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If you've watched Arizona State basketball during the Herb Sendek coaching era, one thing has probably stood out to you. That, of course, being the deliberate tempo with which the Sun Devils operated on offense.

Paired with Sendek's matchup-zone defense, the Sun Devils played a slow-down style of offense designed to keep the score down and give ASU a chance to "win ugly."

That's about to change.

"I would be hard-pressed to believe that anybody will push the ball faster than Arizona State, outside of maybe an outlier, you know someone who chooses to play like Paul Westhead or something of that nature," Sendek announced during the team's annual media day in Tempe Tuesday.

Last season, Sendek's team ranked tied for 299th in the nation (out of 338 teams) in scoring offense, putting up an average of just 61 points per game, so such a proclamation can only be considered bold.

The big reason for Sendek's view on tempo changing is the presence of freshman guard Jahii Carson. The highly-recruited star from Mesa High School had to sit out the entire 2011-12 campaign after being ruled academically ineligible, although he was allowed to practice with the team. Carson averaged 32.2 points and 6.6 assists per game during his senior season.

"I think I'm one of the fastest guys in the country and with the offense that coach is putting in, I think I'm going to flourish in that offense," Carson said. "I think everybody's looking forward to pushing the ball up the court and beating the defense down and scoring easy buckets."

Sun Devil fans have anxiously awaited Carson's arrival on the court, especially during a trying 10-21 season that saw ASU finish 10th in the Pac-12. It was equally difficult for Carson to sit out and watch, but his head coach was impressed with the way he conducted himself.

"I think Jahii handled a very challenging circumstance exceptionally well with a lot of grace and a lot of dignity," Sendek said. "To be put in the public light it the way that he was and to handle it with the grace that he did, to me, was really impressive."

Now that he's academically eligible, Carson can't wait to get going.

"Oh, I'm ready," he said. "I wish the game was tomorrow. I'm chomping at the bit, ready to go out there and get it."

Arizona Sports' Craig Grialou contributed to this report

4 Comments   |   Join the conversation »
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    Patrick Peterson's Talent wrote...
    It won't matter
    They're going nowhere. You need recruits to be successful, and the Wildcats are owning the country. It's too bad, because I actually like Herb Sendek, but the days of James Harden are over. Keep hyping up football, and we'll keep winning at basketball.
  • Abuse
    esc R. wrote...
    Need more talent
    Devils have lost a lot of talent due to transfers or disciplined. Its good they are finally changing their poor recruiting offense that kills each players potential to a more fast pace. Carson is a stud and has the potential to be the best in the pac. For him to thrive, he has to run and push the ball. But Herb has said this in the past. Problem with them is the talent is not around Carson. JB is improving, but this team needs more talent and Herb has been a huge failure in recruiting.
  • Abuse
    esc R. wrote...
    Cont. talent
    Not sure he can change the ship devils bball is headed by this, but I hope he does. UofA is kicking our butts in recruiting, but I believe many of them are over ranked and hyped as players. ASU could use some of those overhyped players instead of flat out scrubs. Still, bball is what they do better then ASU.
  • Abuse
    JW L. wrote...
    Gotta begin somewhere
    The Devils have a big hill to climb, but at least it looks like they are trying. I think Sendek saw the new assistant coaches were buddies of his AD and decided to 'play ball' by making some changes. Its about time. If you want the good recruits, you better give them a tempo they will buy into.
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