03222018 sports

Page 1

SPORTS SECTION E

NBA,

PAGE 16

THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 2018

Franco named to roster for the Iverson Classic

By RENALDO DORSETT Tribune Sports Reporter rdorsett@tribunemedia.net

T

he accolades continue to stockpile for Bahamian basketball prep star Franco Miller and a pivotal summer recruitment continues this spring as his decision on an NCAA programme looms. Miller’s latest honour was being named to the roster for the 2018 Allen Iverson Roundball Classic, popularly referred to as the Iverson Classic. The event goes into its second year on April 21 with a mission to be the most competitive All American game in the country. In his lone season with Crestwood Prep in Toronto, Canada, Miller led the Lions to the National Preparatory Association playoffs. He averaged 21.8 points, four rebounds and 3.6 assists per

game this season and was named a First Team All-Star during the league’s tournament finale. The 2018 Iverson Classic will feature two teams comprised of the country’s most talented prospects. Team Loyalty features standouts like UCLA Commit Shareef O’Neal, Kentucky Commit Immanuel Quickley, UNC Commit Nassir Little and Syracuse Commit Darius Bazley. Team Loyalty will face Team Honour which features Anfernee Simons, LSU Commit Nazreon Reid, Mississippi State Commit Reggy Perry and more. Team Honour also features the most high profile appearance for Georgetown commit and internet phenomenon Mac Mcclung, who recently surpassed Allen Iverson’s all time Virginia scoring record. “These young guys are the future,” said Iverson, who is a co-founder of the event along with businessman Jai Manselle

FRANCO MILLER and grassroots basketball veteran Bobby Bates. “I’m proud to have every single one of them here.” Team Loyalty will be coached by NBA champion Stephen Jackson and Wesleyan Christian head

coach Keith Gatlin. Team Honour will be coached by 14-year NBA veteran Larry Hughes and Christian Brothers College High School head coach Justin Tatum. Tatum is also the father to #3 2017 NBA Draft pick Jayson Tatum. The 2018 Iverson Classic Weekend will tip off on Thursday, April 19, with a day of events, including Dunk Contest, 3-Point Shootout and more. The final event will be the Allen Iverson Roundball Classic All American Game on Saturday April 21. A location, schedule, venue, broadcast and ticket information will be announced later this week. Miller, the 6’2” guard, spent much of last summer playing under coach Ro Russell for the Grass Roots Elite Club where his performance on the AAU circuit garnered offers from several Division I programmes. Russell was hired to head the programme at

Crestwood in 2016 and Miller followed suit. Miller’s play on the AAU circuit has attracted official offers from Hofstra University, Towson University, Montana State University, the University of Wyoming, St Bonaventure University and the University of Illinois at Chicago. There are also several other programmes that have expressed interest. At the local level with the Tabernacle Baptist Falcons, Miller had a season filled with accolades highlighted when he was named as the Most Valuable Player of the 34th Annual Hugh Campbell Basketball Classic. His 27 points led the Falcons to a 58-52 win over the CI Gibson Rattlers. He also led the Falcons to a Grand Bahama Secondary Schools Sports Association (GBSSSA) senior boys’ title and finished as runners-up in the second annual Bahamas National High School Basketball Championships.

Lashann and Longhorns advance to Sweet 16 By RENALDO DORSETT Tribune Sports Reporter rdorsett@tribunemedia.net THE lone Bahamian left in the NCAA Tournament, Lashann Higgs continues the best post-season run of her collegiate career. Higgs scored 19 and the Texas Longhorns advanced to their fourth consecutive Sweet 16 with an 85-65 win over Arizona State at the Longhorns home gym the Frank Erwin Center in Austin, Texas. Higgs’ team-high scoring effort also came on one of her most efficient games of the season as she shot 9-12 from the field. She scored 17 in the first half to send the Longhorns into the break with a 40-35 lead. “I realised that at the ball reversal there were lots of driving lanes. So I tried to take advantage of it. Just tried to be aggressive for my team,” she said. Texas will head to Kansas City, Missouri to face the No.3 UCLA Bruins 9:30pm local time tomorrow night. The game will be televised nationally by ESPN2. The No. 2 seed in the Kansas City Region, the Longhorns advanced through round one with an 83-54 win over the No. 15 Maine Black Bears. Higgs finished with 15 points and dished four assists in 23

TEXAS guard Lashann Higgs (10) celebrates a score with teammates Alecia Sutton (1), Olamide Aborowa (14) and Brooke McCarty (11) during a second-round game in the NCAA women’s college basketball tournament against Arizona State, Monday, March 19, 2018, in Austin, Texas. Texas won 85-65. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) minutes. “I would say that it’s having more discipline on the offensive end,” she said. “The discipline to reverse the ball. The discipline to make the right pass. I would just say it’s becoming more of a team effort. So I

think that’s the reason why our offence has improved.” In two NCAA Tournament games this season, Higgs is averaging a team high 17.0 points per game and shooting a squad-best 78.9 per cent from the field. In her first two seasons with

the Longhorns, Higgs has seen her teams eliminated in the Sweet 16. In 2016 as a freshman, she finished with a then career high 19 points in the Longhorns’ 86-65 loss to the eventual champion UConn Huskies. As a sophomore

in 2017, it was a 77-66 loss to the Stanford Cardinal. Higgs finished with five points and three rebounds. Texas, making its 31st all-time NCAA Tournament appearance, improves to 42-29 (.592) all-time in NCAA Tournament play,

including a 10-4 mark under head coach Karen Aston. “I’m just incredibly proud of our basketball team. The energy and enthusiasm that they’re playing the game with right now, and then just the fact that this is our fourth year in a row to go to the Sweet 16. You can almost tell that - I don’t want to say they’re getting used to it, because we told them not to ever take it for granted, but you can tell that they expect this. “I know they want bigger and better things, but this is a great accomplishment for these particular seniors. Just because all four years they were able to do this,” Aston said. “But, again, there’s a few upsets came about today, and I told them in the locker room not to ever take this for granted, or not to appreciate how great of a season and, in particular these two, how great their careers have been. Really, really proud of our team.” As a junior this season, Higgs has stepped into a leadership role and started all 27 appearances. She averaged 12.9 points, 2.6 assists, 3.2 rebounds, all career highs. She also had the best shooting season of her career at 54 per cent from the field, 33 per cent from the three-point line and 74 per cent from the free throw line.

‘IT SUCKS WHEN YOU LOSE A GAME AND YOU DON’T HAVE ANY MORE’ By RENALDO DORSETT Tribune Sports Reporter rdorsett@tribunemedia.net HIS final season for the Michigan State Spartans ended prematurely with an upset loss in the NCAA Tournament’s Round of 32, but Lourawls “Tum Tum” Nairn was still able to exhibit the leadership that made him a star in the eyes of the coaching staff in East Lansing. The Spartans, ranked No. 3 in the West Region, lost 53-55 to No. 11 Syracuse at the Little Ceasar’s Arena in Detroit, Michigan, on Sunday. Nairn, who was a member of the 2015 Final Four team as a freshman, offered words of insight in the locker room following the loss to place the game in perspective.

“It’s part of life,” Nairn said. “Basketball is what we play, so it hurts. It sucks when you lose a game and you don’t have any more, but nobody on our team is battling cancer. Nobody’s fighting for their life. I’m not trying to say losing doesn’t hurt, but there is so much pain going on outside of this game of basketball that people are facing - kids not eating, homeless people, people that are fighting disease. Nobody on this team is in that position.” Spartans head coach Tom Izzo has always heralded Nairn’s leadership abilities as something that could not be simply measured on a stat sheet. He awarded Nairn the title of team captain for three consecutive years and often called him an extension of the coaches on

the floor. “That kid has meant the world to our programme, our community, our team, and to me. I don’t know if there is another Tum out there. He has been rock solid through a lot of things this year, and I love him for that,” Izzo said. “Tum’s not God, but he’s right there.” Nairn ends his Spartans career with averages of 1.7 points and 2.9 assists per game. After 65 career starts, his numbers in his senior season saw a decline with the emergence of sophomore point guard Cassius Winston. He was awarded the Stephen G Scofes Inspirational Player Award this past offseason for the third straight year when the Spartans hosted its annual Men’s Basketball Awards Banquet for the 2016-17 season.

MICHIGAN State guard Lourawls Nairn Jr (11) passes during a first round game against Bucknell in the NCAA college basketball tournament on March 16 in Detroit. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)


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