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Is The Basketball Game An Impediment Or An Asset To Black Youths? by Ndipe(m): 2:58am On Jul 01, 2015
It seems as if in America, it's an anomaly if you are black and dont play basketball. Most black youths take this game seriously, hoping to be the next Michael Jordan, get drafted into the NBA and strike a pot of gold. In high school, there are youths lounging around in the basketball courts, taking this game seriously and so into buying sneakers and all jersey irrespective of their prices. It's very common in inner city (or the hood as they call it) to see black boys doing pick up games sometimes at the expense of their education. A lady that I know of, told me that her relative goes to school off and on, but still plays basketball, so what are the chances that he will get drafted? Nobody knows the statistics. So this has me wondering, is basketball really an impediment or an asset to the black youths?

What do you think?

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Re: Is The Basketball Game An Impediment Or An Asset To Black Youths? by redvektor(m): 3:34am On Jul 01, 2015
Just incase
Re: Is The Basketball Game An Impediment Or An Asset To Black Youths? by saintneo2: 3:40am On Jul 01, 2015
Ndipe:
It seems as if in America, it's an anomaly if you are black and dont play basketball. Most black youths take this game seriously, hoping to be the next Michael Jordan, get drafted into the NBA and strike a pot of gold. In high school, there are youths lounging around in the basketball courts, taking this game seriously and so into buying sneakers and all jersey irrespective of their prices. It's very common in inner city (or the hood as they call it) to see black boys doing pick up games sometimes at the expense of their education. A lady that I know of, told me that her relative goes to school off and on, but still plays basketball, so what are the chances that he will get drafted? Nobody knows the statistics. So this has me wondering, is basketball really an impediment or an asset to the black youths?

What do you think?



It is just herd mentality. If the William sisters followed this thought then I doubt if we could have seen them in the major tennis opens. In the USA, blacks rush to the NBA, some rush to the NFL(the ones outside black dominated communities); I can remember when rap music was the reigning thing, every black man that gets an opportunity to be in front of a camera always wanted to demonstrate his rap skills.

Humans behave like herd of cattle sometimes; it takes a strong intuition to go in another direction.


Please join me and learn from these Seven Leadership Qualities. I believe you will benefit from it.

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Re: Is The Basketball Game An Impediment Or An Asset To Black Youths? by Chubhie: 3:52am On Jul 01, 2015
saintneo2:



It is just herd mentality. If the William sisters followed this thought then I doubt if we could have seen them in the major tennis opens. In the USA blacks rush to the NBA, some rush to the NFL(the ones outside black dominated communities); I can remember when rap music was the reigning thing, every black man that gets an opportunity to be in front of a camera always wanted to demonstrate his rap skills.

Humans behave like herd of cattle sometimes; it takes a GOAT to go in another direction.


Please join me and learn from these Seven Leadership Qualities. I believe you will benefit from it.
Nice
Re: Is The Basketball Game An Impediment Or An Asset To Black Youths? by tpiander: 3:55am On Jul 01, 2015
basketball is to black youths what football (soccer) is to african youths.
Re: Is The Basketball Game An Impediment Or An Asset To Black Youths? by saintneo2: 4:39am On Jul 01, 2015
m
Re: Is The Basketball Game An Impediment Or An Asset To Black Youths? by Nobody: 5:25am On Jul 01, 2015
Hmmn
Re: Is The Basketball Game An Impediment Or An Asset To Black Youths? by tpiander: 2:22pm On Jul 01, 2015
saintneo2:



It is just herd mentality. If the William sisters followed this thought then I doubt if we could have seen them in the major tennis opens. In the USA, blacks rush to the NBA, some rush to the NFL(the ones outside black dominated communities); I can remember when rap music was the reigning thing, every black man that gets an opportunity to be in front of a camera always wanted to demonstrate his rap skills.

Humans behave like herd of cattle sometimes; it takes a strong intuition to go in another direction.


Please join me and learn from these Seven Leadership Qualities. I believe you will benefit from it.


Re: Is The Basketball Game An Impediment Or An Asset To Black Youths? by Stillfire: 2:35pm On Jul 01, 2015
I can't speak for the black Americans but Nigerians in America use sports to get scholarships. There's still emphasis on the education bit over sports for Nigerians.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/19/sports/more-nigerian-americans-are-reaching-highest-levels-of-sports.html?_r=0

TEMPE, Ariz. — At Arizona State’s recent Senior Day celebration, guard Promise Amukamara was escorted onto the basketball court by her four sisters, whose mellifluous names spoke of royalty and hope: Peace, a teammate, along with Princess, Precious and Passionate.

Their brother, Prince, a cornerback for the Giants, sent his well wishes in a text message.

“All of them got scholarships to university,” said Christy Amukamara, the family matriarch. She smiled. “That was a great relief for us.”

Technically, Passionate, a high school senior, had yet to sign a scholarship offer as her team played for an Arizona prep basketball championship. Still, the Amukamaras are at the forefront of a growing number of Nigerian-American athletes, born in the United States, who are excelling at the top levels of high school, college and professional sports.

Andre Iguodala and Victor Oladipo play in the N.B.A., and Ime Udoka is an assistant coach for the San Antonio Spurs. The brothers Samuel and Emmanuel Acho are in the N.F.L. The sisters Nneka and Chiney Ogwumike of the W.N.B.A. were the only siblings drafted No. 1 over all in a professional sport besides Peyton and Eli Manning. Jahlil Okafor of Duke is predicted by many to be the first pick in the coming N.B.A. draft. And the sprinter Courtney Okolo of the University of Texas set a women’s N.C.A.A. record of 50.03 seconds at 400 meters last spring.

Typically, these athletes have parents or grandparents who came to the United States to study or to escape the 1980s-era military regime in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation, with about 175 million people living in an area twice the size of California.

About 380,000 Nigerian immigrants and their children live in the United States, up from 25,000 in 1980. They have settled in metropolitan areas like New York, Houston and Washington, and as a group, they are far more likely than the overall American population to receive undergraduate and advanced degrees, according to a 2014 analysis done for the Rockefeller Foundation and the Aspen Institute.

Many in the Nigerian diaspora view sports as a kind of student-athlete ideal with their discipline, work ethic and opportunities to gain access to higher education and careers, said the athletes, their parents and sports officials.

“The educational piece is the cross-nexus; they’re not just doing this for sport,” said Chris Plonsky, the athletic director for women’s sports at Texas, where a number of Nigerian-American and Nigerian immigrant athletes have played.

While at Nebraska, Prince Amukamara said, he planned to attend law school until he heard the ESPN draft analyst Mel Kiper Jr. project him as a first-round pick in the 2011 N.F.L. draft.

“My dad said, ‘O.K., you can pursue sports,’ ” Amukamara, 25, said, adding, “Sports has always been secondary.”

Athletes born in Nigeria have also continued to rise to prominence in North America in the decades after Christian Okoye’s grinding success as a running back with the Kansas City Chiefs and Hakeem Olajuwon’s Hall of Fame basketball career with the University of Houston and the Houston Rockets.

Masai Ujiri is the general manager of the Toronto Raptors. Obafemi Martins, a forward for the Seattle Sounders, finished second last season in the voting for most valuable player in M.L.S. The country’s top-ranked girls’ high school basketball team, SS. John Neumann and Maria Goretti Catholic High School, in Philadelphia, has two players from Nigeria: Christina Aborowa, a 6-foot-4 senior forward headed to Texas, and Felicia Aiyeotan, a 6-9 junior center.

Ujiri estimates that his foundation, Giants of Africa, has brought 75 to 100 male athletes to the United States from Nigeria over the past dozen years to play college basketball.

Carl LeVan, an Africa scholar at American University, said that sports in Nigeria had historically provided a unifying force in a culturally diverse country and, along with literature, had helped instill a sense of exceptionalism.

“This is another area where Nigerians hear that calling to greatness,” LeVan said.

On occasion, athletic migration has gone in the other direction. At the 2012 London Olympics, nine players on the Nigerian men’s basketball team were born in the United States. And Nigeria’s reigning 100-meter sprint champion, Mark Jelks, is from Gary, Ind.

Sometimes, achievement has brought controversy. Jelks was called a mercenary last summer by some reporters and former athletes in Nigeria after he switched his track allegiance from the United States. He had only a casual relationship with Nigeria and had previously been suspended for two years by American antidoping officials after missing an out-of-competition drug test. He could not be reached for comment.

While Neumann-Goretti, the Philadelphia high school, has lost only one girls’ basketball game in two seasons, the team has been engulfed in turmoil. John Gallagher, the coach at a rival Catholic school, resigned in February after being linked to emails, sent under a pseudonym to the University of Texas, that questioned the eligibility of Aborowa and Aiyeotan.

Gallagher’s lawyer told The Philadelphia Inquirer his client had broken no laws. The emails emerged in a slander and libel lawsuit filed by Neumann-Goretti’s former coach, Letty Santarelli, who resigned in November amid an investigation of the team. She declined to comment.

The Archdiocese of Philadelphia and the Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Association have said they found no wrongdoing. Neumann-Goretti won the state’s AA girls’ title by 45 points on Friday. Plonsky, the women’s athletic director at Texas, where Aborowa is scheduled to play next season, said, “We have every confidence that she’ll be fine.”

A predominantly black team like Neumann-Goretti’s might have rankled the largely white powers that have dominated Philadelphia’s Catholic League in girls’ basketball, leading to unfounded rumors, said Mike Flynn, who assisted the Nigerian players in coming to the United States and who operates the Amateur Athletic Union team on which they have played.

Still, Flynn acknowledged, there can be risks for players coming from Nigeria and other African countries. “There are so many people looking to make a dollar off them in their own country and so many people not looking out for their welfare once they get here,” Flynn said.

While those who meet expectations often find their way, he said, those who do not are “sometimes chattel; they don’t have a school, a home, a support system.”

“You disappear into the undocumented American landscape or you go home,” Flynn said.

At 18, Aborowa is the median age for Nigerians. And she speaks fluent English, the former colonial language of British rule, which has eased her assimilation into the culture. Her coach said she was a straight-A student.

Aborowa said that three or four years ago, however, she knew almost nothing about basketball and had little expectation beyond a life as a mother and perhaps as a trader of goods. A coach spotted her in Lagos, Nigeria, and gave her his phone number. Her guardian tore it up, Aborowa said, admonishing her not to speak to strangers.

The coach persisted, and Aborowa began to learn the game, eventually traveling to Philadelphia with the help of a foundation called Hope 4 Girls Africa. Basketball, Aborowa said, now means everything to her.

“Before, I didn’t have a life; there was no opportunity to go forward,” she said. “Now it’s my dream, my hope. My mom doesn’t have the money to send me to school. Now I’m there.”

She plans to study computer science at Texas and would like to own a business. “We believe in hard work,” Aborowa said of herself and other Nigerians. “It’s in the blood, to go hard every time, to go for what you want.”

Ify Ogwumike, 47, was also born in Nigeria, the daughter of an oil company executive. She is an assistant superintendent at a school district outside Houston. Her husband, Peter, owns an information technology business. Their four daughters have become somewhat inadvertent basketball stars.

“We come from highly educated families where the mind-set is to send your children to the best schools where they get the best education and the best opportunities,” Ify Ogwumike said. “Sports was not a focus; education was the focus. We just happened to find sports and find that you can get the best of both worlds.”

She insisted that her eldest daughters, Nneka, 24, and Chiney, 23, play the piano. Not until they were 11 and 10 did the sisters take up basketball at a Y.M.C.A., adhering to their mother’s two requirements: They had to play the same sport, and it had to be indoors in humid Houston.

The parents of her friends were skeptical at first, Chiney Ogwumike said, and advised her mother, “You need to put them in honors math.”

Eventually, Nneka and Chiney became all-Americans at Stanford, and No. 1 overall picks in the W.N.B.A. draft. Nneka plans to pursue a Master of Business Administration degree, while Chiney intends to enter law school. A younger sister, Olivia, played in the starting lineup much of this season as a freshman at Pepperdine and will be joined by the youngest Ogwumike sibling, Erica, next season.

“Sports opened doors and sometimes knocked down doors for us,” Chiney Ogwumike said.

Romanus Amukamara, 56, a math teacher, traveled to the United States from Nigeria in 1980 on a student visa and was told by his parents that a “good name is better than riches.” His grandfather was a king of a village, hence the names Princess and Prince given to his children. His eldest three children have college degrees, and Promise is scheduled to graduate from Arizona State in May.

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“People can take your wealth, your property, but they cannot take away your knowledge or that diploma,” Romanus Amukamara said.

Sports provided structure and recreation. Romanus Amukamara was a soccer player, and his wife, Christy, was an elite sprinter in Nigeria. Their children became competitive. Princess Amukamara, 28, played high school football before turning to softball in college. (“I think she was a linebacker,” Prince said with a laugh. “She always wanted to spear people.”) Precious, 24, won seven Arizona state high school track and field championships.

Promise, 21, and Peace, 20, received basketball scholarships and have helped make Arizona State a top-10 team this season.

“In high school, our eyes opened when our coaches told us, ‘You have the potential to get a scholarship and play the sport you love at the next level,’ ” Promise Amukamara said.

Passionate Amukamara, 17, laughed and said she felt some pressure to be the best athlete in the family because she was the youngest. “Once my parents found out my brother was good in football and my sisters were good in basketball,” she said, “it became, ‘You have to excel in sports as much as you do in school.’ ”
Re: Is The Basketball Game An Impediment Or An Asset To Black Youths? by tpiander: 2:53pm On Jul 01, 2015
No, you do not have to excel in sports as much as you do school.


Let's stop making storms in teacups , its not good for you.



Sports can be either professional or for relaxation/exercise.

If you are doing it professionally to make money, fine, if you are doing it to have fun, relax, or exercise, that's also fine.


Don't sweat the small stuff, sheer cussedness.
Re: Is The Basketball Game An Impediment Or An Asset To Black Youths? by Ndipe(m): 4:01am On Jul 03, 2015
It shouldnt come at the expense of one's education. Maybe, a survey or a report should be done to examine the co-relationship between basketball and black high school and college age students.
Re: Is The Basketball Game An Impediment Or An Asset To Black Youths? by tpiander: 4:10am On Jul 03, 2015
like how?
Re: Is The Basketball Game An Impediment Or An Asset To Black Youths? by Ndipe(m): 2:05am On Oct 27, 2016
tpiander:
like how?

You see black kids obsessing over basketball at the expense of their education. It's scary.
Re: Is The Basketball Game An Impediment Or An Asset To Black Youths? by Nobody: 6:17am On Oct 27, 2016
Those who're good know they also have to be in a good academic standing if they want to get scholarships to play in college, so I doubt they would let their education take the back seat.

Ndipe:

You see black kids obsessing over basketball at the expense of their education. It's scary.
Re: Is The Basketball Game An Impediment Or An Asset To Black Youths? by Ndipe(m): 4:34am On Oct 28, 2016
Yieldings:
Those who're good know they also have to be in a good academic standing if they want to get scholarships to play in college, so I doubt they would let their education take the back seat.


But it does at times, check out professional basketball players who dumped their education to get drafted. Is that wrong? Certainly not, one has to hustle. But how about those who do not have such opportunities to get drafted, yet, are hopeful to the detriment of their studies?
Re: Is The Basketball Game An Impediment Or An Asset To Black Youths? by Nobody: 8:34am On Oct 28, 2016
I've noticed, most African American men raised in poor or struggling homes aspire to be athletes or rappers.

It's either herd mentality or they believe they are not smart enough to make it in other fields.
Re: Is The Basketball Game An Impediment Or An Asset To Black Youths? by Ndipe(m): 2:19am On Oct 24, 2017
I've noticed, most African American men raised in poor or struggling homes aspire to be athletes or rappers.

It's either herd mentality or they believe they are not smart enough to make it in other fields.

Maybe, it's an opportunity to make quick bucks to escape from the hood. You see some of them selling CD's from the back of their trunk. Others may feel that the society has failed them or the man upstairs is holding them back from succeeding. Some do succeed, but what's the percentage?
Re: Is The Basketball Game An Impediment Or An Asset To Black Youths? by Nobody: 9:04am On May 06, 2019
I'm a potential student-athlete so basketball is not going to be an impediment. Just try to balance stuff .

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