[clari.sports.top] Kemp back home again in Indiana

clarinews@clarinet.com (JIM SLATER, UPI Sports Writer) (02/02/90)

	INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) -- Shawn Kemp's most recent visits to Market
Square Arena produced the greatest moments of his young basketball
career.
	Kemp battled for the Indiana state high school title and
represented the Hoosier state on an all-star squad against arch-rival
Kentucky.
	Kemp returns two years later as the NBA's youngest player, having
survived college controversy to become only the fifth player to make the
leap directly to the league from high school.
	The homecoming occurs Friday, when Kemp and his Seattle teammates
meet the Indiana Pacers. Kemp, a 6-foot-10, 242-pound rookie center from
Elkhart, has found the NBA pace much faster than at Concord High School.
	``The quickness of these guys has been the toughest adjustment for
me,'' Kemp said. ``They're much bigger and quicker than in high school.
You don't have a night where you can go in and take it easy. There's so
much talent in the league that you have to come and play every night.''
	The high school All-America signed with Kentucky but was sidelined
by Proposition 48 and later drew attention by pawning two necklaces that
someone stole from Wildcats teammate Sean Sutton.
	Kemp transfered to Trinity Valley Community College in Athens,
Texas, before deciding he wanted to be eligible for last year's NBA
draft. The choice came only after he promised his mother he would attend
summer school and work toward his degree.
	``If she had said stay in school, I don't think I would have come
out,'' Kemp said. ``I regret not having the chance to win an NCAA
championship but I'm going to work hard to try and win an NBA
championship. Education is important to me.''
	Kemp was drafted 18th overall last June and signed a six-year
contract to join Joe Graboski, Bill Willoughby, Darryl Dawkins and Moses
Malone as NBA players with no college experience.
	``He's a mature man for his age in terms of being in tune with
life,'' Sonics coach Bernie Bickerstaff said. ``I'm still not on the
Shawn Kemp bandwagon. I just take it day by day. I do that with all
rookies. But that guy is going to put some fear in guys coming down the
lane. He's a great talent. His needs now are defense and learning the
NBA game.''
	Kemp, who turned 20 last November, averages 13 minutes and 5.9
points and 4 rebounds a game as a reserve along the front line. He is
one of eight players invited to compete in the NBA Slam-Dunk Contest
during All-Star Game festivities next week in Miami.
	``I would like to be in a situation by the end of the season where
coaches have enough respect for me to play me at the end of a game,''
Kemp said.  ``Because I'm a rookie and I'm learning, I haven't been able
to get into many games at crunch time.''
	Bickerstaff advises work and patience, but has faith in Kemp's
future.
	``He has the skills. It's just a matter of if he wants to put the
time in,'' Bickerstaff said. ``He's been conscientious about working on
his game. To improve, he's got to play a lot of basketball against good
competition and work on things over the summer.''
	Seattle's Michael Cage knows Kemp's determination first-hand from
workout sessions.
	``He's a young guy playing with men but he doesn't back down. I
admire that,'' Cage said. ``He'll get out there and mix it up with
anybody. He's knocked me on my butt a few times.''