Rising up: Luster overcomes adversity, heads home one last time

IE

Administrator
Forum Admin
Forum Member
Mar 15, 1999
95,440
223
63
JayDee Luster dribbled the ball up the court and began to run through one of Wyoming?s typical offensive sets.

Luster hadn?t attempted a single shot in the first 37 minutes at Air Force, but the Pokes led by three points and needed a bucket to break the Falcons? backs.

The UW senior pulled up from beyond the arc and buried a 3-point bucket that virtually ended the game, and a two-year conference road losing streak, last month.

Luster has attempted 18 3-pointers in 10 Mountain West games, but two ? another against UNLV ? were game-changers.

And while they haven?t all fallen his way, particularly during the Pokes? three-game losing streak, Luster returns home to San Diego tonight for the final time during his collegiate career carrying an 18-8 record and a wide smile on his face.

For what must seem like the first time in more than a half-decade, something is going right.

?He?s lived a lifetime in 23 years,? said Ollie Goulston, Luster?s coach at Hoover High School. ?I?ve coached JayDee since he was nine and just the amount of things that he?s gone through, adversity-wise, it?s really fun to watch him persevere through things and have positive things happen for him.?

Death was no stranger to Luster as a youth in San Diego.

?Gangs and stuff like that was always around and the high school I went to wasn?t in a good neighborhood,? he said. ?And a lot of people questioned me for going there or didn?t want me to go there.?

Still, the basketball court and a spot playing for Goulston were a haven.

And they mixed well.

Luster helped turn a fledgling team around in his first year and was named California?s Freshman of the Year. As a junior, Hoover was San Diego?s city champion.

?Going into that year, I only needed to average eight assists to beat Jason Kidd?s national record,? Luster said. ?I could?ve done that.?

His senior season never arrived.

n n n

Luster, best friend Todd Doxey and a couple other buddies ventured on a trip to a nearby mall.

Rain soaked a busy stretch of highway.

Suddenly, the car in front of Luster ? who was driving ? swerved. It was too late for him to do the same, and the car barreled into another that was stalled out in the middle of the road.

?I was stuck in a bad situation, and I hydroplaned into the back of the car and cracked my ribs,? he said.

Three months earlier, Luster had lost a close friend and former teammate in a similar accident, so he knew he was fortunate to escape with broken bones.

He also found out that his senior season would never begin.

It was a frustrating piece of what became a year with a list full of bad news.

Luster?s cousin was shot and killed. Two other cousins faced life in prison for murder. Three other friends or family members were killed.

The teenager?s life spiraled. Panic attacks set in.

?Life was just hard for me,? Luster said. ?I started suffering from panic attacks, to where it was hard to do daily stuff ? drive, go to school. I think that?s just how my body was dealing with everything that was going on at the time.?

It wasn?t about to get any easier.

n n n

Graduation Day is supposed to be a celebration.

It was, too, for Luster, until he got some more heart-sinking news.

Reggie Theus, who Luster had known since he was a young ball boy for the former NBA player?s AAU team and the man who signed Luster to play at New Mexico State, was leaving the college ranks.

?They just went to the tournament, and he was in the process of turning New Mexico State around,? Luster recalls. ?We had one of the top mid-major recruiting classes in the country.

?The whole coaching staff left.?

Marvin Menzies took the reins, but Luster ? still bothered by panic attacks ? never felt comfortable.

?I just felt like I needed to be somewhere I was wanted, and somebody recruited me and understood what I?d been going through,? Luster said. ?That?s why I decided to leave.?

n n n

Adam Waddell saw an undersized, cocky point guard.

Wyoming?s big man was coming off a medical redshirt season, and the senior-laden Pokes were heading into a year where they?d make a run to the postseason.

?When JayDee first got here, I was not a fan,? Waddell, now a senior alongside Luster, admitted. ?He came in on his visit, and he was that little guard who just kind of came in and established himself and played really tough. He kind of played with a chip on his shoulder and you could tell.?

Luster wasn?t sure Laramie was the right fit for him at first glance, either.

He was at the Hilton Garden Inn across from War Memorial Stadium when he got a call from Doxey.

?[Goulston] called my best friend because he knew he was the only one that could really talk to me and get through to me,? Luster said. ?He called me and told me, ?Jay, you?ve got to do it.? That was my best friend, my brother, everything.

?After I got off the phone with him, I knew I was coming to Wyoming.?

It was the last time the two ever spoke on the phone.

n n n

Luster and Doxey had been inseperable since they were 7 years old.

They played Pop Warner leagues together and never separated all through high school.

?He was my brother, basically,? Luster said. ?Everything we did, we did together.?

On July 13, 2008, Doxey ? then a member of the Oregon Ducks football team ? drowned in a swimming accident on the McKenzie River.

?That has just been tough for all of us and even more so for [Luster] because they were like brothers and did everything together,? Goulston said.

Yet Luster also feels that everything that happened his senior year of high school prepared him for the unthinkable.

He quickly turned the grief into motivation.

?Every day I wake up, I do it for Todd; that?s the slogan I live by,? Luster said. ?Everything I do I feel like I?ve got to put twice as much effort in. Honestly, the world?s standards and what other people think about me [doesn?t] matter. I know what Todd expects from me, and I know what he wants from me and that?s what I live by.?

n n n

Luster arrived in Laramie in the fall of 2008 with two goals ? to be successful on the court and to get two degrees, one for him and one in Doxey?s honor.

He earned a bachelor?s degree in social science last year and will finish a second in criminal justice at the end of this semester.

?My mom always instilled education and always made sure I valued education,? said Luster, who was the first in his family to graduate from college. ?Even Todd, he was always a straight-A student and that aspect of school was always important. To know that the people that I care about most are proud of me, that means more to me than anything.?

Luster plans on continuing on to get his masters degree and would like to get into coaching.

First things first, he?s got a solid senior season to finish.

n n n

The basketball court presented its own issues.

Luster had to sit out a year to satisfy NCAA transfer rules, then became the starting point guard for the Pokes.

But they won 10 games in each of his sophomore and junior seasons.

UW fans were sometimes frustrated in the 5-foot-9, 160-pound point guard who averaged about six points per game and two assists for every turnover.

?He got a lot of criticism at times, but JayDee?s the same guy,? Goulston said. ?The thing about JayDee is he always tried to please his coach. So whatever system was there, that?s what he?s going to run.?

Eventually, head coach Heath Schroyer was fired. Interim coach Fred Langley ? who recruited Luster in high school ? lasted the rest of the season and eventually Larry Shyatt was hired.

?He?s had to play for five different head coaches, which is unprecedented in college basketball,? Goulston said. ?There were many times he could?ve left, even at Wyoming. We had conversations about it, and JayDee chose to stay because he believed in Wyoming and believed in himself and wanted to finish what he started.

?... He?s done a helluva job this year.?

n n n

Waddell has a different impression of his teammate four years later.

?The things that he?s been through, it makes JayDee one of the greatest people that?s ever been through this program and ever came to this university and that I?ve ever met,? he said.

Luster, never shy about bringing religion into the conversation, has often said that he believes good things happen to good people.

?I feel like this year?s team is a testament to that,? Luster said.

Shyatt starts five players that remained on board through the coaching transition and the team is two victories shy of 20 ? a feat not accomplished since the 2002-03 season.

And Luster has been a major contributor, averaging 5.6 points and nearly four assists per game while often stifling some of the league?s top scorers.

?I don?t know a lot of people that have gone through the stuff that he?s gone through all through high school and college,? Goulston said. ?He?s made it through.

?It really says that character means something.?

?God makes no mistakes, and everything he put me through, it was hard,? Luster said. ?It was a lot of hopeless days at that time, but I feel like it bettered me.

?Sometimes you don?t appreciate the sunshine or the good without experiencing the bad. We?ve been through so much as a team and as a family ? because I look at all these dudes as my brothers ? and it definitely makes it that much greater.?
 

IE

Administrator
Forum Admin
Forum Member
Mar 15, 1999
95,440
223
63
Second half dooms Pokes again




Larry Shyatt's team scored fewer than 20 points after halftime for the third consecutive game and made five shots after the break.

That doesn't mean Wyoming's second-time, first-year head coach is buying into any discussion of second-half trends.

"We played one of our best second halves of the year," Shyatt said after losing 54-46 to rival Colorado State for UW's third straight defeat. "I thought we made shots, we answered shots.

"We missed some point-blank shots at the end of the game, got the ball twice to [senior center Adam Waddell] at three feet, once to Leonard [Washington] and Luke [Martinez] missed a couple of open looks, but I credit their defense. I didn't think we stumbled, and I didn't think it was second-half problems."

It's true that the Cowboys were within three points with fewer than three minutes remaining.

But after shooting 12 of 23 in the first half, they made just 5-of-21 baskets, including two buckets in the final 14-plus minutes.

And, during their three-game losing skid, they've scored a total of 50 points after halftime.

"New Mexico scored 19 at home against one of the best defensive teams in the country -- us" Shyatt said, referring to the first half of a Cowboys' 48-38 loss to the Lobos a week earlier. "I saw Las Vegas score 15 points in a half [Saturday], the second half at New Mexico. I tell you what, I thought our effort was incredible. You'll have to write what you think."

I won't fault the Cowboys' effort on Saturday, but I also simply can't ignore the numbers.

In the second half at New Mexico, the Cowboys made 6-of-27 shots after halftime, seeing a four-point halftime lead conclude in a 10-point loss. It was UW's lowest-scoring game in more than a quarter-century.

On Wednesday, I watched an eight-point halftime lead to reeling Air Force become a five-point loss when the Pokes made just 6 of 23 shots after halftime.

And on Saturday, I witnessed the Pokes waste another halftime lead, shooting 5 for 21 after the break.

The saying goes that one time is chance, twice is a coincidence and three times is a pattern, even if Shyatt liked his team's energy.

The Cowboys are now 17 for 71 (23.9 percent) from the field in their last three second halves.

And it doesn't help the trend that the Pokes hadn't lost consecutive games all year, but those ugly numbers helped contribute to back-to-back-to-back losses in games they led at halftime.

Before this stretch, they were 13-0 when leading games at the break.

They've also come from behind at halftime to win four games, including once at Air Force where they shot better than 62 percent, and beat Colorado on the road after being tied at halftime. To say that Wednesday's second half was one of the team's best only left me scratching my head.

I know Shyatt likes to refer to such trends as "poison" when discussing them with his team.

But the Pokes' second-half struggles have been the most toxic to this team.
 

IE

Administrator
Forum Admin
Forum Member
Mar 15, 1999
95,440
223
63
Extra Pokes

TIRED LEGS: When looking at Wyoming's second-half struggles, it's hard to overlook the fact that UW's starters are averaging 163.5 minutes per game in Mountain West play.

They played 167 against Colorado State on Saturday night, a third consecutive loss.

"Sometimes [it wears on us] but our trainers are there," UW guard Luke Martinez said. "They do a good job of keeping us healthy, keeping us fresh. But it is kind of wearing sometimes."

STIFLING EIKMEIER: For the second consecutive meeting, UW senior point guard JayDee Luster all but shut down one of the league's leading scorers.

Colorado State guard Wes Eikmeier scored just two points in the first meeting and scored four Saturday, though made a critical late bucket to preserve the victory.

"Our little guy has the heart of a lion," UW coach Larry Shyatt said. "He's held the leading scorer in this league to one basket in two games and he's done it without fouling."

FREE THROW WOES: Shyatt hoped his team would get to the free-throw stripe more down the stretch.

The Cowboys made 5 of 8 attempts, but the Rams helped their cause by making 14 of 16 freebies.

"They got to the foul line and we did not," Shyatt said. "That's our problem."




LOUD NOISES: There were empty seats at Moby Arena, but Colorado State announced a sellout crowd of 8,745.

"I thought this was one of the greatest college environments I've been in in 40 years," Shyatt said. "This is what fans dream of, an arena with energy like this."
 

IE

Administrator
Forum Admin
Forum Member
Mar 15, 1999
95,440
223
63
Aztecs hope for soft landing against Wyoming



Midway through practice Monday afternoon, James Rahon crashed to the Viejas Arena court with an audible thud. Play instantly stopped and a half-dozen teammates rushed to his assistance, reaching down and helping him to his feet.

Several of them said at once: ?You OK??

It is a common refrain these days on Montezuma Mesa, both said and unsaid, articulated and internalized. Are the Aztecs OK?

The last time San Diego State played Wyoming, a month ago in Laramie, it took 20 hours on a cramped 19-seat turboprop, two refueling stops and an unscheduled overnight in Utah to get there. The Aztecs finally arrived a few hours before tipoff, missed their shootaround at Arena-Auditorium and instead had an impromptu walk-through in a hotel ballroom. They won 52-42.

Tonight, they?ll merely have to walk out of their campus apartments and down a hill to Viejas Arena to face the Cowboys. Might take five minutes, 10 tops.

And this might be the tougher challenge, the taller order. A month later the Aztecs suddenly look like the team that just landed from a harrowing adventure through the mountains in the dead of winter, weary from the travel, rattled by the turbulence.
 

IE

Administrator
Forum Admin
Forum Member
Mar 15, 1999
95,440
223
63
Aztecs update: They have won four straight overall and four straight at Viejas Arena against Wyoming. The last two games here were both routs, 96-57 and 88-57. You have to go back eight seasons, to an 11-18 team in 2004-05, to find the last time SDSU lost four straight. Despite the current losing streak, the Aztecs remain solidly in projected NCAA Tournament brackets, with most having them as a No. 7 seed now. It will be interesting to see if Wyoming puts 5-9 JayDee Luster, its best perimeter defender, on Xavier Thames or Chase Tapley and how the Aztecs counter against his lack of size. With Jamaal Franklin not certain to play with a sprained ankle (and Garrett Green doubtful), the Aztecs will need more offensive production from James Rahon, who is averaging 6.5 points and shooting 35.8 percent since his 22-point outburst in the conference opener. If Franklin and Green both can?t go, look for DeShawn Stephens to start.





Cowboys update: They are jockeying with Colorado State and TCU for the 4/5 spots in the conference tournament, which means you don?t play one of the Mountain West?s ?big three? (New Mexico, UNLV, SDSU) in the opening round. The Cowboys have lost three straight despite leading at halftime in all three, including a staggering 23-19 at New Mexico last week. The problem has been second-half shooting, which has been considerably worse for five game now (47.2 to 27.6 percent). Luster, a senior who grew up a few miles from Viejas Arena and attended Hoover High, makes his final trip home. His numbers aren?t overwhelming (5.6 ppg, 3.6 apg, 36.4-percent shooting), but he regularly plays lock-down defense on the other team?s best guard. F Leonard Washington, a USC transfer, is the leading scorer (13.9 ppg) and rebounder (7.4 rpg) in conference games.
 
Bet on MyBookie
Top