Thanks for posting this. We don't know if it is the truth or not. It did seem believable until I read the part about Domingo being one of the team's best three-point shooters. Domingo must have been lighting it up in practice, because he did not make many threes in games.
I have to feel sorry for the kid. He had such high aspirations, seemed to do what the coach asked, suffered a lot of injuries, and then was unceremoniously dumped. To ask a kid to get in the best shape of his life over the summer, and then dump him, if it happened, was not a good way to handle a player, whether he was potentially in the rotation or on the bench. Chauca plays up his own abilities, which frankly are not what most fans saw on the floor. And he writes with resentment, which he may be justified in doing or thinking, but it means we need to wait for the all truth to come out, which it may never do. It took some courage, i guess, to write this, but I don't like hearing this about a Cal player and a Cal coach.
As to being late for practice, you can't just hear about the time, you have to always see if the time is posted, and if not, you need to ask the coach. You can't ever be late to practice or to a game. I guess no one told him about Eddie Hart missing his starting time in the Olympics. And i didn't like the hearsay alleging what Wyking said to Winston and McCullogh. If Chauca wanted to put Jones under a magnifying glass this coming season, he has certainly contributed to it. Nevertheless, I congratulate him for graduating and getting his degree, and wish him well in whatever he does. He is still young and becoming a man is not without its lumps and bruises.