New York Post

Stage of influence

Ponds has chance to stamp career if he can elevate game the way he did in HS

- Mike Vaccaro mvaccaro@nypost.com

DAYTON, Ohio — The player didn’t have to sell himself. The coach had already fallen hard for him, watched him excel on the A AU circuit, seen enough that he’d gotten him to sign on the dotted line. No, Shamorie Ponds already had quickened Chris Mull in’ s pulse plenty. That wasn’t going to change. Still? Summertime AAU ball is the sport’s Wild Wild West, and it’ s sometimes hard to tell just how well a player might f it into a unit. This was different. This was March 12, 2016, and Mullin and his St. John’s staff were sitting in the stands at Madison Square Garden for the PSAL Championsh­ip game between Ponds’ Thomas Jefferson High School (which had last won a PSA Lin 1954) and Abraham Lincoln (which had won 11 since 1949).

It may sound quaint. But some coaches still like to see how pl ayers respond when they’ re playing for something as simple as their school colors, and for their friends, and for their teammates. Especially on the biggest stages.

“I remember sitting there, thinking, wow, this is going to be tough to figure this kid out, if he can play with other good players and high-level competitio­n,” Mullin said Tuesday, the day before his Red Storm will play Arizona State in the last of the First Four games at Dayton Arena, the winner drawing sixth-seeded Buffalo in Tulsa, Okla., on Friday night in a West Region first-round game.

Thirty-two minutes of basketball later, whatever question marks Mu ll in might have had vanished as if they were printed in invisible ink. Ponds had 31 points, 12 rebounds, six steals and five assists as Jefferson flew past Lincoln, 90-61. He scored 21 in the second half. And he electrifie­d the Garden in a way that had to feel awfully familiar to Mullin.

Three years later, Mullin has seen Ponds grow as a player and, as important, a leader, and when the Johnnies make their grand return to NCAA play it is Ponds who will shoulder most of the load, most of the burden, most of the responsibi­lity. As far as his coach sees it, that is a natural progressio­n of things.

“I think it’ s underrated how much he’s improved,” Mullin said. “He’s obviously had three incredible seasons historical­ly with his numbers and hi s stats. But his improvemen­t, I think, has been overlooked from his strength, his play making. And his defense has improved.”

And there’s the most relevant aspect, as far as St. John’s is concerned:

“Not many pl ayers can really influence the game in a lot of different ways like he does,” Mullin said. “He doesn’t have to score to influence the game. And he draws so much attention that just being on the floor he makes his teammates better.”

One of those teammates, senior forward Marvin Clark II, knows precisely the personal benefits of playing alongside Ponds.

“I talk about Shamorie all the time ,” Clark said. “Great player. Really great player. But for me, he helps my game so much because he draws so much attention that I get a lot of open shots because of that.”

These things are hard to quantify, of course, but there does seem to be a difference in the St. John’s players, and their coach, the past few days. The season was a daily study in expectatio­ns set and expectatio­ns met — and when the gap between the two started to grow, you could see the pressure get to them, to all of them.

Now: That doesn’t mean they are playing with house money against Arizona State, and it certainly doesn’t guarantee them any kind of success against the Sun Devils. But they do seem more relaxed, Ponds especially. This is the stage he’s craved his whole life, or at least since his show-stopping turn at the Garden three years ago.

“It’s definitely a blessing,” Ponds said. “It’s something I’ve dreamed of. I’m just glad to share it with my brothers, and definitely try to go far in the tournament.”

The opportunit­y is there, for the Johnnies and for their star player. People still talk about what Ponds di d in the Garden three years ago. Imagine how long they’ ll talk about him if he takes to this stage the way he took to that one.

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Shamorie Ponds
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