moocow007 wrote:ctorres wrote:moocow007 wrote:WCS is a space cadet. Folks that want him should be fully aware and be willing to accept that. He will likely do and say stupid things and I would imagine the potential for him to get himself into compromising positions in NYC will probably be significant.
If that's the case, then he probably won't work out here. We need 15 Shane Battier's on the roster.
Yeah really for folks that don't like clown type players, WCS is probably not the guy you'd want. He may work and I'm sure he can make an impact defensively. But a lot of folks seem to have problems with players like this. I just don't want to hear folks bitching about how he's like JR Smith, or go on rants if he pulls a silly stunt like Smith's shoe tying incident, or he dyes his hair orange, or he gets caught on camera smoking a spliff.
Here's a pretty good article on WCS
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2287213-superstardom-awaits-willie-cauley-steinif-he-finally-decides-he-wants-itHe seems like a very likeable guy. But it does not sound like his heart and head is in it all the time. The spotlight in Kentucky bothered him. I am not sure how he would hold up in NY especially if (when) the fans turn on him. I know Kentucky basketball is intense, but NYC and the media/fans here is no joke either.
For WCS's sake, I hope he gets drafted somewhere else after reading that article. I am just not sure he is cut out for NY especially when we are lacking leaders.
Indeed, chat with Cauley-Stein long enough, and you'll likely hear about his desire to start his own clothing line.
The guy who wears bow ties and cutoff sweatpants likes to watch zombie movies and has been known to ride a skateboard to class. His former roommate, Alex Poythress, joked last year that Cauley-Stein is often in "La La Land."
During a recent conversation with Bleacher Report, the topics that made Cauley-Stein perk up the most were, one, his days as a football standout at Olathe (Kansas) Northwest High School, and two, using his pedestal as a Kentucky athlete to touch and influence others.
"I want to change lives," he said.
As for basketball?
Cauley-Stein enjoys the game.
"But I don't know if he loves it," said Shields, the guardian. "He hasn't been bitten by the basketball bug yet."
"There's no question that Willie Cauley-Stein is currently the gold standard [for] athletic ability when it comes to centers in the college game," the report said.
The key is coaxing Cauley-Stein's talent out of him. Just as he did in Spearville and Olathe, he continues to need an extra nudge when, as Payne puts it, those "laid-back, small-town country ways" begin to resurface.
"Sometimes," Cauley-Stein said, "I don't feel like I deserve to be good because I don't work as hard as I should. I'm not going balls to the wall like I should be, so I think I don't deserve to have success.
"Some weeks I'll go super-hard at practice for two straight days, but then the third day, something happens away from basketball and I'll lose focus. I'll say, 'I just want to get through practice. I don't want to conquer it today.' But then I'll go home and realize I missed a chance to get better, and it'll bother me."