August 30, 2011 in Sports
Return of Davies has BYU excited
Junior gets second chance from school
PROVO, Utah – BYU basketball players and coaches say they see a different Brandon Davies, one motivated to take advantage of the second chance he’s received after being reinstated following his honor-code violation.
The team returned from a 10-day, five-game trip to Greece late Thursday and learned Friday that the junior center was being reinstated.
On Monday, they saw Davies on campus for the first day of classes.
“I think he’s overjoyed at having a second chance,” teammate Noah Hartsock said of Davies, whose suspension near the end of the regular season came as the Cougars had climbed to …
You have viewed 20 free articles or blogs allowed within a 30-day period. FREE registration is now required for uninterrupted access.
Registration Required
- log in to your Spokesman.com account for unlimited viewing and commenting access.
- Don't have a Spokesman.com account? Create a Spokesman.com profile and register for FREE access.
-
S-R Media, The Spokesman-Review and Spokesman.com are happy to assist you. Contact Customer Service by email or call 800-338-8801
PROVO, Utah – BYU basketball players and coaches say they see a different Brandon Davies, one motivated to take advantage of the second chance he’s received after being reinstated following his honor-code violation.
The team returned from a 10-day, five-game trip to Greece late Thursday and learned Friday that the junior center was being reinstated.
On Monday, they saw Davies on campus for the first day of classes.
“I think he’s overjoyed at having a second chance,” teammate Noah Hartsock said of Davies, whose suspension near the end of the regular season came as the Cougars had climbed to No. 3 in the rankings last season. “Most players here at this school might not get that chance, but he was really excited and just really grateful for the opportunity. I think he’s going to take really good care of what he has and he’s going to be a great help for us this year.”
BYU coach Dave Rose said he was proud of Davies for the way he handled himself after the honor-code violation was revealed, and how he responded positively to all the negative publicity as the Cougars chased a national championship.
The school does not discuss the nature of suspensions but under the honor code students are prohibited from having premarital sex and drinking alcoholic beverages, among other things.
BYU did not make Davies available for comment.
Davies, who grew up in Provo, Utah, had started 26 of 29 games for the Cougars and averaged 11.1 points and a team-leading 6.2 rebounds.
“I think he’s kind of turned the corner as far as his ability to really focus and achieve things that are really important to him,” Rose said. “He’s always been driven, but now he has more focus in that drive.”
BYU players were still a bit jet-lagged from the overseas trip that saw them beat up on a few Greek “B” league pro teams while taking a pounding from bigger, more skilled national teams from Greece and Italy.
Davies wasn’t there to help out as he had not yet been reinstated. And the team is still without guard Matt Carlino, who can’t play until December because of transfer rules, and forward-center Chris Collinsworth, who is still rehabbing a knee.
But players were excited about the possibilities as they gear up to play in a new conference – the West Coast Conference – albeit without stars Jimmer Fredette and Jackson Emery.
© Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Spokane7
Celtic Woman is coming to Spokane
Please keep it civil. Don't post comments that are obscene, defamatory, threatening, off-topic, an infringement of copyright or an invasion of privacy. Read our forum standards and community guidelines.
You must be logged in to post comments. Please log in here or click the comment box below for options.
comments powered by Disqus