Last year at the Crosstown Shootout, Myles Davis scored 17 points, made seven of 10 field goal tries and added three assists to Xavier’s 65-55 win over UC. He was on top of the world, at least the world as defined by the campus at Xavier University.
On the court, Davis was cool and decisive. In interviews, he was polite and polished. If anyone had asked me about Myles Davis then, I’d have said, “seems like a very good kid.’’
That might still be true. Davis’ attorney, Clyde Bennett II, said Tuesday that Davis “is a great, young man who is developing and maturing at a rate that most teenaged and early young men mature.