UW's last-minute show warms up the MLK basketball events

For much of the game, the Huskies put on a how-not-to primer for the high schoolers playing in holiday events.

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by

Mike Henderson

For much of the game, the Huskies put on a how-not-to primer for the high schoolers playing in holiday events.

All the coaches showing kids how to play today (Monday, Jan. 16) in the  annual King Holiday Hoopfest events should note that the University of  Washington Husky men’s team provided a primer Sunday (Jan. 15) about  how to win: Skip the first half and, during the second, just get the  ball to Terrence Ross.

The prep-level kids playing at Hec Edmundson and Foster High in  Tukwila on Monday obviously can’t count on Ross, the sophomore from  Portland who had 26 points in the second half after just four during the  first session. Add 14 rebounds and you’ve got one of the best complete  games in memory by a Husky, as the 11-6 Dawgs, after trailing for 31  minutes, beat Washington State 75-65 and ran their conference record to  4-1. Cal and Stanford, each 5-1 in, come to Seattle later this week.

The men’s win was part of a Western Washington weekend when  those of us home-bound with snow issues could appreciate having  basketball to sustain us. Even if the snow depth didn’t always come up  to media-frenzy expectations (there was talk of it two-feet thick at  KING-5’s Jim Forman’s place, though it turned out there was only a trace  of actual snow), the basketball exploits did.

The Martin Luther King-observance weekend this year is attended  by a wide array of hoops activity. Saturday, for example, while the  University of Washington women (10-5) were besting their cross-state  rivals at Washington State, the Undead SuperSonics thundered their way  to 11-2 — second best in the N.B.A. — with a win against the New York  Knicks in the Seattle franchise’s home-away-from-home of Oklahoma City.

While Seattle’s marquee local game would be the Husky men’s  victory, perhaps the most frenzied set of events was reserved for  Monday. From early morning to well into the night, 12 major  high-school-boys’ teams and a pair of girls’ contingents would compete  in seven games at Hec Edmundson, assuming anybody could get there.  Another seven games featuring stellar girls’ program would grace the  hoop court at Foster. Younger athletes have been competing since  Saturday at several other gyms in the region.

The prep events include tributes to King, the observances adding  to at least a dozen other non-sports-related official Western  Washington Jan. 16 events honoring the civil-rights leader slain in  1968.

Why a King-observance link with youth basketball?  Possibly  because it’s seasonally correct, given that King was born Jan. 15,  albeit, in 1929, well before the sport became all the rage for many. In any case, visitors to Hec Ed Monday could look forward to  hours of prep-hoops action for just 10 bucks admission, with much of the  take going to Boys & Girls Clubs of King County.

The Husky men, desperately missing injured guard  C.J. Wilcox, showed how not to win at home during the first 30-odd  minutes against Wazzu, which had triumphed in Seattle four times during  he recent six years. Missed shots, bad passes, and stupid fouls had the  Dawgs down by 10 with 15 minutes left. Then Ross started hitting from  every direction, with his final point, from the foul stripe, giving his  team its widest margin: 15 points.

Perhaps Ross put on his second-half show knowing that the Hec Ed  stands had some fans connected with his high-school playing days in  Portland. The MLK high-school tournament has become such an anticipated  event that it perennially lures teams from other areas. One of Monday's games involved Ross’s Rose City alma  mater, Jefferson.

The Huskies, meanwhile, will need to figure out how to face  better upcoming competition without Wilcox, who isn’t expected to play  against the Bay Area visitors. Cal and Stanford coaches no doubt are  plotting about what to do to defend against the Huskies. Ross seems to  have shown precisely what they need to do during the second half.