That's okay, PF, I got off subject first.

Anyway, as far as Dement goes, it's not that I've seen so much to indicate that he's a brilliant coach, but rather I haven't seen that much hard evidence that he's a bad coach. (stick with me...) Whenever I've watched or listened to the Ponies the last few years, this is the question I end up asking myself: Is this horrific, embarrassing display the result of inept coaching, or just dumb players who don't listen? I have been leaning toward the latter. For example, whenever Sasser or Hancock would dribble the ball pointlessy for 12 seconds, leave two men wide open, drive the lane into heavy traffic, jump athletically up into the air, and commit a charge/horrible shot/turnover, I would always blame the player. I admittedly don't know that much about coaching, but I have a hard time envisioning Dement teaching them to implement that kind of play in practice. There is no way this "play" appeared anywhere in the game plan. Just because you tell somebody to pass the ball, doesn't mean he's going to do it. I'm not saying that Dement is Coach K or anything, but he has worked with Coach K, who has a high opinion of him. Also, I think if you loaded SMU up with a bunch of McDonald's All-Americans, (like Duke perennially has) we wouldn't be having this conversation, and Dement would look like a genius. Same goes with K if you put him at SMU, but the other way around. Go back and check K's record in 1980(?) in his first year when he didn't have all that talent AND BRAINS to work with. They probably weren't too happy with him up there then, either. I guess all I'm saying is, it's easy to blame Dement's coaching, when maybe he really needs to accept some blame for recruiting players who simply don't like to pass the ball and never will like to pass the ball. And it's my opinion that you can't teach people to play with intensity, you either have it or you don't. Apparently he did good with Hopkins, as he is supposedly All-America caliber, and doesn't mind (and actually prefers) to find the open man and PASS THE BALL.
Anyhoo, that's my humble two cents on the matter. Don't hurt me, I'm just a common rube.