by mrydel » Sun Apr 29, 2012 9:51 am
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Top Picks - Capture Arkansas
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LIKE IT IS
Real Deal junction for old pals, coaches
By Wally Hall
This article was published today at 4:23 a.m.
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LITTLE ROCK — It was a big bear hug.
Not a one-arm-slap-on-the back type that is popular these days.
Two arms all the way around and a hearty squeeze.
The kind that might normally embarrass a man, especially in front of almost 1,000 people, including some of the nation’s top college basketball prospects.
Neither Corliss Williamson nor Larry Brown were embarrassed and neither noticed anyone else in that moment of coach-player emotion.
Williamson, who led the University of Arkansas to the 1994 NCAA basketball championship, was part of the Detroit Pistons team a decade later that won the NBA championship coached by the legendary Brown.
After the hug, in a quieter spot, they visited for several long minutes, and both men left smiling.
Both were evaluating players at the Real Deal in the Rock - Brown, 71, for SMU, where he was recently named the head coach, and Williamson for the University of Central Arkansas.
A third man, none other than Arkansas Coach Mike Anderson, smiled as the Williamson-Brown reunion took place in front of him. Anderson, who had been sharing a few nice moments with Williamson, apparently knows Brown, who won a national championship at Kansas in 1988, well, too.
The event that brought them all to Little Rock was Real Deal, or this year, Best Deal.
Coaches like UCLA’s Ben Howland, who brought assistant coaches with him, flew from Los Angeles to scout players. Top assistants like Glynn Cyprien, once at Arkansas now at Texas A&M, come early and stay late.
The likes of Mike Krzyzewski, Roy Williams, John Calipari, John Thompson III, Billy Donovan and numerous other coaching headliners were seen at Positive Atmosphere Reaches Kids in Little Rock, and by noon Saturday, basketball fans were parking four blocks away and smiling every step on the way to see great, not good, but great basketball players.
There was no bigger rock star than Anderson, and from almost any vantage point, dozens and dozens of Razorbacks T-shirts could be seen.
Anderson graciously took time to visit with any and all who approached him.
He’s only been home for one season, but him being at Real Deal in a Razorbacks coaching shirt seemed as natural as seeing Keith Jackson in P.A.R.K., which he established and has grown to make a huge difference in Arkansas.
The players on the three courts were mostly impact players.
Bill Ingram, founder of Real Deal, was everywhere. But he took a moment from his duties - and the hellos and kudos from the country’s top coaches - and sat for a few minutes.
He was told, this one, his eighth Real Deal, is the best ever.
“Thanks, I agree,†he said. “With the coaches here, the kids play really hard.â€
The coaches, at least the smartest ones, are dressed in nice golf shirts with their school name or mascot large enough to be recognized from 10-15 feet.
Those coaches position themselves in their designated seating area (end zone) close to the center of a court and on the front row.
Some, just a few, watched from the coaches lounge on the mezzanine. Maybe they didn’t understand being seen is just as important as seeing.
Anderson was on the back row when visiting with Williamson, but he slowly edged his way to the front and center.
There was a game coming up that included a sophomore from North Little Rock. Anderson neither denied nor confirmed that was one of the players he was there to watch. That’s against the rules.
Anderson plays by the rules, always has, and in coaching, getting front and center for a game that has a promising player is a rule when it comes to recruiting.
Recruiting is about relationships, and there was no doubt Anderson still has one with Williamson, and so does Larry Brown.
Sports, Pages 21 on 04/29/2012
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