Wednesday, January 25, 2012

'Daddy's Boy,' a Venezuelan In Pink Shoes, a Catholic Priest On the Bench and a Basketball Coach Who Saved His Career By Moving From Ames To Omaha


Creighton University is a Jesuit school in Omaha that has quite a basketball team this winter. It has a Catholic priest who sits on the bench during games, a 6-foot 9-inch center from Venezuela named Gregory Echenique--a 270-pound mountain of a guy who wears pink shoes and double-zero on his jersey--a 6-7 sophomore from Ames named Doug McDermott who was called "Daddy's Boy" by some of Drake's fans tonight, a 6-11 freshman from Waukee named Will Artino, a No. 14 or No. 15 national ranking [depending on whose voters who believe], a 19-2 record and a coach named Greg McDermott who has saved his career by moving from the Big 12 Conference to the Missouri Valley. The Bluejays helped Drake attract its largest home crowd of the season tonight at the Knapp Center, but not even the noise generated by the Bulldogs' faithful among a gathering of 6,110 [nearly 1,000 below capacity] was enough to get Drake over the hump at "white-out night." The first 4,000 fans to arrive at the arena were given white T-shirts by Drake. Creighton elevated its Valley record to 9-1 and remained tied with Wichita State for first place with a 77-69 victory. Doug McDermott, the kid Drake's fans kept referring to as "Daddy's Boy" whenever he shot free throws, scored 30 points and hauled down nine rebounds in a very impressive performance. Doug's father is Greg McDermott, whose career was going nowhere at Iowa State. Then Creighton beckoned, Greg asked Northern Iowa coach Ben Jacobson if it would be all right if Doug played for him at Creighton instead of for Jake at UNI. Nice guy Jake [who had signed Doug to a national letter of intent] said sure. So now Doug is one of the nation's best players and Greg has one of the country's best major-college teams over there in Omaha.