Mon Nov 23, 2009 4:20 pm EST
The Hunt for the Most Interesting Team in the World is the Dagger's 2009-10 countdown preview series. Check out the overriding principles here.
Last year's record: 23-13, 9-7 SEC
2009-10's toughest games: at UCLA, Kentucky, at LSU, Tennessee
Primary attraction: As Rick Stansbury deals with Renardo Sidney (or the lack thereof), can the Bulldogs fulfill their promise?
Three items of undeniable interest:
1. Re-nar-do! Re-nar-do! Re. Nar. Dooooooo! Uh, Renardo? Much of the 2009-10 season will hinge on whether Rick Stansbury's great gambit -- signing Renardo Sidney amidst eligibility suspicions after Sidney's attempts at landing at USC and UCLA failed -- works or not. Thus far, things aren't looking good. The Bulldogs are two games into the 2009-10 season, and Sidney is still ineligible. The NCAA wants more documents from the Sidney family in order to prove they weren't receiving money for their mortgage while they lived in California; meanwhile, Sidney's lawyer, Don Jackson, seems more intent on making a name for himself than doing right by his client, whose best interests involve playing basketball as soon as possible. Whether Sidney can't get eligible and Jackson knows it or Jackson is merely stalling in an attempt to raise his own profile is as yet unknown. What is known is that the Bulldogs need Sidney, and Sidney needs the Bulldogs. They need each other, and soon.
2. Meanwhile, MSU's frontcout is just fine. Of course, Sidney would merely be the icing on an already pretty tasty Bulldog frontcourt cake. Mmm. Bulldog frontcourt cake. This cake is primarily composed of Jarvis Varnado, who led the country in blocks and block percentage last year. Varnado is a future NBA draft pick who -- get this -- offered to give up his scholarship, play his final year as a walk-on, and pay the $5,000 or so for tuition so Stansbury could have enough scholarships to sign Sidney and fellow center John Riek, a four-star recruit in 2008 who couldn't play at Cincinnati last year thanks to academic issues. Varnado's family's selflessness gave Stansbury the chance to load his team just in time for his senior's final farewell. At least Riek is cleared to play; Varnado's gift hasn't been a complete waste.
3. Distractions. Already, distractions. Look at the content of this Hunt. Thus far, the interesting things have been about Rick Stansbury and Jarvis Varnado's equally risky decisions to open their Bulldog arms to a player who may or may not even be eligible to play. This is a shame, because the Bulldogs -- with or without Sidney -- are legitimate SEC contenders. Only Kentucky and Tennessee have better talent, and Varnado's ability to change team's game plans defensively, along with a trio of outside three-point shooters (Barry Stewart, Ravern Johnson and Phil Turner combined for 36 percent from the field last season), give the Bulldogs a legitimate chance at SEC supremacy. Look at it this way: Mississippi State returns all five starters, and the only Bulldog anyone talks about might never put on the uniform.
Stansbury did this to himself. He tweaked the formula, got greedy and went for it all. Let's see if it pays off.
Bonus: This is what Jarvis does.
Varnado is the sort of shotblocker who can stop powerful drives with either hand, and who doesn't just try to swat the ball into the stands. He does only what it takes to stop the shot, and then he gathers it if possible. Your high school basketball coach would love Jarvis Varnado. Then again, who wouldn't?
The Dagger is a college basketball blog edited by Jeff Eisenberg. Email him, and follow him on Twitter.

Posted Jan 28 2010
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