powered by Google  
  Track your favorite teams and players.
Free membership, Register Now
Already a member, Log In
 

Scales tipping in Henderson-Niles' favor in Memphis comeback attempt - NCAA Division I Mens Basketball Sports News
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Home   Fantasy     NFL  |  MLB  |  NBA  |  NHL  |  College FB  |  College BK  |  Golf  |  More CBS College | MaxPreps | Mobile | Shop  
Coll BK Home | Scoreboard | Standings | Schedules | Stats | Teams | Players | Rankings | Video | Women
 

Scales tipping in Henderson-Niles' favor in Memphis comeback attempt

MEMPHIS, Tenn. -- Josh Pastner had finished individual workouts for the day, showered, and thrown on some clean clothes. Now he was leaving the Finch Center practice facility on the Memphis campus, on his way out the door to a school function that required his presence.

But first, a question.

"Can Pierre have pizza?"

This is Pierre Henderson-Niles after dropping 69 pounds. (Photo by Joe Murphy)  
This is Pierre Henderson-Niles after dropping 69 pounds. (Photo by Joe Murphy)    
That's what Pastner stopped and asked Richard Hogans, the director of performance enhancement for the Tiger basketball team. Pastner's players were having pies for dinner on this night, you see. Before heading out, the first-year coach needed to make sure such was OK for his real life incredible shrinking 6-foot-8 power forward.

"Where are they getting the pizza?" Hogans asked.

"Garibaldi's," said Pastner.

"I know Garibaldi's can do a grilled chicken pizza," Hogans said. "Just make sure Pierre gets grilled chicken."

Done.

Pastner made sure Pierre got grilled chicken.

Pierre made sure he only ate the grilled chicken.

So yeah, this comeback story is still progressing as planned, and it really is wild to stand there after a workout and watch Pierre Henderson-Niles jog over to a scale, step on it and smile.

"I'm 278," Henderson-Niles said before tackling that grilled chicken. "I was 327 to start the summer."

And 347 not too long ago.

Shedding the pounds

There's a good chance you don't know Pierre Henderson-Niles by name.

Or by face.

Or by statistics.

Truth is, he hasn't done much of note nationally except slap a fan at UAB two years ago, and I'm not here to promise that he'll be one of the surprises of this season. But what I am here to tell you is that Henderson-Niles has at the very least put himself in position to be one of the surprises of this season, and if weight issues have ever kept you from doing what you wanted to do -- running that marathon, getting that job, dating that girl, etc., -- then I offer the Memphis senior as an example of what's possible when you just decide you're tired of wasting your talent.

"Pierre was supposed to be a better version of [former C-USA standout] Chris Massie," said Keith Easterwood, Henderson-Niles AAU coach. "He was a top 40 prospect back then, and he was putting in work. I've seen him dropstep on the Odens and Durants. But then he went and became a Sasquatch, and he hasn't ever been the same."

Consider: Scout.com rated Henderson-Niles as the nation's 33rd-best prospect while he was a high school junior, but he wasn't even listed as one of the nation's top 30 power forwards by the time he enrolled at Memphis. His fall was fast and steep, and it was almost exclusively related to weight gain that had Henderson-Niles on the wrong side of John Calipari for three seasons and on the verge of quitting basketball all together.

Meet the old Henderson-Niles, who averaged 1.6 points in his first three seasons for the Tigers. (Getty Images)  
Meet the old Henderson-Niles, who averaged 1.6 points in his first three seasons for the Tigers. (Getty Images)  
"I thought about quitting plenty of times," Henderson-Niles said. "But I stuck it out, and look at me now."

You really should look at him now. From his heaviest point to his current state, Henderson-Niles has shed 69 pounds, i.e., roughly the weight of Tila Tequila. He looks great, says he feels great, and he's made believers out of his teammates and coaches thanks to a newfound work ethic that, frankly, not many expected or thought was possible.

"Nope," Pastner answered quickly when asked whether he ever believed Henderson-Niles would be at 278 on the first week of individual workouts. "I didn't think he could get here at this rapid rate, but he's starting to have self-motivation and self-discipline."

"I've walked [into the Finch Center] on a Saturday night before, and Pierre has been in here on the treadmill on his own. He's just got great confidence about himself now, and he's smiling and he's happy. And I told him that he should feel great about himself. I told him to look in the mirror. He should have super self-esteem. He looks great."

Added assistant Willis Wilson: "When you walk in and a manager says, 'Pierre was in here last night on the treadmill' ... that's a sign that the guy is after something. He's investing in himself in a way that he, apparently, has never done before."

Again, it would be foolish to expect somebody who has averaged 1.6 points through three years of college to be a factor in his senior year. So Memphis fans, if you're reading this, I advise you to be cautious and patient and skeptical, for now. Still, I'll say this: When you consider that Henderson-Niles is in the best shape of his adult life, then remember how dominant he was as a freshman, sophomore and junior in high school, and then recognize that Memphis only has one other true post player (junior college transfer Will Coleman) on its roster, the idea of a breakout season really does start to make some sense.

It could happen out of necessity.

It could happen because Henderson-Niles genuinely flourishes.

Either way, count me among the interested to watch it play out.

"I always thought I'd be one of the top players on the team because at one point I was one of the top players in the country, but then I put on all that weight, and a lot of people don't even know where I'm at," Henderson-Niles said. "But now I want to change that. I want to build that [notoriety] back up and have everybody talking about Pierre Niles."

By the looks of it, he seems on his way to doing exactly that.

The scale still reads 278.

A little grilled chicken didn't hurt a thing.

 
For more from Gary Parrish, check him out on Twitter: @GaryParrishCBS
 

Talk Back
Reputation:94
Level:All-Star
Since:Jan 23, 2009

September 9, 2009 9:25 am
I remember this guy talking trash before the 2008 national championship game.  He talked about Memphis being on a mission and not being satisfied after beating UCLA - and contrasting that with how Kansas celebrated after beating UNC as if it had won a championship.  Not sure if he even played against UCLA, but whatever.  Next time I saw him was on the bench, pouting and draped in co ...(more)
Reputation:97
Level:Superstar
Since:Mar 21, 2008

September 8, 2009 7:02 pm
Good luck to Niles. Cal kept him around because he knew he might need a big body to steal some minutes. Cal probably didn't think too much more on it as the big guy wasn't a hot-shot, 10-star recruit. So Cal probably put very little effort into Niles. So he got very little out of him...garbage in and garbage out - as they say, or as is often the case, if you only invest a littl ...(more)
Reputation:94
Level:All-Star
Since:Aug 20, 2009

September 9, 2009 10:08 am
It's good to see Pierre trying to lose weight on his own. Self-Motivation comes from within, and I don't think he had that when Calipari was here. Josh is the reason for that motivation, because he believes in his players and he knows that, the only way to get someone to trust in him is to keep them motivated and preach to them self-confidence. Coach Cal philosophy was, if you don't ...(more)
Reputation:95
Level:Superstar
Since:Jan 17, 2009

September 8, 2009 7:46 pm
This kid has work ethic and he has the will to become a better basketball player. Anytime you lose 69 pounds you have my respect and its obvious that you not only want a better basketball career but that you want to live a better lifestyle.... unless your now a 75 pound anorexic thats a different story. ...(more)
Reputation:99
Level:Superstar
Since:Sep 12, 2006

September 8, 2009 3:23 pm
You're right Gary - never heard of the guy before in my life. But even if he doesn't have a breakout season and create a post-college basketball career for himself, at the very least he has positioned himself to have a longer, healthier life. Frankly, this is a win-win situation for Henderson-Niles and hopefully he can live up to the potential he showed back in high school.
Reputation:96
Level:Superstar
Since:Mar 16, 2009

September 8, 2009 4:10 pm
This is exactly what Memphis needs....Pierre to step up.  It seems like Pastner's way of motivating is working better for Pierre than Cal's do it yourself if not you won't play method.  It would be nice for Pierre to have a breakout season his senior year.  But breakout season or not he'll still average more than 1.6 ppg...... he has too.  Good article Gary (aka Mr. College bas ...(more)
Reputation:90
Level:All-Star
Since:Mar 30, 2009

September 9, 2009 2:10 pm
I am proud of him.  I sure hope he does have a great year. Thumbs up for doing this article.
Reputation:90
Level:All-Star
Since:Feb 9, 2007

September 9, 2009 11:59 am
Hey Gary, try writign about a team other than Memphis, Kentucky, or Loisville. You recycle the same crap over and over. There's 300+ teams in D1...get creative and get off your chair and hustle up a real story.
Reputation:88
Level:All-Star
Since:Apr 23, 2009

September 9, 2009 8:22 pm
how much weight did he put on?
 
 
 
 
Gary Parrish
Recent Columns
 
Headlines
 
 
 
CBS Sports Store
Twins Kansas Jayhawks Franchise Hat Adult
Save 15% on NCAA Gear
Support your school today Shop now
 
 
 
 
 
Fantasy Basketball at CBSSports.com