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A Big Man's Clear View

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Spending a year or more on an NBA bench might stunt his development. Besides, the bubbly Hibbert is clearly having a ball in college and doesn't want to stop acting his age. Why should he? Asked if he "kind of liked" college, including the classes, Hibbert answered, "I kind of love it."

On the other hand, his teammate Jeff Green, the Big East player of the year, made the opposite decision, but the correct one for him, by declaring for the draft. Green is as sober and mature in public as Hibbert seems youthful and buoyant. Also, the forward's game is polished and NBA-ready.

"It's my time to move on," Green said. "The decision was very tough. . . . Just walking down the street people would say, 'Go get the money,' or, 'Come back and get your degree.' I'd just keep on walking, either way."

"We're in different situations," Hibbert emphasized, naming a list of Green's accolades that currently maximize his draft value. "He'll always be a Hoya, and I wish him the best."

Once in a while, we get a feel-good story. But this one's a twofer. Both Hoyas are local products, while Green is one of the most unselfish star players that local college basketball has ever produced. Except for the final game of his career, when he seldom asserted himself offensively and took only five shots against Ohio State, that character trait never let him down.

However, Hibbert is probably the player whose career will have a special place in our memories, like Juan Dixon's at Maryland, because he arrived with so few expectations, stayed all four years and made such an impact. At the moment, he has an insurance policy -- just in case he gets injured next season and never has an NBA career. But the Georgetown basketball program really gets "insurance" because of his return. If he and Green had both left, the Hilltop rebuilding project of Coach John Thompson III might have, with bad luck, taken a step backward. Now, that's unlikely.

"I was comfortable with whatever they decided," Thompson said. "Either way, we try to figure out how next year's team is going to skin the cat."

Perhaps, in this case, fathers really do know best.

"Having Roy come back is significant for the program, because you can't grow seven feet," former Georgetown coach John Thompson Jr. quipped. "Next year, you may not have somebody who can play forward quite as well as Jeff. But you damn sure won't have anybody nearly as big as Roy at center."

The elder Thompson seemed almost equally happy for both players, perhaps because he has such an unashamed appreciation for two of life's great joys: a large pile of money and a good education.

"Next year at this time, Roy will be smiling, I promise you," the elder Thompson said. "They both realize what the NBA entails. It entails getting rich. But you better have other tools for life. And education is the biggest one. Your physical talent determines where you are when you enter the NBA. But your intelligence determines where you stand when you come out. And a lot of players come out looking for jobs and broke."

How much education is enough?

"Enough to read an audit sheet," the elder Thompson said.


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