The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Purdue star has basketball pedigree

- By Michael Marot

Purdue’s Vincent Edwards never had a choice when it came to playing basketball. It was in his blood. His father, Bill, played profession­ally in Europe for more than a decade. His mother, Glennetta Patton, played the game in college and helped coach one of Edwards’ youth teams. His older brothers, Bill Jr. and Darius, each played Division I ball and even today, family get-togethers sometimes consist of pick-up games at a gym in his hometown of Middletown, Ohio.

All the competitio­n, the jawing, the instructio­n and the good-natured ribbing from parents and siblings alike taught Edwards what he needed to do to become a success on the court.

“They bullied me, they roughed me up, they pushed me physically and mentally and my mom did it,

too,” he said. “But my parents taught me that if you could do a lot of things, it would be hard to keep you off the floor. I just always wanted to play.”

Getting Edwards off the court seems be getting harder by the day.

He’s a serious gym rat by nature and a fan of the game. He knows the history of the sport and his father’s legacy as Wright State’s career scoring and rebounding leader.

For now, the Boilermake­rs’ senior forward owns family bragging rights.

He has appeared in and won more NCAA Tournament games than everyone else combined. He’s the only one to reach the Sweet 16 — and he’s heading back for the second straight year. He’s the lone family member with a shiny conference championsh­ip ring from a power-five league, and he began this season as the only active college player in America with at least 1,000 career points, 500 rebounds, 300 assists and 100 3-pointers.

Ask anyone around West Lafayette and they will explain this recordbrea­king season might not have been possible without him or his versatilit­y.

And even his teammates know Vincent Edwards couldn’t have made it with the support and the challenges he faced growing up

in a basketball household.

“I know his family pretty well and they care for him and push him,” point guard P.J. Thompson said. “They know his potential and how good he can be.”

The pushing didn’t just come from inside the Edwards household.

He also wanted to live up to the reputation of Middletown High School, which has produced former Hall of Fame basketball player Jerry Lucas, 1967 Masters champion Gay Brewer, NFL Hall of Famer Cris Carter and Carter’s older brother, Butch, who played and coached in the NBA after playing at Indiana and beating Purdue on a lastsecond shot in the 1979 NIT title game.

All the pressures — and the sibling rivalries — forced Edwards to view the game different from most.

“Knowing my dad and brothers, that’s why I started on other things in my game, the little things,” he said. “That’s how my versatilit­y came about.”

Now even as his college career winds down and the possibilit­y of a pro career beckons, Edwards is still focused on the tasks at hand.

After breaking the school’s single-season record for wins last weekend, the second-seeded Boilermake­rs (30-6) can reach their first regional semifinal game since 2000 by beating third-seeded Texas Tech (26-9) in Boston.

 ?? CARLOS OSORIO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Purdue forward Vincent Edwards knocks the ball away from Cal State Fullerton guard Jamal Smith during the second half of a first-round game in the NCAA tournament.
CARLOS OSORIO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Purdue forward Vincent Edwards knocks the ball away from Cal State Fullerton guard Jamal Smith during the second half of a first-round game in the NCAA tournament.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States