Posts Tagged ‘basketball’

Born Ready Project Supports umttr.org 3v3 Hoops Benefit Tournament

May 6, 2015

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Since Evan Rosenstock took his life in May 2013, his friends and family have rallied to support suicide prevention and education. Most emphatically, the group started umttr, a community of young adults leading a movement to change the story from bullying, depression and suicide to a compassionate culture where every person matters.

umttr’s marquee fund raising event is a 3v3 basketball tournament, which will take place June 14 at Walt Whitman High School in Bethesda, Maryland. The Born Ready Project is a promotional partner with umttr and has donated a speech to those attending.

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Dave Ungrady, author of Born Ready: The Mixed Legacy of Len Bias and the founder of the project, will speak at the event about the importance of good decision making. Books will be available for purchase.

The event will showcase 8th – 12th grade basketball players (coed), men’s basketball (under 50 and over 50), and feature celebrity appearances, speakers, politicians and a silent auction. Proceeds from the event will support student mental health and wellness organizations.

For more information, contact Susan Rosenstock at 202-679-6869, susan@umttr.org. Register here.

Release: Born Ready Project Makes Stop Where Len Bias Learned Basketball

January 29, 2014

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Xtreme Teens Speech Set for Columbia Park Recreation Center

Teens in Prince George’s County will soon have a chance to learn about the rich legacy of Len Bias where he learned how to play basketball.  A Born Ready Project speech for the Xtreme Teens program in Prince George’s County, MD, will take place at the Columbia Park Recreation Center on February 7. It’s at that center where Bias, the former University of Maryland basketball star, developed his game while a teenager.

Dave Ungrady, author of the book, Born Ready: The Mixed Legacy of Len Bias  and developer of the Born Ready Project, will speak about decision making to members of the Xtreme Teens Program. The speech begins at 8 p.m.

Bias grew up in Columbia Park a few blocks from the recreation center and started playing basketball there while in middle school. Bias famously was not selected for his middle school team twice, and he used those disappointments as motivation to become a dominant player.

“When he was young, kids used to laugh at him when he played basketball,” says Lee Madkins, the director of the Columbia Park Recreation Center during Bias’s youth. “They never picked him on a team. Then he ended up with everyone wanting him on their team.”

During the speech, the teens will learn leadership tools that help them increase their confidence in decision making. These lessons are drawn from the legacy of Bias, whose choices resulted in superb athletic performances on the court but tragic consequences off the court, when he died of a cocaine overdose in 1986.

The speech is one of six scheduled for Xtreme Teens through March at MNCPPC facilities. They began in early January. Xtreme Teens, managed by the Maryland National Capital Park and Planning Commission, provides programs, classes, facilities and other fun things to do for teens ages 13-17 and pre-teens 10-12 in Prince Georges County.

The Born Ready Project helps teenagers and adults achieve their greatness, by teaching them life skills and leadership skills to make good decisions and act resilient. Decision making and resilience are important to achieving success.

For more information about the Born Ready Project, contact Dave Ungrady, djungrady27@gmail.com or 703-282-5259. For more information about Xtreme Teens, contact Stephen Makle, Stephen.Makle@pgparks.com or 301-446-3408.

Learning Basketball at “The Rec”

January 22, 2014

The middle-class, black community of Columbia Park sits in humble repose a few miles northeast of Washington, D.C., its rectangular street pattern a reflection of its commonality. Only a mix of colors distinguishes one tidy, box-like house from another, their front yards the size of half a basketball court, positioned neatly in parallel rows, one house segueing into the next. In the 1970s and 1980s, young boys who wanted to develop their athletic skills flocked to the Columbia Park Community Center, reverently referred to as The Rec, spending tireless hours perfecting their skills on a small, indoor windowless court with a ceramic floor.

Johnnie Walker was one of them. He had spent his earliest years growing up in the Congress Heights section of Southeast Washington, D.C., considered one of the poorest sections of the city, about a mile from where the Anacostia River dumps into the Potomac River. There, it was difficult to ignore young adults shooting heroin and drinking liquor all hours of the day. But at 15, Walker moved to the relative comforts of Columbia Park, where life was humble and simple and drug and alcohol abuse did not become an issue until the late 1980s.

Walker played two years of varsity basketball at Northwestern High School in Hyattsville, Maryland, graduating in 1978. While putting off college for a year, he volunteered as a coach at The Rec, monitoring basketball activities for neighborhood kids and preparing his players for the center’s summer league team. He taught them fundamentals and conditioning with innovative exercises, such as plyometrics, which he learned from Bob Wagner, his former coach at Northwestern. Wagner wanted to build his new program with the best available talent, so he alerted Walker to keep an eye out for Len Bias, a young player at nearby Greenbelt Middle School whom he had heard showed promising talent.

 During practice one day in the winter of 1979, some kid kept peeking through the doors to the gym at The Rec, yelling to his friend Terrence Lewis. Walker scolded Lewis, telling him to ignore the kid and pay attention. The interloper finally gave up and left.

“Who was that?” Walker eventually asked out loud.

“That’s Leonard Bias,” someone said.

 A few months later, while walking to The Rec, Walker spotted Bias riding a bike and approached the ninth-grader, saying he understood that he played for Greenbelt Middle School. Bias tried to sell himself to Walker, saying he was better than Lewis. He told Walker that his parents didn’t let him leave the street much without their supervision, so Walker offered to talk with them and receive permission to serve as his guardian to, from and while he was at The Rec, if he was interested in joining the group. Walker could stop by the Bias house, he told the young man, and meet him so the two could walk to The Rec together.

 “They said yes, but don’t you think his dad didn’t come up and check on him,” says Walker. 

At the time, Bias was in the midst of a critical phase in his basketball development, using a setback to fuel a fiery determination to be a great basketball player. He had been cut from the middle school team twice, in the seventh and eighth grades. “It was one of the big shocks in my life,” Bias said in a 1985 Washington Post article. “I remember going down the steps to look at the [team] list and my name wasn’t on it. I couldn’t believe it. Right then, I decided I was going to show these people that I could play the game.”

 “He kept saying the whole time, ‘God, let me get better,’ ” says his middle-school and high school teammate Reginald Gaskins in the documentary Without Bias. Young Leonard’s biggest motivation came from the teasing, his father recalled in Without Bias, explaining: “He was going to be the best.”

 As he integrated Bias into the group at The Rec, Walker took stock of him as a tall, lanky and raw athlete and a bit of a whiner when he felt he was being fouled unfairly. Walker treated Bias like any other regular in the group, meaning he roughed him up, pushing him after he took a shot. With Walker in his path, there was no such thing as an easy layup. Walker hit Bias with elbows and muscled him away from the basket, acting like a bully a few years before the NBA’s Detroit Pistons made the style fashionable in the mid-1980s.

 Brian Waller, one of Bias’s closest friends at The Rec and a high-school teammate, also endured Walker’s tough training. “He’d give us everything that wasn’t in the rule book,” he says. “When you’re not used to it, you whine and cry. People were fouling [Bias] all the time. No matter how much he whined, Johnnie was still killing him. On Monday and Wednesdays we’d play against the older guys in the gym; that’s how they played. You either step up or you don’t.”

 It took a while for Bias to grow into his body and develop his superior talents. “When he was young, kids used to laugh at him when he played basketball,” said Lee Madkins, the director of the center during Bias’s youth, in a Washington Post report soon after the player’s death. “They never picked him on a team. Then he ended up with everyone wanting him on their team.”

 It took only a couple of months for Bias to adapt to the physical play, and soon he became the intimidator on Columbia Park’s 16-and-under traveling team. In order to set the tone at the beginning of each game during his first summer with the team, he played a role: Columbia Park purposely let opponents win the opening tip so Bias could block or goal-tend their opening shot. 

 As Waller remembers, it helped Columbia Park win every game that summer. Bias also showed his athleticism for his age by finishing off alley-oops. He was the only player on the team who had the leaps to complete the play. Columbia Park felt so confident that players on the bench would read the newspaper toward the end of runaway games. “At that age, we didn’t think if it was embarrassing for the other team,” says Waller.

50 for 50 – Len Bias’ Golden Moments #10…Freshman Frustrations

October 9, 2013

Through Nov. 18, Len Bias’ 50th birthday, the Born Ready Blog will provide each day a new item that helped define Len’s legacy, 50 in total.

Freshman Frustrations Force Bias to Think About Transferring

Bias showed flashes of brilliance during his freshman season at Maryland. In one highlight, he hit a 17-foot jump shot with two seconds remaining that helped unranked Maryland upset 15th-ranked Tennessee-Chattanooga by one point in the first round of the NCAA tournament. Bias ended up starting 13 games for Maryland and averaging 7.1 points per game, the best of any Terrapins freshman.

But Bias was far from content with his first year at Maryland. Mentor Johnnie Walker says that after a loss to UCLA in late December, Bias asked him to contact N.C. State coach Jim Valvano about transferring to the school. Bias was unhappy after Driesell subbed him out of the game after he took a shot, and felt that Driesell wanted him to focus more on defense than offense.

Also, Driesell was working to persuade Bias to change his shot by releasing the ball at the height of his jump, to take advantage of his superior leaping ability, and Bias admitted that it took him a while to adjust. It wasn’t until late in his junior year, he told the Washington Post that March, that he finally felt comfortable with his new technique: “Now when I go up to shoot, I don’t expect anybody to block me.”

Walker says Driesell called him shortly after the UCLA game to discuss Bias’s concerns. Walker says he talked bluntly with Driesell, saying Bias didn’t like the fact that he had to focus so much on defense and was clearly unhappy with what he felt were Driesell’s attempts to break him down and control him. He said Bias felt that he wasn’t supposed to take shots. Before the end of the season, Driesell met with Bias and worked out the problems.

“After that, Leonard said everything was OK,” says Driesell.

Bias_cover_pngExcerpted from the book, Born Ready: the Mixed Legacy of Len Bias

Learn about the Born Ready Project that teaches life skills, using Len’s legacy as a teaching tool.

BornReadyLogo_Finalv2b (1)Find out about the Born Ready Hoops Festival  Nov. 22-24, that will honor Len’s legacy as a basketball player.

Shining at Five Star

October 6, 2013

Len Bias Shines at the Five Star Basketball Camp and meets his equal. 

During the summer after his sophomore year, Bias for the first time attended the Five Star Basketball Camp. There, the top high-school basketball players in the nation gathered annually to learn from NBA or college players as well as such luminary coaches as Bobby Knight, Chuck Daly and Hubie Brown. The camp also served as a prime location for college coaches to scout the top high school talent and is considered the precursor to the AAU programs that now serve the same purpose.

The best players received free tuition at the camp, but worked off their fee as waiters. That first year, Bias paid his own way. Waller, who also attended, says Bias’s first Five Star camp experience transformed him as a player. “He either outplayed the other guys or played them evenly,” he remembers. “His confidence changed after the Five Star camp. After that, there was no looking back.”

One of the first people Bias met at camp was Michael Jordan, then a rising-star senior at Laney High School in Wilmington, North Carolina. As Waller remembers, Jordan had already been at the camp for a week working with Spriggs, the Northwestern alumnus and at the time a top player at Howard University, who was among the counselors that year. “We saw Jordan sitting on a bench and Larry said he wanted to introduce him to his homeboys,” says Waller. “Larry introduced me as my nickname, ‘Ice.’ Jordan said, ‘They call me ‘Black Ice.’ ”

With the ice broken, roommates Waller and Bias spent lots of time with Jordan and his roommate Buzz Peterson, who would later become Jordan’s teammate at North Carolina. The four bonded quickly, gathering in each other’s rooms at night talking about their basketball dreams. The friendship between Bias and Jordan grew stronger the following year. Waller and Bias ran into Jordan and a friend at a University of Maryland football game, and the four left the game early to play two-on-two games in Cole Field House for about an hour. “We beat them,” Waller says proudly.

By the summer after his junior year, Bias had reached the heralded Five Star camp status of waiter, which allowed him free tuition. Howard Garfinkel, who started the camp in 1966 and ran it for 42 years, says that after his second year at the camp Bias received a 5-plus rating – the highest a player can receive – signifying “super” potential to dominate college at the Division 1 level. He also won the Most Outstanding Player award that year over such future NBA players as Dawkins and Billy Thompson, who helped Louisville win the NCAA in 1986. “He was one of the top 10 or 15 best ever at our camp,” says Garfinkel. “He was an extra-terrestrial athlete and a great scorer. And he was a great person, very likable.”

Bias_cover_pngExcerpted from the book, Born Ready: the Mixed Legacy of Len Bias

Learn about the Born Ready Project that teaches life skills, using Len’s legacy as a teaching tool.

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A Whiner Grows Up

October 5, 2013

Len Bias chooses a public high school and learns how to play with the big boys.

Bias considered attending DeMatha Catholic High School, at the time one of the top programs in the country, but his mentor, Johnnie Walker, steered him toward his alma mater Northwestern, which had a history of local greatness in basketball. Before the 1980s, Northwestern won three state championships and produced a few NBA players, most notably Larry Spriggs, who won an NBA title during his five seasons with the Los Angeles Lakers from 1981 to 1986.

At The Rec, Waller witnessed Bias’s dramatic evolution as a basketball player, and by the time Bias got to Northwestern, says Waller, his teammate at Northwestern, “it was like night and day from when I first met him.” Nonetheless, Northwestern head coach Bob Wagner considered Bias a work in progress. He was growing taller as he inched toward his ultimate 6-foot, 8-inch frame, had developed a better shot and was a leaper, but Wagner knew there was more to becoming a good rebounder than having an ability to jump.

He also thought Bias lacked a certain toughness and always had to open his mouth, so he encouraged him to play in men’s leagues and learn from some veteran players. “Len was a crybaby, a whiner,” says Wagner. “We wanted the older guys to rough him up a bit, but not hurt him. And we wanted the older guys to talk to him.”

Excerpted from the book, Born Ready: the Mixed Legacy of Len Bias

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Donate to a crowdfund campaign that supports production of a documentary about the legacy of Len Bias.
Learn about the 34+1 campaign,  which promotes effective  decision making for teenagers and young adults. 

The Intimidator

October 4, 2013

As a teenager Len Bias showed the raw talents that would make him on of the most feared players in college. 

It took a while for Bias to grow into his body and develop his superior talents. “When he was young, kids used to laugh at him when he played basketball,” said Lee Madkins, the director of the Columbia Recreation Center during Bias’ youth, in a Washington Post report soon after the player’s death. “They never picked him on a team. Then he ended up with everyone wanting him on their team.”

It took only a couple of months for Bias to adapt to the physical play, and soon he became the intimidator on Columbia Park’s 16-and-under traveling team. In order to set the tone at the beginning of each game during his first summer with the team, he played a role: Columbia Park purposely let opponents win the opening tip so Bias could block or goal-tend their opening shot. As Waller remembers, it helped Columbia Park win every game that summer. Bias also showed his athleticism for his age by finishing off alley-oops.

He was the only player on the team who had the leaps to complete the play. Columbia Park felt so confident that players on the bench would read the newspaper toward the end of runaway games. “At that age, we didn’t think if it was embarrassing for the other team,” says Waller.

Excerpted from the book, Born Ready: the Mixed Legacy of Len Bias

Bias_cover_png

Donate to a crowdfund campaign that supports production of a documentary about the legacy of Len Bias.

Learn about the 34+1 campaign,  which promotes effective decision making for teenagers and young adults. 

Finding A Mentor

October 3, 2013

While in ninth grade, Len Bias meets Johnnie Walker, who convinces Len to start playing basketball with other boys at “The Rec”, where Walker is a coach. 

Walker played two years of varsity basketball at Northwestern High School in Hyattsville, Maryland, graduating in 1978. While putting off college for a year, he volunteered as a coach at The Rec, monitoring basketball activities for neighborhood kids and preparing his players for the center’s summer league team. He taught them fundamentals and conditioning with innovative exercises, such as plyometrics, which he learned from Bob Wagner, his former coach at Northwestern. Wagner wanted to build his new program with the best available talent, so he alerted Walker to keep an eye out for Len Bias, a young player at nearby Greenbelt Junior High School whom he had heard showed promising talent.

During practice one day in the winter of 1979, some kid kept peeking through the doors to the gym at The Rec, yelling to his friend Terrence Lewis. Walker scolded Lewis, telling him to ignore the kid and pay attention. The interloper finally gave up and left.

“Who was that?” Walker eventually asked out loud.

“That’s Leonard Bias,” someone said.

A few months later, while walking to The Rec, Walker spotted Bias riding a bike and approached the ninth-grader, saying he understood that he played for Greenbelt Junior High. Bias tried to sell himself to Walker, saying he was better than Lewis. He told Walker that his parents didn’t let him leave the street much without their supervision, so Walker offered to talk with them and receive permission to serve as his guardian to, from and while he was at The Rec, if he was interested in joining the group. Walker could stop by the Bias house, he told the young man, and meet him so the two could walk to The Rec together. “They said yes, but don’t you think his dad didn’t come up and check on him,” says Walker.

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Excerpted from the book, Born Ready: the Mixed Legacy of Len Bias

Learn about the 34+1 campaign,  which promotes effective decision making for teenagers and young adults. 

Motivation

October 2, 2013

Len Bias was cut not once, but twice, from the basketball team at Greenbelt Junior High School. 

Bias was in the midst of a critical phase in his basketball development, using a setback to fuel a fiery determination to be a great basketball player. He had been cut from the junior high school team twice, in the seventh and eighth grades. “It was one of the big shocks in my life,” Bias said in a 1985 Washington Post  article. “I remember going down the steps to look at the [team] list and my name wasn’t on it. I couldn’t believe it. Right then, I decided I was going to show these people that I could play the game.”

“He kept saying the whole time, ‘God, let me get better,’ ” says his junior high school and high school teammate Reginald Gaskins in the documentary Without Bias .

Young Leonard’s biggest motivation came from the teasing, his father recalled in Without Bias , explaining: “He was going to be the best.”

Bias_cover_png

Excerpted from the book, Born Ready: the Mixed Legacy of Len Bias

Donate to a crowdfund campaign that supports production of a documentary about the legacy of Len Bias.

Learn about the 34+1 campaign,  which promotes effective decision making for teenagers and young adults. 

Finding A Mentor

October 1, 2013

 

While in ninth grade, Len Bias met Johnnie Walker, who convinced Len to start playing basketball with other boys at “The Rec”, where Walker was a coach. 

Walker played two years of varsity basketball at Northwestern High School in Hyattsville, Maryland, graduating in 1978. While putting off college for a year, he volunteered as a coach at The Rec, monitoring basketball activities for neighborhood kids and preparing his players for the center’s summer league team. He taught them fundamentals and conditioning with innovative exercises, such as plyometrics, which he learned from Bob Wagner, his former coach at Northwestern. Wagner wanted to build his new program with the best available talent, so he alerted Walker to keep an eye out for Len Bias, a young player at nearby Greenbelt Middle School whom he had heard showed promising talent.

During practice one day in the winter of 1979, some kid kept peeking through the doors to the gym at The Rec, yelling to his friend Terrence Lewis. Walker scolded Lewis, telling him to ignore the kid and pay attention. The interloper finally gave up and left.

“Who was that?” Walker eventually asked out loud.

“That’s Leonard Bias,” someone said.

A few months later, while walking to The Rec, Walker spotted Bias riding a bike and approached the ninth-grader, saying he understood that he played for Greenbelt Middle School. Bias tried to sell himself to Walker, saying he was better than Lewis. He told Walker that his parents didn’t let him leave the street much without their supervision, so Walker offered to talk with them and receive permission to serve as his guardian to, from and while he was at The Rec, if he was interested in joining the group. Walker could stop by the Bias house, he told the young man, and meet him so the two could walk to The Rec together. “They said yes, but don’t you think his dad didn’t come up and check on him,” says Walker.

Bias_cover_png

Excerpted from the book, Born Ready: the Mixed Legacy of Len Bias

Donate to a crowdfund campaign that supports production of a documentary about the legacy of Len Bias.

Learn about the 34+1 campaign,  which promotes effective decision making for teenagers and young adults.