Travis Trice has never been the biggest player on the floor.
Currently listed at a generous six feet, 165 pounds, the freshman point guard is shorter than any of his teammates on the MSU menâs basketball team by at least an inch and gives up at least 20 pounds to the rest of the Spartans.
Thatâs nothing new for Trice, though. Hailing from Huber Heights, Ohio â" about 20 minutes outside of Dayton â" Trice typically was the smallest player out there.
So, with the help of his dad and high school coach Travis Trice Sr., Trice adapted at a young age.
âNo. 1, I knew he had to be smarter,â Trice Sr. said. âHe had to be able to be in a situation where he could out-think his opponent because he wasnât bigger or faster.â
Trice Sr. also said he knew his son had to develop the dribbling, passing and shooting ability needed to beat a bigger player. The two spent countless hours in the gym working on Triceâs skills and just as much time talking basketball to develop the smarts.
And now, after all the shots and drills and all the discussions on the drive to and from practice, Triceâs hard work is paying off.
Despite being told he was too small, too slow or too weak for so long, Trice finds himself proving all the doubters wrong and doing what he and those close to him knew he could do all along.
âThis is what you dream of as a kid,â Trice said of playing for a top-10 program in MSU. âWhen youâre sitting there â" 5, 6 years old â" watching people play on TV, thatâs what you want to do. And Iâm living it right now.â
Coachâs kid
MSU head coach Tom Izzo found Trice while recruiting his AAU teammate for the SYF Players, Branden Dawson.
Trice had an offer from Dayton after his freshman year of high school, but he said it wasnât until he had a breakout summer on the AAU circuit after his junior year that big schools came calling. Dawson, on the other hand, was a five-star recruit everybody wanted.
But after seeing Trice hit daggers from the 3-point line and feed perfect passes to Dawson â" also now a freshman guard at MSU â" Izzo thought Trice could help the Spartans too. He was completely sold when he realized his dad also was his AAU coach through eighth grade and at Wayne High School.
âThat was a (former MSU head coach Jud) Heathcote rule,â Izzo said earlier this season. âTry to get coachesâ kids because he has a good understanding of the game.â
Once Trice came to East Lansing, he said being a coachâs kid gave him a leg up on other freshmen. Having grown up listening to and learning from his dad, who played two years of college basketball at both Purdue and Butler, Trice has a better idea of what is going through Izzoâs head.
âIâll remember something (Trice Sr.) has told me, and then Iâll do it here,â Trice said. âAnd (Izzo) will be like, âYeah, thatâs right,â or Iâll say something, and heâll be like, âYeah, thatâs right.â
âIt just really helps your relationship with a head coach.â
Trice also said his dad and assistant coaches at Wayne, where he averaged 23.5 points and 6.5 assists his senior year on the way to being named 2011 Gatorade Ohio Boys Basketball Player of the Year, were hard on him, much like Izzo. But having dealt with the same expectations and demands for most of his life, he said the adjustment has been easy.
Plus, it helps he still can go to his dad, who Trice said he calls almost every day. And although those talks sometimes revolve around what he did right and wrong on the court, Trice Sr. said his role has evolved since his son came to college.
âOur relationship is more about being support for him right now, even if thatâs not always telling him what he wants to hear,â Trice Sr. said. âI tell him, âYou have to make sure you donât lose yourself and who you are and the confidence in yourself.ââ
Leader in waiting
Although Trice is sitting back in his back-up role while senior forward Draymond Green and sophomore guard Keith Appling lead the Spartans this year, Trice Sr. said his son is a natural leader. As the oldest of five brothers and sisters, Trice has been looked up to much of his life, especially now that his little brother Dâmitrik is in a familiar situation as a freshman playing on the varsity basketball team at Wayne.
âTravis has always had a lot riding on his own shoulders,â Trice Sr. said. âWeâve always talked about leading the trail and the different types of responsibilities on his shoulders. He knows that. He realizes that.â
Averaging 5.6 points and a shade over two assists in 18.8 minutes per game this season, Trice has had the ups and downs expected from a freshman. And just like his dad used to, Izzo has demanded more from Trice all season.
It doesnât bother Trice, though. Instead, he admits when he doesnât play well. And when he does something worthy of praise, Trice brushes it off and says he still needs to get better.
âThatâs the type of kid he is,â Trice Sr. said. âI look for a whole lot better things from him in the future, and I know heâs going to make Spartan Nation proud.â
No comments:
Post a Comment