By
Al Myatt
©2013 Bonesville.net
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East Carolina basketball coach Jeff Lebo is way ahead
when it comes to transfers.
The memorable final shot, the last assist and MVP in the
CollegeInsider.com Tournament
were all produced by players who started their careers in locales other
than ECU, which is representative to an extent of how business is
transacted in college basketball these days.
Akeem Richmond drained the buzzer-beating 3-pointer which
topped host Weber State 77-74.
Richmond came to ECU from Rhode Island.
Miguel Paul set up the last shot with a drive and a dish.
Paul went to Missouri out of high school.
Maurice Kemp, the tournament MVP, transferred to ECU from
Miami Dade Junior College after playing a season at Alabama A&M.
Lebo claimed post player Ty Armstrong off of the scrap
heap from Auburn, where he played for the Pirates coach before he was
sidelined with a knee injury.
That leaves Robert Sampson and Paris Roberts-Campbell
among the CIT prime time players and, of course, Sampson dismayed the
Pirate Nation with the news he was leaving the ECU program before his
senior season.
It was also announced that seldom-used and seemingly
often-injured big man Yasin Kolo was leaving ECU when Sampson's
departure was released. Kolo was a project, a Chad Wynn with work, at
best.
Not too surprising then was the news that ECU's latest
recruit was a transfer. Terry Whisnant, a shooter who refined his skills
at Florida State, has joined the Pirate program. Whisnant must sit out a
season before playing at ECU.
The Pirates are getting players from different directions
— on the rebound from power conferences like Whisnant and Paul. They are
getting guys like Kemp who feel like they can make it at a higher level.
They are getting guys who want a change of scenery to get closer to home
like Richmond. Lebo must feel more like a travel agent than a coach at
times but he seems well-acclimated to what amounts to free agency in
college basketball.
When it comes to piecing things together, whether the
situation is dictated by injuries or new arrivals at the ECU terminal,
Lebo has the skills of a quilt maker.
"We've had some success with those guys," Lebo said. "The
landscape of college basketball and recruiting is changing. You're going
to have close to 500 kids transfer this year."
The Pirates themselves are on the verge of a huge
transfer from Conference USA to the American Athletic Conference.
Lebo acquired a relevant statistic after attending
meetings from both leagues earlier this month.
"Forty percent of freshman will not be in the program
where they started in three years," noted the ECU coach. "That's quite a
number. It's an amazing number that a lot of people really don't
understand."
To Lebo's credit, he's making the frequency of player
movement work for him rather than throw his hands up in despair and
cluck like Chicken Little.
One and dones who fulfill the current requirement of one
season out of high school before heading to the NBA are one factor in
the 40 percent cited by the Pirates coach. Transfers would make up the
bulk of the number.
If Kentucky's John Calipari is the face of playing the
one and done game, Lebo is handling the emerging transfer phenomenon as
well as anyone.
Jeff Goodman of College Basketball Insider had compiled a
list of 425 transfers after spring semester in April of this year. That
was in addition to 50 players who had departed programs at midseason.
The Pirates have another scholarship remaining due to the
dual departures of Kolo and Sampson.
Lebo said there is a possibility that his program may add
another player.
Sampson's exit is a mystery. Lebo has had nothing to say
other than thanking him and wishing him well.
What was Sampson thinking? He had 12 points and eight
rebounds in the CIT final and made the All-Tournament team. He averaged
29.9 minutes per game, third highest on the team in 2012-13, so playing
time wouldn't have been an issue.
Sampson didn't answer a cell number provided by Jody
Jones, ECU's basketball media relations coordinator. He apparently
didn't answer the number when ECU coaches were trying to get in touch
with him after the Pirates' best season ever. The questions of who was
advising him and what he expected to gain by leaving ECU are still
unanswered. He would have been a vital force had he stayed for his
senior season. No word at this point where he will be playing next
season.
There's no use crying over spilled milk.
"That's just the nature of the beast," Lebo said. "It's
something that we all as coaches have to deal with. You've got 340
Division I teams. You have 500 transfers. You can do the math. That's
over one, close to two on your team a year. ... Kids and families make
their own decisions."
At this point those decisions have worked overwhelmingly
in ECU's favor.
Still, personally, I can't help but wonder why Robert
Sampson did what he did in the position he was in for the Pirates. It's
hard to see how he might have helped his basketball future by leaving
ECU when he did.