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KU’ jayhawks’ Bill Self speaks to Oklahoma coaches

Kansas basketball coach Bill Self spoke with media members at the 2022 youth summer camp.

Kansas basketball coach Bill Self spoke with media members at the 2022 youth summer camp.

gbedore@kcstar.com

Bill Self, a men’s basketball coach in Kansas, imagines how much money a college basketball and soccer superstar could have made if the NCAA name, image and portrait rules had been implemented at the time. You can only do it.

“If Wayman Tisdale was playing now and Billy Tubbs was coaching at the OU (Oklahoma), he (Tisdale) would make $ 3 million,” Self said on Monday at the Marriott Southern Hills Hotel. He spoke at a speech engagement at the Oklahoma Coach Association Clinic in. Tulsa.

My comment is Recorded by Bill Heisten at Tulsa World..

The appearance of Self returning home attracted a standing crowd of more than 450 high school and college coaches, Tulsa World said.

“When I was in Oklahoma State, I probably got a job as good as you could get in the summer. Remember the Fleming Foods in Oklahoma City? I got a graveyard shift. I earned $ 11.05 an hour in 1982, which means I was lying on it … $ 11 and 5 cents an hour. Kids would ridicule it now. ” Self, a point guard at Oklahoma State University, told the group.

“NIL really wants to be done the right way, but I don’t know what the right way is. Everyone has all these (suggestions), but everyone has the answer. Not. Let’s just call it. If you go to school and you haven’t driven a brand new car within the first month you’re there, someone isn’t doing their job. Now all the kids Can have an agent. Anyone can have an agent … it’s out of control. It wasn’t out of control (in Kansas). I think we’re actually quite late Hopefully we’ll get involved, “Self added.

Self told the coach that he was not a fan of the transfer portal. This includes news that the NCAA Division I Council recently recommended removing restrictions on multiple transfers for athletes. The NCAA Board will officialize this rule on August 3. If this rule is passed, players will be able to play in four different schools in four years.

“I think it’s a terrible rule,” Self said in Tulsa. “We allowed all these means to allow children to hit the wall and go around it instead of going through it. This is what the portal did, but (1) Also suitable for children (of the club). If a child (doesn’t have time to play) or is actually happening in one place, he should leave. But the coach calls him and calls him. Allowing the child to just leave, either because of discipline or (due to lack of play time)-it will be the norm for the rest of the time. They haven’t put the genie back in the bottle, “Self added. rice field.

Vitale talks about a long NCAA survey

ESPN’s Dick Vitale responded to news that KU coach Bill Self and Jayhawk’s assistant Kurtis Townsend didn’t hire on the streets in June and July. It was a move that sources said the KU was not ordered by the NCAA, which has not yet completed the KU basketball investigation, which began in 2019 when it received the notice of allegations.

“I firmly believe that if @NCAA accuses a member school of a breach and cannot make a decision within two years, the case should be withdrawn. It’s absolutely ridiculous to take four to five years. increase!” Vitale wrote on Twitter..

On Monday, Vitale added In another Twitter post, he said: “The entire system, which has been a nightmare for many years, has moved into the dark ages. I think using all the latest technology available will speed up the decision-making process. In these cases, it’s definitely not.”

Summer school is about to end

KU’s men’s basketball team is hosting the final training for their summer school session this week. Jay Hawk players in Lawrence from June 7th will be allowed to head home on Friday, starting the 2022-23 school year on August 22nd. NCAA rules allow teams to participate in eight hours of supervised basketball. Weekly related activities on campus during the summer session.

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Gary Bedore Profile Image

Gary Bedore covers all aspects of The Star’s Kansas basketball. He is in charge of former players, coaches and recruiters as well as the current team. He attended KU and was born and raised in Chicago, Lyle and Illinois.

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