College, NBA, NBA Draft / Jun 25, 2008 / 12:00 pm

The Contender

Chris Douglas-RobertsChris Douglas-Roberts (photo. U of Memphis)

*Reprinted from Dime #42, on sale now*

From coming up on the streets of Detroit to willing his Memphis Tigers agonizingly close to a national championship, Chris Douglas-Roberts has been fighting his entire life. This summer, he’s gearing up for his biggest battle yet — to win the respect of NBA teams heading into the draft.

Though his style can be called impetuous, his mindset impregnable, and his will to win ferocious, there’s no expression that better describes Chris Douglas-Roberts’ game than Muhammad Ali’s infamous self-assessment: he floats like a butterfly and stings like a bee.

It should come as no surprise to learn that CDR crafted his slick game on the basketball court one story above Detroit’s legendary Kronk boxing gym, where he mixed with Emanuel Steward, Tommy “The Hit Man” Hearns and “Iron” Mike Tyson. While Chris only ventured down to the Spartan gym to pop the heavy bag a couple of times, his hoop game is predicated on a read-and-react arsenal of leaners, floaters, scoops and hooks no different from a boxer’s toolbox of jabs, uppercuts and haymakers. Combine his knowledge of the sweet science with a 6-7 frame and an electric first step, and Chris Douglas-Roberts has a puncher’s chance to be the steal this summer’s NBA Draft.

When we got up with CDR, he was in the heart of an intense training period at the Attack Athletic Center in Chicago. Working with MJ’s former trainer Tim Grover, Douglas-Roberts was pushing himself to the limit in preparation for upcoming workouts with NBA teams, and the opportunity to go head-to-head with other draftees. The kid was licking his chops thinking about the chance to prove that he’s just as good, if not better, than many of his colleagues who will receive twice the hype heading into the Draft.

“He’s going to be a big-time player in the NBA,” says fellow Detroit native Jalen Rose. “A few people are sleeping on my guy. When I see people talking about who’s about to become the top players coming into the League, I haven’t heard his name mentioned as much as I would like. But he’s going to be one of the top young players in the NBA.”

While everyone witnessed Douglas-Roberts’ consensus first team All-American junior season, in which he led Memphis to a 37-2 record on 18.1 points at a 54% clip, many are still quick to marginalize his game as “squirrelly,” or as a collection of “old man tricks” as ESPN.com’s Pat Forde wrote. But ask UConn’s Stanley Robinson, a gifted defender, if CDR’s 33 points of terror in front of a packed MSG crowd last November felt like any sort of trick. Run that same question by any of the seventeen teams he scored 20 or more points against. Even if he’s not the quickest or the strongest guy around, CDR still routinely dominated guys trying to guard him.

“He was either the most gifted scorer in the nation, or was pretty darn close,” says former Memphis top assistant and new UMass head coach Derek Kellogg.

Game in and game out, Douglas-Roberts took his opponents’ best defender, and absorbed that guy’s best shot. He’s knocked down almost everyone who has stepped in his way at Memphis, and now he’s ready to start swinging in the League.

****

Dime: You grew up playing hoops in the same building that housed the legendary Detroit boxing gym, Kronk. What did that gym do for your game?
Chris Douglas-Roberts: Upstairs in the gym it was a great run. Everybody was really tough, and some guys could really play. I always played with the older guys, so I was never playing with my peers. That just made me much better. My brother and his friends were playing and he’s 10 years older than me. That just really influenced me and it made me who I am today on and off the court. The boxers tried to come up and play, but I was always telling them, “Stay in the gym, man. Stay in the ring.” Nah, but I used to go down there too and do little stuff. I never got in the ring, but I hit the bag or jumped rope with some of the boxers just for the fun of it.

Chris Douglas-RobertsChris Douglas-Roberts (photo. U of Memphis)

Dime: What do you mean when you say that playing up there made you who you are as a person?
CDR: When you’re competing with older guys, veterans, they know all of the tricks to the trade. And I didn’t. By playing with them, I was forced to learn early. That’s where the trickery in my game, or whatever people call it, comes from. I learned it early. I learned all the veteran stuff around 13, 14. All I had to do was polish up the older I got. That just made it much easier. And off the court when you’re playing with the older guys, you develop that mental toughness – toughness is instilled in you. Kronk was a huge part of my upbringing, huge part. Like I said, it really made me who I am.

Dime: As a 13-year-old playing against 23-year-olds, were you actually able to put in work?
CDR: Oh yeah. It doesn’t really matter how much older, or how fast – I mean some guys are considered great defensive players but I never looked at it like that. By playing with them I was always competitive, especially at a younger age. I was always playing against somebody who was supposed to be better – “He’s older, so he’s better,” or “He’s faster so he’s better.” But I never paid attention to it. Never.

Dime: This season at Memphis, you went up against some guys who were supposed to be some of the better defenders around…
CDR: I played a lot of these guys who are considered to be some of the best defensive players in the country. Throughout the whole year, I faced the best defensive player on the other team. Of all the guys I played this year, Russell (Westbrook) was very good. I have a lot of respect for Russell. But I don’t think there’s such a thing as a defensive stopper. If a guy is good on offense, he’s just good on offense. That’s with anybody. There are guys who are really good defensive players, but I don’t feel like there’s such as a lock-down defender. If a guy has it going that night, he just has it going.

Dime: What do you think about the fact that some guys who you outperformed during the season are still slated to go above you in the draft?
CDR: That’s before the draft. I feel if you put me in a room with somebody, I’m going to be the one to come out. That’s all those workouts are. You’re going to have to play me eventually. You can’t run from those – so eventually you’re going to have to see me in a workout, and whoever comes out is a better player, period. Whoever does the best in these workouts, that’s the better player. Me being at the bottom of the draft boards, it doesn’t matter to me. You can’t deny what will eventually happen. That’s me up against somebody – and the team has to pick. I just feel like they’re not used to my game. I’m not the conventional two.

TO READ THE REST OF THIS STORY, PICK UP DIME #42 ON NEWSSTANDS EVERYWHERE.

9 Responses to “The Contender”

  1. YOUNGFED says:

    CDR allday

  2. Junio says:

    ‘ll be a good pro.

  3. tom says:

    I just read this on a hot forum on tall dating site ____Tallmingle.com____ which is a hot dating site for all tall friends and tall singles.

  4. Spliff 2 My Lou says:

    His game reminds me of Rip Hamilton. Not really a superstar but a great piece for a winning team. I think he can be very effective on the right team.

  5. dh says:

    hmm… i remember Kobe’s interview with Dime where he said: ‘if a player is hot go shut him down’ or something like that.

    I wonder if CDR’s approach of “if a guy is good on offense, he’s just good on offense” will do him good in the league.

    CDR’s partly right though, you can’t always just ’shut someone down’ when they are in the zone, but good defense starts with you believing you can…

    from this interview, this guy seems like a nellie player to me.

  6. Daily boy says:

    CDR is a certified Baller!!!! He’ll be a solid SG for years to come.

  7. Brown says:

    Watching CDR play this past year reminded me of watching Brandon Roy play a couple years ago. I was telling everybody that he was the best player in college and would be an impact player immediately. I was floored when all the mock drafts had him going between 6-10. I kept saying how Brian Colangelo was making a mistake not taking this guy #1, not to mention the 6-7 other teams who passed on him. I couldn’t help but gloat when he came out the gate ballin’ and won ROY. And he’s gotten better since then.

    I get the same feeling about CDR, although not on the same level. Most mocks have him at the end of the first round, but this guy is going to be a player. With a lot of the lottery guys, I keep hearing the word “potential”. Like “if he ever puts it all together, he’ll be a great player”-type shit. Why are GMs and scouts so down on a guy who already has his game together and produces at a high level. He might not have the best skill set in the draft, but he’s a player who just gets it done.

    GMs are gonna regret passing on him when their guy with all this “potential” is stuck to the pine a couple years from now and CDR is contributing to whatever team ends up picking him.

  8. doc says:

    I like his game.

  9. TalenTed says:

    i got respect 4 CDR he got game 4real n still improving

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