Sullivan appreciative of opportunity to become Blue Demon

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When new DePaul Blue Demon commit Mick Sullivan entered Wintrust Arena in Chicago’s South Loop on his recruiting visit at the beginning of April, he viewed the arena the same way a wide-eyed child does when he first lays eyes on his presents on Christmas morning.

“It was mind blowing, I had never seen anything like it before,” Sullivan said in a phone interview Monday evening. “It was surreal, walking into the arena and seeing the weight room, the lockerroom, and the film room. Everything was top notch. It was amazing to be able to see that.”

The excitement in Sullivan’s voice was detectable even on the six year old recorder used to record a phone conversation with him (speaker phone was on no less). Saying he’s psyched to begin his DePaul basketball journey would be an irresponsible understatement.

On Monday evening, the Marmion Academy (Aurora, Ill.) big man announced via his Twitter account his commitment to the program as a preferred walk-on. In doing so, DePaul has added another fresh-blooded recruit to its already young frontcourt.

“I think the opportunity for me as a basketball player to become better is really great,” Sullivan said about why he picked DePaul. “Playing in the Big East, it’s a great conference and we’ll be playing the best competition night in and night out. It’ll be really good for me as a basketball player. It’s such a great place [and] when I visited I just fell in love with it. I went to catholic school for high school so the values and morals that you have there mirrored what I had already in high school so it felt like a perfect fit.”

The 6-foot-9-inch center was a double-double machine his senior season, averaging 15.7 points and 11 rebounds per game (712 career rebounds which is third all-time in program history) while eclipsing the 1000 career points mark (he finished his career with 1,033 points which was sixth all-time in school history). In his senior season, he shot 56.1 percent from the field, rejected 54 shots, and had 24 steals. He is the all-time leader at Marmion Academy in blocks (146) and was a three-year varsity starter.

Sullivan self-assessed himself as a back-to-the-basket scorer with a reliable 15-foot jumper and as a guy who plays as hard as he can on defense. He said he needs to work on his ball handling, outside shooting, and his pick-and-roll defense, but these are all common problem areas for young big men. He credits his high school coach Antonio Young, who played Division I ball at Southern Illinois University from 2002-2007, for helping to improve his skills in many of those areas.

“We had a new high school coach [Young] this year and he really got me ready to play at that level [Division I],” Sullivan said. “He was a really good coach and helped develop me and my game and he’s been really instrumental in helping me further myself as a basketball player.”

The tutelage from Young materialized in a flurry of awards after Sullivan’s senior season. He earned All-Area team honors from Kane County Preps and the Daily Herald and garnered second-team All-Area honors from the Kane County Chronicle. He also represented the suburbs in the Chicago City versus Suburban All-Star Game.

In addition to his exploits at Marmion, Sullivan played one season of AAU ball with the Illinois Wolves coached by Mike Mullins. He said his experience there was short in time but long in experiences and value.

“It was so cool to play with a lot of those guys, a lot of my teammates are also playing Division I,” Sullivan said. “Being able to be surrounded by that talent made me a lot better. Anytime you can be surrounded by a group of guys who work hard and motivate you to work harder I think that’s what is going to happen at DePaul with all those guys. I know they are all going to be putting in a lot of effort and that’ll help me do the same thing. [On the AAU team] all those guys were great especially Coach [Mike] Mullins, [he] really helped me and pointed me in the right direction. It was really a great experience to play with them and against the talent [of our opponents].”

Sullivan will join an exceedingly young Blue Demon frontcourt next season. Returners Jaylen Butz and Paul Reed will only be sophomores after shouldering significant roles during their freshmen seasons. Ukrainian big man George Maslennikov joins Sullivan as the other big man in the Blue Demons 2018 recruiting class. Sharpshooting guard John Diener rounds out the recruiting class for now, while New Zealand native Flynn Cameron has a full four years of eligibility after redshirting last season.

With the relief setting in now that he has made his college decision, the question becomes whether Sullivan can prevent his excitement from bubbling over the next several months before he can officially become a Blue Demon.

The answer is probably no.