Baltimore Sun

Booth Jr. gets his shot with Wizards

Former Mount Saint Joseph, Villanova star gets Exhibit 10 contract

- By Don Markus

After not being selected in last month’s NBA draft despite a slew of accomplish­ments at Villanova — including being only one of nine players in school history to finish with at least 1,500 points and get at least 300 assists — Mount Saint Joseph graduate Phil Booth Jr. will get chance at an NBA career.

Booth said in a telephone interview that he signed with the Washington Wizards on Friday, confirming an earlier report by The Baltimore Sun.

Booth’s Exhibit10 contract includes an invitation to training camp and a signing bonus that could get used toward a twoway contract with the Wizards and their GLeague affiliate, the Capital City Go-Go.

“I just want to come in, play hard and compete as hard as I can and see what happens from there,” the 6-foot-3 Booth said.

In assessing the value Booth has on a basketball court, his former high school coach pointed to his history of playing for winning teams and helping them to championsh­ips at Mount Saint Joseph and in college at Villanova.

“You just look at his body of work. He won six or seven championsh­ips in high school, he won three Big East regularsea­son championsh­ips, he won three Big East tournament championsh­ips and he won two national championsh­ips,” longtime Mount Saint Joseph coach Pat Clatchey said Friday.

“When a guy has that kind of track record — not only of winning but winning championsh­ips — that’s who he is. That’s in his DNA. That’s something any team looks for. He knows how to win. He knows what it takes to win. He’s had various roles and he thrived in whatever role was was expected of him.”

Or, as his father, Phil Sr., put it, “He always finds a way to figure it out.”

Booth becomes the third recent Mount Saint Joseph player to sign an NBA deal — following Jaylen Adams, who was a twoway player for the Atlanta Hawks last season, and Henry Sims, who spent parts of four NBA seasons with four teams, most recently the Brooklyn Nets in 2016.

Clatchey said the competitio­n Booth received practicing against and playing with players such as Adams and former Towson guard Jordan McNeil in high school helped him prepare for Villanova.

Booth said the competitio­n for playing time at Villanova — several former teammates, including guards Jalen Brunson and Donte DiVincenzo, are now in the NBA — helped get him ready to take the next step.

“I was always around good players growing up,” Booth said. “Just my strong, competitiv­e nature that I just try to keep with them.”

Booth’s college achievemen­ts included a team-high 20-point performanc­e in an NCAA championsh­ip game victory over North Carolina as a sophomore in 2016 and a team-high 18.6 points per game last season, leading a rebuilding team to a respectabl­e 26-10 record and a berth in the NCAA tournament. Aside from those accomplish­ments, his career with the Wildcats was interrupte­d twice by injury.

Booth played in only three games in his third year because of a knee injury, and missed nearly a month of his redshirt junior year in 2017-18 after breaking his hand, but returned to help Villanova win its third national title. Mostly known for his scoring, Booth was more of a facilitato­r in Villanova’s second title run, including six assists in a semifinal win over Kansas.

Phil Sr. said his son “really raised some eyebrows” with the versatilit­y he showed in summer league with the Cleveland Cavaliers this summer. The last four games in Las Vegas, when Booth averaged 11.3 points in 15.3 minutes and shot 14-for-25 from the field. Booth said his agent heard from the Wizards last week.

“We knew it was tough for him to get drafted, but weknew he’d get a shot to go to summer league,” Phil Sr. said. “That’s all we wanted was a shot. What he did was pick a team that he knew he could get minutes, show that he could play multiple positions and shoot the ball with what he does at a high level.”

Said Booth: I think summer league helped a lot, too, the last few games, playing well. I was shooting the ball and running the team. I think it really benefited me.”

That he will be playing for his hometown team makes both father and son happy.

“I’ve been lucky,” Phil Sr. said. “He went to my hometown of Philly, two hours away, [at Villanova] and now he’s a half-hour. He’s been going to Wizards games since he was 12. It’s kind of surreal for me.”

Said Booth: “That’s super cool. I used to go to Wizards games all the time. I remember them playing with Gilbert [Arenas] and those guys, making those playoff runs. It’s real special.”

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