Tag: NBA

  • Ranveer joins Machine Gun Kelly, Tiffany Haddish for NBA All-Star Game

    Bollywood actor Ranveer Singh is the official brand ambassador of NBA (National Basketball Association) for India. Taking his association forward with the NBA, the actor will now be flying to Cleveland to be a part of a star-studded NBA All-Star Celebrity Game that features basketball players and global musicians as well. For the unversed, Ranveer will be playing the game alongside Anuel, Machine Gun Kelly, Jack Harlow, Quavo and comedian Tiffany.

    The Gully Boy actor confirmed his participation in the game during a Q and A on social media. Ranveer informed his fans that he has started preparing for the big match, which is set to take place on February 18, in Cleveland. “I’m flying to Cleveland to play the NBA Celebrity All-Star Game later this month. Better get some practice, varna naak kat jayegi,” the actor said on social media. Last year, in September, when Ranveer was declared as the brand ambassador for the NBA in India, the actor had confessed his love for basketball.

    “I have loved basketball and the NBA since my childhood and have always been fascinated with its influence on popular culture, including music, fashion and entertainment. With the NBA tipping off its 75th season celebrations, there couldn’t have been a better time to join forces with the league and support their efforts to grow basketball in the country,” Ranveer said.

    Talking about the big game that is set to take place next week, it will also feature Cleveland Browns player Myles Garrett, Las Vegas Aces player Dearica Hamby and Cleveland Cavaliers legends, Booby Gibson and Anderson Varejao.

  • It feels like a dream, says Gurdaspur’s Princepal Singh on his NBA journey

    It feels like a dream, says Gurdaspur’s Princepal Singh on his NBA journey

    New Delhi (TIP): Only the second Indian to debut in the NBA Summer League, young basketball player Princepal Singh says his journey has been nothing short of a “dream” and he is working on his fitness and skills to achieve his next goal of playing in the NBA.

    Singh, who hails from Gurdaspur, Punjab, followed his Ludhiana basketball academy teammate Satnam Singh in making his debut at the summer league when he turned up for Sacramento Kings against Washington Wizards at Las Vegas on Tuesday night.

    “It’s amazing to play in the Summer League. I am very happy with my progress as a player. I played G league first and now am playing in summer league, and I am working towards the NBA. I didn’t think I will reach this far. It sometimes feels like a dream,” Singh said during a virtual press conference.

    “My next goal is playing at NBA. Satnam Singh was the first Indian to play and I want to play for long time in NBA, so my focus is on taking care of my body and keeping myself fit.”

    Satnam had played in the Summer League in 2016 after being first drafted in the NBA by Dallas Mavericks in 2015.

    The 20-year-old Singh, whose first professional stint was with the NBA Academy’s Ignite team in the G-League, made a brief appearance of just a minute and 22 seconds during the match, which they won 89-75.

    “It is a great experience to play against the top players in Summer League. They are all NBA players, who have been drafted. A lot of learning and my game is improving,” said Singh, the first-ever NBA Academy India graduate to feature in a Summer League game.

    “My coach (Bobby Jackson) asked me to play hard, said I should focus on my game and I will get more time. He asked me to focus on strong rebounding and defence and look to score.

    “There is no pressure on me. I have played one game so far. It is just that now getting less game time. So hopefully I will get more time in future. I want to just focus on giving my 100 percent and prove myself.”

    Asked what he learnt from his stint in ‘G League Ignite’, he said: “I learnt how the pro players conduct themselves off the court, how hard they play, how they help each other.”

    On the basketball scene in India, Singh said: “The sport is growing in India but due to the lockdowns no one has been able to play basketball.

              Source: PTI

  • Indian American, Stanford – bound, basketball phenom Ryan Agarwal is a star in the making – “DIFFERENT”

    Indian American, Stanford – bound, basketball phenom Ryan Agarwal is a star in the making – “DIFFERENT”

     STANFORD (TIP): “DIFFERENT,” the title of Indian American high school basketball phenom Ryan Agarwal’s recent Stanford University commitment video reads. While the past few decades have seen the Indian American community climb to heights never seen before, reaching insurmountable levels of success in fields and sectors such as business, entertainment, and politics, it still lags behind in the sporting world.

    It is especially true of the sport of basketball.

    After witnessing the success of talents such as Yao Ming and Jeremy Lin and what they’ve done for the Chinese and other Asian American communities, Indian Americans have longed for a comparable talent.

    Many thought the next genesis of South Asian hoopers would come in the form of giants. At least that’s what recent history might suggest. The greatest talent from the community we’ve seen thus far has come from the likes of Indo-Canadian Sim Bhullar and Indian-born Satnam Singh, both 7-foot low-post behemoths who had stints in the NBA.

    Bhullar became the first player of Indian descent to play in an NBA game in 2015 and Singh was the first Indian-born player to be drafted, also in 2015. Although they broke glass ceilings by making it to such a stage in the first place, unfortunately neither has enjoyed much success in the league.

    It seemed as if the community would have to wait awhile before they saw such a talent grace the courts.

    But Agarwal may already be well on his way to change that.

    Standing at 6’7 and a slender 175 pounds, the Indian American teen is a far cry away from the two leaguers in Singh and Bhullar in terms of size or strength. But, don’t be fooled, the kid is a certified bucket.

    A prolific shooter from the three-point line and beyond, along with the ability score in the midrange or to take it to the rim and finish, coupled with his slender frame and long arms, and it’s no surprise why Agarwal has received a number of Kevin Durant and Brandon Ingram comparisons growing up.

    However, he would describe his own game as a combination of those players along with a mix of Duncan Robinson and Klay Thompson, depending on the situation.

    Agarwal has excelled and it’s why he’s a four-star recruit, the 89th ranked player in the nation and 11th in the state of Texas. It’s also helped him garner the attention of more than a dozen D1 schools.

    However, perhaps none more meaningful than the one he received from his dream school, Stanford University.

    For Agarwal, it was more than just an offer from the best school in the country. It was the realization that this was all really possible; that the amalgamation of all the hard work he’s put into the game of basketball could take him to heights he had never dreamed of.

    Off the court, Agarwal is just like any other typical high schooler. He loves to listen to Lil Baby and Gunna, watch Netflix, and hang with “Day-1’s.” He’s even just like any other South Asian high schooler, able to understand the language of his parents [Hindi and Tamil], but unable to speak it.

    That’s not to get it twisted, however. His heritage means everything to him. Because for Agarwal the journey goes beyond just himself. While the 4-star signee ultimately has dreams of playing in the NBA, he’s not only doing it for himself. He wants to inspire a community of kids that look just like him. A community of people that might never have thought they were athletic enough to play at the next level.

    He’s doing it for the culture.

    And that’s different.

     

  • At NBA summer league, Satnam Singh is still fighting for his chance

    At NBA summer league, Satnam Singh is still fighting for his chance

    DALLAS (TIP): With the first quarter of the DallasPhoenix matchup dwindling down to a close, Mavericks guard Josh Adams dribbled up the floor, received a screen from Ding Yanyuhang and drove left. The Suns’ Mike James and Dragan Bender, charged with protecting the pick-and-pop attack, trapped Adams, leaving Ding wide open from beyond the arc. Adams swung the ball over, and the 2017 Chinese Basketball Association MVP swished a straight-on 3 to the tune of hundreds of elated Asian-American fans busting out in applause.

    All the while, Satnam Singh — a 7-foot-2 center and the first Indian-born player drafted into the NBA — stared on from the end of the Mavericks bench. Challenged with igniting hoops enthusiasm halfway across the world, he must climb a steep ladder to catch the attention of his home country.

    While Ding merits his own acclaim, it is hard to imagine that an arena full of fans would have trekked to Las Vegas in the dead of July for NBA summer league had Yao Ming not come before him. But what happens when you’re not a bona fide All Star such as Yao?

    The truth is, two years after being selected by the Mavs in the second round of the 2015 NBA draft, Singh — the face of Indian basketball — is still toiling away, fighting for minutes in the NBA’s development league with the Texas Legends.

    However, Singh’s resolve remains steadfast. And even if he hasn’t increased his minutes or on-court opportunities, observation alone has proved an invaluable experience. He spent two anxiety-ridden years champing at the bit, watching the clock and wondering when his name would be called. He now has learned not to focus on what he can’t control.

    “I was stressing my mind,” Singh said. “Always thinking, ‘I need time. I need time.’ Whereas now, nothing is happening. If I waste my time like that, I get too much pressure on my mind. I lost everything.”

    It helped that the Mavs were a wrecking squad en route to the summer league championship in Orlando this year, providing the garbage-time minutes Singh so desperately craves to hone his abilities.

    “If I get a couple minutes, I just rebound and finish the shot,” he said. “Focus on running, keep running up and down the court.”

    In that game against Phoenix, which Dallas won 88-77 on Sunday, Singh played in the final two minutes, boxing out and putting the hurt on any Sun who dared venture near the rim.

    Toiling away in the background and hustling up and down the court in the hopes of maybe one day becoming the fourth big man in an NBA rotation isn’t exactly the easiest sell. But to understand Singh’s potential, you also must understand how far Singh has come in such a short period of time — and against what odds.

    Born in Ballo Ke, a tiny village in the state of Punjab, he was destined to a life of wheat farming, until his father took a life-defining chance at the suggestion of a friend and sent Singh to Ludhiana, a nearby city, to play basketball. It was there that the IMG Academy in Florida granted him a three-month scholarship that eventually stretched out to the day he declared for the draft. Starting at 14 years old, Singh not only was tasked with perfecting a new sport among lifelong prospects but also learning to speak English, a language with which he had no familiarity. In many ways, it is remarkable that he is even here at all.