Report: OJ Mayo is going to play for USC Trojans

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May 15, 2002
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O.J. Mayo, the No. 1 recruit in the Class of 2007, told the USC coaching staff and players last week that he would commit to the Trojans, multiple sources told ESPN.com.

The 6-foot-4 Mayo, as recognizable a high school recruiting name as LeBron James and Greg Oden, made the statement while on his unofficial recruiting visit last week in Los Angeles. He still needs to make that sentiment public, though. He could do so as early as this weekend at the Reebok ABCD Camp on the campus of Fairleigh Dickinson in Teaneck, N.J.



AP Photo/Al Behrman
Wherever Mayo lands, he will make an immediate splash.High school recruits often say one thing to a coaching staff to appease them and then sign somewhere else during the fall and spring signing periods, but multiple sources told ESPN.com that the Trojans simply are awaiting official word from Mayo. Even after he makes an announcement, though, the Trojans would have to hang on to his commitment until the November signing period.

NCAA rules forbid college coaches from commenting publicly on commitments until they receive a signed national letter of intent. That said, if Mayo makes it official this weekend -- or anytime before the fall -- he would immediately go down as the most significant recruit in USC basketball history.

Mayo still could still have other alternatives instead of going to college in the fall of 2007. There is a possibility he could go overseas for a year or compete in a barnstorming tour with other high-profile players who are prohibited from entering the NBA draft until they are at least one year out of high school and at least 19 years of age. Details of possible moves like this are expected to be explored in September.

Still, those would be unchartered waters. The more traditional approach for Mayo would be to do what Oden did -- go to school for at least one year. Oden chose Ohio State and is projected to be the No. 1 pick in the 2007 NBA draft if he declares. Mayo, who is still scheduled to finish his high school career at North College Hill in Cincinnati, is a potential No. 1 overall pick in 2008 if he were to declare.

"[Mayo] could change a program and give it instant credibility," said a source. "He sees the big market and knows that he's not too far away from being marketed. [Going to USC] would only help him and he's confident enough to win a national championship."

The assumption for over a year was that Mayo would go to Cincinnati if Bob Huggins were still employed there, or follow him to wherever he landed, which ended up being Kansas State. Multiple sources told ESPN.com, though, that USC coach Tim Floyd received a phone call in November that Mayo was interested.

Mayo then played in an event in Los Angeles in December, with reports surfacing that he was interested in a West Coast school. The assumption at the time was that it was UCLA, but by December, it had been made clear to USC that it was the Trojans, not the Bruins, who were in the hunt.

Multiple sources said that Mayo wanted to be in a major media market and that he told the USC staff that he didn't want to be just another name at a school like Duke or North Carolina. He wanted to win big, go to the NBA and already have been marketed in a media center. Sources also said that Mayo was very aware of the attention that USC's back-to-back Heisman winners Reggie Bush and Matt Leinart received the past two seasons.

"He's a little bit different for a kid his age," a source said.

Mayo was in Los Angeles last week from Wednesday to Friday. He met with the coaching staff, played with USC's returning players on campus and had a conversation with USC athletic director Mike Garrett. The meeting with USC coach Tim Floyd was the first for both parties. A source said Floyd has only talked to Mayo a handful of times, with Mayo -- more than USC -- leading the recruitment.

That's what makes this even more of a coup for the Trojans, assuming it becomes official. Even though he coached in the NBA at Chicago and New Orleans, Floyd has only had one highly-rated freshman in his college career -- Marcus Fizer, while he was at Iowa State.

The timing of a Mayo commitment couldn't come at a better time for the Trojans. USC is still emotionally spent after dealing with the tragic death of freshman point guard Ryan Francis and also needs to overcome the first-semester ineligibility of star shooting guard Gabe Pruitt. The Trojans are also opening its new arena, the Galen Center, this fall.

A Mayo commitment may lead to another major coup if teammate and close friend Bill Walker, another top-10 player in the class of 2007, were to follow him to USC. The two have said for the past two years that they would play together in college.
 
Jan 2, 2004
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Doesn't really matter what school he goes to.. He probably just wants to help a smaller school.

But, he'll be gone in one year anyway, so I don't think any decision is a poor decision in the long-term picture for him.
 

nofx

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Apr 14, 2005
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yea but what if he gets injured and is forced to play another year to help his stock? usc wont even make the ncaa tournament let alone the final four
 

nofx

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Apr 14, 2005
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Ohio State should be good too. Since Carmello & Duncan their havn't been much bonafide superstars in college ball.
 

BAMMER

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Apr 25, 2002
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^Please read the thread.It explains that he wants to play in an area with mass media market.He's a one and done.A typical baller with no plans of winning at the collegiate level,but would rather gain attention for endorsements and future profits by playing in the Los Angeles(Hollywood)market.Quite possibly the first time I'm gonna hope an 18 year old tears his ACL up.$$$$$
 
May 15, 2002
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BAMMER said:
.Quite possibly the first time I'm gonna hope an 18 year old tears his ACL up.$$$$$
damn bammer thats rough. SC's historically not a great basketball school but it could easily change. Look at Florida, they went from a perenial football school to now winning the NCAA championship. Also With SC opening a new arena this year, it could appeal to more recruits to go there plus ts probably not hard to recruit kids to the sun and fun of LA.
 
May 17, 2002
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BAMMER said:
^Please read the thread.It explains that he wants to play in an area with mass media market.He's a one and done.A typical baller with no plans of winning at the collegiate level,but would rather gain attention for endorsements and future profits by playing in the Los Angeles(Hollywood)market.Quite possibly the first time I'm gonna hope an 18 year old tears his ACL up.$$$$$
He prolly has an 8 figure insurance policy, if he gets a career ender.
 
Jun 30, 2002
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nofx said:
USC is not a household name in College Basketball
poor decision
LA is the biggest market in the country (next to NY) and he is probably gonna stay at USC for one year anyways... he'd be another name at Duke or NC... he'll get so much hype at SC...
 
Jun 30, 2002
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BAMMER said:
^Please read the thread.It explains that he wants to play in an area with mass media market.He's a one and done.A typical baller with no plans of winning at the collegiate level,but would rather gain attention for endorsements and future profits by playing in the Los Angeles(Hollywood)market.Quite possibly the first time I'm gonna hope an 18 year old tears his ACL up.$$$$$
plus USC is gonna have the brand new Galen center up and ready... no more Sports Arena... finally...
 

nofx

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Apr 14, 2005
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You got a point but its a gamble, hes gonna have to play alot of minutes and all the pressure will be on em to shine
 
Jun 30, 2002
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http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=jones/060710

Why's Mayo headed to USC?

By Bomani Jones
Special to Page 2

The top recruit in the class of 2007 is headed to USC. To play basketball.

Really.

It's been a few days since reports surfaced that O.J. Mayo, the 6-foot-4 point guard prodigy from West Virginia via Cincinnati, plans to take his talents to South Los Angeles. Perhaps the kid loves a challenge and is itching for the chance to show that he is both the most talented and unconventionally named O.J. in Trojan history. (Orenthal James vs. Ovinton J'Anthony? You make the call.) Maybe he's just ready for his close-up. And upon further review, and with that possibility in mind, his decision is as baffling as it first seemed while making all the sense in the world.

O.J. Mayo
Al Behrman/AP Photo
Looks like O.J. Mayo's going to be a Trojan in college as well.

Since when did kids start looking at media markets before choosing schools? Really, who can imagine a kid calling Bobby Knight and saying, "No sir, I really love the striped warm-ups, but there just ain't enough TV sets 'round here?"

Don't get me wrong -- there are lots of great reasons for a kid from the Midwest to want to live and work in Southern California, especially if he's not paying his own rent. The place has got great weather, smokin' hot women, both beaches and mountains within driving distance, and "Monday Night Football" comes on at 6 p.m. instead of 9. Can't beat that with a bat, Jack.

But the word is that Mayo wants to play for USC because he thinks being in a large media market will build his Q rating, a significant concern since it's more likely that Lew Alcindor will play for the Trojans in 2008-09 than Mayo. (Not to mention that, as ESPN.com's Pat Forde has noted, Reebok powerbroker Sonny Vaccaro lives in Southern California now.)

The kid's logic seems sound on paper. L.A.'s a big place, and USC seemed to do a good job of making household names of Reggie Bush and Matt Leinart. But who's the last basketball star created by the Cardinal and Gold Talent Agency? Harold Miner, maybe? And did USC really make Miner a star as much as it made fools of those who really believed that he was Baby Jordan?

Historically, market size has only been moderately significant in marketing college athletes. Unlike in pro sports, big collegiate names are often built in locales off the beaten path. Carmelo Anthony was the top small forward in his recruiting class when he went to bask in the dim lights and gray skies of Syracuse. But one year and a national championship later, he left college as a megastar.

Would 'Melo have been a bigger star had he won a chip in New York at St. John's? Probably. But would he have been a big star simply because he played at St. John's? Put it like this -- if that were the case, St. John's would be at the top of a lot more recruits' lists. And they surely would have had the talent to win more than five Big East games last season.

In college hoops, it's not where someone plays that makes him a star, but when someone plays. By "when," I mean March. Or so went the world when I was a kid.

Perhaps that's a naïve and antiquated outlook. But it seems that, for example, heading to Lexington to play for Big Blue would make Mayo a bigger name than heading to South Central to play for a program that will be fighting USC and UCLA football, UCLA basketball, the Lakers, the Clippers and Brangelina for L.A.'s attention come November.

But this is the kid's call. It seems to be a suspect decision, but no adolescence is complete without a bad decision here and there.

That doesn't mean that the rest of us aren't allowed to be a little disappointed. Fans of nearly every school in America were trying to convince themselves they had a chance at Mayo and his teammate, cousin and fellow ballyhooed recruit Bill Walker. Mayo did little to disappoint them. From a distance, it seemed like a wide-open race as to who could land Mayo and Walker. The pair even kept Florida A&M on their list for a while, enticed by the possibility of taking a small school and putting it on the map.

No one really thought that would happen -- especially not after the Rattlers athletic department ran afoul of the NCAA -- but the pair kept other schools on their list that weren't hoops hotbeds. Former Cincinnati head coach Bob Huggins established a relationship with Mayo and Walker before the Bearcats fired him, leaving open the possibility that they would join Huggy Bear at Kansas State. After leaving Indiana after last season, it was believed that current UAB coach Mike Davis was using his access to Mayo as a selling point when he was looking for a job.

Those are big-name coaches, but those have never been big-name basketball schools.

Even those who could care less about recruiting had to look at a kid willing to break the mold and go to a less-prestigious program to make his mark. Think about it -- if Bill Snyder was considered a miracle worker for turning K-State into a football powerhouse, what superlatives could be imagined to describe O.J. Mayo taking the Wildcats to the Final Four? And if he could take FAMU to the second round of the Big Dance, his next trick would have to be turning Gatorade into Goldschlager.

So yeah, it would have been cool for him to pursue such a route, and it's a bit of a bummer that he's choosing not to.

But if Mayo knows what he's doing, this should be pretty downright spooky for the NCAA. For years, the NCAA has lamented about the grip sneaker companies have on college basketball. Nike, Reebok and adidas are able to get to the kids before recruiters can and, in many instances, wield more influence than the slick-talking coaches that yearn for the players' services. Though the NCAA would love the world to believe its kids play for the big name on their jerseys, the reality has been that a lot of players are in it for the logos on their feet.

If the esteemed Mr. Forde is right -- as he tends to be -- and Mayo is heading to USC to be close to Vaccaro and what Vaccaro can do for him, then the NCAA is about to have big, big problems. Really, what tangible benefits could an amateur athlete receive from being in Los Angeles, where college sports don't command undivided attention? If a kid's not able to receive a check or cash in on his notoriety while in college, why play in Cali? And between class and the obligations of being a varsity athlete in a revenue sport, how on earth would Mayo find the time to make a star of himself?

Only Vaccaro and Mayo know the real answers to those queries. And they're probably nothing Myles Brand wants to hear. For that matter, they're nothing any fan wants to hear, either.

So instead of breaking the mold and trying to cut his own path during his one -- and definitely no more than one -- year in college, it seems Mayo's taking a new but conventional route. Instead of following a shoe company and using a school's name and prestige to make himself a star, he seems to be following a shoe company and using its location to make himself a star.

If everything with Vaccaro is above board, then this makes no sense. By winning, Mayo would be a star wherever he decided to go. But if this does add up, if Mayo has fame and fortune waiting for him in California, then college basketball is in even worse shape than most of us thought.

And it won't get any better.