MORGANTOWN —
This is going to be an implausible stretch and I know it, but there’s something deep down inside, perhaps the same thing the Los Angeles Lakers felt when they drafted Devin Ebanks, that says he is going to become an NBA star.
Might as well begin with the stretch, for we certainly never thought we would go there. The original idea today was to point out how strong an influence West Virginia has had on the Los Angeles Lakers franchise, right from the day the team moved from Minneapolis to L.A.
The first coach was Fred Schaus. On the team he picked up coming out Minneapolis was Hot Rod Hundley, about to have what could be considered his best season of an NBA career that fell short of his collegiate heroics and was cut short by creaky knees.
And, of course, there was Jerry West coming out of West Virginia to join his coach following an Olympic Gold Medal on what well may have been the first real “Dream Team.”
That was where we were headed, but we got sidetracked as we looked at the Lakers history and saw during those years of Schaus and Hundley and West that the Lakers were always stymied by the Boston Celtics and Bill Russell.
It was so bad that Hundley was once moved to say:
“If we played Boston four-on-four, without Russell, we probably would have won every series. The guy killed us. He’s the one who prevented us from achieving true greatness.”
And, as we thought back to Bill Russell, something came to mind, something that never before had entered our mind and something that history may prove never should have entered our mind.
Could Devin Ebanks be the next Bill Russell?
Have your laughs now, but then let us just state the case, for it isn’t as farfetched as you may think.
Bill Russell is listed at 6-foot-9, 215 pounds. So is Devin Ebanks.
Now, in Russell’s day, 6-9 was a giant. He played center, rebounded like no one before him and no one since, and blocked shots with such devastation that he completely changed the way the game was played.
Ebanks, we understand, is playing in a game where he is no giant, where he must play more outside than inside, but his game, like Russell’s, is one of rebounding and shot blocking. And, rest assured, he comes into the NBA as one of college’s best at both.
Can Ebanks dominate like Russell did, can he lead the Lakers to 11 championships in 13 years?
Of course not.
But remember, Ebanks comes out of college after his sophomore year. Russell
played his whole career at San Francisco and, yes, was so good that they team won a pair of national championships and strung together 55 victories in a row.
But that was during his last two years … the two years that Ebanks is missing in college, years in which he can develop in the professionals, build his strength and size, concentrate 10 and 12 hours a day on the game rather than having to split his concentration with the college life, be it academic or simply social.
Here he learned from Bob Huggins, but there it well could be that he will learn from Phil Jackson, and even if Jackson leaves there’s Kobe Bryant to lead him toward what could be greatness.
See, the talent difference between Ebanks and Russell isn’t nearly as great as you may think. In truth, put Ebanks in Russell’s era and he might have been a dominant player both rebounding and defensively.
The difference, however, is found not in the legs or the arms or muscles, but between the ears.
Russell was Russell because of his personality, because his mentality. There never has been anyone to compete like he did, never anyone to approach the pride he carried into every game, never anyone to play with the chip on his shoulder that Russell carried.
This separated him from everyone else, even Jerry West, who probably ranks right behind Russell in those categories.
Devin Ebanks, who we saw all too often at West Virginia disappear on the court, who missed a couple of games early this season for unexplained reasons, who would sometimes sulk and sometimes act selfishly on the court, is light years away from Russell in the area that may matter most.
That is why he was a second-round draft pick, not a first, and why there was even some doubt that he should come out of college early at all.
But give him a couple of years to grow up, to learn how to grind it out in the NBA, to improve his outside shot and see how Kobe Bryant does it and maybe, just maybe, his mind will be able to match his body and he will become a dominant NBA player.
E-mail Bob Hertzel at bhertzel@hotmail.com.
WVU Sports
HERTZEL COLUMN - If all goes right, Ebanks could be star
- WVU Sports
-
-
HERTZEL COLUMN - God bless America
Perhaps the most welcome innovation in major league baseball in recent memory has been the introduction of a seventh-inning rendition of “God Bless America” while honoring an active member of the U.S. military.
-
Orlando, Pastilong highlight ’12 WVU Hall of Famers
Retired athletic director Ed Pastilong and safety Bo Orlando of the 1988 football team that played Notre Dame for the national championship lead a class of seven into the West Virginia University Sports Hall of Fame.
-
HERTZEL COLUMN: Patrone finally gets his due
Lee Patrone says he remembers it vividly, even though more than 50 years have passed, and while it was the greatest accomplishment in his life it has nothing to do with the West Virginia University basketball career that has lifted him into the Class of 2012 that will be inducted into the Mountaineer Sports Hall of Fame in September.
-
HERTZEL COLUMN: No doubt WVU made out well
There was a cold, ill wind blowing in from the north on Friday.
It was the kind of wind that blows whenever a Pitt man opens his mouth, as the Pittsburgh athletic director Steve Pederson did. -
Tears and memories: VIDEO
It was mid-Thursday afternoon at the Morgantown Event Center and the crowd stood mostly silently in line that wound out of the Events Hall and into the hallway toward the staircase.
A young lady was there holding a singular golden rose
“I wish,” Rebecca Durst said, “it could be gold and blue.” -
HERTZEL COLUMN: Stew fondly remembered by players
The tributes have poured in all week for Bill Stewart, the former West Virginia University football coach whose sudden and unexpected death from a heart attack at age 59 on Monday stunned the state, but it wasn’t the administrators or executives or politicians who really knew him.
-
Friends, fans mourn loss of Stewart
Condolences streamed in from as far as Texas and Massachusetts as fans and friends gathered Thursday in Morgantown to pay tribute to former West Virginia University football coach Bill Stewart.
Stewart died Monday of an apparent heart attack at age 59 while on a golf outing with former athletic director Ed Pastilong. -
HERTZEL COLUMN: White right there with Hall of Famers
Back on New Year’s Eve, 2008, shortly after West Virginia University had edged North Carolina, 31-30, to win the Meineke Car Care Bowl, an attempt was made to put Mountaineer quarterback Patrick White into his proper historical perspective.
-
HERTZEL COLUMN: Pat Beilein follows in father’s path
In a day filled with the sorrow of former West Virginia University football coach Bill Stewart’s sudden and unexpected death, there was a ray of sunshine that managed to slip through, a happening that shows us all that even in death there is life and as one son grieves, as does Stewart’s son, Blaine, somewhere else a father basks in pride over his son.
-
Bill Stewart services scheduled
Visitation and funeral arrangements for former West Virginia University football coach Bill Stewart have been announced.
There will be public viewing from 2-9 p.m. Thursday, at the Morgantown Event Center, 2 Waterfront Place. - More WVU Sports Headlines
-
HERTZEL COLUMN - God bless America

