Cummard is turning NBA heads
Dick Harmon
The deadline for withdrawing his name from the draft is Monday, so Father's Day on Sunday takes on a special meaning for the junior co-MVP of the Mountain West Conference.
Cummard told The Associated Press earlier this week he is toying with the idea of leaving his name in the draft. He's not thinking Europe.
But his coach, and chief advisor, BYU coach Dave Rose, says the two will meet sometime Sunday to finalize his decision. According to Rose, the game plan in recent weeks was for Cummard to test NBA interest and if he was not going to go in a decent spot in the draft, he would return to BYU for his senior year.
"Lee didn't get invited to the NBA pre-draft combine in Orlando," Rose said. "So he's had to gauge the NBA's interest by these workouts, from what he's been told and from the feedback I've received from many people in the league I've talked to."
Cummard's wife, Sarah, likes the married college life and the condo in south Provo, but she'd definitely move forward if the price is right. Ultimately, Sarah Cummard might have the biggest say in what happens come Monday.
"Every team I've talked to likes him," said Rose, who attended the Orlando combine and brushed shoulders with representatives of most of the NBA clubs. "They like his ability to shoot the ball, his basketball IQ, his competitiveness, how he moves without the basketball and how he does with guys in front of him," Rose said.
Cummard has not taken this semester off. The workouts this week have been undertaken despite his final weeks of the spring semester juggling a class load and preparing for finals.
"I've communicated with Lee over the weeks and he really wants to be a first-round draft pick.
This is what the process is right now, to see if there is that kind of interest," Rose said.
Cummard does not appear in any mock draft as a first rounder.
Said Rose: "He's out to find what the likelihood of his going in the first round is. There are three to six teams that have a lot of interest in him, but if he's going to be a late second-round selection, I think he will decide to come back and finish his career at BYU."
Plaisted, on the other hand, could go anywhere from 25 to 40, is what Rose is hearing.
"His situation is really, really solid," Rose said. "I had a chance to meet with him in Orlando and have lunch with him one day and talk to a lot of NBA people about him.
Recent comments
Cummard is a great college player. I'd love to see him playing for…
yo yo | June 17, 2008 at 4:32 p.m.
Lee Cummard's mother Cheryl needs to take a second mortgage out on…
Mesa, Arizona Party | June 17, 2008 at 11:55 a.m.
Dick, Dick, Dick
Your BYU is showing!
Caveman | June 17, 2008 at 12:02 a.m.


