Sports
Kings roundtable: Is there a Stanley Cup path for the revived NHL franchise?
April 10 marks the fortieth anniversary of the Miracle on Manchester, when the Kings overcame a 5-0 deficit to stun the Edmonton Oilers in Sport 3 of the opening spherical of the 1981-82 NHL playoffs. Los Angeles, which completed the common season 48 factors behind the Wayne Gretzky-led Oilers, would go on to tug off the collection upset. Forward of a possible renewal of that postseason rivalry on the finish of this month, The Occasions hosted a playoff preview roundtable at Crypto.com Enviornment on Thursday, earlier than the Oilers’ 3-2 victory over the Kings — and on the fortieth anniversary of one other epic: the Kings’ Sport 1 scorigamic 10-8 shocker over closely favored Edmonton.
Moderated by Occasions government Sports activities editor Chris Stone, the panel was joined by Occasions columnist Helene Elliott, assistant sports activities editor Hans Tesselaar and Kings insiders Jesse Cohen and Zach Dooley. The next is an excerpt from the 45-minute dialog, which has been flippantly edited for readability.
Chris Stone: Let’s assume that Kings-Oilers is the matchup within the first spherical. How do these two groups match up?
Zach Dooley: When these two groups performed final week in Edmonton [a 4-3 Oilers shootout win on March 30], it was the proper microcosm of Kings-Oilers. The primary half of that sport was managed by the Oilers. That they had pace, ability, extra offensive alternatives, and that’s how they prefer to play. They’re free-flowing. They’ve two of the highest 5 gamers within the NHL, [Connor] McDavid and [Leon] Draisaitl. These guys managed that sport, however the Kings weathered the storm. They fought again within the second interval and from that time on, the Kings performed to their id, which is to manage the puck. Puck possession, quantity taking pictures, second possibilities, third possibilities.
You noticed each identities. When the Kings play their type of hockey, when the Oilers play their type of hockey, each groups can impose their sport on the opposite. Neither group is essentially higher than the opposite, and I assumed that sport final week was an ideal preview.
Stone: Zach referenced group id, a extremely fascinating theme. Hans, what’s the id of this explicit Kings’ group?
Hans Tesselaar: I feel what we’re seeing with this Kings group is a coronary heart and keenness that hasn’t been seen in a very long time. They’re not probably the most proficient group within the league, however this group works its tail off. It’s been a protracted rebuild and it seems to be successful proper now.
I feel that effort is absolutely appreciated as a result of the previous few years it didn’t really feel that manner. It’s the primary time since 2018 that the video games are necessary this time of the season. Nobody thinks they’re going to win the Cup this 12 months, however any expertise they get this 12 months goes to be nice for down the street.
Stone: Jesse, earlier in the present day, offline, we have been speaking about [team President] Rob Blake and what he inherited, which was not a lot. Frankly, a bit of little bit of a multitude. Talk about the evolution of the group’s id underneath Rob.
Jesse Cohen: The very best of groups in one of the best of circumstances need to take care of the passing of time, whether or not it’s the Oilers dynasty, the Canadians dynasty. Occasions change, gamers age out, it’s a must to modify to that actuality. When Rob Blake took over this group, his first transfer was buying Cal Peterson. That was when the window of Cup rivalry arguably was nonetheless open.
However each transfer that he made when he took over, even when it was to handle the current, was accomplished with a watch in direction of the longer term. That to me is the way you execute a profitable … I don’t even just like the phrase rebuild, but when we’re going to make use of the time period, that’s the way you do it. You at all times have a watch in direction of the longer term as a result of regardless of how a lot success or failure you have got within the current, there’s at all times a subsequent season. There’s at all times a season after that. So whether or not it’s buying Cal Peterson, whether or not it’s signing Alex Iafallo, Sean Walker, making trades to get Trevor Moore, all the opposite gamers, Sean Durzi, Carl Grundstrom which have are available. We’re now seeing 5 years later, in some instances, the payoff for that technique of at all times wanting in direction of the longer term.
Stone: Helene, your personal interpretation of the Blake years and the id the franchise has carved.
Helene Elliott: Everyone cherished the 2 Cup groups, however I feel that Dean Lombardi tried to maintain it collectively too lengthy. I feel that the type of play within the NHL was altering away from the heavy hockey that these 2012 and ’14 groups performed and it was going extra in direction of youth and pace. Dean tried to maintain the dynasty going on the expense of draft picks and on the expense of the long-term future. That, in fact, is what Rob needed to reverse instantly. He needed to discover the youth, discover the pace and it takes some time to develop. Not each draft decide goes to prove proper. Not each faculty free agent signing goes to prove proper.
Final summer time, they weren’t going to signal a $12 million on a free agent. They weren’t prepared for that. It wasn’t going to assist them win the Cup. However these guys they did signal — Philip Danault, Viktor Arvidsson, Alexander Edler — introduced the veteran presence. These guys introduced the steadiness, the data, the expertise that they’re giving to the youthful youngsters, and that may repay. The following step possibly over this summer time, you make a commerce, a extremely high-impact commerce, or a high-impact free agent signing. Doing it final summer time wouldn’t have made sense. Doing it this summer time makes an terrible lot of sense.
Stone: Let’s have some enjoyable with what you mentioned earlier than concerning the Kings positioning themselves to go get any person on this summer time’s free-agent market. Who’s the best free agent?
Tesselaar: Filip Forsberg.
Stone: Helene, who ought to they be going after, if not a selected identify, a sort of participant?
Elliott: I want to see a No. 1 left wing who scores greater than Alex Iafallo does. I like Iafallo, however should you’re going to be a high line left wing, you’ve acquired to be producing.
Cohen: I’m going to take a really unpopular opinion. I feel one of many causes that you simply concentrate on a rebuild, the best way that the Kings have is to convey and develop the younger expertise. They’ve targeted on buying all of those high-profile drafts picks. One of many arguments that I ceaselessly discover myself having is whether or not or not the Kings have a powerful monitor document of growing ahead prospects in any respect. We all know their document with goaltenders and defensemen. One of many arguments I’ve at all times made is during the last 10 years, whether or not it was Anze Kopitar, Jeff Carter, Toffoli, Pearson, Brown, Williams, Lucic, Kovalchuk, Penner, Smith, I’m going to cease there, however you all know the names, there wasn’t any room for the Jordan Weals or any of the younger prospects to take these spots and to develop into the gamers that [fans] need them to be.
In order for you Artie Kaliyev to develop into a 30-goal scorer, it’s a must to give him the minutes to attain these targets. Signing Filip Forsberg is simply buying and selling the final 4 years of excessive draft picks to place [the franchise] proper again within the state of affairs it was in three years in the past, when it had a bunch of high-profile, high-contract veterans that restricted the group’s flexibility. I’d fairly see them retain that flexibility whereas giving these younger gamers a possibility.
Having mentioned that, in the event that they signal a big-profile participant, I’ll purchase into it in about 30 seconds.
Dooley: The last word factor that I feel is necessary right here is that the Kings have set themselves up with prospects, cap house and draft picks to do no matter they need within the offseason. They’ve a prospect pool and a set of belongings that would just about enable them to make no matter transfer they determine is true.
Stone: One factor that’s so great about hockey is when you get to the postseason, most of those groups have a shot. You wouldn’t be stunned in the event that they pulled off what the Kings did in 2012, after they have been an eight seed. Or ’14 after they completed third within the Pacific, which is strictly the place they discover themselves proper now. You’ll be able to dream within the NHL. Alongside these traces, what’s the Kings’ path to the Cup?
Dooley: The trail to the Cup probably means beating Edmonton and Calgary. The Kings have proven this 12 months that they’re going to play one-goal video games with Edmonton and Calgary. They’ve performed the Flames 3 times this 12 months. All three video games have been Darryl Sutter-special 3-2 video games. They performed the Edmonton Oilers to an additional time sport they usually performed them to a few video games that have been one-goal video games late within the third interval, however expanded late with power-play targets or empty-netters.
The Kings have performed one-goal hockey for almost all of this season. For those who take a look at their aim differential, they’re plus two on the 12 months. The Kings aren’t beating groups by 4 or 5 targets. They’re successful one-goal video games and it’s the expertise in these one-goal video games that’s going to want to hold them within the postseason.
Cohen: It begins on the web. I don’t suppose it’s a shock to anyone that sturdy goaltending defines playoff runs. I don’t know that there’s ever been a group that’s gained a Cup solely on the energy of goaltending alone, however actually a lot of groups have discovered themselves within the finals based mostly on goaltending. I’m a agency believer in the concept when you have two goalies, you have got none. I do know Todd McLellan would disagree with me on that entrance, however I feel the trail to playoff success for this Kings group is discovering one goalie to start out within the playoffs.
Stone: Helene, I’ll body the query to you in a barely completely different manner. Is there a path?
Elliott: There’s completely a path. I imply, as you introduced up a bit of bit in the past, the Kings have been an eight seed in 2012 and no person actually anticipated a lot of them after which they blitzed everyone. There’s a path so long as everyone is wholesome, so long as everyone is enjoying as a unit, so long as there’s management within the locker room. I feel everyone knows that there’s. There’s stable management. So long as the youngsters are capable of be taught and capable of recuperate from errors. They’re going to make errors. It’s the way you get again up after you fall that issues. Completely, there’s a path.
I feel Colorado, clearly, is the category of the league, no query. I feel Calgary has been a bit of little bit of a shock, too, and we all know that Darryl Sutter is aware of easy methods to win within the playoffs, is aware of easy methods to coach playoff hockey. There are any variety of prospects. That’s what makes the Stanley Cup playoffs one of the best playoffs in any sport.
Tesselaar: I firmly imagine the trail for the Kings is possibly 2023. When the Kings gained the Cup in 2012, that they had been to the playoffs, in 2010, after they misplaced to Vancouver within the first spherical. In 2011 they misplaced in six video games to the Sharks. In order that [Cup-winning] group in 2012 had playoff expertise. Outdoors of the core 4 on this group, there’s not numerous playoff expertise. You’ve acquired Arvidsson and Danault being within the Stanley Cup finals final 12 months. However I feel it could be an excessive amount of to ask for this youthful group to tug it off this 12 months. I feel the expertise, although, can solely assist this group transferring ahead.
Sports
Attending 100 college football games is a lifetime feat. Michael Barker did it in one season
Eric Barker has never known his older brother to do anything half-heartedly.
So when Michael informed Eric and the rest of the family that he planned to travel to 100 college football games during the 2024 season — an accepted if not officially recognized world record — Eric wasn’t all that surprised.
“He’s kind of an extreme guy,” Eric said.
“Last year, I did 90 (games),” Michael said. “(This year was) 100 games or bust.”
The elder Barker — who runs the popular X account, “College Football Campus Tour” — hit the century mark earlier this month when he made his way to the Division III national championship game in Houston, fresh off a trip to Nassau for the Bahamas Bowl. He celebrated the milestone with a homemade sign and a late-night trip to Bucee’s, where he grabbed his favorite breakfast burrito and a rhino taco before heading to Frisco for the FCS national championship game the next day. Game No. 101.
100 games in one season 🍾
Appreciate every single one of you for supporting my journey to a new world record 👊 pic.twitter.com/1QXKMpFkZ1
— College Football Campus Tour (@cfbcampustour) January 6, 2025
On the heels of catching both College Football Playoff semifinal games last week, Barker is finally home in California this week for the first time since catching a 5:30 a.m. flight on Dec. 26. But college football’s most well-traveled fan is headed right back out Sunday for Monday night’s national championship game in Atlanta to put an exclamation point on his 104th game of the season.
“I grew up in a pro (sports) house,” Barker said of cheering for the San Francisco 49ers as a kid. “(But) college football really had all the things I wanted and I just didn’t understand it. And when I did, I went full force — obviously.”
This all started sort of by accident.
In 2017, Barker, looking to embrace solo travel and see more of the United States, booked a trip to Lake Estes, Colo., to stay at The Stanley Hotel, the inspiration for Stephen King’s “The Shining.” Barker told his mom at the time that he was afraid to travel alone but knew the trip would be good for him, so he took the leap.
On the way to the hotel, Barker planned a stop at Colorado State’s campus. Although his father didn’t talk much about his college football career, Curt Barker played one season at BYU and two at the University of the Pacific in Stockton, Calif. Barker remembered his dad telling him that one of the best games he ever played was at Colorado State, so Barker planned to make a pit stop there and at the University of Colorado in Boulder.
“I just really enjoyed going around the campus at each of them,” Barker said. “And when I got to the hotel, it was just on my brain. So I stayed at the hotel for — it was supposed to be two nights and I cut it short and did one night. Before I left the area, I stopped at Wyoming and I stopped at Air Force in Colorado Springs.
“I got home and was like, ‘Man, I really enjoy stopping at campuses.’”
That summer, Barker visited colleges in Arizona, Oregon and Washington before booking a three-week trip to see 99 different campuses from Miami to Maine to Minnesota to Texas and eventually back to California.
It was only natural, he said, that he start checking out football stadiums the following fall.
“He just kind of fell in love with the stadiums themselves, the history, the old ones,” Eric Barker said. “So it was kind of a natural progression.”
Barker, a real estate appraiser, started small (by his standards) and attended 13 games during the 2017 football season, an average of about one a week. He increased it to 30 in 2018 and 50 in 2019. During the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, he still managed to see 42 games. And between the spring and fall seasons of 2021, he made 81 trips.
Last season, he upped the ante to 90 games, pushing himself to what he thought was maximum capacity.
But when his social media followers delivered some good-old-fashioned peer pressure and encouraged him to see if he could hit 100 in 2024, Barker realized that a longer regular season and the expanded College Football Playoff would make the goal feasible.
“The people — Twitter — asked for it,” he said. “And I wanted to deliver.”
Baker has now seen games at all 134 FBS programs and has been to 95 of 129 FCS schools — holding a “soft spot,” for FCS stadiums and teams.
The funding has largely come from his savings account, with Barker admitting that the COVID-19 pandemic hurt his income when interest rates reached such low levels that homeowners had no incentive to refinance their homes. Refinances comprised about 80 percent of his appraisals.
He also has a partnership with TickPick that has helped him land obstructed-view tickets, which is also a beloved part of his brand as he visits various stadiums. He estimates he has spent only $300 on tickets all season thanks to some schools providing a media credential and also the generosity of his followers on social media.
Eventually, he knows he’ll either need to make more money in real estate or beef up his corporate sponsorships if he wants to keep this going.
But for now, it works, thanks to his savings and a very specific set of self-mandated rules.
“No parking, no airport food, no concessions,” he said.
Oh, and this is the big one: no hotels, either.
“If you go to 100 games, $150 a night hotel, let’s say, you save $15,000 if you don’t do a hotel,” he said. “If you can withstand the glamour life, you get the reward.”
Barker said the first thing he does when he arrives in a city is search for “grocery stores near me” on his cell phone so he can load up on protein bars and healthy snacks to avoid having to eat stadium food. He spoke to The Athletic from a Target parking lot in Texas.
If he doesn’t get a media parking pass, he’ll often venture a mile or two away from the stadium and walk to avoid paying for parking. On the nights when he isn’t headed straight to the airport, he’ll often sleep in his rental car in a truck stop parking lot, typically at a Love’s or Buc-ee’s, and walk over to grab a coffee the next morning.
He also has a Planet Fitness membership. For $24 a month, he can keep up with his exercise routine at any facility in the country and also take advantage of the free WiFi and showers.
If and when Barker needs to go directly to the airport after a night game, he’ll often sleep in the terminal before heading to his next stop.
Ringing in the new year at LAX. Rental car isn’t available until 2:30am. Rose Parade starts 8am #GlamourLife pic.twitter.com/KKAAVBunoZ
— College Football Campus Tour (@cfbcampustour) January 1, 2025
Asked about his favorite atmosphere, Barker gave the nod to Texas A&M but shouted out LSU and Ole Miss for their tailgating, as well as the fine people of Iowa who once invited him to play Giant Jenga and down beers in the parking lot at Kinnick Stadium. Montana’s Washington-Grizzly Stadium is a favorite, too, with the mountains in the background, and the crowds at Penn State and Oregon are undeniable.
Montana has a 233-35 home record since opening Washington-Grizzly Stadium in 1986. This includes a 37-7 record in home FCS playoff games #GoGriz 🐻 pic.twitter.com/CL6wf6ye0a
— College Football Campus Tour (@cfbcampustour) July 22, 2024
As for his most memorable stretch on the road, it had to be this October when he hit six stadiums in five days.
“It was a Tuesday night at New Mexico State, Wednesday night at UTEP — which is about 45 miles south — and then a 5 a.m. flight into Raleigh-Durham,” he said. “Drove three and a half hours and got to Virginia Tech on a Thursday night. Then flew to Chicago for a Friday night game at Wisconsin-Whitewater, which is a D-III power.
“After that, there was a Saturday two-for-one. It was 1 p.m. at North Dakota in Grand Forks and it was 7:30 p.m. at the Fargodome, the (Dakota) Marker game between South Dakota State and North Dakota State. That required an 11-hour drive from Whitewater to Grand Forks in the middle of the night in about a 14-hour window.”
Barker joked that oftentimes when his mother is curious about his whereabouts, she’ll head over to his X page for answers. He keeps his followers updated with photos and videos from his trips.
Just last month, he went from Montana State (Dec. 13) to South Dakota (Dec. 14) to the Frisco Bowl (Dec. 17) to the junior college national championship game in Canyon, Texas, (Dec. 18) to the New Orleans Bowl (Dec. 19) to Notre Dame versus Indiana in the first round of the College Football Playoff (Dec. 20) to Texas versus Clemson on the second day of the first round (Dec. 21) to the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl (Dec. 23) and, finally, to the Hawaii Bowl on Christmas Eve.
After five overtimes and about 10 hours in Hawaii, he hopped on a red-eye back to San Francisco, where he landed at 6:30 a.m. local time on Christmas Day then boarded a train to Oakland at 8 a.m. to be with his family. By 9:30 a.m., he’d made it to the Christmas festivities and stayed with his family for 20 hours before heading out to the Rate Bowl in Phoenix first thing the next morning. Just enough time to dig into Christmas brunch … and do some laundry from the lone suitcase and backpack he travels with.
“(At first, my family members) were like, ‘Mike is finding himself. Let him find himself,’” Barker said. “And I think there was a point almost where they wanted to say, ‘All right, are you gonna be done with this?’ And I would say in the last 18 months, they have bought in.”
Barker typically travels alone due to the physical and financial demands of his itinerary, but Eric went on one trip with his older brother in 2019.
The duo went to the Egg Bowl at Mississippi State on a Thursday night, where they witnessed the infamous fake urination celebration, then headed up to Charlottesville, Va., for a Friday game featuring Virginia and Virginia Tech before scooting over to Western Kentucky the next day for a rivalry matchup against Middle Tennessee State in the “100 Miles of Hate” rivalry. Eric and Michael capped the trip off with a visit to Vanderbilt for a men’s basketball game later that night, where Eric walked to seats at the top of the arena and promptly fell asleep.
“I don’t even know how he does it and how he survives. He’s kind of like a machine,” Eric said.
“He hasn’t come on a trip with me since then,” Michael said.
As the college football season comes to a close next week, when Notre Dame faces Ohio State in Atlanta, Barker will head back to California with mixed emotions.
This was a season he’ll never forget with memories he’ll always cherish. And he’s hoping to stretch this adventure out for at least two more years, possibly more, finances permitting.
But for now, college football is over for the next seven-plus months.
“I’ll go home and pretend like I’m happy and am going to do all the things when I’m back home,” he said.
“But I’m just gonna be thinking about football.”
(Illustration: Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic; photos courtesy of Michael Barker)
Sports
Eagles fan seen in vile tirade against female Packers supporter loses job at DEI-focused NJ company
A Philadelphia Eagles fan at the center of a vile incident at Lincoln Financial Field on Sunday lost his job at a New Jersey-based DEI-focused consulting firm this week.
The fan, who was identified as Ryan Caldwell, was seen in the viral video getting into the face of a female Green Bay Packers fan and calling her a “dumb c—” while her fiancé recorded the situation. He also taunted the man with other disgusting gestures.
The fan and his employer have since “parted ways,” the company said.
“We, the management of BCT Partners, have concluded the international personnel investigation regarding an employee who was caught on a video outside of the workplace making highly offensive and misogynistic statements,” the company said in a statement Tuesday. “In keeping with our company values, which are firmly centered in respect, dignity, and inclusion, we have decided to part ways with the employee. This separation is effective immediately.
“We condemn our former employee’s conduct in the strongest possible terms. This individual’s conduct and language were vile, disgusting, unacceptable, and horrific and have no place in our workplace and society. Such conduct is not who we are and not what we stand for.
“At the same time, again, to be true to our values, we can condemn the actions without condemning the individual. None of us deserve to be remembered for actions taken on our worst day. We have offered grace and support to our former employee. We hope that he will grow, and we all can learn from this deeply disturbing incident. That’s what real inclusion is and does. That is also who we are and what we stand for.
EAGLES COACH CALLS OUT ‘LAZY’ TAKES ABOUT AJ BROWN AFTER HE’S CAUGHT READING BOOK DURING GAME
“We sincerely apologize to the victim and for the many ways in which these events already have impact so many people. We remain committed to gender equity and fostering a culture of respect and dignity for all.”
Caldwell’s tirade was caught as the Eagles topped the Packers in the wild-card game over the weekend. Aside from just calling the woman a “dumb c—,” he also called her an “ugly dumb c—.” Caldwell asked her fiancé if he was going to do anything about the name-calling, and if not, then he should turn around and watch the game.
The woman’s fiancé identified himself on social media as Alexander Basara and posted the video on social media. He wrote on X he did not want to get into a physical altercation with Caldwell.
He mentioned in one post that he definitely was not going to start painting all Eagles fans with a broad brush.
“A lot of you guys were very nice. Trust me. The normal banter but a handshake at the end. This was out of line tho for sure,” he wrote on X.
The Eagles fan was also banned from all games at Lincoln Financial Field, according to USA Today.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.
Sports
Column: Canyon High's Brandon Benjamin is making the most of his senior season
Watching Anaheim Canyon’s 6-foot-5 senior Brandon Benjamin score, rebound, pass and continuously make a difference on a basketball court against everyone and anyone brings back memories of Jaime Jaquez Jr., who looks like his twin.
“I like the comparison,” coach Nathan Harrison said.
Jaquez used to deploy many different skills during his days at Camarillo High. Some wondered if they would translate at a higher level. Well, they did, first at UCLA and now with the Miami Heat.
The same will be said one day of Benjamin, who’s averaging 30.7 points and is committed to San Diego. Last Saturday, after a game against previously unbeaten Mira Costa in which he scored 30 points with zero turnovers, Mira Costa coach Neal Perlmutter said, “That’s hard to do.”
Said Benjamin: “I just feel you have to play smart, you have to make the right decisions and you can’t force things.”
Then on Monday at the Intuit Dome, he scored 29 points in an overtime win over San Gabriel Academy. It doesn’t matter the opponent or the venue, Benjamin consistently delivers.
Benjamin has gotten used to being double teamed so many times that he knows exactly how to get the ball to teammates. He grew up with opponents trying to trap him as a youth player and Harrison has worked on box-and-one defenses in practices to prepare Benjamin.
“I got used to it, learning how to move around and not get frustrated,” he said.
Benjamin is proof you can return home and be welcomed with open arms. He left to play his junior season at Mater Dei, where he led the Monarchs in rebounding (8.4 per game) and was the fourth-leading scorer (13.7), then returned to Canyon last March.
He’s not going to lie about what it was like walking around the Canyon campus in his return.
“At first, it was little awkward seeing people you know and haven’t seen in a year and were buddy-buddy with,” he said. “After a week or two, I still had a lot of friends. I felt real relaxed. I felt like I was home.”
Benjamin said his Mater Dei experience was mostly positive, complimenting coach Gary McKnight.
“I enjoyed it,” he said. “Not everything is perfect in this life. I have nothing negative to say, only good things about coach McKnight.”
His return to Canyon has worked out. He likes the neighborhood atmosphere at games and appreciates Harrison letting him do what he does best — be himself.
“He has a reputation as this incredible scorer, but he’s just as effective as a passer and kind of runs our team as a point guard,” Harrison said. “The zero turnovers is even more impressive considering how many times he’s touching the ball. He makes all the players so much better.”
Even more intriguing is how Benjamin is preparing himself for college. He’s played forward or center for all four years of high school. At 17, he still has plenty of room to improve, and he’s been working on his guard skills because that’s what San Diego coach Steve Lavin wants him to play.
“I’ve been trying to work on my quickness, strength, ballhandling,” Benjamin said. “He wants me to play guard. It’s going to be a challenge because playing center/forward until now in high school, [this] is something new. I’m down for the challenge.”
Canyon fans have Benjamin’s back, and Harrison is just thankful to have a chance to coach him again.
“We’ve always liked Brandon,” he said. “We appreciated how hard he played for us. We just live in a different era. You can’t take it personally. Young people have a lot in their ears. He’s very comfortable with us and we think we do a good job utilizing our kids.”
As for lessons learned, Benjamin said, “If some of these guys are [as] good as they say, they should stay at their school and try to make themselves a winning school. A lot of college coaches don’t look at high school ball. It’s really the AAU circuit. I feel that’s the path to success.”
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