June 27, 2013
City?s star will have to prove himself
Thomas faces questions about what his NBA role will be
Justin A. Cohn | The Journal Gazette
Associated Press photos
Thomas averaged 19.8 points as a junior and left Ohio State as the school?s No. 9 career scorer.
FORT WAYNE ? When Deshaun Thomas walked the halls at Bishop Luers, he would hear the chatter.
?He?s going to make it,? they said.
And Thomas always believed he would make it to the NBA, and that could be tonight as the league holds its draft.
Not since Tracy Foster was taken by the Philadelphia 76ers in the sixth round of the 1987 draft has someone from Fort Wayne been selected.
Thomas has the talent. You don?t get a scholarship offer from Ohio State as a freshman in high school, as Thomas did, unless you have talent.
There have been many cautionary tales of players not making it to the NBA, and Thomas? greatest achievement may be that he remained focused and didn?t let the hype get the better of him.
?I have come a long way,? Thomas said. ?Growing up and playing at Bishop Luers, this was always the dream. All my friends would be like, ?Oh, you are going to be the one that makes it.? It was just fun coming out of Luers and keeping my dream and keeping my head level.?
The 6-foot-7, 215-pound Thomas spent the last three years playing at Ohio State. But before that, he honed his skills at the YMCA, where he was coached on the AAU circuit by Jim Whittaker, and Luers, where he played for James Blackmon.
Blackmon said that Thomas separated himself from the pack well before he arrived at high school.
Thomas won two middle-school championships and was a star AAU player.
?People had expectations for him because of his great potential to be a great player,? Blackmon said. ?As a coach, you evaluate young players and people say, ?If he plays to his potential, he will really go places.? He did that.?
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