Coach Sendek discusses the season-opening win over Montana State and what the Sun Devils need to work on.
Video Transcript
but Trent Lockett outstandingreally shouldersis of this as like advisedrebounds allowed us hardpolicy two things now in an unfavorable
lightfor us one areoffensive rebounding said shinesnightly Johnsonfantastic job and 7 offenseit seems like shot a much higher
percentage34 percent field hisgot another shot sometimes search sleeplast in any the other thing allowedyou know the game to be hanging in the
balance time and time againcolonels carelesssloppy 22 turnoversme actuallyway way too many justtake care ball anywhere yearthe way we need defense reboundinghis glaring schorktoday caused tripAndy did a very good job 32 linesbest from our oppose of with 10house or or 6 6 questionsyou knowI just don't think we did a very good
jobconcentrating bird being wheredon't think the players meright now your headsure your own toes of right now you walk
wealthywe don't play very play very smartrebound the basketball calledupit was there first game too song we're
not gonna go thereguys the ball basketball agedrebounding the basketball okay soldmental state me I have no explanationwe should be morbidthere thesaidyou know I me obviously Kristen his gamehe was much better week great allyes about writing that you know
obviouslyor way turnovers theirbushel basket closeyou know so I don'tI know across is you know creative right
nowyou know it's fresh in my mind it's
wrong thosethings did said there were some goodreally work we know more didreoffended back shooters make shotsthey're good for me York hereFacebook very well so I didspace you saidhis saidway BB 3 he ended up33 yeah those are really big baskets for
usup we had five guys in double figuresropesaid John good first makeprobably shouldwe didjoin upwell be thank you much betterall last year rustedposition put a lot on his shouldersupshootingis good
Head ASU men's basketball coach Herb Sendek discusses his 2012 recruiting class. Eric Jacobsen, Calaen Robinson and Kenny Martin all signed with ASU today.
http://dailywildcat.com TEMPE, Ariz. — The Arizona Wildcats were able to come back from a 17-point deficit and eventually go up by 2 points, but the Arizona State Sun Devils used home-court advantage to fight back and beat their in-state counterparts for the fourth-straight time, sweeping the second straight season series between the two teams.
ASU guard James Harden led all scorers with 18 points, and forward Rihards Kuksiks had 17 points, thanks to 5-for-10 shooting from beyond the 3-point arc.
Arizona had four players score in double digits: Nic Wise (17 points), Jordan Hill (14), Kyle Fogg (14) and Chase Budinger (13).
Produced by Lance Madden & Bryan Roy.
Photographs and filmed by Alan Walsh.
Arizona State's Jason Braxton shows us his talented career at the university. Includes interview footage with Ike Diogu. Thanks guys for letting me post this and good luck to Jason in his pro ball career in Europe! Edited by Andrew R. Jandt
Final Minutes when things get chippy. Kobe and Harden jaw at each other while Metta, Pau and others get involved. Perfect timing for officials to review a meaningless play at that point, eh? Why is Fisher talking to the other coach? I posed the question on Lakers Line Postgame Radio of why Kobe, Fisher, and Mike Brown continually laugh and smile during losses. The answer from the hosts: they don't like it.
The last 3 minutes, 30 seconds, presented with stoppages cut out, of the January 17th game between the Arizona St. Sun Devils and the UCLA Bruins.
**This is Part 1 of 2**
Only managed to record part of the closing minutes, but still got a good chunk of a very interesting Pac-10 game that features one of the nation's best players in James Harden. If you like points and offense, though, this is one to skip.
As we begin, UCLA (white) leads Arizona St. (in maroon) 54-52, with UCLA having possession of the ball.
Verne Lundquist and Clark Kellogg have the call.
**All footage belongs to CBS**
**Video is also in "high quality"**
Jahii Carson is interviewed at the 2010 adidas Nations camp. adidas Nations is the leading global grassroots basketball program involving the world's top players from Africa, Asia Pacific, Canada, China, Europe, Latin America and the United States.
For more information visit:
www.adidasnations.com