Center of Attention: An Interview with Jalen Duren of the Detroit Pistons

Expectations are high for the Detroit Pistons鈥 talented young man in the middle, but Jalen Duren wears the pressure well.
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Photograph by Justin Milhouse

It was June 2022. Photographers had been hired, a lofty venue had been booked, parents were gushing, and an 18-year-old was dressed in a sharp three-piece oxblood suit. For teenagers across America, this was prom night, but for , it was the 2022 NBA draft, and he was about to sign a four-year, $19.5 million contract with the to become the NBA鈥檚 youngest rookie.

A year later in Livonia, inside a dimly lit restaurant, Duren looks back on draft day. Dressed in a black tracksuit and Detroit fitted cap, he鈥檚 all business, arriving with zero ruckus and declining anything to eat or drink. He can鈥檛 quite fit the legs of his 6-foot-10- inch frame under the corner table.

鈥淚t was a long day,鈥 he recalls of draft day. 鈥淚t just dragged along.鈥 With family by his side, Duren sat anxiously through 12 picks, knowing that his place in the league wasn鈥檛 guaranteed but feeling that he was good enough to reach the next rung.

鈥淗e was someone that we had very high on our board. He was a target for us,鈥 recalls Detroit Pistons general manager Troy Weaver. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 want to end the night without going after him.鈥

The Charlotte Hornets drafted Duren No. 13 overall, but the center was nabbed by the Pistons in a last-minute trade. The very next day, the 18-year-old player whom ESPN鈥檚 Malika Andrews called 鈥渢he most physically gifted big man in this draft鈥 was on a private plane to Detroit.

The last thing you want to do as an adolescent boy is stand out, and Duren was around 6 feet, 6 inches as a 13-year-old, turning heads in the hall and towering over teachers. He didn鈥檛 love the attention but credits his mom with helping him learn early to accept that people would stare and whisper and speculate 鈥 there was no way around it. Raised in Sharon Hill, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Philadelphia, he was recruited by Roman Catholic High School, a boys鈥 school and a major player in the .

鈥淓very high school in the area 鈥 in the country, probably, at that time 鈥 wanted him because he was one of the better players in the country,鈥 says DJ Irving, former assistant coach at Roman Catholic and current assistant coach at the .

Photograph by Justin Milhouse

As a high school player, Duren stood out, most notably for his athleticism relative to his stature. To find a 14-year-old who is 6-foot-8 is rare, but to find one coordinated enough to be effective on the court is almost legend.

鈥淗e had great hands,鈥 Irving says. 鈥淗e could catch; he could jump and catch lobs. Athletically and physically, he was just a man amongst boys.鈥

Irving recalls Duren鈥檚 second-ever high school game against DeMatha Catholic and its star player, Hunter Dickinson, three years older than Duren and now a decorated 7-foot-2 University of Kansas Jayhawk.

鈥淲e ended up losing the game, but Jalen played really well. I think he had like 15 points, 12 rebounds 鈥 as a 14-year-old. That鈥檚 when I kind of realized he was the real deal,鈥 Irving says.

Roman made it to the Philadelphia Catholic League championships Duren鈥檚 freshman year, and Irving was impressed by the teenager鈥檚 calmness and readiness for that game. The league鈥檚 Final Four games are played at The Palestra, the arena where the University of Pennsylvania plays its home games.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a college arena that holds about 10,000, and when the Catholic League Final Four happens, that place is literally sold out,鈥 Irving says. But Duren did not flinch; he just played his game. Roman won the championship game and made it back the following year but lost to a deeper team. 鈥淗is maturity in those environments at a young age stood out to me.鈥

For his junior year, Duren attended , a private boarding school in Florida. Notable NBA players Ben Simmons of the Brooklyn Nets, D鈥橝ngelo Russell of the Los Angeles Lakers, and fellow Piston Cade Cunningham are all Montverde alumni. 鈥淕oing to Montverde was really critical to the beginning of my career and who I am, and who I was going to be as a player,鈥 Duren says.

Photograph by Justin Milhouse

He spent only a year at the academy before it was time to think about where he was going听to do his 鈥渙ne-and-done鈥 year at college before entering the draft. (The NBA requires that its draftees be a year removed from their high school graduation and turn 19 the same calendar year the draft is held.) Several schools were vying for Duren鈥檚 attention, including Miami, where Irving was an assistant coach.

He ended up enrolling at the .

鈥淚 was coming out so early 鈥 I skipped my senior year 鈥 and so I felt like I just needed somewhere where I could really develop and learn and become a man.鈥 Duren credits a coaching staff that included head coach Penny Hardaway and Pistons royalty Larry Brown and Rasheed Wallace for drawing him to Memphis. 鈥淚 felt like that was the best opportunity for me to grow and get more knowledge about the game,鈥 he says.

But did he get to soak in the other stuff that comes with the college experience?

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 go to too many parties or anything. I didn鈥檛 really do all that, but I had one class on campus, and so I was able to walk around and be like a student. But when things started to pick up, the less and less I was able to do that.鈥

Though Irving was disappointed that Duren picked Memphis over Miami, their friendship, built over car rides home from high school practice, didn鈥檛 suffer. In fact, ahead of draft day, Duren spent time at Miami, during which his former coach made sure, like old times, that his player was conditioned and ready for what was to come.

For the Pistons organization, it was Duren鈥檚 physicality and athleticism, of course, but also his disposition that set him high on its must-have list.

Photograph by Justin Milhouse

鈥淲e were really intrigued and enamored with him,鈥 Weaver says. 鈥淏ut the person he is 鈥 he鈥檚 a great teammate. He鈥檚 the kind of guy that will follow our great leaders, and he has the potential to be a great leader. We were very excited to leave the draft with him.鈥

In the fall of 2022, Duren suited up for his first game as a Detroit Pistons center. For those keeping track, within just three years, Duren had played high school, college, and professional basketball. That鈥檚 breakneck speed for someone who, before this issue went to press, was still a teenager.

鈥淚 got used to my life moving fast,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 had people around me to help guide me. I鈥檓 not doing it alone. I feel like if I was doing it by myself, it would鈥檝e taken over. My mental would鈥檝e been all messed up.鈥

Weaver says, 鈥淵ou draft the youngest player in the league, you really don鈥檛 know what to expect. But he came in and we worked his tail off, and he earned his way into the rotation.鈥 Duren started in 31 of 67 appearances during his rookie season and averaged 9.1 points, 8.9 rebounds, and 1.1 assists per game and shot about 65 percent from the floor. He held his own, ranking 28th among the league鈥檚 78 qualifying centers.

Still, the Pistons had a dismal 2022-23 season, finishing last across the league with 17 wins and 65 losses. Everyone from the pundits to the public had been excited about the scrappy young combo that included Duren, guard Cade Cunningham, and fellow rookie Jaden Ivey. Unfortunately, that combo never had a chance to gel, with Cunningham playing only 12 games due to a season-ending injury.

Heading into his second season with the Pistons, Duren says his confidence has grown significantly. Weaver predicts big things for the young center: 鈥淲e expect him to be a big part of what we do, and he鈥檚 getting challenged that way every day from the coaching staff.鈥

Irving says Duren has barely tapped into his potential. 鈥淩ight now, people see him as a defensive shot-blocker or somebody who dunks a lot, but I think now you鈥檒l see the IQ. You鈥檒l see his passing ability on display; you鈥檒l see his ability to shoot the ball, extend his range 鈥 even to the 3-point line but especially from the midrange area. 鈥 His game is just continuing to grow.鈥

When we speak in late September, Duren is preparing for the start of the 2023-24 preseason and the Pistons鈥 first exhibition game against the Phoenix Suns. (The Pistons lost that game in overtime, 130-126.) He鈥檚 mostly work and very little play, rising early for muscle treatments, workouts, and practice; then it鈥檚 back home to his quiet suburban neighborhood to hang out with his puppies, a cane corso named Manman and a Labrador retriever named Mamas. But that鈥檚 how he likes it. He may turn on a podcast or Friends 鈥 it鈥檚 not just his favorite show but his comfort show, he says, which earns him a high five from his millennial interviewer.

He鈥檚 a regular at Somerset Collection, is passionate about fashion, and entertains aspirations of modeling 鈥 but only if he can figure out how to do it seriously and not be dubbed 鈥渢he basketball guy playing at modeling.鈥 He鈥檚 excited for the photo shoot that is happening the following day at a studio in Redford and later in downtown Detroit.

Duren arrives fashionably late to the first shoot with a two-person team and clothes he pulled from his own closet (per 香港六合彩图库资料鈥檚 request). Price tags notwithstanding, they are what you鈥檇 expect from a young person鈥檚 wardrobe: jeans covered waist to hem in black leather stars, white Air Force 1s (size 18), a 听work shirt, and distressed patchwork jeans.

While a diamond-encrusted watch sparkles on his wrist, the most impressive accessory in the studio isn鈥檛 the glimmering baubles; it鈥檚 the basketball. He holds it for some shots, and like magic, it shrinks in his enormous hands. While the photographer adjusts the lighting, Duren absentmindedly dribbles and tosses the ball around. And though he exudes confidence in front of the camera, it鈥檚 obvious he鈥檚 most at home when handling the ball.

Modeling may be in his future, but right now he鈥檚 all game.



This story is from the December 2023听issue of 香港六合彩图库资料 magazine. Read more in our digital edition.