COLLINS
HILL
Suwanee, Ga.
WHEN MAYA MOORE
was three years old, her mother, Kathryn, put a basketball hoop on the back
door of their apartment. She did it more to keep her own sanity than to shape
her daughter's destiny. Maya had been constantly running around their home;
Kathryn hoped the hoop would keep her attention for a few minutes. "I put
it up as an outlet for all the energy she had," says Kathryn. "I never
thought she would slam-dunk that little ball through that hoop for
hours."
Fourteen years
later Moore is still dunking, but now she's doing it in practices--not yet in a
game--at Collins Hill High in Suwanee, Ga., where the 6-foot forward has
blossomed into the most celebrated girls' high school basketball player in the
country. Last year she became only the second junior to win the Naismith
National High School Player of the Year award, and she led her school to its
second straight state title. This season Moore, who has committed to
Connecticut, is playing even better. In December she was unanimously named MVP
of the Tournament of Champions in Chandler, Ariz., after leading the Eagles to
a 75--61 win over second-ranked Poly ( Long Beach, Calif.). A week later she
scored a career-high 48 points during a win against St. Elizabeth (Wilmington,
Del.) in the title game of the T-Mobile Invitational in Seattle.
"Every year
she finds a way to take her game to the next level, physically and
mentally," says coach Tracey Tipton. "This year she has really stepped
up and become more vocal." Moore says her outspokenness comes from being
the oldest of 10 cousins who played together while growing up. In those
schoolyard games, she says, "I got a chance to learn how to be responsible
and be a leader."
Dominant in the
perimeter and the post, she is already the school's alltime leader in points
and rebounds. This season Moore is averaging 27.6 points, 12 rebounds, four
assists and five steals. But her most impressive statistic may be her school's
94--3 record during her first three seasons. This year the Eagles have started
16--0 and will be aiming for their fourth straight state final. Says Tipton of
her star player, "She wants to be the best."
