The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Campbell’s Clemons dazzles among game’s small (big) scorers

5-foot-9 guard leads nation in scoring

- By Aaron Beard

BUIES CREEK, N.C. >> Campbell’s Chris Clemons keeps hitting shots near midcourt logos, dunking in traffic and passing big names on the list of college basketball’s best alltime scorers.

The national scoring leader has a fearless game packed into a 5-foot-9 frame, making the senior the headliner of college basketball’s crop of bigtime undersized scorers — including No. 10 Marquette’s Markus Howard and No. 12 Purdue’s Carsen Edwards.

They are Mighty Mites in a game that endlessly yearns for bigger, faster and stronger.

“The main thing is confidence,” Clemons said in an interview with The Associated Press. “You always want to be confident in knowing you can play with anybody. I think that carries me through mostly anything, defensivel­y and offensivel­y — that I can play just as well as anybody else regardless of size.”

That’s certainly true of Clemons and several others nationally entering the week:

— Clemons averages a national-best 29.1 points, up from around 25 in each of the previous two seasons, and is 11th in Division I history with 2,930 points;

— Howard, a 5-11 junior, is fourth at 25.2 points;

— Edwards, a junior and preseason AP All-American listed at 6-foot on the NCAA leaderboar­d but 6-1 by the school, is seventh at 24.6 points;

— There are four other 20-point scorers standing 6 feet or shorter: Hampton junior Jermaine Marrow (6-0, 24.9 points), Texas San Antonio sophomore Jhivvan Jackson (60, 22.7), VMI sophomore Bubba Parham (5-11, 20.5) and Northern Illinois junior Eugene German (60, 20.0);

— And the season’s only two 50-point games came from small scorers: Howard with 53 points against Creighton in January and Furman 5-11 junior Jordan Lyons with 54 against North Greenville in November, though that was an outlier amid Lyons’ 16.3-point average.

“If you’ve grown up with the ball in your hands your whole life — you’ve had the ball, you’ve made decisions, you’ve had to score, you’ve had to figure out ways — then you’re going to find a way,” said Kevin McGeehan, Clemons’ coach at Campbell.

“It’s like people say that rebounding translates, right? Guys that are great high school rebounders usually end up being great college rebounders. Well, small scorers are the same. It really doesn’t matter. You might have to develop a floater or develop a stepback shot . whatever it is, you figure out a way.”

In Howard’s case, it starts with maximizing every opportunit­y.

He’s shooting 43.7 percent on 3-pointers and hit 10 in his 53-point outing. But he gets to the line, too, where he attempts seven shots per game and shoots 91.6 percent. That alone can turn a good game into a great one, like when he hit 19 of 21 free throws against Kansas State in one of two 45-point showings this season.

“My whole life, I’ve played above my age,” said Howard, who had 38 points in Saturday’s win against reigning national champion Villanova. “I always played three and four years older than what I was. I played against guys that were older than me, stronger than me, taller than me. . So when I got into college, it was something I wasn’t used to seeing.”

Amid that college success, it’s unclear how their games might translate in the NBA.

Jay Williams, a former AP national college player of the year at Duke and NBA player, said they will need to find the right fit — maybe a roster seeking scoring or playmaking off the bench — while overcoming defensive concerns.

“You have a lot of guards who are just taller, stronger, athletic and who have post games,” said Williams, now an ESPN analyst. “I think that’s always the problem when you have smaller guys that come in. . There’s the disadvanta­ge because a team will run the same scheme relentless­ly until you stop it.”

“This is not me saying that Chris Clemons can’t do it or Markus Howard can’t do it. But we don’t see them being guarded by guys who are 6-6, 6-7” in college.

So far, Clemons is thriving against just about anyone.

With a strong 180-pound frame and a quick release, Clemons comes around screens and elevates for 3-pointers even with a defender on his hip. He’s always ready for the big shot, including when he raced upcourt to bury a 30-footer at the horn to finish with 39 points and win at Big South Conference-leading Radford. really not

 ?? JASON E. MICZEK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Campbell University guard Chris Clemons brings the ball up court against Presbyteri­an College in the second half of an NCAA basketball game Thursday in Buies Creek, N.C. Clemons keeps hitting shots near mid court logos, dunking in traffic and passing big names on the list of college basketball’s best all-time scorers.
JASON E. MICZEK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Campbell University guard Chris Clemons brings the ball up court against Presbyteri­an College in the second half of an NCAA basketball game Thursday in Buies Creek, N.C. Clemons keeps hitting shots near mid court logos, dunking in traffic and passing big names on the list of college basketball’s best all-time scorers.

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