UK Basketball Preview 2019-2020 | Page 24

D ec. 10, 2011. Assembly Hall, Bloomington, Indiana. Christian Watford becomes an Indiana cult hero by draining a 3-pointer at the buzzer to boost the Hoosiers over top-ranked and eventual national champion Kentucky, after which the court previously most famous for Bob Knight throwing a chair onto it is awash with red-clad fans in paroxysms of joy. Keion Brooks Jr. was 11 years old. That was the last time Kentucky and Indiana have met in the regular season in a rivalry that was once must-see TV in the Bluegrass, the Hoosier State and beyond. 24 | UK Basketball Preview 2019/2020 The two sides reportedly couldn’t agree on where to play the series; then-Hoosiers coach Tom Crean wanted to stage the spectacle in Assembly Hall and Rupp Arena in alternat- ing years; Cats coach John Calipari, an on-record proponent of neutral-site showdowns to prepare for them in tourna- ment play, did not. So, do the famously hoops-crazy progeny of Indiana still consider the Big Blue a rival, considering there are kids well into elementary school now who weren’t on this earth to see the last scheduled Hoosiers-Cats border skirmish? (It’s worth noting, of course, they’ve met in tournament play twice since then.) Brooks, a Fort Wayne, Indiana product who picked Kentucky over his home-state school, is adamant, both in the passion that still smolders and in distancing himself from it. “Yeah, of course,” the freshman forward said at media day. “For me, I never really thought that way; I just like to hoop. That’s what it comes down to. There’s a lot of kids still from Indiana that hate Kentucky, and pretty sure some Kentucky people that hate Indiana, but that has nothing to do with me.” Asked about Indiana fans’ feedback to his decision to come south, Brooks, with a slight grin, paused, thought hard, and declined comment. Brooks instead focused on why he made the choice he did. One reason: Kentucky’s adeptness under Calipari to contribute to the NBA mill — what secondary-school educators might call “career readiness.” “For me personally, to see where the game is going and how coach Cal is adapting and being receptive to what’s going on in the NBA and trying to implement that here in college,” Brooks said, “I feel like he’s doing a great job of making sure that his players are ready to get there and they’re not taken by surprise by anything that’s going on in the NBA.” “Smaller” lineups may be the pro trend du jour, and Cal has claimed a willingness to embrace them -- placing players in positions that in years past would’ve been anchored near the basket who instead can handle the ball in space and display shooting touch from the mid-range and the perimeter. Brooks’s talents help give Kentucky that option. “He’s got a good feel for the game,” Calipari said of Brooks. “He may play some stretch 4 (the number tradi- tionally associated with power forwards) for us because he gives us that length and size and ability to space the court. And it’s hard for 4s to guard him ... he can do things with that ball, and a lot of stuff he starts like he’s a guard.”