Draft night landed siblings who starred for a West Passyunk school spots on their desired teams.
Marcus Morris, left, and twin Markieff will look to continue their winning ways with teams that will welcome their height, skill and tenacity.
Markieff and Marcus Morris do not dabble in delusions. Teammates at Prep Charter High School, 1928 Point Breeze Ave., and the University of Kansas, the twin forwards knew although their love would keep them emotionally inseparable, their professional lives would halt their being geographically so. The ballers began their new existence June 23, becoming the 13th and 14th picks, respectively, in the NBA Draft.
The Prudential Center in Newark, N.J., served as the site of their severing. The 14 non-playoff squads led off the evening by making their lottery selections. Mock drafts tabbed similar players with the first few choices, but disparities marked the latter ones. The brothers, clad in impressive suits, left donning caps of teams that hope their talents will lead to returns to prominence.
Perennial playoff participants, the Phoenix Suns slumped to a 40-42 record and missed the playoffs by six games. Eager to restore their reputation as a contender, they nabbed Markieff, a 6-foot-9 force, who will provide offensive flexibility and help to minimize their chief liability, shaky defense.
Older by seven minutes, he decided April 7 to forgo his senior season. Doing so initiated debates on how soon into draft night he would extend his right hand to commissioner David Stern. As the honorable mention All-American ascended the stage, his sibling let out tears. Droplets nearly reached his own eyes, as he confessed after descending the area.
“When I heard the Suns picking me, man, I wanted to cry,” Markieff said during Thursday’s ESPN telecast. “That’s just the place I’ve always wanted to be, and it just felt so good.”
The offensive-minded unit’s only pick, he will look for lobs from point guard Steve Nash, a two-time league MVP, and will seek to continue his progression as a defensive stalwart. This past season, he led the Big 12 Conference with a 58.9 field goal percentage and an 8.3 rebounds-per-game average. He dropped 13.6 points per game and proved his perimeter prowess by drilling 38 three-pointers. Despite his achievements, he had to deal with as many attackers as he did backers.
“A lot of guys don’t say I have an upside, but we’re going to see,” he said at a press conference. “I’m ready to put the work in and be the best possible.”
Prognosticators had felt Marcus would end up wearing a hat first, but even though Phoenix ruined their predictions, he soon had his chance to tower over the diminutive Stern.
“Once I was called, I still had a little pressure on me waiting for my brother to be called,” Markieff said.
Marcus had a microphone thrust before him just after his brother’s departure from the arena’s greenroom. Tears gave way to levity when a reporter asked how he would deal with not suiting up with Markieff.
“It ain’t the end of the world,” Marcus said during the television interview. “I’ll see him again. I mean, I’ll send him flowers or some fruit. It’ll be good.”
Their mother Angel Morris had to wait just over seven minutes for her younger child to become a member of the Houston Rockets. While many experts believe the sun has set on Phoenix, they see Houston, often considered an also-ran in their own state because of the NBA Champion Dallas Mavericks and the four-time winner San Antonio Spurs, as a promising bunch. Adding Marcus, a Second-Team All-American and the Big 12 Player of the Year, should make make those sages salivate.
The 6-foot-8 star also declared April 7. Once Stern announced his name, he became the second half of the third set of twins to go in the first round.
“I wanted to be a Houston Rocket,” he said in another interview. “From the first time I worked out, I got a great vibe from those guys, and they told me how much they wanted me.”
The team’s bosses also crave extended campaigns. Owners of two crowns, the Rockets registered a 43-39 mark, falling three games short of a playoff berth. Marcus figures to fire accurate shots and snare plentiful rebounds for the up-tempo team.
He compiled junior-year averages of 17.2 points and 7.6 rebounds per game. He amassed 10 double-doubles and won three Player of the Week honors. He became the 18th Jayhawk selected in the first round in the last 21 years.
“I just told my brother these were the two places that we both wanted to end up at, if it wasn’t together,” Marcus said at a press conference.
The two arrived at Kansas months after the school claimed the 2008 NCAA Title. They helped the national power to win three Big 12 regular-season titles and two conference tournament championships. A favorite to win this year’s title, Kansas fell in the Elite Eight but went 35-3.
With the No. 16 selection in the NBA Draft, the Philadelphia 76ers select ...
Following this week, Antonio “Scoop” Jardine and Marcus Morris are hoping to prove what happens in Vegas does not have to stay in Vegas. The two soon-to-be juniors are partnering with 18 college standouts to form the 2010 USA Basketball Men’s Select team. This group has spent the week engaging in training sessions with the USA Basketball Men’s National team, a squad featuring 21 NBA stars, including Sixers swingman Andre Iguodala.
Numerous graduates of local high schools will use the next five months to do the area proud. Ss. Neumann-Goretti High School, 1736 S. 10th St., leads with 12; Prep Charter, 1928 Point Breeze Ave., boasts six; Girard Academic Music Program, 2136 Ritner St., counts three; South Philadelphia High School, 2101 S. Broad St., claims two; and Center City’s Roman Catholic High School, with Hawthorne native Malik Perry, rounds out the list.
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