Dispatch
HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL
In West Virginia, Mayo a slam dunk in his debut
Thursday, December 14, 2006
John Raby
ASSOCIATED PRESS

O.J. Mayo played at North College Hill last season but is now at Huntington, W.Va.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. ? The 2,000-seat gym was packed and the noise was earsplitting Tuesday night for a high school season opener perhaps like few others ever in West Virginia ? O.J. Mayo?s debut at Huntington High School.
Mayo, ranked by several publications as the nation?s top senior, turned two-time defending Class AAA champion Huntington into an instant national contender when he transferred to his hometown in September from North College Hill, where he was twice Ohio?s Mr. Basketball.
A 6-foot-5 guard, Mayo hit a three-pointer from the corner seven seconds into Huntington?s game with Nitro at the University of Charleston, and the onslaught never stopped.
"It was a whole lot of fun," Mayo said.
In a span of a little more than a minute, he dunked, made a three-pointer and scored on a finger roll in the lane. He scored 31 points and had nine assists in Huntington?s 94-46 win.
"I thought he played very unselfish, blended in well with the team and played good defense," Huntington coach Lloyd McGuffin said.
Adding Mayo, who led North College Hill to two state championships and in November signed a national letter-ofintent with Southern California, was a huge bonus. But McGuffin said his other players weren?t letting the hype go to their heads.
"Those guys are used to getting a lot of attention and they?ve done a good job of handling it," McGuffin said. "They?ve already played under a lot of pressure games before. It?s not anything new."
Huntington?s starting five also includes center Patrick Patterson, the returning state player of the year; and fellow seniors Chris Early, Jamaal Williams and Mike Taylor. Early, a 6-6 guard, signed in November to play at Oklahoma.
"I?m not here to put up 100 points," Mayo said. "If I have an opportunity to finish a play, finish the play. I can use myself as a decoy and be happy scoring zero points and still win the ballgame."