What's new
AllBuffs | Unofficial fan site for the University of Colorado at Boulder Athletics programs

This is a sample guest message. Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

  • Prime Time. Prime Time. Its a new era for Colorado football. Consider signing up for a club membership! For $20/year, you can get access to all the special features at Allbuffs, including club member only forums, dark mode, avatars and best of all no ads ! But seriously, please sign up so that we can pay the bills. No one earns money here, and we can use your $20 to keep this hellhole running. You can sign up for a club membership by navigating to your account in the upper right and clicking on "Account Upgrades". Make it happen!

To Stay Or To Go?

RSSBot

News Junkie
By Stuart


[h=3]Should He Stay Or Should He Go?[/h]–
On January 8, 2014, Spencer Dinwiddie had a bad game.
Dinwiddie scored only six points, but his Colorado Buffaloes survived in overtime that Wednesday night*to defeat Washington State, 71-70, in overtime. The win, sloppy though it was,*pushed CU’s record to 14-2, 3-0 in Pac-12 play. Colorado was ranked No. 15 in the nation, and had a record through sixteen games not matched in Boulder since the 1968-69 season.
Spencer Dinwiddie was the unquestioned leader of that record-breaking 2013-14 CU basketball*team. Contributions from Josh Scott, Askia Booker, Xavier Johnson and others were certainly necessary if the Buffs were to make a deep run in the NCAA tournament, but Dinwiddie was the floor general. Averaging a team-leading 14.7 points per game and a team-high 3.8 assists per game, Dinwiddie was on his way to the NBA after his junior season. Buff fans understood that, and were just along for the ride, enjoying what appeared to be heading for what was promising to be a memorable season.
Then, four days later, on Sunday afternoon, January 12th, everything changed.
Dinwiddie went down late in the first half in the game against Washington, and the fortunes of Dinwiddie and the Buffs took a dramatic turn.
Dinwiddie’s*torn ACL was diagnosed quickly, with surgery taking place eight days later. “The low range (of recovery) is six months, the high range is eight,” Dinwiddie told cubuffs.com on January 19th,*two nights before surgery was performed by Dr. Armando Vidal in Lone Tree. “I see no reason why I can’t do it in six. Climbing that mental hurdle is a big thing, but that’s what I’m going to do. I’m not going to baby it. I’m looking at it as a time to build up my body and become a more complete athlete.”
Speculation began immediately as to whether Dinwiddie would continue his quest for stardom in the NBA, or return to Boulder for his senior season. Back in January, Dinwiddie was circumspect about his options. “In July, I hope to be getting ready to play basketball,” he said. “Where – the Lord only knows.” If pre-draft NBA evaluations he receives appear promising, “I might take my chances,” he said. But, he adds, given the doubt that knee injuries can create until an injured player erases it, “I just don’t know.”
Dinwiddie continued, “You have to think of the future,” Dinwiddie said. “But I’m not going to make a leap of faith, not a rash decision . . . if we weigh everything and it’s not enough (to enter the NBA Draft), then No. 25 will be playing again at the Events Center.”
The deadline for college players to declare for the NBA draft is April 27th. As decision time approaches for Dinwiddie, speculation has increased, but not the certainty of what the decision might be. In a poll at CU at the Game this week, 36% of you thought that Dinwiddie declaring for the NBA was a done deal; 34% thought it would depend on what other underclassmen declared; while 30% were confident Dinwiddie would return to play his senior season in Boulder.
The pros and the cons of going pro
Spencer Dinwiddie has been preparing to hear his name heard in the 2014 NBA draft for years now. His collegiate career, including a stint at the University World Games last summer, has been singularly crafted to prepare him for that moment. Considering that playing in the NBA has been a lifelong dream of his is hard to ignore. If his rehabilitation has been going according to schedule – and there have no reports that it has not – than his mindset has to be on going pro.
There is also the reality that, despite Buff fans hopes to the contrary, that a return to Boulder for his senior season would not prove to be a means by which to improve his draft stock. If Dinwiddie plays his senior season wearing black-and-gold, and the Buffs do not fare well, and/or Dinwiddie does not prove to be sufficiently healed (or, knock on wood, he is injured again), his chances at being drafted – and fulfilling his lifelong dream – could be thwarted.
By the same token, Dinwiddie’s return to play his senior season could prove to be a wise move.
If Dinwiddie decides to play his senior season, he returns to a team which was decent without him, and will be well-stocked to make a run at the Pac-12 title with him back in the driver’s seat. The Buffs lost no starters to graduation this year, and have two new players – Dominique Collier and Tory Miller – who are poised to come in and contribute immediately. Plus, all of the*freshman players forced into the fray more than expected this season – Jaron Hopkins, Dustin Thomas, Tre’Shaun Fletcher and George King – will be back as more experience sophomores. Sports Illustrated, assuming that Spencer Dinwiddie would be back in the fold, listed CU as the No. 9 team in the nation heading into the 2014-15 season.
The temptation is there for Dinwiddie*to leave Boulder as a legend, as one of the all-time leading scorers (already in 23rd place all-time, with 1,115 points) and*one of the all-time assist leaders. He could also leave Colorado as the player with the most wins in a career (supplanting the likeable – but hardly star-worthy – Ben Mills, who finished his four-year career at CU with 92 wins). Colorado’s record book and career charts are a mile wide and an inch deep, so Dinwiddie could rewrite many of those lists and have his name and numbered remembered in Boulder*for decades to come.
But, if we’re being honest, Spencer Dinwiddie has also*likely seen his name carved across the record books of the NBA. You can get to the level of achievement that he has without some ego being involved, and he has to carry with him the confidence that he can not only make an NBA roster, but be a star in The League as well.
What it all boils down to is whether Spencer Dinwiddie believes that there is an NBA team out there that believes in his talent. It doesn’t take the consensus of the mock draft experts to make Dinwiddie a rich young man. It only takes one team who is willing to take a chance on Dinwiddie not only returning*to full strength, but being*able to realize his full potential.
It’s easy for Buff fans, intoxicated with the success of the program over the past four seasons under Tad Boyle, to dream of Dinwiddie returning for his senior year, leading Colorado to*a Pac-12 title and a deep run into March Madness.
But it’s also easy to see how the lure of reaching your goal to be an NBA player, now within reach, is too difficult to pass up … especially when you have been planning for years that 2014 was to be your year to go pro.
We can only hope that Spencer Dinwiddie is getting good advice from his family, his coaches, and NBA personnel who are being honest about his status.
If Spencer is receiving good advice, and that advice is to go pro, then we can only wish him well, and thank him profusely for all of the great moments he has brought to the University of Colorado basketball program.
—–




Originally posted by CU At the Game
Click here to vie
 
Back
Top