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Kansas center Cole Aldrich, pictured here on Wednesday, has discovered one of the many useful purposes for duct tape. As a statement of his love for Kansas basketball, Aldrich used duct tape to spell out the words “Kansas B-Ball” on the living room wall of his apartment in the Jayhawker Towers that he shares with teammate Tyrel Reed.
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Cole Aldrich crams his 6-foot-11, 245-pound frame into a small elevator at Jayhawker Towers, exits after a short ride and heads down a narrow hallway toward his and Kansas University basketball teammate Tyrel Reed’s apartment.
Aldrich unlocks the door, enters and veers left, his guests’ eyes darting to the right.
As the tall Minnesotan states proudly in “The Aldrich File” in KU’s hoops media guide, the first thing visitors to his campus abode notice are the words “Kansas B-ball” duct taped on the Towers’ signature brick wall.
It’s not exactly Andy Warhol-esque, but not a bad first effort from artist-wannabe Aldrich.
“Some people don’t think it’s the most beautiful work of art. I love it. I think it gives a little ‘zazz to the room,” said the Jayhawks’ bubbly — Sherron Collins calls him “goofy” — sophomore center.
“Tyrel doesn’t quite like it. He says, ‘I don’t know why you even did that, Cole.’
“I tell him, ‘Hey, until you come up with something better than that or put up a picture or something, I guess it’s going to stay.’’’
Hey, it’s not so bad
Actually the duct-taped design — pasted on the wall two summers ago “because I was bored one night,” Aldrich states — is growing on Reed.
“I think it adds something creative to our room,” Reed said, Aldrich screaming, “liar,” after eavesdropping on his roomie’s remark.
“These Towers walls can be pretty blah. Putting that on duct tape tells you something about him. It shows how much he loves this place, how much we both love this place,” Reed added.
It’s understandable that Burlington native Reed, whose dad, Stacy, has worked KU’s basketball camps the past 20 years, would be a lifelong Jayhawk fan.
It’s somewhat unusual Aldrich, who grew up 420 miles away from Lawrence, also was raised a diehard KU supporter.
“One of my AAU coaches, who was my coach since fifth or sixth grade, always took me to (Minnesota) Timberwolves’ games, (University of Minnesota) Gophers’ games,” Aldrich said of family friend Steve Heinen.
“His sister lives in Lawrence. When I was in eighth grade, he said, ‘You want to go to a Kansas game?’ I said, ‘Sure, why not?’ We came here for a game. I fell in love with it here.”
Aldrich and Heinen returned for other games, sometimes spending the night at the home of Heinen’s sister, Lori, and brother-in-law Tim Arnold.
“They are great people. They kind of got me hooked on KU from the very beginning,” said Aldrich, who has remained close with the couple and their two children, taking them Trick or Treating on Halloween, Aldrich’s birthday. “I’ll go over there. It’s a nice little place to get away from college.”
Fans make impression
Arnold doesn’t accept credit for helping KU land Aldrich, who orally committed to KU in November of 2005, right before the start of his junior — yes junior — season at Bloomington Jefferson High.
“I think it was the fans who made it special for Cole. They were real excited about him from the start, asking him for his autograph,” said Arnold, who recalls Aldrich being “at least 6-foot-5,” when they first met in Cole’s eighth-grade year.
“Cole’s really a nice kid. I’ve been impressed with him. He’s down to earth. He’s not let this whole thing get to his head.”
“This whole thing” is his emergence as one of the country’s top big men. He’s had that tag ever since making life miserable on Tyler Hansbrough in KU’s 2008 NCAA semifinal victory over North Carolina last April in San Antonio.
Aldrich — he had eight points, seven rebounds and four blocks in 17 minutes versus UNC — didn’t take much time off after playing sparingly in the title victory over Memphis.
Instead, he prepared for a strenuous, productive offseason.
“I remember after the championship game, we went up to the 22nd floor with the team,” Cole’s dad, Walter, said of a victory party at the team hotel in downtown San Antonio.
“We’re sitting there having snacks in the corner. (KU assistant) Danny Manning came up and his first words were, ‘You are not going to get spoiled. You will be working your butt off in two weeks,’’’ Walter exclaimed. “I said, ‘That’s great. You can bust his butt. I don’t care.’”
Hard work pays off
Cole hit the weights hard — and worked on his post moves and free throw shooting — while attending both sessions of summer school.
His work has paid off early in this, his sophomore season.
Aldrich has averaged 14.4 points off 57.5 percent shooting and hit 21 of 25 free throws for 84 percent. He also has blocked 22 shots and averages 10.1 rebounds per game.
“I think it’s actually pretty cool. Somebody told me the other day it’s just Blake (Griffin, Oklahoma) and me averaging a double-double which is exciting, because I always dreamed last year of finally getting into the game and starting and whatnot,” Aldrich said of averaging a double-double early in the season.
“I’ve been fortunate enough to play well and have other guys on the team set me up for easy baskets. I’ve been grabbing rebounds here and there. It’s come along for me and it’s even better that we’re winning. That’s what it all comes down to ... wins and losses.”
Elated with Aldrich’s progress, KU coach Bill Self says he “can be one of the better big guys to play at Kansas in a long time.
“He continues to get better. When he first got here, he wasn’t used to the pace of the game. He couldn’t hedge a ball screen. He has certainly raised everybody’s expectation level of him. His hands, his touch around the rim ... he has natural ability to get the ball in the basket.”
Aldrich also is tough after surviving daily battles in the paint with Sasha Kaun and Darnell Jackson last season.
“Going against him 1-on-1, he elbows me and my teeth go through my lip,” KU senior center Matt Kleinmann said. “He is a physically dominating player.”
Aldrich — who is efficient around the goal — helps smaller guys like Sherron Collins rack up the assists.
“I love playing with Cole,” junior point guard/shooting guard Collins said. “I would not want to play with any other big man in the country.”
Not just because of his ability.
“Cole is one of the goofiest guys I’ve ever played with. Just his voice ... when we call for a ball screen, he says, ‘Love, love,’’’ Collins said, laughing.
“We have an understanding. As leaders of the team, we have a lot of little talks, especially on the road. When stuff is going bad, as leaders we say we will change it.
“I think he’s approached the leadership role great.”
Is he NBA bound?
Aldrich is developing so rapidly, the basketball world is starting to wonder if he’ll take his game to the next level after this season.
NBAdraft.net — at this early date — has Aldrich listed as the No. 11 overall pick in next June’s draft. Draftexpress.com has Aldrich returning to KU for his junior season.
“Everybody wants to be on the first boat ride, the first wave,” Walter Aldrich says of agents, who have contacted him.
“It’s like college recruiting when the coaches were calling. I’m sure at the end of the year, we (Cole, Walter and Cole’s mom, Kathleen) will sit down with coach Self. We trust him. He’s pretty much a straight, honest guy.
“He’ll look at Kansas basketball which is his job, but we know he’ll be honest with us. We’ll play it by ear. If we could all tell the future, we’d all be rich.”
Cole Aldrich stresses the NBA is definitely not on his mind.
“I’ve got too much stuff to worry about with finals (exams) and how to execute against UMass on Saturday,” Aldrich said. “I don’t worry about that at all. I’ve told my parents numerous times that whenever that time comes, if it’s in two years or after I graduate, my whole philosophy is play well and don’t worry about it and things will take care of itself.
“If I continue to play well, I may have opportunities that come. All I want to do is get me another ring. That was way too much fun. Once April 8 comes and we’re standing at the podium again, all having a great time, I’m just gonna worry about it then, after the season.”
Obviously it will take a lot to get Aldrich to leave Lawrence, which may have even surpassed his hometown of Bloomington, Minn., as his favorite place on earth.
“People are all kind of excited about it (his emergence) back home. All my friends and family are totally taken in by my love for Kansas. Even Tyrel says every once in a while when my parents come in or Conner (Teahan) will say, ‘Cole your parents are hardcore Jayhawk fans. How did that ever start?’
“They just love the place where I go to school and who I play for. It’s what it comes down to. Having the love I have for this school.”
His love of KU may even surpass his other great passion:
Food.
“Try getting around him when he’s hungry. If he ever gets ornery, throw him a burger,” Walter Aldrich said. “Pickles and ice cream. He told us once his goal in life was to run an ice cream factory. That’s when he was young.”
“Cole can be a little ornery when he needs some food. Everything above the fridge is his,” roomie Reed stated, pointing to Ritz crackers, Oreo cookies and peanut butter on top of the Towers refrigerator. “I’ve not seen anybody out-eat him, except Sasha.”
“The thing with Cole,” notes Tim Arnold, “he eats often. He’ll have something here and get something an hour or two later. Just keep feeding him.”
Feed him food and the basketball on a consistent basis and he’ll be in nirvana.
Especially in this town.
“It’s been everything I thought it’d be,” Aldrich said of college. “I’m just having a lot of fun. We’ve been winning games since I got here with a great group of guys. I just want to win as many games as I can here.”
More like this
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- Kansas’ Reed can hit big shots 69 comments / October 28, 2009
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- Jayhawks hoops players voice support for football team 22 comments / September 5, 2009
- Feeding post a problem for KU 62 comments / January 30, 2009













Comments
Timmay97 (anonymous) says...
This was a terrific article. You really get a glimpse of what life is like for Cole. Seems like a terrific kid and I wish him nothing but the best.
December 12, 2008 at 7:11 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
Speakeasy (anonymous) says...
Cole is an eating machine--and a true-blue Jayhawk. How refreshing to hear about a kid who found someplace special in eighth grade, latched onto it, and has never let go. Best of luck in this and the next two years, Cole. Join the ranks of the all-time bigs at Kansas--Lovellette, Born, Chamberlain, Wesley, and the rest--and bring home another ring! In fact, bring home two or three!
December 12, 2008 at 7:37 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
Displayhawk (anonymous) says...
Man, this article brings back memories of my days and nights in Jayhawk Towers!I remember when I lived in A-Tower, we turned a blacklight on one night, and we could still see peace signs and "Stop the war" comments that had been painted on by previous tenants years ago. Pretty wild times! .......but FUN!
December 12, 2008 at 7:53 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
tdomine (anonymous) says...
My kids refer to Cole as "Baby Cole," because last year, up until the UNC game, he was such a sweet, innocent looking player among men like Sasha Kaun and Darnell Jackson. We should have probably invented a new pet name for him after he humbled UNC. Now, this year, he's consistant and dominant. All hail King Cole.
December 12, 2008 at 7:55 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
Speakeasy (anonymous) says...
Cole, if he chooses to stay, can leave a mark on the program like no other big man in KU history. If he wins another one, he will even eclipse Lovellette, and his name will hang in the rafters of Allen Field House for all time to come.
December 12, 2008 at 8:11 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
rockchalkin54 (anonymous) says...
I love stories like these that let you get a glimpse of what the guys are really like.
December 12, 2008 at 8:20 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
wi_jayhawk (anonymous) says...
God I love this kid!
December 12, 2008 at 8:24 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
milwaukeeJAYHAWK (anonymous) says...
he kinda reminds me of Jacque Vaughn. Just an all-around good guy with a positive attitude.
December 12, 2008 at 8:28 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
mdalesh (anonymous) says...
Hear, Hear Speakeasy! That's the kind of thing A "True" Jayhawk wants from their career. I believe Cole will be back for two more years. He is just that kind of Jayhawk: Senior Night, Another Ring, All-American, #1 Draft Pick. Stay with us Big Guy, don't stop doing your thing. Coach Self, Coach Manning and the Jayhawk Nation will never let you down.
December 12, 2008 at 8:44 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
KU (anonymous) says...
OMG! Those brick walls in Jayhawk Towers! Man does that bring back memories. Crazy times.
December 12, 2008 at 8:59 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
KUbsee69 (anonymous) says...
Speakeasy ... Don't forget Wilt.Nobody can eclipse Wilt ... ever.
December 12, 2008 at 9:19 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
JJHawq (anonymous) says...
If those walls could talk... I remember actually sneaking a keg into the towers in 1996.
December 12, 2008 at 9:27 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
overseashawk (anonymous) says...
I wonder who got the idea for this story first. Check this out.http://rivals.yahoo.com/ncaa/basketball/news?slug=jn-aldrich121208&prov=yhoo&type=lgns
December 12, 2008 at 9:57 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
dagger108 (anonymous) says...
The silver duct tape is sort of classic - and probably necessary in an impromtu late night art studio, but someone needs to let Cole know that they make colored duct tape now. How about "Kansas B-Ball" in the school colors, or would that be a copyright infringement?More seriously, gotta love the insight. In particular, I love finding out about the off-season work that went into the 80+% FT this year. It sounds a bit like DJ when he was suspended at the beginning of '06. I haven't heard definitively, but I also suspect that last year's team spent some extra time toeing the line away from the lime light during last year's semester break. I seem to recall FT being one of the maligned parts of our game in '07, but by March/April it is what made the difference for us as much as it hurt Memphis. Does anyone know what the breakdown of FT were by semester last year? I'd calc it, but don't have the data. (Seems like a decent article LJW.)
December 12, 2008 at 10:15 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
Jaminrawk (anonymous) says...
If I could have any player on the team stay 4 years, it would be Cole. By the time he would be a senior, he would win the Naismith. The kid's learning curve is straight up. I doubt it will happen, but people said the same about Hansbrough. I guess Hanbrough doesn't have a ring though ... hahaha.
December 12, 2008 at 10:18 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
avaholic (anonymous) says...
Is that a vodka bottle on the television? I love it!!! Keep up the good work!!
December 12, 2008 at 10:18 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
priceiswright (anonymous) says...
Another fine job Gary. Keep up the good work. It's amazing how much better the journal world's coverage on basketball is than football.
December 12, 2008 at 10:30 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
d_prowess (anonymous) says...
What is up with the TV!?! You know these guys aren't getting any "special perks" if they have that kind of tv in their place!
December 12, 2008 at 10:39 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
dagger108 (anonymous) says...
Hansborough may be POY in college because he works harder than most guys, but I think his limit was thoroughly exposed against our frontline of future NBA players last year. Once our guys learned that all he will do is stand in the lane and take charges, he became a virtual non-factor.Cole is so much better than TH because he has the same skills and a whole lot more.I'd see the similarity being more with Blake Griffin than TH. I'd expect BG to come out as one of the first picks this year, after being potential lottery last year, and for Cole to do the same thing - unless of course he is on the podium in April.RC
December 12, 2008 at 10:51 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
GBedoreNum1fan (anonymous) says...
A+ story, go gary
December 12, 2008 at 11:30 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
Speakeasy (anonymous) says...
d_prowess--I'd be surprised if the Memphis players have that kind of a TV in their campus mansion! I'm sure they have a 61" flat screen high def with surround-sound.
December 12, 2008 at 11:40 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
wtarush (anonymous) says...
Ever since Cole orally committed before his junior year I have had him tagged as one of the greats that stay for the whole 4-year ride like a Danny Manning or a Jaque Vaughn. Like Cole, they were all about being a Jayhawk. I hope he decides to live it while he can... there's no coming back.
December 12, 2008 at 12:28 p.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
Speakeasy (anonymous) says...
wtarush--very true. There are things more important than money. For most people, their college years are the best and most fulfilling years of their lives. I know for me they were. (But then, I didn't have the NBA calling, either!) When I think back on the past, my mind usually goes to those years. Sadly, Senior Night is becoming an experience fewer and fewer KU captains get to experience.
December 12, 2008 at 1:56 p.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
InfiniteJ (anonymous) says...
Correct me if I'm wrong, but when Julian Wright was a sophmore, didn't he swear he would be around for at least his junior year? No player with half a brain would talk about entering the draft 9 games into thier sophmore campaign, whether they were planning on entertaining the idea of entering or not.
December 12, 2008 at 2:41 p.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
KU62 (anonymous) says...
Nobody can eclipse Wilt ... ever.Yeah, they could. With four years against two, even the numbers could go.
December 12, 2008 at 3:27 p.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
jaybate (anonymous) says...
Regarding Cole:That is still the greatest looking letter jacket of all time. And Cole wears it as well as any KU player ever has. Rock Chalk!Regarding Nick Krug:Nick Krug should be an award winning photographer, if he isn't already. He's going to go far. He has that special knack for making not just documentary photography, but evocative photography. There is an edge to all his work, despite its essentially laudatory intent towards KU sports. His photograph of Travis Releford is a stunning portrait worthy of any portrait photography I have ever seen. It is a remarkably revealing photograph.
December 12, 2008 at 3:30 p.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
stanfordstarter (anonymous) says...
this story is nearly identical to Jason Kings Yahoo Sports story posted today, hmmm you have something to tell us Gary?
December 12, 2008 at 3:42 p.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
jhawkdan42 (anonymous) says...
JHawq-You snuck a keg into the towers? Your one wild and crazy guy!!! You just gotta love guys like Cole. I hope he has a monster year and lets worry about next year well next year!
December 12, 2008 at 5:09 p.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )