[剪報] 關於Hunter的好文

看板Celtics (波士頓 塞爾提克)作者 (非人)時間21年前 (2003/08/25 04:30), 編輯推噓0(000)
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你若要問我希望能當一個什麼樣的記者。嗯喔,我這輩子不會考慮吃 記者這行飯,因為我不會是一個好記者。不過若要說到稱職,若能寫 出像這樣的報導,我就會感動得心滿意足了。 文章不一定要載道,如何整理材料鋪陳敘事,也是需要用心的。 ------------------------------------------------------------ Instinctive Hunter Celtic rookie has a nose for rebounding By Shira Springer, Globe Staff, 8/17/2003 WALTHAM -- Though he earned a spot on the Celtics because of his rebounding, Brandon Hunter is not one-dimensional. He can change diapers. Heat a baby bottle to the perfect temperature. Cook a family dinner. He learned to keep a clean home, and wash and sort laundry at age 10. By that age, Hunter was helping to raise his two youngest siblings, sisters Jenna and Jenelle. When asked about his parents, Hunter offers "no comment." He figures there will be a proper time to talk about them, when he finds the right way. For now, suffice it to say they were not around when he and his five siblings were growing up in Cincinnati. Hunter was raised by his grandfather, Arthur Clark Jr., who told him to never make excuses and never back down. Clark handed Hunter adult responsibilities well before junior high school, and the two quickly grew to be more like brothers, despite the 38-year age difference. "My grandfather used to tell me he wasn't my maid, so I better come in and learn how to cook or I'd go hungry," said Hunter. "My grandfather taught me to be a man." Hunter had little time for extracurricular activities, which explains why he came late to basketball and cannot believe someone will actually pay him $1 million to play for the next two years. He joined his school basketball team in eighth grade but never made a single practice. He tried organized ball a second time as a junior in high school, and this time he stuck with it long enough to realize he had talent. Recruiters for major college programs were slow to come to the same conclusion, however. All of this helps explain why the role of undersized power forward perfectly suits Hunter's personality. He enjoys the challenge of outrebounding bigger opponents. Like other NBA players who believe they have been unfairly judged too small or too slow or not athletic enough, Hunter has a lot to prove. Minutes after signing with the Celtics last month, Hunter chose No. 56 as a reminder of where he was selected in last spring's draft, how far he has come and how far he must go. Hunter is the first second-rounder signed by Boston in seven years. "I hate `what-ifs?' " said Hunter. "I don't want to be 35 and say, `What if?' What if I worked out two or three times a day in college? What if I studied more? What if this? What if that? So I just give it my all every day and let everything else take care of itself." Getting the bounces Any college senior seeking career advice during a recession would have heard something similar to what George Jackson told Hunter last summer: Find a marketable skill and use it to stand out among the crowd. For Hunter, that skill was rebounding. He finished his senior season at Ohio University as the country's leading rebounder, averaging 12.6 per game at a charitably listed 6 feet 7 inches. He finished his college career as the school's leading career rebounder with 1,103, breaking the record set by Gary Trent, now with the Minnesota Timberwolves. Jackson coached Hunter at Withrow High School in Cincinnati, where rebounding was everyone's job. Nothing made Jackson angrier than allowing the opponent a second chance to score. He had all five players crash the glass. He ran rebounding drills ad nauseam in practice. The Withrow program has a history of producing strong rebounders, including Tyrone Hill, LaSalle Thompson, and now Hunter. "We knew getting the kids we got from the inner city that they don't go to all the fundamentals camps growing up," said Jackson, now an assistant at Seton Hall. "They don't have the great shooting technique and all the proper form. If we know that there's more than a 60 percent chance we're going to shoot and miss, then you better instill in your players the urgency to rebound. Brandon caught on quick. Nothing he'll do in the pros will surprise me." The Celtics are in need of a solid rebounder, someone to help Paul Pierce and Antoine Walker on the glass. Last season, Boston averaged 40.5 rebounds per game, ranking 26th in the NBA. With an average of 10.4 offensive rebounds, the Celtics ranked second to last. Hunter hopes to get the minutes to help improve those statistics. "Rebounding is about athleticism, but mostly positioning and really wanting it," said Hunter. "I'm pretty strong. I'm wide. I'm pretty athletic, so I just put guys on my back and just go get the ball. I'm trying to show them that's what I can do. I think it's true, if you can rebound in college, you can rebound in the pros because it's all about the positioning and knowing where you are on the floor." Rebounding is also about timing. On the court, Hunter has benefited from near-perfect timing. In life, he has not been so lucky. Tragedy intervenes Hunter declared for the 2002 draft as an early-entry candidate, worked out for Indiana, and questioned general managers and coaches about where he might be selected. Because he was not a sure first- round selection, Hunter withdrew his name. But the experience left him certain he could play in the NBA. If he waited one more year, Hunter knew, he could finally give back to his grandfather. Then everything changed on July 28, 2002. Returning from a family reunion in Hawkinsville, Ga., Clark and three other relatives were half an hour from Cincinnati when Clark fell asleep at the wheel. Upon waking, Clark jerked the steering wheel and rolled his Ford Explorer three times on a stretch of Interstate 75 that runs through Dry Ridge, Ky. The three passengers suffered only minor injuries. Clark was paralyzed from the neck down. He died March 13, 2003, the night before Hunter's last college game, a loss in the Mid-American Conference semifinals. Hunter received the news hours before tipoff, played off raw emotion, then drove home to attend the funeral. Asked how much he regrets that his grandfather cannot see him now, Hunter said, "Like crazy. He sacrificed so much for me, and as soon as I get where my goal was [he's not here]. "In high school, I knew whatever I did I wanted to make a lot of money so I could help my grandfather a lot, not just giving him $200 for his car payment, but giving him $200,000 to buy a house. I thank him every day. I see how much he taught me without even saying anything. He taught me an aggressive mentality. How many players do you know that are good that if they were more aggressive, they would be great players?" By all accounts, Hunter was a strong-willed, serious kid. Though he had no time for organized sports in junior high, he dedicated extra hours to training in high school. He would leave the house at night to work out at the Withrow track. At first, his uncle, Larry Hunter, thought Brandon was finding trouble on the streets of Cincinnati. But when Larry trailed his nephew one night, he found Brandon running stadium stairs at the high school. Whatever anger Brandon felt about his family situation he channeled into basketball. "I'm not going to say he was abused, but he wasn't treated well, like he should have been, by both sides of the family, his mother and father," said Larry Hunter. "It affected him, but he basically was able to come out of it and really do something with himself. Maybe it was because he had a supporting cast like myself, his other uncles, his grandfather. He didn't let a nonexistent relationship with his mother and father hold him back from trying to do something." Sizing him up Distraught after an apathetic home loss to Akron his junior year at Ohio University, Hunter took out his frustrations on a ball rack and water cooler, throwing them across the locker room. Despite coach Tim O'Shea's instructions to stay, Hunter showered, dressed, and left without a word. He could not listen to excuses from his teammates. But before leaving the Convocation Center that night, he stopped to sign autographs for a group of kids. For obvious reasons, Hunter has a special affinity for his young fans. He never wants to disappoint them. That was clear last week when he became the Celtics' newest ambassador to the community. As part of the Citizens Bank Summer Caravan, Hunter and Walter McCarty hosted a two-hour clinic at the Medford Boys & Girls Club. Hunter talked about his specialty -- rebounding -- but his message was more about heart and effort trumping size. "In Las Vegas, Paul [Pierce] said, `Let's go one-on-one in the post,' " said Hunter. "I told him, `I will murder you. You're too little.' Paul said, `It's not about size. It's about heart.' I just looked at him and gave him a laugh and I thought to myself, `I'm not here because I'm 6-10.' " Hunter is here primarily because of what he can do on the glass. Almost as soon as team officials saw him record three straight double-doubles in summer league play, they entered into contract negotiations. Determined not to face any "what-ifs?" when training camp starts, Hunter worked out twice a day at the Celtics' practice facility last week, then returned to Cincinnati for a long weekend. He will be back in town this week for more workouts. According to Hunter, he has focused "mostly on wing stuff," learning the Boston system as a small forward. While he may lack power forward height, he has strength and bulk to spare at a stacked 260 pounds. When asked to identify his biggest weakness, Hunter pointed to shooting, though he has been practicing the type of open jump shots he expects to have with defenses drawn to Pierce and Walker. "We want to see what we have in Brandon," said assistant coach Frank Vogel. "He brings a lot more to the table if he can play some [small forward]. So we're just experimenting with that to see if it's a possibility." Scouts who saw him play at the Shaw's Pro Summer League and Tim Grgurich's Las Vegas camp remarked on Hunter's consistency. He is the type of player who rarely has a bad game and can be counted on to practice hard. Even if Hunter sees limited playing time, he can be the tough player Jim O'Brien needs for productive workouts. But Hunter believes he can earn minutes, just as he earned a two-year NBA deal. "For me to get drafted 56 was kind of disappointing," said Hunter. "A lot of it was because of my size. I didn't hear in one poll about my mid-range jump shot, my tenacious rebounding, my ability to guard quicker people. All I heard was, `He's too small.' "So I definitely have a really big chip on my shoulder. A lot of guys have proven that when they're undersized they can play. I can play, and that's what I'm out to prove." -- ※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.csie.ntu.edu.tw) ◆ From: 140.114.117.111
文章代碼(AID): #_II1xak (Celtics)
文章代碼(AID): #_II1xak (Celtics)