Sure shot: Mickelson lives up to first name
The best shot of Hunter Mickelson’s life came in a small pit blind in rural Arkansas, two best friends by his side, his father tasked with sending out the duck call. Hunter and his friends were young then, maybe 9 or 10, and they had journeyed out to hunt green-winged teal, a small breed of duck with a history of being a nuisance to even the quickest and most accurate marksman.
“They’re the fastest birds that fly,” says Hunter’s father, Darien Mickelson.
Hunter Mickelson was no novice in a duck blind. He had been around the sport most of his life, following his father, a local guide, around the rice fields and local farms outside Jonesboro, Ark.
These days, Mickelson is a senior forward at Kansas, a former transfer among a committee of frontcourt bodies. After two seasons at KU — one spent sitting out for transfer rules and one just sitting — Mickelson has willed his way to a starting spot on the nation’s No. 1 team. Which likely means he is the most skilled duck hunter in college basketball, if such a title existed.
There has always been something about the experience that suited him, his father says. The sounds and smells. The calm and quiet before the burst of activity. The long mornings spent in the elements that, even as a boy, took Hunter’s mind off basketball.
There was also the exhilaration of the perfect shot, which came on that day in the early 2000s. As Darien Mickelson stood watching, spotting a group of ducks flying in, his son popped out of the blind and aimed.
Hunter Mickelson took one shot from his 20 gauge. Three green-winged teal ducks hit the ground. Mickelson’s two best friends, Rodney James and Freddy Prince, surveyed the shot and said the same thing at the same moment.
Did three of those just fall?!
“It’s rare to get a double,” Darien Mickelson says. “But hardly ever do you shoot three.”
“That was probably my luckiest,” Hunter says now.
Luck, of course, is a relative term, in both basketball and hunting. While plenty of college basketball players grew up around hunting, few pursued the sport like Mickelson, who grew up near some of the country’s best waterfowl hunting.
“School, basketball and hunting,” Mickelson says. “That has been pretty much what I’ve been doing since the start.”
In fact, this is almost true in a literal sense, for even his first name is not a coincidence. Darien Mickelson grew up in Tyler, Minn., hunting all sorts of game before making a career in the U.S. Army. When his first son was born in 1992, Darien and his wife, Lynne, were living in Fort Louis, Wash. They pondered a few names, but Darien kept coming back to one.
“I always liked Hunter,” Darien says.
To confirm that his father is serious, Hunter Mickelson points to his younger brother, born four years later. He got the name Chase.
“If you’re chasing something, you’re hunting it,” Hunter Mickelson says. “And if you’re hunting something, you’re chasing it, so it’s a little like a back-and-forth.”
When Mickelson was young, his family relocated to Jonesboro, Ark. His father retired from the Army and joined the National Guard. He also took a part-time gig as a hunting guide, as host to out-of-state guys from Tennessee or Georgia who journeyed to the area to hunt mallards, known colloquially as “green heads.” At first, Darien says, little Hunter could only assist. He would handle decoys, tote gear or just take in the scene. When he was old enough, Darien passed down the family tradition.
“Hunter loves the sounds and watching the birds as much as he does shooting them,” Darien says. “He can relax. There’s no pressure on him. He gets away from basketball.”
The latter, of course, would be useful as Mickelson grew to 6-foot-10 and became one of the top high school basketball recruits in the state of Arkansas. After a sterling career at Westside High School, Mickelson opted to stay home, signing with Arkansas and coach John Pelphrey. But two years later, after Mike Anderson and his up-tempo style had replaced Pelphrey, Mickelson went looking for a better fit.
He chose KU — a school that had recruited him in high school — and while the process took time, Mickelson and the Jayhawks appear better for the decision.
“Of course, there were moments where I was frustrated, because I wasn’t playing,” he says.
“But then again, looking back, I kind of understand why.”
In some ways, the reasons were obvious. As a junior, Mickelson was caught in a roster crunch, falling behind Perry Ellis, Landen Lucas, Jamari Traylor and Cliff Alexander in the rotation. In short, coach Bill Self says it took time for Mickelson to build the “trust factor” he had developed with Lucas and Traylor, two veterans who had been in the program longer.
“It hadn't happened as soon as what he probably would have hoped,” Self says. “But I think Hunter went through a period of time where he didn't love the game near as much. I think he just fell back in love with it, to be real candid.”
As No. 1 Kansas prepares to face No. 11 West Virginia tonight in Morgantown, W.Va., on Tuesday, Mickelson’s love has perhaps never been stronger, even as his playing time fluctuates. Mickelson has started the last eight games but is playing just 10.2 minutes per game, averaging 3.3 points, 2.9 rebounds and 1.9 blocks.
In the Jayhawks’ ever-changing frontcourt rotation, it’s unclear what his spot in the rotation will be in a month, but Darien Mickelson says his son is where he always wanted to be.
“The only thing he’s ever wanted to do since he was little is play on a top-10 team and play in an NCAA Tournament,” Darien Mickelson says. “And now, he knows it’s realistic.”
Rustin Dodd: @rustindodd
No. 1 Kansas
at No. 11 West Virginia
▪ When: 6 p.m. Tuesday
▪ Where: WVU Coliseum, Morgantown, W.Va.
▪ Records: KU 14-1, 3-0 Big 12; WVU 14-1, 3-0
▪ Radio: KFH, 1240-AM, 98.7-FM
▪ TV: ESPN2
No. 1 Kansas
at No. 11 West Virginia
P | Kansas | Ht. | Yr. | Pts | Reb |
F | Hunter Mickelson | 6-10 | Sr. | 3.3 | 2.9 |
F | Perry Ellis | 6-8 | Sr. | 16.0 | 6.9 |
G | Wayne Selden | 6-5 | Jr. | 15.5 | 3.6 |
G | Devonte’ Graham | 6-2 | So. | 10.7 | 3.1 |
G | Frank Mason | 5-11 | Jr. | 13.5 | 4.6 |
P | West Virginia | Ht. | Yr. | Pts | Reb |
F | Devin Williams | 6-9 | Jr. | 14.5 | 8.6 |
F | Jonathan Holton | 6-7 | Sr. | 9.7 | 7.3 |
F | Esa Ahmad | 6-8 | Fr. | 4.8 | 3.1 |
G | Jaysean Paige | 6-2 | Sr. | 12.6 | 3.7 |
G | Jevon Carter | 6-2 | So. | 12.7 | 2.8 |
Kansas (14-1, 2-0 Big 12): The Jayhawks had 14 turnovers in last year’s 62-61 loss at WVU Coliseum, and the Mountaineers figure to bring plenty of energy in a raucous home environment. “They’re going to pressure us and we’re going to have to handle pressure,” Kansas coach Bill Self said. Kansas seems well-equipped to handle pressure. The combination of Frank Mason and Devonte’ Graham has excelled in ball control and creating offense off the dribble. Mason has 24 turnovers in 14 games, while Graham has 27 steals and 14 turnovers. The Jayhawks, searching for their 12th straight Big 12 title, can take control of the conference race with a victory. Entering Tuesday, Kansas is 6-1 in games away from home and 2-0 in true road games. The schedule will soften after Tuesday. KU will return home to face TCU Saturday, go on the road to face Oklahoma State on Jan. 19, and then face Texas at home on Jan. 23.
West Virginia (14-1, 3-0): On March 3, 2015, West Virginia played at KU without Juwan Staten and Gary Browne, but they still managed to build an 18-point lead before losing a heartbreaker in overtime. One year later, that loss appears to have set the tone for the 2015-16 season. The Mountaineers lost Staten, the former All-Big 12 point guard, and Browne, but they might be even better. The Mountaineers’ only loss came against Virginia, a top-10 team, at Madison Square Garden on Dec. 8. Now the nation’s top team comes to town, and West Virginia can score a signature victory for the Bob Huggins era. For the second straight year, the Mountaineers have built most of their success on a suffocating press. WVU ranks sixth in the country in defensive efficiency, first in turnover percentage and second in three-point percentage defense.
This story was originally published January 11, 2016 at 7:35 PM with the headline "Sure shot: Mickelson lives up to first name."