The player known as Renardo Sidney signed his Letter of Intent with Mississippi State...and remember. He was a McDonald's All-American and the #2 PF in the country.
We all remember what happened afterwards....the beginning of the end.
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The player known as Renardo Sidney signed his Letter of Intent with Mississippi State...and remember. He was a McDonald's All-American and the #2 PF in the country.
We all remember what happened afterwards....the beginning of the end.
Yep, we should have booted him after the fight in Hawaii.
I think we probably had a little too much ?invested? in him to boot him at that time or any other time
Yeah, definitely one of the worst decisions we've ever made. I don't if it's the worst decision regarding athletics ever made by the university, but its up there. Hindsight is always 20/20 though
We had to sign him. With the kind of talent he had, how bad would it have been if he had an even average work ethic and we DIDN'T sign him? He would have been beating us for at least one year then gone pro, or he would have been beating us for several years. That is, if he had signed elsewhere in the SEC. The guy had amazing talent. He just had the opposite work ethic. Couldn't get in shape to run the court but a few times, and couldn't get back on defense. If he could have just gotten in shape, he would be a millionaire many times over by now. From a talent perspective alone, he was as talented as anybody we have had... maybe ever.
But as another poster said, he may as well have been signing Stansbury's walking papers.
everyone wanted Stan to get to the next level. By signing RS he was rolling the dice to get to at least the sweet 16. It didn't work. the ball players voted on who to throw of the team it was BAILEY. The Sad thing is that Stans last team would have beaten the brakes off of any team we have had since. Maybe this year is a toss up.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n1fFLqvYtmQ
Sad what happened to Sidney, with all that potential.
He could loaf and score a double double. He tore the Rebels a new ass one night.
Yes, I contended forever that Sidney was Stan's downfall. He had a decision to make and made the wrong one by kicking Bailey off the team. Bailey at least worked hard in practice and hustled in games. Sidney loafed and play the old style girl's basketball.....half court on offense. Granted Sidney had incredible skill for a 6'11" player (in his prime....could have played point guard).....but now the tallest and fattest chicken fry cook in history.
Well stans allowed Sidney to to be lazy and not work out. That?s on rick for rewarding him with playing time for his poor work ethic.
Exactly, and not holding him accountable to a strict nutrition plan. I was a student at that time and I saw Sid come in to this local burger place for lunch one day(can't remember the name anymore, but it was on the right hand side right before you veered left a little bit to get on the stretch that Walmart is on). He got this massive Philly cheesesteak that took up the whole to-go box with fries and a soda. This was the same day that we got upset by Akron Stan's last year.
Sidney was a symptom, not the problem. The real problem was that Stansbury had lost accountability and discipline among the team. Even the guys who were close to Stansbury know it, even if they won't come out and say it. I'll agree with Ref that Sidney marked "the beginning of the end," but only because he made the issues visible and thereby possibly accelerated the collapse a little. It was imminent with or without him.
He did. Stans knew it too. But like Danko said, he was past the point of no return. A friend of my family made a trip with the team to NY that year, and he was disgusted with Sidney. He talked to Rick about it and Rick said point blank "That kid is going to be the end of me".