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Adam Zagoria covers basketball at all levels. He is the author of two books and an award-winning journalist whose articles have appeared in ESPN The Magazine, SLAM, Sheridan Hoops, Sports Illustrated, Basketball Times and in newspapers nationwide.
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Friday / November 22.
  • mbb033115Junior college star Bashir Ahmed remains open in his recruitment and recently took a visit to Oklahoma State.

    “I took an unofficial visit to Oklahoma State last week,” he told SNY.tv. “I enjoyed it, it was great.”

    The 6-foot-7, 205-pound combo guard from The Bronx is also being recruited by Texas and Texas A&M, he said, and has no timetable on a college decision.

    Ahmed has already visited St. John’s and Cincinnati, who were considered the leaders for his services. He stopped considering Rutgers and Louisville is no longer involved.

    NEW YORK — Before playing the encore of his second show this week at City Winery in downtown Manhattan, Gregg Allman paid homage to an estranged Allman Brothers Band cohort.

    “We’re going to finish this off by playing a song by Mr. Dickey Betts,” Allman said before launching into “Southbound” on the Hammond B3 organ.

    Allman has been honoring his old bandmate on his solo tour this summer and fall, as Allman Brothers Band historian Alan Paul first wrote in the Wall Street Journal.

    Across some 50 Allman Brothers Band shows I’ve seen in the last 15-plus years, I never heard Allman mention Betts once onstage before Monday night’s show.

    BN-JV073_bettsa_G_20150812093613Allman and his fellow original band members Butch Trucks and Jaimoe suspended Betts (reportedly via fax) prior to the launch of the band’s summer tour of 2000 because of Betts’ alcohol and drug problems. Among other lowlights, Betts was charged with putting a gun to his wife Donna Betts’s head in 1996.

    Anderson_Kyle_sas_141122By MOKE HAMILTON

    NEW YORK — After you’ve enjoyed an undefeated high school basketball season and averaged 14.6 points, 8.8 rebounds and 6.5 assists at UCLA, you might think that you have it all figured out.

    But now in his second season as a member of the San Antonio Spurs, former St. Anthony’s and Paterson Catholic star Kyle Anderson knows better.

    “Everything surprised me,” the 6-foot-9 Fairview, N.J., native told SNY.tv before he went scoreless as the visiting Spurs beat the Knicks, 94-84, Monday night at Madison Square Garden.

    “You kinda think you have a feel from what’s going on because you’re in high school and you know a few NBA players and they tell you what it’s like, but I’ve come to know, in my second year, that what you think you know… It’s not that.”

    The Spurs recently exercised the third-year option for Anderson for the 2016-17 season. After doubts about how his more methodical style of play would fit in the NBA, Anderson has earned a spot in the Spurs’ 10-man rotation. He is averaging less than 1 point with 1 rebound in about 8 minutes per game through four contests for the Spurs.

    635820987494649825-AP-1624639381Playing his first organized basketball game for Kentucky, Canadian sensation Jamal Murray put on a show.

    The 6-foot-5 freshman just missed a triple-double when he went for 22 points, 12 assists and nine rebounds in a 117-58 exhibition win over NAIA outfit Ottawa.

    Kentucky coach John Calipari pulled the starters with almost four minutes to go, so Murray couldn’t notch the first Kentucky triple-double since Chris Mills in 1988.

    “I know now,” Murray said when asked if he knew he was close to the triple-double. “I didn’t know during the game. I just wanted to let my team play. It washes well. I had a lot of fun playing today. I’m sure the team had a lot of fun playing too. I’m looking forward to all of the games that we get to play.”

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