Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Kansas’ Self stresses defense

But will NBA-caliber players buy into it

Dave Skretta Associated Press

LAWRENCE, Kan. – There are few things that Kansas coach Bill Self loves more than playing defense.

But he also loves a roster full of NBA-caliber talent on his team, and sometimes it’s hard for those two loves to coexist.

So attention was paid when Kansas star Andrew Wiggins, the No. 1 overall recruit and the potential top pick in next year’s NBA draft, sidled up next to Self on the sideline in the second half of a blowout win over Towson and asked to guard the Tigers’ best player.

“He was scoring,” Wiggins said of Towson’s Jerrelle Benimon, “and I just wanted to see how I’d do against him.” With a big smile, Wiggins added: “I think my defense is underrated.”

It’s the kind of comment certain to make Self smile, too.

Wiggins isn’t the only highly touted recruit on the second-ranked Jayhawks’ roster this season or the only player potentially headed to the pros next season. Seven-footer Joel Embiid has already shown enough to make scouts salivate, and freshman guard Wayne Selden and sophomore forward Perry Ellis have exhibited enough in four games to send their stock soaring.

But the ability for Self to get the young, offensive-minded Jayhawks to buy into what he wants on defense may just be what decides whether this becomes a season to remember.

“It’s an entire team of young’uns,” Self said, “and it’s going to be frustrating from time to time, but hopefully it’ll be very rewarding at the end.”

It’s worked in the past.

The Jayhawks have won an astonishing nine consecutive regular-season Big 12 titles in part because, in 10 seasons under Self, they’ve led the league in defensive field-goal percentage eight times. Twice they’ve been the best in the nation.

When the Jayhawks won the national championship in 2008, they allowed opponents to shoot just under 38 percent, best in the Big 12 and third-best nationally.

“We’ve been working on our defense, defensive rotation, and mostly how to guard our man without fouling,” Embiid said. “We’re still learning.”