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Next up: A long offseason

Marquette
66
Marquette
Scrimmage
Date/Time: Oct 4, 2025
TV: NA
Schedule for 2024-25
New Mexico
75

JustinLewisFanClubPres

Let's rally around Vander for the three great years that he gave us as fans and alumni of Marquette.  There is a NBA player in Mr. Blue but he has some work to do.  Let's all thank him for 3 great years and wish him the best as he pursues his dream!  Go get 'em, Van.  Marquette supports you!

ErickJD08

Two mediocre and one great. He should have stayed one more year to get better.
Wanna learn how to say "@#(@# (@*" in a dozen languages... go to Professor Crass www.professorcrass.com

JustinLewisFanClubPres

Well, as a fan, I will say "thank you" for three very fun years and not knock him for making a very difficult decision.  It's easy to criticize him but very unproductive at this point.  He made a decision that I'm sure was difficult for him.  Don't turn your back on him now.

Benny B

Quote from: MU7703 on June 27, 2013, 11:29:06 PM
Well, as a fan, I will say "thank you" for three very fun years and not knock him for making a very difficult decision.  It's easy to criticize him but very unproductive at this point.  He made a decision that I'm sure was difficult for him.  Don't turn your back on him now.

Nobody's turning their back, and the decision was probably the easiest one he ever made.  The difficult decision would be the one where he had to postpone his dream a year.
Quote from: LittleMurs on January 08, 2015, 07:10:33 PM
Wow, I'm very concerned for Benny.  Being able to mimic Myron Medcalf's writing so closely implies an oncoming case of dementia.

MU82

Again, I hope I'm wrong, but I don't think there is an NBA player in Mr. Blue.

Bilas didn't even have him on the list of 10 best players to go undrafted.

There are worse things than getting paid to see Europe and play a couple basketball games a week, though. I wish Vander luck.
"It's not how white men fight." - Tucker Carlson

"Guard against the impostures of pretended patriotism." - George Washington

"In a time of deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act." - George Orwell

MUfan12

Quote from: Benny B on June 27, 2013, 11:32:01 PM
Nobody's turning their back, and the decision was probably the easiest one he ever made.  The difficult decision would be the one where he had to postpone his dream a year.

THIS.

Making a decision is easy when you ignore one side of it completely.

ChitownSpaceForRent

He really wasnt even close. I doubt he gets drafted even if there were 75 picks.

martyconlonontherun

Blue wanted to get paid. I'm sure 90% of this board (myself included) would give up anything for another year in college, but you can tell Blue had the "I don't play for free" attitude. It's his right and choice, so I don't blame him and I don't think he will regret it too much cashing checks next year.

ChicosBailBonds

Quote from: martyconlonontherun on June 27, 2013, 11:47:34 PM
Blue wanted to get paid. I'm sure 90% of this board (myself included) would give up anything for another year in college, but you can tell Blue had the "I don't play for free" attitude. It's his right and choice, so I don't blame him and I don't think he will regret it too much cashing checks next year.

Folks can rip me all they want, but I've always felt Vander wasn't one that desired the whole GO TO SCHOOL thing.  He went, did what was necessary, passed his classes, etc, but school hasn't been priority one.  He saw a chance to capitalize on what he does best, play basketball.  Problem is that he vastly overrated his position as did his inner circle.  When you have 40 & 50 year old beer drinking message board posters seeing it, plus the draft gurus, plus pretty much every GM in the league, plus your head coach who was shocked at the decision, well that only tells me school isn't his thing and any sliver of an excuse to get out was going to happen.

I'm not shocked at all, was hoping just one team would go for him in the 2nd round, but knew it was a very outside shot....which it was.  Maybe he gets picked up in free agency.  I'm sure he'll get a sniff or two, perhaps he can stick.  Vander is an enigma wrapped up in a riddle, some guys just are. 

Atticus

Quote from: ErickJD08 on June 27, 2013, 11:26:01 PM
Two mediocre and one great. He should have stayed one more year to get better.

Are you certain that he actually liked school? Maybe he hated it, and was looking forward to a new chapter in his life. Quite frankly, I would prefer kids that dont like school to leave as soon as possible (not saying I know that is the case with VB).

And...there are better players on D-League teams than any program in college basketball aside from MAYBE UK. There are no NCAA limits with regard to practice time with coaches. No classes. No homework. No responsibilities other than "work," which is what basketball is to him at this point.

The big question mark I have is whether or not VB will negatively impact the APR score for next year. He tweeted often that he was spending most of his time between the end of the NCAA tournament and the school year in LA. How could he possibly be an active student in that situation? His type of circumstance is exactly how teams flirt with the NCAA minimum score. Of course, the problem with the APR is that kids that dodge school typically get drafted because the time away from campus likely helped their draft status. It didnt work for VB - double kick in the nuts.



GGGG

Quote from: ChicosBailBonds on June 28, 2013, 12:14:15 AM
Folks can rip me all they want, but I've always felt Vander wasn't one that desired the whole GO TO SCHOOL thing.  He went, did what was necessary, passed his classes, etc, but school hasn't been priority one.  He saw a chance to capitalize on what he does best, play basketball.  Problem is that he vastly overrated his position as did his inner circle.  When you have 40 & 50 year old beer drinking message board posters seeing it, plus the draft gurus, plus pretty much every GM in the league, plus your head coach who was shocked at the decision, well that only tells me school isn't his thing and any sliver of an excuse to get out was going to happen.

I'm not shocked at all, was hoping just one team would go for him in the 2nd round, but knew it was a very outside shot....which it was.  Maybe he gets picked up in free agency.  I'm sure he'll get a sniff or two, perhaps he can stick.  Vander is an enigma wrapped up in a riddle, some guys just are. 


His family did not want him to enter the draft.  They wanted him to stay in school.

Sunbelt15

Quote from: ErickJD08 on June 27, 2013, 11:26:01 PM
Two mediocre and one great. He should have stayed one more year to get better.

I must agree with that now.  :'(

MerrittsMustache

Bear with me here...Let's say that all of your life, you've dreamed of becoming an engineer at Harley in Milwaukee who designs motorcycles even though you know it's a long-shot. You go to college and spend all of your free time working on engineering and motorcycle design. Meanwhile, the classes you take are all gen eds or in the college of communications and have little or nothing to do with engineering. After your junior year of college, you have an opportunity to design motorcycles for Kawasaki in Texas. It's not where you want to live and it's definitely not Harley, but it's a opportunity to live your dream of designing motorcycles and if you do really well, there's a chance that it could eventually lead to a position with Harley.

Do you keep working for free on something that you're passionate about while taking unrelated classes or do you take the opportunity to get paid for your work and do what you love even if it's not quite your dream job?

moomoo

Stache, your analogy is slightly off, because if said example student stayed an extra year at school, he would have developed more engineering skills that could have dramatically increased his chances of working at Harley. 
Silenzio. Parla il moomoo.

MerrittsMustache

Quote from: moomoo on June 28, 2013, 07:52:47 AM
Stache, your analogy is slightly off, because if said example student stayed an extra year at school, he would have developed more engineering skills that could have dramatically increased his chances of working at Harley.  

How do you know? That's not a guarantee. Maybe entering the workforce would help him develop his skills more.

Lennys Tap

Quote from: ChicosBailBonds on June 28, 2013, 12:14:15 AM
Folks can rip me all they want, but I've always felt Vander wasn't one that desired the whole GO TO SCHOOL thing.  He went, did what was necessary, passed his classes, etc, but school hasn't been priority one. 

Why would anyone rip you for this? You could have written the same thing about almost any highly ranked high D1 player. Very few of them place school as priority one.

ChicosBailBonds

Quote from: Terror Skink on June 28, 2013, 05:40:56 AM

His family did not want him to enter the draft.  They wanted him to stay in school.

I'm 100% aware of that, unfortunately that wasn't the only group he was listening to.

ChicosBailBonds

Quote from: MerrittsMustache on June 28, 2013, 07:36:49 AM
Bear with me here...Let's say that all of your life, you've dreamed of becoming an engineer at Harley in Milwaukee who designs motorcycles even though you know it's a long-shot. You go to college and spend all of your free time working on engineering and motorcycle design. Meanwhile, the classes you take are all gen eds or in the college of communications and have little or nothing to do with engineering. After your junior year of college, you have an opportunity to design motorcycles for Kawasaki in Texas. It's not where you want to live and it's definitely not Harley, but it's a opportunity to live your dream of designing motorcycles and if you do really well, there's a chance that it could eventually lead to a position with Harley.

Do you keep working for free on something that you're passionate about while taking unrelated classes or do you take the opportunity to get paid for your work and do what you love even if it's not quite your dream job?


And what if 99% of those in your field, including your mentor (coach) said if you stayed one more year in Engineering school your dreams of fulfillment increase dramatically? 

There's a reason why college basketball writers, Buzz Williams, Draft Express, NBA GM's, etc were all surprised at his decision. 

77ncaachamps

Support his dream.

Selfishly, a good number of us wanted him to "work on his game" for one more year. He was unpolished yet far from unrefined.

He'll get paid and then realize there are things he likes being a professional and things he misses being an amateur.
SS Marquette

PistolPete

Quote from: 77ncaachamps on June 28, 2013, 09:04:39 AM
Selfishly, a good number of us wanted him to "work on his game" for one more year. He was unpolished yet far from unrefined.

I'm sick of hearing how selfish it is to have wanted Vander to return for his senior year.

Of course I wanted Vander to return for the benefit of MUBB, but I also wanted what was best for him personally. I do not know or care to know his personal situation, but I just can't imagine a scenario in which this decision was in the best interest of he or his family. Had he returned for his senior year, he likely would have continued his upward trajectory, made a deep tournament run, and boosted his draft status. There's a strong possibility he'd be a late first round draft choice with a guaranteed paycheck, but almost certainly would have been drafted. Perhaps more importantly, he'd have a respectable college degree in his back pocket to fall back on when his playing days are over.

Of course, the point is moot, and I support Vander in his decision and thank him for his three memorable years at MU, including 2 Sweet 16s and an Elite 8.

MerrittsMustache

Quote from: ChicosBailBonds on June 28, 2013, 09:03:20 AM
And what if 99% of those in your field, including your mentor (coach) said if you stayed one more year in Engineering school your dreams of fulfillment increase dramatically? 


Not true. They may increase dramatically. They may not increase at all. They may decrease. Whatever the case, you'd be doing it part-time for free.


Benny B

Quote from: kilbournave on June 28, 2013, 09:30:48 AM
I'm sick of hearing how selfish it is to have wanted Vander to return for his senior year.

Of course I wanted Vander to return for the benefit of MUBB, but I also wanted what was best for him personally. I do not know or care to know his personal situation, but I just can't imagine a scenario in which this decision was in the best interest of he or his family.

+1. I don't think you can really call it "selfish" when what's best for you is also what's best for others.

Quote from: MerrittsMustache on June 28, 2013, 09:59:37 AM
Not true. They may increase dramatically. They may not increase at all. They may decrease. Whatever the case, you'd be doing it part-time for free.

Well, given that his chance this year was 0% (ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Captain Hindsight to the stage), I don't think his odds could get much worse next year.  Heck, even a 0.001% chance of being drafted next year is dramatic enough of an increase to break my calculator.


Quote from: LittleMurs on January 08, 2015, 07:10:33 PM
Wow, I'm very concerned for Benny.  Being able to mimic Myron Medcalf's writing so closely implies an oncoming case of dementia.

ResidentBrown

In a piece on ESPN.com, Dana O'Neil writes about underclassmen that leave early but go un-drafted. She primarily focused on the downward spiral of Renardo Sidney, but she also mentions some of the underclassmen who came out and went un-drafted last night. She mentions CJ Leslie, Phil Pressey and BJ Young, but not one mention of Vander. It seems that Vander wasn't even close. If you throw in those three, all of the great seniors who went un-drafted, and all of the mystery foreigners, Vander didn't even stand a chance.

http://espn.go.com/mens-college-basketball/story/_/id/9429321/renardo-sidney-cautionary-tale-nba-draft-early-entries-college-basketball

Hards Alumni

Quote from: kilbournave on June 28, 2013, 09:30:48 AM
I'm sick of hearing how selfish it is to have wanted Vander to return for his senior year.

Of course I wanted Vander to return for the benefit of MUBB, but I also wanted what was best for him personally. I do not know or care to know his personal situation, but I just can't imagine a scenario in which this decision was in the best interest of he or his family. Had he returned for his senior year, he likely would have continued his upward trajectory, made a deep tournament run, and boosted his draft status. There's a strong possibility he'd be a late first round draft choice with a guaranteed paycheck, but almost certainly would have been drafted. Perhaps more importantly, he'd have a respectable college degree in his back pocket to fall back on when his playing days are over.

Of course, the point is moot, and I support Vander in his decision and thank him for his three memorable years at MU, including 2 Sweet 16s and an Elite 8.

What?  Seriously, I don't understand why everyone is so damn sure that Vander would improve.  His PPG went up last year... but his A/T went up as well.  His rebounds went down, assists went down.  I simply don't see how anyone can rationally conclude (please please say something other than your gut feeling, or generalizations about players taking the 'next step' their senior year) that he would be guaranteed to be drafted next year.

ATLmarquettefan

Vander Blue playing for Memphis Grizzlies in summer league per Chris Venon tweet

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