The Oklahoman

NCAA TOURNAMENT

- BY DAVE SKRETTA AP Sports Writer

The unsavory news that followed Kansas all season seems to have stopped, at least for the moment. What hasn’t stopped is the opinions reverberat­ing all over town about the Jayhawks and, more specifical­ly, star freshman Josh Jackson.

LAWRENCE, KAN. — Hundreds of people file through the doors of the 23rd Street Brewery for lunch and dinner every day, most bound together by their unrequited love of ales, IPAs and the Kansas Jayhawks.

A glance at the menu confirms they’re among friends: There’s the “Crimson Phog,” an Irish-style red ale, and “Rock Chalk Raspberry Wheat,” while food choices include the “Danny Manning Marsala Chicken” and “The Bill Self,” a mac-and-cheese dish topped with buffalo chicken tenders.

But as the Jayhawks prepare to play in nearby Kansas City on Thursday for a spot in the Elite Eight, not every conversati­on has to do with how the team has played.

Many have to do with the behavior of players around campus, particular­ly star freshman Josh Jackson, who is likely in his final games before making NBA millions. Not only is Jackson a crucial part of a team with national title aspiration­s, he has also been part of three off-court issues that haunt the Jayhawks — including one case where he threatened to beat a woman who tossed a drink at a teammate, then caused more than $1,000 in damage to her car.

The legal woes have caused a divide among one of the most tightknit fan bases in college sports, one side choosing unequivoca­lly to support Jayhawks coach Bill Self and his players, the other struggling reconcile the unsavory headlines with the success.

“I love KU basketball. I love the players and the team,” said Matt Llewellyn, who owns and operates 23rd Street Brewery. “I want to think positive things. I don’t want to think negatively about them.”

Yet even Llewellyn acknowledg­es his disappoint­ment in some of the recent news.

The flood began in early December, when forward Carlton Bragg Jr. was charged with misdemeano­r battery, only to be exonerated later by video evidence.

Things became much more serious about eight days later, when local police said they were investigat­ing a reported rape at McCarthy Hall — the $12 million dormitory next to Allen Fieldhouse built primarily to house members of the men’s basketball team. No suspects have been identified and no charges filed, but five players have been listed as witnesses, including Jackson and star guard Frank Mason III.

During the investigat­ion, drug parapherna­lia was found belonging to Bragg, and the sophomore was briefly suspended. That case was settled last month when Bragg was granted diversion.

The case that’s been making the most headlines, though, involves an altercatio­n outside a Lawrence bar in early December. Women’s basketball player McKenzie Calvert is accused of throwing a drink at sophomore guard Lagerald Vick, and their dispute continued into the parking lot, where Jackson allegedly kicked in her taillight and caused other damage.

An affidavit released last week states Jackson threatened to “beat” the woman, prompting many — particular­ly on social media — to cast judgment on both sides of the dispute.

“We live in a society where everything is done in 140 characters, and headlines, and there’s been a lot of misleading headlines,” said Bob Fescoe, who hosts a sports-talk radio program in Kansas City and spent part of his show discussing the case earlier this week.

“Especially here, there are a lot of divided fans — you have Kansas, Missouri, Kansas State fans, and they’re not budging,” Fescoe said. “If you believe something happened, you’re staying on that side of it, and if you don’t, then you’re staying on that side of it.”

Jackson was suspended for the Jayhawks’ Big 12 Tournament quarterfin­al for what Self called “an accumulati­on” of incidents, and they promptly lost to TCU in a major upset.

It’s not easy to have your name across the ticker each and every day,” Self said, pointing out that most of Jackson’s trouble happened months ago and that discipline has long been handed out.

“I don’t think it should be motivation,” the coach added, “but I also don’t think it should be an excuse or a distractio­n. It’s just sometimes families go through stuff and you got to put blinders on and go at the job at hand, and I think they’ve found their basketball court as their safe haven.”

The issues that have dogged the Jayhawks have created an us-against-theworld mentality.

Legacies matters at Kansas, a program founded by James Naismith, the game’s inventor, and where Phog Allen, Dean Smith and Larry Brown made their names. Five national championsh­ip banners hang in the rafters at one end of Allen Fieldhouse.

What will the legacy of this year’s team be?

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 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? Kansas guard Josh Jackson celebrates a basket on Sunday in Tulsa. The drips and dribbles of unsavory news that have followed Kansas all season seems to have stopped, at least for the moment.
[AP PHOTO] Kansas guard Josh Jackson celebrates a basket on Sunday in Tulsa. The drips and dribbles of unsavory news that have followed Kansas all season seems to have stopped, at least for the moment.

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