CEDAR CITY, Utah (AP) - When Dax Crum was a first-grader, his teacher stopped calling on him because he tried to answer every question.
Dax took to standing on his chair to make sure the teacher would see him. The teacher called the boy's father.
"He just laughed at her," Crum recalled. "He said, 'You're making it a game and he likes to win."'
There's something else to remember about Dax Crum. That hand he used to raise so eagerly in first grade was the only one he had.
Crum, a senior guard at Southern Utah, was born with only a left hand. Yet he still plays well enough to be part of an NCAA Division I program. It was what he wanted to do all along. And those who mocked him as a kid and told him he couldn't play basketball didn't stand a chance.
Crum's playing career will end with Southern Utah's season. The Thunderbirds open the Summit League tournament against IPFW on Sunday in Tulsa.
The fact that he has had a college career at all amazes everybody but Crum. It's hard to notice there's something different about him when he's playing. He can dribble on either side, although he's definitely better with his left. His right arm ends at the wrist, other than an extension that looks like a finger. There's not much he can do with the finger alone, but combined with the stump at the end of his wrist he can control and hold the ball.
He plays aggressive defense and is quick with his left hand and looks like anybody else when he shoots.
He said sometimes opponents don't even notice until the post-game handshake.
Southern Utah assistant Ron Carling said about a month into the season, he told his wife he couldn't believe that he was coaching a one-handed player. Karin Carling had watched the games from the bleachers and hadn't noticed.
"She said, 'Which one is it?,"' Carling said.
Crum kind of prefers it that way. This has been his life, not a novelty show. His biography in Southern Utah's media guide makes no mention that he lacks a hand. But Crum, quiet and modest, understands why he's considered a standout without being a star.
Crum is an average shooter from the floor, but he's made 18 of 19 free throws this season. That's almost 95 percent, a total most players with two hands can't match.
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