More than a scorer
Kemba Walker knows he's far better than Jimmer Fredette: Now he has a title gameto prove it
- Kemba Walker is more dominant in more ways than Jimmer Fredette.
- Jimmer Fredette can only take over a game by scoring.
Jimmer Mania should have been Kemba Mania. That much is already clear.
UConn guard Kemba Walker has shown he can do everything the obsessed-over Jimmer Fredette can do, only better. Now, Walker gets a chance to deliver the ultimate exclamation point on the argument in the national championship game.
Just three days after Fredette collected another Player of the Year award in Houston — an award that should have been Walker's — Kemba plays Butler for the one trophy that everyone remembers.
It isn't quite Vince Young taking on Reggie Bush's USC team for the national title after Bush nabbed the Heisman from Young. After all, Fredette got bounced out of the NCAA Tournament more than a week ago. There will be no 1-on-1 battle.
No matter. Kemba can still shoot down Jimmer by cutting down the nets. He's already played one of the great semifinal games ever in this Final Four, putting up 18 points, seven assists and six rebounds in a defensive muck of a heavyweight power showdown.
Which has UConn coach Jim Calhoun having fun with Kentucky's claim that it held Walker in check.
"I know that (Kentucky coach) John (Calipari) said they thought they did a great job on Kemba," Calhoun said Sunday. "He only had 18-7-6, got loose balls, blocked shots. If that's controlling, he's far and away the best player in the country. He dominated the game when it had to be dominated."
Walker's done more to dominate than Fredette, bettering the most popular player in the country in assists (4.6 per game to 4.3) and rebounds (5.3 per game to 3.4) while playing in a much tougher conference. A 23.9 points per game average in the Big East far exceeds a 28.9 average in the Mountain West.
The only way Fredette can take over a game is through scoring. Walker makes his impact as a distributor and rebounder (despite the fact he only stands 6-foot-1) as well.
UConn's man is harder to stop and he's carried his team much farther.
"There's no doubt in our mind that Kemba's the best player in the country," Huskies point guard Shabazz Napier said. "People who know basketball now he's the best. Other guys are more for casual fans."
Walker's next task isn't shattering the myth of Jimmer Mania though. It's outplaying Bulldog Shelvin Mack, another future pro in this UConn-Butler matchup.
The most talented college basketball player in the country is Arizona's Derrick Williams regardless. The best? It's already impossible to dispute Walker's case. There's a good chance he'll win the Most Outstanding Player (MOP) award for the Final Four even if UConn losses the title game — and no one's done that since Hakeem Olajuwon.
"I think any competitor uses anything he can as motivation," Walker said of being overshadowed by the Mania this season. "I don't think about it much though."