NBAdraft.net Justin Young on Dwight Howard

slinslin

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I've seen Dwight Howard probably more than anyone outside of the Southwest Atlanta Christian program and I will say this until the day I die, he is hands down the best player in high school basketball and he isn't very far behind LeBron James at this level. It is hard to compare the two because their games are so different. But know this: Howard will be the number one pick. There is no reason not to pick him first. He has all of the tools to be a mix between Chris Webber, Amare Stoudamire and Tim Duncan. Keep these ridiculous Kwame Brown comparisions away. I coached Kwame at the AAU level. I know the two very well and Dwight is a man amongst boys.

By the way, he will face off against his good friend and AAU teammate Randolph Morris on Jan. 10 at Atlanta Metro College. On Jan. 30, they will play again, this time on ESPN at Georgia Tech.


http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/charlotte/sports/columnists/7464498.htm

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ATLANTA - The best high school basketball player in the nation doesn't need to drive a Hummer and would rather glorify God than Nike.

So, although Dwight Howard might be the top pick in June's NBA draft, that doesn't mean he's LeBron James all over again.

"He really knows how to be a role model in a time when so many athletes seem driven by material things," said Howard's coach, Courtney Brooks of Southwest Atlanta Christian Academy.

Howard, a 6-foot-10 power forward, is a different kid on many levels. He listens to gospel rather than hip-hop. His replies are peppered with so many "yes, sirs" you'd assume he's a marine. And while many of his peers board at the classic basketball prep schools -- an Oak Hill or a Fork Union -- Howard attends a 300-student school where he'll be one of 14 graduates in the spring.

He likes it there, and why not? His support system is always nearby. His mother is a physical education teacher at the school and his father is the athletics director, along with being a Georgia state trooper. They taught their son to be proud, but not haughty, and to care about people for who they are, not what they can do for him.

Those lessons stuck.

"I think I was brought up in a loving situation. I was prayed for by everybody -- that I would be healthy, that I would be a son of God," Howard said. "Everybody treats me well here, but that's how everybody here is treated, not because of the situation I'm in."

His situation is certainly a blessing. Though he's broad-shouldered and massive, Howard has the quickness and ball-handling skills of a guard. In these watered-down times for the NBA draft, he appears to be the favorite to go No. 1. Almost certainly he'd go top-five.

Charlotte Bobcats coach/general manager Bernie Bickerstaff already has scouted Howard once this season. The Bobcats will have the fourth overall pick, so it's dicey that Howard would still be available.

Bickerstaff and other NBA scouts aren't allowed to comment on Howard's potential since he hasn't officially declared his intention to turn pro.

He is still considering three colleges -- North Carolina, Georgia Tech and Georgia -- but it's clear from his statements that he's leaning heavily toward the NBA.

"Physically, mentally, I think I can handle it," he said.

"Most people get college degrees to get a job. I would already have a job."

He treats basketball as a job, often doing individual workouts with Brooks at 6:30 a.m. They have known each other since Howard was 6 years old. Early on, Howard expected to grow no taller than 6-foot-4, so he trained to be a guard.

He said he went into serious pursuit of an NBA career at age 8, and he just had his 18th birthday.

"I worked on it every day, all the different things, particularly ball-handling. I'd be dribbling for two hours, dribbling through cones or with both hands," he said.

If he has a deficiency, Brooks said, it's the consistency of his outside shot.

That could be important, some scouts say, because right now he's more a finesse player than a true banger.

At 225 pounds, he could use some additional muscle, and has concentrated lately on weightlifting.

Successfully jumping from the preps to the pros is about more than the skill to play ball. It's about functioning as an adult and making the right choices. Howard said Los Angeles Laker Kobe Bryant's recent legal troubles reminded him how one bad decision can ruin an exemplary reputation.

Howard aspires to be like former Spur David Robinson, another highly religious player who built a school in San Antonio. He sees the NBA as a great forum to spread his faith.

"Since the NBA is national, and soon will be worldwide, people can see how I act, and that can lead people to Christ," he said.

"I don't have to say it all the time, because young people don't have a lot of patience with preaching, but I have to do it right."


http://www.usatoday.com/sports/preps/basketball/2003-11-12-dwight-howard-skills_x.htm

Howard proves to be a well-grounded star
By Ray Glier, special for USA TODAY
ATLANTA — The sparkling new gymnasium at Southwest Atlanta Christian Academy seats 476 fans, which might be enough of a stage for your basic high school basketball center.
But Dwight Howard Jr. plays here. Envision fans crammed into doorways and aisles to catch a glimpse of the 6-11, 246-pound forward-center.

While the gymnasium does not fit his status, it is fitting in many ways. Howard is expected to declare for the NBA draft next spring, but there is no hint of the mania that surrounded last year's high school showcase player, LeBron James.

Dwight Howard Jr.'s entourage is a posse of one, Dwight Howard Sr.

Not only is Dwight Sr., the school's athletics director, he is a Georgia state trooper. Dwight Jr.'s uncle, Paul Howard, is the district attorney of Fulton County.

And the ride of choice for this year's marquee high school player is not a Hummer but a dark blue 1984 Crown Victoria.

"You know," recruiting analyst Bob Gibbons says, "he is a wonderful player and simply just a real nice kid."

Howard emerged last spring as the USA's best high school player, according to Gibbons, when he "destroyed" some of the best big men in national tournaments. He is strong enough for the post, lithe enough for the wing.

When Howard talks about getting out in transition to beat opponents down the floor, he is talking about beating opponents' guards down the floor.

"He is the best player in the country, by far," Gibbons says. "He's a more refined Kwame Brown. He plays with more heart, he has more ability, and Kwame, remember, went No. 1 to the Wizards.

"If you took a poll of the pro scouts and asked them to name the player most likely to go right to the NBA, it would be Dwight."

Dave Telep, recruiting analyst for The Insiders.com, also has Howard ranked No. 1 among high school players, as does The Sporting News. Pro scouts and league officials don't officially discuss players while they're in high school.

Howard has been attending Southwest Christian Academy since kindergarten. The school has 300 students in K-12 and does not coddle athletes. Among his classes are statistics and advanced placement English.

Last season he led the Warriors to a 30-3 record and a Class A runner-up finish, averaging 21 points and 18 rebounds. He can dominate inside, but he has guard skills to play in the open floor. He was 5-10 as an eighth-grader and played the point for his father's AAU teams, so he handled the ball.

Not only did Howard acquire point guard skills when he was younger, he also developed a competitive streak playing against older youth. He was in the fourth grade when he started to play against eighth- and ninth-graders.

"They were a lot smarter and stronger, so I learned," he says. "They pushed me around a lot to see where my head was and see if I would back down."

The only chance some opponents might have this season is if Howard loses that competitive edge, which he says is the cornerstone of his game: "Every night I have to play like I'm going against 300-pound guys and they are the best."

Howard has cracked a pole on the basket at his house and shattered a backboard at his school. He seems strong enough to declare for the NBA.

"The NBA is just basic discussion so far," his father says. "He has this dream of the NBA and it's part of the thought pattern. If there is a great desire by the owners for him and there is a chance he could be in the top 10, we would consider that.

"We want to evaluate it at the end of the year. We've heard from different sources he could be in the top five. If he's in the top five, we would have to say, 'Go ahead.' The final decision would be his."


http://www.thejournalnews.com/newsroom/123003/c01p30ianweb.html

Howard, the 6-11 son of a Georgia state trooper who wowed 17 NBA scouts at Delaware's Slam Dunk to the Beach tournament the other night with 25 points, 21 rebounds, nine blocks, five assists and one frightening ability to handle the ball on the fast break.

"If I go pro, I'm thinking I'm going in there to dominate right away," Howard said in his locker room. "What I want to do is make that step and show everybody LeBron just set a standard for high schoolers that we can play basketball with the big boys. ... I think I can surpass LeBron."

If it sounds crazy, so did the notion of James already standing among the 10 or 12 best players in the NBA. Howard's next tour stop is Saturday's Pangos Dream Classic at UCLA, while James will continue to sell $110 sneakers and make the kind of beautiful music worthy of a Mozart in shorts.

"So premature a fruit might fall before it has come to maturity," Friedrich Melchior von Grimm warned about young Wolfgang.



Might be something to keep an eye on now that we are looking right into the 2004 lottery.
 

Joe Mama

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I'm sure he and Little Jake would get along well. Little Jake is very Christian and talks about it every time he gets the chance.

So is this guy 6-11, 246 lbs. or 6-10, 225 lbs.? There is a big difference.

Joe Mama
 
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slinslin

slinslin

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As long as he is 18 years old and 6'10, does it really matter? He is likely not done growing anyway.
 

Joe Mama

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Originally posted by slinslin
As long as he is 18 years old and 6'10, does it really matter? He is likely not done growing anyway.

Has Amare Stoudemire grown since he was drafted?

Joe Mama
 
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slinslin

slinslin

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Was Amare 18 when he was drafted?

Kevin Garnett definately has grown since he was drafted, I would say.
 

Joe Mama

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Originally posted by slinslin
Was Amare 18 when he was drafted?

Kevin Garnett definately has grown since he was drafted, I would say.

I guess he was 19, but they still think it is a mistake to count on players growing after they are drafted.

Yes, Kevin Garnett looks like he has grown 2-3 inches since he was drafted. Sometimes it even seems like he is still growing!

I think that when Amare Stoudemire and Zarko Cabarkapa the return the Phoenix Suns will do better. I don't think they will make the playoffs, but I don't think they will finish in the bottom five either.

Slin, what do you know about Kosta Perovic the 7-2 center out of Serbia-Montenegro?

Joe Mama
 

hcsilla

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Originally posted by Joe Mama
.

Slin, what do you know about Kosta Perovic the 7-2 center out of Serbia-Montenegro?

Joe Mama

I'm not slin but Matthew Maurer wrote about Perovic:

"Harrison maybe the best "true center" in college but the best defensive center not in the NBA is Kosta Perovic hand down..."

An italian poster on nbadraft.net wrote about Perovic:

"Anyway he is an intelligent player, with quite good fundamentals and good body.. He needs some years to be a player... Anyway I don't think he is gonna be a star..I'm not impressed with him for what I've seen in the euroleague games."

"Right now he is skinny and has to be more tough...
Femerling took offensive rebounds on him...He doesn't have a great athleticism... on offense he is not involved...so I can't say he is good.. Anyway he is good on making picks.."

Other than that there are very very limited informations about Perovic.
 

George O'Brien

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Here is what HoopsHype says about Perovic (they list him 3rd on their board)

7'2 240 19 years old

Strengths: Great size and coordination...Huge wingspan...Good work ethic...Very unselfish

Weakness: Offensive game is still coming along...Must get stronger.

BTW, HoopsHype lists Howard at 225.

nbadraft.net ranks Howard as their top pick while hoopshype lists Okafor first.
 

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Usually I players who make the jump to the NBA from highschool get under my skin, but Dwight dosen't bug me too much. Mabye because if he does go pro he has a good enough head on his shoulders to let himself decide as apposed to Chad Ford or Slam magazine making the choice.

Having said that I hope he goes to North Carolina and plays with Raymond Felton :)
 

George O'Brien

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Amare weighed 245 when he was drafted and did great on strength drills. Howard is only listed at 225. That number may be out of date, but if accurate it would make a difference. It is reported that Howard does not have much of a jump shot. This would make it hard for him to play SF for the Suns and many other teams. (Marion and JJ have jumps shots, its just that they are too inconsistent).

BTW, this weight/strength question is a recurring issue with prospective big men. They are either heavy and slow or too light to defend the low block.
 
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slinslin

slinslin

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http://www.denverpost.com/Stories/0,1413,36~90~1844086,00.html

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Grounded for life

High school basketball phenom Dwight Howard has the stability of family and faith to fall back on

By Marc J. Spears
Denver Post Sports Writer


Special / John Amis
Atlanta high school senior Dwight Howard could become the NBA's No. 1 draft choice next year.





Dwight Howard Jr. stands 6-feet-10, weighs 225 pounds and moves on the basketball court with a rare combination of grace and power. At 18, the high school senior draws NBA scouts to tiny Southwest Atlanta Christian Academy in much the same way that LeBron James began captivating the basketball world.

But the similarities begin to fade there.

Howard drives to school in a 1984 Ford Crown Victoria that was fixed up by his father, Dwight Sr., not a Hummer2 like the one given to James by his mother. Howard has received little national media attention, hasn't made the cover of Sports Illustrated and isn't constantly featured on ESPN, as James was during his senior year at St. Vincent-St. Mary High School in Akron, Ohio.


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"I'm glad, absolutely glad that he is not as big as LeBron," said Courtney Brooks, Howard's high school coach. "We're going to do everything in our power to make him an average 18-year-old high school senior. He has to enjoy these days, because they will never come back again."

But when an NBA team selects the first player in the draft this summer, Howard could join James as the only players to be chosen No. 1 right out of high school.

"Yes, sir," answers Howard, a devout Christian, when asked if he is the best high school basketball player in the country. "I've earned the title with hard work. There are a lot of boys in my class that play basketball (well). But I am in that position because of how I act and treat people on and off the court."

The scouts might agree.

The top draft prospects now include Howard; Connecticut forward-center Emeka Okafor; Russian center Pavel Podkolzine (7-5, 303 pounds); Oak Hill Academy (Va.) swingman Josh Smith; 7-foot Brazilian forward Tiago Splitter and Peoria Central (Ill.) High School point guard Shaun Livingston.

NBA teams aren't supposed to publicly speak about underclassmen, but they are high on Howard.

"The next draft is unlike this year's as it won't be set in stone months, or even possibly weeks, before the draft," an NBA executive said. "But on the early radar, all indications are that (Howard) will be one of the potential candidates for the No. 1 spot. There aren't a lot of big guys out there any more.

"He's big, athletic, very agile and has a good fit for the game. I hate to overuse the word upside, but he's got it. He could be an excellent player at his position, where it is very hard to find people."

In the eighth grade, Howard stood 6-2 and could handle the ball like a guard. By the end of his freshman year he stood 6-7 and his skills improved. Now, he owns a versatile, athletic, coachable, unselfish game that he believes is "a mix between Tim Duncan, Kevin Garnett and Shawn Kemp in his prime."

At this time last year, media, fans and NBA general managers were buying into LeBron-mania as James played under the brightest spotlight any high school athlete ever has. USA Today and a handful of basketball magazines have written about Howard, but he is mostly unknown nationally. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution writes a monthly update about Howard, but the only mention of a high school victory over Our Lady of Mercy on Dec. 9 in the paper was the score. Nuggets rookie forward Carmelo Anthony recently said he knew little about Howard.

"We haven't got a whole lot of attention," Brooks said . "... It's been quiet so far. "

The nation will get its first look at Howard when his high school faces Fairburn Landmark Christian Academy (Ga.) in a game scheduled to be televised live on ESPN on Jan. 30. Southwest Atlanta Christian Academy, with a total of 80 students in the high school grades, also will play marquee games in Los Angeles and New York City this season.

Attention is coming
"It's starting to pick up," Howard said of the attention. "Everybody is still searching for the next (James). It will probably take a while. Our school is real small. When we start touring, it will pick up. ... I'm not nervous. I'm ready to play."

Howard averaged 19.3 points, 15.5 rebounds and 4.5 blocks while shooting 72 percent from the field as a junior. He led his AAU Atlanta Celtics to a title at the Adidas Big Time Tournament in Las Vegas this past summer and was named co-MVP of the tournament with Oak Hill's Smith. Howard also dominated the Adidas ABCD camp and the National Basketball Player's Association camp last summer.

Bob Gibbons, editor and publisher of the All Star Sports Report, ranks Howard as the top high school player in the country and described him as the "most dominating player."

"He's very special," Brooks said. "He encompasses what the game is about. That's team, keeping everyone involved, having fun and dominating the game. ... If I could, I would duplicate him 10 times as a person. It just helps that he is a special basketball player."

Howard hasn't ruled out college, but it's doubtful.

"I've wanted to go to the NBA since I was 2," Howard said. "Every year I've been building myself up as a player and spiritually so whatever God would have for me, I'll be ready."

His devotion to his religion and the foundation of his family has kept Howard grounded as the professional basketball world begins to call.

His father is a Georgia state trooper who also works as athletic director at his son's school. His mother Sheryl is a physical education teacher there. Howard attends his church's peer mediation program, listens to gospel music and is an honor student. To school, he wears a uniform that consists of a long- or short-sleeve shirt with the school emblem, slacks and sometimes a blazer.

Howard's reputation makes him an even more attractive prospect to pro teams in a league where many players are having problems off the court.

"The key for him was the stability of the family as a whole," his father said. "As a young person, he wanted to be a top-notch basketball player and the best. It wasn't hard, because he loved the game. It wasn't hard, because the stability of our home.

"He is truly a blessing. He has done some things that impress me. From when he was a little kid, I've talked to him about what is right and what is wrong. He's a product of teaching."

That teaching included religion.

"God has called for me to do something with basketball in my life," Howard said. "It's one part of what he wants me to do. Not just in the NBA, that's just something I can do for 10, 15-18 years. Through basketball, they can see God through me and what he can do for them."

Role model
Though Howard wants to be like Garnett or Duncan on the court, he hopes to be like former NBA star David Robinson off the court. Robinson was a two-time NBA champion with San Antonio; won two Olympic gold medals; is the Spurs' all-time leader in points, rebounds, steals and blocked shots; was the 1995 NBA MVP and 12-time NBA all-star. As a devout Christian and major philanthropist, Robinson was honored with the 2001 NBA Sportsmanship award, the 2003 J. Kennedy Citizenship award and recently was named the 2003 Sports Illustrated Sportsmen of the Year with Duncan.

Dwight Sr. set up a phone conversation with his son and Robinson in August. The No. 1 pick in the 1987 NBA draft and the possible No. 1 pick in the 2004 NBA draft spoke for about an hour.

"(Robinson) told me, 'It won't be easy. People will try to tear you down,"' Howard said. "'What God wants to do with you, you have to do for yourself.' He said to do everything on the foundation of Jesus Christ."

Howard's father said he plans to live with his son during his rookie season and possibly his second season in the NBA. He acknowledged that Dwight could be in for a rude awakening.

"I don't think he will go bad, but he doesn't know what to expect," Howard Sr. said. "He lives 2 1/2 miles from his high school and a half-mile from his church. The most he's done is travel with his AAU team. I don't know if you can be mentally ready for the NBA at 17 or 18 years old. I don't know what is on the inside (of the NBA)."

When asked what type of advice he would give Howard, James said: "I don't know him personally. The best thing I can tell him is, 'Don't let nobody else try and make your decision for you. Make your own decision. And work hard."'

Though he acknowledges he needs to get stronger, Howard believes he is mentally strong enough for the NBA. And to keep him focused on his goals and not by temptations, the teen uses the Bible verse Philippians 4:13 as motivation.

"I have a theme verse, 'I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me,"' Howard said. "I can do anything that he has given life for me to do. Anything God wants for me to do, I can do for him through discipline and obedience.

"(My faith) is going to be tested highly (in the NBA). The devil doesn't want to see any of God's children succeed. Every day, he tries to break me down with different temptations. It's a test from God to see how I handle it. I think I handled it great so far."
 

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