6 minute read
Joplin’s pattern of success traces back to high school days
Brookfield Central product buys into bench role for MUBB
By Kaylynn Wright kaylynn.wright@marquette.edu
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As a first-year, David Joplin averaged 7.1 minutes per game and shot 28.8% from beyond the arc.
Now, the sophomore forward has more confidence than ever, while playing three times more minutes and shooting almost 40% from the three-point line.
“If you look back at his high school numbers, he’s always been a guy that can really shoot the basketball,” Marquette assistant coach Neill Berry said. “Clearly, he’s done that well for us this year.”
Joplin attended Brookfield Central High School, which is only 17 minutes away from Marquette. As a senior, he averaged 25.6 points, 10.6 rebounds and 2.6 assists per contest under head coach Dan Wandrey.
Wandrey said that he has known Joplin, or “Dave,” since he was in middle school when Wandrey moved from the girls’ to the boys’ basketball program in 2014.
“I knew who he was,” Wandrey said. “He was a pretty good player even in middle school.
When he got to high school, it was pretty clear that he was going to come right to (the) varsity (team) with us.”
Joplin said Wandrey played a big role in the successful high school career he had.
“Playing under Dan Wandrey was great,” Joplin said. “He was a really good coach. I’m glad he was able to mentor me and teach me some of the things about the game and just help me be me.”
Wandrey harped on Joplin’s joyous personality on and off the court in high school.
“He’s just got that megawatt smile and charismatic personality,” Wandrey said. “He walks in the room, and he lightens the whole place up. He just always had that larger-than-life personality off the court and on it. That was really nice to have from a basketball standpoint.”
Wandrey said that Joplin started to massively improve his game in the middle of his sophomore season at Brookfield Central.
“We had some growing pains and adversity,” Wandrey said. “We lost an all-state guard on our team, (but) he raised his level of play. At the end of the season through the state tournament run, he had five or six games where he was scoring over 20 points. That (was) when he just started to know that he could score in a variety of different ways.”
It wasn’t until the summer going into his junior year, Wandrey said he saw Joplin’s game flourish.
“Now, he’s a lights-out threepointer shooter, but that didn’t develop for David until the end of his sophomore year going into his junior year,” Wandrey said. “When he came back as a junior, that’s when his perimeter game really blossomed. That year, David was almost unguardable.”
During this past offseason, Berry said Joplin primarily focused on conditioning and becoming more athletic.
“He really put a lot of time into getting into the best shape he can possibly be and getting stronger. That has probably helped with his confidence more than anything else that he’s done,”
Berry said.
Joplin said that he was not only working on growing physically but also on developing his mindset.
“It’s really just mentally wanting to and making sure that when I’m on the court, I’m in the right spot,” Joplin said. “Just growing, getting older and getting used to playing the college game really helped me a lot.”
Berry also said that Joplin is only scratching the surface of what kind of player he will become.
“He’ll continue to get better as his career goes because like DePaul (and) Purdue, he can make one and then he can really run them off in a hurry,” Berry said.
Joplin finished with a careerhigh 28 points against DePaul Jan. 28, where he shot 8-for-11 from beyond the arc and 10-for14 from the field.
When he comes off the bench, Joplin said he tries to bring enthusiasm and energy to his teammates on the court.
“I know that my scoring brings energy from the team and the crowd, so I try to bring that and increase the score as much as we can,” Joplin said. “Just make sure that the second five (players) keep up with what the first five did.”
Sophomore guard Stevie Mitchell said it has been fun to see his development as a player firsthand.
“He’s a great guy,” Mitchell said. “When someone like him just keeps getting better and better, it’s always great to see because he’s someone who deserves it.”
Berry said that Joplin has truly embodied his role coming off the bench this season.
“A big thing for our team this year is (that) every single player on our team is a role player,” Berry said. “David has done a great job of that and just embraced the role along with everybody else on our team. That’s allowed Jop to play with a clear mind and execute the things that we need him to do.”
Mitchell said that Joplin brings offense and swagger to the team as he continues to grow.
“He’s a scorer that can get buckets in any way, fashion, shape (or) form,” Mitchell said. “He also brings swag and attitude to the team. As he becomes more of a two-way player, he becomes more unstoppable.”
As the season goes on, Joplin said that his personal growth will come from being united with his team.
“Our biggest strength is our togetherness,” Joplin said. “I take confidence from them, and I try to give them confidence as well. We’re all confident that whatever we come through, whatever we come across, whatever team we play, we (can) beat them just because we have each other.”
From being his coach to watching him play now, Wandrey said he has never doubted Joplin’s athletic ability.
“I always knew that David had it in him to continue to improve,” Wandrey said. “Offensively, he’s got so many ways to be effective. It’s just a matter of a comfort level and confidence.”
Men’s basketball moved down to No. 11 in this week’s Associated Press Top
Following its statement win over thenNo. 4 UConn, women’s basketball earned five votes in this week’s Associated Press Top 25 Poll.
Men’s golf is 1-over par after two rounds of the Puerto Rico Classic. Final round is set for today.
Column
THIS WEEK: GUNVILLE ON MUBB
Feb. 5, Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain: Markus Howard became the first person in the history of the Liga ACB, the top division of professional basketball in Spain, to score 30 points in less than 20 minutes.
Checking the Baskonia box score and checking up on Howard have become a welcome part of my morning routine.
After moving from the Denver Nuggets to Baskonia, Howard is back to putting up numbers similar to what he used to at Marquette. He is currently averaging 15.8 points per game on 44.7% from three while taking 7.1 threes per game.
Every time a Liga ACB highlight of Howard graces my Twitter feed, inevitably someone comments about retiring his jersey.
Marquette should not retire Howard’s jersey.
In case you forgot, Howard racked up a total of 2,761 points and was a two-time AllAmerican selection over his four years at Marquette. He holds the program’s all-time leading scoring record and during his senior season, he led the nation in scoring.
With those accolades alone, he presents a solid case for jersey retirement.
But accolades are only one piece of the jersey retirement puzzle, all of the other pieces are missing.
Postseason success is the most important aspect of jersey retirement. The nine players with retired jerseys have 46 combined NCAA tournament wins, have been to six Final Fours, five National Championship appearances and two have won the National Championship.
By comparison, Howard has no NCAA tournament wins in his two trips.
Don Kojis and Doc Rivers each only have one NCAA win, so how did they get there without the significant postseason achievement of other players?
Kojis is Marquette’s alltime leading rebounder despite playing just three seasons and was a two-time
NBA All-Star.
Kojis was one of Marquette’s first true star players and was a huge factor in what the program became. That can’t be discounted here.
Rivers is fifth in career steals, 10th in career assists, won NBA coach of the year in 2000 and won a championship with the Boston Celtics in 2008.
For a player to make a better case for jersey retirement, NBA success should be considered. It raises the status of the Marquette as a program if a player has a lot of success in the NBA and it’s what put Kojis and Rivers over the edge for jersey retirement.
WOMEN’S LACROSSE
Marquette women’s lacrosse opened up its season Sunday afternoon defeating San Diego State 20-13 at Valley Fields. Senior defender Ellie Henry finished with 12 draw controls, which ranks third most in a single game in program history.
Howard scored more than 20 points only twice in his twoyear NBA career.
With zero NCAA tournament wins and not much NBA success, Howard hasn’t proven that his accolades are worth more than that.
The sentimental factor of jersey retirement is hard to predict. But Howard’s style of play, isolation offense and not much else, is contrary to the core of Marquette basketball.
Hard-nose, scrappy basketball has always been what Marquette is about. From legendary coach Al McGuire, who has a number retired of his own, recruiting from cracked sidewalks to Buzz Williams making NBA stars out of junior college players, this team has a history of making the whole greater than the sum of its parts.
Howard is one of the greatest parts of a whole Marquette has seen, but he was on teams where the sum was perpetually less than the parts. That’s maybe an unfair argument to make because he was just one player, but jersey retirement isn’t fair.
I say all this knowing that I still might see No. 0 hanging in the rafters one day, but I’m not convinced that it deserves to be there.