Whisperer

The following is a post from NBA.com written by Idan Ravin (aka The Hoops Whisperer), who first became known to me because he was Carmelo Anthony’s hoops trainer. Idan has also trained various other NBA All-Stars. Knowing that I don’t copy-paste much of other people’s work unless I find it compelling, read this.

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Welcome to this week’s Morning Tip. This week’s guest columnist, Idan Ravin, has become one of the league’s most in-demand personal trainers. In an ultra-competitive business where people are desperate for access to athletes, Ravin has built an amazing clientele, working with the likes of LeBron James, Kobe Bryant, Carmelo Anthony, Chris Paul, Kevin Durant, Amar’e Stoudemire, Joe Johnson, Rudy Gay, Gilbert Arenas and others, mainly through word of mouth. Known as the “Hoops Whisperer,” Ravin keeps his methods for improving the NBA’s elite close to the vest. But this week, Ravin shares his appreciation for the journey that many pro players make to the big time. Hope you enjoy it.

I’m often asked whether the NBA players I train are “good guys.” An interesting question because it suggests people want to find a way to humanize the professional athlete and make them more familiar. Television, print and the Web bring the NBA player into our homes. We see them compete, win, lose, succeed and struggle.

But it is still not enough. They want to know, “What are they really like?”

In my eyes, they are like you and me. There are good days and not-so good-days. They can be careful and careless. They can make good decisions and not-so-good decisions. It is not as important for me to share with you whether they are good or bad guys, but, rather, that we can find inspiration from their unlikely journey.

It’s easy to say you want to be a doctor, lawyer, accountant, banker, consultant, journalist, graphic designer, architect, etc. After all, there’s a traditional path to take and inevitably there’s someone you know who has taken this journey. It is palatable. There is a path of bread crumbs you can follow until you make it “home.” In other words, “If I go to school, get good grades, get good standardized test scores, excel with my internship, then I will eventually reach my goal and succeed.”

Now, imagine an 8-year-old boy living in Brooklyn, or Inglewood, or Riga, Latvia, or Bologna, Italy, or Vancouver, Canada, or Berlin, Germany telling his mother he wants to play in the NBA when he grows up. The numbers don’t lie: there are 30 teams and 13 to 15 roster spots, but at least 20 million children/teenagers/men that play organized basketball around the world. The odds are frightening. Yet, each NBA player started at this point. I call it Point A or, “I have a dream and I am crazy enough to believe I can do this.”

The dream starts with a bounce of a ball, and a hoop, somewhere in some park or gym around the world. For the sake of this story, let’s call our 8-year-old Billy. At an early age, Billy learns the game by playing in the park and devouring every bit of information he can to develop his game. For the next eight years, he continues to practice, to play and to improve. He becomes a very good player in his age group and attracts the attention of AAU travelling teams and high school coaches. He selects a travelling team that complements his style of play. The travelling team swallows up his summer. It is an enormous time commitment. Along with practice, he plays in multiple summer tournaments around the country.

For the next two years, he plays well with his AAU travelling team. He catches the eye of several top universities. These schools would like to recruit him but they have some reservations regarding his ability to play other positions in college, as well as the strength of his high school schedule. They suggest he transfer high schools so he can play against the top high school talent in the country. After talking it over with his family and his AAU coaches, he elects to leave behind friends and family and transfer from his neighborhood high school to a small prep school located in rural Virginia.

Billy packs two bags and leaves his family and friends behind. When he arrives on campus, he is shocked to see this small campus is nothing more than a few buildings, a gymnasium and a cafeteria hidden in a small town. Each day becomes the same until he eventually loses track of time: 5 a.m. wake-up call; weight room, practice, school, practice, homework, lights out. Billy has traded his adolescence for a goal and a dream. Unlike other teenagers his age, Billy has no weekends at the mall, dates, time to hang out with friends. But his sacrifices pan out. He becomes a starter on the team and excels against the other top-ranked prep schools.

Billy receives college basketball scholarship offers from many top ranked Division I programs. He narrows his choice of schools to Duke, North Carolina, Michigan State and Connecticut. He visits each of these schools. He meets with the coaching staff and team, and tours the campus and facility. He eventually selects a school after analyzing which team has an NBA system and has produced the largest number of NBA players at his position. He announces his decision to the media. He receives several nasty e-mails and phone calls from third parties disappointed he didn’t select their schools.

Five months later, the pressure escalates as Billy arrives on campus. He must manage 12 school credits per semester, at least 15 hours of basketball practice each week, mandatory lifting sessions, school work, classes, mandatory study hall, new found popularity and the high expectations from himself and the public as a highly recruited player. Each game is nationally televised and so each game brings its own internal and external pressures. Billy battles through sprained ankles, a dislocated finger and a bout of food poisoning he sustains while on the road. Nevertheless, he plays well . He leads his team to a top 20 ranking, a second-place finish in the conference and the Sweet 16 of the NCAAs.

Billy catches the eye of NBA scouts. NBA scouts project him as a top 20 pick in the upcoming Draft. Billy must now decide whether to hire an agent, to declare for the Draft and forego his remaining collegiate eligibility, or remain in college. His college coach and others in the university encourage him to stay in school. Meanwhile, his family and AAU coach, who love him but who also are expecting to be taken care of, encourage him to declare for the Draft. Billy elects to trust his instincts and declare for the NBA.

However, now he faces the monumental task of interviewing and hiring an agent, lawyer and financial advisor. This is new terrain for him. He understandably doesn’t know which questions to ask or what to look for when retaining the services of these professionals. He again turns to his intuition to guide him in the process of retaining advisors and counsel. Only three weeks after the college season ends, Billy selects an agent, declares for the Draft and withdraws from school.

Billy packs two bags, again, less than two years after starting his senior year of high school, and relocates to a new city to prepare for the Draft. For the next seven weeks, six days per week, he wakes at 6:30 a.m. to begin his two-hour on-court training sessions. From there he immediately visits with a strength coach for an hour weightlifting session. If he is lucky, he sneaks in a short nap before returning to the gym in the late evening. And it begins again the next day.

In May, Billy begins to crisscross the United States, auditioning for every NBA team with a first-round pick that has interest in him. He flies in the evening, squeezing his 6-foot-5 frame into middle and window coach seats. He is met at the airport and taken to his hotel. He changes to jeans and a collared shirt and heads to dinner for a quasi-interview with the team’s front office and staff. He returns to his hotel and heads to bed so he can be fresh for the morning workout with the other top players at his position.

He arrives early for his workouts. Each team puts Billy through a set of rigorous on-court drills to evaluate his basketball IQ and skill set. From there, he meets with the team’s strength and conditioning coach, who puts him through rigorous strength, speed and conditioning drills to evaluate his physical talents. He then meets with the NBA team’s front office, where he again interviews with the general manager, assistant general manager and director of player personnel. He repeats this process 10 times with 10 teams over the course of two weeks.

In late June, Billy is selected with the 17th pick of the NBA Draft. The next day the team flies him to the NBA city to sign a contract, meet the local media and begin preparing for Summer League. Summer League is more intense then he imagined. All eyes are on him. He is expected to perform immediately and begin to master a playbook as thick as a telephone directory. The NBA does not have much patience and it does not issue much positive reinforcement. There is no time for hugs and kisses. Performance and work product are the metrics for success. The game at the NBA level travels at supersonic speed. Every player is big, fast and with a “Harvard-like” style basketball pedigree.

Billy plays well in Summer League. Veterans camp is several weeks away so Billy elects to remain in the city to continue to prepare for the season. Many of his friends do not understand why Billy does not want to vacation and begin to spend his money. Billy recognizes the pressures associated with NBA life and the expectations of a first-round pick. It is now the end of September and camp is scheduled to start. Two practices per day, film sessions, team bonding exercises and a heightened intensity from players, coaches and front office alarm Billy.

He faces grown men who will do anything to earn a roster spot. Many have families to feed. Billy faces veterans who are 10 years older, who will do what is necessary to ensure the young rookie does not capture all the minutes at the position. This means hard fouls, mental games and physical play. For several of these veteran players, it is also a contract year. They challenge Billy even more because they need the minutes on the court to puff up their statistics, so they have more leverage when negotiating their next contract. Nevertheless, Billy remains focused, poised and plays well in camp. He earns a start for the opening regular-season game.

It’s now October 28. Ten years or so since he first began working toward his dream. He lines up for the jump ball. He looks around and witnesses the size, strength and experience of the players on the floor with him. For each game, each team will spend countless hours watching and scouting his deficiencies and tendencies so they can exploit him. Throughout the season Billy will continue to play hard and do what he loves. Yet, at the same time he has to learn the complexities associated with NBA life. These include dealing with the ego of the team franchise player, an overbearing head coach, a team filled with veteran players, a complex playbook, a new city, a new community, a new life, media, extensive travel and expectations from family and friends.

Billy’s journey to the NBA has been a journey filled with uncertainty each step of the way. But he had unshakeable resolve and commitment to his dream.

After two years, Billy has become a solid pro. He’s earned the respect of his teammates and coaches. He’s making good money and has a solid foundation in life. But he wants even more. He doesn’t just want to be good, even very good; he wants to be one of the best, a perennial All-Star, someone who leaves a mark on the game. That same drive that made him believe he could make the pros when he was 8 still burns in him, still pushes him. He knows that there are people out there that can take his skills and make them better, using their minds and their methods to push him even further.

And he comes to me. With one question: “How do I get better?”

I find inspiration from Billy’s story. The NBA is filled with guys like Billy. In many ways we are not so different. If you are a dreamer like me, you never think your dreams are crazy or farfetched. You just accept the uncertainty. You learn to trust your instinct, develop a talent for catching your balance on this very windy road while finding peace in your commitment.

Life,

Idan

You can read more about Ravin’s work with NBA stars here, here, here, here and here. His website iswww.idanravin.com and he can also be reached on Twitter ( @IdanWan).

Posted 1 day, 4 hours ago at 5:49 PM. Add a comment

Book Review: Red And Me

This is a review from my Favorite Books list; the link from which will be also on the Books Page.

***

“The team game was the game I wanted to play.”

Bill Russell is the Ultimate Winner in any professional team sport. Russell won 11 NBA championships with the Boston Celtics in 13 seasons. Bill Russell was not a big-time scorer of highlights-type of player, however (and there was no ESPN in the 60s anyhow). He was all about 2 things: 1) The Team 2) Winning.

Red And Me gives the reader a deep look into Russell’s relationship with his late coach and friend Red Auerbach. If you’re into Russell or Red or the Boston Celtics, read this book.

That pretty much sums it up.

Posted 1 month ago at 7:30 AM. Add a comment

Book Review: Eating The Dinosaur

This is a review from my Favorite Books list; the link from which will be also on the Books Page.

***

“Why do we ask questions?”

I cannot tell you what this book is about. It’s titled Eating the Dinosaur, for chrissakes.

The chapters in the book are seemingly (and, for the most part, literally) unrelated — from comparing Kurt Cobain and David Koresh; to time travel; to Ralph Sampson. But if you have ever consumed Klosterman (such as a magazine piece, or his brilliant 1-page cameo in The Book Of Basketball), you know this man is a unique thinker who will have you tilting your head with raised eyebrows (what I — and most humans — unconsciously do when I hear or read a completely unique but also completely accurate point).

The one thing about Klosterman that draws me to him is that he is extremely analytical; breaking his and others’ actions down to the most minute levels and (possible) purposes. So much that his chapter on Garth Brooks even had my attention.

Favorite section: Klosterman explaining how we give up almost all of our independent, human freedoms to have an air-conditioned apartment in July. And it makes perfect sense.

Posted 2 months, 1 week ago at 9:23 AM. Add a comment

Christmas Greetings!

Posted 8 months, 2 weeks ago at 1:26 PM. Add a comment

QOTD 8.27.09

“I don’t know anything about Angola, but Angola’s in trouble.” – Charles Barkley

Posted 1 year ago at 9:11 AM. Add a comment

Book Review: How To Be Like Mike

This is a review from my Favorite Books list; the link from which will be also on the Books Page.

***

“The game is my wife. It demands loyalty and responsibility, and it gives me back fulfillment and peace.”

Just as the other MJ-centered books on my list, this one is a must for any fan of Michael Jordan. Pat Williams breaks down aspects of MJ’s personality an character, and discusses ways that the reader can incorporate them into their own pursuits.

belikemike

Posted 1 year ago at 1:59 PM. Add a comment

Book Review: :07 Seconds Or Less

This is a review from my Favorite Books list; the link from which will be also on the Books Page.

***

“‘Agree or disagree in the room, but, when the meeting’s over, align.’ We always align.”

If you’re a fan of the NBA in this millennium, you have read of SSOL or heard of it in the least. Sports Illustrated’s Jack McCallum traveled with the Phoenix Suns for an entire season and wrote about his experience of being a part of an NBA team. The fact that McCallum chose to follow the Suns during the season in which they were the talk of the NBA (despite not making the NBA Finals) because of their exciting, high- energy, free-flowing style of play didn’t hurt.

7seconds

Posted 1 year ago at 10:38 AM. Add a comment

Book Review: The Jordan Rules

This is a review from my Favorite Books list; the link from which will be also on the Books Page.

***

“… If we got to the Finals, Michael would figure out some way to win it. He’s the greatest competitor I’ve ever seen and then he goes to still another level in big games.”

Sam Smith wrote this unauthorized account of Michael Jordan’s dealings with his teammates and coaches during the Bull’s first title season. Supposedly, MJ was sort of a bully with his less-bloodthirsty teammates and was the main authority figure the Bulls players strived to satisfy. Jordan publicly came out and denied the book’s accounts when it was first released in 1992, making it a must-read going off of that alone. I’ll leave it up to the reader to decide what to believe or not believe from the Jordan Rules, but an entertaining piece of work nonetheless.

jordanrules

Posted 1 year, 1 month ago at 8:18 PM. Add a comment

Book Review: Can I Keep My Jersey?

This is a review from my Favorite Books list; the link from which will be also on the Books Page.

***

“The sentence(s) he used included the following words: bitch, ever, don’t, weak, shit, bring, and in here. The order in which he used them remains unclear.”

A 300-page book I flipped through in two weeks, and could’ve read another 300 pages of in a week. Paul Shirley details 4 years f basketball travel that goes everywhere from the farms of Kansas to the steel  cold and darkness — literally and figuratively — of Russia in winter. Shirley even spent a few weeks with the LA Lakers back in the Kobe & Shaq days; the above quote is from that laugh-out-loud experience. Looks like Paul may have stepped away fro the pro game; damn shame too- cuz that means he won’t pen another one of these.

BOOK REVIEW SHIRLEY

Posted 1 year, 1 month ago at 7:49 PM. Add a comment

Photo A Day: 7.31.09

073109Screen shot from my NBA.com Post-Up victory.

Posted 1 year, 1 month ago at 6:22 AM. Add a comment

Book Review: Shaq Talks Back

This is a review from my Favorite Books list; the link from which will be also on the Books Page.

***

“See, when a little guys acts tough, I like to see if he really is tough. Well, Kobe didn’t back down. He came at me.”

If you’re not sure if you wanna invest time in reading an entire book by/about Shaquille O’Neal, or you just despise Shaq in general, the above quote gives you a glimpse into what’s in store: Shaq talks extensively about his relationship with Kobe back in the L.A. Days (this book was written in the early 2000s).

If you have been following the man on Twitter and saw him recently on some wrestling event, you know that Shaq is quite the entertainer in addition to being one of the most dominant players in the history of basketball. And this book does not disappoint. I’m hoping Shaq pens another book after he retires from the League.

shaq

Posted 1 year, 1 month ago at 3:39 PM. Add a comment

Book Review: The Macrophenomenal Pro Basketball Almanac

This is a review from my Favorite Books list; the link from which will be also on the Books Page.

***

“…they’re part of the antics. And the antics are what this book is all about.”

A thoroughly enjoyable read that felt more like a good magazine issue than a 200-plus-page book (in a very good way). I would say that this would be a great book even for non-book-readers, but the vocabulary of FreeDarko’s authors dissallows the mental detachment of an issue of, say, ESPN The Magazine.

The Almanac does profiles of a handful of NBA players, with witty sidebars and very creative illustrations (look around the ‘net for the Kobe Byrany visual from the book and you get the idea- captured #24′s basketball image perfectly).

darko

Posted 1 year, 1 month ago at 3:00 PM. Add a comment

Book Review: Outrageous!

This is a review from my Favorite Books list; the link from which will be also on the Books Page.

***

“Dear Bill, Fuck you. Your friend, Charles.”

We all know Charles Barkley. And the best thing about Charles, to me, is that he says exactly what he feels all the time, regardless of the audience. So if he was to sit down and write an entire book, you know it’ll be pure entertainment. Outrageous! was written back when Chuck was still playing in Philly for the 76ers, and he was keepin’ it real even back then. The best thing I like about first-person books by athletes is the behind-the-scenes stuff they write about, like locker room exchanges, and dealings with coaches, family and business associates. Barkley has written a couple other books since this one, all increasingly less basketball-related. Good thing, since Charles is hardly even associated with the NBA anymore in the eyes of the mainstream. If you read those you’ll see that Chuck is knowledgeable about a lot more than sports.

outrageous

Posted 1 year, 1 month ago at 9:42 AM. Add a comment

Photo A Day: 7.3.09

070309I got this jerseycustomized at NBA.com (All-Star 2003, I think) right at the brink of jersey-wearing becoming out-of-fashion. Money well spent, still.

Posted 1 year, 2 months ago at 7:13 AM. Add a comment

Talk To Him

I get a lot of messages, Youtube comments, and emails from (mostly young) players asking me questions about strength, conditioning, and other physical aspects of basketball (how much weight to lift, increasing jumping ability, etc). My rote answer is usually in the form of, “I am not a trainer…;” which is true, and also keeps me from: 1) Giving out bad information that may work for me but not work for you; 2) Starting an avalanche of inquiries that make me feel like I should be charging for my training “knowledge (I use the term loosely since I have no formal training in, um, training).”

But anyway, I’ve recently started reading the blog of a guy who has not only held my interest with the stuff he writes, but is also generous with info as it relates to training for basketball. His name is Alan Stein (Twitter), and his blog (called Stronger Team Blog) can be found here. I actually sent Alan an email last week and asked him about some specific training issues I was having, and he promptly wrote me back with a plethora of useful info.

Alan also interviews current and former NBA players regularly about their own training techniques, does book reviews, and re-caps his experiences working camps for top high school and college players. So since I’m not a trainer (at least for now), now y’all have one to talk to.

Posted 1 year, 2 months ago at 3:12 PM. Add a comment

Photo A Day: 6.26.09

062609This flyer was a promo for a game we played in Mexico in some wild ass town that had no traffic lights and no police presence. The promoters of these game had no problem lying about the resumes of the players they wished to tout, but i like to think of it more as foreshadowing. The placed was jam-packed for the game, though and the crowd was very into it. This game was the second of back-to-backs we played that day in two different locales; just an average road trip for my time in Mexico.

Posted 1 year, 2 months ago at 12:51 PM. Add a comment

D-Listed

I posted this on my Twitter and Facebook last week, and I’ll complete the circle with this blog post: I’ll be attending the D-League’s Pre-Draft Camp in Los Angeles on the 19th of this month. nbdl

For the uninformed, the D-League (or NBDL) is the official minor league of the NBA, which makes it closest thing to the NBA you can be without actually being in it (being that players signed to NBDL teams can be called up to an NBA team at any time, unlike a player signed to a European club). I’ll see what interesting stuff I can photograph and/ or film in the process and share it with the public.

Posted 1 year, 2 months ago at 8:20 AM. 3 comments

Things That Make You Go, “Hmmm…”

Here is an article I just read on Stephen Strasburg, the “the best amateur pitcher I’ve [MLB super-agent Scott Boras] seen” on ESPN.com. And here’s Sports Illustrated’s 1995 cover piece on a 19 year-old coming straight from high school named Kevin Garnett.

It is interesting to me how the piece on Strasburg discusses his fastball, how much money his super-agent will be able to fetch him in contract negotiations, and how teams with no chance of acquiring him are sending scouts to watch him anyway, because of what a treat it is just to see the kid perform. How the crux of the column is how much guaranteed money the young pitcher will receive from the team that drafts him, and how negotiation will set a new standard for top-flight draftees.

While the Garnett piece (also this, this, this, and this), paradoxically, discusses how overwhelming the whole situation may be for the young basketball player, how the money he is set to receive is “like… Monopoly money” to him, and how there is a strong possibility (along with past cases as evidence) that he might fail.

I know this issue has been talked about ad nauseum over the years, and fired up again last yer when Brandon Jennings ditched the NCAA for Europe and this year when Jeremy Tyler passed up his senior year of high school for the pros overseas. It’s just crazy that Lebron James and Kevin Garnett’s initial NBA contracts were worth less than $25 million COMBINED (note: the NBA installed a rookie pay scale in 1998;  LBJ’s rookie year was 2003-04; and KG’s yearly salaries can be seen here), and Strasburg’s agent has MLB general managers talking in the $50 million range and there is nary a word of how overwhelming that may be for Strasburg or how he may have to worry about keeping childhood friends from pulling him in all directions or how he very well may fail, or how his example of being super-talented sets a bad precedent for less-gifted amateurs who may attempt following in his footsteps.

Just interesting to me.

Posted 1 year, 3 months ago at 10:21 PM. Add a comment

On The Record

This is an Internet interview I did with Johnny To from Lakewood HS in California, for his Junior Thesis (glad my HS didn’t require those!). Johnny is interested in being a basketball player, so he wanted to ask me a few questions about bball and the pro ranks as part of his assignment. Enjoy.

Dre Baldwin is a professional basketball player who plays overseas/internationally. He is from Miami, Florida and is an uprising basketball star, for more information about Dre Baldwin visit his website www.DreAllDay.com.

Q: I’ve read your basketball stories I know that you always faced adversity, was there ever a time where you started having self-doubt or ever believed that you just weren’t good enough?

A: First things first- I’m from Philadelphia, PA, not Miami. Very important that you have that correctly stated. To answer your question, there have always been ups and downs I’ve gone through with basketball, but since I’ve been in my adult years, there has never been a time in which I doubted my abilities on the floor. The most important contributor to that is the fact that I always know i can go in the gym ad improve on any weaknesses I see.

Q: What does it take to become a legitimate basketball player?

A: To be a legitimate ballplayer, there are three essential elements (which I mention in the Player Classification System on DreAllDay.com: 1) Physical abilities; 2) Knowledge of the game; 3) Heart.

Q: I know you’re really dedicated and determined when it comes to basketball, is there a set of values or rules you follow?

A: I don’t really have a set of values to recite; the most important attribute for my success is my willingness to put in work, plain and simple.

Q: What is a normal day like for Dre Baldwin/you?

A: A normal day for me at the current time consists of a basketball/on-court workout, a strength/ weight training workout, and a conditioning/ speed, quickness workout. Playing in rec leagues 3-5 times per week, occasional pickup games, a tournament here and there, and in between all the physical activity, working on my site, DreAllDay.com (recently re-launched), and other business affairs. Also spending time with my beautiful girlfiriend of two plus years.

Q: You were born and raised in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. How was life like growing up?

A: Life growing up in Philadelphis was no different than any other neighborhood for someone who grew up in the city. Everyone played basketball every day in the summer, and the games I struggled to sometimes even get picked for were the basis for the work I put in to become the payer I am today.

Q: Is there any advice you have to give to a young person who is pursuing a career in basketball?

A: Advice for young up-and-coming players: First: Work Hard- be willing to do what your peers are not doing. Network- being good is useless if no one knows who you are. Play above your level- find games & leagues with players who are better than you. Take responsibility- if you have people around you providing help, great. If not, take responsibility for yourself. You must be willing and able to do everything necessary for yourself before anyone else will. And lastly, Work hard.

Q: Was there anybody that had a big influence on your character when you were growing up?

A: My parents, of course. They both worked to get everything we had and that definitely made an impression on me.

Q: Alright, this is a question I had to ask, Nba Draft 2010.. What does that mean to you? Can we expect to see your name in the lottery?

A: The NBA Draft process doesn’t wok like that. A player may only be draft-eligible once (My one time was after my senior year of college, in 2004). If he is not drafted at that time, he is considered a free agent. So, I am a free agent to an NBA club. I will join a team through being signed to a contract, but not drafted.

Posted 1 year, 3 months ago at 10:05 AM. Add a comment

Was It All A Dream?

Gotta share some quick notes on a dream I had 2.5 days ago, but didn’t post about it. I had waaay more details back then, but now all I have are the notes I jotted down when I awoke from said daytime nap:

I was playing in a full-court game of bball with, like, all 400 dudes in the NBA. The only faces I saw were Dwight Howard, Shaq, and Deron Williams. There was a missed shot when I was on defense, and Shaq rose above the scrum to grab it. He missed the putback, though, and I ended up with the ball in transistion (well, as much “transition” you can have with 400 dudes on a 94 X 50 floor). I was thinking, “these dudes don’t now me like that; if I can score here I’ll be established! Just make a play, Dre!”

Deron was between me and the basket… I awoke as I approached the foul line.

The end.

derondwighthowardshaq

Posted 1 year, 4 months ago at 12:39 AM. Add a comment