Before the season even started, Cowboys coach Travis Ford assigned one key element to his team?s success:
?No outside distractions.?
Uh, oh.
The distractions are piling up for Ford and his squad.
The coming week might prove critical in forecasting this Oklahoma State basketball season.
And it has nothing to do with Tuesday night?s game against Stanford, but instead how the Cowboys cope with issues facing them and their months ahead.
Already, point guard Fred Gulley ? the team?s best perimeter defender ? has been lost for the season to a shoulder injury that will require surgery as early as this week.
Forward Matt Pilgrim, who was dealing with his own shoulder woes, went down at the end of Saturday night?s win over Alabama with a knee injury. It isn?t believed to be serious, yet adds potential delay in the progress of a player who missed most of the preseason under suspension.
The injuries, however, are but minor irritants when compared to what may come next.
News that two so-far-unnamed players are suspects in a sexual assault investigation hangs over the program as the Cowboys roll toward the end of non-conference play and the rugged Big 12 schedule that awaits.
Where the investigation leads threatens to deliver the kind of distraction that can doom this season. There are whispers that the two players are key figures, so the impact could be mighty ? on the floor and off.
The Cowboys, at 10-1, appear to be a solid squad with decent upside and legit NCAA Tournament aspirations, if maintained intact. Yet there?s little room for error, or subtractions, as it?s a team constituted by its parts, not built around a star capable of heaving everyone on his shoulders, the way James Anderson did so many times a year ago.
So the coming days will be telling.
How will Pilgrim?s knee feel? Who among the guards ? Markel Brown? Reger Dowell? ? will ease the burden of Gulley?s loss?
And how will the district attorney perceive the information presented by the Stillwater police? Do arrests and charges follow?
Ford said Saturday night that he couldn?t comment on the situation, with the legal ramifications still unknown. But it was clear that the past few days had been wearing on him.
And it may only get worse.
?No outside distractions.?
Uh, oh.
The distractions are piling up for Ford and his squad.
The coming week might prove critical in forecasting this Oklahoma State basketball season.
And it has nothing to do with Tuesday night?s game against Stanford, but instead how the Cowboys cope with issues facing them and their months ahead.
Already, point guard Fred Gulley ? the team?s best perimeter defender ? has been lost for the season to a shoulder injury that will require surgery as early as this week.
Forward Matt Pilgrim, who was dealing with his own shoulder woes, went down at the end of Saturday night?s win over Alabama with a knee injury. It isn?t believed to be serious, yet adds potential delay in the progress of a player who missed most of the preseason under suspension.
The injuries, however, are but minor irritants when compared to what may come next.
News that two so-far-unnamed players are suspects in a sexual assault investigation hangs over the program as the Cowboys roll toward the end of non-conference play and the rugged Big 12 schedule that awaits.
Where the investigation leads threatens to deliver the kind of distraction that can doom this season. There are whispers that the two players are key figures, so the impact could be mighty ? on the floor and off.
The Cowboys, at 10-1, appear to be a solid squad with decent upside and legit NCAA Tournament aspirations, if maintained intact. Yet there?s little room for error, or subtractions, as it?s a team constituted by its parts, not built around a star capable of heaving everyone on his shoulders, the way James Anderson did so many times a year ago.
So the coming days will be telling.
How will Pilgrim?s knee feel? Who among the guards ? Markel Brown? Reger Dowell? ? will ease the burden of Gulley?s loss?
And how will the district attorney perceive the information presented by the Stillwater police? Do arrests and charges follow?
Ford said Saturday night that he couldn?t comment on the situation, with the legal ramifications still unknown. But it was clear that the past few days had been wearing on him.
And it may only get worse.
