The Hamilton Spectator

He’s NBA bound

Point guard from Hamilton begins his March Madness experience

- SCOTT RADLEY

When Hamilton’s soon-to-be-most-famous athlete walks onto the court to open March Madness on Thursday, there will be endless chatter about where he’s going to go in the upcoming NBA draft. Most agree it’ll be in the first round. Some are even predicting the top 10.

It’s just affirmatio­n that Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is indeed a special talent.

But when Stef Giovannang­eli watches the 6-foot-6 point guard play for Kentucky, he can’t help but think of the skinny Grade 9 kid with the giant feet who fell to him as head coach of the St. Thomas More midget squad six years ago.

“He didn’t make the junior team,” he chuckles. That’s right, a guy who was just named MVP of his conference tournament and who’s been pegged by both ESPN and Sports Illustrate­d to be a lottery pick with a rookie salary of $3 million-plus next year didn’t make his high school’s junior team. In Hamilton.

Take a moment to let that sink in.

To be fair, the school’s junior team that year was apparently very good. And some will recall that even Michael Jordan was famously cut from his high school team once upon a time. Still, this is a post facto eye-opener. Future superstars simply don’t play midget.

As Giovannang­eli recalls, the Gilgeous-Alexander who showed up for that first practice was disappoint­ed about not making the higher team. But from Day One, he was the hardest worker on the court and clearly had talent. On top of everything else, Shai (rhymes with hay) had a tremendous attitude.

“He was the ‘Yes coach’ kind of guy,” he says. By the end of the season, he’d been chosen as team MVP as the Knights won the city championsh­ip with the future star leading the scoring in that game. Assistant coach Chris D’Angelo says his natural ability was clear by then. Already he could finish around the basket with either hand which few players even in Grade 12 can do well.

That summer he transferre­d to Sir Allan MacNab where he did make the junior team. But still wasn’t a standout.

“He had a lot of the gifts,” says coach Tim Francis. “But at the time, we had a great group of kids so he was just one in the mix.”

Yet after not even starting at the beginning of the year — “He had a lot of turnovers,” Francis says. “Maybe he was just nervous” — he quickly separated himself from the pack with a positive outlook and hard work. By the end of the season he was clearly the best player on the team. Based in large part on his terrific defence.

Even with that, Francis never guessed this physically average kid would eventually become one of the most-talked-about players in U.S. college basketball at one of the game’s most-legendary universiti­es. Or a future pro. In fact, he wasn’t even considered the top prospect at the school. Back then, a 6-foot-8 forward named Nolan Narain was getting all the attention at MacNab, as 6-foot-8 Grade 10s tend to do.

Within two years, both were playing elsewhere. Narain headed to a high school in Indiana to refine his game. Gilgeous-Alexander left for Chattanoog­a, Tennessee, to the hometown-sounding Hamilton Heights Christian Academy. After two seasons there, he chose Kentucky over numerous other schools that were after him.

He was supposed to be pretty good. He turned out

to be great.

Despite arriving with basically no fanfare and not starting when he arrived — sound familiar? — he scored 29 points in his conference championsh­ip game on the weekend and is now widely considered the top player on the Wildcats.

Thursday, he gets his first taste of March Madness when No. 5 seed Kentucky takes on No. 12 Davidson. Which happens to be the alma mater of NBA star Stef Curry, who also played on a junior high school team in southern Ontario before moving to the States and becoming a star. So if you believe in dramatic foreshadow­ing ...

Amazingly, Narain is also in the tournament and also opens play on Thursday for his No. 12 seed San Diego State Aztecs against No. 5 seed Ohio State.

Giovannang­eli hasn’t talked with his 19-year-old prodigy since that midget season. Not because of any resentment at his departure. Just because the kid was busy and moving on with his life. But the coach has followed the player’s progress from a distance, taking absolutely no credit for the ascension.

A while back, he received a call from an NBA scout — checking with a guy’s midget coach? Man these guys do their due diligence — asking about the prospect’s character. He had only good things to say.

“I think it’s cool,” he says. “I still have our team championsh­ip picture on my desk.”

Yes, he will be looking to get it signed someday. Which shouldn’t be difficult since Gilgeous-Alexander is often home in Hamilton, shooting around at MacNab with his old high school senior coach, Dwayne Washington.

As for that other coach who cut the future NBA draft pick from the junior team, does he ever get teased about that decision now? Giovannang­eli starts to laugh.

“It’s come up in conversati­on.”

 ?? JEFF ROBERSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Hamilton native Shai Gilgeous-Alexander cuts down the net after Kentucky defeated Tennessee in the championsh­ip game at the Southeaste­rn Conference tournament Sunday.
JEFF ROBERSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Hamilton native Shai Gilgeous-Alexander cuts down the net after Kentucky defeated Tennessee in the championsh­ip game at the Southeaste­rn Conference tournament Sunday.
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