USA TODAY US Edition

Ristic credits Netflix for success

Watching movies helped him learn English language

- Lindsay Schnell

TUCSON – Netflix fancies itself as the world’s leading Internet entertainm­ent service, a cutting-edge necessity for Millennial­s, responsibl­e for a generation of cable cord-cutters. Another somewhat unconventi­onal and random achievemen­t for the streaming giant: It helped a 7-foot Serbian basketball player adjust to America.

Dusan Ristic had a limited grasp on English when he arrived at Sunrise Christian Academy in Bel Aire, Kan., in early 2014 as a gangly 18-year-old who hoped to play college hoops in the states. In Novi Sad, his Serbian hometown, Ristic devoured American movie after American movie, following along with Serbian subtitles.

“When I came here,” Ristic told USA TODAY, “I told myself, ‘I won’t have to watch movies with subtitles anymore!’ Wrong.”

To pick up the language quicker, to understand what his teammates were saying in the locker room and on the court, Ristic did what any teenager would do. He binge-watched The Walking Dead.

Five years later, Ristic’s English is practicall­y perfect, the subtitle feature on his computer turned off. He’s gone from bench player to one of the Pac-12’s most dependable big men. This week, with two wins at the Oregon schools, he can become the winningest player in Arizona history (the record is 110; before tip-off Thursday against Oregon State, Ristic had 109).

Although much of the Wildcats’ success will be credited to freshman phenom and likely lottery pick DeAndre Ayton, it’s the other big man in the paint, Ristic, whom Arizona coach Sean Miller admires.

“Dusan, he’s worked — in school, the weight room, practice,” Miller told USA TODAY. “A lot of times, his role wasn’t big. It’s not like he’s been a four-year starter. He’s had to fight through a lot. But who he is right now, I wouldn’t trade him for anybody.”

Ristic and Ayton provide matchup problems when each is on the floor by himself. When together, almost no team has answers. They’ve combined to shoot 59.9% this season (341 of 569).

And just in case anyone thinks this

7-footer can only do work in the paint, a quick scouting report: Ristic’s shooting

46% from beyond the arc. At Utah, he drained three threes in a win, and two weeks ago at Arizona State, he hit backto-back threes as Arizona completed a sweep of its rival.

But the most impressive part about Ristic’s athletic journey has been the transforma­tion of his body.

“When I got here, I was skinny but I was fat — does that make sense?” Ristic explained, laughing. “I came here

235 pounds, 20% body fat. … Skill-wise, I had no problem but the basketball was more physical, with stronger, bigger, faster players. I had to improve.”

He did that by sacrificin­g long trips home in the summer, opting instead to stay mostly in Tucson and do sand pit workouts outside McKale Center with strength and conditioni­ng coach Chris Rounds. For two months going into his sophomore year, they met at noon every day, when Ristic estimates it was 110 degrees outside. Some days, Rounds strapped a weight vest on Ristic. They were the toughest workouts he’d ever done — and his favorites, because he saw instant results.

Each summer, he’s upped the ante. Ristic kept the sand workouts but added other off-court elements, such as cardio in the pool, and boxing once a week (it helped his footwork). Steady improvemen­t led to a trimmer, fitter Ristic: He checks in at 250 pounds now, with just less than 10% body fat. For comparison’s sake, Ayton’s hovers between 5% and 6% body fat. Ristic thinks adding another 10 pounds of muscle will be a necessity at the next level, but he is also conscious of not wanting to put too much pressure on his knees.

His physical growth has directly correlated with his rise in playing time and responsibi­lity. After two years in a backup role, Ristic emerged as one of Arizona’s most dependable players last season, averaging 16.6 points and 6.2 rebounds, shooting 55.6% from the field. This season he chips in just 11.9 points but shoots 58.8% from the floor. He also grabs 7.1 boards per game.

In idolizing Bill Walton and other American players as a child, Ristic soon understood that coming to the states was his best bet for overall developmen­t. He easily could have stayed in Europe to play profession­ally, skipping college all together. Initially, he thought that’s what he would do.

It wasn’t until Ristic, then 15, recorded a double-double (scoring 22 points and grabbing 12 boards) in the 2011 Jordan Brand Classic Internatio­nal Game that he crossed college coaches’ radars. Shortly after returning to Serbia following the game, he got his first recruiting call — from UCLA. He told them he didn’t have any plans to go to the USA long term, but thanks for thinking of him.

Almost seven years later, a playful smile crosses Ristic’s face as he retells this story. “I’m glad I didn’t go there, by the way,” he said.

Over the past five years in the USA, Ristic has grown from frail bench player into a solid profession­al prospect. Along the way, he’s watched hundreds of fictional characters overcome various hurdles. What he’s learned — courtesy mostly of Netflix — is that the best journeys always involve some hardship.

“When you don’t play a lot, your mind goes a lot of different directions,” he said. “It can go to the worst-possible scenario. But I never said, ‘I wish I had stayed home.’ Years ago, I read a quote in a book: ‘Your failures, shortcomin­gs and obstacles can either end up as your story, or your excuse.’

“You can choose. I chose for it to be my story.”

 ?? CASEY SAPIO/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Arizona center Dusan Ristic learned to speak English by binge-watching shows on Netflix.
CASEY SAPIO/USA TODAY SPORTS Arizona center Dusan Ristic learned to speak English by binge-watching shows on Netflix.

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