| Boys’ Basketball Athletic
News
From Senegal with Basketball
December
14, 2009
Brendan Kuty
Scared, alone, Lionel Gomis could barely
lift his eyes the first time he stood on Blair Academy’s
campus.
Home was an ocean away. Worse, the teenage
basketball prodigy was surrounded by strangers speaking a language
he didn’t
know.
“Where the hell am I?” Gomis
asked himself after reaching his dorm room that night more
than a year ago.
Now, big-time college scouts ask Joe
Mantegna a similar question.
“He’s got a chance
to play at the highest level of college basketball,” the
Buccaneers’ head coach
said, “and he’s certainly got a chance to make
money playing basketball.”
Gomis, Blair’s 6-foot-9
Senegalese center, has spring-loaded legs and saucer-sized
hands.
Gomis, a junior, also has a chance to
follow in the sneakers of Royal Ivey, Charlie Villanueva and
Luol Deng — all
current NBA players and former Blair stars.
“He’s
in hot demand,” Sports for Education
and Economic Development Foundation (SEEDS) U.S. operations
manager Brian Benjamin said in a telephone interview.
It wasn’t
always this way.
Gomis didn’t start playing basketball
until age 14. Soccer ruled Dakar — Senegal’s
capital and Gomis’ hometown.
But after a few days of
basketball — which, he said,
included multiple dunks on family members — Gomis realized
something: This sport could pave his road to a better education,
a better life.
Then tragedy struck.
His mother died,
leaving him and his two older sisters with just his father,
a middle-class banker. Gomis wishes his mother could see
him now.
“When she passed, that’s
when I really started improving my basketball skills,” he
said. “I
showed her that I started loving the game.”
“She
was always reminding me to never forget about my studies.
That was the only thing she wanted from me.”
Soon Gomis
caught the eye of SEEDS founder and Dallas Mavericks director
of scouting and vice president of international affairs Amadou
Gallo Fall. He invited Gomis to join Senegal’s
SEEDS Academy, which provides its students 10 months of athletic
training and academic guidance.
Fall, also from Dakur, saw a
lot of himself in Gomis.
“Great kid,” Fall said
in a telephone interview. “Obviously
high-energy. He wants to be good and he’s eager.’’
At
SEEDS, Gomis refined his game and study habits and became
his team’s unquestioned captain.
“He became a leader
out of 20 boys,” Benjamin
said. “It was a no-brainer that when we were talking
with Joe that he would be a logical fit.”
Mantegna agreed
to take Gomis without seeing him play. Instead, Mantegna
embraced San Antonio Spurs general manager R.C. Buford’s
recommendation and his own history with SEEDS. Cameroon native
Alexis Wangmene, a former SEEDS standout, graduated from Blair
in 2007 and plays at the University of Texas.
Gomis was grateful
for the opportunity. But he was also afraid.
“I felt
like I had what I wanted,” he said. “But
I was going to have to leave my family.” Gomis, traveling
with friend and Lake Forest Academy (Ill.) senior Remey Ndiaye,
landed at John F. Kennedy Airport on June 13, 2008. He said
the fresh air, of all things, awed him most.
“It
was the same thing I saw in my dreams,” Gomis
said.
Gomis spent the next few weeks in Manhattan
with his legal guardian, who requested anonymity. Then it was
off to the Chicago school for a monthlong English language
crash course.
When Gomis arrived in Blairstown, he
said he immediately felt pressure. Would Mantegna like him?
Would he understand the plays and mesh with the team?
“It
was kind of awkward,” Gomis said. “The
game was faster than I thought. And my teammates were trying
to get me into the atmosphere of the team, joking around.
But I didn’t understand in the beginning because I
didn’t
understand the language.”
Said Mantegna, “He was
just like a young colt that can’t
quite keep his legs under him. He was raw, physical, a little
weak. And there were three 19-year-old big guys that basically
knocked him down every day.”
Austin Johnson, a Rutgers
University freshman guard, was one of them. Gomis spent the
season mired on the Buccaneers’ bench
frustrated, upset. But Johnson, who couldn’t be interviewed
due to NCAA recruiting rules, helped Gomis assimilate, introducing
him to students, teaching him the playbook.
Still, Gomis took
his bench role like a gut punch.
“He felt like he
didn’t play because he wasn’t
good enough,” Benjamin said. “If he wasn’t
good enough, (he believed) he was pretty much letting down
all of Senegal.”
Gomis got a better grip on English while
living with his guardian in Manhattan for the summer. And
in June, Gomis attended the NBA Draft with other SEEDS representatives
and even had his photo snapped with commissioner David Stern.
He
returned to Blair in the fall like a new kid. With the language
barrier weakened, Gomis flourished on the court, muscling
into the starting five while drawing interest from Stanford
University, Davidson College and other Division I programs.
“He
made a big jump this summer,” Mantegna said. “He
put on a half-inch of size and 15 pounds. He’s finally
starting to fill out his broad shoulder and become an explosive
athlete.”
Then Mantegna paused.
“Now he’s kind of the big man on campus,” he
said. “He’s come a long way.”
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