No matter how hard he tries, he can't hide.
Ralph Sampson Jr.'s 7-4 frame, the one that helped him win three national player of the year awards at Virginia in the early 1980s, betrays him these days as he tries to play the role of a normal dad.
That frame also makes it difficult for Ralph Sampson III to be a normal college player with the Gophers. His famous father travels the country to see his son's games, but it is the father who remains in the spotlight, constantly entertaining interview requests, photo-ops and a stream of handshakes from admirers.
Following a father with an elite basketball legacy is a common thread for the Gophers. Freshman Austin Hollins is the son of former NBA star and current Memphis Grizzlies coach Lionel Hollins. Gophers assistant coach Saul Smith is the son of coach Tubby Smith and played for his father for four years at Kentucky.
The three sons share this trait: They say their fathers let them evolve into their own players.
During a Gophers victory over St. Joseph's in Philadelphia last month, Ralph Sampson Jr. tried to relax in the bleachers, but the stilts below his kneecaps towered a foot above everyone sitting in front of him. By halftime, he had on a headset during interviews with radio and TV outlets.
His stature in the basketball world virtually demands comparisons whenever his son throws up a sweet hook or blocks a shot barely leaving the floor. Still, Sampson Jr. said he allows his son to forge his own identity.
"No pressure whatsoever. We believe pressure comes from within, not from without," Sampson Jr. said last month. "He's handled it very well from a little kid until now. It's not about Dad and what Dad has done. It's about what you want to do."