Greenwich Time

Knicks take NCAA player of the year Obi Toppin in draft

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NEW YORK — Obi Toppin was lightly regarded when he was a high school player in New York.

He’s coming home as the college player of the year.

The Knicks selected Toppin with the No. 8 pick in the NBA draft Wednesday night, bringing the national player of the year back to his hometown.

He struggled to speak when asked during an ESPN interview why it would mean so much to wear a Knicks jersey.

“I’m from New York, that’s why it’s important,” Toppin said. “Me repping my city, it’s amazing.”

Toppin ended a remarkable ride from unheralded prospect to the top of college basketball by leading Dayton to a 29-2 record as a sophomore. He averaged 20 points and shot 63.3% from the field en route to being a unanimous All-America selection.

That would have seemed unimaginab­le a few years earlier, after he received no Division I scholarshi­p offers after playing only one season of varsity basketball in Ossining, New York.

But Toppin, born in Brooklyn, shot up from 6-foot-2 as a high school junior to his current 6-9.

“I feel like nothing has came easy for me,” Toppin said. “I went through a lot of things growing up, and I feel like through those struggles and through those bad times that I’ve been through growing up, it’s made me the person and player that I am today.”

The Knicks made him their first pick under the new leadership of President Leon Rose and coach Tom Thibodeau.

“He’s an explosive athlete and one of the most dynamic players in college basketball, which earned him the Naismith Player of the Year honors,” Rose said. “Just as importantl­y, he’s also a high character individual with a tremendous work ethic. We look forward to a bright future with him and are excited to bring a native New Yorker home to the

Garden.”

The Knicks added a second player at No. 25 in Kentucky guard Immanuel Quickley, voted SEC player of the year by the league’s coaches. The pick was acquired in a deal with Minnesota but the trade hadn’t been announced by the time Quickley was drafted, though Wildcats coach John Calipari confirmed his destinatio­n in an interview with ESPN.

Calipari’s former top assistant, Kenny Payne, left during the offseason to join Thibodeau’s staff in New York. Rose and another Knicks executive, William

Wesley, have good relationsh­ips with Calipari and the Kentucky program.

“Going anywhere, you know, you’re just happy to be there. But going somewhere like the Knicks, where I know coach Kenny Payne — I was with him every single day,” Quickley said. “Worked out with him every single day, watched film with him, things like that. So going somewhere I know and I’m familiar with the coaches, the GM, and things like that, I feel it’s definitely an advantage going to a team like that.”

Quickley led the Wildcats with 16.1 points per

game.

KNICKS WAIVE GROUP OF VETERANS AHEAD OF NBA FREE AGENCY

NEW YORK — The New York Knicks waived veterans Elfrid Payton, Taj Gibson and Wayne Ellington and declined their team option on Bobby Portis on Thursday, just a year after signing them in free agency.

The Knicks signed all the veterans as part of a sevenplaye­r class in the summer of 2019. They enter free agency Friday with only Julius Randle and Reggie Bullock remaining from the group, having traded Marcus Morris to the Clippers during the season.

Former Knicks President Steve Mills insisted at the start of last season that the Knicks got the players they wanted with that group. But successor Rose cut most of them as he prepares to reshape one of the league’s worst rosters.

The moves have them well-positioned for free agency. Portis’ option would have paid him $15.8 million in 2020-21. Gibson was due $9.5 million and Ellington and Payton were each set to earn $8 million.

The Knicks also waived forward Kenny Wooten and declined their option on guard Theo Pinson.

 ?? Sarah Stier / Associated Press ?? New York Knicks center Taj Gibson reaches for a pass during the first half of the team’s NBA game against the Utah Jazz in New York on March 4. The Knicks waived veterans Elfrid Payton, Gibson and Wayne Ellington and declined their team option on Bobby Portis. Gibson was due to be paid $9.5 million.
Sarah Stier / Associated Press New York Knicks center Taj Gibson reaches for a pass during the first half of the team’s NBA game against the Utah Jazz in New York on March 4. The Knicks waived veterans Elfrid Payton, Gibson and Wayne Ellington and declined their team option on Bobby Portis. Gibson was due to be paid $9.5 million.
 ?? John Minchillo / Associated Press ?? Dayton’s Obi Toppin dunks as North Texas’ Javion Hamlet looks on during the second half of an NCAA game, in Dayton, Ohio. Toppin, the national player of the year, was taken with the No. 8 pick in Wednesday night’s NBA draft by the New York Knicks.
John Minchillo / Associated Press Dayton’s Obi Toppin dunks as North Texas’ Javion Hamlet looks on during the second half of an NCAA game, in Dayton, Ohio. Toppin, the national player of the year, was taken with the No. 8 pick in Wednesday night’s NBA draft by the New York Knicks.

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