From: AP via SI.com

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) – Mark Titus seldom even gets into a game for No. 21 Ohio State. Incredibly, that hasn’t kept him from becoming one of the most popular and famous college basketball players in the nation.

How many stars have a blog that has had more than 2.1 million visits? How many guys scoring 20 points a game have produced a video called “The Rainmaker” for NBA scouts that has gotten more than 115,000 hits on YouTube.com in the last week? How many future pros are cheered by opposing fans and players and have been lavishly profiled in The New York Times, on Yahoo.com and on ESPN’s SportsNation and First Take?

And that’s the point. Titus’ blog is about NOT being a superstar or being worshipped at the age of 20. It’s about losing, getting little or no respect, learning and having fun – sort of a microcosm of the college experience.

“There are so few stars, and that’s why they are stars,” Titus said after taking his lumps in Thursday’s practice. “There are only so many people who can win the national player of the year. But on every single team there are two or three guys that will never get in. And that’s true for every team at every level. Everyone at some point, it seems, has been a bench warmer. And they can identify with that.”

Titus named his blog “Club Trillion” because that’s a typical box-score line for a scrub: a 1 in the minute column, followed by nine zeros (for shots attempted and made, and so on). Now Club Trillion has actually become a brand, if you can believe it. More on that later.

It’s been a weird and wild ride for a kid who scored 1,000 points and was considered a high school star back in Brownsburg, Ind., a town of roughly 18,000 souls nestled in the middle of farm country in the basketball-crazy state.

Titus turned down a few scholarship offers and came to Ohio State because he wanted to be a part of a major university with big-time athletics. Not long after he came to campus in the autumn 2006, he offered to serve as a manager for the basketball team. After a week or so of filling up water bottles and picking up wet towels, he quit.

Within a week, he got a call back. Ohio State’s prized big-man recruit, Greg Oden, had an injured wrist and a couple of other players had hurt their ankles. The Buckeyes didn’t have 10 guys to even scrimmage. Would Titus consider being a walk-on?

He embraced the opportunity and stuck around when Oden, who would go on to be the No. 1 overall pick in the NBA draft after that season, and the others returned.

A few weeks in, he got the idea to write about being cannon fodder on the nation’s No. 1 team. He didn’t really know what a blog was, but he researched it and started one. It was a way to inform his family and friends back home of what was going on with him, and it was a way to log some of what he was going through so he wouldn’t forget.

“When he first told me kind of what he was doing, I just said, ‘Hey, use your head. Be smart,”’ said coach Thad Matta, who concedes he doesn’t read it closely but also concedes that maybe he should. “I haven’t heard anything otherwise.”

Titus wrote that he skipped several preseason conditioning workouts this fall and Matta and his staff were OK with it.

“They understood that because I’m paying my own way through college, it’s not a huge deal if I skip a few workouts so I can make some money bagging groceries at my neighborhood supermarket,” Titus wrote. “Sure I used the off time to go golfing and never actually did any grocery bagging, but the coaches don’t have to know that.”

One of the first times Titus gained public notice came after the Buckeyes capped a 35-4 season with an 84-75 loss to Florida in the 2007 national championship game after that freshman season. The team was welcomed home with several thousand people showing up at the arena.

Speculation was rampant that Oden, point guard Michael Conley and shooting forward Daequan Cook might skip to the NBA after their freshman seasons. When Oden was introduced, the crowd chanted, “ONE MORE YEAR!”

That prompted Titus to grab the microphone and say, “I heard the fans chanting ‘one more year.’ I sat down with my family and just want to say that I’ll be back next year.”

The crowd went nuts. A legend was born – well, except for the basketball part. To date, he has played in 31 games and has scored nine points, his production (and playing time) falling off precipitously the past three seasons when he has combined for just four points in 17 games).

The blog has done much better, crossing the 2-million visits mark recently. To celebrate, Titus and friend Andy Keller produced the 4-minute “Rainmaker” video in a couple……

READ THE REST OF THE ARTICLE DIRECTLY FROM THE SOURCE PAGE AT SI.COM BY CLICKING HERE.

Club Trillion: http://clubtrillion.blogspot.com/

A Kid Again: http://www.akidagain.org/

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This entry was posted on Saturday, January 23rd, 2010 at 2:11 pm.
Categories: BUCKEYE COUNTRY, MEN's BASKETBALL.

One Comment, Comment or Ping

  1. Buckeyes’ Titus famous for NOT playing
    http://bit.ly/752OXF

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