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Boston Globe: Two cultures, one popular sport

Discussion in 'Houston Rockets: Game Action & Roster Moves' started by ymc, Feb 23, 2003.

  1. ymc

    ymc Member

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    http://www.boston.com/dailyglobe2/054/nation/Two_cultures_one_popular_sport+.shtml

    Two cultures, one popular sport

    Yao Ming symbolizes basketball's old, deep roots with the Chinese

    By Jackie MacMullan, Globe Staff, 2/23/2003

    First of a three-part series

    BEIJING - For nearly 500 years, only royalty, their minions, and highly decorated military officers were allowed to step inside the Forbidden City, the imperial palace that houses priceless treasures of the Ching and Ming dynasties.

    But times have changed. The Forbidden City is now open to anyone willing to pay an entrance fee of 55 yuan, or roughly $4.

    Crossing the Golden Water bridge and stepping through the Meridien Gate, a visitor would expect to be admiring an ancient urn, a gilded statue of a dragon, a silk screen depicting a historic battle. Instead, the first thing you see is a pair of basketball courts.

    ''They are for the guards,'' explains Melyssa Deng, a student from Beijing who is acting as a translator. ''They love to play basketball on their break.''

    Basketball has been played in China since 1893, only two years after James Naismith tacked his peach basket onto the wall of a tiny gymnasium in Springfield, Mass. Basketball has been woven into the fabric of the Chinese culture over 11 decades and through thousands of promising players.

    Tomorrow, the nation's most gifted prodigy, 7-foot-6-inch center Yao Ming, who has been the talk of the National Basketball Association in his rookie season with the Houston Rockets, will make his first visit to the FleetCenter against the Celtics.

    Yao's stunning success has forced NBA teams to reexamine Asia, and China in particular, where rumors of more than 100 7-footers in one Chinese village have sent scouts scrambling.

    ''It's the new frontier,'' says Indiana Pacers coach Isiah Thomas. ''I plan on being there this summer, doing some camps and possibly some clinics. The word is out. There are no secrets in the NBA. Now that everyone knows China is more receptive to sending their players over here, everyone's looking into it.''

    What they find might surprise them. The Chinese economy is a work in progress but holds much promise, and the stifling communist government has loosened its hold on inhabitants and visitors. The Western influences are unmistakable. Students wearing blue jeans and midriff tops can easily be mistaken for Americans. In Beijing, there are too many Pizza Hut and Kentucky Fried Chicken franchises to count. There is a Kodak kiosk on nearly every street corner. A large billboard in Mandarin bears the likeness of Philadelphia 76ers guard Allen Iverson and his Reebok brand.

    There is no need to educate the Chinese on the NBA; they were versed in American basketball long before a 22-year-old Yao packed up his mother, her Shanghai chicken, and his size-18 signature sneakers for Houston.

    Yao, remember, was not the first Chinese player to be drafted by an NBA team. That honor was bestowed upon center Sung Tao, who was selected by the Atlanta Hawks in 1987 with the 67th pick but never made it stateside. Center Wang Zhi-Zhi became the first Chinese to play in the NBA, in the 2000-01 season. The 7-footer played five games that season and all of 2001-02 with the Dallas Mavericks before joining the Los Angeles Clippers this season. And 6-11 Mengke Bateer, the final prong of China's version of the Big Three, is currently a reserve with the San Antonio Spurs. This trio of centers generated considerable national pride, but until Yao's magnificent splash into the NBA pool of superstardom, young Chinese fans were content to share the same basketball heroes as kids from Philadelphia, Los Angeles, or Chicago.

    The next Jordan?

    Bruce O'Neil, the former University of Hawaii coach who signed a contract with the Chinese government to serve as an adviser for its national team, has spent the last eight years developing relationships with every major coach and player in this vast and heavily populated country. He has traveled to some of the most remote northern villages to conduct clinics and take stock of the millions of young players learning to develop hang time.

    ''I'll never forget the trip I made a few years ago,'' O'Neil says. ''I was way up north, in a region that had very little amenities, maybe one television in the whole village. I saw kids there playing basketball, and I asked them who they followed.

    ''They knew all about Barkley, Jordan, and Iverson. But when I asked them about their own teams, the only player they could name was Yao Ming.''

    Television commentator Xu Jicheng, a former Chinese basketball star affectionately known as ''Big Xu'' in his native land, loves to tell the story of the visiting American professor who decided to enlighten his Chinese students about one of the greatest athletes ever, Michael Jordan.

    ''So he starts to tell them about MJ,'' says Big Xu, laughing. ''He asks them if they've heard of them. He asks them if they know where he's from, and they answer, `North Carolina and the Chicago Bulls.' He asks them if they know what he's accomplished, and they rattle off all of Jordan's records, and the years he has won championships.

    ''The professor is very flustered. He can't believe they know so much. Then it is the students' turn to ask questions. They ask him if he knows Michael Jordan's wing span. He says he doesn't. That's when one of the students tells him, `Then you are the only one in this room who doesn't.'''

    Jordan's popularity reached almost mythic proportions in Asia during his championship run, and he remains the standard by which all Asian basketball superstars are measured. Even now, as Yao's visibility increases, both in his homeland and in United States, the Chinese people are hesitant to speak of him in the same revered tones as His Airness, or ''Qiao Dan,'' as Jordan is referred to. According to Liu Yumin, vice president of the Chinese Basketball Association, the nickname loosely translates into ''skillful, clever, lucky, and strong.''

    ''I believe Yao Ming can be like that,'' says Madame Liu, ''but other people would like to wait and see.''

    ''Research shows the Chinese are very tough on their own athletes,'' says Bill Duffy, Yao's agent. ''They don't believe their own can match up with the best of the world. A couple of times, Nike featured top Chinese players in their ads. The paying public's reaction was, `That was fake. Don't tell us our local athletes deserve Nike.'''

    But there is more to the hesitancy of Yao's homeland to tout him. Liu, who played basketball with Yao's mother, Fang Feng Di, and counts her among her closest friends, explains through a translator that a true communist always puts the team first and the individual second. That is why there are few records of the individual accomplishments of the great Chinese players of the past.

    Madame Liu was plucked from her family at age 12 and sent to a basketball school to train year-round. She was lucky if she saw her parents twice a year.

    ''It was not a choice,'' Liu says. ''It was what you did.

    ''Everyone has always loved basketball here. It's very popular in the playgrounds. The national team used to go play for the workers in the factories, and it was a great source of national pride.''

    Star power

    The NBA recognized the potential of the Chinese market nearly 20 years ago, and its All-Star Game aired on CCTV, the Chinese government's television network, as far back as 1987. In the past five years, as it charted Wang and Yao's development, the NBA ratcheted up its presence. The league currently produces 12 telecasts in China and is reaching more than 280 million homes. According to Mark Fisher, who is based in Asia and serves as the league's managing director of China, NBA games last season averaged 6 million viewers a night. This season, they average 12 million-13 million in games not involving Yao and 15 million-18 million in games when Yao plays.

    ''What Yao has done has drawn in the marginal fans,'' Fisher says. ''By that, I mean the fans who knew what the NBA was, and might even have watched a game once in a while. Now, when Yao is playing, they make a point to watch. They do understand star power.''

    So does the NBA. It opened a Beijing office five months ago and plans to have more than 100 retail stores in China by 2008, when Beijing hosts the Olympic Games. The league has started a Chinese NBA Hoop magazine that already has more than 100,000 subscribers, has created a Chinese Web site, and is putting together packages (visas included) for Chinese citizens to travel to the US and take in a Rockets game.

    ''When an individual goes to the US and sees a real, live game, they come back and tell their friends all about it,'' Fisher says. ''It only strengthens the interest in our product.''

    While no formal announcement has been made, Chinese officials say the NBA will play two preseason games in their country next fall, and they are expecting the Rockets to be the featured team.

    Unlike Wang, who caused a furor when he refused to go home and train with the national team last summer, Yao has remained loyal to and supportive of his government and countrymen. In fact, he missed a large portion of the Rockets' preseason while he fulfilled obligations to his national team.

    ''I think it is fine for people in China to enjoy the NBA,'' Yao said, ''but I hope they do not forget about the Chinese Basketball Association. It is a very important part of our heritage.''

    Yao echoes the fears of many traditionalist government officials, who worry that if they allow their top prospects to go to the US to train, they might never come back. The old-school basketball hierarchy also has resisted attempts to improve its training techniques. That hesitation is what has prevented China from becoming a world power in basketball.

    During the first International Basketball Forum in Beijing last December, newly elected secretary general of the International Basketball Federation Patrick Baumann likened China's potential to ''going through the forest and finding all these exotic mushrooms everywhere you look.''

    Baumann also outlined the many hurdles that remain before China can become a major player in the international world, among them the need to upgrade facilities, identify young players sooner, further educate coaches, and be willing to accept outside help.

    People like O'Neil have made inroads with the government. They have brought top Chinese players to the US to train and returned them safely with a better understanding of the fundamentals of the game. The fruits of that labor are just beginning to be seen, with the NBA showing renewed interest in the pool of Chinese prospects.

    ''We have some good resources for our international scouting,'' Orlando general manager John Gabriel says. ''Do we have a direct Asian scout? No, but that's the next thing that will happen.''

    China's top young players will be waiting. Tang Zheng Dong, an 18-year-old 7-footer from Nanjing on the junior national team, dreams of the day he will become eligible for the NBA draft.

    ''It is my wish to be good enough someday to follow Yao's path,'' Tang says. ''If I work hard enough, perhaps this can happen for me.''

    Top basketball officials in this country have their doubts. They wonder whether Tang has enough heart, enough motivation, enough toughness. He has been coddled since he was sent to the basketball academy at the age of 12, and he is not considered a top prospect like Yao.

    ''It's a stretch to think you will find another Yao Ming,'' says Isiah Thomas. ''Yao is very gifted. It's not just his size that makes him so good. But I do believe there are other players over there who can play in the NBA, especially with some good coaches, and better players around them.

    ''One of the reasons Yao is flourishing now is because now he has Cuttino [Mobley] and Steve Francis to get him the ball. Yao has never played with guards like that in China.''

    Motivation is there

    Is China the next frontier? According to NBA commissioner David Stern, it is only ''one of many frontiers,'' including Africa, France, and even India.

    Exhibiting patience, Stern insists, will be critical in the NBA's dealings with the Chinese, who are suspicious of outsiders and often wait years before they place their trust in foreigners.

    ''We know there are some very, very important opportunities for us there, and we must be appropriate in how we develop those opportunities,'' Stern says. ''We understand it will take time. We will not be making a mad rush to grab the low-hanging fruit.''

    Although the Chinese basketball system is pocked with difficulties, there does appear to be a willingness to upgrade. There are two motivating factors: a desire to fare well in the 2008 Games in Beijing, and the simple fact that good basketball will translate into good business.

    ''Basketball will attract a number of foreign companies into the Chinese market,'' says Wei Jizhong, executive director of the 2008 Games. ''This cooperation will force China's government to get rid of the red tape and their closed mentality. It should invigorate the Chinese.''

    Yao Ming says he is not sure what the future of basketball in his country will bring. He speaks hopefully of a good showing in Beijing.

    ''I look forward to playing in the Olympics,'' Yao says. ''It is an honor that does not happen for everyone.

    ''But maybe by then they won't need me. Maybe by then they will have found a better player to take my place.''

    The big man smiles mischievously. China's crown jewel of basketball, the emperor of a new Ming dynasty, has never shone quite so brightly.
     
  2. ymc

    ymc Member

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    Anyone know that Sung Tao guy? He was supposedly the first Chinese drafted NBA in 1987.
     
  3. winwook

    winwook Member

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    Isiah Thomas said ''One of the reasons Yao is flourishing now is because now he has Cuttino [Mobley] and Steve Francis to get him the ball. Yao has never played with guards like that in China.''

    Is he serious? I think he must be the only person involved with the NBA who thinks Yao is succeeding because of Cuttino and Francis. Most people think Yao is succeeding despite Cuttino and Francis. Since when has it been a priority for either of them to get Yao the ball? I think if Yao were on almost any other team in the NBA, he'd be averaging closer to 20 ppg. Nothing against Steve and Cuttino, they both great players but their game isn't about getting assists, it's about getting shots for themselves.
     
  4. carayip

    carayip Member

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    Well read the quote probably Isiah were comparing them to the Chinese guards! ;)
     
  5. prlen

    prlen Member

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    Z-like player.I heard someone hurt him in one of Chinese Nt practise.great leaping ability,could dunk from ft line...and so on...
     
  6. prlen

    prlen Member

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    Mourning-like
     
  7. nyquil82

    nyquil82 Member

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    55 yuan is closer to 7 bucks, im sorry, but it hurts a guy's credibility when he cant do lower school division for a major newspaper.
     
  8. jchu14

    jchu14 Member

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    Someone confirm me on this, but isn't Qiao Dan a direct phonic translation of Jordan into mandarin???
     
  9. carayip

    carayip Member

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    Yes, it's phonic translation. But Chinese is a very speical language. There are different Chinese words with the same pronounciation. So Chinese like to put together words to add "meaning" to their names. This is the 1st time I heard that Qiao Dan actually has some meaning though.
     
  10. feishen

    feishen Member

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    I think he played for univ of Utah for a couple of seasons. He was in clipper trainning camp, didnt know he was actually drafted by hawks. He is right now a very popular basket ball commentator in China, sort of like Bill Whalton. He had more atheletism than Yao Ming or Wang Zhizhi in his prime, and a 7 footer (or close) too.

     
  11. feishen

    feishen Member

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    Yeah, the writer didnt know what he was writing about.

     
  12. carayip

    carayip Member

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    Did Yao's agent know something we don't? :confused:

    http://www.boston.com/dailyglobe2/055/sports/The_Tao_of_Yao+.shtml

    CHINA AND BASKETBALL

    The Tao of Yao

    Hard work, respect, fun are guiding principles of Rockets phenomenon.

    By Jackie MacMullan, Globe Staff, 2/24/2003

    Second of a three-part series



    HOUSTON - The cameraman groans as he cranes his neck. Two reporters jostle for position, then resort to standing on folding chairs. Their precarious position, they determine, is worth it. Houston's Big Man is speaking today, and he might just say something they haven't heard yet.

    Yao Ming waits patiently as a chain of bodies coils around him. He stands 7 feet 6 inches and looks down on the proceedings like a blue heron resting on a branch. His translator, Colin Pine, a full 18 inches shorter than his employer, is not so fortunate. He is smothered by the onslaught.

    China's crown jewel speaks passable English, but he has concerns about miscommunications and delivering an improper and potentially newsmaking statement. Better to let Pine filter his thoughts and water them down if necessary.

    This affords Yao the unusual luxury of becoming a detached observer of his own celebrity. He rarely speaks for himself, and yet it doesn't stop the questions from coming.

    He has grown weary of it, and on this January afternoon, a week before the All-Star Game, his team, the Houston Rockets, has decided only eight minutes will be allotted for the burning questions of the day.

    It begins with an American with a radio microphone and a booming voice who stands inches from Yao yet completely turns his back on the gifted center.

    ''What does he eat?'' the inquisitor shouts at Pine, as if Yao were an exotic pet in a zoo and Pine his trainer.

    Yao, who clearly understands the question, seems perplexed by its relevance.

    ''He likes chicken,'' says Pine, after conferring with his friend in Mandarin.

    ''How old was he when he started playing basketball?''

    ''He was 9,'' answers Pine without hesitation. He has fielded this question hundreds of times.

    ''How does he feel about the chance to be China's first billionaire?''

    Yao rolls his eyes.

    ''I still eat three meals a day,'' he says through Pine.

    The man with the radio microphone cuts in quickly.

    ''Does he have a car?''

    Yao and Pine laugh. Yes, Yao does have a car, a brand new Toyota Sequoia. Only four days earlier, he christened it by denting the rear fender when he tried to back out of the Rockets' parking lot.

    ''Before I get my next car, I better get some insurance,'' Yao says through his translator. ''If I hit someone, I will have to pay a lot of money.''

    ''So he has a car!'' shouts the radio man, clearly pleased with himself.

    Thus, the day's headline is secured: YAO DRIVES!

    Here's another news flash: He eats, sleeps, and dreams, and he becomes tired, cranky, and homesick. He is not a curiosity; he is a man who carries the weight of a large Asian country on his surprisingly slender shoulders and will try to lead Houston to victory tonight against the Celtics at the FleetCenter.

    He's been here before

    Yao, 22, has not come from out of nowhere. He has come from a loving home in Shanghai, where families live in apartments, have one child, and rarely purchase cars; from a communist culture that frowns upon trash-talking, finger-pointing, unnecessary slam-dunks. He has become an instant hero on two continents, bridging a cultural gap between East and West that seemed insurmountable as recently as a decade ago.

    Although to most Americans Yao did not exist before he became the No. 1 pick of the Rockets in the 2002 draft, he had, in fact, been to the United States numerous times before that historic day last June.

    He played in a Nike All-Star game in Indianapolis in 1998, then scooted West to Santa Barbara for an audience with Michael Jordan at his Flight School, then was off to another Nike Camp in San Diego. Two years ago, Yao and the Chinese national team were guests of the Dallas Mavericks, working out at the Landry Center and scrimmaging against a number of the Mavericks' rookies.

    While those US stops have been duly recorded, his longest stint in the US was the one that flew under the radar. It was in 1999, when he was 19. He spent three weeks in Eugene, Ore., training with the Chinese national team at Bruce O'Neil's United States Basketball Academy. O'Neil, the former Hawaii coach who has carved out a niche as the adviser and American basketball conduit of Yao's homeland, delighted in watching the young big man loft jumpers as soft as raindrops from all over the floor. His passing skills were superior, his court sense impressive.

    ''You could tell he was a very intelligent player,'' O'Neil says.

    Here's another shocker: Yao drove a car then, too.

    ''I let him use my Ford Explorer,'' says O'Neil. ''He didn't go very far in it. He looked kind of cramped.''

    Who can say exactly when Yao began to blossom into the most intriguing big man since Shaquille O'Neal. His development was consistent yet unspectacular in the beginning. His friend, Shanghai native Frank Sha, watched him grow up in a typical basketball climate, the child of two former national team players who was singled out for his size.

    ''He always had talent,'' says Sha, sitting in a hotel lobby in Shanghai, ''but it was his temperament that set him apart. He was patient. He knew he did not have to rush greatness.''

    His greatness, O'Neil maintains, was suppressed by a system that requires waiting one's turn, even if one is ready to advance.

    ''I had watched Yao for a number of years in China,'' O'Neil says. ''They kept him on the junior national team forever. They had Wang Zhi-Zhi on the national team, and they were focusing on him, but we all knew Yao was the one. Even so, he was the stepchild for a long time. They didn't want him to shoot. They needed Wang to shine first. Yao was just the young guy, learning the ropes.''

    O'Neil was not the only American who had spotted Yao's potential. Tom McCarthy, a Boston native who was an assistant coach both at Boston College (1978-83) and Boston University (1985-87), originally moved to Asia as a marketing rep for Etonic. He soon started his own company, Dynasty Sports Marketing, and became involved in promoting the Asian Junior Championships.

    ''The first time I saw Yao, he was with his mother,'' says McCarthy. ''He was about 6-9 at that time, with caved-in shoulders. He had no strength at all. He hadn't developed any real skills yet, but he glided when he ran. He was only 14.

    ''I pulled him out of the drills and talked to him about commitment. I showed him how to do fingertip push-ups, and told him he needed to build his upper-body strength.''

    McCarthy, who has lived in Shanghai for 12 years, and O'Neil continued to monitor Yao's progress. By 1999, nearly every basketball insider knew there was something special about the young center, who arrived at O'Neil's facility in Eugene with an insatiable thirst for basketball knowledge.

    ''When I first saw Bruce, he reminded me of Santa Claus,'' says Yao. ''He was very nice to me. I couldn't understand English very well then, so I couldn't watch TV or anything. I was a little bored. I was also really tired every day. We worked very hard in practice.''

    Like Wang and Mengke Bateer of the Spurs, who had attended O'Neil's academy before him, Yao was shielded from the press. There were no distractions in Eugene; no big-city nightclubs, no wild parties, no booze.

    ''It was a valuable place for our players to learn the very basics of the game,'' says then Chinese national coach Ade Jiang. ''I have great faith in Bruce O'Neil. He has our interests at heart.''

    A developing story

    The development of Chinese basketball has taken a quantum leap in concert with Yao's stunning success. As his country reaps the benefits of his worldwide appeal (the government receives an unspecified percentage of Yao's contract, reported to be anywhere between 5 percent and 25 percent), Yao learns to adapt to a faster, stronger, more ferocious NBA game.

    ''You think he's good now,'' gushes Bill Duffy, his agent. ''Wait until he starts stepping back, and hitting threes. I'm telling you, he's only scratched the surface of how good he's going to be.''

    Sha says what has impressed him most about his friend has been his ability to focus on the game while his popularity has soared.

    ''The beauty of Yao is he is so stable,'' Sha says. ''He is always thinking about the right thing. That is not always easy when so many people are pulling at you from so many different places.''

    Yao's success, believes Sha, already has paved the way for the next Chinese prospect.

    ''The Chinese basketball market has matured greatly,'' Sha says. ''There's not so much government control any longer. It is possible for players to now reach for the next level.

    ''China has this huge population. If it was not Yao Ming, it would have been someone else.''

    So who is the next Yao? There are two 7-footers who have been cultivated: Tang Zheng Dong, 18, who has limited mobility; and Qong Jor, whom McCarthy dismisses as ''a poor man's Bateer.'' Neither has the agility, quickness, desire, or touch of Yao.

    The next NBA prospect is 16-year-old Yi Jian Lian, who is 6-11 and plays for the GuanDong Tigers. He has been likened to Croatian import Toni Kukoc, the 6-11 former Bulls star and current Buck, because of his shooting ability, ballhandling skills, and versatility. He has good speed, loves the transition game, and already has caught the eye of the major US sponsors in China. Last summer, Yi spent one week at an Adidas camp and another at a Nike camp.

    ''He is a major talent,'' O'Neil says. ''He is young, still growing, and he's very agile. He will not be a center, like Yao. He's more of a small forward, but he has the skills to take him to the NBA.''

    Of the 12 NBA officials contacted for this story, only one - Dallas assistant Donnie Nelson - had heard of Yi. Nelson is somewhat of a folk hero in China for his efforts to bring Wang overseas and is years ahead of other clubs in regards to connections and contacts. The status the Mavericks enjoy because they drafted the first Chinese player cannot be understated.

    ''Let's just say we've made some friends over there,'' Nelson says.

    Boost for Rockets

    The Rockets can relate. They provided Yao with a glittery international stage, and the Chinese people have taken note. Even before Yao signed with Houston - a three-year deal worth $4.1 million per year with a team option for the fourth year at $5.6 million - general manager Carroll Dawson and coach Rudy Tomjanovich sensed they enjoyed a special status when they went to Shanghai to meet with Yao and the Chinese government.

    ''We were walking down the street, and the people all recognized Rudy,'' Dawson says. ''They were grabbing his sleeve saying, `Coach Rudy! Coach Rudy!' It was amazing. And the greeting we received from the Chinese basketball officials was just as positive.''

    McCarthy confirms that Dallas and Houston have become NBA favorites in China. Had things worked out differently, McCarthy says, the preferred franchise could well have been the Orlando Magic.

    ''I knew of this [one] kid,'' McCarthy said. ''He wasn't a complete player, but he could shoot from the parking lot. His name was Hu Weidong, and he wanted to go to the NBA.''

    Because Hu was 27, he was not subject to the rules of the NBA draft. He could have been signed at any time by any team as a free agent. McCarthy called Magic general manager John Gabriel and offered to broker a deal that would land Hu in Orlando - before Dallas had the chance to draft Wang.

    ''We talked with Tommy about it,'' Gabriel says. ''The idea was to build relationships with people over there, and he thought the first step might be to give one of their players a trial run as a free agent.''

    McCarthy, who had developed a friendship with Xin Lancheng, the secretary general of basketball for China, convinced him to secure government approval. Then he called Hu and told him it looked promising. McCarthy and Gabriel still were negotiating a 10-day contract that would pay Hu in the neighborhood of $18,000 when McCarthy checked in with Hu to update him.

    ''I'll never forget it,'' McCarthy says. ''I called Weidong to tell him I thought we were all set. He starts crying. I said, `What the hell are you crying about? You're about to be the first Chinese player in the NBA.' He says, `I was so excited about my chance to go to America I did a very hard workout last night. I broke my leg! I can't play!'

    ''I couldn't believe it. It ruined my day in history. It ruined his day in history, too.''

    Risk of burnout

    It is hard to imagine any other Chinese player having the same impact as Yao. There's a new radio show that airs every Saturday in Houston - in Mandarin. He has become an endorsement king for Apple Computer and Visa (watch out, Gatorade is next), and a symbol of the new, changing face of China. It doesn't hurt that Yao has a killer smile, and a game to match.

    ''I think we've done a good job of humanizing him,'' Duffy says. ''He's very intelligent, and he's handled some of the situations he's found himself in with some amusement. But, at the end of the day, the US is still a foreign country for him. Everyone follows him around. He can't go anywhere anymore.

    ''And, from what I understand, it will be even worse when he goes back to China.''

    The risk of burnout looms large. Every day, a chain of reporters starts out in search of its prey. One other thing: Yao has not had a month off from playing basketball since he was 15. Rockets officials are understandably concerned how much longer he can serve two masters - his national team and the Rockets.

    ''We understand that there are certain national commitments he must make, but at the same time, we have a strong interest in his development in the NBA,'' explains Houston president George Postolos. ''He's got to be here for training camp, and preseason. Summer workouts are critical, too. So far, he's had limited opportunities to do all that. The first year, we understood. But moving forward, we're going to have to examine it.''

    Yao does not want to discuss these potential difficulties. He is fiercely loyal to his national team but has grown to understand the immense burden of his role as the newest NBA dynamo.

    ''It is hard to pick out the one part that has been the hardest,'' says the big man. ''I've had ups and downs like the waves of the ocean.''

    The ocean never rests; it only ebbs and flows. When Yao enjoys a private night of dining with Duffy and his friends, he converses with them in English, hoping to build on his comfort level of a strange and difficult language.

    His American friends have their own fantasies about that. They relish the day the radio man turns his back on this gentle giant and demands to know, ''What does he eat?'' only to be answered by Yao, in perfect English: ''What do I eat? I eat food. Same as you.''
     
  13. carayip

    carayip Member

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    We have a great reputation as an one-on-one team huh? ;)

    http://www.bostonherald.com/sport/celtics/cs02242003.htm

    C's quandary: Stop Yao, but how?

    by Mark Murphy
    Monday, February 24, 2003

    There's a lot more than basketball to consider when Yao Ming is the subject.

    Consider those commercials and endorsements, for example.

    Antoine Walker can certainly relate. The Celtics co-captain has done a few of his own commercials and even he has to admit that the computer gig that paired Yao with Mini Me of ``Austin Powers'' fame is a winner.

    ``I like his,'' Walker said after yesterday's practice. ``He has the little short guy, that really works.

    ``I think he's great for the league. He has a great personality.''

    And tonight, the Celtics get their second chance at dismantling the 7-foot-6 rookie's game.

    The Rockets come in for tonight's game with a 29-26 record that only hints at the improvement Yao's arrival has made to their already potent mix of perimeter players.

    Mark Blount, about to start his second tour of duty in a Celtics uniform tonight, played against Yao twice this season while with the Nuggets.

    It doesn't take much for a player to understand that this isn't your typical, classic big man.

    ``You really have to watch him in the post,'' Blount said. ``If you play up on him too tight, he can spin off of you and he's a very good passer.

    ``With his height, he's almost taking an eight-foot shot when he goes to the basket. But I think he's a really good passer, definitely a good passer. He's gonna be a very good player and he's gonna get better.''

    The Celtics faced Yao for the first time during a loss in Houston on Jan. 13.

    ``I don't recall him being out there for that long,'' Celtics forward Eric Williams said.

    In truth, Yao played 31 minutes, scored 10 points on 4-of-7 shooting and, most important, blocked five shots.

    The Celtics, who have not had great success against opponents with strong defensive interiors this season, get another shot at attacking, or finding a better alternative.

    ``We have to make sure we respect his size offensively,'' Celtics coach Jim O'Brien said. ``You have to attack, but if you don't have that shot in close, you have to be able to pull up for the shot.

    ``I think he's a traditional kind of center, but he's a much better passer than traditional centers. He's above everyone thanks to his height and he can see everything on the floor. He's like a tall quarterback in that respect.''

    ``What you have to remember is that they're one of the best one-on-one teams in the league,'' Walker said. ``And when you put Yao in the middle, and you put all of those shooters around him, they can really hurt you from inside and outside.

    ``He's 7-6, but he's not your typical 7-6 guy. He may not be as dominant as Shaq (Shaquille O'Neal) is body-wise, but he's getting there. He's very long and he's very skilled, the total package.

    ``Right now he's trying to fit into the NBA. And next year he's going to be even better. He's good. There's no doubt that he hurt us in the first game.''
     
  14. Jonhty

    Jonhty Member

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    the player you're talking about is Ma Jian and he's 6'7. Song Tao is actually another player. He is the first Chinese player who had the chance to play in the NBA. He definitely had more atheletism than Yao and Wang as another poster mentioned he could take off frome the FT line and dunk the ball. but I don't think he was as skilled as Yao. Also he's 6'10.
     
  15. prlen

    prlen Member

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    yes ,Jonhty.It is Ma,and ma is not Bil Walton in china too ,that is big xu ,haha.
    Song is a Zo-like player, strong ,great blocking ability.
    Now he live in Taiwan ,his wife is a well-know basket player in china too.

    someone (one of my Bball friends,who played for 18 -21(?)chinese NT teams )said¡° I know their complot is to hammer his leg¡±. Rumor!?Maybe!
    Hawks like to pick Song_style 's player,I still remmember Song 's
    360 Dunk...sigh.
     
  16. Free Agent

    Free Agent Member

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    I didn't realize Yao had an idiot for an agent.
     
  17. Free Agent

    Free Agent Member

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    Let me clarify that...I meant about Yao shooting the 3's.
     
  18. rockbox

    rockbox Around before clutchcity.com

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    There is nothing wrong with Yao hitting 3's as long as he doesn't camp there like EG does. It spreads the defense and makes the opponents honest. I don't understand why Yao doesn't shoot the ball more often when he is left alone at the top of the key. If he hits it more often then the pick and roll would more effective since the opposing center can't back off of him and help out on Stevie. It also makes the guy covering Stevie have to go around Yao and the other center.
     
  19. Yetti

    Yetti Member

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    Right on the mark! Keep on this fact till changes are made, please!
     
  20. jxu777

    jxu777 Member

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    I agree with your take on Yao's outside shooting. When that becomes part of the game plan, it'll keep the opposing defense honorst and create better opportunities for other players. That said, I also understand why Yao doesn't take those shots now.

    It's obviously not in the current game plan. And that's a good decision. From what I observed so far, Rudy wants him to fully develop his low post moves. Yao Ming has a long way to go to establish himself as a consistent low post force. It's in the long-term benefits of both the Rockets and himself. Yao's plate is full with all those low post assignments. Until he is consistent at the low post, I don't think occasioanl outside shots will help the team that much.
     

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