BEARZ77 wrote:That's the year I was referring to, where WSU fans kept saying they had the two best teams in the conference, but still lost both times to MSU and took second in the conference. Shocker posters kept complaining that Marshall wasn't getting the right players on the court at crunch time, hinted several times about some division on the team between Stutz and others, and that they had not developed a go-to player like Weems. Those were points made on the Shocker board. Every Coach likes to have depth, but they will also tell you it's hard to keep 11-12 guys happy when they have pretty comparable abilities. I thought Marshall had trouble that year deciding what role he wanted for a number of players and they lost several close games when they had poor possessions late. There aren't as many tough decisions when you only go 8-9 deep.
I still believe there were serious chemistry issues on that team.
Insider info at WSU indicated that Durley was not going to get his scholarship renewed after his So season. Durley was a Turgeon recruit who sat out a season with an injury. After he recovered from the injury, he had no interest in doing the rehab or work to get back into playing shape. That gave him to Marshall as a Fr and he admitted to the press - "I don't like to work hard. I'm lazy".
Stutz was a hard-working guy who over-achieved based on his work ethic. Durley was a self-admitted lazy guy who could score 30 (and give up 30) if you got the ball in his hands.
Stutz went to suburban small-school religion-based private schools. The rest of team went to (mostly) inner-city public schools. Other than Stutz, the rest of the team was primarily inner-city athletic guys and some JuCo's. Stutz was vocal, well-spoken, and viewed himself as the team leader.
Do you see why I think there may have been some chemistry issues? After he signed Stutz, Marshall hasn't really gone for many (if any) white, suburban, parochial-school players.