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- <text id=94TT1670>
- <title>
- Nov. 28, 1994: Books:The Cyclone
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 28, 1994 Star Trek
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/BOOKS, Page 91
- The Cyclone
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> On Coney Island, the lives of basketballers soar and fall
- </p>
- <p>By John Skow
- </p>
- <p> Basketball is called the city game, but that's not quite right.
- The really slick city game is played by college and high school
- coaches, sports agents, shoe manufacturers, sportswriters and
- TV producers. It involves conning kids--mostly poor black
- kids--into believing that they can grow up to play professional
- basketball. The fine documentary film Hoop Dreams shows how
- the game is played with high school basketballers in Chicago,
- and now Darcy Frey's thoughtful, sharply observed book, The
- Last Shot (Houghton Mifflin; 230 pages; $19.95), spells out
- its consequences for students at Abraham Lincoln High School
- in the bleak Coney Island section of Brooklyn.
- </p>
- <p> Lincoln High's Railsplitters--Abe's rustic nickname is grotesque
- in this concrete waste--are city champs coming into the 1991
- season. Their best players are returning as seniors: Russell,
- a guard who emerges, coldly intent, to take over games; Tchaka,
- a wonderfully athletic 6-ft. 7-in. power forward; and Corey,
- only 6 ft. 1 in. but spectacularly quick and a great dunker.
- Coming up as a freshman is a supernatural shooter named Stephon.
- With this sort of talent, the question isn't whether Lincoln
- will dominate its league again; the question is whether the
- three seniors, and Stephon when he's older, will win basketball
- scholarships to Division 1 colleges, the schools that incubate
- most of the N.B.A. pros.
- </p>
- <p> Frey gets to know Coney Island not as a place with a few old
- amusement park rides but as 50 square blocks of high-rises housing
- poor families and fractions of families. The athletes are the
- hope of the community, and they are talented enough to play
- at any college. Everyone knows this, including the big-time
- coaches who buddy up, winking and promising. For the honor of
- the neighborhood, Frey makes us feel, to redeem something from
- the miles of drabness, at least one of these guys must make
- it big. But the odds aren't good. The omens that say so aren't
- so much the ubiquitous drug dealers but rather the old Lincoln
- High legends of four, five and 10 years earlier, gifted fellows
- who never got near the Celts or Lakers.
- </p>
- <p> The players' biggest problem is that Division 1 colleges make
- at least a pretense of being educational institutions. They
- require sat scores of 700 for entrance. This isn't high if you've
- been prepped for these tests for years, but in educational terms
- the kids at Lincoln were written off before first grade. Some
- members of the team try to study enough to make up the difference.
- Mostly they aren't successful, so they are sidetracked to junior
- colleges, not hopelessly off the N.B.A. track, but slowly lose
- confidence and direction. Like the Lincoln High legends before
- them, they will someday be back home on the sidelines watching
- a new crop of kids who can make a basketball do card tricks.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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