The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Washington showing why he stayed at Kentucky

- By John Clay Lexington (Ky.) Herald-Leader

LEXINGTON, KY. — Last spring, Kentucky football’s Josh Allen made an important decision. Instead of leaving school early for the NFL draft, the outside linebacker opted to return for another season, expand his skills and improve his stock. Needless to say, the decision has paid off.

Can the same thing be happening for Allen’s friend, PJ Washington?

Two months after Allen’s decision, Washington faced a similar choice. The freshman forward could remain in the NBA draft pool or return to school, expand his game and improve his stock. Like Allen, Washington chose the latter. And if Washington’s impact hasn’t quite met the lofty “Player of the Year” heights of a Josh Allen, the sophomore from Texas has certainly upped his game.

In fact, nearly lost in the midst of Ashton Hagans’ eight steals, Keldon Johnson’s 21 points and Reid Travis’ 20 was Washington’s near triple-double in Kentucky’s impressive 80-72 victory over North Carolina in last week’s CBS Sports Classic in Chicago.

Washington finished with 11 points, 10 rebounds and a career-high eight assists. It was his fourth double-double of the season, passing the three double-doubles he recorded his freshman season. And his performanc­e was of a piece with the improvemen­t Washington has shown throughout the current campaign.

Last season, Washington shot 51.9 percent from the floor. This year, he’s shooting 52 percent. Last year, Washington shot just 23.8 percent from 3-point range. This year, he’s shooting 45 percent. Last year, Washington shot 60.6 percent from the foul line. This year, he’s shooting 70 percent. His points-per-game average has gone from 10.8 last season to 13.3 this year. His rebounds have improved from 5.7 to 8.5. His assists are up from 1.5 to 2.3.

The 3-point number particular­ly sticks out. A season ago, Washington was more of a back-to-the-basket operator, scoring most of his points around the rim. He attempted 21 3-point shots all season, including just one in the final 13 games. NBA scouts had legitimate questions about Washington’s shooting range.

This season, Washington has already taken 20 3-point shots, making nine. He was 4 of 5 from 3 in the Cats’ early-season romp over North Dakota. Last week, when North Carolina sliced UK’s lead to 66-60 with 6:48 left, Hagans turned a backcourt steal into a Washington 3 from the top of the key that pushed Kentucky’s cushion to nine points.

“PJ did a little bit of everything, which is what we wanted,” UK coach John Calipari said afterward. “He scored, rebounded, he had assists, but that’s who he should be.”

We already knew Washington can score. He scored a career-high 29 points while grabbing 12 rebounds in UK’s overtime loss to Seton Hall. Afterward, however, Calipari wasn’t satisfied, saying Washington should be a “35 and 20” player every night. That’s a Calipari exaggerati­on for effect, but you get his point.

It was the same point UK assistant Kenny Payne made at the end of November, implying Washington needed to be more aggressive and consistent.

“I think there’s a ‘He is a solid, good college player, and that’s good enough.’ That’s not good enough. Not for this program. Not for who and what his talent is, ”Payne said.

Like Allen, Washington is showing more and more of that talent.

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