BANGOR — Cooper Flagg was back in town this weekend as he hosted his second annual basketball camp with his brother Ace.
It was our first time getting to ask Flagg questions in a year, so naturally we asked him and Ace about everything under the sun.
Bangor Daily’s Matt Junker talked about the influence the Flagg’s have on kids not only at camp, but around the state, then asked Cooper who his basketball influences were growing up… and the answer might surprise you.
“I mean for me, my parents obviously were big basketball influences,” said Dallas Mavericks forward Cooper Flagg. “My AAU coach Andy Bedard. I mean, guys like Bryce Lausier when I was growing up, just some of the players in Maine but Bryce was a big one. He was really the best, probably was the best player in the state for a while when I was growing up, so.”
Now imagine you’re Bryce Lausier… You’re a Maine high school basketball legend, played college ball at all three levels, but now your college career is over and you work in finance. Then all of a sudden the number one overall pick and one of the best basketball prospects in years, names you and your game as an influence. So of course we had to get Lausier’s reaction.
“It’s definitely kind of surreal,” said former Hampden Academy, UMaine & USM guard Bryce Lausier. “I mean, kind of having a lasting impact on Maine basketball is something that I didn’t think I would have. So it’s pretty cool to see I inspired some kids that are now grown up and playing college ball. Especially someone with the magnitude of Cooper.”
Bryce even has a story of a time he played well against Nokomis his senior year, prompting the Flagg brothers to come up to him after the game.
“It was my senior year, and Cooper was in 7th grade I think,” said Lausier. “We were playing Nokomis and Cooper was at the game, and I ended up having a pretty good game. After the game, he and Ace came up to me, said hi, and were like, ‘We look up to you’. I was just like, ‘hey, if you guys keep working hard, you guys can be like me one day.’ Which, you know, is kind of arrogant, but never would’ve thought that someone from Maine would be the number one pick in the NBA draft, college basketball player of the year, it’s just kind of an anomaly. It’s really cool to be front row and witness it.”
Safe to say that hard work has paid off for the Flagg’s.

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