It is no surprise that Pitt's DeJuan Blair has earned somewhat of a national following this season after earning All-American honors as a sophomore. It should be less of a surprise that he desires to explore his options at the next level.
Blair, a Schenley graduate and Hill District native, will enter the NBA Draft, according to his attorney, James Cook, whom he has signed with as his representation while he selects an agent. A press conference was held at 4:00 p.m. Wednesday at the Petersen Events Center, with Blair and Pitt head coach Jamie Dixon.
"Everything I've always dreamed for is coming true," Blair said in an exclusive interview with Channel 4 Action Sports. "It's a wonderful honor coming from nothing and gaining all kind of success for you and your family."
The 6'7", 265-pound forward averaged 15.7 points and 12.3 rebounds for the Panthers, sharing Big East Co-Player of the Year honors with Hasheem Thabeet and helping lead them to the South Regional final of the NCAA tournament, where they fell to conference foe Villanova.
Blair was named to the AP All-American first team last week, only the second Pitt player to do so, joining Don Hennon (1958), who was also a sophomore. Blair was also heavily considered by many national experts as a contender for the Naismith Player of the Year award, which went to Oklahoma's Blake Griffin.
Blair grew up less than a mile from the University of Pittsburgh campus, and had a stellar high school career at Schenley that included three City League championships, the 2007 Class AAAA state championship, and three City League Player of the Year awards, amongst many other awards and accolades. But he admits he had to face great adversities to earn each of them.
"I've always been an underdog my entire life," Blair said. "Coming from two knee surgeries and people saying I wasn't coming back, and I came back from that and got a state championship. Coming out of Schenley, going into Pitt [weighing] 300 pounds and they said I couldn't have a starting job, and I overcame that."
He is the highest profile basketball player from Schenley to enter the professional ranks since Maurice Lucas, who led Schenley to the City League and state titles in 1971, played collegiately at Marquette, and played 14 professional seasons between the ABA and the NBA.
Blair says he spoke with Dixon during his decision-making process, and his coach was supportive. "He just wanted the best for me," he said, "and he just wanted me to have a good career and come back as an ambassador to Pittsburgh."
Projected to be a mid-first round pick, Blair is expected to be joined by Pitt teammates Sam Young and Levance Fields among this summer's draft class. While he acknowledges that critics already consider him too small for the NBA, he plans to meet his challenges with the same popular, bright smile he has met them with in the past.
"Now the smile will be a million dollar smile for real."