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(NYTimes) Nigeria WC Team and Hakeem

Discussion in 'NBA Draft' started by xiki, Aug 14, 2006.

  1. xiki

    xiki Contributing Member

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    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/14/sports/basketball/14olajuwon.html?_r=1&ref=sports&oref=slogin

    Long Arms Groom Nigeria’s Long Shot

    By THAYER EVANS
    Published: August 14, 2006
    HOUSTON, Aug. 13 — Playing for the Nigerian junior national team in the All-African Games in 1979, Hakeem Olajuwon demonstrated so much potential that an opposing basketball coach recommended he attend college in the United States.

    Olajuwon played 18 seasons in the N.B.A., winning two championships with the Houston Rockets.
    Less than a year later, Olajuwon, a skinny 7-foot teenager, landed a scholarship at the University of Houston.

    Olajuwon led the Cougars to consecutive N.C.A.A. championship games before the Houston Rockets selected him as the first pick of the 1984 N.B.A. draft.

    He retired 18 years later with two titles, a Most Valuable Player award and two defensive player of the year awards. He is seventh on the N.B.A.’s career scoring list and the top shot blocker in league history.

    Olajuwon became a naturalized American citizen in 1993 and won a gold medal with the United States at the 1996 Olympics, but his loyalty to Nigeria is the reason its national men’s basketball team was in Houston this week.

    “That’s how I got discovered,” said Olajuwon, who was born in Lagos, Nigeria.

    At his invitation, the 12-player squad arrived Thursday night to train with him at Memorial Hermann-Houston Baptist University Wellness Center before departing Monday for Japan to participate in the 24-team world championship beginning Saturday. The team had been training in the Dallas area and in Las Vegas.

    “It’s just incredible — his sincerity to somehow get involved and be a part of what we’re doing,” said Sam Vincent, the former N.B.A. player who is coaching the Nigerian team.

    The Nigerian men’s basketball team has never appeared in the Olympics, though it could secure a spot in the Beijing Games in 2008 with an unlikely championship in Japan.

    The team qualified for the world championship by taking bronze at the FIBA Africa Championship in Algeria last year.

    To be eligible for the team, a player must be born in Nigeria or carry a Nigerian passport through his parents, Vincent said.

    One of Nigeria’s captains is Ime Udoka, who averaged 2.8 points in eight games with the Knicks last season.

    Other notable players include the former Oklahoma standout Ebi Ere, the former Texas forward Gabe Muoneke and the Maryland senior forward Ekene Ibekwe.

    Golden State Warriors center Ike Diogu and Philadelphia 76ers guard Andre Iguodala are also of Nigerian descent and could play for the national team if it qualifies for the Olympics, Vincent said.

    “Nigeria is blessed with incredible talent,” Vincent said. “Because of maybe less than good organization and preparation, their teams have never been able to take the place on the international scene that it deserves.”

    Basketball stills lags far behind soccer in Nigeria, which has a population of about 120 million.

    Besides Olajuwon, a goalkeeper for much of his youth, the country has also produced the former Nets center Yinka Dare and the current Boston Celtics center Michael Olowokandi.

    But there is increasing fanfare and government support for basketball, Udoka said.

    And there are signs of success. The women’s basketball team won its first Olympic game in Athens in 2004.

    Udoka said he expected Nigeria to improve on its 2-3 record and 13th-place finish in its previous trip to the world championships, in 1998.

    “There are some teams that we definitely should beat, and if we upset a team or two, we’ll be fine,” Udoka said.

    The top four teams from each six-team group advance to the next round. Nigeria’s group includes the Olympic champion, Argentina; the defending world champion, Serbia and Montenegro; and France, which features several N.B.A. players.

    Olajuwon’s involvement with the Nigerian national team could have significant implications for the future, Vincent said. Working out with Olajuwon could become an annual summer event, he said.

    “He’s the guy that has the network, the resources,” Vincent said. “He’s got the credibility, the professionalism and the history. He’s the guy who can pull a lot of things together for us and help us focus on three- to five-year plans as opposed to yearly plans.”

    The team practiced for two hours Friday morning, and afterward at least two players had their photographs taken with Olajuwon.

    “I had to get one,” said Chamberlain Oguchi, a junior swingman for Oregon who grew up in Houston watching Olajuwon play for the Rockets. “It’s a great honor to be on the same court as him. He’s a legend.”

    After Nigeria scrimmaged Friday night against a group of Houston-area players, the team went with Olajuwon to a local African restaurant for Nigerian and South African delicacies.

    Olajuwon, who lives in Amman, Jordan, with his wife and five children, has been in Houston the past two weeks as part of his annual summer visit to the city. In addition to the Nigerian national team, he has been working out with Emeka Okafor of the Charlotte Bobcats and other young players in one-on-one drills.

    His passion for tutoring basketball players is evident. Clad in a sweat-stained red T-shirt and black shorts Friday, he frequently rested his hulking hands on his knees between repetitions, but his trademark offensive post moves were still dangerous.

    He swiftly blocked one of Okafor’s shots and made a nifty move against another player to free himself for a duck-in layup.

    “That’s abuse,” Okafor said.

    Olajuwon teaches through playing, so at 43 he is competing against players half his age.

    He is already eyeing a potential game between the United States and Nigeria in the world championships. The earliest that matchup could happen is in the quarterfinals.

    “I’m from Nigeria, born in Nigeria,” Olajuwon said. “I’m an American who plays basketball. This is an American game.

    “If Nigeria plays U.S.A., it’ll be a good basketball game. The best team will win.”
     
  2. c1utchfan925

    c1utchfan925 Contributing Member

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    Wish yao had the athletisism that hakeem posseses. but im content with how he is now if he continous to improve. glad to hear that hakeem can still do what he did best.
     
  3. xiki

    xiki Contributing Member

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    Maybe The Dream will invite Team China next...I can dream, can't I?
     
  4. MandM's

    MandM's Member

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    The more I read about Hakeem "teaching" and "coaching" players, the more it sounds like he is just playing against them.

    I love Olajawon. Always have. But I will say it again (like so many have said before), great players rarely make great (or even good coaches). The spend their time competing against players and blocking their shots, not truly teaching them anything that those with with less-superior genetics can use.

    It happens over and over again, and it sounds like it is happening again in this case.
     
  5. jo mama

    jo mama Contributing Member

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    couldnt disagree more. although dream has said he has no desire to be an x's and o's coach, he has said he feels obligated to pass on his knowledge. in an earlier interview he mentioned that the best way to teach is to physically be out there and show them and that how while he was older, he could still do this.

    i seriously doubt he is out there just trying to show up a bunch of kids and relieve his glory days. he is trying to help, and more power to him.
     
  6. Rocket River

    Rocket River Member

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    as oppose to guys who never played barking orders from the sideline
    guys who just read books on basketball?

    Sports have to be PLAYED
    You cannot simply explain moves
    they have to be seen . .experienced and repeated

    Hakeem being on the court is so much better than
    him sitting on the sidelines trying to explain it

    Rocket River
    You lead by Example
     
  7. Rocket River

    Rocket River Member

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    Seriously!
    He *LEARN* by BANGING with Moses Malone
    not Moses saying .. do this. . or do that
    They played
    He learned
    he became the greatest

    Rocket River
     
  8. Deckard

    Deckard Blade Runner
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    As RR and jo mama pointed out, how would you have him teach a big man? Draw diagrams on a blackboard?? What better way than to get out on the court and show them how it's done? That he is still capable of showing a young stud like Okafor some moves, some tricks, and teach by playing against him is a testament to how welll Dream has stayed in shape since retiring. This was discussed in another thread, and there were the same disagreements about Dream's abilities to teach (to my astonishment), but how a player like Yao, a true student of the game, couldn't learn from the tutoring of the best center to lace them up, IMO, strikes me as nuts. Hell, Yao could learn from him sitting over the dinner table, talking about the game.
     
  9. Yetti

    Yetti Contributing Member

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    :p Sounds to me like we have just found the other big man that some think we need !! :p
     
  10. xlr817

    xlr817 Member

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    Man! I really miss the DREAM! Oh well, at least we have Yao! :)
     
  11. AggieRocketFan96

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    You are so out of touch. Perhaps you have never had the pleasure of watching Hakeem play? There is no doubt in my mind that Hakeem is an incredible teacher. Why? Because he had a passion to play unmatched by anyone on the court. Because he had the ability to make his team mates better when frankly they were subpar compared to most NBA teams. And he obviously shows this same passion to teach big men who aspire to play with the footwork and skills he brought to the NBA.

     

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