Learning How to Play Basketball Better in Vietnam

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

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nikebasketball

One of things I’d like to do is start a basketball/streetball discussion and matchup community for Vietnam. It’s kind of what I do on a larger level at work already, and something I tried to pitch once to And1 a few of years ago. (It’s something they still haven’t done, which has disappointed me greatly- I feel like they’re just throwing away money)

Internationally, Streetball.com has in some ways become the community that And1.com should be. In Vietnam, as far as I know, there aren’t any large online basketball communities here, just discussion groups in other forums like TTVNOL. I could probably use Ning like Streetball.com did and buy my own domain for it and create that Vietnamese basketball community site, but my Vietnamese isn’t good enough where I could be a leader of a community.

Basketball is definitely growing in popularity here, and the skill is growing. The Internet has been a big part of this, and you can see that people have been watching And1 mixtapes because you can see it in how they play. Access to NBA games is much less compared to highlights and streetball footage on sites like YouTube, and this has created a more loose style of play, not so physical in terms of boxing out, but a lot of slap fouls and palming/carrying. It’s very one and one, not so much about defense and passing- at least not the fundamental setting up of plays(more And1 no look than John Stockton pick and roll).

As for learning the basics of the game through pure instructional videos, most are hard (forget about purchasing legal or illegal copies) to find online, and most people don’t have the luxury of their own courts or space to work on the basics.

Recently on sites like Streetball.com (below), though, I’ve seen videos showing people how to do moves, not just videos of people doing them. Even Nike has gotten in the fun with their Signature Moves section on NikeBasketball.com, which I show above.

Personally, I love this kind of stuff. I’ve seen my share of instructional stuff, and stuff like thus is very accessible and can help even non-English speakers learn more about the game. 

image

Aside from those, betterbasketballI personally recommend the Better Basketball DVD series and Bobbito Garcia’s Basics to Boogie. The Better Basketball series is heavily advertised in Slam Magazine, and I own the Shooting DVD but have watched parts of some of the others. The hard part with the Better Basketball series is that it requires a lot of work (surprise!) and dedication to really understand and be able to execute on the lessons. The series is also quite expensive at $30 a DVD, and is not easy to find pirated (they’ve done an amazing job stopping people from doing so). It’s not so non-English speaker friendly either.

Basics to Boogie, on the other hand, is more accessible to a Vietnamese player. It’s focused mostly on dribbling, but they show things anyone can work on- just mastering the first 15 minutes of drills is going to take a long time (years). In fact, since I don’t have a court to practice on and shoot around on nearby, I just go through dribbling drills once or twice a week. Sometimes, the Better Basketball stuff requires too much extra stuff, like other people or cones, but Basics to Boogie is a good lone man practice tape.

I even used the Basics to Boogie stuff when I coached women’s basketball at Dai Hoc Hanoi (Hanoi University) a couple of years ago.

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Ball Is Life The Project Volume 1 (DVD) [Review]

Monday, March 24th, 2008

The guys at BallisLife.com are bad ass. I watch a lot of basketball mixes (check out MixMakers.net), and they do as good a job as anyone. True professionals.

Anyway, about a month ago, they came out with their first DVD, Ball is Life: The Project Volume 1, at a very attractive price. Only $10 for the DVD, another $5 for shipping within the US, or $10 for international orders (for me). Simply, it is worth your money.

The Official DVD Trailer:


Featuring: OJ Mayo, Derrick Rose, (OJ and Derrick Rose are the super freshman at USC and Memphis, respectively) Demar Derozan (plays AAU ball with Master P junior, Lil Romeo), Brandon Jennings and a bunch of other high school and streetball (Exile, King Handles, Ball 4 Real crew) superstars, about an hour total in length. Basically, if you read Slam magazine, these are the guys always getting covered. I love this kind of thing because it’s like seeing a good glimpse at the future of the NBA. Even just 5-10 years ago, a normal person wouldn’t have had this kind of access.

Like I said before, these guys are exceptional as mixers. The footage here, in terms of image quality (more like DVD rather than VHS), is excellent, no amateur handi-cam crowd-blocked shaky video. The action itself is also excellent and laid out with music (excellent track selection) that (they imply) they have the rights to. This is a very enjoyable DVD.

If you have ever watched things like ESPN’s 3D’s or Plays of the Day, this is the kind of mixing you’re getting. You are going to see effects, introductions, transitions, music syncing- if you watched this DVD on ESPN, you wouldn’t notice a difference between ESPN’s normal footage and Ball is Life.

I definitely recommend getting this if you’re interested in the subject material at all.

One thing to suggest for them for next time: Progressive Scan for people with Widescreen TV’s.

More details on the footage:

  • 2006-2007 high school season teams:
    Compton High School
    Mater Dei High School
    Campbell Hall High School
    Oak Hill High School
    Huntington High School
    Artesia High School
  • 2007 National AAU Tournies we attended:
  • Houston Kingwood Classic-Belmont Shore, Tmac All Stars, Pump n Run, Indian Elite, Inland Reebok, Southern California All-Stars (www.visionsports.com)
  • GBOA Challenge of Champions- Belmont Shore, Arkansas, Grassroots Canada, Texas Blue Chips, Southeast Elite, D1 Greyhounds, Lamar Odom, GBOA slam dunk contest (www.gboahoops.com)
  • Pango’s End of the Trail- LA Stars, LA Dream Team (www.fullctpress.net)
  • Pango’s Fall Prep Showcase (www.fullctpress.net)
  • Double Pump’s Adidas Best of Summer- Southeast Elite, Bay Area Hoosiers, Texas Blue Chips, Pump n Run Elite (http://www.doublepump.com)
  • Streetball- The once highly anticipated Exile Mixtape footage will be combined with footage of Ball4real, Dunkalicious, Kinghandles, and Hoop It Up Dunk Contest.
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Yay Area’s Finest Volume 2 (DVD) [Review]

Sunday, March 23rd, 2008

I could not be in any sense of the word, described as cool. As much I wish I could, I’m not someone who could ever use “Yay Area” the way it’s supposed to be meant, I’m more of a “Bay Area” in terms of coolness.

Now that I’ve gotten that out of the way, I do like stuff from the Yay, and well, I bought Yay Area’s Finest Volume 2 mainly because it was…from the Yay.

Buying this DVD was a lot harder than it should have been. Coming from an e-commerce background in the US, I’m just amazed at how difficult it was. I ended up getting the DVD over this past Christmas when I was in the US, but I had been trying to get it since summer 2006, before I had even left for Vietnam. Their official MySpace account said to go to Rasputin to get it. Not only did Rasputin (Los Gatos one) not have it, however, they didn’t even know what I was talking about. Impossible to find on EBay or through Google search.

I eventually had to log in my MySpace account (I rarely do this on my own) late last year and send them a personal message, to which I actually got a quick reply directing me to Rapbay.com, which seems to be dead at the moment, but worked for me in October. Sigh.

Anyway, on to the actual DVD.

Official Trailer:


There’s a lot of footage on this DVD. And I mean a ton. The DVD focuses on local Bay Area streetball (to their credit, they have a lot of footage from all over the Bay, not just 3-4 locations) and high school basketball. Here’s a quick description taken from the official site:

But last but not least I wouldn’t be doing my job if I didn’t ask for more shine. Some of the YAY AREA’S FINEST still need some love in the mag: My dude Devon Hardin from Cal is finna be a lottery pick in a year after he wrecks the PAC-10, the guy Terrence Jennings outta Sac destroyed the summer circuit and has climbed into the top 20 of the high school class of ‘08, another dude to watch for is my boy Wendell Mckines out of Richmond on his way to New Mexico State (if u never heard of him, watch the DVD, he’s the guy who clears dude’s head on the tip dunk at the end of a chapter and the reverse tip-dunk on the end of the “Bang It” chapter), couple other names of note: HS players: Frank Otis, DJ Seely, Reeves Nelson, Matt Simpkins, Ramon Eaton (some say he’s the 1 freshman in the country outta Sacramento), Chris Brew, Jared Cunningham, Collin Chiverton, Kelly Kaigler, Tyree McCrary, and the list goes on. College: Demarcus Nelson (Duke), Rogdrick Craig (Son of 49ers legend, coming back from a heart condition to play for Texas Tech), Kyle Spain (San Diego State), Dior Lowhorn (USF), Eli Holman (Indiana incoming freshman), too many more to name; Other dudes: Ballaholic, Moses “Ghost” Keys (killed in the and1 game), Exile, Sante aka 757, Drew Gooden, Drew Gordon (I see yall hatin on him online in the HS rankings, watch the DVD, he’s got about 75 clips on there, all freshman and sophomore year), can you tell I could go on and on all day? I just got so much pride in my region, and I’m trying to see my guys shine like they should. But anyways, yall ain’t gotta print this, or listen to any of my suggestions, just enjoy that DVD and know we doin it in the Bay. Thanks for the years of good work by the way. Gone.

There are a bit too many segment introductions by famous and semi-famous (you probably need to be from the Bay Area to know at least a few of the names) rappers and basketball players. The footage itself is of decent quality, but this DVD just doesn’t resonate with quality in terms of production and editing.

My sister watched a little bit of the DVD with me, and while she’s not really a big basketball fan, she said, “this seems like something you might want to watch just because we’re from the Bay Area, but even then, there isn’t really a reason to watch this again.”

I agree perfectly.

A ton of footage (1.5 hrs), but a bit too much because it’s not edited and mixed well. Most of the footage isn’t that great and a lot of the DVD is just boring. I think that’s more of an issue of pacing than anything. Another issue is that I know a lot of hot players are in this, but the editors never highlight who you’re looking at, so you can’t get excited, “Oh, so that’s Drew Gordon” and so on. I remember reading a big list of who’s in this, but I don’t know when they actually get shown. I want to know who’s doing what! Since the chapters are named by song, I wasn’t sure if there were any themes in footage attached to a specific song. It’s extremely difficult to distinguish among them, which creates another problem for replayability- who is in and what happens in each section.

In the end, I wouldn’t recommend this to anyone unless you’re a die hard Bay Area basketball fan, maybe not even then. They do some good things here, but it’s hard to watch. I hope they have some major changes for the next round, Volume 3, which has been “coming soon” for a long time (6+ months).

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You Couldn’t Even Make a USBL Team – TrueHoop

Saturday, December 8th, 2007

Link: ESPN – You Couldn’t Even Make a USBL Team – TrueHoop

To me, it’s always ridiculous how people think they could ball. I mean, really, ball. You get it from everyone, current not-good-enough players (50 from And1 once said he could beat Tim Duncan 1 on 1), hip-hop stars (Master P talks about how he could ball, The Game is a big-time baller, everyone seems to say they could have made the NBA or that they have serious game, and everyone knows it), and prisoners, former guys who once had a bright future but got caught up in things. I’m ok with the prisoners feeling like they missed out on their chances, but I just hate the type of person who just so believes in the fact he could have/should have made the NBA.

There are more US Congressman than NBA Players.

I couldn’t even make a junior-high basketball team right now, at the age of 27, so I have no delusions. I still have child-age dreams that I could be awesome only-if, but I am not delusional.

Here’a a great article from TrueHoop on this type of thing, taken from an excerpt from Thomas Beller’s “How to be a Man”:

——

I know, I know, you’re good. When your jumper is on, the points can come in bunches. Look out for you in the open court. And don’t even get me started about the crafty defense you have in store for bigger, more athletic defenders.

But the fact is, 99.99% of people who play basketball do not play it a level that approaches professional in any way, shape, or form. 

Mercifully, that’s a point that is not hammered home too often. (Rich fans may be able to buy their way into space, but they can’t buy their way into NBA games, which is a good thing, because Dwight Howard might accidentally break one of them in half.)

How do I know this to be true? Consider the case of Thomas Beller. He’s a writer, but not just a writer. He’s also nearly 6-6, and someone who holds his own on the blacktop of New York City. Compared to just about anybody you know, he can play.

So when his local USBL team had open tryouts a few years ago, Beller showed up half expecting to make the team.

Beller has serious writing chops, and used them writing about his tryout, in his book “How to Be a Man.”

Just for fun, here’s author Philip Lopate on that book:

These quite marvelous and darkly hilarious personal essays derive their power from a shameless honesty, often about the most shameful moments, which suddenly reveal a luminous upside in the author’s comic retelling. Together they give us a privileged view of how curiously attenuated and winding, for many a young American male, is the long march to maturity.

And, for a simpler view, here’s TrueHoop friend Donnell Alexander, writing in the San Francisco Chronicle:

Beller can write his butt off.

So, how did the tryout go? John Starks was there, coaching. Jeff Van Gundy made a cameo. Remember teen phenom Lenny Cooke (now in the CBA)? He was there, trying out, as was Stephon Marbury’s brother Zach. 

Courtesy of Thomas Beller, below are those seven pages of his book:

Originally published in Thomas Beller’s book “How to Be a Man” and reprinted here with the author’s permission.

The TryoutI sat in the car in the parking lot before the tryout. My sneakers were on the seat next to me. The parking lot was crowded and more cars were pulling in. The try-out was being held on a college campus whose name often appeared in the newspaper. The New York Knicks had their practices here. Here was the place were those gruff transactions between a player and journalist took place, the results of which were sprinkled through the next day’s paper like little nuggets of gold.

The college, SUNY Purchase, is not distinguished for its basketball program. It is just a place with a basketball court but it is where the Knicks practice and so everyone pulling up in their cars wasn’t arriving at just any basketball facility but at the place where the professional basketball players they read about in newspapers pull up in their cars, music blasting.

The Westchester Wildfire, a newly formed franchise of the United States Basketball League, was holding open try-outs. Cars pulled up and guys got out and in the end there were about eighty people in the gym warming up, in spite of the $150 dollar fee. The gym was filled big guys, medium size guys, guys with jump shots, guys with muscles, white guys, black guys, flan guys, everyone loosening their bodies and playing that little mantra in their heads, a personalized version of, “I know I can I know I can I know I can.”

A lot of these guys had played for top flight universities. They had seen the big time. But a fair number were playground all-stars for whom the try out was a kind of one day basketball fantasy camp, an opportunity to run up and down in the same gym where the Knicks practice. I kept glancing around to see the star attraction of the day, John Starks, New York Knick who the Westchester Wildfire have named as their first head coach. Starks kept a low profile during the morning session, haunting the sidelines briefly and then appearing upstairs at a booth overlooking the gym. At one point another familiar face from years past appeared next to him up there–Jeff van Gundy, former coach of the Knicks, his eyes less dark than usual, his hair – that incredibly catastrophe of implants – subdued on his head.

I glimpsed Starks for just a moment, grey shirt and shorts, his white socks pulled up neatly to cover his ankles, smiling while someone patted him on the shoulder. Then a whistle was blown, the terse shriek that is the basketball equivalent of a judge pounding his gavel, and the try-out began.

There is an almost masochistic thrill in witnessing the undeniable fact of your physical inadequacy. Maybe that was why I was there, to be reminded of my place in the athletic cosmos. But I was also there because like all the other dreamers who was not a division one player – and that was a lot of us – I was secretly convinced that I could perform a little magic. We all have different tricks but they ended with the same result-the ball goes in the hole.

We began drills. We ran up and down the court passing the ball back and forth. The dreamers had to keep up with players who can run twice as fast, jump twice as high… and who themselves can not keep up with the very best players on the floor, who could run twice as fast, jump twice as high… and who themselves were longshots to make the team, whose best players were longshots to make an NBA team, whose lowest rungs were occupied by players who moved at only half the speed of the top flight players we read about in the newspaper and see on television.

Right away we were split into three groups. The serious contenders, immediately recognizable by height, demeanor, and reputation, were in one group. Everyone else composed the other two. We did running drills, passing drills, three man weaves, fast break drills. Everyone strained and pushed themselves to their limit. To try as hard as you can is an interesting thing; interesting to do the trying and interesting to see other people try. As hard as I could was too slow, too close to the ground. I watched a guy, not too much taller than six feet, race down the floor and then take off just inside the foul line, sending a crashing dunk through the hoop with two hands. As hard as he could was impressive. Surely this guy will make the team, I thought.

He didn’t.

The last thing we did was break into small groups to play three on three, and it was here, finally, that I got to do the tricks. Every time I scored or blocked a shot I thought, “Did anyone see that?” But I knew it was too late. One guy who I played against was rail thin, light skinned, with a spray of freckles across his face. He wore a white headband and his hair was cut like Kobe Bryant. I posted him up and felt his heart beating. His chest literally thumped against my back. I’d never felt that before. Why was his heart beating like that?

Perhaps it was sheer physical effort and adrenaline, but I think it was panic. All of us in our group had failed to distinguish ourselves. We had seen what the competition was like. It was clear we were outclassed. Some illusion had been shattered. It was not a great loss, the sting wasn’t too bad, but the moment did require a fleeting acknowledgment that we had allowed ourselves to hope, to dream a little.

Most of the players were cut before lunch, including me. Dream over.

The remaining players came back for an afternoon session, and I stuck around to watch. There was a good deal of talent on the floor. Zach Marbury, Stephon’s younger brother was there, as was Brian Reese from North Carolina, Kitwana Rymer from U Mass, and Lenny Cook, the high school player who declared for the recent NBA draft and then failed to get drafted.

Cook was then in the strange limbo of leagues like the USBL, where sub-NBA players operate on a barnstorming circuit, hoping to develop their skills, attract attention, and move up to the NBA.

Hoping, in other words, for the spectacular moth to butterfly transformation experienced by John Starks.

After playing at Oklahoma State, Starks played briefly in the CBA, the World basketball league, and at one point was bagging groceries in Tulsa before making it to the Golden State Warriors and then the Knicks, where, in spite of his Oklahoma accent, he embodied a hyperactive energy and enthusiasm that went beyond the Knicks franchise and seemed to speak to the whole city, at least for a little while.

When a TV crew stood in front of Cook during the warm-ups and posed the question, “Lenny, do you still think you have a shot at the NBA?” his answer was inaudible. But I’d like to think it was: “Most definitely.”

This phrase – “most definitely” – was for a period of time the touchstone of everything John Starks said. He used it as the preface to every statement, the beginning of every answer. It was a linguistic crutch and philosophy of life rolled into one. It was the essence of Starks. At some point someone must have told him to drop it, and apparently he had some speech coaching somewhere along the line.

When Starks spoke at the mid day press conference he was smooth, composed, and articulate. He sat besides the team’s owner, Gary Leiberman. Lieberman is a former Bear Stearns banker and how a hedge fund manager. He is a small man with delicate nail bitten hands whose eyes are rimmed with pink. He is a banker and there is something about him that suggests that this whole enterprise, owning this minor league basketball team, is an attempt to let go of a prudence that is deeply ingrained in his soul. The prudence of a skinny kid who got beat up a lot and went on to make a lot of money as a money guy.

Starks sat there. Prudence is not the word that one associates with John Starks. He was subdued and chose he words carefully. He said how happy he was to be here, where he spent so many years with the Knicks. He was relaxed in blue shorts and a grey Westchester Wildfire Polo shirt, and looked remarkably unchanged from his days in New York, His round almost baby-ish forehead was as smooth as ever, the pensive eyes were familiar, as was the puckish, bashful, mischievous smile. He spoke about how playing for Pat Riley and Jeff van Gundy has taught him a lot about what it takes to win. When asked about the talent he had seen so far he said, “It’s too early to tell right now. You can get a sense of a players athletic ability and you can see their offense, but you can’t really see how well they’re going to play defense until you see them in a full court game.”

Sports journalism is probably the most overfunded activity in the world. So much effort in connection with such meager rewards! These little nuggets one hopes to get from players. It’s like asking the magician how he does it.

With Van Gundy in the house one almost expected to see Patrick Ewing stride in. Starks said he hoped his former team mates would put in appearances. “There’s a host of players and former coaches who will come by, and I welcome that, because I learn too.”

Asked if he would consider suiting up he said, “I wont pull a Michael Jordan,” and smiled.

Leiberman, the team owner, roamed the sidelines of the afternoon session and explained the secret method he used for acquiring Starks’ as a coach. “I was watching the Ewing retirement ceremony and I saw John interviewed. He said he wanted to coach, so I called him up.”

The afternoon work out was intense. There were running drills and then four on four fast break drills. Jerold Macrae of Northwestern, and Greg Stevenson of Richmond, were stand outs, both of them throwing down gigantic dunks in traffic. Craig Austin, from Columbia, and last year’s Ivy league player of the year, had a calm, distant, almost zenned out expression the whole time. He has a wandering eye, which is an odd attribute for a guy whose game revolved around a jump shot.

Zack Marbury looked more like his brother Stephon than Stephon himself– the round head, the terse, almost militant hand gestures, directing traffic, the faintly fascistic air of a martinet. But he does not have his brother’s game. During warm ups, he wore a sweat suit and sneakers that gleamed with newness. There was a swagger to him. But on the court a certain timidity appeared, as though he was ashamed, slightly, that his talents didn’t live up to the older brother who was giving him the money for the new clothes.

Then there was the long faced, ominous, and extremely skinny seven foot two inch Terry Sellers, in his late twenties, out of Compton, now residing in New Jersey. His thin legs were nicked and scratched. One of the coaches, asked why Sellers didn’t have a higher basketball profile, said, “The streets got him,” and shook his head sadly. I had a vision of him literally falling into a whole.

In an empty hallway near the lockers I bumped into Lenny Cook, 6 foot 5 but just eighteen, having an emotional conversation with a small man in a grey suit carrying a briefcase.

“I’ll give you $200 hundred dollars out of every week’s paycheck!” said Cook.

“Listen I can’t help you,” said the man.

“I’ll give you two hundred dollars out of my paycheck every week, I swear!”

Oh God, I thought, what? Loan Shark? I got a glimpse of the small man’s brittle died black hair: he had loan shark hair.

“I’ll give you three hundred dollars every week! Please!” His voice rang with emotion, the emotion of a kid.

“Hey, listen,” said the man, who was very small. “I’m already in Two Thousand dollars so far for your travel, your hotel, I can’t do anymore!”

The man could have been an agent or an owner, it was unclear.

I walked away. It was a random snippet that made the distance between the promise of the NBA and the reality of getting there seem very large. Seeing Starks roaming the sidelines of his old practice facility and knowing what he had accomplished – he was an All-star, he dunked on Jordan! – was a pure example of Most Definitelyness.

In a way the whole tryout was John Starks impersonation day. Everyone wanted to be like John.

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And1 Cover Letter

Sunday, September 2nd, 2007

Seth Berger

And 1
4 Industrial Blvd
Paoli, PA 19301

February 7, 2006

Dear Mr. Berger,

I am
a bit obsessed with basketball. Often, I think about taking a year off from work and going to Vietnam so I can live cheaply and play basketball every day. I think what I really want though is some time to practice the Sauce 2K and show the pretty girls there my moves.

I currently work at [former company], a videogame publisher, running its online store. The videogame industry, perhaps like the shoe industry, relies on retailers rather than direct sales, but [former company] has been able to buck that trend, finding success in both markets, and I believe that I’ve been a positive part of that success over the last couple of years. Some of the things I have done were to organize our grassroots and search engine marketing efforts, helping to lead the online store to a record breaking sales quarter in 4Q2005. I also took over content writing duties for the store and maintained our corporate blog. Away from [former company], I have contributed articles to both print and online press for the game industry as well as ethnic media.

[former company]’s success has come from its direct relationship with its fans, with the online store serving a pivotal role in obtaining feedback from our customers. I feel that one of the weaknesses of the And1 site is its lack of content. When someone hears about the MixTape tour on the radio or sees the ESPN Streetball series on TV, he inevitably comes to the And1 site to learn more but there is not much there to hold his interest. I have been that someone myself in the past, frustrated and forced to rely on Google searches to find fan forums to read about the latest news or even just general information about the And1 brand, and in particular, the MixTape Tour.

I think I can be part of something exciting and fun at And1. I’d like to work at And1 to bring in new fans and show them why And1 is so special, let them know how it all started and what the street game is all about. At the same time, we can remind the old fans why they love And1 in the first place. One of the opportunities that could be pursued is a tour blog. It would show fans the tour in a much more detailed manner than what the Streetball series can do in its limited time format. I would write in a personal style about the tour, the players, and the cities. I think it can be a part of why the MixTape Tour is so successful- with the tour, people feel like they’re part of the experience rather than merely observers when they come out to meet the players and watch the game. The blog will be another part of that in the sense that when someone reads about when And1 came to his city, he’ll feel, “Hey, they’re writing about me! I was there. It was one of the best times in my life.” I think that’s what And1 should be. The blog will be another extension in making And1 a cherished part of people’s lives.

I have enclosed a copy of my resume for your perusal. Thank you for your consideration, and I look forward to discussing more of my ideas and a possible role at And1 with you.

Sincerely,

Michael [Last Name]

(And1 was bought out by a bigger company a few years back, and I think at the time I sent the letter, Seth Berger wasn’t part of the company any more. Seth Berger is the founder of And1. He went to Wharton for his MBA and started doing the And1 gig selling stuff out of his car after playing basketball at the gym there. Or something like that. It’s actually close to the story of UnderArmour. I like that like the letter suggests, I’m now in Vietnam. But not practicig the Sauce2K- like I could have ever done it- or impressing the pretty girls.)

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STREETBALLIN.net :: View topic – Rampaging Teens Force Mall Shutdown After And1 Exhibition

Sunday, September 2nd, 2007

A mall in the suburbs east of San Francisco has reopened after a large group of teens and young adults stormed the shopping center following a parking lot basketball exhibition, police said. About 200 young people streamed out of makeshift bleachers and into the Southland Mall on Saturday afternoon, yanking clothes off hangers, kicking merchandise and overturning displays, police Lt. Mark Koller said.Thousands of shoppers were forced to leave after more than 60 officers shut down the entrances to the mall. No injuries or arrests were reported.

The ruckus followed a so-called streetball exhibition in the mall parking lot, where the popular And1 team, often featured on ESPN, took on local players in a form of basketball that emphasizes tricks and dunks.

The mall reopened around 7 p.m.

abclocal.go.com

Streetballin.net Forum Link

—–

Yay Area! I’ve been to two And1 events in the Bay, the tour stops in 2004 and 2005. In 2005, Khoi’s friend “accidentally” brought in a knife. This was at the Oakland Arena (where one would expect good security), incidentally, not the outside mall parking lot like this year’s show. During the second half of the game, my sister and I noticed the TV crew leaving early, as if something was going on. When we left the game, ambulances were arriving, police where everywhere.

Later, I learned someone had gotten shot/stabbed right outside the arena. Oakland police made things better by only allowing people to exit the parking lot through 1 lane (normally, 5+), so it took over an hr just to get out the parking lot. Then, they wouldn’t let people go South, so I had to drive 10 miles up before I could finally turn back.

Stay classy, Oakland.

Southland Mall is actually in Hayward, but still a vital member of the Yay.

Regarding the product itself, I love And1, or at least the DVD’s. I am definitely in love with Streetball, the ESPN series. Of course, it’s very hard for me to watch episodes in Vietnam, and I can’t buy Seasons 3+ (currently on 6) on DVD, so I don’t know what to do but download and pirate the episodes when I can. Incidentally, I’ve even sent a letter to And1 trying to get an internship in the past. (no response, even after a follow-up call) I’ll go post my “awesome” letter in another post.

The tour, unfortunately, is disappointing. It almost feels like the game is meant only to support the mixtape DVDs. The MC, Duke Tango, will call out a player and tell everyone to get away for an isolation. Sure, I guess this what the fans want in a sense, to see what they see on the DVDs, but it just feels weak when things feel unnatural. When you’re watching the DVD, you believe that things are in game, people are really facing-up each other, and that’s what makes the moves so great. The games instead feel like a mix of highlights combined with slop. Half-trash, half-amazing (pun-master). In both games, I never feel the steady excitement of good play, just extremes of whoa! and sheesh…

A lot of the guys have mentioned that they have different responsibilities on tour, that they have to win and impress with tricks and crazy dunks. They’re right, I understand, and I don’t necessarily blame things on the players.

In 2004, I had a bad angle to see the Hot Sauce match-up. I was in the 2nd or 3rd row behind one of the baskets. 2 women two rows behind me and Khoi went after each other and security had to pull them away. The white people next to us left right after that. Security let people walk freely in front of us, so we kept having people just interrupt our view.

After that, I had sworn I wouldn’t go in 2005 because it just wasn’t that fun in 2004. A year goes bye, I watch my DVDs again, and I get excited to go. I notice the Professor isn’t that good, can be beat up physically- I still love him though. He actually got man-handled by Bad Santa, who ended up making the team (and is still on And1). Main Event went hacking like crazy because Oakland was up for a long time throughout the first half. I’m not even sure if And1 won that game in the end.

So 2005 was just as bad or worse versus 2004. I still resent the tour because in 2005, Frontline was supposed to be there for halftime (I predicted and hoped for it!) and they didn’t show. I’m pretty sure because of the security issues detailed above.

In 2006, I couldn’t go when I saw that all the cheaper tickets were gone. Better off anyway, though I was excited to see the tour back with a new focus this year because of all the defections to Ball4Real. I’m glad I wasn’t in the US for this one now though. And I do like my Spyda jersey (bought in 2005)…

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Haas (Berkeley) Application: Short Answers

Friday, August 17th, 2007

(I have one last set of essays to share, this one the short answer portion for Haas.)

1. What is your favorite quote, and why is it meaningful to you? (250 word maximum)

“I watch these guys every summer and I don’t think they grasp what is going on. They think it’s all about them, they’re supposed to be there, And1 is supposed to do this, they’re supposed to take them in.”- Rafer Alston on Streetball (basketball reality-television show), Season 1.

At [former company], I once called a meeting with a frustrated employee. She felt that the company had done nothing for her in terms of career development and that her current role held no possibility of advancement. I sat with her for a couple of hours to discuss how she could set goals with me in terms of her current work performance and how exceeding them would show she was ready for a promotion. Ultimately, while she said she understood my points, she was extremely reluctant to set performance metrics and never followed-up with me to do so.

I have also felt at times that I deserved more recognition or was upset that I had not reached a certain milestone. Alston’s quote and the memory of that meeting remind me that, to succeed, I need to look closer at my actions- what is it that I am doing or refusing to do that is stopping me? I look to others to let me know how I am missing the mark, no matter how difficult it is to hear. I place the burden of success on myself and accept no excuses in order to push myself to reaching my goals.

2. Tell us about your most significant accomplishment. (250 word maximum)

The experience of being a manager at [former company] was invaluable, but often strenuous. During [former company]’s employee review period, I gave two employees below-average ratings, with one employee receiving the minimum overall score. Going through the process, I knew I felt that they had performed inadequately, but I looked at my own responsibility in their failures and struggled with finding the right sense of objectivity towards their work while being able to give constructive criticism.

After I gave the two employees their reviews, both were so upset that they refused to sign the review forms to acknowledge the sessions. Both felt that their performances were completely opposite of what I had rated them, and any discrepancies or issues were my own and not theirs. I spent the next few days thinking carefully about their comments to learn about myself as a manager. While I believed my scores were fair and honest, I was still disappointed in myself that I had been unable to help the employees perform better. I hoped the reviews would cause them to consider my thoughts as well as themselves carefully over time.

When I last spoke to my former manager at [former company], he mentioned that the two employees had been progressing on the issues I had raised. I find some sense of accomplishment in this because even if I will not be benefiting directly from the changes, I was able to be part of the process that led to their developments.

3. At Haas, we value innovation and creativity. How have you demonstrated these qualities in your professional or personal life? (250 word maximum)

For [former company]’s first videogame release, [some game], I was asked to develop a preorder campaign for our online store.
[former company] was limited by its small budget and relative anonymity in the gaming market, but I felt that people could help us market the game at low-cost virally. My feeling was that if we could make a personal connection to our customers, they would respond positively to our brand and products over the long term, evangelizing our products to a broader community.
I reached out to select gaming community websites and gave exclusive access to production materials and company employees. I developed the image that we were developing a game for these fans and inviting them to be an intimate part of the process.

At the same time, I opened a corporate blog on [social networking site], exposing the game and company to a new demographic. Using the concept of “friends” in the [social networking site] community to create a more human rather than corporate image of the company, I provided behind the scenes access to company events, posted humorous pictures of employees, and wrote personal birthday wishes for friends. I wanted our company to connect to our fans’ lives as much as possible.

My efforts were completed without funding and the preorder program was a success; over the game’s first month in release, the online store sold [X]% of all units sold in the market, an outstanding accomplishment (most companies depend entirely on retail sales) for direct sales in the industry.

4. If you have visited Haas, please let us know what about your visit made the most lasting impression on you. If you have not visited Haas, what steps have you taken to familiarize yourself with our MBA program? (250 word maximum)

“We had cohort olympics. There was beer and kickball.”

Having gone to Berkeley for my undergraduate studies grants me an insight into the school, students, and surrounding community. I know, however, that my past does not necessarily give me an accurate assessment of who a Haas student is or what his life is like, and the same applies to the school website and program brochure.

To get a more intimate feel of Haas, I read every student blog I could find, uncovering revealing memories like the one above. I wanted to see impressions and experiences as students went through them, getting a feel of the impact Haas had on their lives. For some students, I got to read about their application process and see why they eventually decided on Haas.

I found that the people I was reading about were hopeful, energetic, and caring about other students. While hard working and accomplished, everyone was modest and simply trying to get better.

Haas has the type of student body that I want to meet and be part of. Their attitudes and motivations reflect my own, in the sense that they want to do well, but want to do so in a collaborative fashion so that no student gets left behind. In my long term plans of starting a business, I hope to find not only potential business partners from Haas, but life-long friends as well, and I feel excited about the opportunity to return to Berkeley.

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