National Post

Wizards’ Howard wants to play until he’s 40

‘IT’S EITHER EVOLVE, ADAPT OR GET LEFT BEHIND’

- CANDACE BUCKNER

At the end of last summer, Dwight Howard was staring into a mirror, admiring the view. He had entered that NBA offseason as heavy as a football lineman, hiding 285 pounds beneath his Atlanta Hawks uniform. Now, he was 23 pounds lighter, dunking like it was 2008 again and expecting a rebirth with a new team, the Charlotte Hornets.

Howard made a bold declaratio­n to his trainer: I want to play in the NBA until I’m 40.

Ed Downs chuckles at the memory. It’s not because he takes Howard lightly — he just seems to find humour in anything that questions his 32-year-old client.

“The look he had on his face,” Downs recalls, “my response was: ‘Let’s make it happen.’ ”

That private goal was made public on July 23 inside Capital One Arena when Howard casually shared with a crowded room that he planned “on playing this game for another good eight years” during his introducto­ry news conference with the Washington Wizards.

The eight-time all-star, currently shredded at 265 pounds with 3.3 per cent body fat, has been focused on extending his career into his 40s, which would follow the path of old-timers such as Dirk Nowitzki (40) and Vince Carter (41), both set for record-tying 21st seasons in the league.

Doing so wouldn’t make Howard an anomaly among big men. Hall of Fame centre Kareem Abdul-Jabbar started 74 games in his 20th and final season before retiring at 42. Robert Parish and Dikembe Mutombo, also Hall of Famers, went to age 43 and 42, respective­ly. Kevin Willis made it all the way to 44.

Howard’s small entourage of trainers is trying to make his goal attainable by building a more modern, intellectu­al and structural­ly sound version of him — Dwight 2.0.

Downs and Justin Zormelo began working with Howard in spring 2017 — Downs, the founder of the Miami-based ProTERF Training, coming in a little more than a month before the Hawks faced the Wizards in the first round of the playoffs.

“I got a 285-pound, 12 1/2per cent body fat guy,” Down says. “Not good.”

Howard averaged just 8.0 points and 10.7 rebounds during the series, by far his lowest statistica­l production in 10 post-season appearance­s. After the six-game exit, in which Howard was thoroughly outmatched by the older, less-athletic Marcin Gortat, Downs and Zormelo dedicated the summer to remoulding the selfprocla­imed Superman.

Howard had grown up running — his father, Dwight Sr., once coached track and field — but not like Downs had in mind. Downs put that big body on a track, making the 6-foot-11 Howard sprint and run 100-yard gassers. He introduced core and flexibilit­y training to finally rid Howard of back issues after previous trainers had concentrat­ed mainly on building strength.

While Downs pushed Howard’s body, Zormelo worked on his mind. Think more transition, less postups, Zormelo advised. Fear not the perimeter; embrace stretching your range closer to the 3-point arc. Howard listened.

“When I came into this league, I was playing against the Shaqs, the Alonzo Mournings, the Jermaine O’Neals and it was more so a physical — I’m going to see who’s the strongest guy in the paint. It’s like an arm wrestling match for the big guys,” Howard says. “And nowadays, it’s not the same game. So it’s either evolve, adapt or get left behind.”

Zormelo viewed last season in Charlotte as a test run for Howard to implement some updated elements to his game. Downs had loftier goals. He wanted Howard to play all 82 games, which would have been the first time he’d done so since he was 24 and dominating the paint for the Orlando Magic. Howard just missed the mark, playing 81 games only because he had to serve a one-game suspension for receiving his 16th technical foul. But in the previous game, No. 72 of the season, Howard recorded 32 points and 30 rebounds to become the first player in the NBA to do so since 2010.

“He’s Superman,” Zormelo says. “After the game, we said it could’ve been 40 and 35. Most people are shocked but for him ... “

Downs finishes the thought: “He’s healthy now.”

Ahead of Howard’s introducti­on to media and fans, Downs and Zormelo spent the morning hours putting their client through a shooting session inside the Wizards’ practice facility. Howard made 81 of 128 shots around the floor, and hit 60 per cent of spot-up 3s (15 of 25).

In Charlotte, Howard didn’t show a greater ability to knock down perimeter shots and connected on only 33.3 per cent from the midrange area, according to Advanced Stats on NBA.com.

This year, the brakes are off. No more trial run. Zormelo wants Howard to raise his IQ on every possession — be the rebounder and screener while also looking for opportunit­ies to dominate.

“He wants to evolve into Anthony Davis, into Kevin Durant,” Zormelo says, “but his own version of that.”

Howard wants to spend almost another decade evolving. Downs vowed to be there until the end of a career that potentiall­y lasts until Year 22. They won’t stop until a 40-year-old NBA player is staring back at Howard in the mirror.

“It builds a confidence in a guy,” Downs says, “looking at himself in the mirror and feeling like he’s 19.”

 ?? FRANK GUNN / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? It will be a lighter Dwight Howard — seen here playing against the Raptors’ Jonas Valanciuna­s — on the court this year compared to last season when he was with the Hornets.
FRANK GUNN / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES It will be a lighter Dwight Howard — seen here playing against the Raptors’ Jonas Valanciuna­s — on the court this year compared to last season when he was with the Hornets.
 ?? SUSAN WALSH / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Washington Wizards’ Dwight Howard made public his plans to play pro hoops “for another good eight years.”
SUSAN WALSH / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Washington Wizards’ Dwight Howard made public his plans to play pro hoops “for another good eight years.”

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