Pillows plentiful on K-State schedule

Men's basketball coach Wooldridge takes page from Snyder's standard operating procedure

The basketball schedule Kansas State will play this season is so soft, you could spread it on your morning bagel. The Wildcats will face every hyphenated institution short of Colgate-Palmolive.

K-State football coach Bill Snyder is notorious for stuffing his nonconference schedules with teams that take their guaranteed paydays and four-touchdown beatings with a wink and a smile.

This is different. Jim Wooldridge has not yet built K-State basketball into a national power. Should he get there someday, perhaps he will be eager to line up his Wildcats against Kentucky’s, Arizona’s and Villanova’s.

But after his three seasons, the program is 14 games under .500, and the current team will feature four freshmen in its rotation.

They are promising freshmen, but they eventually will compete in the nation’s best conference. If they’re going to win at all in the Big 12, they’ll first need to understand what winning is like. Which is where Birmingham-Southern, Gardner-Webb and Bethune-Cookman come in.

And why K-State will leave home only three times before league play. And why the average RPI ranking of its nonconference opponents last season was 216.

“In how you gain confidence, there’s no way to do it other than to win,” Wooldridge says. “There’s no guaranteed win on the schedule. Nobody’s going to forfeit. We have to play well, we have to play together, but we are at home. And that’s an advantage.”

One trend that apparently grew from Syracuse’s 2003 national championship is the renewed popularity of homebound scheduling by major conference teams.

Pittsburgh will not leave its city limits for a nonleague road game. Cincinnati’s only preconference road test is at Valparaiso. Auburn will cross the Alabama state line just once before Southeastern Conference play. And the Orangemen will play only one nonleague road game.

For Kansas State, however, the motivation to load up on teams from low-major conferences is different. The Wildcats add one of the nation’s top recruiting classes to a group of four returning regulars — none of whom was a double-figures scorer last year or owns more than a year of Big 12 experience.

Sophomore power forward Marques Hayden might mature into a top rebounder, and senior guards Frank Richards, Jarrett Hart and Tim Ellis are OK.

But K-State’s future is invested in point guard Dez Willingham and small forward Cartier Martin, both of whom appeared on many top 50 recruiting lists . After going 1-9 on the road last season, K-State obviously needs to improve in that area.

Two of the three nonleague games away from Manhattan are against respectable opponents (Oregon State and Saint Louis). But save for a Dec. 3 visit from Wyoming, the Wildcats are taking it easy at home.

If they can plow through the early schedule and experience a smidge of success in the Big 12, they might have a chance at making the NIT.