likwitdesi wrote:We have to take a look at Khalif Wyatt in the late 1st / early 2nd. I live in Philly so I've been following Temple. Ihave questioned his draft stock because he is probably a below average athlete but what a feel for the game...
Khalif Wyatt has played well in two NCAA games, one against Indiana and Victor Oladipo trying to defend him.
I want to know more about him --
http://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/co ... story.html
Dayton, Ohio — In the NCAA tournament’s first round, no player in the country scored more points than Khalif Wyatt, Temple’s senior guard with the senior-citizen skill set.
Wyatt employs, in fact, the classic “old man’s game,” crafty and resourceful but far from slick or polished. His repertoire ranges from the jaw-dropping to the head-scratching, the kind of moves you expect to see in a YMCA pickup game, not necessarily the NCAA tournament.
“You do kind of live with what Khalif gives you,” Temple Coach Fran Dunphy said Saturday. “Most of it is good. And there’s some that will drive you a little bit crazy.”
“Coach Dunphy has definitely made me — well, him and the rest of the staff, definitely — made me a better player and better person,” Wyatt said. “Definitely owe a lot to my coaches and my teammates.”
This season, Wyatt has evolved into a more consistent and dependable teammate. He finds ways to score. When his shots aren’t falling, he gets to the free throw line. In the conference tournament, he shot 1 of 8 behind the three-point arc but managed 30 points against VCU. And Friday against N.C. State, Wyatt was 1 of 7 on three-point attempts yet scored a tournament-high 31, thanks in part to 14 free throw attempts.
“Whether you score a lot of points or you don’t, you just want to make sure that you left it all out there,” Wyatt said.






















