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By N2H

Archive for the 'Basketball' Category

Monta, Monta! (And1, Warriors)

Dec 07, 2008 en basket-ball

(Si vous êtes nouveau ici, vous mai souhaite m'abonner à mon flux RSS / Atom. Merci de votre visite! - Michael)

Come2Play - Games006

C'est un sérieux belles ad-il de l'actuel And1.com page d'accueil. Je suppose que le fait que je suis un grand fan Warriors Monta et si, peut-être si je ne l'étaient pas, ce ne serait pas un gros problème.

Les Warriors sont jusqu'ici sérieusement puant la composent. Lorsque le baron signé, je me suis dit, "c'est cool" au début, mais maintenant je regrette que chaque jour qui passe, pas seulement parce que le baron est grand et les Warriors sucent, mais en sachant que Chris Mullin réellement voulu garder Baron, mais Robert Rowell refusé. Maintenant, avec le Baron est Clippers, et pas tout à fait baron-esque comme il était une fois, je pense que des deux côtés, le baron était destiné à être un guerrier, et maintenant il ne l'est pas. Tout comme J-Rich a été conçu pour être un guerrier, mais il ne l'est pas.

Cela met Monta dans le rôle de pression ultime. Il a de se développer en une superstar. C'est essentiellement 25 pts / 5 conseils / 5 assists/1.5 vole par match, sur l'efficacité de prise de vue comme un mini-Wade/Iverson. Combien de son succès a été de jouer avec Baron, nous verrons bien assez tôt. Si il ne peut pas faire le saut, les Warriors sont à la même place qu'ils ont toujours été mauvais, mais pas suffisant pour obtenir un ensemble de sélection # 1, mais pas tout bon non plus.

Bien que personne ne peut douter que les Warriors ont une foule de jeunes talents, alors que dans les 7 dernières années (Larry Hughes, Gilbert Arenas, Mike Dunleavy, Troy Murphy, Antawn Jamison, J-Rich, etc) est-ce pas déjà été dit sur Warrior chaque équipe? Le problème est essentiellement que l'ensemble de ces années, ils ont toujours aspiré (quand il importe), sauf pour une année fantastique (dernier) et 2 mois de kick-ass (éliminatoires de la course).

De plus, les Guerriers ont eu tous ces contrats de long après l'extension de Stephen Jackson et se Jamaal Crawford, ils sont donc essentiellement de la chance et un projet d'une superstar (peu probable) ou simplement être une victoire 35-42 équipe pour les 5 prochaines années . Même en supposant que l'Nelson bâtons et se développe autour de ces gars-là, et que le prochain entraîneur décent. Si Monta est un marqueur de 20 pt, qui peuvent passer un peu et ne pouvons pas défendre, c'est essentiellement le même ensemble de compétences a toute l'équipe. L'ironie dans cette Monta doit travailler à son développement est que, dans son année recrue, il a été mis en D, et utilisé pour ramasser le plus rapide de la garde au sol. Il était grand, il est donc étrange de soudain entendre qu'il n'est pas homme plus.

Je vais voir le jeu Warriors Raptors après Noël, et si Monta n'est pas de retour, je vais être très déçu, non seulement du point de vue d'un ventilateur, mais presque dans le sens de vouloir renoncer à cette équipe . J'ai parcouru près de 15 ans de jouer déjà pauvres, je ne pense pas que je peux passer par ce nouveau.

Je ne sais pas si je peux faire confiance à la longue que les Warriors de nouveau.

Mots clés: des

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Stephon Marbury, votre carrière est terminée

Nov 28, 2008 en basket-ball

Stephon Marbury, s'il vous plaît joindre à Steve Francis dans le chômage ligne.

image Pourquoi est-ce l'homme souriant?

Stephon Marbury, vous serez surpris de tout le monde oublie vite vous même l'existence.

Ne le crois pas, pense que vous serez toujours Starbury? Combien de gens se souviendront de Steve Francis, Stevie Franchise?. Il ya 5 ans, il fut l'un des top vote getters pour le All Star game. Maintenant, combien de personnes donnent une merde? Il n'est même pas vieux, il a seulement 31! Voilà comment vous êtes vieux. Pensez-y de cette façon, Steve Nash va être 35 dans quelques mois.

Obscurity vient beaucoup plus rapidement que la célébrité.

Ce qui est encore pire pour vous est que, à l'exception de Vancouver, le projet de refus, Steve Francis a toujours été censée être un bon gars.

Vous en revanche, n'a jamais eu une telle sterling rep. Vous avez atteint votre 30, mai-vous même pas de jeu à gauche (come on dude, on pourrait même pas jouer sur le temps Knicks), mai-vous être impliqué dans certaines histoires de cul sexe avec Isiah Thomas, et vous " es un éternel perdant. Comme étonnant que vous être en mai mixtapes (ci-dessous), vous avez rien fait, mais pour perdre 4 franchises, et vous avez même tué une entreprise de chaussures (en dépit de ce qui semble être de bonnes intentions).

Quel est le problème avec vous? Votre propre famille (look up Jamel et Thomas Sebastian Telfair) n'est pas de même en vous.

Oui, vous avez la sécurité financière (en millions de $ 20.84 cette année), mais allez, vous pensez vraiment que quelqu'un va vouloir de vous ajouter à sa liste l'année prochaine? Qui? Même pour 500K USD, qui va vraiment prendre un changement sur Starbury? Un perdant compatible avec un problème d'attitude qui, au 30, mai-être déjà fait (même s'il n'a pas été blessé?)

Rappelez-vous, Barry Bonds a eu une OBP du ,480 à l'âge de 43 ans et il ne peut toujours pas trouver un emploi en raison de ses problèmes. Que pouvez-vous faire?

Vous avez peut-être raison, ce n'est pas votre faute. Mais personne ne donne une merde sur un perdant, et maintenant, c'est ce que vous êtes, et vous êtes tout en œuvre pour mériter cette réputation.

Marbury suspendu un match, a dit de se tenir loin des Knicks au lundi:

NEW YORK - Stephon Marbury a été suspendu pour un match par les New York Knicks, qui sont tirés, il a refusé de jouer mercredi soir contre les Detroit Pistons.

Marbury a accosté un jeu de salaire et son salaire sera réduit de plus 1/110th, l'équipe a déclaré vendredi. Cela revient à 189.460 $ de son salaire de $ 20,84 millions pour cette saison.

Une source a déclaré à ESPN.com vendredi que Marbury a été dit de rester à l'écart de l'équipe au moins jusqu'à lundi, lorsque son état sera ré-adressée. Il ne sera pas pratique vendredi, ni va-t-il le bienvenu dans la maison vestiaire au Madison Square Garden quand le Knicks jouer le Golden State Warriors, le samedi soir.

"Un joueur de centre de l'obligation de fournir ses services professionnels lorsqu'il y est invité," président des opérations basket-ball de Donnie Walsh a déclaré dans l'équipe de l'annonce. "Parce qu'il a refusé la demande de l'entraîneur à jouer dans l'équipe du dernier match, nous n'avions pas d'autre choix que d'imposer des mesures disciplinaires."

Marbury a contesté les Knicks' allégation selon laquelle il a refusé de jouer, raconte le New York Post: «Je n'ai jamais dit [l'entraîneur Mike D'Antoni] Je ne vais pas jouer. Ces mots ne sortaient de ma bouche. C'est insubordination. "

Hal Biagas, un NBA Association des joueurs de procuration de conseiller Marbury, a déclaré à ESPN.com vendredi matin: "Nous estimons que la discipline imposée par les Knicks est sans fondement. Nous envisageons de déposer un grief."

Selon la région de New York, les médias, les Knicks étaient censés envoyer Marbury maison, tout en considérant des solutions au problème. Il s'agissait notamment de collage et de la suspension de lui; d'essayer de parvenir à un accord de rachat avec lui, ou simplement l'envoi de payer la maison avec lui jusqu'à ce qu'il puisse être échangé ou est libéré.

Dans une interview avec le Post a publié vendredi, Marbury a dit qu'il ne peut pas jouer pour D'Antoni, car il n'a pas confiance en lui.

"Nous avons besoin de se séparer de la relation», dit-il, selon le Post. "Le mariage est terminé. C'est un fait accompli."

Les Knicks sont actuellement à deux gardiens en bonne santé - Chris Duhon et Anthony Roberson - après Nate Robinson manquer mercredi le match avec une blessure à l'aine. Cuttino Mobley, acquis la semaine dernière dans le commerce avec les Los Angeles Clippers, n'a pas encore été autorisé par les médecins d'équipe.

Marbury, qui a déclaré qu'il soupçonnait D'Antoni a atteint le point que "je ne voudrais pas confiance en lui pour marcher avec mon chien dans la rue", a déclaré qu'il n'a pas créé le Knicks' situation actuelle, selon le Post.

»[D'Antoni] créé dès le début," a déclaré Marbury, selon le rapport. "Pourquoi at-il de créer cet environnement? Je suis prêt à jouer ici, a porté, en tenant le rôle j'étais prêt à le faire. Ils ont dit: 'Nous ne voulons pas de vous." Je ne suis pas dans les plans. Je l'ai dit , 'OK, pas de problème. "

«Je ne savais pas cela," a déclaré Marbury, selon le Post. «Je suis assis à l'intérieur de la voiture. Je ne suis pas derrière le volant dans le siège du conducteur. Je n'ai pas de contrôle de la roue de la voiture, si nous tourner ou aller tout droit. Je suis assise à l'arrière . Il ne va pas jouer moi, car mon cœur n'est pas en elle, parce que la façon dont il m'a traité. C'est sur lui, pas moi. "

Après Marbury aurait refusé de jouer contre les Pistons, coéquipier Quentin Richardson offert critiques sévères.

"Je ne considère pas lui mon coéquipier", a dit Richardson de Marbury mercredi. "Vous ne faites pas que de coéquipiers. Peu importe qui il essaie de tenir bon, à la fin de la journée, nous sommes là-bas à gauche."

Marbury a répondu à ces critiques dans son entretien avec le Post, en disant: "Quentin ne comprend pas ce qui se passe dans l'entreprise, mais je suis désolé qu'il se sent de cette façon."

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My Fantasy Basketball Team

Oct 26, 2008 en basket-ball

2008-10-26_12-04-28-762

Tout juste de terminer mon premier projet de fantasy de basket-ball, mis en place 40 $ pour jouer / perdre avec des amis.

Globalement, j'aime beaucoup cette équipe. Un de mes clés, c'est que je me concentre un peu plus sur le rang de Yahoo O-Rang. O-Rang est de 3 ans d'histoire du passé, il est donc plus stable en termes d'évaluation d'un joueur. Mais je dis regarder le classement de l'année dernière, beaucoup de bien. Par exemple, Mike Dunleavy a été classée 20ème l'année dernière et la plupart des gens le prendre dans les années 40. En supposant que vous ne pensez pas que c'est un hasard (je ne suis pas), vous pouvez obtenir beaucoup de valeur grâce à lui.

Je me suis roulé pour la cueillette David Lee 61e, mais l'année dernière, c'est exactement ce qu'il a été classé plus il va y avoir une entrée de cette année (passage entre les deux positions) et de jouer lourds minutes. Donc, si on lui suffit de lancer comme il l'a fait l'année dernière, j'ai eu valeur exacte, mais je m'attends à faire mieux, donc je pense que je n'ai amende.

Globalement, je suis concentré sur la valeur. Je pense que je mai faibles en fin de vole et de blocs, mais à se sentir bien dans tout le reste (il faudra voir, une fois le début de la saison). Cette équipe va être très efficace, pas de jeux de tir ou de chiffre d'affaires des machines de l'équipe.

J'ai eu la 2e pick globale, ce qui est exactement ce que je voulais, c'était que je voulais motif parce que j'avais le sentiment que je pouvais obtenir quelques bons pics à 18-22 dans la gamme que d'autres n'ont pas. J'ai choisi une équipe assez jeune, autres que Manu, je me suis senti une équipe s'est améliorée, et que vous allez voir si certains d'entre eux répondent au moins aux chiffres de l'an dernier, je vais être bien.

Voici comment j'ai choisi, avec un commentaire:

10 équipes, 10 tours, 100 joueurs:

  • # 2 choix (classé n ° 2 l'an dernier), Amare Stoudemire: le meilleur centre autour, joue deux positions, pas de réelle faiblesse. Je m'attends à ses stats de continuer à améliorer de l'année dernière
  • # 19 choix (classée n ° 12 l'an dernier), Danny Granger: Je pensais que c'était une grande valeur ici. Beaucoup de gens pensent qu'il va augmenter aussi, mais je serais heureux de résultats de l'an dernier. En fait, je voulais un PF ici, comme Dwight Howard ou de Al Jefferson, mais ils sont allés # 8 et # 13, m'a vraiment surprenant. Quelqu'un a également pris Nash à # 7, ce qui m'étonne.
  • # 22 choix (# 29 l'année dernière), Jose Calderon: maintenant qu'il va jouer 35 minutes par match, je pense qu'il va avoir aucun mal à gagner sa valeur et, au pire, faire de ces 7 places.
  • # 39 (# 24 l'an dernier), Rudy Gay: J'ai examiné mon 4ème/5ème cycle reprend vole, honnêtement.
  • # 42 (# 20 l'année dernière) Mike Dunleavy: J'ai toujours été un fan Dunleavy, pas que je pense que c'est bon, tiens simplement à lui succéder
  • # 59 (# 47 l'année dernière), Andris Biedrins: Andris est assez cohérent, je ne m'attends pas à aller beaucoup plus faible ou plus élevée, mais je ne prévoient 11 pts, 11 rebonds, 1-1,5 blocs à 60% de tir et 60 % de la ligne si il peut enfin 30-32 minutes par match.
  • # 61 (# 61 l'an dernier), David Lee
  • # 79 (# 224 l'an dernier, comme prévu # 71 cette année par Yahoo!), Randy Foye: ce fut plus difficile honnêtement mon choix. Il y avait d'autres bons joueurs dans cette gamme. Jason Terry a été choisi 95e, et j'ai envisagé de lui avec cette sélection. Foye est un peu d'un risque, mais il est certainement le démarrage de cette année, il aura ses chances. Il a certainement le talent et la capacité à remplir un grand nombre de données statistiques.
  • # 82 (# 17 l'an dernier), Manu Ginobili: c'est bien sûr un risque, mais d'après ce que j'ai lu Manu sera de retour avant Noël, et il est juste, il convient, à moi. Une autre chose à faire Manu, c'est que je ne voulais pas avoir à insister plus, qui allait prendre sur la première liste de Free Agent. Le reste de mon équipe est en fait assez (je n'ai pas de blessure sujettes Yaos) durable (tout le monde, s'il vous plaît ne sont pas blessés!) Donc je vais prendre la chance je peux assumer le risque de lui sur le banc.
  • # 99 (# 76 l'année dernière), Francisco Garcia: Je ne savais pas que Garcia a été blessé avant que le projet, mais il pourrait être de retour à la mi-novembre, donc pas d'une trop grande perte. Il est un autre gars, je m'attends à améliorer et à jouer de démarrage minutes. Il a beaucoup de compétences, et peut remplir les feuille de stat. Evidemment, il ya beaucoup de bons joueurs toujours là, et je pensais à le relâcher, mais ne savez pas qui vient d'obtenir.

Je pense que c'est génial que je suis arrivé (et a juste valeur), avec Rudy Gay, David Lee, et Calderon, comme si les gars étaient vraiment je favorisés. J'ai reçu 6 du top 29 des joueurs l'an dernier. Si chacun joue exactement (pas même d'améliorer) comme ils l'ont fait l'année dernière (pas fou blessures bien sûr, Manu est de retour avant janvier), je n'ai aucune raison de penser que je vous en dehors de la fin de l'argent (3e place pour obtenir un remboursement) , et je serais heureux que, compte tenu que je n'ai jamais joué.

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Fantasy, Shmantasy Basketball

Oct 15, 2008 en basket-ball

Préparation de mon premier fantasy (sur Yahoo! Le cas ailleurs) de basket-ball saison. Hai m'a invité à se joindre à lui et tout un tas de gens, je ne sais pas sans doute, mais qui ont créé l'équipe des noms de fantaisie comme joseph sPalin et Kimbo Rice. (Je devine que nous avons d'autres peuple vietnamien dans cette ligue) $ 20-40 par équipe (peut-être que je devrais demander à Hai de finaliser, je ne voudrais pas que les enjeux à coup aller plus élevé à la fin de l'année, lorsque j'ai perdu pour lui), 10 équipes en tout, je pense.

C'est compliqué. Bien sûr, je sais qui est généralement bonne dans le basket-ball et qui ne l'est pas, je peux lire toutes les colonnes, je veux des conseils sur l'Internet, lire des simulations des projets, etc, mais tout est d'une tonne de travail. Et rien, vraiment, se passe de battre l'expérience (en termes de plusieurs années de jouer la fantaisie) et / ou de la chance.

Tous les chiffres sont tellement compliquées, il est difficile de voir comment il s'adapte, mais je suis sûr que dès le début de la saison je vais facilement voir, oh, pas bon.

Peut-être que Yahoo devrait avoir une équipe de conseiller pour vous permettre de savoir où serait votre position dans chaque catégorie basée sur la dernière année de statistiques que vous le projet, qui est probablement assez critique de la saison.

Mon sentiment est que je crois que je ne puis ok et que je suis notoirement faible dans les catégories 1 ou 2, j'ai oublié.

Quoi qu'il en soit, avec mon projet de 10 jours, voici quelques "conseils" sur lesquels j'aime:

  • Jose Calderon, PG, Raptors: si vous suivez ce site, vous le savez je suis un grand fan. Je crois qu'il peut mettre en place des numéros Steve Nash (même% 's, un peu moins de points, beaucoup mieux A: A ratio) - après tout, qui aurait pensé Steve Nash Steve Nash mis en place des numéros avant de rejoindre la Suns. Calderon de porc peuvent désormais toutes les minutes, avec TJ Ford disparu, et il a une autre cible Jermaine O'Neal. J'espère que le pick up de 3e ronde (4ème tour serait génial)
  • Rudy Gay, SF, Grizzles: Peut-être cette année, Danny Granger (serait heureux de 3e ronde pour lui)

Je me rappelle toujours cette vidéo de Rick Majerus parler de Rudy Gay:

  • David Lee, PF / C, Knicks: Il a déjà beaucoup de statistiques, mais maintenant qu'il va commencer, attendez-lui d'aller fou, sérieux, je ne doute pas qu'il peut faire 15 pts et 12 rebonds / match, avec 50 % / 80% par rapport à la parole et la ligne, avec ajout de passage, et de faibles chiffres d'affaires. D'ailleurs, Lee est un fantastique joueur de basket-ball, pas seulement un gars fantastique, à chaque article, j'ai lu au sujet de son apport global, comme son + - dit qu'il est tout simplement mauvaise ass (j'irais 6e ronde pour lui, surtout parce qu'il est comme un crédit Center)
  • Kevin Durant, SF, Thunder: J'ai prévu de lui pour la fin de la 4e ronde. C'est un peu un risque parce que la position swingmen sont toujours chargées. Voici pourquoi je l'aime. C'est un monstre. Il est jeune. Il va être beaucoup mieux cette année que l'an dernier. Regardez la dernière moitié de son année recrue, et s'il améliore les un peu, vous pouvez être heureux: 22 points par match, 48% à partir du plancher, 6 FTA @ 88% de la ligne, 5 rebonds, 3 passes, 1 voler, ,75 blocs. Les faiblesses sont les 3 balles (il peut tourner, juste besoin de faire preuve de retenue, comme il l'a fait dans la seconde moitié) et les chiffres d'affaires (3 par match). Mais je pense que l'amélioration de Jeff Green, Russell Westbrook et à venir, il peut faire le saut.

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Do You Remember Felipe Lopez?

Oct 10, 2008 en basket-ball

Lopez_stj

Il ya des chances que vous ne l'avez jamais su qui il était, mais quand cette couverture venir sur Sports Illustrated, même si j'étais probablement 12 à l'époque, c'est à ce moment que j'ai découvert sur lui et se souviennent encore. Si il ya une histoire de la façon dont vous ne sait jamais qui peut le couper quand il s'agit de l'athlétisme, il avait soit.

Il a été avant Lebron Lebron, Kobe, même Kevin Garnett. Un collège des nouveaux entrants qui ont débarqué sur la couverture de Sports Illustrated. 1993 a été quand on a assez d'être la classe moyenne supérieure d'avoir un PC, ou même plus riches d'avoir un modem d'ordinateur et l'accès au réseau, avant que Windows 95. Il fut un temps les gens pouvaient encore dire qu'ils aimaient Michael Jackson en public.

S'il avait été né 5 ans plus tard, Lopez aurait été un top 5 du projet de choisir l'école secondaire. Au lieu de cela, il est resté à l'école pendant 4 ans et a été félicité pour cela par la récolte à la fin du premier tour, de perdre des millions de dollars dans le processus. Il maxed de son potentiel encore trop tôt, et le battage médiatique n'a jamais été remplie.

Voici un excellent article sur le passé de la légende-à-être-que-jamais-a:

Shoot the Moon

par Susan Orlean
The New Yorker
22 mars 1993

http://www.susanorlean.com/articles/shoot_the_moon.html

Les hommes blancs en costume Felipe Lopez suivre partout où il va. Felipe vit dans Mott Haven, dans le South Bronx. Il est chercheur à l'école secondaire de riz, qui est au coin de la 124e Rue et Lenox Avenue, à Harlem, et il joue de la garde de l'école équipe de basket-ball, les Raiders Rice. Les hommes blancs sont omniprésents. Elles ne manquez une de Felipe de jeux ou de tournois. Ils ont absolument rappeler de ses meilleures minutes de jeu. Ce sont les autorités sur son état physique. Ils admirent ses pieds, qui sont grandes et en forme de ponton, et ses poignets, qui ont un lâche, soyeux motion. Il n'ya pas longtemps, je me suis assis avec les hommes blancs, à un jeu entre Rice et All Hallows High School. Mon mi-temps de loisirs a été l'écoute d'un débat entre deux d'entre eux - un collège et un scout Westchester entrepreneur qui est un grand fan de basket-school - si Felipe a grandi sur un demi-pouce de Noël. «Je sais que ce jeune," le scout a dit que le deuxième semestre a commencé. "Un demi-pouce n'est pas quelque chose que je ne manquez". Les hommes blancs pensent que Felipe est la meilleure école secondaire de basket-ball dans le pays. Ils sont souvent comparer à Michael Jordan, et les paris, il deviendra l'un des plus grands joueurs de basket-ball pour sortir de la ville de New York depuis Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Cette conjecture leur fournit suspendu, sarriette enthousiasme et une bonne et heureuse prémonition. Felipe est comme la suite de traîner avec quelqu'un que vous pensez qui va gagner à la loterie un jour.

À l'heure actuelle, Felipe est de six pieds cinq. Il aimerait être de six pieds sept. Ses chaussures sont de taille 12. Il achète son pantalon à gros et grands magasins-hommes. Ses oreilles, qui sont de petits et de grande série, look exagérément petite, parce qu'il garde ses cheveux rasés à proximité de son crâne. Il a les yeux bruns noirâtres et un grand, vive la langue - je sais ce que parce que sa langue parfois bâtons quand il joue dur, et contre sa peau, qui est très sombre, il ressemble à une rose fanion. Sa voix est lisier, tous ses mots sont tour bords. Il est maigre comme un pôle de haricots, et depuis longtemps les tibias et les avant-bras mince et tranchant, ciselé genoux. Ses mains sont gigantesques. En descendant la rue, il reçoit beaucoup de regards en raison de sa hauteur, mais il n'est certainement pas un cheval d'un enfant - et non l'un de ces hommes de taille des garçons qui étoffé en cinquième année et les adultes dont les formes sont mises en place par la temps, ils sont treize. Il est tout plan: il ne ressemble pas à un étiré-out personne de taille moyenne - il ressemble à un croquis d'une grande personne qui n'a pas encore été po couleur

Sur la cour, le corps de Felipe semble particulièrement bien organisé. Ses mouvements sont rapides et liquide. Je l'ai vu naviguer horizontalement à travers l'air. High-school acteurs sont souvent rudes et l'exploitation forestière, et surtout tirer les pieds à plat, mais Felipe a un élégant jeu dynamique. Il flotte autour de la pointe de la cour, puis les ressorts sur la balle et sprints loin. Quand il se déplace vers le panier, il semble que, s'il était patinage de vitesse, et puis, soudain, il s'élève dans l'air, demeure, et les pousses. Son tir est lisse et belle, avec un arc Loopy. Actuellement, il en moyenne vingt-six points et neuf rebonds par match, et il est à portée de tous les temps du lycée score record de l'État de New York. Il a une grande cour vision, mains douces, d'un bon tir de trois points, et la vitesse à l'intérieur de la balle et faible. Il est l'homme le plus rapide dans le fast break. Il peut manipuler la balle comme un point de garde, et il bat les acteurs plus importants de la défensive, en raison de sa rapidité et son corps de contrôle. Quand il n'est pas à un tribunal, même si, de la façon dont il marche est complexe et bâclée. Il a l'air de marcher de cette façon sur la finalité, à la lumière de sa taille et de dissimuler sa grâce.

Avant, j'ai rencontré Felipe, les gens m'ont dit, je le trouve mignon. Tout ce que je savais de lui - qu'il est un garçon, qu'il est un jeune garçon, qu'il est de six pieds cinq adolescentes jock-boy - fait de cette très difficile à croire, mais il s'avère être vrai. Il est en fait la plus douce personne que je connais. À un certain moment au cours de notre temps ensemble, il m'est venu à l'esprit qu'il pourrait être un grand Hustler basketball, car il semble naïve et désireux - de la personnalité idéale pour attirer la concurrence sur les gros plans de basket-ball. Il se trouve qu'il n'est pas le moins un peu de Hustler. Mais il est également loin d'être aussi naïf et avide comme il apparaît. Il m'a déjà dit qu'il aime les gens pensent de lui comme un clown, car alors ils ne pourront jamais l'accuser d'être un snob. Il a dit aussi qu'il aime être sympathique à tous, afin que personne ne se rendra compte qu'il est de déterminer qui il peut avoir confiance.

Felipe ne parlait pas l'anglais à tous quand il a déménagé à New York de la République dominicaine, il ya quatre ans, mais il a vite repris certaines phrases, dont «l'écrasement des conseils," "il est en écoute,« obtenir de l'enfer la peinture ", et" oh, mon Dieu. " Maintenant, il parle l'anglais confortablement, avec un accent dominicaine riches - les mots et cliquez sur tumble ensemble, d'être jetés comme des pierres dans un polisseur. "Oh, mon Dieu" reste son expression favorite. C'est une expression qui révèle l'utilité de sa modestie, ses manières, sa candeur et son état d'esprit habituel, qui est une agréable surprise et guileless remarquable à la nature de sa vie. Je l'ai entendu l'utiliser pour des commentaires sur l'espoir qu'il sera un jour un riche et célèbre joueur de la NBA, et sur le fait qu'il a été récemment proposé un demi-million de dollars par les gens de l'Espagne à mettre de côté ses devoirs et de venir jouer dans leur ligue, et sur le fait qu'il est déjà considéré comme un séminales nationaux à l'exportation par les citoyens de la République dominicaine, qui comptent sur lui pour être le premier dominicaine dans la NBA, et sur le fait qu'il est de plus en plus vite, afin qu'il une fois refusé de reconnaître son propre pantalon. Parfois, il utilise l'expression dans des circonstances où ses coéquipiers et des amis peut-être enclin à dire quelque chose de plus dynamique. Une nuit, cet hiver, j'ai été à l'école, assis autour avec Felipe et ses coéquipiers, à regarder une cassette vidéo de l'ancien Michael Jordan saillants. The tape had been edited for maximum excitement, and most of the boys on the team were responding with more and more baroque constructions of foul language. At one point, Jordan was shown leaping past the Celtics center Robert Parish, and someone said, "Yo, feature that, bro! He’s busting the Chief’s face."

"Busting his fucking face," another one said.

"Busting his goddam big-ass face."

"He’s got it going on. Now Jordan’s going to bust his foul-loving big-ass mama’s-boy dope black ass."

On the tape, Jordan slammed the ball through the hoop and Parish crumpled to the floor. While the other boys were applauding and swearing, Felipe moved closer to the television and then said, admiringly, "Oh, my goodness."

Felipe’s life is unusually well populated. He is very close to his family. He is named Luis Felipe, after his father. His older brother Anthony is one of the managers of the Rice High School team. Anthony is a square-shouldered, avid man of twenty-five who played amateur basketball in the Dominican Republic and in New York until his ankle was badly injured in a car accident. Until last month, when he was laid off, he worked at a Manhattan printshop and had a boss who appreciated basketball and tolerated the time Anthony spent with the team. Anthony is rarely away from Felipe’s side, and when he is there he is usually peppering him with directions and commentary in a hybrid of Spanish and English: "Felipe, mal, muy mal! Como estas you go so aggressive to a lay-up?" A couple of times a month, Anthony makes the rounds of Felipe’s teachers to see if his B average is holding up. "If he’s not doing well, then I go back and let my people know," Anthony says. "It’s nice, it’s beautiful to be a superstar, but if he doesn’t work hard he doesn’t play." Once, Felipe’s father forbade him to travel to a tournament, because he had neglected to wash the dishes. This made Felipe cry, but in hindsight he is philosophical about it. "He was right," he says. "I didn’t do my dishes." Felipe is also close to Lou DeMello, his coach at Rice, and to Dave Jones, his coach with the Gauchos, a basketball organization in the Bronx which he plays for during the summer, and to Louis d’Almeida, the founder of the Gauchos. Felipe says he sometimes gets basketball advice from his mother, Carmen, and from Maura Beattie, a teacher at Rice who tutors him in English. Neither of them plays. "You know what, though?" Felipe says. "They know something." His primary hobby is sleeping, but his other pastime is talking on the phone for hours to his girlfriend, who is an American, a resident of Brooklyn, and a basketball fan.

Sometimes his life seems overpopulated. He has so far received four crates of letters from college coaches and recruiters pitching woo at him. Some make seductive mention of the large seating capacities of their arenas. Basketball-camp directors call regularly, saying that they would like Felipe Lopez to be in attendance. Officials of Puerto Rico’s summer basketball league have requested the honor of his presence this summer. There are corporate marketing executives who would very much like to be his friends. Not everyone crowding into his life wishes him well. There are people who might wittingly or unwittingly mislead him. Felipe has been warned by his father, for example, never to have sex without a condom, because some girls who pretend to like him might really have appraised him as a lucrative paternity suit. Last year, Felipe and another player were invited to appear in a Nintendo television commercial, and the commercial nearly cost them their college athletic eligibility, because no one had warned them that accepting money for a commercial was against NCAA regulations. There are people who are jealous of Felipe. There are coaches whose hearts he has broken, because they’re not at one of the colleges Felipe is interested in — Florida State, Syracuse, St. John’s, Seton Hall, North Carolina, Georgia Tech, UCLA, Indiana, Arizona, Ohio State, and Kansas. There are coaches who put aside all other strategy except Keep Felipe Lopez Away from the Ball. Some opponents will go out of their way to play him hard. There are kids on his own team who have bitter moments about Felipe. And there are contrarians, who would like to get in early on a backlash and look clairvoyant and hype-resistant by declaring him, at only eighteen and only a junior in high school, already overrated. His response to all this is to be nice to everyone. I have never seen him angry, or even peeved, but when he isn’t playing well his entire body droops and he looks completely downcast. It is an alarming sight, because he looks so hollowed out anyway.

"Wait till this kid gets a body," Coach DeMello likes to say. During practice, DeMello will sometimes jump up and down in front of Felipe and yell, "Felipe! Make yourself big!" The best insult I ever heard DeMello hurl at Felipe was during a practice one afternoon when Felipe was playing lazily. DeMello strode onto the court, looked up at Felipe, and said acidly, "You’re six-five, but you’re trapping like you’re five-eleven." Anthony Lopez can hardly wait until Felipe gets a body, so sometimes during the off-season he will take him to the steep stairway at the 155th Street subway station, in the Bronx, and make him run up and down the hundred and thirty steps a few times to try to speed the process along. Felipe is less than crazy about this exercise, although he appreciates the advantages that more bulk might give him: "When I first came here, I could tell the guys were looking at me and thinking, Who is this skinny kid? Then they would say, ‘Hey, let’s’ — excuse my language — ‘bust his ass.’ "

Felipe’s body is an unfinished piece of work. It gets people thinking. Tom Konchalski, a basketball scout who follows high schools in the Northeast, suggested recently that if Felipe ever wanted to give up basketball he could be a world-class sprinter. Coach DeMello said to me once that, much as he hated to admit it, he thought Felipe had the perfect pitcher’s body. Felipe’s mother told me that even though Felipe is now a fast-break expert, she thought he should sharpen his ability to penetrate to the basket and go for the big finish — say, a windmill slam dunk. I once asked her whose style of play she wanted Felipe to emulate, and she pointed to a picture of Michael Jordan and said, in Spanish, "If he would eat more, he could be like the man who jumps."

Felipe’s father, who played amateur baseball in the Dominican Republic, thought he saw in his son the outlines of a first baseman, and steered Felipe toward baseball when he was little. But Felipe was hit in the nose by a wild throw, and decided that, in spite of its popularity in the Dominican Republic and the success Dominican ballplayers have had in the United States, baseball was not his game. Maura Beattie, his English tutor, is an excellent tennis player, and one day, just for fun, she took Felipe with her to the courts. She was curious to see if someone with Felipe’s build and abilities could master a racquet sport. He beat her. It was the first time he’d held a tennis racquet in his life. Another time, the two of them went to play miniature golf in Rockaway, and Felipe, who had never held a putter before, made a hole in one. Some of this prowess can be attributed to tremendous physical coordination and the biomechanical advantages of being tall and thin and limber. Felipe Lopez is certainly a born athlete. But he may also be one of those rarer cases — a person who is just born lucky, whose whole life seems an effortless conveyance of dreams, and to whom other people’s dreams adhere. This aura of fortune is so powerful that it is easy to forget that for the time being, and for a while longer, Felipe Lopez is still just an immigrant teenager who lives in a scary neighborhood in the South Bronx and goes to high school in Harlem, where bad things happen every day.

Currently, there are five hundred and eighteen thousand male high-school basketball players in the United States. Of these, only nineteen thousand will end up on college teams — not even four per cent. Less than one per cent will play for Division One colleges — the most competitive. The present NBA roster has three hundred and sixty-seven players, and each year only forty or fifty new players are drafted. What these numbers forebode is disappointment for many high-school basketball players. That disappointment is disproportionate among black teenagers. A recent survey of high-school students by Northeastern University’s Center for the Study of Sport in Society reported that fifty-nine per cent of black teenage athletes thought they would continue to play on a college team, compared with thirty-nine per cent of white teen-agers. Only sixteen per cent of the white athletes expected that they would play for the pros; forty-three per cent of the blacks expected that they would, and nearly half of all the kids said they thought it would be easier for black males to become professional basketball players than to become lawyers or doctors. Scouts have told me that everyone on the Rice team will probably be able to get a free college education by playing basketball, and so far all the players have received recruiting letters from several schools. The scouts have also said that it will require uncommonly hard work for any of the boys on the team other than Felipe to ascend to the NBA

Every so often, scouts’ forecasts are wrong. Some phenomenal high-school players get injured or lazy or fat or drug-addled or bored, or simply level off and then vanish from the sport, and, by the same token, a player of no particular reputation will once in a while emerge from out of nowhere and succeed. That was the case with the NBA all-stars Karl Malone and Charles Barkley, who both played through high school in obscurity; but most other NBA players were standouts starting in their early teens. Most people who follow high-school basketball teams that are filled with kids from poor families and rough neighborhoods encourage the kids to put basketball in perspective, to view it not as a catapult into some fabulous, famous life but as something practical — a way to get out, to get an education, to learn the way around a different, better world. The simple fact that only one in a million people in this country will ever play for the NBA is often pointed out to the kids, but that still doesn’t seem to stop them from dreaming.

Being told that you might be that one person in a million would deform many people’s characters, but it has not made Felipe cynical or overly interested in himself. In fact, his blitheness can be almost unnerving. One evening when we were together, I watched him walk past a drug deal on 125th Street and step off the curb into traffic, and then he whiled away an hour in a fast-food restaurant where several ragged, hostile people repeatedly pestered him for change. He hates getting hurt on the court, but out in the world he is not very careful with himself. When you are around him, you can’t help feeling that he is a boy whose body is a savings account, and it is one that is uninsured. But being around him is also to be transported by his nonchalant confidence about luck — namely, that it happens because it happens, and that it will happen for Felipe, because things are meant to go his way. This winter, he and the Rice Raiders were in Las Vegas playing in a tournament. One evening, a few of them went into a casino and attached themselves to the slot machines. Felipe’s first quarter won him a hundred quarters. Everyone told him to stop while he was ahead, but he continued. "I wanted to play," he says. "I thought, I had nothing before I started, now I have something, so I might as well play. So I put some more quarters in, and — oh, my goodness! — I won twelve hundred more quarters. What can I say?"

At three o’clock one afternoon this winter, I went over to the high school to watch Felipe and the Rice team practice. I hadn’t met Felipe before that afternoon, but I had heard a lot about him from friends who follow high-school basketball. As it happens, Felipe’s reputation often precedes him. Before he moved to this country, he was living in Santiago, in the Dominican Republic. The Lopez family had been leaving the Dominican Republic in installments for thirty years. A grandmother had moved to New York in the sixties, followed by Felipe’s father in 1982, and then, in 1986, by his mother and Anthony. For three years, Felipe stayed in the Dominican Republic with another older brother, Anderson, and his sister, Sayonara. At age eight, he started playing basketball in provincial leagues, sometimes being bumped up to older age groups because he was so good. He already had a following. "I would hear from a lot of Dominicans about how good he was getting," Anthony says now. "It made me curious. When I left him in the Dominican Republic, he was just a little kid who I would boss around. He was my — you know, my delivery guy." When more visas were obtained, in 1989, Felipe and Sayonara moved to New York. Anthony took Felipe to a playground near the family’s apartment and challenged him one-on-one, decided that the rumors were true, and then took him to try out for the Gauchos. Lou d’Almeida says that people were already talking about Felipe by then. Many high-school coaches had intelligence on Felipe by the time he started school. Lou DeMello first saw him in a citywide tournament for junior-high players. Felipe was in the Midget Division. "He looked like a man among boys," DeMello says now. "If I could have, I would have taken him then and started him then on the Rice varsity. I swear to God. At the time, he was in eighth grade."

Rice High School is a small all-boys Catholic school, which was founded in 1938 and is run by the Congregation of Christian Brothers. It is the only Catholic high school still open in Harlem. Currently, it has about four hundred students. Tuition is two thousand dollars a year, which many of the students can afford only with the help of scholarship money from private sponsors, including some basketball fans. At school, students have to wear a tie, real trousers, and real shoes, not sneakers. There is also a prohibition against beepers. The school is in a chunky brick building with a tiny, blind entrance on 124th Street, close to some Chinese luncheonettes, some crack dealers, and some windswept vacant tenements. A lot of unregulated commerce is conducted on the sidewalks nearby, and last year a business dispute in an alley across from the school was resolved with semi-automatic weapons, but the building itself emanates gravity and calm. Inside, it is frayed but sturdy and pleasant. There is an elevator, but it often isn’t working; the gym, which occupies most of the top two floors of the school, is essentially a sixth-floor walkup. The basketball court is only fifty-five feet long instead of the usual ninety-four, and the walls are less than a foot away from the sidelines. It would qualify as regulation-size in Lilliput. Rice has to play its games in a borrowed gym — usually the Gauchos’ facility, in the Bronx.

At the time Coach DeMello first heard about Felipe Lopez, the Rice Raiders had a win-loss record of eight and thirteen, tattered ten-year-old uniforms, and an inferiority complex. Catholic League basketball in New York City is a particularly bad place for any of these. Since the early eighties, the Catholic schools in New York have had ferocious rivalries, fancy shoes and uniforms from friendly sporting-goods companies, and most of the best players in the city. College teams and the NBA are loaded with New York City Catholic League alumni: Jamal Mashburn, now at Kentucky, attended Cardinal Hayes; the Nets’ Kenny Anderson and the Houston Rockets’ Kenny Smith went to Archbishop Molloy; the Pacers’ Malik Sealy, Syracuse’s Adrian Autry, and North Carolina’s Brian Reese all went to St. Nicholas of Tolentine; the Pistons’ Olden Polynice attended All Hallows; Chris Mullin, of Golden State, went to Xaverian; Mark Jackson, now of the Clippers, went to Bishop Loughlin. Rice had won the city Catholic-school championship in 1966 and proceeded to become steadily undistinguished over the next few decades. Four years ago, Lou DeMello took over as head coach. First, he persuaded Nike — and later Reebok and Converse — to donate shoes and uniforms to the team. Then he started scouting Midget Division players who might have a future at Rice. The Gaucho coaches have a cordial relationship with DeMello and began pointing players like Felipe his way. Last year, the Rice Raiders reached the finals of the city championship. This year, they are ranked in the top twenty high schools nationally — the first time they have been ranked there for twenty-seven years.

Coach DeMello is short and trim, and has bright eyes and a big mustache and an air of uncommon intensity, like someone who is just about to sneeze. His usual attire consists of nylon warmup suits that are very generously sized. The first time I saw him in street clothes, he looked as if someone had let his air out. He speaks with a New York accent, but in fact he was born in Brazil, and played soccer there. His motivational specialty is the crisp reprobation wrapped around a sweet hint of redemptive possibility — stick before carrot. When addressing the team, he is prone to mantra-like repetitions of his maxims, as in "Listen up. Listen up. I want you to go with your body. Go with your body. Go with your body. I want you to keep your foot in the paint. Your foot in the paint. Your foot in the paint. In the paint. And put the ball on the floor. The ball on the floor. On the floor."

This particular afternoon, Coach DeMello was especially hypnotic. The team was getting ready for its first out-of-town tournament of the year, the Charm City/Big Apple Challenge, in Baltimore, which would be played in the Baltimore Arena and televised on a cable channel. The Raiders would be facing Baltimore Southern High School, one of the best teams in the area. When I arrived at the Rice gym, the Raiders had been scrimmaging for an hour. Now, during a break, Coach DeMello was chanting strategy. "You guys are ina funk," he said. Someone dropped the ball, and it made an elastic poing! sound and rolled to the wall. "Gerald, hold the ball," DeMello went on. He clasped his hands behind his back. "Hold the ball. OK You guys are in a funk. You got to get your head in the game. Your head in the game. We’re going up against a serious team in Baltimore. They do a hell of a job on help. A hell of a job. A. Hell. Of. A. Job. We need leaders on the floor. Leaders on the floor. All we want to do is contain. Contain. Contain. So you better hit the boards. Hit the boards. The boards."

Everyone nodded. The Rice Raiders are Felipe, Reggie Freeman, Yves Jean, Gerald Cox, Melvin McKey, Scientific Mapp, Gary Saunders, Gil Eagan, Kojo Lockhart, Rodney Jones, Robert Johnson, and Jamal Livingston. Melvin, the point guard, is usually called Ziggy. Jamal, the center, is known as Stretch. Gerald, who also plays center, is known as G-Money. Scientific, the reserve point guard, is known as Science. All of them are known, familiarly, as B, which is short for "bro," which is short for "brother." During practice, they are solemn and focussed. During a game, they are ardent and intense, as if their lives depended on it. Before and after each game, they stand in a circle, make a stack of their right hands, and shout, "One, two, three, Rice! Four, five, six, family!"

Most of the Raiders live in the Bronx or upper Manhattan. Once, after a game, I rode in the van with an assistant coach as he dropped the team members off at their homes. A few of them lived in plain, solid-looking housing projects and some in walkups that, at least from the outside, looked bleak. No one lived in a very nice building. Some of the kids have families that come to all their games and monitor their schoolwork; some have families that have fallen apart. Six of the twelve live with only their mothers. Ziggy lives with his uncle, and the five others have a mother and a father at home. Each of them has at least one person somewhere in his life who arranges to send him to attend a disciplined and serious-minded parochial school. Sometimes it’s not a parent; the Gauchos, for instance, send a number of basketball players to school. The coaches and teachers I met at Rice are white. Most of the teachers are Catholic brothers. The basketball team is all black, and none of its members are Catholic, although Gary told me once that he was thinking of converting, because "being Catholic seems like a pretty cool thing." There is currently a debate in the Catholic Church about financing schools that used to have Catholic students from the surrounding parish but are now largely black and non-Catholic, their purpose having shifted, along with neighborhood demographics, from one of service to the Church to one of contribution to the inner city. The debate may also have a flip side. I had heard that for a time one player’s father, a devout Muslim, was unhappy that his son was being coached by a white man. But Coach DeMello resisted being drawn into an argument about something no one on the team ever paid attention to, and the crisis eventually passed. I didn’t think of race very often while I spent time with the team. I thought more about winning and losing, and about how your life could be transformed from one to the other if you happened to be good at a game.

The seniors on the team are Yves Jean, Gerald Cox, and Reggie Freeman. Yves has signed a letter of intent to go to Pitt-Johnstown, which is a Division Two school; Gerald and Reggie are going to the University of South Carolina and the University of Texas, respectively, which are both in Division One. Yves grew up in Lake Placid. He was more fluent in ice fishing than in basketball when he moved to New York, but he is big and strong and has learned the game well enough, even as a second language. Usually, he looks pleasantly amazed when he makes a successful play. Gerald and Reggie are handsome, graceful players who would have been bigger stars this year if it weren’t for Felipe. Gerald is dimpled and droll and flirtatious. Reggie has a long, smooth poker face and consummate cool. At times, he looks rigid with submerged disappointment. I remember Coach DeMello’s telling me that when Reggie was a sophomore he was waiting patiently for Jerry McCullough, then the senior star, to leave for college, so that at last he would be the team’s main man. Then Felipe came. Reggie and Felipe now have a polite rapport that fits together like latticework over their rivalry.

The team is a changeable entity. Some of the kids have bounced on and off the squad because of their grades. One of the players has had recurring legal problems. The girlfriend of another one had a baby last year, and because of that he missed so much school that for some time he wasn’t allowed to play on the team. When I first started hanging around with the Raiders, Rodney Jones wasn’t on the roster, having had discipline problems and some academic troubles. Sometimes the boys get sick of each other. They practice together almost every day for several hours; they travel together to games and tournaments, which can sometimes last as long as two weeks; and they see each other all day in classrooms, at the Gaucho gym, and on the street. Usually, they have an easy camaraderie. During the other times, as soon as they are done with practice they quickly head their own ways.

"Are you guys listening to me? Are you listening?" DeMello was saying. He was now joined by Bobby Gonzalez, an assistant coach, who was nodding and murmuring "Uh-huh" after everything he said. Gonzalez handed DeMello a basketball. DeMello curled it to his left side, and then held his right hand up, one finger in the air, as if he were checking wind direction. "One more thing. One more thing. If there’s one player you guys want to be looking up to right now, I’ll tell you who it is."

"Uh-huh," Bobby Gonzalez said.

"That guy is Reggie Freeman. Reggie Freeman." No expression crossed Reggie’s face. Felipe, who was standing on the other side of the circle, flexed his neck, rotated his shoulders, and then stood still, a peaceful expression on his face. "Reggie is the most unselfish player here. He is the most unselfish. I want you to remember that. He’s grown a lot. That’s who you should be looking at. OK"

"Uh-huh."

DeMello bounced the ball hard, signalling the end of practice. The boys circled and counted: "One, two, three, Rice! Four, five, six, family!" They straggled out of the gym, talking in small groups.

"I never been to Baltimore."

"Let me ask you something. You think Larry Bird’sa millionaire?"

"Larry Bird? I don’t know. A millionaire. Magic’sa millionaire."

"Magic’sa millionaire, and he didn’t have fifty-nine cents to buy himself a little hat and now he’s going to die. The man’s stupid."

"I don’t know if Larry Bird’sa millionaire. I do know he’s never been to Harlem, and he’s never done the Electric Slide."

Felipe on his development as a player:

"Back in my country, I was just a little guy. I tried to dunk, but I couldn’t. I tried and I tried. Then, one day, I dunked. Oh, my goodness. Three months later, I was dunking everything, every way — with two hands, backwards, backwards with two hands. I can do a three-sixty dunk. It’s easy. You know, you jump up backwards with the ball and then spin around while you’re in the air — and pow! I’m working all the time on my game. If Coach DeMello says he wants me to work on my ball handling, then I just work at it, work at it, work at it, until it’s right. In basketball, you always are working, even on the things you already know.

"When I come to this country, I was real quiet, because I didn’t speak any English, so all I did was dunk. On the court, playing, I had to learn the words for the plays, but you don’t have to talk, so I was OK My coach used his hands to tell me what to do, and then I learned the English words for it. There aren’t too many Spanish kids at school. I know a lot of kids, though. I meet kids from all over the country at tournaments and at summer camps. If you do something good, then you start meeting people, even if you don’t want to. Sometimes it’s bouncing in my head that people are talking about me, saying good things, and that some people are talking about me and saying bad things, saying, like, ‘Oh, he thinks he’s all that,’ but that’s life. That’s life. I don’t like when it’s bouncing in my head, but I just do what I’m supposed to do. I’m quick. I broke the record for the fifty-yard dash when I was in junior high school — I did it in five point two seconds, when the record was five point five seconds. I also got the long-jump record. It feels natural when I do these things. In basketball, I like to handle the ball and make the decisions. I can play the big people, because of my quickness. But I got to concentrate or the ball will go away from me. At basketball camp, I’m always the craziest guy — people always are walking around saying, ‘Hey, who’s that Dominican clown?’ But on the court I don’t do any fooling around. I got to show what I got.

"In life, I don’t worry about myself. My brother will run defense for me. I got my family. Some kids here, I see them do drugs, messing around, wasting everything, and I see the druggies out on the street, and I just, I don’t know, I don’t understand it. That’s not for me. I got a close family, and I got to think about my family, and if I can do something that will be good for my whole family, then I got to do it. I think about my country a lot — I want to go there so bad. In Santiago, everyone knows about me and wants to see me play now. If I’m successful, the way everyone talks about that, I’d like a big house there in Santiago, where I could go for a month or two each year and just relax."

After practice, Felipe and I walked down 125th Street in a cold rain. First, he bought new headphones for his tape player from a Ghanaian street peddler, and then we stopped at Kentucky Fried Chicken to eat a pre-dinner dinner before heading home. He was dressed in his school clothes — a multicolored striped shirt, a purple-and-blue flowered tie, and pleated, topstitched baggy black cotton pants — and had on a Negro League baseball cap, which he was wearing sideways and at a jaunty angle. In his book bag were some new black Reebok pump basketball shoes; everyone on the team had been given a pair for the Baltimore tournament. Felipe was in a relaxed mood. He has travelled to and played in big tournaments so often that he now takes them in stride. He has become something of a tournament connoisseur. One of his favorite places in the world is southern France, where he played last spring with the Gauchos. He liked the weather and the countryside and the fact that by the end of the tour French villagers were crowding into the gyms and chanting his name. This particular evening, he was also feeling pleased that he had finished most of the homework he needed to do before leaving for Baltimore, which consisted of writing an essay for American history on Brown v. Board of Education and the Fifteenth Amendment, preparing an annotated periodic table of the elements, and writing two poems for his Spanish class.

One of his poems was called "Los Dientes de Mi Abuela," which translates as "The Teeth of My Grandmother." Sitting in Kentucky Fried Chicken, he read it to me: " ‘Conservando la naturaleza se ve en aquella mesa los dientes de mi abuela, que los tenia guardados para Navidad.’" He looked up from his notebook and gestured with a chicken wing. "This is about an old grandmother who is saving her special teeth for Christmas. In my country, it’s funny, old people will go around without their teeth. So in the poem the grandmother is saving the teeth for Christmas, when she’ll be eating a big dinner. The teeth are brilliant and shiny. Then she gets impatient and uses them to eat a turkey at Thanksgiving — ‘GRRRT . . . suena la mordida de la abuela al pavo.’ " The other poem Felipe had written was about a man about to enter prison or some other gloomy passage in his life. It is called "La Primera y ‘Ultima Vez . . ." As he began reading it, an argument broke out in front of the restaurant between a middle-aged woman in a cream-colored suit and two little boys who were there on their own. First, the boys were just sassy, and then they began yelling that the woman was a crack addict. She balled up a napkin and threw it at them, shouting, "Why don’t you respect your elders? What are you doing out at night all alone? Why don’t you get your asses home and watch television or read a fucking book?" Felipe kept reciting his poem, raising his voice over the commotion. When he finished, he said, "It’sa sadder poem than the one about the grandmother. I like writing poems. In school, I like to write if it’s in Spanish, and I like to draw, and I like math. I’m good at math. I like numbers. How do I write the poems? I don’t know how. They just come to me."

Done with dinner, we went back out onto 125th Street and caught a cab up to Felipe’s apartment. The apartment was in a brick walkup, on a block with half a playground, a bodega, some unclaimed auto parts, and the depopulated stillness of urban decay. Walking up the four flights to the apartment, we passed an unchaperoned German shepherd napping in the vestibule, a stack of discarded Chinese menus, and someone’s garbage, which had toppled over in a doorway. Felipe took the stairs three at a time. He used to dribble up and down the staircase until the neighbors complained that it was driving them crazy. For that reason and many others, the Lopezes were looking forward to moving as soon as they possibly could. Ironically, Felipe has been discouraged from playing in Puerto Rico this summer, on the ground that the basketball league there has a reputation for attracting prostitutes and drug use, when the fact is that spending the summer in Puerto Rico would help him get out of a neighborhood that attracts prostitutes and drug use.

One reason I decided to go home with Felipe was that I thought it might reveal something I hadn’t yet seen in him — impatience or embarrassment at living a very humble life when he has been assured that such a rich and celebrated one is virtually in his grasp. That turned out to be not at all the case. In fact, Felipe loves to have people come over to his apartment. That night, he had invited Coach DeMello and his tutor, Maura Beattie, to drop by. When we arrived, they were already there. So were Mrs. Lopez; Felipe’s brother Anderson, who moved to this country last year; Anderson’s girlfriend, Nancy; Anthony; and Felipe’s father. Felipe’s sister, Sayonara, was expected as soon as she was through with a meeting at church. The Lopezes are an exceptionally good-looking and unusually large-scale family. Felipe’s father, a construction laborer, is broad-chested, dignified, and well over six feet tall. His mother, Carmen, who works in the Garment District, is leggy and vigorous. She competed in track and volleyball as a girl in the Dominican Republic. That night, she was wearing a long flowered dress and black Reeboks. In the Dominican Republic, the Lopezes had a middle-class life. In this country, that life did not change so much as compress. All its hallmarks — Luis’s exacting discipline, Carmen’s piety, the children’s sense of honor and obligation — came over intact, and then intensified in contrast to the disorder of the neighborhood they found themselves in.

The Lopez apartment was a warren of tiny dark rooms. One wall in the living room was covered with plaques Felipe had won — among them the Parade All-American High School Boys Award, the Five-Star Basketball Camp Most Promising Player, and the Ben Wilson Memorial Award for Most Valuable Player at ABCD Basketball Camp — and one corner of the room was filled by an old broken television set with what looked like a hundred basketball trophies on top. There was also a new television set, a videocassette recorder, a shelving unit, a huge sofa, a huge easy chair, a huge coffee table, some pretty folk-craft decorations from the Dominican Republic, some occasional tables, big billowy curtains, several floor lamps, and a life-size freestanding cardboard cutout of Michael Jordan. It was an exuberant-looking place. It was also possibly the most crowded place I’d ever been in. The television was tuned to a Spanish soap opera when we walked in, and Maura Beattie and Coach DeMello, were sitting beside it, ignoring the show and eating pizza. The Michael Jordan cutout was propped up behind DeMello, blocking the back door. Anderson and Nancy were squeezed together on the couch, looking at one of Felipe’s scrapbooks, and Anthony was pacing around the room and talking to his father, who was reclined in the easy chair. Felipe said hello to his mother and they chatted for a minute in Spanish, and then she led him to a seat at the kitchen table and set a stockpot in front of him that was filled with chicken stew. There seemed to be a lot of people coming and going, and the conversation perked along:

DeMello: "I’ll never forget when Anthony brought Felipe to Rice. He couldn’t speak a word of English. I thought, How on earth is this kid going to take the entrance exams? Maura, do you remember that?"

Ms. Beattie: "I’ma math teacher. I’m not an English tutor. But I figured this would be something interesting to do. I didn’t want the Lopezes to realize I wasn’t really a tutor."

Anthony, walking through the kitchen: "Felipe, are you ready for tomorrow? You got your books with you? You planning to play?"

Nancy, translating for Carmen Lopez: "She says Felipe would rather play than eat. Otherwise, he don’t give her no torment."

DeMello: "You should see the tape of the commercial Felipe and Robert Johnson did for Nintendo. They had a lot of fun, a lot of fun. Someone gave them bad advice, though, and it almost cost Felipe his eligibility. He turned down the money, and the commercial has to stop playing when he gets into college."

Ms. Beattie: "You want more pizza? Should we get more pizza? Felipe, would you eat more? He doesn’t eat. I don’t think he eats."

Nancy: "Would you look at this, all these trophies! Felipe, you got all these trophies?"

Anderson, to Nancy: "One of those is mine. Yeah, really. Nancy, look in the middle of the table and you’ll find mine."

Anthony: "Everything everybody tells you is so beautiful — you know, be on TV, score thirty points, be the MVP, have the fame, all right — but you got to pay attention. There are a lot of rules. The NCAA rule is that no coaches can talk to him while he’sa junior. They’re willing, they’re dying to talk to him, but that’s not going to happen. When he’s ready, we’ll meet and talk and see. I had these dreams to be a great player, and I had my ankle broken, so it was all over for me. Felipe is my chance to see it happen for someone in my family, but it’s going to happen the right way."

Felipe, coming in from the kitchen with Sayonara, just back from church: "Mommy, hey, Mommy, didn’t I grow all these inches over here? One day, remember, I went to my closet and found these little pants and I said, ‘Mommy, whose pants are these?’ They were only this big — just little short pants — and she said, ‘Felipe, those are your pants!’ I couldn’t believe it! I couldn’t believe I ever wore those pants! I just looked at them and thought, Oh, my goodness."

DeMello: "Hey, Felipe, are you ready for tomorrow? Because anyone who isn’t ready with their homework done, Brother is going to hear about it, and we’re not going to be going to any other tournaments. Are you ready?"

Felipe: "DeMello, I got one thing I got to do tomorrow. I got to type