Long shooter Former USU star trying to prove he belongs on NBA team
But if there's one thing Utah State's all-time leader in scoring and 3-point shooting knows a little bit about, it's long shots.
Long as in getting discovered in Evanston, Wyo., by the Utah State coaching staff and earning a scholarship when few other schools bothered to pay him any attention.
Long as in earning a starting position with the Aggies shortly after returning from his LDS mission to Chile and never losing it.
Long as in the likelihood the New Jersey Nets which already have a league-max 15 players under contract now that they acquired veteran combo-guard Keyon Dooling will be able to make room for him on their roster. "There's more to me as a basketball player than what I've been stereotyped as," Carroll said while at the Rocky Mountain Revue. "I can handle the ball. In college, I just wasn't asked to run the team. Now, that's what they want me to do and I understand why. I just have to show people I can do that."
With the Nets, Carroll is hoping to join a backcourt loaded with Devin Harris and Dooling as the potential third point guard. Former first-round draft pick Marcus Williams was traded to Golden State the day after the Nets acquired Dooling, giving Carroll a slightly better chance of earning a roster spot.
"I think that is something that is going to be a continual adjustment for him," Nets assistant coach Brian Hill said after Tuesday's game against Utah. "That's one of the hardest things to do, is converting from being an off-guard to a point guard. He has done a good job offensively of running the team.
"Sometimes he still has that scorer-first mentality but he has done a good job of running the team ... and getting better with it and more comfortable with it in each game."
Still, finding a home in the NBA is something the former Aggie may not realize this season. He's prepared for something like that and has received advice from people who have been in his shoes.
"There's plenty of doubters," Spencer Nelson also a former USU great who has been invited to a few summer league teams and tried to make the adjustment from one position to another. "In everyone's mind there's a lot of reason he can't make it. He's too short, he's too old, he's too slow. Whatever. He can't change those things."
"What I've told him to focus on are the reasons he can make it," Nelson said. "He's a great shooter. He's unbelievably athletic. He's smart. He's a great teammate. And he's the hardest worker I've ever played with."
Recent comments
He has a chance, why not take it. And by the way, a lot of NBA players...
Re: Ford | July 31, 2008 at 8:40 a.m.
Car-Bear has an awesome shooting touch, and is motivated. Problem...
Ford | July 24, 2008 at 11:36 p.m.
I would take Carroll over Brevan Knight all day long and twice on...
TRADE | July 24, 2008 at 10:32 p.m.



