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OSU?s Aaron Craft better player than coach
By Matt Tait
New Orleans ? It?s a well known fact that Ohio State point guard Aaron Craft is the glue that holds the Buckeyes together, the motor that makes his team go, the tough-as-nails, lead-by-intensity player who would do anything to help his team win.
What?s not as widely known is that Craft also is an up-and-coming college basketball coach.
Earlier this year, while the Buckeyes were in the middle of their run to the Final Four ? they?ll face Kansas University at 7:49 tonight in the second semifinal at the Superdome ? Craft spent some of what little down time he had as the de facto head coach for the Ohio State intramural team known as ?Turning Point.?
The team, which is sponsored by former Ohio State standout and current Philadelphia 76er Evan Turner, is made up of nine OSU team managers. Having Craft pace the sideline during the team?s run to the quarterfinals was equal parts exciting and hilarious.
?He?s got the clipboard, he?s on the sidelines. He really gets into ?coaching? us,? said third-year manager Lee Miller, using his hands to make the quotation gesture. ?We really don?t listen that well, though.?
Although Craft did not have the luxury of spending as much time preparing for Turning Point games as he did for his own, that did not stop him from trying. In addition to imploring his players to run a few sets, the 6-foot-2 sophomore from Findlay, Ohio, spent time studying the squad?s opponents as well.
?He used to give us the scouting report on the other teams based on what he saw on the other end of the court during the three minutes of warm-up time,? third-year manager Weston Strayer said. ?He?d go by things like nice shoes, the arm sleeve ? if a player had those, Aaron figured they were pretty good and we geared our game plan around stopping them.?
After winning the intramural championship in 2011 ? with Craft occupying a less prominent position on the team?s coaching staff ? things did not go quite so well for Turning Point in 2012. It reached the quarterfinals, but lost before reaching the school?s intramural version of the Final Four.
?We didn?t make it all the way this year,? Craft said. ?But it was still a good year.?
cont...
http://www2.kusports.com/news/2012/mar/31/osus-aaron-craft-better-player-coach/
Craft has come long way since being 'kid who got Bruce Pearl fired'
By Jeff Goodman | CBSSports.com College Basketball Insider
NEW ORLEANS -- Long before he was known as the nation's premiere perimeter defender, well prior to him being regarded as one of the elite point guards in the country, Aaron Craft had another claim to fame.
He was the kid who got Bruce Pearl fired.
"Aaron Craft was a victim," Pearl said.
Craft was an unheralded point guard, and Jared Sullinger's AAU sidekick, when he committed to Pearl and the Tennessee Vols back in September of 2008. He, along with Josh Selby and Jordan McRae, all visited Pearl's house in the fall of that year, and had no clue that it was a violation -- one that would ultimately cost Pearl his job in Knoxville.
Craft declined to comment for the story here in New Orleans, in fear of taking away the focus from Saturday's national semifinal contest against Kansas. However, Craft spoke to CBSSports.com last season and said he had no knowledge that he was breaking a rule by being at Pearl's house.
It all came down to a photo of Craft and Pearl, one taken at Pearl's house back in 2008. It was against NCAA rules for Pearl to host the trio on an unofficial visit. No one still quite knows who faxed the picture to the NCAA, but it wound up being Pearl's undoing. When questioned by the NCAA, Pearl initially lied and said he didn't know where it was taken.
"It was my responsibility to protect his eligibility and say we'd love to have you over the house, but you cannot," Pearl said. "I didn't do that. He's a victim."
"We've honestly never felt like the victims," Craft's father, John, told CBSSports.com. "It was a bad set of circumstances, but there's no ill feelings. We have no bad thoughts about the man."
Craft has moved on. He's gone from a virtual unknown in recruiting circles to, what former Ohio State star Jim Jackson calls the best on-ball defender he's seen since Mookie Blaylock. Pearl was one of the first to become a Craft believer, when he was watching All-Ohio Red in the summer following Craft's sophomore campaign in high school. He was there to get a glimpse at Sullinger, just in case the skilled and then-rotund big man didn't elect to stay home and play his college ball in Columbus.
"This kid couldn't shoot it at all, but he didn't have to," Pearl recalled. "No one could get by him and he was always the first one diving on the floor for loose balls. He was the reason why that team was winning."
cont...
http://www.cbssports.com/collegebas...since-being-the-kid-who-got-bruce-pearl-fired
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