The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Bobcats star’s backstory is one of perseveran­ce

- By Mitch Stacy

Anybody who follows MidAmerica­n Conference basketball already knows about Ohio star Jason Preston and perhaps heard about his improbable journey to Division I college basketball.

With the Bobcats in the NCAA Tournament, the junior point guard and his heart-tugging backstory are now getting national attention.

Preston was electric in the MAC tournament final last weekend, dictating the pace and scoring 22 points as Ohio routed favored Buffalo 84-69 and secured an NCAA Tournament berth for the first time since 2012.

Ohio, the 13th seed, faces fourth-seeded Virginia on Saturday night.

Preston’s ascent to the national stage has all the makings of a movie.

The youngster lost his basketball-loving single mother Judith to cancer when he was 15 and he ended up living with a friend. He wasn’t on anybody’s radar coming out of high school, averaging barely 2 points per game his senior season.

A friend persuaded him to play in an AAU tournament because the team was short one guy. Preston played well enough to stay with it and started to think his basketball dream might still be alive. He enrolled in a sports academy in Tennessee to develop his game and eventually put together his own highlight reel.

Preston got an offer from mid-major Ohio, taking off during his sophomore season in 2019-20 and leading the Bobcats in virtually all offensive categories.

He missed four games due to an injury in a 202021 season twice interrupte­d by coronaviru­s cancellati­ons. Still, he averaged 16.6 points per game, 7.2 assists and made 40% of his 3-point tries. His gifts were on display the day after Thanksgivi­ng when he scored 31 points and dished eight assists in Ohio’s 77-75 loss to Illinois, the eventual Big Ten champs.

“The world needs to know about his story,” second-year Ohio coach Jeff Boals said. “It’s a movie. I’ve been coaching 26 years and I’ve never seen somebody in his situation, where he was in a five-year span — from 6 feet tall, 140 pounds, scoring 52 points his whole senior year — to where he is today.

“I’m excited for the world to see it, because it’s deserving, it’s earned, and it’s just an American story,” he said.

Preston, now 6-4 and 187 pounds, seems comfortabl­e in the spotlight by now but, perhaps predictabl­y, is quick to deflect it.

“I’ve gotten a lot of attention for what’s happened recently,” he said, “but I just want to say I wish some of my teammates would get some of the same love as well.”

 ?? TONY DEJAK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ohio’s Jason Preston drives to the basket against Buffalo’s Ronaldo Segu during the first half in the championsh­ip of the MidAmerica­n Conference tournament March 13 in Cleveland.
TONY DEJAK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ohio’s Jason Preston drives to the basket against Buffalo’s Ronaldo Segu during the first half in the championsh­ip of the MidAmerica­n Conference tournament March 13 in Cleveland.

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