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Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Controlling Games on Defense


Chris Kramer's theory on pain- "It's just weakness leaving the body"- is one hard often in Marine boot camp. The junior guard has adopted that creed because he knows plenty about pain. He suffers from a condition known as compartment syndrome, which causes high pressure levels in muscle tissue. Two times he had to undergo surgery for it in 2007, and the seven-inch scars on each of his shins are a reminder of that. While he would prefer not to have them, he admits that the scars "do fit my identity".
The reigning Big Ten defender of the year, Kramer is 6' 3'', 205 pounds and built like a football free safety. "I'm usually bigger than players I'm guarding," he says, "so I try to body them up and get them frustrated." Never was this more evident than on Feb. 12 last season, when he went up against Michigan State's 6-foot, 185-pound star, Drew Netizel, and held him to six points on 1-of-7 shooting. "Every time Neitzel came off a screen, Chris was right there," says sophomore guard E'Twaun Moore.
Kramer says he can tell when he's doing his job well because his opponent starts blaming his teammates, and in that game Neitzel "was yelling at every other person on the court," Kramer says. "Once he gets to a point where he's that frustrated, you know you've won the battle.
Kramer's 2.3 steals per game last season helped Purdue rank eighth nationally in the percentage of opponents' possessions that ended in turnovers (25.5). His meager offensive stats- 6.8 points, 21.7 % three-point shooting- belie his value to a team that surprised the Big Ten by coming within one win of a regular season title. Says coach Matt Painter, "Very few people affect the game as much as Kramer does without scoring from the guard position. If you affect the game without scoring, you're normally a big man, dominating the glass, getting a lot of blocked shots. He's able to do it by disrupting the flow, getting in passing lanes, shutting down scorers and just playing tough basketball."
"Chris gets up in a guy's face right from the start," says Morre, "and you can tell that guy is thinking, Oh, man. He ain't ever going to stop."
-Story from Sports Illustrated