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Rebounds still are going to fall from the backboards when the Oklahoma Sooners play this winter. It's an inevitable part of the game. No one, not even 1985 Villanova playing nearly flawless basketball, makes every shot. When Jeff Capel ponders the season ahead, this is what he wonders most: Who will pick up the balls that miss?
After producing Oklahoma's greatest basketball success since the 1980s, Capel must replace three starters and the most productive reserve from last season's 30-6 team. Player of the year Blake Griffin averaged 22.7 points and led OU in scoring in 29 of its 37 games and left to become the first pick in the NBA draft.
Aware of all this, however, Capel declared, "My biggest concern, to be honest, is rebounding."
He never worried about this when Griffin was around. As a sophomore, Griffin established himself as one of the great rebounders of modern college basketball history. His 14.4 average was the best Division I performance in a dozen years. He collected roughly one of every five missed shots in Oklahoma's games.
Imagine that: Griffin grabbed one rebound for every four gathered through the combined efforts of all his teammates and all the opponents who faced him.
"We're going to have to really gang rebound," Capel said. "If somebody wants to play -- become a really good rebounder."
Griffin is a big man who moves like a shooting guard, but OU was able only on occasion to use his speed in an end-to-end running game. It was important to keep Griffin in games for as long as possible, and there wasn't much overall depth, anyway.
Capel expects this team will play faster. He has challenged All-America candidate Willie Warren, a shooting guard, to use his extraordinary athleticism to chase down rebounds and then push the ball into the attack. Warren is an irrepressible scorer who likely will rank among the nation's best in that category. He just can't let that be the extent of his contributions.
Point guard Tommie Mason-Griffin, one of last summer's fastest-rising recruits, will have the first chance to replace playmaker Austin Johnson. Reliable wing Tony Crocker and shooting specialist Cade Davis return give the Sooners a promising backcourt rotation.
"The look of our team will change," Capel said. "Every time down floor, we wanted to get the ball inside and play through Blake. The strength of our team now is our guards.
"I don't know if we have a guy they can put down low and throw it to and, if he doesn't get doubled, you know he's going to score."
Oklahoma will not be undersized because of Griffin's departure, not if Tiny Gallon turns out as planned. His nickname is ironic, of course: He is listed on the OU roster at 6-9, 300 pounds. (And, for the record, is listed as "Tiny" and not "Keith," his given name).
Gallon was a top-10 recruit out of Virginia's Oak Hill Academy, where he averaged 16 points for a 40-1 team. He put up 20 points in the McDonald's All-America Game, where there's generally not much defense played but the ball tends to flow toward the fellows who can do good things with it.
"We lost a lot, but I'm really excited about this group," Capel said. "We do have talent. It's young talent, but it's talent. Our freshmen are going to have to grow up quickly."
To that end, Capel decided that process might be accelerated if the new Sooners were to wake up quickly. When hiring his new strength and conditioning coach, Jozsef Szendrei, Capel asked a curious question: "'Would you mind being a jerk?' Because I thought that's what this team needs."
Apparently Szendrei answered appropriately, because for much of the past six weeks he's been meeting the Sooners at 5:45 a.m. for conditioning workouts. A mandatory team breakfast follows. Capel said it's about instilling discipline and accountability.
"I don't know if it's better," Capel said. "It's just a different way to mentally challenge them and to try to help them become mentally stronger. It's been good. For our returning guys, it was something of a shell-shock.
"You can get spoiled a little bit by the success we had last year. Our guys need to understand it's going to be harder. Because of the success we had last year, now we're hunted. Our enforcer is not there. I want these guys to have a chip on their shoulders."
The Sooners cannot expect the sort of excellence they enjoyed last season, but putting Warren on the floor means they'll still begin every game with one of the nation's top five players. He's not going to pull down 14 rebounds a game, but Warren could find other ways to make certain Oklahoma is rebounding, not rebuilding.
Mike DeCourcy is a writer for Sporting News. E-mail him at decourcy@sportingnews.com.