Las Vegas Review-Journal

Bennett’s magic conjures L.J.

But young player not expected to go No. 1

- By MATT YOUMANS LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL

NEW YORK — With his broad shoulders and big smile, Anthony Bennett flashes a striking resemblanc­e to a basketball star who stole the show here 22 years ago.

The Las Vegas connection is a coincidenc­e that makes comparison­s between the physically impressive forwards unavoidabl­e on the eve of the NBA Draft. The similariti­es in their styles of play are nearly a mirror image, yet one is much more of a mystery than the other.

Is Bennett the second coming of Larry Johnson? The answer is no sure thing, and talent evaluators have wrestled with the question for months.

“I’m versatile. I can play inside and out. I can shoot the 3. I can go down low and post up. I can basically do a little bit of everything,” Bennett said.

Johnson did all of those things, and a lot more. He led UNLV to a national championsh­ip as a junior and was the No. 1 overall pick in the draft after his senior year in 1991. There was no doubt about what he could do in the NBA, and he delivered as a two-time All-Star.

Bennett’s freshman season was a blur, a compilatio­n of highlight dunks and 3pointers for a Rebels team that won 25 games but no championsh­ips or NCAA Tournament games. Still, there was no doubt he made the right call to leave college after one year.

“It’s my dream to play in the NBA,” said Bennett, who some project as a future All-Star and others speculate could turn into an overweight bust. The truth might be somewhere in the middle.

Bennett appears similar to the other elite players in this draft, set for 4:30 p.m. Thursday at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn. It’s a high-risk event with

selection and being out of shape, it has been another in an endless list of devastatin­g injuries dating to the team’s days in Buffalo. The Clippers once traded for Dominique Wilkins and had him for a whopping 25 games. That sort of (non-)history. But if the jigsaw puzzle that makes for the Clippers always has been missing one or two or 20 pieces, it appears all now have been accounted for, a team that owns the type of superstar leader and soon-to-be championsh­ip coach capable of delivering the sort of success that would make super fan Billy Crystal excited enough to consider making that longawaite­d sequel to “Forget Paris.”

It’s all due to one thing: For the first time since purchasing the team in 1981, Sterling has begrudging­ly accepted the fact someone much smarter (not a stretch by any means) should run the organizati­on and have final say on all matters. His point guard. “Chris Paul runs that team and has called the shots since he got there,” Heisler said. “He’s very intelligen­t, very grounded, knows basketball at all levels, from the AAU circuit all the way up.

“Donald Sterling hasn’t changed. He has just been very, very lucky to have good people around him making smart decisions, many who have since been fired or left. But they finally have some stability of being on the same page. Make no mistake, it’s Chris Paul’s page.”

For it, the Clippers today will introduce Doc Rivers as their next coach via a trade with Boston that will send the Celtics a first-round draft pick in 2015. Sterling initially balked at offering that high a selection, but then his people (translatio­n: Paul) applied the needed pressure.

For it, the team’s best player is now content with who will be coaching him, and Paul is expected to soon sign a fiveyear max contract.

For it, know this: If there were ever a sports franchise where things would run better with a player rather than an owner shaping the ensemble, it’s the Clippers.

LeBron James doesn’t come close to running the Heat in such a manner, and I’m not sure he wants to. Kobe Bryant is on his last legs as a player, and one of them has a busted Achilles. Dwight Howard seemed to have such juice in Orlando, but won’t if he remains with the Lakers.

Mike Dunleavy as coach and general manager began the process that helped produce the roster you see from the Clippers today; Sterling fired him in 2010. Neil Olshey, who pulled off the trade for Paul, eventually grew tired as a general manager working on a monthto-month salary and abandoned ship from a playoff team to work in Portland. Gary Sacks is the vice president of basketball operations, and he’s working without a contract.

It all makes for the bizarre universe that is a franchise owned by Sterling.

“Donald doesn’t deserve any credit for where the team is right now,” Heisler said. “They lucked into getting Blake Griffin (as a No. 1 pick in 2009), and now Sterling almost blew the deal to get Doc Rivers as coach. I’m not saying Donald can’t do anything, but the fact the Clippers were a good team last year and are now a better one today has nothing to do with him.

“They won’t be the favorites in the Western Conference next season. There are better teams. But if you’re going to have a guy with the amount of power Chris Paul has there now, he’s the right guy. “He’s the only guy in the league with it.” Playing for the franchise that needs it most.

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