Ron Baker (basketball)

Ron Baker

Baker in 2015
No. 31 Wichita State Shockers
Position Shooting guard
League Missouri Valley Conference
Personal information
Born March 30, 1993
Hays, Kansas
Nationality American
Listed height 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)
Listed weight 220 lb (100 kg)
Career information
High school Scott City (Scott City, Kansas)
College Wichita State (2012–present)
Career highlights and awards

Ron Baker (born March 30, 1993) is an American basketball player who currently plays for the Wichita State Shockers men's basketball team. The shooting guard played just one game in his redshirt freshman year and attended Scott Community High School in Scott City, Kansas. Baker is best known for being named to the Missouri Valley Conference All-Conference First Team in his sophomore year.

Early life

Born in Hays, Kansas, Baker spent his early childhood in the tiny farming town of Utica, Kansas growing up with one sister, Audrey Baker, and one brother, Sloan Baker. They continued to compete against each other for their entire school careers Sloan on the same team while Logan lived thirty minutes away in a neighboring town. In a 2014 interview, he recalled, "I have memories of when was I very, very little, holding a basketball in my dog’s doghouse when I was about 1." His father noted that he eventually gravitated toward basketball for practical reasons: "It was easier to haul him around and easier to get five or six to play basketball than to play baseball, where you’d need 12 to 14."[1]

High school career

While he developed into a star at Scott Community High, and dreamed of playing for the state's premier college program at Kansas, he was slow to grow into his body; by the end of his junior year, he was only 6 feet (1.83 m) tall, and had drawn interest from only two Division I programs: Arkansas–Little Rock and South Dakota State.[1] However, he grew to 6-3 (1.91 m) during the summer between his junior and senior seasons.[1]

In his senior year, Baker helped the team finish with a 25-1 record. In return, he was named 3A First-Team All-State in Kansas. The peak of his high school basketball career was when he hit a game winning put-back buzzer beater against Minneapolis High School to win the Class 3A state basketball championship, also scoring 26 points earlier throughout the game. As a result, Baker helped the school win its first ever Class 3A Championship, although the school had made two different appearances in the past.[2]

Nonetheless, Baker remained little-known among Division I coaches. ESPN.com writer Eamonn Brennan noted in 2014,[3]

ESPN's RecruitingNation maintains detailed scouting reports on hundreds of the best high school basketball players in the country. . . . Ron Baker's profile read as follows:

"Will walk-on at Wichita State in 2011-12 and spend a redshirt year. Expected to be on scholarship starting in 2012-13."

And that was it. Next to Baker's name was "NR," which stands for "Not Ranked." The same abbreviation sits next to secondary lists for "position," "regional" and "state." Baker — who requested a redshirt year when he committed, as a walk-on, to Wichita State in April 2011 — couldn't have been more off the recruiting radar.

After his senior season, Kansas invited him to visit the campus. Baker had thoughts about walking on there, but the invitation occurred during the middle of his high school baseball season. Baker's father recalled that Ron felt that his basketball game was rusty, and that "he didn't want to embarrass himself" in a potential scrimmage.[1]

College career

Baker as a redshirt freshman for the 2012–13 Wichita State Shockers

Baker chose to play for the Wichita State Shockers after also having interest in Arkansas–Little Rock, Eastern Illinois, and South Dakota State.[4] Rather than playing in his first season with the Shockers, Baker had the entire year redshirted after a reluctant approval from head coach Gregg Marshall.

In his first season on the court, Baker emerged as one of the elite free-throw shooters on Wichita State. He finished the season shooting for a free-throw percentage of .822, the highest for a qualified player on the team. Baker did not prove himself to be an efficient scorer and played just eighteen games in the entire season due to a stress fracture in his left foot.[5] He eventually played a major role when the Shockers made an unanticipated run into the semifinals of the 2013 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament. Ron Baker shot 40 percent from the field, 42.9 percent on three-pointers, most notably scoring 16 points in a huge win over No. 1 Gonzaga (tied for team-high). He earned no major awards by the time the season came to a close.

Entering the 2013–14 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Baker became known as one of the MVC's premier shooters. He, Cleanthony Early, and Fred VanVleet led the team in scoring and had a major influence on Wichita State's season, which saw the Shockers become the first NCAA Division I men's team to enter the NCAA tournament undefeated in over 20 years. Baker was named to the 2014 MVC All-Conference First Team and the CBE Hall of Fame Classic's Most Valuable Player after finishing his first season with a double-digit scoring average. After the Shockers' season ended in the NCAA tournament at the hands of Kentucky and its highly touted freshman class, Baker indicated that one of the Wildcats' top recruits, Aaron Harrison, told him, "You are a bad, bad, bad boy."[3]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Gregorian, Vahe (March 22, 2014). "Ron Baker embodies spirit of Wichita State’s second March in the national spotlight". The Kansas City Star. Retrieved March 23, 2014.
  2. http://www.scottcountyrecord.com/sports/baker-hits-game-winner-for-3a-state-title Ron Baker hits the Game-Winner for 3A State Title
  3. 3.0 3.1 Brennan, Eamonn (August 27, 2014). "The art of talent evaluation". ESPN.com. Retrieved August 27, 2014.
  4. https://sports.yahoo.com/ncaa/basketball/recruiting/player-Ron-Baker-125003 Ron Baker - Yahoo! Sports
  5. http://www.goshockers.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=7500&ATCLID=205835905 MBB: Ron Baker diagnosed with a stress fracture

External links