Category Archives: Player News

Iron Man Bryce Cotton Goes for 3 This Week

It appears that Bryce Cotton’s NBA Draft chances are picking up some steam as more teams are scheduling workouts with him after hearing how well he has performed in other team’s workouts. Bryce’s agent, Charles Bonsignore told me “the fact that he has done so well in other workouts has teams taking notice.” This shouldn’t come as a shock to any Friar fans because it is well known that Cotton has the work ethic that is required to be successful at the next level. He has been working hard with God Shammgod when he isn’t on the road working out for teams.

The latest team to jump in is the Cleveland Cavaliers. Originally this week, Cotton was scheduled to work out for the Washington Wizards on Wednesday and then the Philadelphia 76ers on Friday but he will now fit the Cavs in on Thursday instead of having a day off. “We realize that it is a tough task, but Bryce’s desire to play in the NBA made it an easy decision for him. He did not flinch when I asked him if he was up for 3 workouts in 3 days,” Bonsignore said.

After being subjected to the infamous Boston Marathon drill at the Boston Celtics workout, Cotton told NESN.com’s Ben Watanabe, “to my advantage, I had to play pretty much every minute of every game this year, so my body’s used to always being on the go.” Bryce is not far off when he says he played “pretty much every minute of every game this year.” He played 1398 total minutes last season in 35 games which is an average of 39.95 minutes per game. For those unaware, a regulation college game has 40 minutes. Cotton now owns Providence All-time records for minutes per game in a season (previously held by Jimmy Walker, 39.68 mpg), minutes played in a season (shattering the previous mark which he was tied with Billy Donovan at 1234 minutes) and  minutes played in a career, 4314 (previously held by Donnie McGrath, 4,128). In short, he is the owner of every minute related record at Providence College except points per minute where he is in the top 15 all-time. He also possesses elite athletic ability but someone should probably let ESPN’s Chad Ford know that.

bryce cotton ncaa tourney steal

There are 17 days until the NBA Draft takes place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. As of now, Cotton currently has a work out scheduled with the Indiana Pacers next week but I wouldn’t be surprised if a few more teams reached out to get him in for a work out prior to the draft.

 

BREAKING: Ted Bancroft to Apply for 5th Year Medical Redshirt

Well it’s not the 5th year senior we were expecting but it appears Ted Bancroft will return for a 5th year at PC. Ted said he is now in the process of applying for the waiver so this isn’t a done deal quite yet. I must admit I have my doubts about him being granted the waiver because the rules seem pretty clear that you cannot play in any games beyond the 1st half of the season and still be granted a “medical redshirt”. Ted played in only 3 games his freshman year but one of them was in the 2nd half of the season unless ESPN game logs are lying right to my face.

This has been a possibility all offseason but I have to think the Josh Fortune departure and the fact that the Friars now have 3 open scholarships made it easier for both Ted and Ed Cooley to pull the trigger on this move.

UPDATE 1:47pm – I spoke with NCAA Compliance expert, John Infante via Twitter and he informed me that the rule regarding not playing in any games beyond the 1st half of a season still applies but one interesting note that he mentioned- “You can get a waiver of the waiver, but you need some compelling justification.” So maybe that’s the angle that Ted is taking.

Impact of Josh Fortune’s Transfer

The news came down late Friday afternoon before Memorial Day Weekend and was a big shock to me when I saw it but Josh Fortune is in fact transferring from Providence College.

@Craig_Belhumeur

 

While some Friar fans are brushing off the news, this cannot be seen as anything but bad for an already thin backcourt for Ed Cooley’s 2014-15 squad. While I agree with people who say Fortune isn’t an irreplaceable player in terms of skill set, when you look at losing him in the context of the current roster situation, he’s pretty damn irreplaceable.  Right now, PC has the following guards on the roster:

  • Kris Dunn
  • Kyron Cartwright
  • Junior Lomomba
  • Casey Woodring

So just to recap the above – there is a point guard coming off a 2nd shoulder surgery who will not be rushed back, an incoming freshman backup point guard who was previously committed to Loyola Marymount and is ranked around the 45th point guard in the class of 2014, a transfer from Cleveland State who sat out last season and has a reputation as a defensive specialist and rim slasher and a walk on who saw a total of 10 minutes last season all in garbage time.

Losing Bryce Cotton and Kadeem Batts was tough enough but now the Friars are losing another player who averaged over 30 minutes per game in Fortune. Ed Cooley will now have to replace 103.5 minutes per game out of 200 from last season. PC will only have 3 players returning who played meaningful minutes last season in Henton, Harris and Desrosiers.
Continue reading Impact of Josh Fortune’s Transfer

Bryce Cotton, the student, drives to the finish of his academic career

~ Vicki-Ann Downing, Writer for Editorial Services

Providence, R.I. – Bryce Cotton ’14, two suitcases in hand, arrived at Providence College three days before the start of his freshman year, the final student admitted to the Class of 2014 thanks to the last-minute offer of a basketball scholarship.

Four years later, he leaves with a BIG EAST Tournament Championship, an NCAA Tournament appearance, the possibility of the NBA draft in June — and just as important to him, a bachelor’s degree in sociology and a 3.1 grade point average.

“I want to thank Providence College for taking a chance on me and giving me a scholarship,” said Cotton (Tucson, Ariz). “It allowed me to see another side of life. I was able to be with people who have noble ambitions, people who want to be doctors and lawyers. I had always been driven. I knew this is where I belonged, because I was around people who think like me.”

Cotton’s success on the basketball court, especially his twirling, leaping, second-half scoring rush in the NCAA Tournament game against North Carolina in March, made him familiar as a basketball player beyond Rhode Island. Less well known, though, is Bryce Cotton the student — a good and proud one.

“He’s been such an exciting player on the court, but he’s remarkable in so many other ways as well,” said Dr. Margaret K. Reid, associate professor of English. “Bryce is smart — really, really smart. In class, he is inquisitive and insightful. He’s a terrific writer, and he thinks things through from multiple perspectives. He has a rare maturity and self-discipline which serve him well in athletics, but also in all of his other pursuits.”

Enjoys DWC, writing, and sociology

Cotton enjoyed the College’s Development of Western Civilization Program (DWC) because of his love of history, particularly ancient history. He also loved to write. He decided to major in sociology after exploring his options freshman and sophomore year.

“I’ve always liked sociology,” Cotton said. “You learn to study people, why people do things, why as a society we do things. I’ve always been good at reading people, so I thought why not get a degree in it. After two years, I knew, ‘This is the one for me. It fits how I am, and there’s only one math class.’”

His senior capstone was a 20-page paper and a 45-minute presentation critiquing In Search of Respect: Selling Crack in El Barrio, a book by Phillipe Bourgeois.

A student-athlete playing Division I basketball has a grueling schedule. Cotton’s first class was at 9:30 a.m. each day. Practice was from 1-4 p.m., followed by a review of game films. After that, it was time for dinner. By the time he’d get back to his residence hall, it would be 8 p.m. most nights.

Fortunately, he’s able to make do with exactly seven hours of sleep — but some days were more challenging than others.

“After a game in Chicago, we got into Providence at 2:30 a.m., unloaded stuff until 3 a.m., and I was up at 8:30 for class,” said Cotton. “And that wasn’t the only day I had like that. That’s when you really have to dig deep and say, ‘What are my priorities.’”

A chance for a college education

Cotton understands priorities. He grew up on the north side of Tucson in a neighborhood where “going to college, playing Division I sports, that stuff is nonexistent,” he said. “A lot of people I grew up with are in jail, doing a lot of crazy stuff.”

In his family, only an aunt has a college degree. So when Providence called and offered him a basketball scholarship, “I was the first thing smoking out of Tucson. With two big suitcases,” said Cotton.

He had never been to Rhode Island before, but “you can be surprised what you can do when you don’t have a choice.” When things got difficult, he would tell himself, “What would you be doing if you weren’t here?”

“If they didn’t offer me a scholarship I don’t know where I’d be,” Cotton said.

The basketball team’s success ignited a fan base that hadn’t had much to cheer about in recent years. Suddenly, the players were engaged by classmates in discussions about basketball and recognized everywhere they went. A few days ago, after breakfast with his fiancé at Newport Creamery on Smith Street near campus, Cotton said a stranger picked up the tab, saying, “Thanks for a great season.”

“As a player, you notice those things – the community or school coming together,” said Cotton. “It gives you the motivation to do better. It gives you all the reason in the world to never stop striving.”

A strong faith and marriage plans

Cotton credits his drive to his mother, Yvonne Cotton, “the strongest woman I know.” His mother and his grandmother instilled a deep faith in him. He belongs to a church at home and, though he’s not Catholic, he attended Masses at PC. When Cotton and his mother look back on his successes, “we think, that’s God written all over it. And to be at a Christian school as well, of all the places I could have gone, it’s amazing.”

Statistics show how Cotton developed as a player at PC. Did he change as a person as well?

“I’ve definitely changed a lot,” said Cotton. “I’ve grown up in so many ways. I’ve matured in my way of thinking. My fiancé helped me become such a better person. When you get to know someone really well then you see the world from a different perspective. I think God put her in my life for a reason.”

Cotton and Simone Tubman ’14 (North Providence, R.I.), will marry on July 27 at the Cranston (R.I.) Country Club. They met the first day of freshman year in DWC class and became study partners. A sociology and political science major, she is bound for law school.

“I’m just so happy to be graduating from here,” said Cotton. “I’m glad I ended up coming to Providence. It showed me a different side of life and a different perspective, finally getting out of Tucson, Ariz., and going to a prestigious school like this. It helped me realize the opportunity I had and to capitalize on every opportunity I’ve been given.”

Hoping for a life in basketball

His mother will be at commencement, along with his brother, stepfather, aunt, and her son. Afterward, Cotton will remain in Providence to continue working out with God Shammgod, undergraduate student assistant coach, in preparation for the NBA draft. He would like to see how far basketball can take him, and after that, perhaps work as a basketball analyst or in public relations.

Reid believes he will be successful.

“Like so many others, I am eager to see him have his chance to play basketball at the next level, but I’m just as eager to see what comes after that for him,” said Reid. “His future possibilities are boundless, given his abilities.

“Bryce Cotton is going to lead a distinguished life because of the depth of his character and the quality of his mind. He is a person of genuine depth and wisdom who has a tremendous amount to offer to the world. He is as remarkable for his humility, his intelligence, and his depth of character as he is for his extraordinary athletic achievements. He is absolutely a genuine treasure as a student and as a human being.”

http://www.providence.edu/media/commencement-2014/Pages/bryce.aspx

Bryce Cotton to Work Out for NBA Teams This Week

Bryce Cotton has been working out constantly in Alumni Hall both with God Shammgod and against chairs.

He will begin working out for NBA teams over the next 6 weeks leading up to the NBA Draft in the hopes of hearing his name called. The Providence Journal‘s Kevin McNamara is reporting that Cotton will have his first 2 workouts this week when he will travel to Utah on Wednesday and Sacramento on Friday.

Utah has a bunch of young guards including Trey Burke and no coach at the moment but of their bevy of young guards only Burke, Diante Garrett and John Lucas III are point guards. Garrett is Burke’s backup but has a non-guaranteed salary heading into this upcoming season and Cotton could come in and compete for the backup job in Utah because Lucas III didn’t get off the bench in April for the Jazz and is on the wrong side of 30 for a rebuilding team. To top that all off, he has a non-guaranteed contract for next season so it wouldn’t be surprising if Cotton was brought in to try to win the backup role behind Burke if the Jazz don’t take a point guard in the 1st round. ESPN’s Chad Ford has the Jazz taking Kansas C Joel Embiid with the 4th overall pick and Louisiana-Lafayette PG Elfrid Payton with the 23rd overall pick. In addition to Cotton, the Jazz will host Taylor Braun, Stephen Holt, Akil Mitchell, Mike Moser, and Ronald Roberts Jr.

Sacramento has 5’9 Isaiah Thomas as their starting point guard so I guess they aren’t afraid to give a smaller guard a chance but I’m also unsure how Cotton fits here unless Thomas leaves as a restricted free agent this summer in which case Cotton could come in to backup 2nd year player Ray McCallum. Chad Ford’s latest mock draft has the Kings taking Oklahoma State PG Marcus Smart with the 7th overall pick so this may just be a way of posturing to lower Thomas’ asking price as a restricted free agent.

The NBA Draft lottery is May 20th and the NBA Draft is June 26th.

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