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Center of attention

Leon Williams winces ever so slightly as he eases his 6-foot-8 frame into a chair that clearly wasn't built with him in mind. He shifts in his seat, trying to find the best way to stretch out comfortably.

Sore?

You know it

Williams says and rubs both of his knees. There are a lot of miles on these legs.

The Convo's practically deserted after men's basketball practice and one by one his teammates head out. Spying Williams, they crack jokes at the expense of the senior, who responds with a gibe of his own and a deep laugh that echoes across the court.

This isn't the serious image of Williams that the Ohio Athletic Department often portrays in advertisements and on posters that are splattered across town. No, this is the easy-going, unassuming Williams who tries so hard to discredit the attention he receives.

Consistently throughout his college career, Williams has downplayed every positive comment he's received and attributed any accolade to the rest of the team.

He never sought the spotlight, but inadvertently found it during a freshman season that surprised the entire Mid-American Conference and after a tip-in that made him the hero of Athens.

Williams may not have seen himself as the guy back then, and he may not have wanted the attention or the responsibility he stumbled into.

But now, in his final season, the signs are everywhere that the 21-year-old has accepted and embraced his role as the face of Ohio basketball.

Marquee Matchup

Williams has seen it all. Double-teams, triple-teams, defenders who drape themselves over him and players who flop backward at the sight of him even if he's more than a foot away.

I'm used to everything at this point Williams said. There's nothing I can do because even if I retaliate in the slightest I know I'm going to get a foul. It's kind of frustrating to be honest.

His MAC Freshman of the Year performance in 2004-05 caught the attention of opponents, who have made sure to throw everything they have at Williams since. He gets teams' best scouting reports, best defensive efforts and best games every game, because if he's rolling, they're probably losing.

It's never just a single player who wants a piece of Ohio's marquee forward, either, but instead it becomes more of a group project, sometimes with three crashing on top of him to wrestle a rebound away.

I always joke that I wish Leon was the second biggest guy in the league or the second best big man

assistant coach Kevin Kuwik said. Guys can just bang on him and the refs feel sorry for them because they're guarding Leon

meanwhile he's getting the snot kicked out of him.

Williams won't react though, because he doesn't want anyone to know when they've gotten under his skin. I'm pretty durable anyway

he said. Besides if defenders are busy worrying about Williams, somebody else is wide open.If that's how they want us to beat them

that's fine

Williams said. They can triple-team me.

'The guy'

It was a week in late July when Kuwik and then assistant coach Brian Townsend were in Florida at an AAU tournament looking for a forward when they spotted Williams.

He didn't have much of a reputation at the time because he had gone to public school his first two years of high school. And even though he earned accolades after transferring to Cardinal Gibbons, he was overshadowed by two players at rival Baltimore high schools ' Rudy Gay, who now plays for the Memphis Grizzlies in the NBA and George Mason's Will Thomas.But Williams was exactly what Ohio was looking for. He was a big kid, Kuwik recalled, he had these NFL ankles

great hands and he really knew how to get great positioning on people.

He never really had an explosive game like some guys. He's always been more workman-like, Kuwik said. But when he gets the ball there aren't many kids who can do what he does.

The Bobcats and the rest of the MAC found that out fast. Ohio had just come off a 10-20 season and expectations were low ' the Bobcats were rebuilding and had been picked to finish last in 2004-2005.

Only hitch was

no one told Williams that. He averaged 11.9 points and 8.6 rebounds that season

only to further imbed himself in Ohio basketball lore by tipping in the game-winner in the MAC Championship game against Buffalo.

There was nothing like that, Williams said. I wish we would have come back that night to celebrate here with everyone. I just want to have another memory like that.

The Bobcats have been contenders in the MAC East since then

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