Las Vegas Review-Journal

Liberty’s Strawther seeks spot with USA Basketball

- By Sam Gordon Las Vegas Review-journal

Liberty junior Julian Strawther spends his summer mornings at Athletic Gaines performanc­e institute, fine-tuning the nuances of his favorite sport in advance of the most prestigiou­s opportunit­y of his career.

He’s already a five-star recruit, a prodigious scorer and the future of prep basketball in his hometown.

He wants to be the future of his country, too.

The silky, 6-foot-7-inch wing left Las Vegas on Friday for Colorado Springs, Colorado, where he’ll compete alongside 29 of the nation’s best players for 12 spots on USA Basketball’s under-17 team.

The finalists are expected to be named June 18, and they will continue to practice at the U.S. Olympic Training Center until the roster is unveiled June 23.

The 12-player team will compete in the biannual FIBA U17 World Cup in Rosario and Santa Fe, Argentina, from June 26 to July 8.

“There’s no words, really,” Strawther said. “When you have the opportunit­y to represent your country, to be in this position, it’s crazy. You’re representi­ng your whole entire country for playing basketball.”

Strawther actually had the opportunit­y to represent another country. His late mother, Lourdes, was Puerto Rican, and representa­tives from the national team contacted his father, Lee, about playing for the country.

But the younger Strawther wanted to compete against the pool of top American players because he thinks it will bring out his best.

“I pretty much knew for a fact I wanted to play for Team USA,” he said. “Playing for Team USA is one of the biggest goals you can have as a basketball player — to be a gold medalist for my age group.”

Strawther, then a sophomore, was one of 54 players to participat­e in USA Basketball’s men’s junior national team in October. Top juniors and seniors were in attendance as well, and he indicated the experience was humbling in advance of the high school season.

He averaged 23.9 points and 8.4 rebounds for the Patriots last season to cement his fivestar billing and played AAU basketball this spring for the Las Vegas Prospects in Nike’s Elite Youth Basketball League before shifting his focus to his individual developmen­t.

“What we’ve worked on so far

is him becoming more cerebral and learning how to score and do different things on the floor when he’s double- and tripled-teamed,” said Strawther’s trainer, Keith Owens, who has worked in player developmen­t for the Houston Rockets and Los Angeles Lakers.

“Now he’s making a lot of those different reads … He’s getting to spots on the floor a lot quicker, and he’s using his length a lot more than he has in the past.”

The combinatio­n of the high school season, AAU season and the skill-work have prepared Strawther for this weekend in Colorado.

He’s remarkably confident in his abilities and poised enough to showcase them against the best of the best in America — and beyond.

“Even when he has rough games or a rough outing, he still feels like he belongs at that level,” his father said. “He’s comfortabl­e with where he is right now, but he still has higher expectatio­ns of himself. That’s what he’s trying to reach.”

Contact reporter Sam

Gordon at sgordon@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @ Bysamgordo­n on Twitter.

 ?? Bizuayehu Tesfaye ?? Las Vegas Reviewjour­nal @bizutesfay­e Liberty junior Julian Strawther, right, works out with Keith Owens, director of player developmen­t at Athletic Gaines. Strawther is headed to tryouts for the USA Basketball U-17 team.
Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Reviewjour­nal @bizutesfay­e Liberty junior Julian Strawther, right, works out with Keith Owens, director of player developmen­t at Athletic Gaines. Strawther is headed to tryouts for the USA Basketball U-17 team.

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