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| Sunday, February 13 | |||||
ESPN.com | ||||||
CINCINNATI -- Kenyon Martin raised his elbow after a rebound and was
immediately whistled for his second foul midway through the first half of Cincinnati's win over DePaul on Sunday.
Official Dave Libbey didn't hesitate to reel in a superstar. He
wasn't about to afford Martin the kind of respect given to Duke's Elton
Brand last year, or bow to Martin as being the premier (and only truly
dominant) player in college basketball.
This isn't the NBA, where the veterans get the calls or are rewarded for their length of service. But college basketball should almost revere Martin for staying around for four years. He's the poster boy for staying in school, showing that someone can actually mature on the court. He's taken his game from being a first-round pick somewhere just out of the lottery to a near-certain No. 1 overall. "I put the time in and I should get some calls," Martin said. "I've been here four years." But in the past year, Martin has made himself roughly an extra $6 million come June by returning for his senior season. In the process, he's taken the Bearcats to a lonely perch as the clear favorite to win the national title."If he doesn't get the national player of the year award, then they need to throw all that stuff away," Huggins said. "He has more influence on the game than anybody else does." Before Martin was abruptly removed for the final four minutes of the first half, he had given a tease to the packed Shoemaker Center and the regional audience on ABC of how dominant he can be on the floor. He followed a missed shot with a nasty flush. When he was double-teamed in the post, he found a trailing teammate for a layup. He worked the ball around the perimeter to keep the offense flowing. Oh, and on defense, he blocked one shot and grabbed four defensive rebounds. "I'd compare him to Grant Hill from when I coached in the ACC (at Florida State)," DePaul's Pat Kennedy said of the former Duke guard. "But not by the way he plays, but because he's dominant. Grant could control an entire game. Kenyon does too. He's one of the top 25 kids I've ever coached against in 25 years. He's so aggressive and you have to be aggressive to be great. If you're not aggressive, you're not great." Martin never picked up another foul. He played 17 of a possible 20 minutes in the second half and showed every slice of his game. Playing more like Scottie Pippen than Tim Duncan, Martin stole one DePaul entry pass deep in the lane, dribbled three-quarters of the court and finished with a one-handed dunk. When he had the shots in the middle of the lane, he nailed them. When he had to do his part with a screen, he gladly set up stake at the top of the key to set down DePaul's 5-foot-7 Rashon Burno, more than a foot shorter. "Everybody is playing me so differently that I've got to do something more," Martin said. "I just keep working and, hey, if they want me at the player of the year, then I'll be happy to be in L.A. (at the Wooden Award ceremony April 7)." Martin finished with 23 points, 13 rebounds, three blocks and two steals in 29 minutes. The Bearcats finished DePaul in less time than that for their 15th straight win. Looming for Cincinnati is a home game against Temple on Sunday after a quick trip to Houston on Thursday. Southern Mississippi, Louisville, Saint Louis at home, and DePaul in Chicago are all that stand in the Bearcats' way for an undefeated Conference USA season. "That would be great for us," Martin said. "We've never gone undefeated in the league before. We're not going to lose at home. We know that."
Andy Katz is a senior writer at ESPN.com
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