CHICAGO — The town of Newport, Maine, has a population of about 3,200 people. There's a bowling alley, a popular local diner that serves breakfast all day, a hunting club and it costs only $6 to license your dog.
It is a quintessential small New England town. It is not known for developing NBA stars.
Cooper Flagg was undeterred.
Flagg played his lone college year at Duke, finished high school in Florida at Montverde Academy and presumably will soon be moving to Dallas to play for the Mavericks, the team that has the No. 1 pick in next month's NBA draft. But he's still just an 18-year-old from Maine, a small-town kid who says ''please'' and ''thank you'' and seems completely unphased by being labeled basketball's next big thing.
''It doesn't matter where you're from," Flagg said Wednesday at the draft combine. ''If you have a goal, if you have a dream and you put your mind to it ... I mean, honestly, for me it wasn't real until I was in high school, but I always loved the game of basketball. I always put the work in. I always wanted to be the best that I could be.''
The only player who lists Maine as his birthplace and played in the NBA this season is Miami Heat guard Duncan Robinson. There are a couple of players — current Indiana Pacers coach Rick Carlisle among them — who went to the NBA after spending at least some of their college career at the University of Maine. But the basketball history, at least at the NBA level, of the Pine Tree State isn't exactly rich.
Flagg — who should be a high school senior right now in Newport, then decided to reclassify and go to college early — could soon change that.
''I'm so proud of this guy, what he's done,'' Duke coach Jon Scheyer said last month at the Final Four. ''I have to remind myself it's a year early. He should be graduating high school now. To have the season that he's had, I think the stats speak for itself. I think how hard he plays, the highlights, all those things speaks for itself. But it's the person he is every day.''