More than just '3'

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Sure, Zane Johnson can shoot it from beyond the arc; and yes, that's his number, but he insists he'll show Hawaii fans he has all the goods to be a complete baller


They'd look at Zane Johnson's resume. See his jersey number. Go by his reputation.

"Zane Johnson is a spot-up shooter," they'd say.

Johnson furrows his brow at the notion.

"I hate when people say that," Johnson said. "I feel that's disrespectful for everything I've done, you know? It's like saying I pretty much can't play; all I can do is sit in the corner and shoot 3s. I just don't want to be labeled as a 3-point shooter."

The former Arizona guard will be among the many in the Stan Sheriff Center seeking a fresh start tonight when his new team, Hawaii, opens the 2010-11 season against Montana State.

Johnson, a Phoenix native, is the Rainbow Warriors' starting shooting guard, and will most likely be joined for tipoff by Hiram Thompson at point guard, Joston Thomas at small forward, Bill Amis at power forward and Vander Joaquim at center.

The 6-foot-6, 210-pound junior chose three as his jersey number when he arrived last season. Yes, three. Not exactly the best way to bust his stigma like he busted zone defenses as a Wildcat.

Johnson concedes the point, but swears that wasn't intentional. Three is his grandpa's favorite number.It's true, letting it fly from behind the arc used to be his sole occupation. Johnson was a part-time starter for the Wildcats when they made a Sweet 16 run in 2008-09. He was essentially a long-range specialist, especially from the corners, and did his job well. He shot 41 percent on 3s in 11 starts in Pac-10 games.

But his limited role ate at him. That, and a carousel of coaches during his two years with the Wildcats, sent him away. Playing for Bob Nash at Hawaii seemed as good an idea as any for a restart.

He had yet to face his toughest test. Johnson sat out last season for both the mandatory NCAA transfer rule and a torn patellar tendon in his left knee that reduced him to rehabbing for months. He could only watch as the Rainbows combusted internally and Nash was fired following a last-place finish in the Western Athletic Conference and 10-20 season.

"Knowing that I couldn't help and everything that went on last year, with the coaching and players, it was definitely tough," Johnson says. "It was definitely nothing I'd ever experienced before. It was a shock, some of the things that went on."

Enter new Hawaii coach Gib Arnold in March. Here was a coaching change that Johnson welcomed. As luck would have it, the two had some history. Johnson was a former recruiting target of Arnold's in his days as a USC assistant.

"It was great (him being here)," Arnold said. "He wasn't a guy I recruited, he was a guy I hung out with. ... He definitely needs coaching, we're not hanging out on that side. But in the recruiting process, he was actually a fun guy."

Johnson is naturally easygoing; like Amis and Thompson, he's fond of cranking up the Xbox 360 for some "Call of Duty: Nazi Zombies" in his free time. But after fully recovering from his knee injury, he devoted hours and hours in the offseason to make his quest for versatility possible. He's proved it throughout the preseason by strongly attacking the rim, a welcome sight for the new UH coaches.

"When I first got here, I thought Zane was an unbelievable worker in the offseason," said assistant Benjy Taylor, who oversees the guards. "I thought he was relentless and I thought he knew his game pretty well -- he worked on those strengths that he had. Since he started practice and individual workouts, he's really done a good job of trying to develop his weaknesses (defense). He's turned into a pretty good all-around basketball player."

Johnson can still bury the trey with the best of them, of course -- his "bread and butter," as he calls it, and that extends to NBA range. The team's new multiple-set offense works just fine for him, as various screen-and-roll looks and drive-and-kick dishes play right into his hands. If he's overplayed at the 3-point line, he can put the ball on the floor and finish.

Sharpshooting freshman guard Bo Barnes has taken notice of Johnson's recent drive to drive.

"Just the way he attacks the rim hard, every time," Barnes said. "Or give a little pump fake, and two dribbles, pull-up (shot)."

Whether he proves himself by living from within or without 20 feet, 9 inches ultimately doesn't matter to Johnson, as long as the team avoids a fate like last season's.

"This year I'm glad I can finally play and show the people of Hawaii what I can do," Johnson said. "I just want to win. I do not want to lose. That's the main thing. I won't go out as a loser here. I won't."
_________________


RAINBOW CLASSIC
? Today: Montana State vs. Hawaii, 7 p.m.; Cal State Fullerton vs. Central Michigan, 9:30 p.m.
 

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Like their coach, Warriors will bring energy


His contagious energy overflows.

The trap here is that Gib Arnold's animated aura could be mistaken as a symbol of what to expect when his first team of Hawaii Rainbow Warriors takes the court this season.

Just watch a few practices, and you'll know: This team will be more about setting the perfect screen than executing the perfect run-out. They'll take a lot of charges, more than pull-up jumpers off the 3-on-2.

And this -- which UH fans should find most encouraging: Maybe they won't run the break, but it's unlikely they'll run away. This isn't the most athletic bunch, but they'll be physical; they won't get pushed around without retaliation like last year's 10-20 squad.

We don't know for sure if in-team drama lies ahead with so many new players, but these guys look like they can and will have each other's backs.

They've muscled up. Joston Thomas is put together like an NFL tight end. Even the guards are yoked. If June Jones were still around, he'd be recruiting at Gym 2 every day.

THE STYLE of play question is one of the first every new head man is asked.

Billy Booster: "You're gonna run, right Coach?"

Skip Sportscoat: "Of course we're gonna run. Enough to break the scoreboard. Now, about that check ..."

But Arnold wisely embraces the long view. He knows that if you give fans or media the smallest opening, if you even hint at an up-tempo game, the expectation will be triple digits, every time out.

Paul Westphal, whom he assisted at Pepperdine, is one of his coaching influences.

But ...

"I've worked with three NBA coaches and two of them focused on defense," he says. "(Westphal's Pepperdine teams) never played a lick of defense, but we were great on offense, and that's where I learned about pick and roll."

Make no mistake, this team is being built defense first. Defense, rebounding and toughness.

THIS IS WHERE we're supposed to tell you not to expect miracles right away, that you shouldn't even dream about UH climbing out of its half-a-decade funk, that you shouldn't bother plotting vacation for March.

But it's hard not to buy into Arnold -- because he doesn't over-sell. He says he needs two more recruiting classes.

"We still need to get athletic, deeper," he says.

You admire his guts, for going after and getting a job that at first glance is the last place where he should be -- but then again makes all the sense in the world because of our island culture's most treasured value, that of family, ohana.

Arnold's an up-and-comer. There are other schools who would eventually provide him an opportunity to be a head coach. But he's here -- not just for himself, but for generations of Arnolds.

He wants his wife, Lisa, and five children to learn first-hand why he loves living in Hawaii.

"Now my kids are able to have that same experience I had."

He wants to make things right for his father. If it had gone better for Frank as UH's head coach, Gib -- the all-state guard -- would've graduated from Punahou buff and blue to Hawaii green and white.

"The biggest thing we're trying to sell is passion. We have the passion and the work ethic," he says. "That's all I've got right now. We will be relentless in how we approach this."
 

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5 things about the Warriors


1. INTERNATIONAL CENTERPIECES

The Rainbow Warriors may not have quite as many international players as last season (five), but UH still sports three foreigners on its roster representing three separate continents. And they all play the same position: center.

They are Douglas Kurtz (Brazil), sophomore Vander Joaquim (Angola) and sophomore Davis Rozitis (Latvia).

Some of the Americans on the team hail from places nearly as far from Hawaii, such as Washington, D.C. (Joston Thomas), and Tallahassee, Fla. (Anthony Salter).

There is one local boy on the roster -- 2009 Kamehameha graduate Pi'i Minns.

2. DIVERSE COACHING STAFF

The Hawaii coaches cover considerable ground as a staff as they scour for the next generation of Rainbow Warriors.

Head coach Gib Arnold has considerable knowledge of West Coast prospects, particularly the greater Los Angeles area. Associate head coach Walter Roese hails from Brazil, assistant coach Benjy Taylor comes from the East Coast and has coached in Chicago and the third assistant, Brandyn Akana, was raised on Molokai and is familiar with Asia. Director of operations Scott Fisher spent much of the last 20 years in Australia playing and coaching.

Combined, the UH coaches have contacts throughout the Pacific Rim and beyond.

3. SENIOR CAPTAINS

UH coach Gib Arnold couldn't decide on just one team captain, so he went with three -- all three seniors on the team.

Forward Bill Amis, point guard Hiram Thompson and center Douglas Kurtz will share tri-captain duties this season.

Amis, a natural leader, was team captain in the 2008-09 season as a junior, and would have been last year as well if not for a season-ending foot injury. Thompson, a quieter person who leads with his actions, filled in as the lone captain in 2009-10. And not many people would argue toe-to-toe with the imposing, 7-foot Kurtz.

4. PHYSICAL FITNESS

A few Rainbows distinguished themselves in preseason strength and conditioning testing applied by strength coach Chris McMillian.

Freshman point guard Bobby Miles posted the highest one-step vertical leap at 37 inches, followed by freshman guard Jordan Coleman at 35.

Sophomore forward Joston Thomas bench-pressed 185 pounds the most times at 25, while senior center Douglas Kurtz was second at 19 reps.

Junior shooting guard Zane Johnson and Coleman tied for the fastest three-quarter-court sprint at 3.39 seconds. Coleman was also tops in agility testing in a boxed area of the paint.

5. NEW NUMBER FOR AMIS

Senior forward Bill Amis went from wearing 41 his first three years on the team to No. 4 this season, in honor of his lineage.

His full name is Wilburn Amis IV.

The other three returnees on the roster -- Hiram Thompson (2), Zane Johnson (3) and Douglas Kurtz (34) -- kept their same numbers.

No. 23, made popular by a certain Chicago Bulls legend, was worn last season by the departed Roderick Flemings and fittingly went to freshman guard Jordan Coleman.
 
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