Posts Tagged ‘basketball’

I often hear from people my age… parents as it were…that the kids of today lack character, drive, responsibility, etc…

Well, I think that is precisely what parents said about my generation and their parents about them.

And by the way, I know there has been a lot of negative press about sports lately, but sports is a great teacher of life. It teaches us to work with others, work together, work hard and, even if one does work hard, you could still lose. Builds character.

Speaking of character…

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My dad died one-year ago tonight. Naturally, on the  anniversary of your father’s death, any son would be thinking of his father…with flashes of wonderful memories over the years sliding in ‘n out of my brain throughout the day. But today is much more than my father’s passing.

You see, tonight is the NBA All-Star Game in Houston. Houston is the first city where I took my father to an NBA All-Star Game. 2006. I was so thrilled to have him along for NBA All-Star Weekend. To give back to my Dad for all he did for me. For all those times after a long-day at work he’d come home and play catch with the football or squat down with his catcher’s mitt to catch my fastball, curves and the occasional knuckle ball. Tough enough when I’m 10-years old, but incredibly brutal when I’m 16 throwing 75-80mph bb’s at him.  He never, ever let me see his swollen hand.

Ask any star –athlete, singer, actor, musician– and they will tell you one of the greatest things is to get to a level where you can include your parents in once-in-a-lifetime events. I’ve met them on red carpets and the big-time star is reduced to a beaming 12-year-old  kid. It’s pretty cool.

Throughout my 12-year career at Access Hollywood, I was able to be at some of the most amazing events around the world. But the truly most memorable are the ones where I was able to include my mom and dad.  On the sports side, it was my dad. The man who taught me how to throw a football…chased after my errant pitches…and attended every game I ever played. The man who sat next to me in our living room watching Rose Bowls, Super Bowls, All-Star games and more. The man who will sit next to me no more. Or will he?

You see, my dad’s gift to me was to always tell me to get my ass out in the world and go for it…and, if life threw me a curve and I was knocked on my ass, I had a place to come home to —as long as I got a job. “You’re not going to come home and just sit on your ass,” he would say.

So, as I left home at 19, never to return, but always knowing I could, I took off and never looked back. Wherever I was, there he was (and my mom), in my heart. Borneo,  Singapore, Kuala Lumpor, Paris, London, Isle of Man, Cannes, Eze, Amsterdam, Cairns, Sydney, Kota Kinabalu, Venice  and many, many more…he was with me even tho’ he wasn’t with me.

Tonight, as I watch the NBA All-Star Game FROM HOUSTON, on the anniversary of his death, I have a smile on my face thinking back to the 2006 All-Star Game with my dad in Houston.

It was Thursday night of All-Star Weekend. Alonzo Mourning and Magic Johnson had this billiards tournament. Every celeb and NBA player signed up in teams of two to battle it out on the green felt. There were tables everywhere. It was chaos. It ALWAYS ran late. That night was no exception. It was a little after midnight and my dad and I had just knocked Dr. J and Clyde Drexler out of the tourney. Yes, you read that right. WE played a furious game of pool against two of the NBA greats and beat ‘em.

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My dad and I watched them for years on tv and marveled at their talents and now, not only are we playing against them, we just put them out of the tourney. My dad was so in awe of them and respectful, when they came over to shake our hands, my dad apologized for winning. Dr. J put his hand on my dad’s shoulder, laughed and said, “You deserved it. We are the one’s who should apologize for not giving you a better game.”

It’s a moment I’ll never forget and I won’t forget another one from the same night, just a few minutes later.

We had to wait nearly 45-minutes for our next game. My dad and I went to get our first beers of the night. We were  having a couple of sips and watching this mad scene before us. All famous athletes having fun…young guns talking to the legends…some celebs mixed in. It was like everyone was in a ‘safe zone’ and could be themselves.

I took off for the bathroom and tell my dad I’ll meet him right where we are now. So, I go and return about 5-minutes later to find that my dad is nowhere to be found.

I run into Shaq, Magic  – even Nelly. Finally, about 10-minutes later, I see my dad from across the room. He’s up against a wall, laughing and chatting with someone. I can’t see who it is. As I weave my way through the crowd to get to him, I see it’s Ludacris.

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Ludacris is laughing. My dad is laughing. I have no idea what they’re talking about, but it’s clearly funny. I say to my dad… “I couldn’t find you”… and Ludacris sez, “Tony, this is YOUR dad?”

I’m like, “Yep…that’s my dad, Big Ray.” Ludacris says, “Your pops is cool man and funny as hell”. And then they just started laughing.

Apparently my dad was telling him about us going to The Strip House earlier that night. When I had told my dad where we were going, he was a little nervous. Finally, he was like, “so…we’re going to eat and there are going to be strippers all around?”

He didn’t know The Strip House was a steak joint. Apparently, Ludacris thought that was hilarious. Anyway, they hit it off and all weekend long whenever Ludacris would see my dad, he would give him a shout out, “Hey, Big Ray!”

My dad was amazing. Comfortable in any situation, big stars, no stars –didn’t matter. He just loved people. And people loved him, my dad, The All-Star. Tonight he is with me, even tho’ he isn’t with me.

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So, the video your about to watch will move you, in my guess, tremendously. It  is so self-explanatory, it doesn’t really need much in the way of backstory. But I thought it important enough to create this blog. Why? Well, because as we rush around this holiday season looking for the perfect gift for someone, it is worth stopping and noting that often the ‘perfect gift’ requires no rushing around to find it. No ‘Black Friday’ to purchase it. In fact, no real world currency at all. No money.

But make no mistake, currency is involved. And here’s the fantastic thing; we have more of it than we could ever need. However, this currency is often locked-up, surrounded by layers of societal b.s. that often make it impossible to peel those layers away and see it’s beauty and spend it. It is the currency of humanity and compassion. It’s where the heart takes over for the brain and says, “Stand back smarty, I got this one.”

This very thing happened this weekend at, of all things, a middle school wrestling match. Yes, sports. And kids. BTW, kids often put us adults to shame in the compassion n’ honesty department, but I digress.

12-year old Justin Kievit was ready to wrestle and win his match. He’d been practicing for this match for weeks. But, then, on the big day when it came his time to show his skills, wrestle and win, Justin showed a skill that surprised everyone. A skill that will serve him well for the rest of his life –as my daughter would say, ‘like, forever.” You see, he PURPOSELY lost the match.

His opponent was a 13-year old boy named Jared Stevens. Jared has been working out with his team all year, but had never wrestled in a match against another team. It wasn’t because he didn’t want to. In fact, he couldn’t wait. However, there was something called cerebral palsy which had stepped in and made it nearly impossible for Jared to wrestle in a competitive match. You could assume Jared would pay anything for the chance to represent his school and wrestle in a match just one time. As fate would have it, Justin Keivet had enough money, um, ‘currency’ to pay for Jared’s opportunity. As Jared’s coach reached out to the other team’s coach to see if Jared’s dream could be realized, all he asked for was if the opposing coach could find a kid “who has the kindest heart.”

This is what happened next.  Click the link. Please forward this if you believe others might like it…

Justin Kievit, Middle School Wrestler, Lets Boy With Cerebral Palsy Win Match – YouTube.

Have ya’ ever wondered, while watching Kobe Bryant all these years tear up the NBA, what he would do against average folks who just happen to like to play hoops — and he played like he was playing against NBA players? Well, wonder no more. Your video answer is here. A mere eight days after Kobe and his U.S. teammates put Olympics gold medals round their necks on the world’s stage, he dazzles a huge crowd in China at a charity game.

 

Now as you watch the video, I know what you’re thinkin’: Why is he playing so hard, dominating actually, a charity game? Like, really, dude? However, Kobe’s reasoning makes sense. He posted his thoughts on his Facebook page.

“I wanted to play it cool but what the heck, the place was packed with fans who’d sang an early happy birthday to me and really wanted to watch me go to work.”

Now according to Kobe, he didn’t play in the first of two 15-minutes halves. By the time the second half was about to start, the crowd was hungry to see the superstar play and, according to Kobe,  encouraged him to take over the game since his team was down by 29-points. 

“I didn’t want to disappoint them or the fans that had paid their hard earned money for a show so I took the challenge of really using the second half as a training session for my stamina. I ran and ran and ran,” Bryant wrote. “I wound up scoring 68 in the 2nd and we won.”

So, who were the opponents of  the future NBA Hall of Famer? According to Kobe, mostly singers, actors and tv personalities in China. 

“They are not basketball players by any stretch of the imagination,” Bryant wrote. “I was just having fun with all of them and loved hearing the crowd enjoy the show we put on.”

Kobe is in China as part of his promotional tour, putting on clinics and playing in charity games. In some other footage I saw of Kobe’s arrival in China, the crowds were in the thousands just to greet him.