March 31, 2002
By DAVID GINSBURG
AP Sports Writer
ATLANTA - Each time he steps to the free-throw line, Juan Dixon
taps
his chest lightly before eyeing the basket. Underneath his No. 3
Maryland
jersey, close to his heart, is a tattoo of his mother, Juanita.
Juanita often used heroin in the bathroom when Dixon was growing up. His
father, also a heavy drug user, spent part of his life in jail. Both
died of
AIDS when Dixon was in high school.
Dixon's success on the court would be impressive even if he came from a
storybook background. That he's had a troubled past makes his
accomplishments even more impressive.
"He uses his heart," teammate Lonny Baxter says.
Dixon's dedication to basketball helped put him and the rest of the
Terrapins in the national championship game against Indiana on Monday
night.
There's no telling where he might have ended up if he didn't devote so
much
time to his jump shot.
Maryland's fabulous senior shooting guard long ago made basketball his
refuge. By spending time in the gym he avoided the temptation to hang
out in
the streets of Baltimore, and he found peers who could improve his life.
If only his parents had such a sanctuary.
"They got caught up in the wrong crowd," says Dixon, whose parents'
names,
Nita and Phil, are tattooed on his left biceps.
After they died, Dixon was cared for by his grandparents and turned to
his
older brother, Phil, for guidance. Phil showed him a world without
drugs,
one that emphasized education and basketball.
"He's been a role model for me ever since I was a kid," Dixon says. "He
played college basketball, I wanted to play college basketball. He got
his
degree, I wanted to do the same."
He plans to get his degree in family studies this fall, about the same
time
he begins his NBA career
The 23-year-old Dixon wanted to play at Maryland, but when he came to
College Park - at 6-foot-3 and weighing just 150 pounds - he was deemed
too
frail to survive in the Atlantic Coast Conference. He spent his first
year
as a redshirt freshman, and didn't start a game as a sophomore.
He's now up to 165 pounds, but more importantly he is the leading scorer
in
the history of the program, passing such greats as Len Bias and John
Lucas.
He has participated in more wins (109) than any other Terrapin, and is
the
only person in NCAA history with at least 2,000 points, 300 steals and
200
3-pointers.
"Juan is as good as anyone who's ever played at the University of
Maryland,"
Terps coach Gary Williams said.
One more win, and Dixon will be able to achieve the goal he set at the
beginning of his college career: to win a national championship, the
first
for Maryland. Only Indiana stands in his way.
The Hoosiers see it differently, especially after watching Dixon score
33
points in Maryland's 97-88 win over Kansas on Saturday night. To them,
Dixon
is the biggest obstacle in their path to a sixth national title.
"Juan Dixon is probably one of the best competitors in the country. He
wants
to win in the worst way," Indiana coach Mike Davis says. "He's a tough
guy."
Of course he is. What else could he be?
"A lot of people counted me out before I even got here," Dixon says.
"Not
having my parents around make it a little harder. But I stayed strong. I
had
my extended family. I had Coach to help me develop as a person and also
as a
basketball player."
Williams has grown weary of questions about Dixon's troubled past. He
would
prefer to talk about his best player's development with the team.
"You have to separate it from what Juan does on the court. It's just
incredible what he does," Williams says. "I'm very proud of the way Juan
has
improved as a basketball player in his four years at Maryland."
Actually, Dixon's personal life is as much a part of his excellence on
the
court as the 300 jump shots he takes after almost every practice. He
attributes his relentless work ethic to the stand he took in the wake of
his
parents' deaths.
"I think that my parents dying definitely made me stronger mentally,"
Dixon
says. "I think I have an edge on the court because you've always got to
believe in yourself, and I believe."