National Post (National Edition)

Shayok’s always been mad about March

Ottawa-raised guard sixth man for Virginia

- TIM BAINES tbaines@postmedia.com

OTTAWA • March Madness? For Marial Shayok, what was once a dream is very real.

When Shayok was seven years old, he started playing basketball, sometimes in Ottawa’s playground­s, sometimes at the YMCA.

Basketball kind of ran in the family. Sisters Akuluel, Lau and Yar (University of Detroit-Mercy and France) and brother Shayok (University of Missouri-Kansas City) played, too. Their father, Makur, played college basketball years ago, then got paid to play overseas.

Now Shayok, the youngest, is set to play in March Madness, the wildly popular NCAA men’s basketball tournament that tips off Thursday. Marial’s Virginia Cavaliers open against the UNC Wilmington Seahawks at 12:40 p.m. in Orlando. The matchup is a clash in styles. While high-flying UNCW is 10th in the country in offence, Virginia (312th in offence) leads in defence.

“Being in this the past two years, this being my third time, I’m more comfortabl­e going in, I’m not as nervous as I was as a freshman,” said the 21-year-old Shayok, a guard. “I’m blessed to be here, to get to experience March Madness. I watched it on TV, like a lot of people do. I’m still excited, for sure.”

As for Thursday’s matchup, Shayok said: “They seem like a really fast team that can score a lot of points. We just have to stick to what we know, play defence as best as we can. We’re a very deep team. All year we’ve had so many different rotations, so many different players stepping up. We just have to stay together, play together and be ready to step up. Defence is our identity, we just have to keep that going.”

As a sixth man who effectivel­y comes off the bench, Shayok has averaged 8.6 points per game this season. His aggressive style and defence will be keys if Virginia is going to have success.

“You have to be confident in this tournament or you’ll be a step in behind,” he said. “You have to believe in yourselves, believe you can compete with anybody. Take it a game at a time and see how it works out.”

For Shayok and his teammates, they know all too well about the Cinderella stories that March Madness brings. That means there’s no time to take the foot off the gas pedal.

“You can’t really think ahead, you can’t think ahead of the next team you’re playing,” said Shayok. “If you start looking too far ahead, if you’re not focused on who you’re playing, you’ll get beat.”

As a kid who grew up in awe of NBA stars like Kobe Bryant and Vince Carter, Shayok feels blessed to have got the opportunit­y to play college basketball south of the border. After fine tuning his talent at Hawthorne Public School, then on the playground­s in the Walkley-Russell Road area, he starred at St. Patrick High School before heading to the U.S. to attend New Jersey’s Blair Academy.

“I’ve put in a lot of work since I was a kid living in Ottawa,” said Shayok. “For me, it became a purpose, to get here to the States and play in March Madness. It really was a dream come true.”

Home for two days in December before heading back south on Christmas Day, Shayok is excited to have his family in Orlando.

“They helped me get to where I am today,” he said.

 ?? CHET STRANGE / GETTY IMAGES ?? Ottawa’s Marial Shayok averaged 8.6 points per game for the Virginia Cavaliers this season.
CHET STRANGE / GETTY IMAGES Ottawa’s Marial Shayok averaged 8.6 points per game for the Virginia Cavaliers this season.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada