Dayton Daily News

Archdeacon: Toppin flies in UD dunk fest

- Tom Archdeacon

Obi Toppin, UD’s 6-foot-9 redshirt freshman, was a oneman aerial show in the Flyers’ 98-59 victory over Detroit Mercy.

In the official box score, Jalen Crutcher is listed as having six assists Tuesday night in the Dayton Flyers’ 98-59 victory over Detroit Mercy at UD Arena.

The point guard actually had a seventh. It came at halftime and may have been his biggest facilitati­on of the night.

“We were doing lay-ups at halftime and I went to shoot a three,” Obi Toppin remembered afterward with a grin. “Jalen said ‘No! Go dunk the ball!’ He didn’t want me shooting out there.”

The way Crutcher saw it, why mess with success.

Toppin, UD’s 6-foot-9 redshirt freshman, was a one-man aerial show against the Titans.

Sixteen seconds after entering the game in the first half, he dunked an alley-oop pass from guard Trey Landers. Just over a minute later, he dunked another Landers lob.

A couple of minutes after that he finished off a Jordan Davis alley-oop with a onehand slam that drew a chorused “Oooooooh!” from the crowd of 12,700.

Before intermissi­on he had another slam and then one more, leaving him with five dunks, one shy of Dayton’s alltime game record of six set by Sean Finn against Prairie View A&M in 2003.

Thanks, in part, to Crutcher’s “don’t ruin a good thing” admonishme­nt, Toppin added three more dunks in the second half, including one on a Frankie Policelli assist with 1:47 left that he tomahawked in one-handed from the baseline.

That got what was left of the Arena crowd roaring again.

Toppin ended with a careerhigh 22 points, a team-high 11 rebounds and, of course, the dunk record.

“Those are exciting plays and they certainly bring energy to his teammates and energy to the fans,” said UD coach Anthony Grant. “They are great momentum-swinging plays.”

When Toppin initially came off the bench with 14:36 left in the first half, Dayton held a 12-11 lead. He played all but two minutes of the half after that and the Flyers had a 49-29 advantage at intermissi­on.

“At home, if a team dunks it riles the crowd up and the other team gets like in a shell,” Toppin said.

The night of rile-’em-up plays and the whopping 39-point victory were just what the Flyers needed following a run of bad luck lately.

After starting the season 4-0, they’d lost three straight — including a pair of seven-point defeats by No. 4 Virginia and No. 22 Mississipp­i State — and Monday night Grant announced junior guard Jhery Matos would miss the rest of the season because of torn ligaments in his foot.

A 6-foot-6 junior college transfer who was one of the team’s best defenders, Matos now will undergo surgery after taking his upcoming semester exams.

With a road game at No. 8 Auburn awaiting them Saturday night, the Flyers needed a big lift against Detroit and got it.

Besides Toppin, four other players scored in double figures — Josh Cunningham had 20, Crutcher added 16, Davis 13 and Ryan Mikesell 10 — and Davis also did a superb defensive job on the Titans’ Antoine Davis, who came into the game averaging 29.6 points, second in the nation.

Davis ended with a season-low 18 points after going 3 for 14 from 3-point range and 6 for 23 overall.

Toppin’s assessment of the game was perfect: “That was the big burst of excitement going into Auburn we needed to show.”

A buzz in the crowd

Already this season there’s a palpable buzz in the crowd when Toppin comes into the game.

His long legs are covered by white tights, the sort of get-up many comic book superheroe­s wear. His equally long arms are tattooed canvasses bearing uplifting messages and images and remembranc­es of family.

He has his mom’s name, Roni, tattooed inside his right arm and Daniel, his late brother’s name, is inked inside the left.

“He wasn’t a year yet when he passed,” Toppin said quietly. “Something in his head, it burst. He was just one year younger than me.”

Toppin’s left biceps is covered by a large picture of praying hands beneath a basketball.

Conversely, on this night Detroit didn’t have a prayer when Toppin was roaming the baseline against its porous 1-3-1 defense, just looking for the chance to launch himself above the rim.

And he readies himself with much animation — puffing out his cheeks and exhaling air in anticipati­on, all while signaling teammates with nods, quick looks upward or just raising a long arm skyward.

He said the rest of the Flyers know when to throw him the ball, especially Landers and Crutcher.

“I think Obi would tell you he was the beneficiar­y of his teammates tonight,” Grant said. “They found him. We always talk about playing to our strengths.”

Afterward, though, Toppin had no idea just how strong he had been.

He was taken aback when told he had had eight dunks:

“I thought I only had four.”

Long road to UD

Toppin said just a few years ago he thought he’d never be able to dunk — and never did until he was a senior at Ossining High School in New York:

“I swear I never thought it was gonna happen. I thought I was gonna stay the same height, so I’d try to stretch and do everything.

“I got rim-stuffed a lot and used to hurt my elbow trying so hard. But I just couldn’t get it. I wouldn’t even get close. But I just kept trying and senior year I finally made it.”

His high-flying frustratio­n mirrored his struggles getting his basketball career properly off the ground.

After moving to Florida with his mom to help relatives in need, he played basketball as a freshman at Heritage High School in Palm Bay, Florida, and as a sophomore at Melbourne Central Catholic. After moving back to New York, he played two seasons in Ossining.

His mom once told me Obi was like his dad, who had been a hoops standout on the playground­s, AAU circuit and semi-pro leagues of New York, but didn’t initially embrace the classroom.

That and his moving contribute­d to a lack of scholarshi­p offers for Obi coming out of high school.

To bolster his chances, he moved again — to Baltimore and Mount Zion Prep.

Finally, Dayton made an offer, but Toppin was forced to sit out last season to meet NCAA academic standards. He could practice and he proved to be the consummate teammate — affable, supportive, fully-engaged — in street clothes on the bench.

His mantra for the year was a saying he had tattooed on one arm. He said his mom chose it:

“Success is no accident.”

He worked, took nothing for granted and now all that stored-up talent and desire and emotion is coming out on the court and even off of it.

As Grant held his postgame press conference, Toppin playfully peeked around a curtain behind his unsuspecti­ng coach and smiled and nodded.

If Toppin liked what he was hearing, Grant especially likes what he is seeing:

“Just knowing Obi’s story from high school to prep school, opportunit­ies weren’t there for him.

“And (knowing) what he had to go through in terms of not being allowed to play last year and the road he’s had to take to be able to play college basketball — to see him be able do what he’s doing academical­ly and on the court — I’m really proud of the growth he’s been able to make.”

 ??  ??
 ?? DAVID JABLONSKI/STAFF ?? Obi Toppin throws down one of his team record-setting eight dunks against Detroit on Tuesday night in UD Arena. In addition to the record, Toppin finished with a career-high 22 points and a team-high 11 rebounds.
DAVID JABLONSKI/STAFF Obi Toppin throws down one of his team record-setting eight dunks against Detroit on Tuesday night in UD Arena. In addition to the record, Toppin finished with a career-high 22 points and a team-high 11 rebounds.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States