Football
Associated Press 17y

LSU's Davis says he's ready for the NBA

BATON ROUGE, La. -- LSU center Glen "Big Baby" Davis is
moving on to the next stage of his basketball life.

The 6-foot-9, 290-pound junior said Tuesday he will skip his
senior year to enter the NBA draft.

"After my toughest year, I now feel I am physically and
mentally ready for the NBA," Davis said at a news conference. "In
my mind and in my heart, I felt that it was time for me to move
on."

He has signed with agent John Hamilton of Performance Sports
Management but will remain enrolled at LSU until the end of the
semester. The NBA's predraft camp is May 28-June 5 in Orlando,
Fla., and Davis expects to be there.

Davis averaged 17.7 points and 10.4 rebounds this season,
missing several games late in the year because of a strained
quadriceps. He is the only LSU player other than Shaquille O'Neal
with career totals surpassing 1,500 points, 900 rebounds and 100
blocks. Davis was an AP second team All-America selection during
the 2005-06 season, when LSU went to the Final Four.

"Last year, the team had great success. I was part of only four
(LSU) teams to make it to the Final Four," Davis said. "I decided
to stay and hoped to build on that this year. Unfortunately that
didn't happen."

Coach John Brady said he advised Davis to turn pro unless he was
fully committed to returning to LSU for his senior year. The coach
told Davis not to base his decision purely on projections about how
high he will go in the draft.

"I told him two weeks ago that he needs to go where his heart
moves him to go, not where someone tells him he'll go (in the
draft)," Brady said. "He had three outstanding years at LSU. I
watched him grow. ... He'll do well."

Davis said he's been told he could be selected anywhere from the
middle of the first round to early in the second. First-round picks
get guaranteed three-year contracts. Second-rounders do not, and
many get cut in training camp. In rare cases, however, being picked
in the second round can be a financial boon to players who perform
well since they can enter the league under shorter contracts and
become free agents sooner.

Davis played center and power forward in college but is expected
to play power forward in the pros.

"It's just about being ready and I'm ready," Davis said. "The
game is still called basketball. I'm well qualified to play the
game. Basically, I was ready for the next level. I feel I have
nothing to prove. ... I believe no other power forward can do what
I do. I can score and I can rebound."

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