Posts Tagged ‘basketball’

The Conscience is Ironic

Friday, January 9th, 2009

catherine Donnelly

catherine Donnelly


This picture was taken in 1985 at Catherine Donnelly’s graduation from Princeton. With her are her mother, Alice Brown (left) and grandmother, Martha Thompson.

Sometimes the Conscience has a humorous interplay with our lives. It was 24 years ago that a white family decided that their little girl couldn’t and wouldn’t room with a black girl. Little did they know that that black girl would grow up to become the first-lady in the White house. The Conscience is irony in action.

Reported on 4/12/08
www.AJC.com

Michelle Obama speaks last week at Winston-Salem State University. When Catherine Donnelly saw her on TV news reports, she thought she looked familiar. She walked into the historic Nassau Inn that evening and delivered the news to her mother, Alice Brown. “I was horrified,” recalled Brown, who had driven her daughter up from New Orleans. Brown stormed down to the campus housing office and demanded Donnelly be moved to another room. The reason:

One of her roommates was black. “I told them we weren’t used to living with black people — Catherine is from the South,” Brown said.

Today both Donnelly, an Atlanta attorney, and Brown, a retired schoolteacher living in the North Carolina mountains, look back at that time with regret. Like many Americans, they’ve built new perceptions of race on top of a foundation cracked by prejudices past — and present. Yet they rarely speak of the subject.

Barack Obama’s run for president changed that. When the Democratic senator from Illinois invited more dialogue on race last month, Shock to the stereotype. The acceptance letter from the Ivy Leagues was really the culmination of two peoples’ hard work. “My mother was thrilled,” Donnelly jokes, that she got into Princeton. Donnelly, now 44, captained the basketball and volleyball teams. She was the homecoming queen. And she racked up science and math awards, often with the help of her mother.

But the “Three R’s” weren’t the only thing Donnelly learned from an early age. There was a fourth one. Her mother and grandmother filled her head with racist stereotypes, portraying African-Americans as prone to crime, uneducated and, at times, people to be feared. Brown, 71, explains that she was raised to think that way.

She recalls hearing her grandfather, a sheriff in the North Carolina Mountains, brag about running black visitors out of the county before nightfall. And Brown’s parents held on to the n-word like a family heirloom. In fact, upon learning that her daughter had a black roommate at Princeton, Brown’s first call was to her own mother. Her suggestion: yank Donnelly out of school. alive and well on a prestigious campus in the Northeast. The university’s private eating clubs, host to frat-style parties, were largely white. The social scene for many minority students, including Obama, revolved around an activity building called the Third World Center. ‘I was inspired …. I was envious’ When Donnelly first saw Obama’s wife on TV, she was struck by how tall and graceful she looked. Then she studied her more closely. Michelle Obama looked so familiar, down to those long fingers. Could that be Michelle Robinson? A Google search gave Donnelly the answer. Obama was far more than a first-lady hopeful. She had gone to Harvard Law School, had been an associate dean at the University of Chicago and rose to vice president at the University of Chicago Hospitals and was making over $500,000.00 at the Chicago Hospital plus receiving $51,000 as a director of Wal-Mart and the associate dean salary was unknown.

“I was inspired,” she says. “I was amazed. And I was envious of all she had accomplished.”

Donnelly called her mother, who in turn phoned the friend who had traveled with her to Princeton all those years ago. The friends had stayed up that night calling everyone they knew with a connection to the university, hoping to get Catherine moved out of the room.

“We thought this is so ironic,” Brown says. “[Obama] could be the first lady, and here we wanted to get my child out of her influence.”

Some empathy for lingering anger Living as a gay woman has made Donnelly far more aware of what it’s like to be judged by a trait beyond your control. “Being gay is such a small part of who I am.” Now she wishes she had reached across racial lines at Princeton. “I don’t think I ever set foot in the Third World Center,” she says of the popular hangout for minority students. “It’s like this mystical place.” When Brown heard about Barack Obama’s former pastor — his angry rants against white America — she didn’t like it. But she understood. “If I had been treated the same way blacks have been treated,” she says, “I’d be resentful, too.”

Man-Man

Monday, December 8th, 2008

I don’t wanna play basketball, yea baby, ’cause I’m too small to hoop,”
–Rapper-Imajin

If you’ve ever been told that basketball is for people 6’0” or taller, or you believe you are too small to play basketball, I invite you to go down to Inglewood High School (home of Paul Pierce) in Inglewood, California and watch 5’0”, “Man-Man”, real name Gerald Evans, who is in the 11th grade. I first saw Man-Man last year when he was a sophomore, when his team played Santa Monica High School.

Man-Man caught the attention of several people in the stands and some were even laughing about how small he was. One person commented that he must be the team mascot, manager or coach’s son. But, I have scouted talent for over 30 years, and I knew he was a contributing member of the Inglewood team. This 5’ 0” had a swagger about him. Sure enough, four-minutes into the first quarter, this little bullet shot up off the bench and was at the scorers’ table. Prior to Man-Man coming in the game, Inglewood was playing pretty flat and Santa Monica was having their way with them. Well, in comes Man-Man, and like the movie “Gone in 60 seconds”, all of Santa Monica’s Mojo shifted to Inglewood. Inglewood went on to win the game as a result of Man-Man’s energy and Dashawn Gomez’ outstanding play down the stretch that sent them into overtime. But it was Man-Man that shifted the tide and the game with his infectious energy.

I don’t even know if Man-Man even thinks of himself as a small player. He plays big, plays every possession and never quits. The minute he comes in the game, you can see how much he lifts the spirits of his teammates and the fans. I have never seen him not make an impact. If you are a player on the short side, or the large variety, you need to see Man-Man play. Not only is he quick and fast, but he also knows how to take advantage of everything he’s been given. Imagine being an opposing guard with average handles and then having to deal with this guy who is up in you, giving you no breathing room, and here you are trying to run the offense. It’s a daunting experience! A year after seeing Man-Man have an impact in a big game, I got to see him, once again, bring verve with a resolute spirit and acuity of ability to the floor that very few players have.

Man-Man has a huge heart, some above average athletic ability and an “I won’t quit” attitude. I don’t know if Man-Man will play at the proverbial “next level” that we all talk about, but who cares? There is so much focus on the “next level”, that I think we often forget about the level the players are at right now. There is a risk as a player, coach or parent of getting too far ahead of the moment.

Play hard, work hard, and bring your heart in each moment and let that determine what the future holds. The biggest trend in basketball is to go for size, and yes, the game is getting bigger and stronger. But if you really have a passion for the game, why not go as far as you can, for as long as you can? Basketball is an activity that can be played for a long time if you take care of your body, stay in shape and don’t have too many injuries. Who knows, the “next level” for you might just be the White House!

Developing the Whole Person

Friday, November 7th, 2008

Jerome Green

More and more I am speaking to college coaches these days that are more concerned about GPA’s and  players characters than how athletic or gifted a player is.  While the top players in the country will still get speculative nod when it comes to choosing their athletic abilities over other factors, others won’t.  The other 7 players on that roster better bring more to the table than their basketball game. One of the rising stars in this whole person approach to basketball is Coach Greg Robinson of Oregon State University men’s basketball. I know that he and the university have gotten major press as a result of his speech at the Democratic National Convention and the fact that his sister is now the First Lady-Elect, but if you go to the OSU website at: http://www.osubeavers.com and read his resume, you’ll see how Coach Robinson and his staff stands on their own merit.

More parents are now realizing with tougher NCAA standards, higher test scores, and GPA’s requiremenets means choosing a high school for its ability to develop the whole person is more crucial than how many stated championship teams they have. Finding the balance between athletic and academic excellence has become increasingly important.

IF your son or daughter is being recruited by a university at any level (D1, D2, D3, NAIA) you need to become an educated buyer. Don’t just get caught up in the fact that someone wants to offer you a scholarship- really take a look at what else they offer. Look at the staff, what is their background and how effectively will they be in developing the whole person?  Not just the athlete. Evaluate what else has the coaching staff done with their lives? In the case of the Oregon State staff, you have a head coach who has been banking, lived oversees, and an assistant coach, David Grace, who spent 20 years in the Air Force. The diversity of experience will bode well in how these men, develop young men.

The NCAA has a commercial they run on television during all of their events. It’s called-”going pro is something other than.” Players and parents need to pay very close attention to this commercial, because the simple fact is that most college athletes will be going pro is something other than. I sometimes have the opportunity to speak with a  GM of a major sports franchise and one of the things he always mentions first is the perspective draft picks character. Millions of dollars are invested in athletes; just ask the knicks about Stephon Marbury. The person that was cheated was Stephon; a long time ago his prodigy, was placed ahead of his development as a person. Stephon is a good man, and he never was held accountable early on in his career. In discussing his current situation with the Knicks, he is quoted as saying:

“Looking back at the last two years, I kind of liked Larry Brown. I kind of liked Larry Brown. I’m like, ‘Man, I wish this guy was here to drill me now.”

Most young players today might resist the direction and correction, but so what? I would rather do what I felt was best for that players overall life, than worry about wining a few AAU games. I have always been far more interested in the whole person than the athlete.

Quality teams combine both athletic talent and human talent. If you really look at most of the champions of sport, their characters was impeccable and someone like Bill Russell had to also demonstrate a strong conscience and courage while he was winning championships.

Today’s young athlete needs to learn not just the fundamental skills that go along with being a great or good athlete in their sport. They also need to learn how to become a whole person and how to develop an ability to listen and follow conscience.