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7-foot-8 Chinese joins in NBA???

Discussion in 'NBA Draft' started by Yaowaming, Apr 13, 2005.

  1. Yaowaming

    Yaowaming Contributing Member

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    http://www.charlotte.com/mld/observer/news/local/11383811.htm


    Posted on Wed, Apr. 13, 2005





    7-foot-8 Chinese player trains in Greensboro, hopes for NBA

    KELLIE DIXON

    Associated Press


    GREENSBORO, N.C. - The hoop hangs within arm's reach of Sun Ming Ming.

    The 7-foot-8 3/4 center positions himself under the basket and awaits a pass from trainer Keith Gatlin.

    Ball in hand, Sun muscles his 350-pound frame into training partner Dshamal Schoetz, a 7-footer who played at Greensboro College who is nearly nine inches shorter. Sun pivots and places the ball firmly into the hoop. Swish.

    Sun, who is from Harbin, China, is training in Greensboro for a shot at the NBA. His agent, Charles Bonsignore, paired the prospect up with former client and former professional basketball player Keith Gatlin. Gatlin, a managing partner with 334 Sports, a local firm that trains athletes, has worked with Sun for about five weeks.

    "With his size, that intrigues everybody," Gatlin said. "He can really shoot the ball to be that size. The challenge for him now is to get mobile, to get up and down the court."

    Sun also can handle the ball and has a sweet outside shot that swishes with the quick flick of his wrist. When it comes to dunking, he doesn't need to leave the ground.

    Basketball, Gatlin will tell you, is not Sun's problem.

    Sun's weakness is his flexibility and his lack of weight training. While playing for the Junior Olympic team and then Da Qing, his province's club squad, Sun never lifted weights and is just now building upper-body strength.

    Trainer James Wilson, who coaches track and field at High Point University, has worked with Sun on his mobility for about five weeks.

    During the first workout, the color drained from Sun's face, and he tired easily. Now Sun completes the workouts. His flexibility has improved to where he can lift his knees higher, and he gets up and down the court smoother.

    Wilson said Sun is young in terms of his training years.

    "I treat him like he is a high school senior lifting weights," Wilson said. "You build from that. ... There's a progression that you need to go. You can't just go everyday hard, hard, hard. It just doesn't work like that."

    Sometimes the language barrier can be a problem, Wilson said, because Sun is mentally tough and wants to complete the workouts. An "OK" from Sun isn't always good enough for Wilson, who looks for other signs. Is he wincing? Is there color in his face?

    "You push a person, but you don't want to push a person where they get injured, and that happens with a lot athletes with a lot of willpower," Wilson said. "It's better to undertrain than overtrain."

    The risk of injury is too great, especially with NBA teams already asking about Sun. The possibility of making the NBA thrills Sun, who is happily working toward his future.

    "I have more opportunities here," Sun said through interpreter Hsiao-Yin Chu. "I have the opportunity to play with the best players in the world and get into good basketball."

    Bonsignore saw the raw potential while watching Sun play for the Junior Olympic team in China and again when he played for Da Qing.

    "More than anything I saw his size," Bonsignore said. "I just thought it was a complete waste of a kid's life: That he's so big, and they don't have the resources to train him."

    That's why Bonsignore asked Gatlin to train Sun. Gatlin spent eight years playing professional ball in Europe, so he understands what it's like to adjust to a new culture.

    "Keith believes in basically the old style of basketball fundamentals," Bonsignore said. "With his personality and demeanor, I knew he'd make Sun comfortable."

    Since arriving in North Carolina in early March, Sun has become more comfortable with his surroundings, particularly around his support team and host family Rocky and Celeste Manning, friends of Gatlin's.

    During the week, Sun climbs into the back seat of Gatlin's SUV and rides to the Greensboro Sportsplex or Fitness by Design. His days are devoted to basketball, but he spends the evenings lounging around the Manning's house in Summerfield. He is another member of the Manning family whether he's cooking on the grill, driving the golf cart or writing in his journal.

    The Mannings don't speak Chinese, but sign language does the trick.

    "He's been great," Rocky Manning said. "He totally changed from when he first came here. He didn't seem that happy, but now he smiles and laughs and knows a couple hundred words in English. He's a very smart guy."

    Sun will stay in Greensboro until May when he'll return to China for 45 days to play in the national games with his club team. He is expected to return in June for the NBA draft, but Bonsignore isn't interested in hyping Sun's situation because it could create unfair comparisons to recent China product Yao Ming.

    If Sun is drafted in June, Bonsignore hopes he'll be picked by a team willing to develop Sun's skills.

    If he's not drafted, he will become a free agent, and Bonsignore said they will consider taking next year to continue building his skills.

    "If a team doesn't show that they are willing to be patient," Bonsignore said, "we'll just wait and show him when he's ready."


    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Information from: News & Record, http://www.news-record.com
     
  2. Tdogg

    Tdogg Member

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    The article mentions the Junior Olympics. I wonder how old this kid is?

    Plus it says that he is going into the draft in June. I though China was invoking an age limit before their players could enter the NBA Draft. (If I am wrong, someone please correct me).
     
  3. tim562

    tim562 Member

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    What the hell are they feeding these people, 7'8". Geez:eek:
     
  4. emjohn

    emjohn Member

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    Doesn't sound like he's going to be much to me. Maybe those'll be famous last words. But a big guy that struggles to get up and down the court and sounds to be a stiff isn't going to last long in this league. He'd get roasted on D.

    Evan
     
  5. A-Train

    A-Train Member

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    Oh hell yeah, the Rockets HAVE to draft this guy, if for no other reason than to call our frontcourt "Ming squared"
     
  6. ymc

    ymc Member

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    If I remember correctly, the age limit applies to CBA players. As long as he is not in CBA yet, he can declare for the draft.
     
  7. qrui

    qrui Member

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    is this a joke? a guy 7'8'' playing bball in china should already have been reported, if he's indeed playing for his provincial team, had played in the junior olympic team, and is looking to be drafted by the nba.
     
  8. pirc1

    pirc1 Member

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    #8 pirc1, Apr 13, 2005
    Last edited: Apr 13, 2005
  9. BigM

    BigM Member

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    lmao :D
     
  10. KaiSeR SoZe

    KaiSeR SoZe Member

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    Ming Ming for 3!!
     
  11. JayZ750

    JayZ750 Member

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    Dude, it would be Ming-cubed...
     
  12. GBRocket

    GBRocket Member

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    makes you wonder when, not if we will see the first 8-footer in the L. Now THAT will be a story.
     
  13. Qwertyque

    Qwertyque Member

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    Ohh my god lmao I'm now sold, we HAVE to draft him
     
  14. lalala902102001

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    That article basically says in a nice way that this kid can't play ball at all.
     
  15. DeAleck

    DeAleck Member

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    By the look, this guy ain't... forget about it.
     
  16. Relativist

    Relativist Member

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    I hope he enters and gets drafted high enough to push some of the other big men like Shelden Williams down to us in the first round.
     
  17. user

    user Member

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    Don't look like the result of nature growth to me, especially the huge hands. More like the Iran dude.

    [​IMG]
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  18. user

    user Member

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  19. vunny1408

    vunny1408 Member

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    whoa the dude looks like he's 50 yrs old!
     
  20. vunny1408

    vunny1408 Member

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    Actually that sounds awfully familiar to what ppl were saying about Yao
     

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