JuJu Watkins will lead the next generation of women’s basketball
The USC freshman is already a phenomenon, even if the rest of the country hasn’t seen it yet
Jim Alexander (OC Register) — LOS ANGELES — To really understand the impact JuJu Watkins has had on USC women’s basketball in just a few short months, consider the concession stands.
No, seriously.
A year ago, the Women of Troy played and defeated Oregon at home on a mid-February Friday night – a T-shirt giveaway, no less – and drew 1,126 fans, and my search for an open snack bar at the Galen Center was truly a search – one on the lower level just happened to be open. Smaller crowds, fewer concession staffers needed, right?
Sunday afternoon, when USC played Utah – and Watkins broke the school record for 30-point games in a 74-68 loss to the Utes – there were 7,129 in the house, food stands were fully stocked and staffed … and lots of those in attendance were little girls waving signs, boys and girls – and adults – wearing JuJu jerseys, and certified basketball royalty in the courtside seats.
Yes, Cheryl Miller has four season tickets directly across from the USC bench. The fulcrum of the school’s two NCAA championship teams in 1983 and ’84 – and indisputably the greatest player of her era – is prominent in her presence and one of a number of program alumni encouraged to come back by head coach Lindsay Gottlieb and lead assistant Beth Burns.
They may have been attracted because they’re loyal alums, but they’re mainly there because of JuJu.
This is a prime era for women’s college basketball, with more televised games, more attention, and as Gottlieb noted in a phone conversation this week, more investment in the women’s game than ever before. On the other side of the country, Iowa’s Caitlin Clark has set the NCAA Division I women’s career scoring record and is creating a nice living for scalpers wherever the Hawkeyes go. Connecticut’s Paige Bueckers and LSU’s Angel Reese are among others who have taken advantage of the attention.
But JuJu is the vanguard of the next generation of superstars. More significantly, she’s an L.A. kid who, rather than migrating to one of the sport’s established powers to chase a championship, opted to stay home and help build something.
The amazing thing is that for all of the attention she gets here – including the throngs of well-wishers and autograph seekers who wait for her to come out of the Galen Center after home games – she’s a well-kept secret nationally so far. USC has played only two national TV games this season and most of its exposure has come from the Pac-12 Network, meaning a large swath of the country only sees JuJu highlights on SportsCenter or YouTube.
There are plenty of highlights. Going into USC’s Thursday night game at Arizona, she has a school-record 12 30-point games (eclipsing Miller’s 10 in a season), a single-game school record 51 points in a victory at Stanford, three Pac-12 Player of the Week awards and 13 conference Freshman of the Week honors.
Watkins leads the Pac-12 in scoring (28.2) and is 10th in rebounding (7.0), third in free-throw percentage (.861), third in steals per game (2.64), seventh in blocked shots (1.64) and seventh in minutes played (34.01). Nationally, she’s second in scoring to Iowa’s Clark (at 32.1 a game) and is 35th in free-throw percentage and 27th in steals per game.
She is a 94-foot player, a potential difference-maker at both ends of the floor with a significant skill set.
“It’s been fun to watch JuJu,” Elise Woodward, a former player at Washington and now a broadcaster for ESPN and the Pac-12 Network, messaged on the Platform Formerly Known As Twitter.
“JuJu has elite body control that is world-class. The way she can elevate so quickly to get her jump shot off even with the defender close is special. The ability to change pace and tempo to freeze defenders, even when they have good position, and then explode by them, allows her to get easier looks in the paint than most other players. And when she misses, she pursues her own rebounds with a vengeance and her body control allows her to grab rebounds in tight spaces without fouling.
“She is a shot maker at all three levels, with the height of a forward but the skills of a point guard.”
And she seems to have accepted the responsibility of lifting the performances of those around her.
“We have a really good team and we have other good players around her, but she was put in a situation where she’s had to shoulder the load from Day One, whereas some of those other players walk onto a top 10 team, a top 15 team,” Gottlieb said. “She’s all over the floor impacting the game in a lot of different ways. … I think the threat of her being able to drop 40 at any time affects game plans, which opens things up for other people.
“She raises the level of play of those around her. I mean, she’s a complete player who most importantly has impacted winning. And I think for a young player to come in and have individual success, but more importantly lift the team is, I think, her greatest accomplishment.”
The legend and the up-and-comer haven’t interacted a lot – “maybe 10 minutes, max,” Miller said – but there’s a link, given the expectations when Cheryl arrived at USC. The legend’s advice: Give JuJu time.
“You know, Caitlin wasn’t Caitlin until her last two seasons,” Miller said. “Everything looks great on paper. Everything looks great for right now. But let’s see where she elevates her team. … Her junior and senior years, she’ll pretty much have it figured out. But right now a lot of that falls on Lindsay’s shoulders. You want JuJu to be JuJu, and that’s a fine line. Lindsay’s got to say, ‘Hey I’ve got to keep those reins a little tight. I’ll have them a little loose. But I have to be able to reel her in.’”
The parallels? When Miller got to USC, she had a respected coach in Linda Sharp – “Anything she told me to do, I never rolled my eyes because I knew she had my best interests at heart,” she said – and two strong veteran teammates in twins Pam and Paula McGee. If she strayed, she heard about it.
“I needed that, too,” she said, “because you can’t help when you’re coming in with all of that attention and all of the accolades to somehow think, yeah, you are the center of the universe. And then you find out very quickly you’re not.”
It is a different environment now, of course.
Miller said she’s impressed that JuJu understands that all of those little girls are looking up to her and that she has an opportunity, and responsibility, to set an example, be it in interviews, one-on-one interactions or social media posts.
“She has an incredible following,” Gottlieb said. “I think the diversity of it is really interesting. It’s boys. It’s girls. It’s older, it’s younger. It’s just – it’s cool to have a JuJu jersey. It’s cool to be a fan here now. But also I think it speaks to JuJu and her family understanding the bigger picture. … it’s JuJu who wants to spend the time and interact with people. And I think she understands her place in all of this, you know, maybe beyond her years.”
Gottlieb mentioned a road game at Colorado where the players were already on the bus, ready to leave for the airport, when an assistant coach saw a little girl waiting for Watkins.
“He came on the bus and said, ‘Hey, JuJu, would you come out and sign for her?’ ” Gottlieb said. “And she said of course. She comes out, and as soon as she’s signing for the one kid, 50 other people started running down a hill to come to her. And we’re like, ‘Oh, man, we didn’t know we were opening her up to that.’
“But this is what we’re starting to see, and I only think it’s going to grow from here.”
If the JuJu Phenomenon does become the hottest ticket from coast to coast, it will only be positive for a sport that is beginning to hit its stride in the public consciousness – and, with the success of USC and UCLA, establishing a beachhead in the nation’s second-largest market.
For years, the star stories have been concentrated in Storrs, Conn., Knoxville, Tenn., and more recently in such far-flung outposts as Eugene, Iowa City and Baton Rouge.
“People used L.A. in some ways as a negative, like, ‘Oh, you know, women’s college basketball can’t be big in L.A. because there’s too many other things going on,’” Gottlieb said. “Or, historically, the L.A. schools haven’t drawn crowds. And I think she’s turned that narrative on its head, because L.A. loves winners and L.A. loves a show, and there’s no bigger winner or no bigger show than JuJu right now.”
And there’s also this:
“During this era of (women’s) college basketball players with a huge following, we haven’t seen a young Black female with this type of attention,” Gottlieb said. “And I think that’s significant for her community. … It definitely has, I think, implications beyond just our team this season, kind of what you’re talking about as sort of the next wave of women’s college basketball.”
The JuJu Phenomenon is just beginning. Get ready.
ocregister.com
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USC beats ARIZ 95-93 in double OT.
It’s 85-85 to start the 2nd OT.
Trojans and Wildcats headed to OT 71-71 without JuJu who has fouled out. USC’s first OT game of the year. ARIZ’s fourth.
Trojans tie ARIZ on a long 3-pointer 71-71 with 7.6 secs to go.
Update — JuJu fouls out with 1:41 to go and ARIZ leading 67-62. Wildcats have led by as many as 10 points in 2nd half.
ARIZ leads USC at the half 33-31.
Good team effort to go into double OT and get the win without JJW. 6 Pac12 WBB teams in the top 25. Conference Tournament will be good and decide seedings for NCAA.
No. 7 USC (21-5 overall, 11-5 Pac-12) at ARIZONA (16-12, 8-8)
Tonight at 5 p.m., McKale Center, Tuscon, Ariz., Pac-12 Los Angeles/790 AM
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What’s holding back a new RB position coach? The NFL & CFB seasons are over with so there’s no reason to wait. Spring football is coming and what is LR thinking? Get on your high horse man!
It looks like USC is in talks with TCU assistant coach Tony Jones Jr. He has sent quite a few running backs to the NFL. He has had interest from NFL teams. Could be a good one if they ice the deal.
Juju is really something. She is carrying the team on her back it seems. Coach needs to recruit some play makers to maximize what JuJu provides or it could turn into another CW situation?
Tonight’s game is supposed to be on PAC12N at 5pm, but I don’t see it on my schedule in San Diego till 10:30pm. Instead they have some lousy men’s games at 5pm. Really the #7 team in the country is on tape delay? Good riddance Pac12.
In Laguna, Cox is showing JuJu and her friends at ARIZ on Pac12LA (78) at 5 pm.
I don’t have Pac12LA, not sure what form I have, oh well I can watch it tomorrow.
btw, I love San Diego. What an incredible, great place with so many amazing diverse areas and different things to do.
My mom was in Pearl Harbor when it was bombed and my grandfather, being a Navy man, is buried next to my grandmother at the beautiful Ft. Rosecrans National Cemetary, where they have a nice spot overlooking the Pacific.
When my son was a Boy Scout we helped plant flags at each grave for Memorial Day. Amazing site, this wave of thousands of Scouts planting thousands of flags across the hillside. Point Loma is beautiful.
She’s clearly the best player on the floor n every game she plays but she also needs a running mate. I’ve watched 6 or 7 games this year (I’m proof she brings eyeballs) and she is gassed out in the 4th in all of them. The load she carries is crazy. I hope she carries us in the tourney and gets to play Clarke. That would be fun. Juju is not yet the shooter or passer Clarke is, but she’s better at everything else.
A very good article on Juju. I’m very impressed with her style of play and she seems to be able to handle all the attention very well. I wish her nothing but the best in her career.