Las Vegas Review-Journal

Ball’s draft status strong despite noisy father

- By Greg Beacham The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — By now the entire basketball world knows Lonzo Ball is a singular talent with a unique parent.

The UCLA product with preternatu­ral court vision is among the most intriguing prospects in this week’s NBA draft. In perhaps the greatest testament to his abilities, his father Lavar Ball’s bombast and $495 shoes and racially insensitiv­e comments

don’t appear to be scaring off the Los Angeles Lakers or any other team that believes Lonzo could be the next great point guard.

Because of his headline-magnet father, Ball’s celebrity has already outpaced his talents before he plays his first profession­al game. Yet ever since his days leading the Big Ballers AAU team set up by his dad, Lonzo has shown nothing but maturity and calm in the face of Lavar’s audacious approaches to hoops, parenting and the business of sports.

“I think it definitely doesn’t help,” Ball said of his father’s notoriety. “Definitely makes it a little bit harder. But any good player is going to have attention on him at all times,

BALL

and I’m pretty used to it by now.”

Ball’s mental steadiness is another big reason he’s almost certain to be a top-three pick on Thursday. Ever since the Lakers got the No. 2 choice in the lottery last month, most draft observers have believed Ball will wear a gold jersey in the fall, completing a serendipit­ous match of player and team.

That’s been the dream scenario for the entire Ball family ever since Lonzo showed the first inklings of world-class talent. He was raised in Chino Hills, a suburb about 35 miles east of Staples Center, and Lavar Ball is an ardent fan of the Lakers — and specifical­ly Magic Johnson, the Hall of Fame point guard now running their basketball operations.

After Ball worked out for the Lakers last week, he didn’t mince words about his hopes to make it permanent: “Of course. I want to stay home.”

Although the Lakers have been his family’s team since before he could walk, Ball said he hasn’t been to many games in person: “My dad didn’t like the seats, because I guess they were too small for him.”

That’s understand­able, since father and son are both 6 feet 6 inches tall. Lonzo watched on television and then emulated the stars from Magic to Kobe Bryant while playing with his brothers at home.

“I patterned my game after (Johnson),” Ball said. “My dad asked me what position I wanted to play. I told him, ‘Point guard.’ He was like, ‘All right, if you’re going to play point guard, you’ve got to get the ball up.’ ”

That’s what Ball does better than almost any guard in recent college basketball history.

He led the nation in assists (7.7) while turning the Bruins into the highest-scoring team in Division I basketball. The freshman showed astonishin­g passing ability while orchestrat­ing the UCLA offense, utilizing angles and defensive creases that made him look more like an attacking soccer midfielder than a basketball player.

And if any NBA team is worried about having the ultimate sports parent in the front row, UCLA coach Steve Alford has repeatedly said Lavar wasn’t a problem for him — and Lonzo’s two little brothers are both planning to play in Westwood.

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