NEW YORK | John  Wall is ready to go to Washington and clean up the Wizards. And  he’s expected to have more backcourt help when he gets there — whether  or not Gilbert Arenas is still around. The Wizards selected Wall  with the No. 1 pick in the NBA draft and agreed to a trade for another  guard Thursday, hoping they’ve found players who can help them quickly  bounce back from a season that was embarrassing on the court and in the  locker room. “I feel like I had pressure since I became No. 1 in  high school and was one of the top players,” Wall said. “I always got  there hungry wanting to fight hard and compete in every game, so when I  step on the court I’m going to take on any challenge there.” The  SEC player of the year is the first Kentucky player ever chosen first  overall — and started a record run of Wildcats. He goes to a team still  reeling from Arenas’ season-ending suspension for bringing guns into the  team locker room. Wall could replace Arenas as the Wizards’ point  guard, or perhaps play alongside him in a potential high-scoring  backcourt. He’ll try to become the third straight freshman point guard  to win Rookie of the Year honors after Chicago’s Derrick Rose and  Sacramento’s Tyreke Evans — who like Wall also played for John Calipari. The  pick came shortly after a person familiar with the deal told The  Associated Press that the Chicago Bulls had agreed to trade veteran  guard Kirk Hinrich and the 17th pick in the draft, Kevin Seraphin, to  the Wizards. Hinrich is a solid veteran defensive guard who could help  with Wall’s transition to the NBA. After his name was announced to  begin the draft, Wall hugged family members and donned a blue Wizards  cap before climbing onto the stage to shake commissioner David Stern’s  hand. Predicted to finish in the top half of the Eastern  Conference last season, the Wizards’ season quickly spiraled out of  control, reaching its low point on New Year’s Day when news broke of the  altercation involving guns between Arenas and fellow guard Javaris  Crittenton, who also was suspended for the year. Washington eventually  traded fellow stars Antawn Jamison and Caron Butler in a dismal 26-56  finish. Arenas is eligible to return, but Wall is ready to take  charge of the team. “I was always a leader by example being the  first in the gym and the last in the gym,” Wall said. “But I’m a leader  that doesn’t mind speaking up to the older guys.” Kentucky, which  set a record with five players taken in the first round, put its second  in the top five when DeMarcus Cousins was taken by Sacramento. His  lavender shirt matched nicely with the Kings’ purple, but that wasn’t  planned. “We had the suit made long before,” Cousins said. “Guess  it’s made for the moment.” Kentucky put two more players in the  top 18 picks when the Houston Rockets chose Patrick Patterson at No. 14  and Oklahoma City took guard Eric Bledsoe four spots later. Daniel Orton  then went to Orlando with the 29th pick, breaking the previous record  of four first-round picks from one school. The Philadelphia 76ers  took national player of the year Evan Turner from Ohio State at No. 2.  The notoriously tough Philadelphia fans at Madison Square Garden liked  the choice, loudly cheering and chanting “Evan Turner! Evan Turner!” “I  don’t have any pressure. I have a lot of demands of myself,” Turner  said. “If Philly expects me to be great, then we have a mutual  understanding.” Derrick Favors became the second freshman taken in  the first three picks when the New Jersey Nets chose the Georgia Tech  forward. “I pretty much knew John was going to 1 and Evan was  going 2, but I had no idea I was going to the Nets, and when they called  me I was just excited,” Favors said. The Minnesota Timberwolves  then grabbed Syracuse forward Wesley Johnson, whom the Nets also had  considered. Stern seemed impressed by the Christmas-colored slacks worn  by Johnson, who held up his leg to show them off. Baylor’s Ekpe  Udoh also is headed to Northern California, chosen by Golden State at  No. 6. Detroit kept up the run of big men by selecting Georgetown center  Greg Monroe with the seventh pick, before the Los Angeles Clippers went  for Wake Forest’s Al-Farouq Aminu. Butler’s Gordon Hayward went  ninth to Utah, one spot before the Indiana Pacers would’ve faced  pressure to pick the hometown star. Instead, they chose Fresno State  forward Paul George before Kansas teammates Cole Aldrich (New Orleans)  and Xavier Henry (Memphis) went with back-to-back picks. Aldrich’s  rights were later sent to Oklahoma City along with veteran swingman  Morris Peterson for the rights to the Thunder’s Nos. 21 and 26 picks,  which became Iowa State forward Craig Brackins and Washington guard  Quincy Pondexter. The draft hadn’t even started and already the  buzz was on free agency, which opens in exactly a week with LeBron James  leading perhaps the deepest class ever. There were even a few chants  for the league’s MVP, whom the Knicks are expected to make a run at. Moves  were made with July 1 in mind, such as the Bulls’ deal with Washington  that opened additional salary cap space for perhaps a second top player.  Toronto drafted North Carolina’s Ed Davis at No. 13, a potential  replacement if the Raptors lose Chris Bosh in free agency. “I know  they have big free agents coming up with Chris Bosh and people are  saying he’s not going to be there, but right now I’m just going to try  to work hard and earn the starting job,” Davis said.
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