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FAIR
White House delays Latin music
festival after Navy Yard shooting
Brickleberry is an animated
series on Comedy Central that fol-
lows national park forest rangers
daily lives. Te series was created
by Roger Black and Waco OGuin,
and produced by Black, OGuin
and Daniel Tosh. Te series re-
cently premiered its second season
on Sept. 3. Te show received high
ratings on the premiere of the new
season and continues to surprise
audiences with ofensive content.
In a phone press conference on
Sept. 16, college media was able to
talk to Tom Kenny, who is known
for being the voice of SpongeBob,
and Brickleberrys head ranger,
Woody, as well as Jerry Minor
from Eastbound & Down and
voices Denzel on Brickleberry.
Q: What is different about
the second season of Brickle-
berry compared to the frst?
J: It looks better. I was talking
to the creators and I dont know
what they did with the animation
but it does look brighter for some
reason, theres one thing. I think
theres been a few little tweaks with
the writing staf. So, I think theyve
just gotten better with it.
T: I think, you know, you fnd
out how to build your machine
both in terms of content and exe-
cution. Like Jerry said, when I saw
the [new] episode, the animation
looks, to me, remarkably better
than it did the frst season. I think
youre just getting your paradigm
down better. Also, I think, its
the second season, the show has
done well, the season premiere
did really well amongst its candid
demographic. Everybody settles
down and it allows you to make
the show that its supposed to be.
Q: When it comes to doing
live action and TV, I know Tom,
you have done a lot of both, is
there one you prefer over the
other and if there is, why so?
T: Well you know, I started out
in stand up and on camera stuf,
and then I started doing voice-
over. I very quickly realized I
liked it better, it was more fun, I
thought it was more suited to me,
its personality and it also played to
my skillset better. You could think
of it as a batting average. I could
go out and audition for voice-overs
and book a much, much, much
higher percentage than I ever did
on camera where youre kind of a
prisoner of what you look like.
Whereas in animation as long as
you sound like all these diferent
characters, youre physicality
doesnt matter, nor does your
age, you know, says the 51-year-
old guy. I realized that for my
personality, and in terms of career
longevity, and in terms of having
a functional life, if you dont care
about being famous, then anima-
tion is the place to be.
Q: What do you think your
favorite moment, this season,
is?
T: Te episode that they showed
at the premiere party was when
Woody had his past career as
a 70s/80s porn star. Teres a
scene in there where they go to
a porn awards [show], like the
Oscars, called Boneys, and the big
statues on either side of the stage
were very much like the Oscars
statuettes, like for the Academy
Awards, but with one very import-
ant addition. I just cant believe the
stuf they were able to get through.
Like, yeah man. Teres more
weiner per square inch in this ep-
isode than there has ever been on
TV. I think thats a victory of sorts,
you know?
Q: Ive seen a lot of compar-
isons to Family Guy and South
Park. What do you think makes
Brickleberry stand out from
those types of show? Whats
different about it or what do
you enjoy about it that other
shows dont have?
J: I think both of those shows
take pride in their thought about
the subjects theyre handling, and
I think that this show does the op-
posite: it takes pride of its reckless
handling of sex subjects.
T: Both Family Guy and South
Park have the fngerprints of the
creators on them. Seth [McFar-
lane] defnitely has his own point
of view and way of looking at
things and approach to comedy.
Like it or not, or dont like it, its
been very, very successful, and
the same with South Park. And
I think Roger and Waco, the
creators of this show, defnitely
have a comedic sensibility that is
uniquely theirs that they came by
very honestly. All those shows are
diferent because the creators of all
these shows are diferent.
Te Family Guy sensibility is
way diferent than the South Park
sensibility. And theyre all way dif-
ferent than the Brickleberry sen-
sibility. But theyre all three very
strong, identifable sensibilities.
Q: Youve done all of these
different shows and voice
work, what do you do usually
in warm-ups before you go
record a voice track?
J: What you should do is take
care of your voice, which means
not smoking, trying not to get sick,
and staying away from things that
will give you allergies. Tis year I
had some problems
I got sick this summer. And when
I came back it was really tough. I
forgot that you have to really take
care of your voice on your down
time.
T: We all forget that, like Jerry,
Im probably someone that should
have some sort of regimen or
routine and because Im stupid,
I dont. But because were actors
and stuf, were people-pleasing
weirdos so you want to do a good
job for the people who hired you
so youll go to the max, go to the
wall, and crash through the wall to
do what they want
Im on six or seven other series
that I have to keep my voice in
tune for Ive had to run to the
cartoon voice doctor and hell put
a camera up my nose, down my
throat and hes asked me, Do you
work every day? And I go, Yeah.
And he goes, Well, duh, if you go
to the gym and just work one mus-
cle every day for six hours a day,
of course its going to bust once in
awhile. I kind of changed my ways
a little bit, like Jerry did.
I try to get a decent amount of
sleep, not drinking cafeine all day
because it dries out your vocal
chords, not eating late at night.
Tere are probably things Jerry
and I should be doing for our
voices because I dont want to blow
it out but its an efort. Youve got
to keep your voice right for when
you need it.
Q: How have your past acting
careers effected your presen-
tation on Brickleberry?
J: Its a lot easier for me to get
into a characterization that I prob-
ably couldnt do physically Its a
lot of fun.
T: Everything that youve done
in the past in a way kind of goes
in the blender when youre doing
something like this. I think that
having a background in stand up
or sketch comedy where you get
thrown in to playing these really
broadly drawn characters that are
completely disposable
You have to make a couple really
strong decisions and commit to
them, and I think thats very much
put me in a good stead with voice
acting. You just got to go in with
what theyre giving you, the draw-
ing and the characters description,
and just go balls to the wall, pedal
to the metal, go for it and hope
they like it. And if not, oh well, I
have another audition tomorrow.
Edited by Heather Nelson
Brickleberry stars
review new season
TV
NATIONAL
SOPHIA TEMPLIN
stemplin@kansan.com
COMEDY CENTRAL
WASHINGTON Te White
House decided late Monday to
postpone the taping of a pro-
gramcelebrating Latin music,
citing a morning shooting at the
Washington Navy Yard that lef at
least 12 people dead.
"In light of today's tragic events
at the Washington Navy Yard
and out of respect for the victims
and their families, Musica Latina
will be postponed to a new date,"
said the announcement about an
hour and a half before President
Barack Obama was to kick of the
festivities in the White House East
Room.
A new date for "Musica Latina: In
Performance at the White House"
was not immediately announced.
Gloria Estefan, Romeo Santos,
Lila Downs, Marco Antonio Solis,
Natalie Cole and other musicians
were to join Obama and Michelle
Obama for a taping of the latest
installment in the decades-old
series. Coming at the start of the
monthlong celebration of Hispanic
heritage, the concert was to show-
case the various styles of Latin
music.
Other artists scheduled to
perform were Ricky Martin, Price
Royce, Arturo Sandoval, Raul
Malo, Alejandro Sanz and Natalie
Cole.
At a White House event earlier
Monday, the frst lady said the
beats and melodies in Latin music
are so irresistible that even the
president would "shake his groove
thing" Monday night. But the
prospect of seeing Obama jiggle
his hips grew increasingly unlikely
as the death toll mounted and
other events around town were
postponed.
At the Capitol, Senate Major-
ity Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev.,
announced that he was adjourning
the Senate and postponing votes
until Tuesday. Te Washington
Nationals baseball team also
postponed its Monday night series
opener against the Atlanta Braves
and will now play a doubleheader
on Tuesday.
When it is rescheduled, "Musi-
ca Latina: In Performance at the
White House," will be the 12th
installment in the series produced
by the local PBS television station
since 1978. Every president since
Jimmy Carter has participated in
the series.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. Rook-
ie Wil Myers homered and had
three RBIs, Alex Cobb pitched
eight solid innings, and the Tampa
Bay Rays took the lead for the frst
AL wild-card spot by beating the
Texas Rangers 6-2 on Monday
night.
Tampa Bay and Texas started
play one-half game ahead of
Cleveland, which was at Kansas
City, in race for the two wild-card
spots.
Myers had a second-inning solo
shot and hit a two-run double
during a four-run ffh. Cobb (9-
3) allowed two runs, six hits, one
walk and had 10 strikeouts.
Matt Garza (9-6, 3-5 with Texas)
gave up six runs and eight hits
over 4 1-3 innings to lose his third
straight start for the Rangers, who
have lost seven in a row and are
2-12 in September.
Te announced crowd was just
10,724. Te Rays entered with the
major's lowest home attendance
average of 18,747.
Tampa Bay went up 6-2 in the
ffh. Afer James Loney and Evan
Longoria both had RBI singles
against Garza, Myers drove in two
with a double of Jason Frasor.
Garza, who was the MVP of the
2008 AL championship series
when Tampa Bay beat Boston,
pitched against the Rays for frst
time since being traded to the
Chicago Cubs on Jan. 8, 2011.
Texas obtained the right-hander
from the Cubs on July 22.
Te Rays took a 2-1 lead in the
fourth on Desmond Jennings'
sacrifce fy.
Texas pulled even at 2 during the
ffh when Mitch Moreland, mired
in an 0 for 22 slide, doubled and
scored on Ian Kinsler's double.
Kinsler was caught attempting to
steal third to end the inning.
Myers put the Rays up 1-0 on
his 13th homer, an opposite-feld
drive to right in the second.
Cobb retired nine in a row,
including his four batters on
strikeouts, before Kinsler doubled
to start the fourth. Afer advanc-
ing to third on a sacrifce bunt by
Elvis Andrus, Kinsler got tagged
out during a rundown on Alex
Rios' grounder to third.
A.J. Pierzynski tied it at 1 later in
the fourth with an RBI single.
Rangers center felder Leonys
Martin made a strong defensive
play in the third, throwing out
Yunel Escobar, who tried to score
from second on Ben Zobrist's
single.
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 7
1814 W. 23rd
Lawrence, KS
8436000
Any Sub
Tuesday is
DOUBLE
Stamp Day Not Valid with any other offers
75 Off
20% OFF 20% OFF
KU MERCHANDISE KU MERCHANDISE
TODAYS DISCOUNT TODAYS DISCOUNT
Official local campus store since 1946
AVAILABLE IN STORE & ONLINE
/KUBookstore
Since 1979, some of the most
athletic guys on campus have been
heading to Robinson Field behind
Watkins Health Center to practice
Ultimate Frisbee. For the mens
club team, collectively known as
the HorrorZontals, diving catches,
spin moves, feld-long throws and
midair snags are just another part
of a days practice.
Ultimate Frisbee, known simply
as Ultimate by many, is a sport
not too diferent from basketball
or football. Te game allows for
seven people from each team to be
on the feld at a given time, and the
goal is to get the disc from where
team A gains possession to team
Bs end zone. Te trick is that the
disc cant touch the ground, and
players must remain stationary
when holding it. Te sport has
been gaining popularity over the
last ten years, and its starting to
show at KU.
Weve been getting big numbers,
anywhere from 35 to 50 people per
practice, said senior team captain
Brent Kimmi.
Kimmi has reason to be excited
about the numbers, as hes in his
ffh year on
the team and
his frst year as
captain.
Te team also
has two other
leaders in soph-
omore Jason
Finkelstein, who
is also in his frst
year as a captain,
and Trent Kuhl,
who is in his
second. Te numbers that the Hor-
rorZontals have been getting for
practice are perfect for constant
scrimmages and drills. Te team
has been able to split up and get at
least two seven-on-seven games
going at one time.
Tese practices are setting up the
team for their fall plans, includ-
ing tournaments in Manhattan,
St. Louis and even as far away as
Fayetteville, Ark. Tese fall tourna-
ments beneft the HorrorZontals
by giving everybody a chance to
develop more and to gain the edge
needed when the team faces more
serious competi-
tion later.
In the spring,
they will face
opponents in
sectionals, then
move on to
regionals, and
eventually to
nationals if they
win games. Te
HorrorZontals
are looking to
continue the good fortune of re-
cent years, as they advanced to the
postseason (sectionals, regionals
and nationals), in fve out of the
past seven seasons.
If youre interested in learning
more about the HorrorZontals
check them out on Twitter (@Zon-
tal_Ultimate), or on their website
Zontals.com.
JOEY ANGUIANO
janguiano@kansan.com
JOEY ANGUINAO/KANSAN
Jason Finkelstein completes a pass during a HorrorZontals practice. The team has experienced an infux of members this
season.
Participation in HorrorZontals Ultimate Frisbee grows
CLUB SPORTS
!
?
Hes not going to need to practice to play
in the game,
Ravens coach John Harbaugh
said to the Baltimore Sun
QUOTE OF THE DAY
FACT OF THE DAY
TRIVIA OF THE DAY
THE MORNING BREW
By Matt Corte
mcorte@kansan.com
This week in athletics
Saturday Sunday Monday
Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday
NO SCHEDULED
EVENTS
Womans Golf
2013 Marilynn Smith
Sunfower Invitational
All Day
Manhattan, Kan.
Volleyball
North Dakota State
Noon
Lawrence, Kan.
Soccer
Illinois State
1 p.m.
Lawrence, Kan.
Football
Louisiana Tech
11 a.m.
Lawrence, Kan.
Mens Golf
Ram Masters Invitational
All day
Fort Collins, Colo.
Soccer
South Dakota State.
6 p.m.
Brookings, S.D.
Volleyball
Notre Dame
1 p.m.
Lawrence, Kan.
Volleyball
Georgia
7 p.m.
Lawrence, Kan.
Womens Golf
Louisville Cardinal Cup
All day
Simpsonville, Ky.
NO SCHEDULED
EVENTS
Q: Where did Ray Rice go to college?
A: Rutgers University.
Ray Rice ranked sixth for fantasy
running backs in 2012.
FFToday.com
When fantasy football goes too far
DES MOINES, Iowa Te
season is three weeks old, and yet
there seems to be as many ques-
tions marks in the Big 12 now as
there were in August.
It's probably a good thing that
nearly half the league has the
weekend of.
Oklahoma, Oklahoma State,
TCU and Iowa State started bye
weeks on Monday and each is
doing its best to take advantage of
its early-season break.
Te 14th-ranked Sooners (3-0)
will use it to re-evaluate their
quarterback situation.
Oklahoma went with Blake Bell
at quarterback last week afer
Trevor Knight was sidelined with a
bruised knee. All Bell did was earn
Big 12 ofensive player of the week
honors in a 51-20 rout of Tulsa.
Bell, who was surprisingly beaten
out by Knight in fall camp, was
27 of 37 passing for 413 yards and
four touchdowns in his frst career
start.
"Te competition was very close.
He did keep a positive attitude and
kept working weekly. He was set
to play, kept working hard and he
knew if he had his opportunity he
was going to be prepared for it,"
Oklahoma coach Bob Stoops
said.
Te Sooners now have an
extra week to allow Knight to get
healthy. Stoops said Monday that
Knight's status for the game at
Notre Dame on Sept. 28 won't be
clarifed until later this week.
But it also appears that Bell will
be given every opportunity to
wrestle the job away from Knight
regardless of health.
"Blake's the guy right now, but
we'll see how things go," Stoops
said. "Tat's just something that
we'll see as time goes. But right
now, there isn't an issue."
Oklahoma State coach Mike
Gundy would rather have one bye
week in the middle of the season
rather than one this week and
another in October.
Still, the Cowboys (3-0) head
into their frst break on a roll afer
pounding Lamar 59-3. Gundy
noted improvements in tackling,
special teams coverage and overall
fundamentals against the FCS
Cardinals.
Oklahoma State, ranked No. 11
in the nation, has two weeks to
prepare for their Big 12 opener at
West Virginia (2-1) on Sept. 28.
Te Mountaineers don't have it
nearly so easy. Tey face regional
rival Maryland in Baltimore on
Saturday.
"I think we're about where we
would expect to be. We obviously
have a plan for our football team,"
Gundy said. "It's obviously a long-
term plan. It's to try to make us
the best team we can in the end
of November and December, and
I feel like were close to being on
track."
For TCU, the bye will give it ad-
ditional time to bounce back from
a 1-2 start.
Te Horned Frogs were 4 of 16
on third-down conversions and
picked up 13 penalties for 115
yards in a 20-10 loss to Texas Tech
which helped the Red Raiders
snag the fnal spot in this week's
Top 25.
TCU is allowing nearly 25 points
a game, is ninth in the Big 12 with
190.7 yards passing per game and
has just two TD passes this season.
Te Horned Frogs host SMU on
Sept. 28.
"I think it's a combination of a lot
of things. Obviously the coaches
always get blamed. But we've had
2-3 days of talking about things
we need to do. We need to tweak
some things, change some things
around.
But we got to get some guys in
position where we have people
open that will catch the ball. Te
other night we could have run the
ball a little bit more efectively,"
TCU coach Gary Patterson said.
Iowa State bizarre early season
schedule includes a pair of byes
following by back-to-back Turs-
day night games.
Te Cyclones can only hope their
second bye in September will help
them turn things around.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Oklahoma State running back Jeremy Smith, top center, jumps for a touchdown over
the back of lineman Calvin Barnett, bottom, while Lamar defensive back Courtlin
Thompson, right, watches during the frst half of an NCAA college football game in
Stillwater, Okla., Sept. 14, 2012
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Many uncertainties exist in Big 12
FOOTBALL
As disheartening as the fnal
result was for the Jayhawks in
the loss to Rice, Charlie Weis saw
several encouraging signs.
On defense, the secondary held
up in its frst true test of the sea-
son. Weis said the unit played bet-
ter than at any point last season,
and with three
sacks there
was plenty of
pressure on the
quarterback.
Our defense
was great,
Weis said in his
Monday tele-
conference.
Additionally,
James Sims
rushed for more
than 100 yards once again.
Tese were major strengths in
Saturdays game, but they couldnt
make up for the disappointing
passing game.
Te problem you have is, when
youre intermittent in the passing
game then you dont score points
and you end up losing, Weis said.
Intermittent is a nice way to de-
scribe the Kansas passing attack
against Rice. Jake Heaps threw
two interceptions, but more costly
still were the six dropped passes
by receivers.
It was the second straight week
that dropped passes have been a
major issue, and a dropped pass
on third down can be the same as
a turnover in some cases.
I mean, six drops, and fve of
them for key
frst downs, and
one of them
for a walk-in
touchdown,
Weis said. Tat
is signifcant.
Signifcant
enough that
Weis will con-
sider whether
changes in
personnel are
necessary.
Well address the guys that are
dropping them and then look to
see if theres other guys that can
play instead of them, Weis said.
So far, Weis has no concerns
with Heaps. It can be frustrating
for a quarterback to see his passes
drop to the ground despite being
perfectly thrown, but from Weis
perspective Heaps has handled
the situation as best as he can.
Heaps is one of the leaders on
the team that Weis believes he can
count on to handle unfavorable
situations in the right way.
Teres no problem with Jake,
he knows that is part of the deal,
Weis said. All his frustrations are
because hes trying to be error free
himself.
Te statistics, however, were
unimpressive again for Heaps.
He threw for 157 yards and one
touchdown, along with the two
interceptions, completing 13 of 28
passes. Te drops made up six of
those 15 incompletions.
Trow those on the completion
category and tally them up and
look at the percentage and the
yards there and all the sudden
youre saying he had a heck of a
game, Weis said.
Weis went a step further on
Monday, and said that during
practice passing was nearly
perfect.
Well, I mean, when you have a
practice on Wednesday when you
complete 29 of 31 passes without
a dropped ball and then you go
into a game and theres a bunch of
them, its just not consistent with
what is happening in practice,
Weis said.
Edited by Ashleigh Tidwell
Volume 126 Issue 15 kansan.com Tuesday, September 17, 2013
TENNIS
ULTIMATE FRISBEE
PAGE 8
PAGE 7
S
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
sports
By Ben Ashworth
bashworth@kansan.com
COMMENTARY
Kansas offense
disappoints
E
nvironmentalists have
attempted to ban rice at
outdoor weddings, citing the
adverse efect it has on the pigeons
that eat it.
Maybe its time someone attempts
to ban Rice from the Kansas foot-
ball schedule. Its not healthy for
Kansas fans.
For the second straight year,
Kansas came up short against Rice.
Te Owls managed to hold the
Jayhawks to two touchdowns and
270 yards of total ofense.
Last year, Rice gave up 54 points
to Marshall, 56 points to Louisiana
Tech and 49 points to Tulane.
159 points allowed in three games
to non-BCS teams and Kansas
couldnt at least put up a third
touchdown?
Rices defense improved as the
year progressed and returned
almost all major contributors, in-
cluding Conference USA Preseason
Defensive Player of the Year Phillip
Gaines. Rice is not a bad team.
However, it is a team that relies
on its ofense to simply outscore
the other team. At the very least,
it should have been a high-scoring
afair that instilled confdence in
our revamped attack.
Nevertheless, instead of putting
pressure on Rices ofense to score,
Kansas ofense was as lifeless as a
Jack-O-Lantern in December.
Jake Heaps failed to impress
again, but that is almost more the
fault of his supporting cast. His re-
ceivers failed to get any separation
from the Rice corners. When they
did get separation, they treated
the football like it had chickenpox.
Tight end Jimmay Mundine, who
Weis touted in the ofseason, had
two key drops that would have
resulted in frst downs. One could
have even been a touchdown. With
the receivers poor performance,
it comes as no surprise that most
of Heaps completions were to the
backs.
As I feared, Weis didnt use his
running backs to their full poten-
tial. Instead of implementing the
relentless fve-headed attack he
used against South Dakota, Weis
relied heavily on James Sims.
Granted, Sims had a strong game
with 109 yards rushing on 19
carries, but Weis largely ignored
his superior depth. Last week
against South Dakota, 31 carries
were by running backs not named
James Sims. Against Rice, Sims
had all but four of the carries. Weis
also tried to use Heaps in option
situations, which were about as
successful as Eddie Murphys music
career.
Tere is no reason that Darrian
Miller only got two carries or that
Tony Pierson only rushed it once.
If you take away ten of Heaps
throws and replace them with
rushes, the outcome of this game
could have been very diferent. In-
stead, Weis opted to throw the ball
almost 30 times. He also decided
to give Heaps more rushes than any
of Sims backups.
Weis clearly is planning on riding
Heaps and his receivers, for better
or for worse. In the South Dakota
game, the rushing attack was
able to overcome the woes of the
passing game. Against Rice, it was
a diferent story.
Maybe Heaps will get more
comfortable in the ofense. Maybe
the receivers will succumb to fewer
drops.
Or maybe, Kansas should just
stop scheduling Rice.
Edited by Heather Nelson
MAX GOODWIN
mgoodwin@kansan.com
Kansas gains insight, still room for improvement
FOOTBALL
MICHAEL STRICKLAND/KANSAN
Charlie Weis shares a small victory with an assistant coach during the game at Rice last Saturday. Kansas lost 14-23.
GUT CHECK
ANDY LARKIN/KANSAN
Andrew White III shares his boot camp experience with reporters during a press conference Monday. Bill Self Boot Camp started Monday and will run through the remainder of the week.
BASKETBALL BOOT CAMP
Mens basketball team grinds through Bill Self Boot Camp
BLAKE SCHUSTER
bschuster@kansan.com
Bill Self can run practice without
basketballs and make his players
lif weights until their arms fall
of, but afer one day of his famed
Boot Camp, hes going to need to
work a little harder to see what his
team is made of.
Nobody threw up, Andrew
White III said. So it was a real
good experience.
Alas, theres still time for Self
to make his team sick. For the
remainder of the week the Kansas
mens basketball team will go
through 5:30 a.m. workouts before
taking a break for classes, then
getting back to the gym.
Keep that in mind if you happen
to see any players sleepwalking
down Jayhawk Boulevard, and
perhaps help
them look both
ways before they
cross the street.
You can be sure
theyll need as
much ssistance
as possible.
Its a diferent
kind of tired,
you know what
I mean? former
Kansas player
Marcus Morris said to the Univer-
sity Daily Kansan in 2010. Your
bodys tired. You really cant sleep
that much.
Ten youre just running around
and doing drills and getting yelled
at. Its just drain-
ing.
Tink about
that the next
time you con-
sider walking
onto the team.
It doesnt matter
how much
playing time
you get, Self s
standards hardly
change.
Coach does it for a reason,
White III said. I think thats what
really brings a lot of guys together.
Yep, nothing like running wind
sprints before the sun comes up to
reafrm the concept of teamwork.
But, for those whove been
through Self s Boot Camp before,
its a chance for voices to become a
little louder and set the tone for the
year ahead.
Teres so much communication
going on today, White III said.
Just to make sure everybody was
getting through it at the pace we
need to have it done.
White III also said theres a part
of him that enjoys the process.
When the Jayhawks are battling
through tough games hell think
back to all these workouts to keep
his teammates motivated.
With a heavy non-conference
schedule, Kansas must be ready to
start grinding out wins early.
Te Jayhawks face the Duke Blue
Devils just two games into the
season, and head to the Battle 4
Atlantis tournament just a couple
of weeks afer that.
Te tough competition has made
Self s Boot Camp more vital this
year. Fortunately, even the new-
comers have been able to keep up
so far although theres still plen-
ty of time to draw the ire of Self.
We didnt have to do much ex-
tra, White III said. Tats always
good for the frst day.
Edited by Duncan McHenry