on Thursday off the No. 10 tee, with the Buffs paired with Indiana (No. 11 seed) and UNC-Wilmington (No. 12).  The field will be re-paired according to score after the first and second rounds, with all tee times between 8:20 and 10:20 a.m. for the second round (Friday) and between 7:50 and 9:50 a.m. for the final round (Saturday).

 

The top five teams and top two individuals who are not members of those squads will advance to the NCAA Championship Finals, which are scheduled for May 28-June 2 in Atlanta, Ga.

 

 

 

David Plati

Associate AD/Sports Information

University of Colorado Buffaloes

357 UCB / Fieldhouse Annex #50

Boulder, CO 80309-0357

303/492-5626 (office)

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CU men snag a “sleeper” high school basketball player for next year

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CU capitalizes on San Antonia b-ball pipeline

BOULDER – University of Colorado men’s basketball head coach Tad Boyle and his coaching staff announced Monday they have signed George King, a 6-foot-5, 205-pound forward from San Antonio, Texas to a National Letter of Intent. King will be a freshman at CU beginning of the 2013 fall semester.

cu recuit king

 

King will be one of four true-freshmen on the Buffaloes team that will also feature a pair of redshirt-freshmen. He joins fellow freshmen Tre’Shaun Fletcher, Jaron Hopkins, and Dustin Thomas. The incoming class also features redshirt-freshmen Wesley Gordon and Chris Jenkins, both sat out this past season.

 

“He can rebound, block shots, shoot and defend,” Boyle said of CU’s latest addition to the roster.

Boyle also said CU was “kind of late to the party” in recruiting King, who conceded he was a “late bloomer” and didn’t start attracting major attention until late in his senior season and went through the April signing period unsigned.
During his senior year, King averaged 16.6 points, 11.5 rebounds and 1.6 blocks per game in leading the Brennan Bears to a 39-3 record and an appearance in the 4A state semifinals. He shot 60 percent from the field and was named both TABC All-State and District 28-4A MVP. As a senior he recorded 25 double-doubles and had two 20-20 games with 23 points and 20 rebounds against Warren (Nov. 12) and 20 points and 20 rebounds against Lanier (Jan. 29) including 12 rebounds in one quarter.

 

King was an all-area selection as a junior.

 

“They believe in me and I believe in them,” King told Rivals.com on signing with the Buffaloes. “I’ve only been to Colorado a handful of times and it was my first time in Boulder,” he said. “I knew I liked it as soon as I stepped foot in Boulder. It has a beautiful campus, really nice people.”

“They have a really good coaching staff, the players and I really clicked. I got up and down with the guys and got a good feeling. (The coaches) like that I’m good sized, I’m skilled, that I can shoot and that I have a lot of potential.”

CU returns two seniors (Ben Mills, Kevin Nelson) on the 2013-2014 roster; along with three juniors (Askia Booker, Spencer Dinwiddie, Beau Gamble); and four sophomores (Xavier Johnson, Josh Scott, Eli Stalzer, Xavier Talton).

 

By the end of the summer, the Buffs will have graduated three student-athletes (Jeremy Adams, Sabatino Chen, Shane Harris-Tunks). Andre Roberson, who had one more year of eligibility remaining, declared for the NBA Draft on April 28. His sister, Arielle Roberson was nationally ranked as a freshman, will be a sophomore on CU’s women’s basketball team next season.

CU sports media release

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