Undeniably good
Cal State Fullertonâs Josh Akognon has been double-teamed, face-guarded and hounded by box-and-one defenses.
Yet the points havenât stopped coming.
Akognon scored 41 against Hawaii, 24 against Wake Forest -- a team later ranked No. 1 -- and 41 again against Cal State Bakersfield.
And just when it began to appear the defensive attention lavished on him by Big West Conference coaches who know his abilities would thwart Akognonâs output, he scored 31 against Long Beach State on Thursday -- including the game-winning jumper in the final moments.
âWe tried to deny him, double him, and we did a good job in the first half,â Long Beach Coach Dan Monson said.
Akognon scored 23 in the second.
âA player like that, once he gets in the flow, then heâs off and running,â Monson said. âWe did a pretty good job on Dionte Christmas from Temple, Tajuan Porter at Oregon.
âHe was the best kid weâve seen all year.â
Akognon -- pronounced ah-KOY-uhn -- is the No. 8 scorer in the nation, with a 23.4-point average. He was as high as No. 3 before he hit the Big West.
Thatâs when Cal State Northridge held him to eight and UC Irvine to 12. His average against Big West teams is only 19.9, markedly lower than his average against everybody else.
âNobody has played him like we saw in the preseason, with one guy on him in a normal defense,â Fullerton Coach Bob Burton said. âThey might put one guy on him, but he never leaves him, he stays with him and face-guards him. Itâs almost like a box and one.â
At least Akognon hasnât gotten the treatment Davidsonâs Stephen Curry did when Loyola (Md.) put two players on him no matter where he went. Curry, the nationâs leading scorer -- and a friend of Akognonâs since they met at a summer camp -- took the two players to the corner.
He went scoreless, but he watched his teammates play four-on-three and win by 30.
Akognon hasnât faced any tactic quite like that. But being the focus of every defense is the challenge for the maybe-5-foot-11 NBA hopeful who started his career at Washington State before transferring to Fullerton because of the lower-scoring, defensive style favored by former coach Dick Bennett and his son and successor, Tony Bennett.
He landed at Fullerton with an endorsement from UCLA Coach Ben Howland, who watched Akognon score 25 points -- all in the second half -- in a close game against the Bruins in 2006.
âWhen I found out he was going to transfer, I called Ben and he said, âThatâs a no-brainer. We had a hard time guarding him,â â Burton said.
Akognon, whose father is Nigerian and mother American, arrived in Pullman, Wash., from Casa Grande High in Petaluma, Calif., as part of a freshman class that included Derrick Low and Kyle Weaver. Sitting out at Fullerton after transferring, he watched his friends carry the once-dismal Cougars to the NCAA tournament in 2007.
âThat made me work that much harder to try to make it happen for my team, so I could experience it too,â Akognon said.
Improbably, he did, when Fullerton reached the NCAA tournament last season for the first time since 1978. Akognon scored 31 points in a 71-56 loss to Wisconsin in the first round, and the Titansâ trip was over.
âIt was crazy, a police escort and everything. Youâre thinking, Duke and North Carolina, this is how they live,â he said.
The only starter back from that team, Akognon is the focal point, and everyone knows it.
âIt gets frustrating, just for the simple fact that you want to do so much. Sometimes the defensive attention just will not allow it,â he said. âAt the same time, it gives my teammates opportunities to score. At the end, man, if it helps us win, Iâm all for it.â
Winning has been hard at times, with the Titans 10-10, 4-4 in the tightly packed Big West.
âI told the guys, the one thing you have to understand coming out of this conference is everything depends on the Big West tournament,â Akognon said. âThe only thing that matters in the season is the NCAA tournament, and the only way you can get to that is to win our tournament.â
Akognonâs prospects after college are uncertain. Itâs possible he could be drafted, but more likely heâll have to try the route taken by former Titan Bobby Brown. Brown, who signed with the Sacramento Kings after going undrafted, is averaging almost 15 minutes a game.
Akognon has more challenges than the 6-2 Brown, even though he jokes he is âthe giant of my family.â His father, Emmanuel, the pastor of Village Baptist Church in Marin City, is 5-5, and his mother, Alfreda, is 5-4.
But Akognon received some good reviews after declaring for the NBA draft after last season, later withdrawing without hiring an agent.
âI think the league is a little more understanding of lack of size when they see players like Jameer Nelson,â said an NBA executive who attended a workout where Akognon went against D.J. Augustin, the former Texas guard now with the Charlotte Bobcats.
âOne thing about him, he can really score the ball. A small guard has to be a playmaker, though, and he doesnât really get after it defensively. If you donât do that, youâre not going to last very long.â
Akognon knows heâll have to do more.
âCoach Dick Bennett used to always tell me I have all the tools to be a great defender,â he said. âHe said Iâm low to the ground and Iâm quick. But Iâm always just holding out for something else, for the offensive end or whatever.â
He also knows heâll need to show he can play the point.
âTeams were asking if I was going to play point guard, but Coach Burton doesnât want me to pass the ball the whole time, he wants me to shoot,â Akognon said. âHe said what they want to see might not be best for the team. A lot of those questions will have to be answered this summer, but as far as this team, I canât really do that right now.â
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