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SF David Lighty (Most Career Buckeye Wins, ASVEL Lyon-Villeurbanne Basket - France)

Do you guys think that there is a chance that Lighty could redshirt.

crazybuck, you bring up an interesting situation......

No. Lighty has not shown any signs of problems with his knee so far this season, the only issue he has had is having to wear the knee brace which has caused him some mobility issues, but I believe he only has to wear the brace this year.

Its just my opinion, but I think his ability to shoot the three, will get him on the court early next year, he is also a consistent defensive player.

Obviously, the knee will be key here........
 
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i think it would be tough to tell Lighty that he will have to sit on the bench while he watches the greatest creator of open shots, in years, play.

it would also be hard to convince him, to sit out on a team that is a potential pre-season #1, and a team that can go deep in the tourney.
 
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crazybuck, you bring up an interesting situation......

No. Lighty has not shown any signs of problems with his knee so far this season, the only issue he has had is having to wear the knee brace which has caused him some mobility issues, but I believe he only has to wear the brace this year.

Its just my opinion, but I think his ability to shoot the three, will get him on the court early next year, he is also a consistent defensive player.

Obviously, the knee will be key here........

Ok, I honestly havent been able to see him play or read much about what is going on, just that he struggled against Dunbar and they said he was healthy just the mentality and being able to do the things he used to do arent there yet, and from watching other people go down with knee injuries it usually takes about 2 years.

Thanks for the input.
 
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scout.com (free)

1/29/06

Soul Survivor

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Villa Angela-St. Joseph's (Ohio) David Lighty

By Matt Remsberg

Date: Jan 28, 2006

Villa Angela-St. Joseph (Ohio) swingman David Lighty has overcome injuries, ailments and doubt to become Cleveland’s top baller.


This article appears in the January/February 2006 edition of SchoolSports magazine.

Forces seem to have conspired to keep Villa Angela-St. Joseph wing David Lighty under wraps throughout his high school hoop career.

Some have succeeded temporarily. Others have failed immediately. But he’s kept his head up through it all and now Lighty is coming unleashed as a senior.

Lighty, a 6-foot-6, 215-pounder who averaged 24.5 points, 12 rebounds and six assists per game as a junior, thought he was coming unleashed when he lifted off for a monster dunk in the third quarter of last year’s Division III Lakeland District final against St. Peter Chanel. With the score tied, Lighty’s jam gave the Vikings the lead for good and sent the overflow crowd at Lakeland Community College into hysterics.

Lighty had a trademark game — 18 points, 11 boards and seven dimes — as VASJ advanced to the regional tournament with the win. It was an effort that made it clear why Lighty earned scholarship offers from the likes of Arizona, Syracuse and his eventual school of choice, Ohio State.

An effort that made it clear why he entered his senior season rated the nation’s No. 30 recruit in the Class of 2006 by SchoolSports.com.

Only four wins stood between the Vikings and their first state title in a decade. Then Lighty woke up — literally.

“He called me the next morning,” says Vikings coach Dave Wojciechowski. “I don’t think he’d even gotten out of bed yet. He told me, ‘Coach, I’ve got a coconut on my knee.’”

Coming unleashed had torn the anterior cruciate ligament in Lighty’s right knee.

The injury wasn’t confirmed until the day of VASJ’s regional semifinal game. And even then Lighty didn’t believe it. He wanted a second opinion, but the news was the same. Torn ACL. By then, the Vikings had been eliminated in the Canton Regional finals and Lighty was robbed of a chance to shine on the state’s biggest stage by an injury he didn’t remember suffering.

Eventually, Lighty and Wojciechowski concluded it had been the dunk.

Coming back to earth caused Lighty’s right leg to buckle and he collapsed backward onto the hardwood. But he jumped up and sprinted back on defense without a hint of pain. No pain as the team huddled between the third and fourth quarters. No pain after the celebration on the floor and no pain as he fell asleep. Only a coconut on his knee when he awoke.

“I guess adrenaline carried me through the game, but even after that it never hurt too badly,” says Lighty, whose family calls him Tank. “I didn’t know what it was, but I thought if I took a few days off I’d be ready for regionals.”

Lighty ended up taking seven months off from basketball. But he hardly took seven months off. Rehab was a seven-days-a-week test of strength and will that he emerged from with 30 additional pounds of muscle on his frame. Now, more than 10 months after suffering the injury, the only difference Lighty notices is his developed post game.

The torn ligament was the most recent — and most difficult — obstacle Lighty has had to fight through, but it was hardly the first.

As a freshman, Lighty’s parents requested Wojciechowski keep their son off varsity so he could adjust to high school ball on junior varsity. Lighty knew his parents had good intentions, but he wanted to play varsity. All Wojciechowski could offer Lighty’s folks was his word that David wouldn’t be overwhelmed by the competition.

“I told them, ‘Trust me, he’s going to be a star,’” says Wojciechowski, who was finally able to convince Lighty’s parents to let him play varsity. “I think they knew he was good, they just didn’t know how good he was compared to everyone else.”

Wojciechowski has been convinced of that star potential ever since he saw Lighty play CYO ball as a seventh-grader.

“He was a lanky kid in goggles at that point, but it was clear by the way he handled the ball and the way he knew the game that he could be special,” Wojciechowski says.

An injury to another VASJ player forced Lighty into the starting lineup on opening day of his freshman season and he proved he belonged right away. He played nearly the entire game in his debut, recording eight points, six rebounds and four assists. But the stat sheet isn’t what told Wojciechowski he made the right decision.

“As a freshman, he was better than anyone on our team, and even the older kids were looking to get him the ball,” Wojciechowski says. “He quietly assumed that leadership role, probably without even realizing it, and the ball has gravitated to him ever since.”

Lighty averaged 16 points and six boards per game as a freshman and showed plenty of flashes of the explosiveness that was to come. But a bout with mononucleosis kept Lighty from the true breakout season most expected as a sophomore.

With only a day of rest between playing in the football state title game as a wide receiver and his first day of hoop practice, Lighty’s body wore down. He missed about a month of the season with mono and wasn’t fully healthy for another month after that. He still managed to average 19 points and nine rebounds per game for the season and decided to give up the pigskin for good, much to the chagrin of football recruiters from LSU and Oklahoma.

A fully rested Lighty led the Vikings to a 22-3 mark as a junior. But this time, in addition to the injury, he was overshadowed by O.J. Mayo, who led Cincinnati’s North College Hill to the Division III state title and became the first sophomore since LeBron James in 2001 to be named Ohio Mr. Basketball.

Even Lighty’s decision to commit to Ohio State has taken a back seat to the Buckeyes’ signing of Lawrence North (Indianapolis, Ind.) center Greg Oden, the nation’s top-rated senior.

But a team-first attitude has Lighty poised to steal some of the spotlight this year. He entered the season with just a few goals, most notably win the state championship and average eight assists per game. That’s right. Lighty’s only statistical goal as a senior is to dish out eight helpers each night. Forget Clark Kellogg’s school record of 51 points in a single game.

“Since I’m playing point guard this season, I have to distribute the ball and get everyone involved,” Lighty says. “That’s something I’ve always liked doing anyway. When my teammates are playing well, I feed off that.”

Sounds like a guy who’s ready to be unleashed.
 
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Rivals $

2/1/06

Kind of a humorous piece about where some of the best basketball recruits would end up if they played football. Lighty would haev obviously been a WR, considering he had a few B10 football offers.
 
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Lighty is underappreciated, not overrated

link

2/1/06

O-V-E-R-R-A-T-E-D

Let's take a close look at that word.

Here's what I think it means:

Overly-Vindictive-"Experts"-Rambling-Rubbish-About-Things-Exceeding-Density (of the brain).

In other words, most of the time a team or player is deemed overrated, it is because the person or persons doing the deeming have no idea what they are talking about.

The latest example of this carelessly used word by the uninitiated - Villa Angela-St. Joseph's David Lighty.

The 6-foot-5 guard has had every stone imaginable - and unimaginable - thrown at him since a disappointing 10-point performance in a game Jan. 16 against future Ohio State teammate Daequan Cook. It was a game in which the Dayton Dunbar stud scored a career-high 41 points to lead his team over the Vikings, 101-53.

The Lighty doubters were all but doing cartwheels with excitement.
The murmurs then started from the cheap - and obviously intelligence-impaired - seats:

Lighty doesn't deserve the OSU scholarship.

Lighty will never see the floor as a Buckeye.

Lighty doesn't deserve all the All-Ohio honors or the attention.

Lighty is an unwarranted product of media hype.

Lighty, was in the eyes of the waiting wolves and uneducated critics, overrated.

The 44-point performance Lighty put up against an ultra-talented St. Edward team on Saturday should hopefully silence the masses. If not, it should have at least applied a barbed-wire choker to their throats.

If it didn't, let me tighten the steel around the voice box of the fools on the hill and all around the Buckeye State who wanted to paint Lighty as average or ordinary.

At the end of 36 thrilling minutes against the Eagles, Lighty and his teammates were heartbroken with a three-point overtime loss, but here is what the overrated senior accomplished: 44 points, six rebounds, six steals and four assists.

This was done against one of the top big-school teams in Northeast Ohio and in front of a standing-room only crowd - some of which were probably selfishly, maliciously and ridiculously salivating for another rare bad outing from Lighty - and while recovering from a severely sprained ankle suffered in New York, and, oh yeah, on a surgically repaired right knee after a torn ACL last March.

The sprained ankle and the recovery from the torn ACL isn't something you will ever hear Lighty talk about, but it is what it is. And what it is, most critics want to ignore. That only helps their argument, but at the same time, that blissful ignorance only helps this argument.

I'm not an apologist, and Lighty certainly doesn't need me to defend him because his basketball talent speaks for itself. There's no question he played poorly at Value City Arena in Columbus - his future home court - but nobody was harder on Lighty after that game than himself.

If the critics and pundits were right, then one bad game should have been enough for OSU coach Thad Matta to rescind that scholarship offer. One bad game should have been enough for him to be buried as a decent but not Division I-caliber player. One bad game should have elicited the "O" word.

Yeah, that's what should have happened.

Hopefully, the irony and sarcasm is abundantly apparent to the experts and critics, and if not, my e-mail address is on the bottom of this column.

Does anybody out there honestly think Matta, Arizona coach Lute Olsen, Michigan coach Tommy Amaker, Florida coach Billy Donovan, Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim or a host of other Division I stalwarts had nothing better to do than recruit this kid with great vigor and passion for an extended period of time?

I'm sure Donovan was basking in the warm Florida sun and thought to himself, "Let's hop on the Gator plane, fly to chilly Northeast Ohio and watch this Lighty kid who can't play a lick just for something to do this weekend."

The fact is, Lighty is one of the top three or four players in Ohio and one of the top 25 or so players in the country. Look at the national rankings, and that is indisputable evidence supplied by more knowledgeable folks than yours truly or any armchair shooting guards tossing stones from their living-room couches.

It shouldn't have taken the 44 points against St. Edward to solidify that, but maybe it will help hush the bubbleheads who have nothing better to do than wait around loading up rocks to heave at a high school athlete when he has an uncharacteristically subpar game.

Lighty isn't going to score 44 every night, but he isn't going to struggle like he did against Dayton Dunbar on a consistent basis, either. Somewhere in between, he is closer to the player he was against St. Edward than the tough afternoon against Cook.

He can drive to the hole, hit 3-pointers, make outstanding passes and play defense. He is every inch a Division I college basketball talent, and a player who shouldn't have to answer to one bad game the way critics and doubters have tried to grill him.

Of course, that is just my opinion, and we all know the old saying about opinions.

Most opinions stink, or, better yet, are overrated at best.

Perhaps, instead of overrated, Lighty should be dubbed underappreciated.

But I don't have a creative acronym for that.

Maybe creativity is overrated.

David Lighty, on the other hand, is not.
 
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PlainDealer

2/7/06

David Lighty


Thursday, February 02, 2006

David Lighty

VILLA ANGELA-ST. JOSEPH

Sport:
Basketball
Class:
Senior
Age:
17
Ht:
6-5
Wt:
215
Last week:

Was outstanding in a 74-71 overtime loss to St. Ed ward, scoring 44 points, grab bing 11 rebounds and dishing off for six assists. He was 16-of- 26 from the field with four 3- pointers and 8-of-10 from the free-throw line.

Personal:

Lighty's favorite subject is math, his favorite athletes are Tracy McGrady and LeBron James, his favorite musical artist is Jay-Z and his favorite TV show is "SportsCenter."
 
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PlainDealer

3/3/06

[FONT=arial,sans-serif]Wednesday, March 01, 2006[/FONT]

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[FONT=arial,sans-serif]Mr. Basketball Candidates[/FONT]
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Now that the regular season is in the books, debate will begin on who will walk away with Ohio's prestigious Mr. Basketball award, given to the top player in the state amongst all divisions.

This year, it seems as if anyone could walk away with the honor. Unlike some years past, there is no "Chosen One."

Could a player from Northeast Ohio take the honor this year? There are several players who definitely are in contention. Lets take a look at some of the possible candidates.


David Lighty, VASJ Coming off major knee surgery in the offseason, there were questions raised about Lighty's future. Could he do the same things as he had in seasons past? The 6-foot-5 wing silenced the doubters with some terrific performances in big games, including a 44-point outburst against St. Edward and a 28-point performance against St. Vincent-St. Mary. Of course, the fact that Lighty has given his commitment to Ohio State will help his cause.
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