9 minute read

Coach check-in: Terry Butterfield

Men's basketball head coach says young team is expected to play 'exciting' brand of basketball this winter

Advertisement

TYLER BURKHARDT Editor-in-Chief

In this week’s Coach Check-in, I sat down with Terry Butterfield, men’s basketball head coach, to discuss the makeup of the team’s roster and what preparation for the season is going to look like.

So, first off, with the season starting in a couple weeks, what does preseason preparation for the team look like?

per se is affected by what happened last year. It'll be interesting to see how many of the guys in this current group, once they get to the end of their eligibility, elect to stay on and play an extra year. That's sort of a face card in the hip pocket, so to speak.

Talk to me about the pros and cons of having this younger group.

After reopening, GG EZ have slowly started to attract more regular

BEN NGUYEN Managing Editor

With a return to in-person operations, many student organizations, gaming or otherwise, have flocked to a rarer sight in America but a staple of Korean gaming culture: the local PC bang.

UTD’s local PC bang is the GG EZ Gaming Café, home to PCs loaded with a variety of games available for play on an hourly basis. Joseph Cho, UTD alum and one of the shop’s owners, runs the café with his two older brothers. Inspired by visiting PC bangs in Korea, the brothers opened up GG EZ concurrent with esports’ rise to cultural relevancy.

“Back then, people would be like, ‘Esports is not a sport.’ But it takes a lot of skill, like how people are skilled in basketball and football and stuff like that. Time and practice,” Cho said. “I feel like, in the esports field, it’s just going to continue to grow. We wanted to do something that would bring people together to play games and also enjoy tournaments. … We wanted to do something that would bring everyone together and enjoy their hobbies.”

The café is the standard PC bang affair: a $5 hourly rate to play on a PC loaded with competitive esports including League of Legends, Overwatch, PUBG, COD Warzone, Fortnite and more. The concept is not entirely foreign to the U.S., with a few other gaming cafes in the DFW area, but GG EZ is the closest one to campus. It acts as a dedicated play space for the most popular competitive video games, especially for students who may not be able to afford an expensive PC to run the games optimally. Cho said that the café serves as a hangout spot for a few UTD organizations as well.

“I went to UTD, so I tried to talk to a lot of people, clubs like UTD LoL. And we got the UTD VALORANT team to come out and play in the tournament,” Cho said. “Talking about JSA [Japanese Student Association], they’re actually here every other week on Thursdays.

After the meeting they want to do something, so they asked if they could come here and just chill out and play games, and we told them it was fine. And I believe we’re talking to someone else that goes to UTD; he actually hosts Guilty Gear and stuff like that every other Saturday.”

The café also hosts LAN tournaments for a variety of games, including Call of Duty, VALORANT, Super Smash Brothers, Teamfight Tactics and League of Legends. While they usually have about two to three events every week, Cho says that they’re starting to plan more regular events for people to attend.

“We’re trying to do this thing called Fight Club, which is all fighting games, and we’re just trying to get people out on Fridays. And we’re trying to do a Smash tournament and other games you can play like Tekken, Street Fighter, Dragon Ball Z, so we’re trying to get more people out here.”

In combination with clubs at UTD and the UTD Esports team, GG EZ is starting to provide more opportunities for competitive esports play locally in a LAN setting. The café offers both the main PC area and a set of private rooms that UTD clubs and the Esports team have used. While there haven’t

The best and worst of esports today

been a large amount of 5v5 events for games like Rainbow Six Siege and VALORANT, games like Teamfight Tactics where each contestant plays for themselves have attracted players. ITS senior and LOLUTD president Jennifer Nguyen recently set up a Teamfight Tactics tournament at the location with a cash prize, deciding on GG EZ over the cafes in Carrollton due to location and ease of setup.

“We didn’t need to use any of the private rooms; we could just use the [PCs] in the middle. We basically let them know two weeks ahead of time we were going to have some people and expecting two lobbys, three lobbys maximum,” Nguyen said. “It went pretty easily actually. Their methods of contact are email and Instagram, and using Instagram makes it a lot easier because it’s faster for us to communicate than just waiting for emails to go back and forth. They were really nice throughout the entire process and gave us a discount for having a lot of people. … Overall, it was very easy to work with them.”

In order to better design a competitive play space, Cho says that they’ll be holding more events in the future and expanding the kinds of games they run tournaments for so that they can attract a wider variety of players.

“On our Instagram, we try to post and ask the community what they want,” Cho said. We usually try to do it because we just want people to come out for the game they like to do – not just keep it kind of like a small pool [of games] but actually have a big pool. We’re trying to do Apex, PUBG and Dota 2.”

BEN NGUYEN Managing Editor

“Well, actually, today is our first official practice. October 15 sort of begins, begins it all for all of the U.S. Division Three basketball folks. The kids have been doing things on their own up to this point; they've been lifting and conditioning and getting in the gym on their own, but now I finally get my hands on them. It's always an exciting day to go into that first practice and have a chance to interact with them on a regular basis. Now, my upperclassmen tell me that the group we have this year is intense, enthusiastic. They really like the chemistry so far. Again, everything that they've done has been of an unofficial nature, but I have heard nothing but good things from my upperclassmen when I've asked them how everything was going. So, I think that's a real positive.”

That's great to hear. What is your preseason practice regimen for them going to look like for the next couple of weeks?

“Well, that's a great question. I'm always anxious about this period of time because we start practice today, October 15. Our first game is on November 9, so as we figure, we've got about 17 practice dates to get the team ready to play. And for me personally, it creates some anxiety for me because there's so much to cover in such a short period of time … and on top of that, we're trying to do a couple of new things this year. Which means, you know, that's going to be new for the upperclassmen as well as the new kids, so that necessitates going in there and teaching with precision teaching, with logic, you know, making sure they understand what new things we want to do. That's a, that's a big challenge for a coach, no matter how long he's been in the game.”

How has COVID and some of the affiliated changes – the extended eligibility, potentially disruption of recruitment activities the past year, etc. – how has that impacted the makeup of this year's roster?

“None of the guys that graduated last year elected to come back to the University. So, there are a number of guys obviously on our roster now that will have that extra year if they so desire. But probably the most unique thing about our team this year is that it’s a very young group: we have maybe one senior. But even Colton [Pruitt] didn't play last year because he tore his Achilles early on in practice. So, in a sense, he's a new guy too, but because we have such a young group, I don't know that our roster

“The only con that I can think of is that we'll take the floor for our first practice with some experience, but not total experience. We have a lot of new inexperienced players, and transitioning from the high school game to the college game is always a huge challenge because you're leaving one coach in his system and you now are with another coach who may see the game completely different. So, getting the new kids up to speed with our culture and in the way that we do things both offensively and defensively is a big deal, and we know that. Usually you're not going to see the best in a new kid until a little later in the year when he's really sort of adapted and feels comfortable.

Now on the other side of that, the pros are that it infuses a whole new energy, passion and excitement into our team. And our upperclassmen that I have talked to randomly have said that the new kids are really exciting to be around. They're not only talented but they just have great energy and great enthusiasm. They're all great kids, they have fit in with the upperclassmen very well. We believe in sort of a mantra of all for one and one for all. So, all conversation that's been directed to me has been very positive about this infusion of energy that the new kids are bringing around. …I feel very excited and optimistic about the kinds of people we have in the program; their character, their work ethic and all the intangibles lead me to a fairly strong level of excitement [this year].”

So, what's, what's the outlook for the year – what are you hoping to achieve?

“Well, our goal every year is to find a way to win our league and win our conference tournament, which then springboards into the national tournament. So that's always our goal. You know, we sort of view ourselves as a national program. I think our track record speaks to that, and I would want nothing less from our guys. I don't care if we're young; they don't care if we're inexperienced. When you play hard and you play with intelligence, you have a chance to win every game. So, hopefully, when we get to February, we're in there battling for a top spot in the ASC tournament and, and consequently, an opportunity, you know, to be one of the top dogs.

One thing I would want to do is to ask the campus community to get behind our basketball team. I think that our guys are going to play an exciting brand of basketball. I think [Comets] will have a lot to cheer about and get excited about if they like basketball. We're the only sport going during the winter, so I think it's a great opportunity to have an afternoon or night out, to come and see a ball game and to get excited and let some energy go in the stands. We need that. We welcome that. And we’re just as excited to see how this team evolves.”

Cloud 9 make it to knockouts

For the first time in 3 years, an NA team has made it past the group stage at the League of Legends World Championship. After starting 0-3 in the group stage, they were able to bring it back and deliver a hype tiebreaker performance to deliver NA to the quarterfinals. NAmen!

LoL team is still scaling

The UTD LoL team still seems to be finding itself, with a 2-4 record in the UAL and a 3-3 record in the CLoL Warmup tournament. They still have time leading up to the main CLoL tournament to work on their fundamentals, including executing on plays with their jungler and getting consistent teamfight setups.

Sora is finally here

Sora, one of the most requested Smash characters in history, has overcome the legal and logistical hurdles to be added to the game! With a simple moveset with great combo potential, the last of the Smash DLC characters could "unlock" a place at the top of locals with his release.

Overwatch finishes top 4

If this is a loss, then we're not doing that bad. Ending a mostly undefeated streak, the Comets take their first few losses at the Will English Invitational IV, making a loser's bracket run to a top four finish. As the team improves and continues gelling together, the faithful can expect tournament wins to come.

Comets come racing into CRL

The CRL fall season has begun, and with that the Rocket League team made it through the qualifiers to get into CRL league play. Only dropping a series to CU Boulder Black, they made it through with a 7-1 record and are expected to keep on blasting through the season of league play.

This article is from: