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COACH KAREEM; ABDUL-JABBAR PREACHES HOOPS ON RESERVATION.


Byline: Mark Emmons Orange County Register

Five miles down a winding highway, through wilderness dominated by red rock buttes Coordinates:

Buttes is a municipality in the district of Val-de-Travers in the canton of Neuchâtel in Switzerland.
, remnants of the real Fort Apache still stand.

It's not the one Kareem Abdul-Jabbar For the football player, see .
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (born Ferdinand Lewis Alcindor, Jr. on April 16, 1947) is a retired American professional basketball player and current assistant coach.
 thought he once knew, the Fort Apache portrayed on ``The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin'' television show he watched while growing up in Harlem during the 1950s.

Three years ago, Abdul-Jabbar came to the remote White Mountain Apache Reservation to research the Buffalo Soldiers buffalo soldiers, name given to the African-American U.S. army regiments commissioned by Congress to patrol the American West after the Civil War. Consisting of two infantry and two cavalry regiments, they were the first such units chartered in peacetime.  - African-American cavalry troopers who served on the Old West frontier - for his book, ``Black Profiles in Courage.''

Now, Abdul-Jabbar carries the title of volunteer assistant basketball coach at Alchesay High, a team that is the pride of this hoops-obsessed reservation. He's also something else: a modern-day Buffalo Soldier buffalo soldier

Nickname given to members of African American cavalry regiments of the U.S. Army who served in the western U.S. (1867–96). An 1866 law authorized the army to form cavalry and infantry regiments of African American men under the command of white
.

He wants to be a coach, and only Alchesay would offer him a position - for the princely prince·ly  
adj. prince·li·er, prince·li·est
1. Of or relating to a prince; royal.

2. Befitting a prince, as:
a. Noble: a princely bearing.

b.
 sum of $1. But the reasons run far deeper why one of history's greatest basketball players has left his Beverly Hills Beverly Hills, city (1990 pop. 31,971), Los Angeles co., S Calif., completely surrounded by the city of Los Angeles; inc. 1914. The largely residential city is home to many motion-picture and television personalities.  home to spend four months in a one-stoplight town of 3,000 people 150 miles northeast of Phoenix.

Abdul-Jabbar hopes to show kids there's a way to rise above the cycle of poverty that permeates a reservation where unemployment stands at 60 percent and almost every family has felt the effects of alcoholism.

But something curious is happening. The teacher also has become a student.

On the court in practice, he exchanges playful banter with the players and smiles easily. In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, Abdul-Jabbar is everything he wasn't during a celebrated playing career in which he was perceived as aloof, sullen and unapproachable.

``I think he's learning a whole lot more about himself than he's teaching us,'' senior guard Kyle Goklish said. ``Our life, our culture is different from the big city. He's not going to be the same when he leaves here.''

Abdul-Jabbar pondered that thought.

``I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 if coaching in the NBA NBA
abbr.
1. National Basketball Association

2. National Boxing Association

NBA (US) n abbr (= National Basketball Association) → Basketball-Dachverband (=
 is the most important thing to me anymore,'' he said. ``I'd be open to listening, but it's not the same as it was just a month ago. It's changed.''

A learning experience

The team's starting center stands 6-foot-2. Abdul-Jabbar deals with daily traumas such as players in detention. Away games can mean eight hours, round trip, in a cramped school bus. A recent shortcut (1) In Windows, a shortcut is an icon that points to a program or data file. Shortcuts can be placed on the desktop or stored in other folders, and double clicking a shortcut is the same as double clicking the original file.  included traveling a dirt road dirt road n (US) → camino sin firme

dirt road nchemin non macadamisé or non revêtu

dirt road dirt n
.

But here, in the middle of nowhere, Abdul-Jabbar has quickly discovered basketball's importance to the Apaches.

Most houses here have hoops - many homemade with wooden backboards and logs for standards - and kids begin dreaming at a young age of playing for Alchesay High. Last season the Falcons, coached by Raul Mendoza, lost the Arizona 3-A title game by three points.

The school's new activity center tells you everything you need to know about basketball on the reservation. It cost $6 million, seats about 4,000 and is usually full at home games.

``The people here were fanatics long before I arrived,'' Abdul-Jabbar said. ``This is the only game in town.''

But while Apache teams are known for their basketball excellence, that success hasn't been duplicated off the court.

Alchesay - named for an Apache chief '''
Apache Chief is a fictional Native American superhero from the various Super Friends cartoons created by Hanna-Barbera. He was one of the new heroes added during the 1977 series The All-New Super Friends Hour
 who earned the Congressional Medal of Honor Congressional Medal of Honor
n.
The highest U.S. military decoration, awarded in the name of Congress to members of the armed forces for gallantry and bravery beyond the call of duty in action against an enemy.

Noun 1.
 - had 115 graduates last spring. Only 45 enrolled in college.

``Then a lot of guys come back in the first week,'' said Brennen Butterfield, the team's center. ``They can't handle it.

``There's a lot of drug abuse and alcohol here,'' he added. ``It would be very easy to slip into that. I know (Abdul-Jabbar) had to get past similar problems in Harlem. I want to know how he coped. Maybe he can teach me something about how to deal with things because I think I would be homesick, too.''

Abdul-Jabbar may have been hired to coach X's and O's, but he seems more interested in talking about the ABC's of life. Just as he discovered the Fort Apache depicted in ``Rin Tin Tin'' didn't exist, he wants Native American kids to realize the perception that they are inferior also is an illusion.

``Because of the messages that Apaches get from the mainstream culture, they don't think success is for them,'' said Abdul-Jabbar, 51. ``It's the same thing in the ghetto or the barrio bar·ri·o  
n. pl. bar·ri·os
1. An urban district or quarter in a Spanish-speaking country.

2. A chiefly Spanish-speaking community or neighborhood in a U.S. city.
. They will accept this as fact unless they see someone challenge it and beat it. They have to see an example like me, someone who has gotten his degree, that they can apply to their lives.''

So when the rumors started circulating last summer that he would help coach the team, much of the reservation understandably was skeptical.

``I didn't believe he was coming,'' said Tinker Burnette, an 18-year-old senior. ``Who comes here? A NBA player coming to our (reservation) is weird.''

Famous athletes and entertainers occasionally visit the 1.6-million acre reservation, which is home to 13,000 Apaches. But they fly in on private jets, pay thousands to spend a few days hunting elk and then leave with a trophy kill. Contact with actual Apaches is strictly accidental.

Abdul-Jabbar was different. When he first visited Fort Apache, which has housed the all-African-American Ninth and 10th cavalries, he struck up a friendship with Edgar Perry, whose grandfather was an Apache scout.

They stayed in touch, and when the gymnasium was dedicated in 1996, Perry encouraged Whiteriver Unified School District Whiteriver Unified School District is a school district in Navajo County, Arizona, United States.

The district serves parts of Navajo County, including the communities of Cibecue, East Fork, and Whiteriver.
 superintendent John Clark John Clark is the name of:
  • John Clark (actor/director) (born 1932), ex-husband of Lynn Redgrave
  • John Clark (governor) (1761-1821), American farmer and governor of Delaware
  • John Clark (Georgia governor) (1766-1832), American politician and governor of Georgia
 to invite Abdul-Jabbar. For the appearance fee of an Alchesay hat and T-shirt, Abdul-Jabbar spoke and sunk the building's first official basket. Sky hook. Nothing but net.

He also took part in a traditional sunrise dance for Perry's grandniece grand·niece  
n.
A daughter of one's nephew or niece.


grandniece
Noun

same as great-niece

Noun 1.
 - a rite-of-passage ceremony for Apache girls. Abdul-Jabbar had been accepted.

``He has a heart for the Apache,'' said Perry.

Earlier this year, Abdul-Jabbar was talking to Noun 1. talking to - a lengthy rebuke; "a good lecture was my father's idea of discipline"; "the teacher gave him a talking to"
lecture, speech

rebuke, reprehension, reprimand, reproof, reproval - an act or expression of criticism and censure; "he had to
 Perry by phone, voicing his frustrations over how nobody was taking his interest in coaching seriously.

``The next day, Mr. Clark called me,'' Abdul-Jabbar said.

Change for the better

Abdul-Jabbar is not sure why NBA and college teams have ignored him even though he has tutored big men such as Shawn Bradley Shawn Paul Bradley (born March 22 1972) is a retired American 7 ft. 6 in. (2.29 m) basketball player who played center for the Dallas Mavericks (NBA). Born in Landstuhl, West Germany, Bradley grew up in Castle Dale, Utah, in the United States and has dual citizenship.  and Michael Olowokandi Michael Olowokandi (born April 3 1975 in Lagos, Nigeria), nicknamed The Kandi Man is a Nigerian professional basketball player in the National Basketball Association. He currently is a free agent. , the No. 1 pick of this year's draft. But there are reasons prospective employers would be hesitant.

He long has been a complex figure. Extremely intelligent, he rarely displayed much joy on the court and made little effort to be cordial.

There also were questions about his judgment. In 1997, there was a series of bizarre events. He sued former UCLA UCLA University of California at Los Angeles
UCLA University Center for Learning Assistance (Illinois State University)
UCLA University of Carrollton, TX and Lower Addison, TX
 running back Karim Abdul-Jabbar for trademark infringement Trademark infringement is a violation of the exclusive rights attaching to a trademark without the authorization of the trademark owner or any licensees (provided that such authorization was within the scope of the license).  over his name; underwent anger-management counseling after an altercation with a motorist; and had to pay a $500 fine after surrendering a small amount of marijuana at the Toronto airport.

Abdul-Jabbar said he suffers from severe migraine headaches and the marijuana was for medicinal purposes. ``I am not,'' he said, ``a stoner ston·er  
n.
1. One that stones.

2. Slang
a. One who is habitually intoxicated by alcohol or drugs.

b. One who is a delinquent or failure.
.''

As for other legal entanglements, he conceded he often has been his own worst enemy. ``Sometimes I wasn't very wise,'' Abdul-Jabbar said. ``But hopefully I'm wiser now.''

``Not everyone leads a perfect life,'' Clark said. ``Maybe those incidents have made him reevaluate his life and become a different person.''

His assessment after watching the new coach for six weeks?

``Every high school athlete should be lucky enough to have a coach like Kareem,'' he said.

Clark has come to a conclusion about his 7-foot-2 coach: It's not easy being Kareem.

``To be around him is really eye-opening,'' he said. ``He stands out. When people see him, they always want something from him. I saw a woman grab him around the legs and say she wouldn't let go until he gave her an autograph. And she had to be 70. You just feel sorry for him.''

Abdul-Jabbar resisted psychoanalyzing himself. But for whatever reason, he clearly has softened that hard shell around him, discarding his scowl.

He recently spoke to a group of 700 reservation women and secured his place in their hearts when he complimented them on their beauty . . . in Apache. He's getting language lessons once a week from Perry.

Native Americans also aren't the only ones who appreciate his volunteerism.

``I went home for a weekend and people were stopping me saying, `It's great what you're doing,' '' he said. ``I was never stopped that much by people who had bet and won on the Lakers. There's been a change in the way people accept me.''

It took a couple weeks for the players to accept him.

``We had to get used to him because he wouldn't talk to us,'' junior guard Tony Parker said. ``He was quiet. He didn't know what to say and didn't know how to act around us.''

The fact Abdul-Jabbar is a Hall of Famer also didn't impress them. Most only vaguely remember him as an NBA star, and they resisted his suggestion to run less and think more on the court.

``We thought we were too good and didn't want to listen to him,'' Butterfield said.

Then they lost three games.

``Nobody believed me when I said they needed to make all their layups to win,'' Abdul-Jabbar said. ``Now they believe.''

Goklish, a senior guard, said he now feels comfortable with the new coach. Goklish has lots of questions he wants to ask.

He is the top student in his class and recently finished fourth in the state cross country meet. He already has received several academic and athletic scholarship offers. Yet he remains troubled about his future.

``It's so different out there,'' Goklish said. ``That's why on the long bus rides, he'll be talking and we'll hang on every word. He said he'd do anything he can to help me go to college, and that he'd even contact UCLA. He gives you such a sense of hope.''

CAPTION(S):

2 Photos

PHOTO (1--Color) Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

(2) ``I think he's learning a whole lot more about himself than he's teaching us. Our life, our culture is different from the big city. He's not going to be the same when he leaves here.''

- Kyle Goklish, Alchesay High senior guard, on assistant coach Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

Paul E. Rodriguez/Orange County Register
COPYRIGHT 1998 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1998, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:SPORTS
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Dec 17, 1998
Words:1669
Previous Article:USE OF FORCE MAY MEAN END OF INSPECTIONS.
Next Article:LEAGUE'S ORIGINS WORTH STUDYING.



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