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Riley Bradshaw

NorthEndZoneDan said:
PeauxRouge said:
He will kick ass in the Frontier.

I hope you are right. I wish nothing but the best for Riley.

I do to, but I'm still scratching my head how someone goes from MWC talent, to BSC talent, to Frontier talent in the span of 3 years.
 
AZGrizFan said:
NorthEndZoneDan said:
PeauxRouge said:
He will kick ass in the Frontier.

I hope you are right. I wish nothing but the best for Riley.

I do to, but I'm still scratching my head how someone goes from MWC talent, to BSC talent, to Frontier talent in the span of 3 years.

Never was a true MWC or BSC talent. Knuckle ball jumper and lots of ball moves that worked in HS but not so much at college level. Had tough time keeping up on defense too.
 
Mousegriz said:
AZGrizFan said:
NorthEndZoneDan said:
PeauxRouge said:
He will kick ass in the Frontier.

I hope you are right. I wish nothing but the best for Riley.

I do to, but I'm still scratching my head how someone goes from MWC talent, to BSC talent, to Frontier talent in the span of 3 years.

Never was a true MWC or BSC talent. Knuckle ball jumper and lots of ball moves that worked in HS but not so much at college level. Had tough time keeping up on defense too.

I know, but that doesn't explain Utah State's wild swing and miss on him.
 
AZGrizFan said:
I know, but that doesn't explain Utah State's wild swing and miss on him.
One of mine played for the Hamilton Broncs and of course the rivalry on that end of the valley extends off the court. The tournament in Dillon in 2012 saw the Broncs drop Corvallis, and all the Corvallis guys were crying and disconsolate. That "wasn't supposed to happen" (the Broncs were 4-12) and of course that was also because Corvallis was on a streak that year, but especially because of Riley. Riley did well because the team was more or less structured around him. Not a criticism, it made some sense, but it also focused considerable team talent on Riley's statistical production. His Dad, the team coach, told the team at the end of the season that they had been "lucky" to play with Riley. Welllll ...

He was a good "all-around" player for sure, but in that environment, he had plenty of team support, but that only meant that he was still a "development prospect" to play college ball. Aren't they all? His potential was there, but it was overlooked that his actual performance was team-based, not entirely skill-based. He left Utah State "for other than performance" problems, so it wasn't necessarily a "wild swing." Small mistakes, big consequences.

From Fritz Neighbor:
His game is so well-rounded that University of Montana coach Wayne Tinkle offered him a scholarship the summer before his sophomore year. It is so polished that former Griz coach Stew Morrill, who landed Bradshaw at Utah State, feels fortunate to get him onto a Western Athletic Conference team that has won 23 games 12 straight seasons.

He's so gifted he just might be WAC-ready in December.

"He's certainly going to have an opportunity to play as a freshman," Morrill said this week.
He's a fine young man, great family. "Development," as is often noted, between the ages of 17 and 19 is a problematic transition under even good circumstances. Sometimes those are "on court," sometimes they are "off court." His particular high school experience may not have prepared him as well as other places might have. Corvallis is a very small place to be.
 
I didn't think it was a stretch when Tinks offered him so early. He was one of the better freshman I had seen but by his senior year he had been caught and maybe passed by some of the other in-state kids. That may be the biggest bummer of it all actually, Tinks forsaking all others in-state because he had his guy.

A successful program relies on everyone on the roster. Bench guys don't often get much credit but they can make or break a team. Riley working hard all year even after it became clear he wasn't going to contribute is a testament to him and the team was better because of it.

Excelling in the frontier won't be the breeze some feel it will be but I wish him the best and if nothing else I hope he enjoys his last go around.
 
Good luck to Riley. Never heard anyone say a bad thing about the guy, hope he succeeds where ever he goes.
 

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