USA TODAY US Edition

Redshirt year a Gonzaga rite of passage

- Daniel Uthman @DanUthman USA TODAY Sports

Zach Norvell Jr. is accustomed to playing high-level basketball, having graduated from Chicago’s Simeon Career Academy, which has won four state championsh­ips this decade and counts the Milwaukee Bucks’ Jabari Parker among its recent alumni.

But what Norvell encountere­d last summer during his first offseason workout with the Gonzaga men’s basketball team was something else.

“It was so much faster,” Norvell said. “I was like, ‘ Oh God, I’m so tired. I’m taking plays off, that’s how tired I am.’ ”

Speed and endurance weren’t the only challenges Norvell encountere­d in his first months with the Bulldogs. He tore the meniscus in his left knee in July. By October he made a decision

that numerous other Gonzaga players have made dating to the era before the program’s current streak of 19 NCAA tournament appearance­s: He decided to sit out this year as a redshirt.

The decision of Norvell, who was rated as one of the top 100 recruits entering college basketball this season, as well as that of fellow freshman Jacob Larsen reinforces an area in which Gonzaga zags where the other teams in the NCAA tournament Sweet 16 zig. In a period in college basketball when many players in top 25 programs view the sport as a brief way station en route to the profession­al game, Gonzaga has a tradition of players intentiona­lly prolonging their college careers.

Eleven of the 17 players on the Bulldogs roster have redshirted during their time at the school. The other 15 teams still playing in the NCAA tournament have an average of 2.93 such players.

“When we go around the locker room and we’re all sitting there waiting for coach and point around the room and go redshirt, redshirt, redshirt, redshirt, redshirt, redshirt, it’s literally like you are the exception to the rule if you haven’t redshirted at some point,” said Travis Knight, Gonzaga’s strength and conditioni­ng coach.

“It’s not looked at as, ‘Hey, you failed to be out there as a freshman.’ It’s looked at as if you don’t redshirt, by all means do as much as you can, but if you do get an opportunit­y to redshirt, man, it will change everything for you.”

Nigel Williams- Goss, the Bulldogs’ All-American redshirt junior guard, recognized that quickly when he was entertaini­ng suitors after deciding to transfer from Washington in 2015. Like almost all Division I transfers, he was going to have to sit out a season per NCAA rules, but the last thing he wanted to do was spend that time actually sitting.

“That was one of the biggest reasons why I came here, was because of the plan that they had in place for me,” Williams- Goss said. “It was already mapped out when I came on my visit as far as what we were going to do, things we were going to work on.”

DRAW, NOT DETERRENT

For players matriculat­ing to Gonzaga directly from high school, the redshirt is an option, but it’s not a fit for every player. Current Bulldogs forward Zach Collins is the team’s most efficient player as a true freshman, and Oklahoma City Thunder rookie Domantas Sabonis played as a true freshman and sophomore from 2014 to 2016 before leaving for the NBA.

Yet Gonzaga has figured out how to turn the redshirt year into a recruiting tool. Player developmen­t is one of the program’s core pillars, and Knight presents redshirtin­g as a problem-solving exercise that is different player to player and often day to day. The weight room isn’t a place to brag or turn into bodybuilde­rs, but just one of dozens of tools for the players’ benefit.

“We literally try to not leave any stone unturned,” said Mark Few, Gonzaga’s head coach, “whether it’s nutrition or sleep or DNA predisposi­tion to weights to speed, agility, flexibilit­y, yoga.

“Capping out their potential has always been the goal. If you’re not getting the top five or 10 or 15 players in the country — which we don’t get coming out of high school — you focus on, ‘Let’s get these other guys that we evaluate properly and know how hungry they are and their potential, and then let’s do it that way.’ ”

Matt Santangelo, who was part of a five-player redshirt class in 1995, remembers being told as a freshman, “You’re going to be better at the tail end of 22 than on the front of 18.”

“And that kind of made sense to me,” he said.

Santangelo and his fellow redshirts would grab then-graduate assistant coach Bill Grier to play 3-on-3. Four years later, Santangelo earned honorable mention All-American honors on the Bulldogs’ 1999 Elite Eight team, and as a senior they made the Sweet 16.

Few reiterates that the process has evolved since Santangelo’s era, with Knight being one of the biggest difference­s and players such as Kelly Olynyk, Kyle Wiltjer and now Williams- Goss earning AllAmerica­n honors in their first seasons post-redshirtin­g.

“They now have multiple examples to say, ‘Hey, our system works,’ ” Santangelo said. “Our system is working for whichever direction you’re coming from or going to.”

THE ULTIMATE REDSHIRT

There is one story in Gonzaga’s history of redshirtin­g that reached legendary status even though it is only a few years old.

Shortly after the 2010-11 season, Olynyk met with the coaching staff, troubled by his lack of body control and disappoint­ed that he could not be a bigger contributo­r to the team. In Gonzaga’s final game that season, a 22-point loss to BYU in the NCAA tournament Round of 32, Olynyk had played 10 minutes off the bench. He suggested that it should be his final game in a Bulldogs uniform, that he should transfer.

“He was frustrated,” assistant coach Tommy Lloyd said. “He was kind of a late bloomer, so physically he wasn’t quite there, so he had a lot of balance issues and things like that. But he loved it here so much, we were able to sit down and have some honest conversati­ons.

“Basically, the conclusion was, ‘Yeah, transfer. Transfer to Gonzaga and redshirt here.’ We’d had a ton of redshirts before, and they’d all had success, and let’s see what we can do with you.”

What they saw was an effort that might never be matched. Olynyk was so eager and aggressive in his desire to improve, Knight said it challenged him to be a better strength and conditioni­ng coach and find new drills, tools and exercises to implement. Because Olynyk was a rare mid-career redshirt, Lloyd said he was able to focus on the aspects of his agility and movement that were specifical­ly tailored to accentuate the style of play he had been a part of for two years. Olynyk’s commitment and growth redefined what could be accomplish­ed in a redshirt year at Gonzaga.

“Mentally, he shifted, where he became tough and physical and willing to go inside and outside,” assistant coach Brian Michaelson said, and then all of a sudden not much after Christmas there was a stretch where it was, ‘He might be our best player.’ In February and March, we knew what we had coming. He was our best player. Our best player’s not even playing this season.”

The next season Olynyk did, earning first-team All-American honors from four organizati­ons and becoming a lottery pick in the 2013 NBA draft.

WHY IT WORKS

The notion that the best player on the roster could be unavailabl­e for game competitio­n might seem like a risk of the redshirtin­g strategy, but it’s really the point.

“What’s made it work is we have a culture of ownership and responsibi­lity,” Lloyd said. “Those guys know they’re redshirtin­g for a reason, and I always tell them the redshirt needs to be your ‘because’ year. Because you redshirted, you were able to do this. It’s not a wasted year. Your mind-set needs to be at the end of your career, because you redshirted, you were able to do this, this and that.”

Because Norvell redshirted, he has a plan for every move and shot, he is learning to play at a faster tempo and, due to the use of strobe goggles with Knight, is learning to trust his instincts.

Because Larsen redshirted, the 7-foot native of Denmark has been able to add 20 pounds of upper body muscle to complement his European playing style. “He’s a guy who walks around quoting Arnold Schwarzene­gger,” Knight said. “Everybody who comes in contact with him just marvels at how he’s transforme­d his body and calls him The Machine.”

As Division I transfers, Johnathan Williams and Williams- Goss’ redshirt years were mandatory, but because of them Williams learned to get more arc on his shot, use the backboard on hook shots and actually show he could use his right hand. “I was so lefthand dominant in my two years at Missouri, you probably thought I’d cut my right hand off,” he said.

The focus for Williams- Goss was almost all mental, specifical­ly recognizin­g and manipulati­ng floor spacing to his advantage. He embraced the work, especially because he couldn’t imagine how much he could improve if he had an entire year to study and work on his game.

The days when Gonzaga is playing are the days the redshirts have their hardest workouts, a combinatio­n of weight room training and on-court training in an empty gym that soon will be filled with fans rooting for or against the Bulldogs who are actually playing. That’s what dozens of Gonzaga players have done for more than 20 years, and it’s what Norvell and Larsen are doing now.

“I feel like if you take advantage of it or you make the most out of it,” Norvell said, “nothing but good will come out of it.”

 ?? YOUNG KWAK, AP ?? Zach Norvell redshirted after he tore his meniscus.
YOUNG KWAK, AP Zach Norvell redshirted after he tore his meniscus.
 ?? KELVIN KUO, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? That Gonzaga already had a plan in place for him was attractive to Nigel Williams-Ross, right.
KELVIN KUO, USA TODAY SPORTS That Gonzaga already had a plan in place for him was attractive to Nigel Williams-Ross, right.

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