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NBA has a new monster in the middle

Magic’s Howard, 22, already the best center in the league

Image: HowardAP
At the age of 22, Dwight Howard is already an unstoppable force in the paint.

Free-throw shooting aside, the biggest criticism of Dwight Howard is that he doesn’t have a go-to move.

Haven’t the critics seen him dunk? How about last year’s game-winner vs. the Spurs? Kissing the rim? Or the All-Star sticker?

So far this year, more than 35 percent of Howard’s field goals have been dunks. What a basketball player wants to do, whenever he wants to do it? That is a go-to move.

Cavaliers assistant coach Chris Jent said Howard thirsts for the jam relentlessly.

“Early on, we just wanted him to catch the ball in tight and get it to the rim, put it in the basket, get your two points,” said Jent, who worked with Howard in Orlando, including as the team’s interim head coach the final 18 games of the 2005 season.

“He wanted to jump up and tear the rim off every single time. And he’d say, ‘Coach, I gotta dunk that. I gotta dunk that.’ And he’d come in with these big swooping dunks. The fact that he knows he can do that every time — he understands he’s pretty special. There aren’t too many people on the floor that know they can dunk on anyone who’s out there.”

Howard, of course, is more than a dunker. In his fourth NBA season, Orlando’s 22-year-old center has become one of the league’s top players, ranking among the leaders in scoring, rebounding, blocked shots and field-goal percentage. The early performance, along with his team’s improvement — Orlando is on pace for its first winning season since 2003 — has earned Howard some early MVP consideration.

In fact, he is well on the path to greatness that was envisioned by many when Howard was drafted out of high school by the Magic with the No. 1 overall selection in the 2004 draft. One scouting report then already mentioned the possibility of an “all-time top-50 player.”

“He’s just scratching the surface,” said Magic radio analyst Richie Adubato, a former NBA coach who has been involved in basketball for more than four decades. “The sky is the limit for him. There’s no doubt about it.”

Path to greatness
Everything has fallen into place for the budding superstar. These items on the checklist have already been met:


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