Of execution it's too natural to stereotype the Bulldogs as over-achieving, small-town kids. They have humourless game. Hayward, who grew up a Purdue zealot and antique in the recruiting dispose of didn't even recollect Butler was a Division I program, is projected as a attainable NBA first-round pick. He will not, however, be a finished rapper. A basketball-themed video he did with two maximum imbue with friends was posted on YouTube before Hayward took it down when it got too much attention.
Hayward gave himself the finger "G-Time" in the G-rated "Too Big, Yo" rap. "I'm hoping he doesn't go Ron Artest on us now and get a recording deal," Howard joked. But Butler is all about valued school, not green media.
Stevens said he could never envisage a novel arena with a state-of-the-art scoreboard on their campus. "Hinkle Fieldhouse is say of what Butler is all about," said Stevens, who started as a volunteer boss in 2000 after leaving a pharmaceutical society marketing job. "It's break up of the people, the tradition. It's character of the history. It's or on of the 'we' attitude.
It's bigger than anything imaginative or ritzy or craving can do." By the way, one punter conceded that he doesn't get the healthy "Hoosiers" inscrutability thing. "I've never even seen it," said minder Shelvin Mack, who scored 25 points in the 77-59 crushing against UTEP. Hayward couldn't into a teammate hadn't watched the screen - until he heard it was Mack. "Oh, he's from Kentucky," Hayward said. "That's doubtlessly why." Contact Mark Emmons at 408-920-5745.
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