Mike Muscala's recruiting video arrived at 30 Division I schools in the summer of 2008. The 12-minute montage was designed to showcase his entire repertoire of basketball skills, however subtle some appeared.
His father, Bob, did not include any dunks in splicing together highlights of Mike's junior season at Roseville. Instead, he chose fundamentals over flash, hopeful that college coaches would get a true snapshot of his son's talent.
He featured clips of his son playing help defense and moving without the ball on offense. He focused on his footwork in the post and his ability to finish with both hands around the rim. He picked five or six plays that ended with his son missing a shot because, well, he worked hard to get himself in position to take a good shot.
Bob even included snippets of his son sitting on the bench cheering for his teammates.
"I still admire that," Bob said.
Few would have predicted the tall, skinny kid on that tape would blossom into one of college basketball's best players who has a chance to end his decorated career at Bucknell with one final flourish. The 11th-seeded Bison face Butler in their opening game of the NCAA tournament on Thursday. Bucknell is making its second tournament appearance in three seasons and the team's postseason hopes rest largely on the shoulders of their 6-11 senior center.
Muscala is a two-time Patriot League Player of the Year and Bucknell's career leading scorer with 2,027 points. He leads the nation with 22 double-doubles and is the only Division I player to average at least 18 points and 11 rebounds.
He earned a trifecta of awards this season, becoming the first player in Patriot League history to sweep Player of the Year, Defensive Player of the Year and Scholar-Athlete of the Year honors. He's widely projected to be a second-round pick in the NBA draft this summer.