| (Thursday, June 24, 2004) [ Photos
] [ David
Young Bio (PDF file) ]
NCCU'S YOUNG SELECTED BY SEATTLE IN NBA DRAFT
Young Becomes School's First NBA Draft Pick in 21
Years
North Carolina Central University senior David Young had his dream
fulfilled Thursday night when the Seattle Supersonics selected the All-CIAA
guard with the 41st overall pick in the 2004 NBA Draft.
Young, NCCU's first NBA draft pick in 21 years,
sat alone in an Atlanta hotel room when he saw his name flash on the television
as the 12th player chosen in the second round. "Wow," he said, "God is
good."
After ending his college career as the Eagles'
top scorer in 2003-04 with 20.5 points per game, Young faced a long and
tough journey around the NBA workout circuit. He had workouts with the
Houston Rockets (May 24), Washington Wizards (May 27), Los Angeles Lakers
(May 28 and June 23), Seattle Supersonics (June 4 and June 19), Detroit
Pistons (June 14), San Antonio Spurs (June 15), Dallas Mavericks (June
17), Miami Heat (June 21) and Atlanta Hawks (June 22).
"I knew I had real strong workouts with the
Los Angeles Lakers, Miami and Seattle, and they all had good things to
say about me," he said. "I felt it was just a matter of time."
"I have endured and persevered through a lot
of tough times." Young said reflecting on his life and basketball career.
"I have always dreamed about playing in the NBA. I got a second opportunity
at North Carolina Central University and now my dream has come true."
A native of New Castle, PA, Young came to
NCCU via Xavier University, where he saw his playing time diminish after
three seasons with the Musketeers. The 1999 Pennsylvania State Player of
the Year made a big impact during his only season in Durham, becoming the
first Eagle in 21 years to net more than 200 field goals in a single season.
Ironically, the last Eagle to accomplish that feat is also the school's
last NBA draft pick. David Binion was chosen by Seattle in the 10th round
as the 221st overall pick in the 1983 draft after averaging 22.4 points
per contest and earning All-CIAA honors as a senior. A year earlier, NCCU's
Donald Sinclair was a 10th round selection (217 overall) by the Washington
Bullets. Then there was Joe Pridgen in 1969 (Round 18, San Diego Rockets),
Lee Davis in 1968 (Round 10, Phoenix Suns), and Ted Manning, NCCU's all-time
leading scorer, in 1965 (Round 5, Detroit Pistons). Of course, the school's
first and most notable NBA draftee came in 1957 when the Boston Celtics
chose future Hall-of-Famer Sam Jones with the eighth pick in the first
round of the draft.
SONICS HEAD COACH NATE McMILLAN:
On David Young, the Sonics 41st pick:
"He is a tough defender and good scorer, he averaged 22 points. He
really competes when he's out on the floor. His strength is just his mental
toughness. A few teams had him in twice to look at him and his workouts
for us were really good. He was all business. Defensively, he can hold
his own, and offensively, he's a scorer. Looking at those factors and knowing
we're looking for that kind of toughness at (pick) 41, we felt like that
was pretty good."
SONICS GENERAL MANAGER RICK SUND:
On David Young:
"We brought him in for a workout, liked him, and then brought him in
for a second workout. We liked him very much."
"Young
enjoys draft thrills" - Herald-Sun article by Mike Potter
"Young
restless no more" - News & Observer article by Sheena Johnson
"Young
Excited for Opportunity in Seattle" - Supersonics.com
This is what David Young saw when he realized his dream had come true.
ESPN flashed this graphic up on the screen just before cutting to commercial.





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