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Chilbert arenas 14 years, 3 months ago.
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- Posted on: Tue, 04/17/2012 - 6:48am #38386

McDunkinHe’s not going to be confused with Harrison Barnes, Kendall Marshall orJared Sullinger, but while those three underclassman are just a number of college players who have already declared themselves as early entrants into the 2012 NBA Draft, Kyryl Natyazhko is making some early pro moves of his own.
Who?
Earlier this week, Natyazhko left the University of Arizona’s basketball team and intends to play professionally in Europe after a three-year college career that was less than impressive.
The 6-11, 265 pound center averaged 1.1 points, 1.6 rebounds and 0.2 assists per game in 22 games last season as a junior, and during his three-years at Arizona averaged 1.7 points, 2.0 rebounds and 0.2 blocked shots per game in 91 appearances.
Aside from the sub-par numbers, is this another growing trend we will start to see with college basketball?
When times get tough on campus, jump to play ball overseas.
Right now, that is the route Natyazhko has decided to travel. For some foreign-born college players that option remains a constant back-up plan.
This past season at Arizona was filled with growing pains for Natyazhko, a native of the Dnipropetrovsk, Ukraine who first came to the U.S. from the Ukraine in 2007 and enrolled at IMG Academy in Florida.
Back in late February, Natyazhko was suspended for one-game against USC because of an unspecified violation of team rules, which essentially became a telling sign of where Natyazhko’s tenure at Arizona was heading. Head coach Sean Miller grew increasingly exasperated at Natyazhko’s lack of frontline production over the centers time with the program, so foregoing his senior season of college was understandably a mutual decision despite Miller explaining Natyazhko, "would only do it if an excellent opportunity presented itself."
This isn’t to say Natyazhko won’t find success opting to play in Europe. At 22-years old and with his size the offers should be there. And while Natyazhko has not yet signed with a club overseas and is in the process of signing with an agency, the suspect numbers he put up at Arizona could limit his options on where he’ll play overseas.
Yet the numbers don’t tell the whole story here. Depending where Natyazhko signs — perhaps with BC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk, his hometown team in the Ukrainian Basketball SuperLeague – experience will certainly go a long way.
In 2010 and rooted in the Ukrainian National Team, Natyazhko helped his under-20 team finish eighth at the 2010 European Championships in Croatia, and averaged 17.2 points, 8.4 rebounds and 1.1 blocks per game.
Those are the kind of numbers Sean Miller thought he’d see in Tucson.
Instead, Natyazhko is turning pro a year early and heading overseas.
Chances are he won’t be the last either.
0 - Posted on: Tue, 04/17/2012 - 7:08am #660440

mikeyvthedonParticipantI am sure that will get him some job playing ball overseas. I remember him doing well in the U-20 Euro’s and getting people excited about his upside, but it never seemed to translate at Arizona. I honestly did not think he was that bad, guessing he would get PT for the Ducks, but he could not beat out Angelo Chol last year, so who knows. T
hink he saw the writing on the wall with Arizona bringing in Tarczewski at center, Jerrett at 4/5 and Brandon Ashley getting time at likely both forward spots. They even signed a JUCO PF named Matt Korcheck, so I think they are fairly covered up front. Much like Josiah Turner moving on, I doubt Sean Miller batted an eye lash. If any players were expendable, it was those two. Turner seemed to never fit in and Natyazhko never developed.
0 - Posted on: Tue, 04/17/2012 - 7:56am #660468

Chilbert arenasParticipantSo much front line depth coming in next year and Chol developing he’d never get off the bench at UA
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