ISU’s Royce White turning heads in Big 12

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AMES (AP) — Iowa State star Royce White was at the free-throw line with just 1:47 left in the game against mighty Kansas with a chance to give the Cyclones a five-point lead.

Nerve-racking? Sure. And especially for White, who has had an anxiety disorder since childhood and was woken the morning of Saturday’s game by a nightmare in which he couldn’t make a free throw. White dashed off to Iowa State’s gym to hoist some shots in the hope that his dream wouldn’t become a reality.

It didn’t. White capped a brilliant 18-point, nine-rebound game by sinking those two crucial free throws. The Cyclones (15-6, 5-3 Big 12) went on to beat then-No. 5 Kansas 72-64, and White overcame yet another private anxiety episode on a very public stage.

“To an extent it’s almost a good thing. It’s almost a gift in the sense because I went to the gym and I really focused on the free throws and I got in the game and I was really focused on that,” White said. “Sometimes it’s a curse, too, because my fatigue level is always real high because of it. I never get to sleep.”

White continues to battle his problem with the help of doctors and medication, but simply being able to play basketball again after two lost seasons has been a blessing for the sophomore who is making Big 12 coaches nervous on a nightly basis.

White’s long journey to Iowa State has been well documented. A top national recruit from Minneapolis, White struggled through legal issues and a rift with coach Tubby Smith and left Minnesota without playing a game. He had to sit out all of last season as a transfer student.

White was named this season’s Big 12’s preseason Newcomer of the Year anyway, and he has established himself as one of the toughest matchups in the Big 12 and across the nation.

The 6-foot-8, 270-pound White leads the Cyclones with 13.6 points, 9.6 rebounds and 4.5 assists per game, and is probably the strongest player the Cyclones have ever had. He shattered the team’s weightlifting marks over the summer, bench-pressing 185 pounds 28 times with a personal best of 365 pounds.

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