MANHATTAN, Kans. -- There was a class observing Kansas State's practice last Tuesday, and so, for the sake of decorum, coach Frank Martin spared junior forward Curtis Kelly of what might have been an epic reaming, instead pulling him aside afterward and informing him in hushed-but-serious tones, that the effort he'd just put forth was unacceptable. "For a guy as good as you, to have only one rebound" -- a long board that fell into his hands -- "and one basket in two hours and 45 minutes" Martin said to the 6-foot-9 transfer from UConn, "should let you know that you had no interest in practicing today."
Watching Kelly's performance made me worried about the Wildcats, who finished fourth in the Big 12 last season and were spurned on Selection Sunday despite having a 22-12 record. Was this really the guy who was supposed to get them over the hump by solving their frontcourt scoring problems, the former five-star recruit who was supposed to be reviving his career after two tumultuous years at UConn? It didn't seem likely.
Damning someone on the basis of one practice is unfair, though, and Martin -- who's not in the business of defending players who don't deserve defending -- walked over afterward to provide some context. I had apparently seen their worst workout of the young season. "Curtis was awful today," he said, "but he had been playing like a pro before this. On his good days, he blocks shots, he plays with a lot of energy, and he's extremely skilled with his back to the basket offensively."
That should be a relief to K-State fans, because for this team to be good -- and they really are an intriguing dark horse in the Big 12 -- Kelly must become a third, quality scoring option alongside senior guard Denis Clemente (15.0 points per game in '08-09) and junior Jacob Pullen (13.9), who form one of the nation's most underrated backcourt duos. I sat with Clemente and Pullen before practice as they detailed their frustrations from last season: Defenses ignored the post, which was manned by offensively challenged role players Darren Kent and Luis Colon, and smothered the two guards with heavily extended defenses, ball-screen traps, and even triangle-and-twos. They're overjoyed to have what Martin calls a "pressure release" on the interior.
"We have a legitimate threat down there now," Pullen says. "If a team tries to trap us and we throw Curt the ball, he can actually go score."
Kelly, to his credit, acknowledges that focus and effort issues were what doomed him at UConn in '06-07 and '07-08. Coming out of Rice High in the Bronx, he says, "I was a young fool, and I didn't adjust to college quick enough. The combination of me not working hard, and me not being able to handle coach Calhoun mentally -- he's a great coach, but he's tough to play for because he can really get into you -- just ate away at my career."
As a freshman and sophomore, he was buried on the Huskies' front line behind Hasheem Thabeet and Jeff Adrien, and Kelly wondered if Calhoun's image of him might forever be as a role player. "I didn't really want to wait to see if that would change," Kelly says. "Like this year, [senior] Gavin Edwards is probably going to be their starting four-man, and who knows -- that might have been me if I'd stayed. But I didn't want to take that risk."
After he dislocated his elbow against Villanova on Feb. 23, and felt that too there wasn't much interest in when he was coming back -- "when I didn't feel that love, that was the most depressing time of my life," he says -- he opted to transfer. His criteria were to find a coach who wasn't in the Hall of Fame, and school that was still in building mode. Martin and K-State fit. "If you work hard," Martin told him on his visit, "I promise I'll get you somewhere."
Where Kelly and the Wildcats go depends on what version of him they get: the lackadaisical one I saw on Tuesday, or the energetic one Martin's seen in most other practices. He really is their only scoring option inside; Colon is too limited, Samuels is more of a wing player, and four-star 6-9 freshman Wally Judge, the team's best NBA prospect, still lacks a legitimate post move. How much will it matter to Kelly that, for the first time in his college life, a team is counting on him?
Heart and Soul: K-State has a power-sharing agreement between point guards Clemente and Pullen, whom Martin says have both earned the right to speak their minds -- and lay into freshmen who slack off, if necessary. Clemente and Pullen are so far ahead of everyone else on the roster that they must be split up at all times in scrimmage situations ("Otherwise," Pullen says, "it just wouldn't be fair"), and in games, the 'Cats are better when they're both clicking: They were 12-4 last season when each point guard scored in double-figures, and 10-8 in games they didn't.