Dayton Daily News

Knicks raving about Toppin’s high-flying act

- ByStevePop­per

NEWYORK— In the first days of Knicks training camp, one of the early taskswas a conditioni­ng drill, and when it was Obi Toppin’s turn, the rookie asked the trainers what the recordwas for the test. Hemarked that as a goal

and his first achievemen­t in the NBA.

“I feel like me being who I am, me wanting to grind, mewanting to always win, I just feel like I always put in theworkwhe­n conditioni­ng time comes up, it’s like I’m automatica­lly ready for it,” Toppin said in a Zoom call Thursday. “When I go out there, I try my best to have the highest score. I always ask what the highest score is so I can beat it. We had a conditioni­ng test and I asked what the highest score was and I had to beat it.”

Although Knicks sources said they don’t keep an official list and that this was based on the trainer’s recollecti­ons, the agreementw­as that the recordwas real and that Toppinwas given a time to beat — and shattered it.

Givenwhat his new teammates have seen, maybe that’s not surprising. The Brooklyn native has begun to take his high- flying act around theMadison Square Garden Training Center.

“He’s a freak athlete, man,” saidKevin Knox, who spent a month working out with Toppin in South Jersey before the draft. “He comes in the gym 8 in the morning and his first shot is a between-the-legs dunk. It was just crazy his athleticis­m is where it’s at now. It’s only going to continue to get better.”

“Obi Toppin is beyond a freak athlete,” Austin Rivers said. “He’s going to be really good. I know I obviously didn’t get to play against him last year, but just seeing him in here, my God.”

But that high-flying skill didn’t always carry Toppin. When he graduated from Ossining High School, he didn’t have a single Division I offer, so he opted for a postgradua­te season atMt. Zion prep school inMaryland and leaped at the first school to make him an offer, landing at Dayton, where he redshirted his first year.

Even after a solid freshman season, heworked out for NBA teams but opted to head back to school. This time, after earning NCAA Player of the Year honors, hewas a certain lottery pick.

Whenthe Knicks took him with the No. 8 overall pick, therewas little doubt about the 22-year-old’s athleticis­m. But he understand­s that to earn minutes under coach TomThibode­au, there still is plenty ofwork to do, particular­ly on the defensive end.

“Coach Thibs, he’s known forhis defense,” Toppin said. “I feel like with my athletic ability, my speed, the way I movemy body, I understand my body and I understand the things I need to do to get better and to takemy game to another level.

“So I’m locked in, I’m at another level, I’m not in collegeany­more, andI’m locked intowhat I have to do to be great. With the coaching staff and playerswe have, they’re going to pushme as well as I’m going to push them to do everything we can to be successful.”

The push certainly will come from Thibodeau and his staff, and Toppin insists that he will follow the lead. He already has heard the talk that with his age, experience and skills, he could be a frontrunne­r for Rookie of the Year honors if he gets the minutes and lives up to the opportunit­y.

If not, as a native New Yorker, he iswell-acquainted withwhat the falloutwou­ld be.

“I’m notworried about all the outside stuff that’s going to happen,” he said. “Growing up in New York, to have the opportunit­y to play in Rucker Park, Dyckman, West 4th Street, all those amazing parks in the city. I feel like there were crazy fans out there. If you can play in that, you can play anywhere. We have a great fan base. At the end of the day, they aren’t between those lines like we are.”

 ?? DAVID JABLONSKI/STAFF ?? Dayton’s Obi Toppin dunks against St. Bonaventur­e on Jan. 22 atUD Arena.
DAVID JABLONSKI/STAFF Dayton’s Obi Toppin dunks against St. Bonaventur­e on Jan. 22 atUD Arena.

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