D’Andre Bell Is Palisades High Basketball Team’s Floor Leader

Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer
Take a walk on the Palisades High campus and it’s not very hard to find D’Andre Bell. When he’s not in class, he’s in the gym shooting baskets, in the fitness center lifting weights or on the track running laps. For him, high school is a stepping stone towards his lifelong goal and Bell wants to be ready, both athletically and academically, when opportunity knocks. “My number one goal is to get a scholarship at a good Division I school,” said Bell, the leading scorer on the Dolphins’ varsity basketball team. “I believe in my heart and in my soul that I can do that. I just have to keep working as hard as I can and it will happen.” Working hard has become Bell’s modus operandi since he arrived at Palisades three years ago. In fact, his work inspires not only his teammates, but also his coaches, who have trouble getting him to tone it down. “He’s a phenomenal person and the hardest working kid I’ve ever had” said James Paleno, who has been at Pali since 1981 and is in the midst of his 13th season as head coach. “He’s always asking me to open up the fitness center so he can work out. He plays as hard in practice as he does in games. I take no credit for his success. He’s gotten where he is because he’s driven to succeed.” Hours and hours of extra shooting and dribbling have enabled Pali’s 6-5 junior guard/forward to perfect his mid-range jump shot and drive to the rim with authority. Extra reps in the weight room have added a foot to his vertical leap, making him a force on the backboards, and game experience has improved his court vision. With Bell leading the way, Pali (12-8 overall, 3-3 league) was in position to finish third in the Western League heading into yesterday’s game against defending state champion Westchester. “If there’s one thing I’ve learned from playing, it’s that to be good you have to have confidence,” said Bell, whose younger brother, Lance, plays at Hollywood High. “You have to work hard and believe in yourself. You also have to be able to play whatever kind of game gets you the ball–whether it’s up-tempo or half-court.” Bell is a ball-hawk on defense and is usually assigned to guard the other team’s top-scorer. In Pali’s first game against league rival Fairfax, Bell played so well against Lions’ top-scorer Josh Shipp (who is bound for UCLA) that his teammates dubbed him “Skipper” because he handled the Shipp. On offense, Bell is frequently double and triple-teamed yet still finds a way to score. “He used to come to me and say `I took some bad shots’ but to me that’s okay,” Paleno said. “He’s very unselfish and always tries to get other people involved, but when you’re as good as he is sometimes you have to be greedy and shoot because that’s what’s in the best interest of the team.” Bell sets a positive example off the court as well. He is the first to volunteer for the team’s many off-season charity functions, including its annual Kids Jam at Calvary Christian School. “It’s a real treat to play with D’Andre,” said Dolphins’ point guard Corey Counts. “He makes the rest of us better players because he can do so much. I get a lot of my points because the other team is focused on stopping him. D’Andre does it all.” Though still only 15, Bell is one of the best players in the City Section and has the numbers to prove it. He averages 25 points per game, fourth-best in the City, and his 10.8 rebounds per game are third-most in the Section. Of course, none of that matters to Bell unless the Dolphins win. “The most important thing is for us to win,” said Bell, who has started at Pali since halfway through his freshman year. “If I go out and score 30 points and we lose, what good is it?” Bell lives near Fairfax High, which has one of the top prep basketball programs in the state, but chose to attend Pali for its academic environment. The ultimate for him would be to play at North Carolina, his dream ever since he first bounced a ball at Robertson Park when he was 4. “I could’ve gone to Fairfax or Westchester and been a role player for two years,” Bell said. “Instead, I’m here at a school known for academics and playing a major role in building Pali into a winner. That is the ultimate challenge and I like it.” Bell does not regret staying at Palisades. His grades (Bell maintains a B average in college prep courses) and his on-court performance have garnered attention from several Division I universities, including Iowa State and Colorado, but Pali’s top gun takes those things in stride. “I want to put Palisades on the map as far as being a top basketball school,” he said. “Hopefully, the players who follow in my footsteps will come here expecting to win.”