Showing posts with label nba. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nba. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 7, 2025

A super early birthday present, or playing with dolls?

I wanted to share with you an early birthday present that I recently gave myself. In case you didn’t know in 2024 I did a long series about my love of urban vinyl, and basketball. I talked about the history of my basketball figures collection going all the way back to around 1999. My big purchase last year were the two figures “Flash” and “King” which were based on Dwyane Wade, and LeBron James respectively. They were created by Jai Tseng Studio aka JTStudio. The artist mixed street fashion, and pop culture in his own unique style. He made figures inspired by comic characters like the Justice League, and the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. He also created figures based on classic Hollywood like Felix the Cat, and Charlie Chaplin. I had a small toy basketball hoop that I got with the Nakia girl basketball player figure that I would use as a display. For more than 20 years I had used it to frame my Super-X, and All Star Vinyl figures.

The company that had the license to create 1/6 scale NBA figures was Enterbay, which was also out of Hong Kong. Their figures they made were very pricey, but their quality was unrivaled. I never had enough money, or desire for their figures. We're talking $250 on the low end, and some going for triple the price! I did however long for their scale basket, and locker accessories. As you could imagine they were expensive as well. Sadly the company closed shop sometime in 2024, and didn’t bother to give retailers any notice. They simply shut down their website, and stopped taking orders. I assumed that anything they made would shoot up in price because they were now rare. Before the resellers could mark everything up I scoured eBay, and found one of their baskets for a reasonable price. I pulled the trigger, and got it a couple of weeks ago.

The hoop was heavy, and solidly built. The pieces were metal, hard plastic, with foam padding on the front like an actual basket. It had a spring loaded metal “breakaway” rim, and nylon net, also like the real thing. It even included a working game clock. It would count down the period, and shot clock separately. It also made an authentic buzzer sound. I lost my mind watching the clocks then hearing the horn go off. Needless to say I was absolutely stoked on my early birthday present. I had to get pictures of my old rim, and new one. Can you believe the size of this thing? If you collect 1/6 scale figures I’d like to know what you think of this accessory. I’d still like to collect the Enterbay locker accessory, but it’s currently hovering near $200 with online retailers, so I’m holding off for now. I’d also like to get the various trophies that they produced as well, but those were only sold with certain All-Star figures. So my plan was to wait for someone to sell the individual parts of a collector’s set. 

Sadly the license for 1/6 scale NBA products wasn’t transferred to any other studio that I know of. While I was searching for more figure news I discovered that there would be a LeBron James figure made by Mattel in 2025. The same people that made Barbie announced an exclusive Ken doll version of LeBron. This one would be wearing street clothing, rather than a basketball uniform. He was called a “Kenbassador.” He was scheduled to be the first in a series of dolls based on actual influencers, and tastemakers. He might be the only basketball player in the lineup, but probably not the only athlete. He sold out the minute he went on sale in the middle of April. Resellers were now asking for double his original sales price. I would keep an eye on the figure this summer, and depending on how the trend went I might pick him up for my Christmas present.

So that was my toy news before the summer. If you're a collector I'd like to know if you got any new items as well. Tell me about it in the comments section. As always if you enjoyed this blog, and would like to sponsor me please visit my Patreon page and consider donating each month, even as little as $1 would help make better blogs and even podcasts!
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Friday, July 26, 2024

Remix Culture, how Asian designers changed the game, part 14

 

This series started with me declaring how much I loved basketball. I was never any good at playing it, or any sport really, but I liked writing about it, and I really loved drawing fictional streetball characters. I’m still a huge fan of the game, and still get inspired when I see basketball art from various illustrators. I also talked about how Michael Lau came along at the end of the '90s, and turned me into a fan of urban vinyl art. I collected many of Lau's mini gardener figures before the trend took off. Many of my other favorite toys were streetball vinyl players. The Super-X line of fictional players inspired by actual NBA legends meant a lot to me. That collection from Dragon Models out of Hong Kong, and the Upper Deck All Star vinyl figures from the US were among my prized non-Lau figures.

NBA Street debuted in 2001, not long after the urban vinyl trend was started. Developed by EA BIG it brought together stylized character designs, streetball which had looser rules than pro basketball, and arcade game play. There hadn't been anything that had captured the frenetic pace of the game since NBA Jam from a decade earlier. There were several reasons why NBA Street really stood out to me. Of all the sports it was the one the closest to the playground experience. It was created on a farm in Springfield, Massachusetts, in 1891, but in less than 50 years it would become the most important game of the inner-city. It would be embraced by black, and brown kids faster than any other sport had ever done in the history of the US. Even though the NBA didn't integrate Black players until 1950, it was nonetheless following on the heels of Major League Baseball which started integrating in 1947.

There were many Black pioneers in the ‘50s, but it wouldn’t be until the late ‘60s, and ‘70s that Black culture really started showing up with the players. The Civil Rights era turned athletes into cultural touchstones. This meant that the music, the language, the fashion, and even the hairstyles of the street also became part of basketball culture. This made it easy to identify with the sport while growing up in the city. Unlike baseball, or football, the game of basketball didn’t really need a huge field, just a basketball, and a hoop could do the trick. It didn’t matter if it was a hoop on a garage, or a milk crate tied to a telephone pole. The game was easy to pick up, and impossible to master. Every time you played you could learn something new. The athletes that played the game, the culture lent itself easily to urban vinyl art. The best figures in my opinion reflected the world. They weren’t trying to sell a name, or brand.

While growing up the toy companies told my brothers, and I season, after season what we were going to play with. The cartoon shows they produced were nothing more than extended television commercials. By Christmas time their goal seemed to get us to dump all our old toys, and beg our parents for some new ones. These manufacturers reminded us that there weren’t any alternates, they controlled the toys, they controlled the games. Even Legos which were the standard for letting kids use their imagination soon started licensing movies, and comic book franchises. Countless generations were stuck following the same trends. All of that changed when urban vinyl figures made their debut at the end of the ‘90s. These toys were not selling any product, or label necessarily. They were instead a celebration of us. There were men, women, boys, and girls that looked like us, our family, our friends, and heroes. They highlighted our culture, our music, and fashion. More than that these figures just looked cool. This understanding started changing the way that characters would be designed for video games.

JC Entertainment out of South Korea started creating streetball games in 2004, and continued pushing the genre forward over the next 20 years. In the earliest days they presented traditional street-styled basketball players, with jerseys, shorts, and sneakers. Over time their ball players would become more stylized, and dress in all sorts of outfits. They played in business suits, track pants, surf gear, astronaut helmets, pajamas, and much more. By the time they released 3on3 Freestyle in 2016 the studio had fully embraced vinyl character design. I enjoyed the look of many of the characters that went into their franchise. Joey was the star player, and had received a radical makeover called “Intensive Joey” for a special update. Of course it was absurd that anyone would try playing in boots, neon purple, and green punk rave gear. It nonetheless was a hard look. The fact that he was pictured with a black spiked basketball brought the entire fit together. It made me wish that JC Ent. made collectable figures, and not just virtual characters. It also got me thinking of what was it that I really enjoyed in those designs, in basketball, and vinyl figures.

I talked a little about it previously on this blog series. As much as I liked the game of basketball, and as much as I admired the superstars, I just wasn’t invested in getting highly detailed 12” figures of those players for my collection. The more stylized they were, like the All Star Vinyl line from Upper Deck, the more likely I was to collect them. But there was a different motivation to which figures I sought out. I liked characters that represented an era, a genre, and entire league even more than an individual player. In my opinion the greatest gardener figure designed by Michael Lau was Jordon. He was more than just a clone of Michael Jordan.

For starters he didn’t look anything like Mike. He was much taller, with a large afro, earring, and eyebrow piercing. He represented the entire game of basketball. He was a snapshot of the late ‘80s / ‘90s era of the professional league. This would be during the formative years of Michael Lau, when the street influence was inescapable. We're talking a period of time when all the classic Nike commercials from "Just Do It," and "Be Like Mike," all the way to "It's gotta be the shoes" directed by Spike Lee (as Mars Blackmon) had taken place. This marked a time when Hip Hop, and pro basketball started going hand-in-hand. 

These street-centric campaigns were an affront to the loud protests of the team owners. They wanted basketball players to be seen as clean-cut college kids gone pro, and not street kids hitting it big. By the late '90s, and early 2000's Hong Kong was the only place on Earth that understood how to tie all of those cultural touchstones together into a new 3D format. They had a culture that was quick to spot trends, remix them by pulling elements from music, fashion, and street culture while creating their stylized vinyl figures. Their ability to remix culture at an absurdly rapid pace would end up changing the way studios the world over would approach their own character art. This sort of stylized representation was what I thought made Stretch Monroe from the NBA Street franchise so important. Although he was modeled on the ‘70s era Dr. J, he represented much more than that. 

Stretch was a fictional legend from the same post-Civil Rights era. He was like many of the pioneers of the rival ABA that were pushed out of the league when the NBA captured the market. He just couldn’t fit in because he was too ahead of his time. Stretch never got a chance to compete in the pro ranks. This didn’t stop him from destroying all challengers on the playground over the following 30 years. When NBA Street 2 came out, and EA Big started putting retro characters in the game, like a young Julius Erving then it made the inclusion of Stretch feel redundant. The fictional spirit of basketball was the aesthetic that I loved more than anything. I wondered if there was anything that a new generation of creators could do to make me rethink my approach to collectables, and specifically their basketball character designs. Could I ever love a design for a real world player as much as I loved the fictional Stretch? What about his fictional contemporaries? All9Fun had the answer for me when they released Basketrio.

In case you weren’t familiar with the current generation of pros, the ones featured in the picture above were based respectively on Giannis “The Greek Freak” Antetokounmpo, James “Fear the Beard” Harden, LeBron “King” James, and Joel “The Process” Embiid. All9Fun allowed you to create your own avatar, build stats, earn prizes, and unlock pro players. These were things that gamers had already seen for years. However the pro players, or rather look-alike pros were not licensed from actual NBA, FIBA, or other leagues. Despite being eerily similar to real people the studio changed just enough features on them to skirt IP laws. The case of public opinion was something else entirely. It was similar to how they released players based on Street Fighter designs. I highlighted them in the previous blog. The team at All9Fun were building virtual characters using all the same tricks that Fools Paradise did when creating the Three Kings, and TwentyFour statues I had also talked about. The thing was that the statues from Fools Paradise, and the virtual characters from Basketrio were extremely desirable to fans. They managed to capture the personality of some of the greatest players to have ever existed, but in a highly-stylized fashion. 

As a fan of the vinyl aesthetic there was no doubt that the design worked in video games. Basketrio featured a version of the NBA elites in a format that I had always wanted to see. It was as if the studio was able to pull equal parts of the animated look of the Upper Deck All Star Vinyl figures, the street fashion sense of Michael Lau’s gardeners, and the Hong Kong style of the Super-X athletes. The remix of the various elements was sublime character design. The knockoff pros featured in Basketrio were a master class in storytelling, and streetball design. First off the team understood the scale of the individual players. The largest of which was “Shark” who was based on Shaquille O’Neal who in real life was over seven-feet tall. The smallest of which was “The Answer” who was based on Allen Iverson, who was barely six-feet tall. 

Everyone in between had a cartoonish scale applied to them. Their frames, muscles, shoulders, torsos, hands, and feet were just a bit exaggerated. This helped the characters stand out from the rest of the cast. As with fighting game characters, the bigger hands, and feet were easier to read when moving across the screen. They allowed animators more leeway when creating movements for crossovers, backing down opponents, and of course flashy slam dunks. These proportions also made it easier to read dribbles, or passes, making defending against them more balanced for gamers. From head to toe their costumes were absolute works of art. There was more to the fit than would be typically seen on a streetball player. They were all essentially wearing high fashion streetwear, however the choice of colors, logos, patterns, also reinforced the personalities they were portraying. NBA fans could identify who these characters were based on just by looking at their faces, however the studio could get away with it because they never named one of the characters after an actual person.

All9Fun skirted the line without ever crossing it. For example Shaq was called Shark, Kobe Bryant was called Mamba, after his nickname the Black Mamba. The outfits they wore had similar colors to their actual team uniforms, of course nobody could copyright a color combination, nor could they copyright the name of a city, initials, nicknames, or even numbers. Even if each of these things happened to be pulled from actual players, and teams. This allowed the staff at All9Fun to dress the characters appropriately, without getting in legal hot water. The outfits of each, and every player was more than really fashionable street wear. They were the streetball equivalent of superhero uniforms. Fans of every sport tended to make icons out of their favorite athletes. Even race car drivers, and their autos enjoyed a certain level of hero worship. Fans of NASCAR could tell you how important the colors of their favorite cars were. Just as red, and blue were matched to Superman, or red, and yellow were matched to the Flash every character in Basketrio got similar nods. 

The Lakers royal purple, and gold were matched to Kobe, and Lebron’s outfits, without either of them wearing anything remotely alike. The Milwaukee Bucks forest green, and white dressed on Giannis. The Maverick’s navy blue, silver, and black were placed on Luka Dončić. Even if you had no idea which teams, or players they were based on, each of the outfits was inspired. The standout was Dennis Rodman, the long-retired former Bulls player had multicolored hair, was shirtless with a feather boa, and dressed in white pants with the words THE WORM printed on the leg. A nod to his over-the-top personality, and outspoken fashion sense. While I could never justify spending hundreds on realistic NBA figures, if any studio were to ever release 12” collectables in the vein of the Basketrio characters then I wouldn’t hesitate to get them all. 

I was extremely happy with my Super-X team, and the Vinyl All Stars. They sung to all of my interests in a way that no other creator except for Michael Lau was able to reach. I never thought that anything better would come along. All of that changed fairly recently. A figure designer learned the tricks that the artists working on the FreeStyle Street Basketball series were using. Not only that his work predated the look of the Basketrio icons. I will talk about this designer in the next, and final blog in this series. What do you think of video games using the likenesses of real people, or teams without licensing them? Would you be willing to look the other way if they spoke to your interests? Do you think there is a difference behind art, and IP theft? Where do you draw the line? I’d like to hear your thoughts on the comments section. As always if you would like to sponsor me please visit my Patreon page and consider donating each month, even as little as $1 would help make better blogs, podcasts, or buy a future streetball figure!
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Monday, December 4, 2023

The Best There Ever Was, Part 3 - A 1UP classic from March 16, 2005

More like Wild Bill than Billy the Kid.

Billy Harris is "the one." Billy Harris is the final legend among Legends. Billy Harris is the greatest playground legend ever. Some would go so far as to say that he was the greatest basketball player, period.

"They used to have jump ball. Muthafucka throw that shit up, I jumped up and grabbed that bitch and shoot it in. They stopped the fucking game! They don't know what the fuck to do! Is this shit legal or what? Y'all figure this shit out. When y'all get it figured out I'll finish whopping y'all ass."
- Billy Harris in Nike Battlegrounds.

The best basketball journalist of our time, Scoop Jackson, did the homework so I didn't have to. Scoop separates fact from fiction in SLAM #30 with the help of Bhatie Demus, Courtney Goldwire and Chicago Sun-Times reporter Lacy Banks. Billy's life is so extraordinary that is really does tell that many writers working for the common goal. Breaking down Billy's life, understanding what happened and separating fact from fiction proved to be a hard undertaking.

I've added some text from the SLAM article as well as dialogue from the Battlegrounds DVD in which Billy shares some of his stories. The text is uncensored. Billy and Fly Williams were snuck in the early part of the DVD, introduced by the poet SEKOU (THA MISFIT), yeah I've never heard of him either and I'm sure Nike threw him in there to try and be hip and "urbane." That whole DVD would have worked better without the cages, hype, narrator and circus atmosphere, but I digress. This is the story of Billy Harris, not a two-minutes and bleeped-out like it was on the DVD, you have been warned...

Billy has seen every possible aspect of the playground to pro back to playground life that any legend has ever had. Scoop illustrated that wonderfully in SLAM. The life of Billy Harris was not an easy one. Billy had the most potential and carried more of the ghetto on his shoulders than any other playground legend mentioned in this article. Every game he played was a battle for more than himself. It was a battle for the hood; it was the one thing that kept his community going. Billy had become bigger than a legend. He was a god.

Accomplishments mean nothing compared to the life Billy had. This life included drugs, women, cash for favors, pimping and dependency. However Billy would redirect our attention to the game, he would say, "Check the books" and they would prove that he was right. Billy had nothing to hide. His ability to play the game so incredible that it scared coaches and opponents alike. He was too much for one team, too much for one city to contain. Billy was drafted and then cut by the Chicago Bulls. Although he was the best draftee on the team (and apparent that he was the best player period) he was still cut.

"The fact that Billy didn't make it had nothing to do with talent. Politics and many other aspects made it impossible for him to make it. If they had a three-pointer when he was playing, he'd average 60 or 70 points. Easy. Because most of his points came right as he came across half-court. He had character, but was outspoken. Like Muhammad Ali said, 'It's not bragging if you can back it up.' Billy always did. Honestly, I don't think the league was ready for him."- Sonny Parker, NBA and playground legend as told to Scoop Jackson.

Billy could foretell his fate and knew that he was not cut out for professional basketball. His game proved to be too much for a league not ready for change. It was enough that the ABA was radical enough for the NBA to incorporate. Billy's all-around ability would have pushed the league into the 22nd century.
 
Sadly very few people realize or acknowledge the sacrifices that Billy, and many legends like Fly Williams and Earl Manigault made in order to bring the playground game up to the prominence it is now. A lot of cats today assume that the street game has always been big and that the money that is out now has always been around. Get it straight. It was people like Billy that brought the game up and more people should praise the names that came before like Chicago University coach, Marquette University and NBA star Bo Ellis, "If I leave here without saying what I have to say, I will feel awfully bad. I want to say thank you to this man sitting on my right, Billy Harris. Bill Harris is by far the best basketball player I've ever been associated with. I don't consider this man a playground legend, though. Because when we were coming up, playground legends were young men that didn't really go to high school, didn't graduate, didn't go to college. This man has a degree. He played in the ABA. He worked downtown in suits. So I don't consider him a playground legend, because he's accomplished things. But I do consider him one of the coldest players I've ever seen coming out of Chicago-on the court and mentally. Because without his direction and guidance, [a lot of things] would have been non-existent to me. The reason I've had a lot of success in my life is because of people like Billy Harris." (Jackson 114)

I will begin to put down the numbers. Each statistic gets more unbelievable than the previous. These are not myths or fables, there is proof for all of the claims and the four journalists that brought Billy's story to SLAM will testify that this is the truth the whole truth and nothing but the truth.

Billy was an amazing scorer, averaging no less than 30 points per game in high school in college. He never played a team game for less than 30 points, period. His shooting was deadly accurate, somewhere in the 65-70% range from anywhere on the court. However Billy was more than a shooter. He could drive, he could dish and he could dunk. He could defend the basket and more than any other legend he could read his opponents. Billy's athleticism matched every mental aspect of his game and vice versa. Billy understood how to score and how to utterly destroy his opponents.

"You know it's a curse. People think it's a good thing to be able to read other people, being able to smell bullshit. But it's not. Because what happens when you sense that bullshit inside your family? When it's right next to you every day? What do you do then? (Jackson 110).

This is all hyperbole without telling you who gave Billy Harris competition. In the mid 60's every playground, college and high school legend in Chicago and the surrounding cities was gunning for Billy.

This is not myth but fact: Billy never lost a game of 1-on-1 in his life. For the 14 years he was in his prime. From the age of 16 to 30 he never lost a game of 1-on-1. Period. At his peak Billy would handicap himself. He would play a game to 24 and give his opponents 22 points. "West side" rules so possessions would alternate after every basket. If they made one basket from the three-point line then the game was over... Billy never lost. Billy would even give opponents a half point if they could touch the backboard with their shot. Hit the backboard four times and the opponent would win? Even with those odds Billy never lost.

"Nobody knows these stories. Nobody. You wanna know why? Cause I ain't told them."
- Billy in Nike Battlegrounds.

Scoop tested Billy, asking him if he would give Dr. J, Jordan, Magic and Bird those same odds. Defiantly Billy answered, "I'd give them 22 and the game's 24. They would never beat me? Ain't no motherfucka alive, walking around, that can say that they beat Billy Harris one-one-one. You can put it on the radio, TV, whatever. Ain't nobody ever going to step up and say that they beat me. They are not going to win. You don't understand-I played against n*ggas that would rather kill you than let you beat them. And I figured out a way to destroy those n*ggas."

In team games no one ever put any number of points on Billy. Billy says it with conviction. He never played a bad game in his life. Each and every game he played was nothing but his best. "I played basketball like it meant life or death. Pressure? Where the fuck does pressure come from? The pressure is on me. I'm playing against me! I'm searching for the perfect game. That's what I did." (Jackson 112)

It sounds too good to be true. A player this good could never have existed. Scoop went searching for proof of the claims. Billy's friends, coaches and family all backed up the stories. More incredible were the enemies that also supported Billy's claims. People that hated Billy could not bring themselves to lie against his game.
 
Still Scoop went on a hunt for just one bad game, the missed shot for all the money, the crack in the armor. Ed Curry, fellow Chicago playground tournament champion and spokesperson told Scoop, "You won't find it. That son of a bitch never had a bad game, and he didn't lose. I can say that I've seen every great ballplayer that's ever played in this city-played against most of them-and there was no one like Billy. There's no one in the pros today like Billy. He was one of a kind, and he didn't care. He didn't care about the other four players that played with him, and he didn't care about the five guys that used to try to guard him. People think Michael Jordan is one of a kind? No. Billy Harris was one of a kind." (Jackson 110)

Every playground legend is grounded in reality. Up until now every playground legend had a rival, a peer. The playground legend was never perfect. There was always that one bad game, the shot missed with money on the line. This made every legend real. Scoop could not find it in the case of Billy Harris. The further Scoop dug, the more witnesses and record books would back up the claim.

"I go play now and I get a little tired now, but I'm real slick, ya dig? Play a little bit. Chill. Fuck you up a little bit. Chill. You understand what I'm saying? Because I know how to orchestrate this. My shit's that tight." Billy in Nike Battlegrounds.

I am not going to talk about why or how Billy was blacklisted from professional basketball. Lacy Banks, a reporter at the Chicago Sun-Times lost his job (and went to court to get it back) for writing an article about Billy and posting the conspiracy subject that contradicted the Chicago Bulls reasons were for cutting Billy after drafting him in 1973. Scoop writes that the conspiracy was to keep him out of the NBA because Billy would not conform.
 
"What these people don't understand is the very things that if they do now they can sign a 80-million dollar deal. That's bullshit! They got n*ggas crossed out. I'm the n*gga that took that shit to Division 1 and made it work! You understand me? All this shit, crossover, behind the back when I'm going on a muthafucka, one hand jumper coming with the spinnin' fuck. [gestures as if he's doing basketball tricks] All of that. I did all that shit dude? I pick up a paper, here's a bunch of muthafuckas talking about they're street legends. Man, fuck you, you ain't shit, and if somebody believes that shit, so be it."
- Billy in Nike Battlegrounds.

30-years later a new generation of streetball players and "legends" (some with only a few years experience) get shine on TV, shoe contracts, national tours and earn street cred for the NBA all because some fat rappers, businessmen and promoters can cash in on the talent. That is phony. Billy Harris is real.

Billy deserves respect for everything he has ever done for the game. Billy deserves recognition as the greatest playground legend ever. Just because there aren't mix tapes featuring people like Fly and Billy doesn't mean they weren't real or their games weren't as good if not far better than the best we have today. In the NBA they said that nobody would ever be able to create better highlights than Bob Cousy backindadaze. Eventually Pistol Pete came around... Years later the legacy of greats came and evolved the game, Dr. J, David Thompson, Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan and (injuries notwithstanding) LeBron James. Many, many more have come and gone in the playground. But it doesn't matter much. NBA or playground Billy would have balled them all up. Believe it.

Addendum: Months after writing this series Lang Whitaker wrote of another ballplayer named Jesse Dunn in the second issue of Streetball by SLAM magazine. If reports are to be believed (Lang has never lied before) then we may have discovered the Angel to Billy's Devil. But that story is for another day...

Were there any street legends that you heard of in any discipline that were better than the pros? Let me know in the comments section please. As always if you would like to sponsor me please visit my Patreon page and consider donating each month, even as little as $1 would help make better blogs and even podcasts!
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Friday, December 1, 2023

The Best There Ever Was, Part 2 - A 1UP classic from March 15, 2005

Skip to My Lou, a Professor and a Bone Collector.

Rafer "Skip to My Lou" needs no introduction. He was 12, barely 13 when he began competing at the Rucker. He was the first real street phenom in a long time. With skills so blessed it would only be a matter of time before the tapes his coach and family recorded found their way to the offices of upstart company AND 1. The rest as they say is history.

Skip did it all, playground, high school, college, pro... There are so many self-proclaimed legends that don't have a fraction of the experience and reputation that Skip has (remember that when I mention a certain Bone Collector a little later). Below are some of his many thoughts taken from the first Season of ESPN Streetball:
"Volume one was just a guy just trying to show who he belongs out there playing with the bigger guys, and before you know it everybody's anticipating every game I had to play.
When I walk on court on the playground, they view me as the best one out there. If I'm going into and NBA arena I'm just an ordinary player. I'm just another guy in an NBA uniform.

Bone Collector said that the only person he really wants to play against is Skip. He wants to throw between my legs; I'm going to let him throw between my legs so he can get his ooh and ahh. Cause after that I don't see nothing else spectacular he's going to do.
Reporter: How about he try and stop you?
Skip: Impossible. [Laughs]

Streetball, everyone is still sold on this one-on-one ability. Headache, Main, they have a lot of ability, these guys can play ball. I play those guys over here. They think it's simple. They don't understand how hard it is to be the last man on the bench in the NBA.
In fact everybody's trying to get it, everyone wants it, most people come out their try to take it from somebody that already has it. You know, people tend to come out there, thinking you're supposed to automatically give them respect just because they're out there playing with you. But they're not, they have to earn it.

As I'm getting older, you know, sooner or later you're going to have to walk away from the playground game and just, you know, let it go. When do you walk away? I found myself taking a back seat most every summer now just to let those guys get more shine. Because I'm being seen during the winter and I'm being seen during the summer. So I'd rather let them shine as much as they could during the summer because that's their thing.

On the other hand I watch these guys every summer and I don't think they grasp what's going on. You know. You think it's all about them. They're supposed to be there. AND 1 is supposed to do this. They're supposed to take 'em in you know. And I'm trying to tell them that there's guys out there better than them. Every last one of us on that AND 1 Mix Tape Tour. There's a guy that's better than Skip to My Lou, there's a guy better than Hot Sauce, there's a guy better than Dribblin' Shane and Sik Wit It and AO. Every open run that I've been to and every place that I've gone. I've seen guys better than us. AND 1 can take those guys, come up with a new game. And that's what I'm trying to tell them that. You know, enjoy this moment. Enjoy this time. And enjoy what AND 1 is doing for us and what we're doing for AND 1.

These guys never asked me about the proper way they should take. They never asked me the things they should do. The more they just let those questions stay in the air, I can't really help them with that, you know. They think it's simple, they think I got there, just someone placing a call. What they do is look at me and just say 'you made it through streetball, why can't we?'
 
Playground legend is a person that holds his own summer after summer after summer. And he's consistently just destroying everybody that they put in front of him. A streetball player, he's more of a guy that has a lot more flair, a lot more tricks. You know, he's like a person that's going to put on a show all by himself.

Reporter: Which one is going to the NBA?

Skip: None of them made it. None of them made it."

For everything Skip's done for the game and AND 1 he was rewarded with his very own signature shoe during the 2002 And 1 Mix Tape Tour. It was the first signature shoe for a playground legend and a testament for all his hard work and years of sacrifice. However some of that shine would disappear two years later. In 2004 AND 1 would release a special color-way version of the Ballistix Mid for the Professor.

The Professor played exactly one summer with the AND 1 crew, won the sponsorship contest and was added to the team. Now he has his very own signature shoe! Note that none of the other mix tape players (that have been touring around the country for years and years) have had a signature shoe. It was almost as if all the hard work that Skip and the other players had endured for years and years adds up to one lucky [white] boy named the Professor. A kid that never made any type of college or high school name for himself was now some sort of playground hero? What is the world coming to?

As long as I'm riding this wave of controversy it's time to do some comparisons between Skip and the Bone Collector. Those that think I'm hating need to relax. I'll admit that BC is a talented player, great handle and court presence and a very clever entertainer on the playground. But real, solid, all-around basketball skills? That still hasn't been established.
 
Larry "Bone Collector" Williams was born in Texas but raised in part in Pasadena California. He says that his life growing up was very hard. He had a lot of obstacles to overcome, what exactly he had to face growing up is unknown.

His rise in the playground circuit has been very quick. Seemingly overnight. BC started playing high school basketball as a freshman in Pasadena but stopped because he and his father determined that the coaches were going to hurt his chance to get college attention.

He did play some with Chaffey College in Rancho Cucamonga, California. Then moved to the Globe Institute of Technology in Lower Manhattan. His grades being his biggest weakness in college. Big schools like Providence and Florida A&M have shown interest in him, however his grades still needed improvement before they could offer him a scholarship.

On the court he was okay for Globe, averaging 9.5 points and 2.5 assists per game. Not quite the stellar numbers that you would expect for a "legend?" His then coach didn't have much praise for him, calling him the "Turnover Collector" for the number of times BC would lose the ball in games.

Eventually BC got a better hold on that handle and became an overnight sensation at the Rucker and EBC tournaments, winning the 2002 MVP in the process. His ego seemingly grew as quickly as his name, often times saying things like "I'd like to think that right now I'm the best player in this whole league." The whole league including NBA, college, high school, streetball and even playground legends.
 
His self-glorification doesn't end there. "I'm the 50 of this shit right now, plus Eminem and Hova. All on the same label."
 
BC on AO from mix tape fame: "All I got to tell this dude is that you are a pussy. I played you in Philly. AO is from Philly and he quit. First half. Nigga had three fouls, got mad at the ref and threw the ball at him. I was averaging 40 out there. He knows, ask AO how much I had. That is the only reason he knows me."

Now BC has announced that he is ready to go pro. He hired the SBA sports management group to help him prepare and they are taking him on a European trip with the SBA All-Stars and helping him get to play in the USBL so he can have scouts judge his game and rank him for the draft.
 
In a world where then 16-year-old man-child LeBron James was already anointed as the "Chosen One" before his high school junior prom, it should make you wonder how far BC will go in the league. At 24-years-old BC could have been aided in his development if he had gotten into a Division 1 college, and would have graduated by now. Instead he is competing in the draft with high school phenoms, NCAA champions and international players of all shapes and sizes. It is almost enough to make you wonder if BC should have stayed on the playground.

More realistically streetball fans, wanna-be legends and streetball players should at least have chastised all the people that hyped his game while not helping him look at the bigger picture. Those selling tapes and DVD's, those using him in commercials. They throw some money his way and convince him he's as good as he thinks he is. A couple of good summers at the Rucker? A DVD appearance? A television commercial? Where are the Bone Collectors real credentials? Does he qualify to be a playground legend?

The real legends held down the Rucker for a decade, they scored 40 in a half on Dr. J, they stacked nickels on the tops of backboards to show their vertical. Skip began his reign at the Rucker when he was 12 and 13. Even Rory "Disaster" Grace from the Notic and AND 1 open-runs or the "Computer Chip" from the AND 1 open-runs didn't really get into streetball until recent, and even then both would have gotten steamrolled by the competition at the Rucker. Skip didn't just entertain, he produced points along with his assists. He had a jumper and could lay-up with both hands from all sides. Skip and many of the other legends did well in high school and college. Some got a chance to shine in the pro ranks. None thought that they could simply make themselves eligible for the draft because they had a couple of good summers at the Rucker, called out a pro player and talked shit the entire time.

Yeah BC will still become rich and famous. Maybe he'll release a hit-single as a rapper and "retire" from the game. But it should make you wonder how it got to this point. Where does a streetball player get all this money? How many unknown ballers had to come before BC? How many ballers had to get used by the system and not see anything in return? How many kids are being sold the game instead of told the game? In the universe of playground legends Bone Collector is still a child. I don't know if he will ever grow up and be ranked among the men that came before and the men that will come after.
If you want to read more about the Bone Collector check out these links:

BC Link 1
BC Link 1
BC Link 1

So if it isn't Skip 2 My Lou or the Bone Collector then who was the best ever? That remains to be seen! If you think you know who the greatest streeball legend was then let me know in the comments section please. As always if you would like to sponsor me please visit my Patreon page and consider donating each month, even as little as $1 would help make better blogs and even podcasts!
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Wednesday, November 29, 2023

The Best There Ever Was, Part 1 - A 1UP classic from March 10, 2005

The story of Fly and the Black Widow.

"Current streetball players, they owe their whole livelihood to the cats that played the game before. You know, just as we owe our existence to our mothers and fathers. You know these cats playing ball on the streets owe the checks that they getting, the shine that they getting, the exposure that they getting to these cats."
- Scoop Jackson in Nike Battlegrounds.

I'm going to try and keep my editorials to a minimum this time around. I apologize in advance for the gratuitous use of the "N" word in later parts, these are the players speaking and not me. I didn't censor anything because I figured that sometimes the truth doesn't sound as harsh as it should. For the most part I'll try to let the legends tell their stories and warnings in their own words. I hope you enjoy.

James "Fly" Williams: Get this straight, that until he said his real name, people assumed that Fly was James' real name. His game was so incredible that people assumed that his parents had labeled him Fly from birth. James was Fly before Curtis Mayfield had even filmed "Super Fly."
On the blacktops Fly was always good, very good. But in his teen years Fly shot up some six inches seemingly overnight. The next thing people knew was that Fly was 6' 4" and had the speed and handles of people a foot shorter. Some of Fly's life is accounted in the book Heaven is a Playground.
"You can go from east to west, north to south, borough to borough. I'm the only one dropped 50 in a half, regularly. You know, like a kid with diarrhea. You know I was tough man, played two or three different games. You know what I'm saying? 60 here, 45 here, 55 there. I used to add them up in the course of the day. I scored about 200 and change, you know."
- Fly in Nike Battlegrounds.

Fly was flamboyant, in the way he played, the way he dressed and the way he presented himself. On the court he was cutthroat and playful at the same time. Often times making the audience laugh at his antics and making his opponents steaming mad. Fly had exceptional dribbling skills and made players fall with his mad handles. Sometimes he would dribble the ball out of bounds just to get a drink of water and then return to the game and finish off his opponent. He could do all of this to regular players and could hold his own against the best NBA and playground legends like World B. Free, Earl "the Pearl AKA Black Jesus" Monroe and Earl "the Goat" Manigault.

"I was born too early, with the money they givin' out now. They should have thought about me 25 years ago. I'm gonna tell it like it is. I'm gonna keep it real, you know. If anybody come to me, I'm gonna keep it real, anything I tell ya it's not no myth bro."
- Fly in Nike Battlegrounds.

Fly dominated in college at Austin Peay State University and won several scoring titles as a freshman and sophomore, twice scoring 51 points in a season. He was drafted into the ABA and maintained his sense of humor and flamboyant game. In the ABA he was pitted against Dr. J and David Thompson, both sky walking prodigies whose game paralleled Fly's.

When the ABA folded many players were drafted into the NBA but Fly remained on the outside. In the case of Fly there is no blacklist, no conspiracy. Fly understands that his game was too advanced for the rules; he knew that his attitude was also bad and wouldn't allow him to get along with any coach.
The downward spiral of Fly began in the late 70's and by the mid 80's Fly had been reduced to a drug-dependant shadow of his formal self. His basketball skills drained by a hard life on the streets, Fly got through by hustling. After being shot and left for dead in a botched robbery Fly was brought back to life in the ER. Knowing that it was as close as any man could come to getting a second chance Fly swore of drugs and crime.

Fly became a motivational speaker and today spends his time with kids and people on the street. Trying to turn them around by sharing the darkest moments in his life. He knows that people might not be ready to hear about how hard life can be, but Fly's lessons are as important as the lessons any other playground legend has ever lived. The only difference is that Fly is not too ashamed to hide the truth from those willing to listen and learn. The current crop of street players has Fly wondering, have they earned a name or are they simply being labeled street players for someone else's gain?

"The street legends today is guys they give a name to. I mean we earned it man, you know, year after year. I mean a guy plays now for two years and he's 'Kid Dynamite'. "
- Fly in Nike Battlegrounds.

To read a detailed account of the life of Fly visit this SLAM Reprint Article.

Some 20-odd years later in New York (on Fly's turf), a 19-year-old Tyrone "Alimoe AKA Black Widow" Evans was one of the hottest players at the Rucker. The son of Jerry Tarkanian, the coach at Fresno State in California, spotted Alimoe, Rafer "Skip to My Lou" Alston and Chris Parker and offered them tickets to fly to Fresno.

"At the time we were like the hottest dudes in the tournament. Get you guys supposed to go to Fresno City and then Fresno State. But at that time I was caught up in the street life. So what I do, Tarkanian sends me a plane ticket; I take the plane ticket and try to cash it in. I go upstate to Sullivan Community College, which is an hour and a half away. Therefore I can still come back to the hood. See if I had gone out to Cali I'm thinking at 19 'He gonna make me run, make me play D.' I like New York; cause New York let me get away with everything. They like me for what I am. I don't gotta work, I was lazy at the time.

I had a guy that was paying me. I can't say his name. He would just hit me and my boys off just for playing with him in the summer. Its wintertime, ain't no games, he's still hittin' us off. So you know how that is. Got a new chain, I'm in all the parties, all the rappers know me.
 
I just messed most my life up listening to everybody tell me 'You better than Jordan. You nice.' So I don't gotta go to school, I'm nice. I'm gonna do this forever. But when you get to 24 it ain't funny no more. You know what I'm saying? Cause guys asking me 'Al you were supposed to make the league since you were 17. What's up' Now it ain't funny no more. See what I'm saying?

If you ain't strong yourself it's a lost cause. I take my hat off to Skip for that, he's seeing the bigger picture. Me, I'm standing around there, hanging around, drinking all day, smoking weed, whatever. Rafer goes to Fresno State. Rafer is on ESPN getting double-doubles. From there Rafer gets drafted by the Milwaukee Bucks.
 
I called Tarkanian for a recommendation. I can't get in contact with him. That's karma kicking you in your ass right there; you understand what I'm saying? No matter how good they telling me I am, no matter how much I work, I don't have no resume. And it came from that choice that I made. You know what I'm saying?

A lot of guys say AND 1 raping you, they making 400 million, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. That's all I got right now is AND 1.

Guys just think AND 1 is just for highlights. They take that too far and think we really don't know how to play. And they wrong. It's up to us to change their perception on how they think of us. It's up to us.
[On the fans of streetball and the players] That's like saying 'forget the NBA, this is good for me.' Know what I'm saying? NBA ain't for everybody."
- Alimoe from Season 1 of ESPN's Street Ball.

Fly, and Alimoe were two brilliant players, but were they the best from the street? Let's dig in a little deeper in the next blog. If you know the stories of any street legends that could have been then let me know in the comments section please. As always if you would like to sponsor me please visit my Patreon page and consider donating each month, even as little as $1 would help make better blogs and even podcasts!
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Friday, November 24, 2023

Streetball: The Big Picture, Part 4 - A 1UP classic from May 30, 2005

Let's talk about the future. EDIT: Well I guess this is talking about today instead of the future since the post was written 17-years-ago. Did my predictions come to pass? Let's find out... 

This is the last part in the series. I hope to have gotten you thinking about the bigger picture of streetball. It's bigger than one company, one player or one mix tape. It's a global phenomenon, but still all about one game. So what does the future of streetball look like? What can we expect to see and what surprises are around the corner? Let's try and figure out what the future is by making some logical observations.

1. Streetball will gain more exposure on television and in the media.
ESPN will very likely invest more time and money in the Streetball series. EDIT: The Mix Tape Tour turned out to be one of the most popular shows for ESPN. What wasn't known was that according to Tim "Headache" Gittens the players were not compensated by ESPN for the reruns that ran through early 2000's, despite it being one of their most popular shows.

The EBC has started to broadcast famed Rucker games on MTV with the show Harlem Hoops. MTV and Magic Johnson have already produced the reality show "Who Got Game?" They will most likely follow it up and pursue other streetball broadcasts, like the Nike Battlegrounds 2005 World Tournament. EDIT: This came, and went as fast as it was announced.
 
Producers from various TV studios will explore streetball as a sports entertainment. Perhaps by mixing the WWE and shows like Slam Ball someone will be able to sell a form of streetball unlike anything we see, complete with actors, stories and plots (and convince the audience that it's "genuine" streetball). EDIT: Thank goodness this didn't come to pass.

Expect to see more streetball video games and video games with streetball elements. The NBA Street series has already finished 3 solid games, with plenty of celebrity hidden characters like the Beastie Boys and even game legends like Mario, Luigi and Princess Peach. Maybe the people at EA will introduce real legends in the next game instead of fictional ones?

Street Hoops 2 seems to be put on the backburner at Activision. No word on an NBA Ballers 2 by Midway. Still the original Ballers sent a very subversive message to streetballers "you ain't made it as a baller until you beat NBA talent and cash in as fast as you can." UbiSoft is developing AND1 Streetball for the holiday 2005 season.

EDIT: It turns out that a lot of streetball games would come out in the 2000's. Below is the full list.

NBA Street, EA Sports BIG, 2001.

Street Hoops, Black Ops Entertainment, Activision, 2002.

NBA Street Vol. 2, EA Sports BIG, 2003.

NBA Ballers, Midway, 2004.

NBA Street V3, EA Sports BIG, 2005.

NBA Ballers Phenom, Midway 2006.

AND1 Streetball, Black Ops Entertainment , Ubisoft 2006. 

NBA Street Homecourt, EA Sports BIG, 2007.

NBA Ballers: The Chosen One, 2008.

The thing that I discovered many years ago when I was in contact with the Notic crew was that several of the teenage players were recruited by EA in Canada to do motion capture for the game. A number of the trademark moves would appear in NBA Street Vol. 2, and beyond. I doubt that any of those kids was fairly compensated for their work. Worse yet one of the new characters added to the game "Biggie Little" was clearly based on the youngest member of the Notic; Rory "disaster" Grace. Although the kid was made into a Black character. I guess exploitation is sometimes the name of the game.

2. Companies are going to hesitate about doing a streetball tour this year. Rather sponsors will organize events and invite teams to compete, similar to the X-Games set up.

It seems that 2005 is the beginning of the end for streetball companies and leagues. The problem is that each tour features its own legends and version of the game. Each company has also started up in the hopes of succeeding in the business and getting paid. The only problem; whom are people supposed to believe as having any one real legend or tour? EDIT: Streetball died in popularity in the mainstream, the writing was on the wall as early as 2003 when Dave Chappelle made fun of the mix tape phenomenon on the first season of his wildly popular TV show. 

The Street Basketball Association already has it's own league and tour. They have a few recognizable names from mix tape and EBC tournament fame. Where their tour goes and how many others will join in their crusade remains a mystery. EDIT: This came, and went as fast as it was announced.

The National Freestyle Basketball Association had also been formed and closed within a year. With only one franchise, the LA Hooptainers, it was not hard to see why they disappeared. 

Roc-A-Fella Records sponsored "the Rock" streetball brand of entertainment which was founded by Anaconda Sports. Like the NFBA before them they came and went within a year. 
 
Sadly it looks like the Adidas streetball challenge happened once in Spain in 1999 and never again. Too bad.
 
Nike has not officially announced a 2005 Battlegrounds tournament. Sadly Asia was not invited to compete against North America and Europe last year. If Asian countries are not invited to compete expect to see Nike host Team Battleground competitions in Asia instead of individual contests.

Nike will most likely tour the world with a new Freestyle campaign. Try clicking on a different language to see how unique each Freestyle promo is. Such as the Freestyle Clash in Japan, pitting battles for the Freestyle King in Basketball, Football (Soccer) and Skateboarding. Note, this link and the movies on the pages have been removed. Sadly Nike considers street skating as freestyle, and not real freestyle skateboardingEDIT: There were no other Battlegrounds tournaments. However Nike did popularize local tournaments instead.

The EBC which once called the AND 1 tour and videos fake and phony launched their own tour in 2004. We are still waiting to see if they will announce a new tour this summer. EDIT: This came, and went as fast as it was announced.
 
Team Suave and Smooth has been formed by some of the people associated with the long-defunct Dunk Nation site S&S featuring a collection of some of the greatest dunkers ever. A mix tape, clothing line and tour is planned as well... rather has been in the works for a few years now. The only claim to fame for these adults is beating the high school players from the Notic. EDIT: This came, and went as fast as it was announced.
 
The Killer Crossover Tour is now a few years in. Hot Sauce is the headliner for this tour. Previously Sauce's tour ran before and after the Mix Tape Tour, this year he and some of his AND 1 teammates will try and compete directly against AND 1. Will the talent pool be spread thin over too many tours and players? We'll have to wait and see. EDIT: This came, and went as fast as it was announced.

3. Miscellaneous streetball crews will begin doing more entertainment shows. Plus websites about streetball will pop up from all over the world.

Here are some synchronized shows put on by the French kids troop The Magic Freestyle Crew Or a French site dedicated to dunking.And of course there is Slam Nation a collection of the best dunkers around.
 
In English or in Spanish, Streetball Style is trying to expose the Spain side of streetball.

4. There are plenty of talented ballers that may not be getting as much exposure as they deserve. Here's a short list on some talent to keep an eye on:

- Luis "Trikz" De Silva sadly what could be argued as the best freestyle basketball player in the world does not have his own web page or mix tapes. So finding his appearances in anything other than the Nike commercials is going to be tough. His teammates in the Nike Campaigns, Arnold "A-Train" Maurice Bernard and Christian "Hands" Scott Franklin are talented, but Trickz is on another level. He is a genius in the handle department and has contributed a lot to streetball. Keep an eye out for the influence his routines have all over the world. EDIT: Luis became an actor, and appeared in dozens of hits including Fast and the Furious: Fast Five.
- The Notic crew, King Handles, Goosebumps, J-Slice, Dazzle, Disaster, et all... For as long as fans keep on waiting, eagerly for the mix tapes, and the fame of the players spreads all over North America, we will continue to see these players grow and mature. Hopefully the team can stay together should the industry try to throw money their way. EDIT: The team dissolved, and in 2022 reunited for a documentary movie.
- Demetrius "Hook" Mitchell. At 5' 9" nobody believed he could out-ball anyone he faced. But he was a God to people like Gary Payton and Jason Kidd. Hook threw it all away for drugs but his legend never died. Check his movie and never forget that these playground legends are all real people, and capable of making the same mistakes as anyone else.
- Hot Sauce has let his contract with AND 1 expire. He doesn't have a website, nor do his reps at Urban Visionaries, they have been promising that for a few years now. Sauce is one of the few mix tape players to own his own name. With shrewd business sense and a name that flows his Killer Crossover Tour and other business ventures will eventually take off, with or without the help of AND 1. EDIT: He joined the Street Ball All Starz team, and made a few appearances in TV. Sadly the popularity for stadium tours never rematerialized.
- Headache should also serve as a cautionary tale to other streetball players that think the business is easy. Tim "Headache" Gittens was one of the founding players on the Mix Tape video and tour. However his constant accusations against AND 1 on national TV proved too much to keep him on board. He was soon removed from the tour and company. Despite all his skills Headache no longer has the support and exposure that the mix tape tour once offered. This will find getting a shot in the NBA that much harder. EDIT: Headache became a pro trainer, and will be detailing his experience with the AND1 Mix Tape Tour, and the inconsistencies with the documentary in an upcoming book.

- Rafer "Skip to My Lou" Alston and Stephon "The Handler aka Starbury" Marbury. Both point guards in the NBA have solid street credentials and are the first street-bread players since Dr. J and Wilt Chamberlain to show the NBA that they are more than just flashy entertainers, but in reality basketball elite. Both players making it into the Eastern Conference Finals in 2004 have solidified that status. Only a championship ring now can seal the deal. EDIT: Both retired, had some controversial moments both on, and off the court, but they also elevated the status of playground legends being NBA stars.
- Ken "Cyclone" Rodriguez is an incredible freestyle performer with the Harlem Wizards. He joins other streetball legends, turned tour players James "Speedy" Williams and Alvin "Anti-Gravity" Pierce. Be sure to give their promo video a look.
- The best that the Bay Area of California has to offer will continue to gain momentum on YPA a second DVD is almost out. Popular player Roberto "Exile" Young aka "the Young One" was featured in Season 1 and Season 2 of the Streetball television series. Apparently someone impersonated Exile online and the AND 1 players took offense to that accusations that their tour really was phony. Exile was booted from the tour bus and the real Exile tried to defend himself. With the loss of Hot Sauce and the credibility of the Mix Tape tour in jeopardy could a YPA tour be in the works? EDIT: This came, and went as fast as it was announced.
- Garo Salibian is doing a hell of a job by trying to keep track of every basketball web site in the world. He should be getting paid for his efforts and you should stop by and see what he's got.
- The Japanese freestyler Bullet. Voted the King of Freestyle in Japan 2004. Bullet had a very good assortment of tricks and flavor. He was able to switch things up when running against the champ from Osaka, RHYTHM. The Chinese Freestyle finalists simply could not match the quality of Japan's talent. Why? Possibly because there is not as much access to technology in China as there is in Japan. Chinese finalists were pulling copies of "Trikz" De Silva routines from two years ago whereas Japan finalists like Bullet, RHYTHM and MIX were doing more of their own thing.
- MIX. She is not the first young woman to compete in the Freestyle tournaments but she was the first to place in a major competition. She lost to Bullet in the live freestyle final however won the web votes over Bullet in online polling. Expect to see more of MIX, Bullet and RHYTHM in advertising and promotions (at least in Japan). And if some Nike person is reading this please give me her e-mail addy, she's cute and talented!
 
- Billy Harris. He is that old guy talking a lot of sh-t in the Battlegrounds DVD. Who is he and why is he getting away with all that talk? If you don't know you'd better learn. Billy "the Kid" could have very well been the best basketball (street, pro or otherwise) player ever.

- Mr. Woo. Without a doubt Mr. Woo is the world's greatest freestyle football (soccer) player. So why his he listed here with the streetball players? Simple, his skills are legitimate and a lot of his moves are now getting picked up by freestyle basketball performers around the world. MIX used some of his tricks in Japan to great success. So if you ever feel like you are hitting the limit of freestyle moves in basketball, just take a look at what he does without using his hands and you should be inspired.
- Abbas Farid is another great football freestyler that should be studied by all freestyle ballers.

5. The bubble will burst! EDIT: this happened a few years after the blog was posted. Here is an example; Streetball fights to stay relevant, an article from 2011

That's right. I said what everyone in the industry is fearing to predict. The streetball bubble will burst sooner rather than later. The market is saturated with too many companies, players, mix tapes and tours. Each of them trying to send a different message as to what streetball is about I.E. they are the "real deal" and nobody else is. Each of them trying to cash in on the craze as fast as they can.

Right now a lot of players assume that the ride will last forever. The money is here. The fame and girls are all here... for now. Sadly a lot of street talent get caught up in the hype and don't have a clear sense of the bigger picture. It is only our culture selling them short on their potential. Everyone hypes these players up and assumes that they will also always be at the top of their game. Ballers want to be rappers, rappers want to be producers and producers want to sponsor some ballers so they can make more money. It's a vicious cycle and it won't end until the reality of streetball comes crashing down.

Fame has a price. Once you become the hot thing in mainstream America the only place to go is down. The mainstream audience is always after the "next" big thing. I see streetball as being the new thing over "extreme" sports like skateboarding. Kids are trading in their skateboard and helmet for a basketball and swingman jersey. For another summer or two the kids will be all about streetball. Then the next big thing will come along and that basketball will find its way in the closet, along with the Pokemon cards, razor scooters, skateboards, Yu-gi-oh cards and whatever other pastime the industry sold the kids on.

Those that are about the culture and community will still keep doing it. Real skateboarders will still keep skating even if it's hated on. Real ballers will keep going to the playground even when ESPN and MTV stop airing games. Those that hung on for the ride will just go jump on whatever other bandwagon is passing by. EDIT:In 2014 some of the biggest Streetball tournaments were happening in Europe.

It may sound like I'm being a pessimist but it's more like a realist. Remember when I wrote that streetball is about the entertainment now? By tying directly into the Hip Hop path then I can predict what will happen. Thousands of ballers will step on each other to prove that they are the best and should be getting bought for their credit. After all, doesn't the Bone Collector call himself the "50 Cent and Eminem" of streetball in one interview and then in another bragged about his game:
"InsideHoops.com: Who are your favorite NBA players to watch?
Bone Collector: Tracy McGrady, A.I. (Allen Iverson)... I like everybody. Everybody exciting. Not as exciting as me, but they're exciting...
InsideHoops.com: And around here, who are the best players?
Bone Collector: Skip to my Lou and these guys. They were here before me, so you know, I come out here, I took over here now, though. It's me now.
InsideHoops.com: How much have you watched the mixtapes?
Bone Collector: I didn't really watch them that much, naw.
InsideHoops.com: Not even the very first one when Skip was like 12 years old?
Bone Collector: No, I didn't watch that at all. I wasn't really into it like that. But I knew I was better than them so I had no reason to watch it."

Arrogant? Is this not like how rappers "get over" in Hip Hop by stepping on the hard work of the MCs before them, and now ballers "getting over" in streetball by stepping on the ballers that came before them? I'll let you decide. To read the full article visit InsideHoops. EDIT: Many years later he was still dreaming of reaching superstardom. Bone Collector tried to get into the NBA at the age of 37

All of the players and all of the companies each fighting for a slice of the pie... it doesn't have to be this way though. If all the best streetball players and teams united there would be, without a doubt, enough talent to form a universal professional streetball league.

Of course for many years they wouldn't be making money, or breaking even at all. But in the long run, a united front could make it easier for the next generation, and next generation of street ballers to be able to conduct a serious business. For once, streetballers united could be able to do far more for the collective than just whatever moneys the apparel or entertainment companies are throwing their way. I'm talking streetball lawyers, agents, endorsements, programs, businesses, collective bargaining units, investment strategies, health care, retirement plans and insurance. Right now most touring streetballers don't have very solid business sense, health care or plans for the future. For them it's just about balling over the summer and making as much as they can. But if they worked hard enough for it eventually some sort of universal streetball league it would be a viable option for a player. Can you imagine if a really talented player had a choice other than the NBA for which to highlight his (or her) game?

Sounds like a pipe dream right? Well, they always said the same thing about "professional skateboarding." ESPN and the other networks assumed that the skateboarders would always be unorganized and easy prey for the entertainment industry. Within the past few years many of the pro skateboarders unionized and actually have walked out on several major, televised, events until their demands were met. Before they unionized, companies like ESPN would not pay the skateboarders on any set scale, nor would they give them residuals for video sales or movies shot for the IMAX. Now skateboarders united have a voice. They can argue for health care and their fair share of video sales and promotions. Skaters will determine their own fates whenever a large company decides that they want to exploit them to try and capture the "youth market." Wouldn't it be great if streetballers had that sort of support to turn to whenever they might get exploited?

Skateboarding doesn't have rules or seasons of play. Skateboarders just do what they want and somehow were clever enough to organize. You would think that the ballers would grow up and stop playing the selfish game? After all, if a bunch of skaters from all over the world could do it, there's no reason that streetball players couldn't. Time to stop playing the greed game, streetball is going to be finished in pop culture before it even gets established.

To those that took the time to read these articles I say thank you. Try and spread the word to those that haven't. Tell them to get educated about the game and do their part for the culture and community. Take a look at the bigger picture. Streetball isn't just about one mix tape player or one country. The game that became famous on the streets of New York now belongs to the world. It is up to us to keep it alive and make sure that it is treated right.
Peace,
Noe V.

Did you ever play basketball? Or any basketball video games? Were you a fan of the Mix Tape Tour, or freestyle basketball? Or is this the first time you're hearing about it? Let me know in the comments section please. As always if you would like to sponsor me please visit my Patreon page and consider donating each month, even as little as $1 would help make better blogs and even podcasts!
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