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Toledoan Jamiya Neal goes to the Big Dance

TOLEDO – Jamiya Neal’s feet will never get stuck in cement.

The Toledo native, who helped Rogers’ boys basketball team reach the regional semifinals in 2020, has been, shall we say, on the move over the past several years.

Thursday night, in the first round of the NCAA Tournament, Neal and the ninth-seeded Creighton Bluejays (24-10) will take on eighth-seeded Louisville (27-7) in a South Region opener in Lexington, Ky.

Neal, a 6-foot-5 senior guard, is the only Creighton player to start all 34 games for coach Greg McDermott’s squad.

Creighton basketball coach Greg McDermott, who has led the Bluejays to five straight NCAA Tournaments, said senior guard Jamiya Neal, a Toledo native, has exceeded his expectations. (Courtesy Photo/Sullivan Lawrence)

“I’m pretty excited,” Neal said. “I’m happy we get this opportunity to play another game with our teammates and my coaches. I want to try to extend my senior year as long as I can.”

This will be Neal’s third game playing in an NCAA Tournament game. He played in two NCAA games as a sophomore guard at Arizona State two years ago. He scored a career-high 16 points in the Sun Devils’ 98-73 win over Nevada at the University of Dayton that season.

“It was my first time playing close to home,” Neal said. “I had a lot of family and friends there.”

The Sun Devils lost to TCU, 72-70, on a last-second shot in their second NCAA game.

Neal spent his freshman and sophomore years at St. Francis de Sales High School, then transferred to Rogers for his junior season.

“I was ready to move on from that situation,” Neal said. “One of my best friends was going to Rogers and we knew all those guys at Rogers.”

Eighth-ranked Rogers was set to take a 22-3 record into the 2020 Division II regional semis against top-ranked Lima Shawnee when the Covid-19 pandemic forced officials to cancel the tournament.

“I’m grateful for Rogers and the opportunity to go there,” said Neal, who averaged 10.9 points, 7.4 rebounds and 3.5 assists per game in his lone season with the Rams. “I’m still a Ram for life. We had a good shot to win state. There were a lot of seniors on that team and they didn’t get to finish their season.”

Fearful that his senior season at Rogers might get canceled due to Covid, Neal transferred to Hillcrest Prep Academy in Gilbert, Ariz. for his final year of high school. He averaged 18 points, seven rebounds and five assists per game for the Bruins and still had to decide where to go to college.

“I was playing AAU ball that summer and [Arizona State’s staff] happened to be at one of the tournaments,” Neal said. “We had conversations, and then I went out [to ASU], toured it and decided to go there. It was what I needed; playing with other players who had Division 1 offers, playing against better competition. It got me better prepared had I stayed in Toledo. I’m so happy I made that decision.”

Neal still wasn’t done moving around. He learned about Creighton basketball and decided to transfer to the Omaha, Neb. campus to play for McDermott and the Bluejays.

Toledo native Jamiya Neal, a 6-foot-5 senior guard, is averaging 11.5 points and 6.1 rebounds a game heading into Creighton’s NCAA Tournament opener Thursday against Louisville in Lexington, Ky. He is the only Bluejays player to start all 34 games this season. (Courtesy Photo)

“It just felt like the right fit,” Neal said. “I was searching for something and they had everything where I could grow as a basketball player and as a man. The weather [in Omaha] is kind of the same as Toledo, and it has a little bit of a Toledo feel. You get a big sense of community here, and I like that.”

McDermott, who has led Creighton to five straight NCAA Tournaments, said Neal “has been a breath of fresh air for our program.”

“He came here and has played every role we’ve asked him to play, and he’s become ‘us’ rather than forcing us to become ‘him,’” McDermott said. “That’s not easy when you’re in your last year of college basketball. He comes to work every day with a smile on his face and has really worked hard to get better.

“It’s been fun to watch him connect with his teammates. His assist numbers are as good as they’ve been at any time in his career. I think that’s a sign of trust in your teammates, when you’re willing to share the basketball like that. He understands that they’re going to share it with him as well.”

The Bluejays finished second behind sixth-ranked St. John’s in the Big East standings during the regular season. Creighton got past DePaul in double overtime and then beat two-time defending NCAA champion Connecticut, 71-62, in the Big East Tournament before falling to St. John’s in the championship game at Madison Square Garden in New York.

“I’ve never played at Madison Square Garden,” said Neal, who tied for the team lead with 19 points against UConn, and scored 13 against St. John’s. “It was kind of a surreal feeling. You hear it’s the best arena in the world, and you feel it when you go in.”

The Bluejays took a hit eight games into the season when junior guard Pop Isaacs underwent season-ending hip surgery. Isaacs scored 27 points in the Bluejays’ home win over top-ranked Kansas.

“We were still trying to figure out our identity and we were just finding our groove,” Neal said. “We beat Kansas, then we had to figure it out again. Everybody had to step up and do different things. Everybody had a role to step into and they were prepared to do it; they were capable of doing it. I think that’s why we’ve been so successful.”

Jamiya Neal, a Toledo native, helped Rogers’ boys basketball team reach the regional semifinals in 2020. He spent his freshman and sophomore years at St. Francis de Sales High School, then transferred to Rogers for his junior season. (Courtesy Photo)

Neal, who is majoring in business leadership, is averaging 11.5 points and 6.1 rebounds entering the NCAA Tournament. His 150 assists is second on the team, and he is shooting 44 percent from the field.

“He’s exceeded my expectations,” McDermott said. “He came into a very difficult situation. When Pop Isaacs went down with the injury, his role changed again and he had to play a bigger role on the team than what he was earlier in the season. He’s handled that with a lot of maturity.”

Mark Griffin
Mark Griffin
Mark Griffin is a freelance reporter for the Toledo Free Press. Griffin is a Toledo native, a 1981 graduate of Bowsher High School and a 1985 graduate of Ohio University. He has been a sportswriter, news reporter and editor for 35 years for several Ohio publications.

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