Back from injury, Medlock starts anew
EMU junior ready to take back the reins at point guard
In Carlos Medlock's world, there is no room for hypotheticals.
Long gone are the days when the Eastern Michigan University junior point guard viewed last season as a series of what ifs, what could have beens, and if onlys.
It's all forgotten. The 12 games he missed with a broken right foot. The stretch of five Mid-American Conference games following Medlock's injury that produced four losses. The 12-point, second-round MAC tournament loss to top-seeded Toledo that came on the heels of Eastern's first tournament win in eight years. None of that matters now as Medlock enters his third season as the Eagles' floor leader, prepared to take the next step after seeing his sophomore year end prematurely.
"Once we got to preparing to this season, everything in my mindset about last year was all gone,'' Medlock said.
"I'm just focused on doing better this year.''
Before sustaining the foot injury, Medlock had started every game of his Eastern Michigan career as the starting point guard. Now, he begins the new season in just that manner.
Brand new.
As difficult as he found watching his team finish the season without him, Medlock grew, suddenly seeing the game from a new perspective.
He watched as things on the floor developed without him, mentally taking images he could use when he did return. He used his time off to watch film, concentrating on his game and breaking down aspects of how he played that needed improvement. Chief among them was patience.
For some time, Eastern coach Charles Ramsey had pleaded with Medlock to stop rushing and to take a calmer approach to running the Eagles' offense. Medlock, however, couldn't see it, maintaining that he was playing with a style that he used to become one of the league's top point guards.
"When you're out there playing, you're just so hyped,'' Medlock said. "You're into the game, and so you don't see those things.'' But in film study, Medlock instantly saw what Ramsey was saying, coming to the realization that he didn't have to sacrifice productivity by simply slowing down. Together, player and coach pored over game films, studying scenarios if Medlock displayed a little more patience, the outcome could have been better.
And throughout the instruction, Ramsey used a simple principle to drive his point home.
"Be in a hurry, but don't rush,'' Ramsey would tell Medlock.
Medlock, who led Eastern in scoring with 13.2 points per game last season, now returns to his role with a renewed sense of pace. He realizes that he can be more effective as a floor leader if he remains patient rather than trying to make too much happen all at once.
With patience, Ramsey believes, Medlock's turnover-to-assist margin will change significantly, putting the 6-foot guard in a better position to make better decisions. And out of better decision-making will come a smoother offense, which, in turn, will lend itself to Medlock seeing improvement in his own game.
Medlock, who is not yet at 100 percent nearly 10 months after breaking his foot, now translates the film study to his approach to the court.
Watching the game go on without him also provided Medlock with a better working knowledge of the game that he uses to bring younger players along.
It's a role Medlock is quickly becoming more comfortable with, taking the next step in his development as a player. And moving forward is just the next step for a player whom much has always been asked from since the day he arrived at Eastern. But Medlock doesn't regret the approach Ramsey took with him from the start.
"If coach didn't throw me to the wolves the way he did, I wouldn't be the player I am now,'' said Medlock, who scored eight points in 19 minutes in Eastern's recent exhibition win over Northwood. "He told me from Day 1 he was going to put me in, and he was going to surround everything around me.''
And while Ramsey says he didn't have any other choice but to use Medlock in that fashion, he believes the dividends of his decision are starting to pay off in the form of an experienced guard well-versed in what he demands.
"He had to grow up overnight - he didn't have a lot of help, and he just had to sink or swim,'' Ramsey said. "Now, he's mentally tough. Not only was he thrown in, but he thrived.''