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Inside College Basketball

Posted: Tuesday January 22, 2002 3:27 PM

Youth Movement  

Precocious freshman guards are making their points across the country

By Seth Davis

Sports Illustrated Chris Thomas remembers the moment precisely. He was seven years old and playing in the championship game of a youth league in Indianapolis. With his team trailing by one point and only a few seconds remaining, Thomas was fouled and awarded two free throws. League rules permitted players to shoot from a kiddie line a few feet inside the regulation stripe, but Thomas took his attempts from the grown-ups' line. He drained both shots, and his team won. "I wanted to prove I didn't need somebody to give me an advantage because I was young," he says.

  Williams (25) may be young, but he has made an immediate impact. Manny Millan
The same precociousness has been evident this season at Notre Dame, where Thomas, now a freshman point guard, was second in scoring for the 12-5 Irish with a 15.6-point average through Sunday while quarterbacking the team with an assist-to-turnover ratio of better than 3 to 1. As good as Thomas has been, he is just one of many stellar freshman point guards, along with Texas' T.J. Ford, Alabama's Maurice Williams, Marquette's Travis Diener and Kansas' Aaron Miles, not to mention UCLA's 6'6" Cedric Bozeman, who recently returned from missing seven games with a torn lateral meniscus in his right knee and might be the best of the bunch. West Virginia's Jonathan Hargett and Louisville's Carlos Hurt got off to promising starts before injuries sidelined them. "As a group, this year's crop of freshman lead guards is as impressive as any I've seen in the last 20 years," says recruiting analyst Bob Gibbons.

Like Thomas, who is the first Indiana Mr. Basketball to play for Notre Dame and in his first game had the first triple double in Irish history, Ford arrived on campus accompanied by prodigious hype. That could have created jealousy among his teammates, but it hasn't been a problem thanks to Ford's predilection for sharing the ball. "I've had to tell him to shoot, and that's something you rarely have to do with a freshman," Longhorns coach Rick Barnes says of Ford, who was averaging only 9.3 points but was leading the nation in assists with 8.4 per game. "I've never had a player like T.J. He's a true throwback."

Ford immediately earned the respect of his teammates and coaches by exhibiting leadership and savvy well beyond his years. After the Longhorns' first practice, on Oct. 13, during which Barnes was riding redshirt freshman Jason Klotz, Ford playfully grabbed his coach and told him, "You know you're going to have to give Jason some love now, don't you?" A bit taken aback at first, Barnes agreed and privately told Klotz that he was only trying to make him a better player. The next day during the third hour of a rigorous practice, Ford stopped during one drill, threw the ball to Barnes and said, "That's it, we're done." Several players seconded the notion, and Barnes agreed to call it a day.

The Crimson Tide's Williams (10.2 points per game) may be the most gifted of this group, but he needs to improve his shooting (38.4%) as well as his ball handling (53 turnovers to 88 assists). Still, with Alabama 16-3 and ranked 14th, Williams led his classmates in the most important category, wins. Says Tide coach Mark Gottfried, "He gives us a dimension we've lacked the last couple of years."

As good as this year's class is, some observers think next season's may be even better. "This group is very good, don't get me wrong," says analyst Dave Telep, who runs theinsidershoops.com recruiting network, "but everybody is waiting to see the 2002 crop, with players like Raymond Felton [who has committed to North Carolina], Daniel Horton [Michigan] and Anthony Roberson [Florida]. About 20 programs got themselves a really good point guard."

Issue date: January 28, 2002

For more Inside College Basketball see this week's issue of Sports Illustrated, on newsstands Wednesday, January 23. Click here to subscribe to SI.

 
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