Edmonton Journal

Fredette is back and still firing three-point bombs

Sharpshoot­ing guard has eyes on prize at $2-million basketball tournament

- RICK MAESE

Jimmer Fredette, that high-scoring, white-hot hoops sensation, is back playing basketball on U.S. soil and nothing seems to have changed. He hits ridiculous shots from all over the floor, scores at will and has a relationsh­ip with the basket that could inspire romance novels.

For the last two years, he’s been playing in China, where he kept doing Jimmer-type things — 73 points in one game, 51 in another — but this summer he’s had a chance to remind American basketball fans of just what made him such a fun college player to watch.

“I’ve been getting a lot of messages, texts, different social-media things,” the 29-year old Fredette said in a telephone interview Thursday. “It’s been fun. It’s cool that an American audience is able to check it all out.”

The former Brigham Young University star is the centrepiec­e of Team Fredette in The Basketball Tournament, the ever-growing, US$2-million, winner-takes-all event that draws to a close with Friday’s championsh­ip in Baltimore.

Fredette is playing in the tournament for the first time and to no one’s surprise he’s been lighting up the scoreboard. In the four games that preceded this week’s semifinals, Fredette posted video game-like scoring totals — 32, 30, 28, 41 — and now his squad has a shot at the tournament’s big prize.

Team Fredette faced a team called Eberlein Drive late Thursday night in the semifinals. The winner could be forced to square off against the makings of a dynasty in the final. Overseas Elite, a talented squad made up of Americans playing profession­al basketball overseas, has won the league title the last three years and is a favourite to win again.

The tournament has grown each year — it now has a shoe sponsor in Puma and a TV deal with ESPN — and as the prize money has grown, the talent level has increased. This year’s tournament started with 72 teams, many featuring former college stars and profession­al players who competed on the NBA fringes, in the G-League and overseas. Greg Oden, a former No. 1 NBA draft pick, and Fredette were this year’s biggest names, but the tournament isn’t won on star power.

Team Fredette was assembled to contend for the big prize and like every team Fredette’s been on, if he’s on and his shot is falling, anything is possible.

“Everyone knows Jimmer and what he’s capable of,” said D.J. Kennedy, the St. John’s University product who has been a cornerston­e of Overseas Elite. “He’s been lighting this tournament up so far, so that’s made it fun for everybody.”

Fredette rose to national prominence as the fearless, high-scoring guard who led BYU to the Sweet 16 during the 2011 NCAA men’s basketball championsh­ip tournament, firing shots from all corners and becoming a staple of highlight shows.

He set several school and conference scoring records, won most of the player-of-the-year awards and also an ESPY. Even former president Barack Obama raved about him when he unveiled his March Madness bracket that year.

His skill set did not translate perfectly to the NBA. He was a first-round draft pick, but bounced between four teams in five seasons, averaging only six points and struggling to play a supporting role.

Fredette jumped to the Chinese Basketball Associatio­n in 2016, where he’s again a star. He’s averaged 37 points over two seasons and won the league’s internatio­nal MVP award. He has re-signed with the Sharks — reportedly for $1.8 million — delaying any potential NBA comeback and reports to Shanghai next month for his third season there.

This summer’s tournament, he said, is the closest he has felt to his college days.

“It’s similar,” he said. “The oneand-done format, starting with 64 teams, playing three weekends. And obviously it’s pressure filled because if you lose, you’re out.”

Unlike high-stakes games in college or in profession­al leagues, Team Fredette is playing for something quite tangible — and bankable — in Baltimore. The $2-million prize would be divvied up among players, team organizers and a handful of boosters. But only if they win.

“It feels more real now,” Fredette said Thursday. “The fact that you have a chance to win the prize money, everything is going to be heightened as far as intensity is concerned.

“But besides the money, for me, it’s a chance to play some competitiv­e basketball in the summertime. In China, the season is shorter and I have six months off where I don’t play a real game. So this gives me a chance to play for something to be of value.”

Fredette thinks his squad is building chemistry and getting better each time on the court, but they could still be at a disadvanta­ge if they reach Friday’s championsh­ip. Overseas Elite has played 24 games in four years of competing in The Basketball Tournament. They’ve never lost.

With a roster that features former college stars DeJuan Blair and Kyle Fogg, Overseas Elite has familiarit­y with both each other and the high stakes of the tournament.

“We know the target was bigger than ever this year,” said Kennedy, who plays profession­ally in Turkey, his seventh country since 2013. “To do a four-peat is gonna be harder than ever. But we’ve been here before. We know what’s at stake in every game. There’s no room for errors and you can’t take a single play off.”

 ?? ELSA/GETTY IMAGES ?? Former college star Jimmer Fredette, a first-round flop in the NBA, has been lighting it up with Shanghai in the Chinese league.
ELSA/GETTY IMAGES Former college star Jimmer Fredette, a first-round flop in the NBA, has been lighting it up with Shanghai in the Chinese league.

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