Fast and young: UW basketball start could mean good things in March

Tony Wroten is looking as special as expected. But the team as a whole could be shaping up the same way.

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Mike Henderson

Tony Wroten is looking as special as expected. But the team as a whole could be shaping up the same way.

With about 14 minutes left against the University of Portland Monday  night (Nov. 14), the host Washington Huskies’ guard Tony Wroten shoveled  a pass across the paint and through maybe eight players. The ball wound  up in the ample hands of Aziz N’Diaye, who put in the hole to up  the already insurmountable lead that would end in a 93-63 Dawg-pounding.

It was the third UW victory in about 60 hours. It leaves the team  3-0 with nearly a week off before facing a skein of six winnable games  that could lead to an early 9-0 mark.

Against elite teams? Of course not, but why should that matter? The  Huskies already are ranked 28th in one national poll and 29th in  another. At season’s end, when NCAA-tourney seeding considerations are  made, nine straight early wins (or even seven of nine) would augment the  rest of a record mostly wrought from daunting contests amid the new,  highly competitive Pac-12 conference.

More importantly: Even an easy 30-point grounding of the Portland  Pilots serves another critical purpose. Coach Lorenzo Romar has eight  freshmen this season and a pair of sensational sophomores. No matter  what the caliber of the opponent, every win bonds the young players and  builds their confidence.

Wroten, it was widely believed as the season approached, would  prove to be the key freshman. He’d already received something like  LeBron James celebrity treatment at Garfield High in Seattle. To say  that he already appears to be, ahem, passing the test in the NCAA is  obvious beyond being an inevitable pun. Among his team-leading six  assists Monday, Wroten’s seemingly effortless toss to N’Diaye was of  NBA-caliber precision, or would’ve been were the pro league in  business and if NBA players even valued the passing game anymore.

The effort was part of Wroten’s growing highlight reel, with feats  that have made fans gasp in amazement. Yes, and even he would concede  that he’s not even the best or most valuable player on the young team.

Would that be C.J. Wilcox? The sophomore guard, showing formidable  scoring talent, was named the season’s first Pac-12 player of the week. Would it be Terrence Ross, the Portland-bred sophomore three-point specialist who led scorers with 24 against Portland? Or how about N’Diaye, the seven-foot Senegal-born center who seems  to have grown measurably in basketball skills now that it’s unlikely he  will (or will need to) grow any further in stature?

All of the above seem to be insignificant questions. What seems to  matter most going forward (or guard or center) is whether a young club  with apparently deep talent reserves will be able to continue to develop  continuity, especially when inevitable problems occur.

During the Portland game, for example, the Dawgs were stalled at 21  points for nearly four minutes until Abdul Gaddy (the junior is back  and seemingly healthy after last season’s major knee injury) and Wilcox  tossed down three-balls. After that Portland never got closer than 11.

Portland partisans may not relish further encounters with the likes of Wroten.

After the game, Romar spoke to reporters about the prize freshman:  "You kind of allow his personality to take over on the floor. He's  special in that way."

Early as it is and even though some arbiters pick the Dawgs as no  better than fourth in the conference, it could be that the team itself  will continue to improve enough to prove “special in that way” when  March rolls around.