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March 03, 2005

The jump.

Excerpt
The following is an excerpt from the book The Jump: Sebastian Telfair and the High Stakes Business of High School Ball By Ian O'Connor.

Published by Rodale; February 2005; $23.95US/$33.95CAN; 1-59486-107-2 Copyright C 2005 Ian O'Connor

The Jump chronicles the rags-to-riches path of New York sensation Sebastian Telfair, perhaps the greatest point guard that the city famous for point guards has ever produced. Sebastian exemplifies the new face of basketball--young, talented, mediagenic teenagers who skip college on the way to NBA fortune and fame. - (Cover notes)

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Chapter 12

Sebastian Telfair was sitting in the Lincoln bleachers and handicapping the companies that were after his feet. Telfair had worn Adidas, Nike, and Reebok at different points in the season. He said Adidas was in the lead for his services, but that there was still time for the opposing teams to catch up.

We talked about money, and why amateur athletes were denied an opportunity to cash in on their talents. The system was set up so that the only way a high school or college player could profit from his or her skill was to take gifts or cash from people who weren't allowed to give them. It opened a door for me to ask Sebastian about the $250,000 offer he said he'd received as an underclassman from a man who claimed to be representing a major college in the East.

"I was at a game, another school's game, just watching," Telfair said. "It was an alumni, but I brushed it off. Certain schools are dirty, and certain schools are not dirty. Like Rick Pitino. He ain't doing nothing. Rick Pitino is not doing anything illegal. He's not buying you a drink. That's what I like about him."

I inquired about the man who made the alleged offer. "He asked me what school I was going to," Telfair said. "I didn't even know the guy at all. I knew the school he was from.... He said what school he was from. He was like, 'What school are you thinking about going to?' I was like, 'You know, I've got a couple of choices,' but I didn't say any names. He was like, 'If you come to this school, you'll get paid. I'm talking hundreds of thousands of dollars, $250,000.' And I was like, 'Oh yeah?'

"But it ain't worth it. If you do something stupid with a school and then after it happens, you get in trouble for it, you're like, 'Damn, I wish I didn't do that. It wasn't worth it. I didn't get enough out of it for me to get in trouble.' If you've got a chance to be a millionaire in a couple of months or in a year, why take a couple hundred thousand when it's only going to hurt you and your family?

"But then, what if you do get hurt? What if you don't make it? Then you're like, 'Damn, I could've had that.' It's a risky situation, and nothing's guaranteed."

Back to the man who made the alleged $250,000 offer. I asked Telfair for a description, and he said the man was white. I asked if the man was old, young, or middle-age. "Middle," he said. "I don't know the guy's name.... The person that it was, I was in the gym of that school he said he was with."

Telfair wouldn't name the school the man said he represented. A person close to Telfair said the man claimed to represent the interests of Georgia Tech, the school that had landed two previous point-guard greats from New York, Kenny Anderson and Stephon Marbury.

Paul Hewitt, the Georgia Tech head coach, dismissed the possibility that any alum or fan at a Georgia Tech home game could have approached Telfair with an improper offer. "There's no way Telfair came to a game on our campus and didn't come into our locker room," Hewitt said. "If that happened, one of my assistants would've been fired. If he came to one of our games, it was an Elvis-like appearance. If he was down here, I didn't know it. I think somebody's trying to sex up the story."

Hewitt confirmed that Georgia Tech briefly recruited Telfair during his junior year. His assistant, Willie Reese, tried to convince Hewitt to go to Lincoln to see the point guard. Hewitt had seen Telfair as a sophomore and figured right then and there he would go straight to the NBA. "But I had Willie call Stephon and ask him if he thought Sebastian would go to school," Hewitt said. "We have these buses on campus that take you from one place to another, and we call them the Stinger. Stephon told Willie, 'You really think that kid's going to ride a Stinger bus when he can be driving a Mercedes? There's no way he's going to school."'

Allison George, Georgia Tech's director of sports communications, said that she, too, never saw Telfair at a Georgia Tech game and reminded me that a player of Telfair's profile would have been almost impossible to miss. But Lincoln assistant Danny Turner said his brother did attend a Georgia Tech game, a claim Telfair declined to comment on. "It wasn't an official visit," Turner said. "He was down there for something else and just went to a game."

Bubba Barker, Telfair's best friend, confirmed Turner's account. "Yeah, he went to a Georgia Tech game," Barker said. "It was a brief visit, like in and out of there. He said he liked the people there a lot." Neither Turner nor Barker could recall which game Telfair attended.

Of course, someone could have made a $250,000 offer -- and an empty one at that -- without having any connection to Georgia Tech or its basketball program. Whether the alleged offer to Telfair was real or a hoax, this much was clear: The Lincoln star was forever in position to reject business propositions that could have landed him in trouble.

"I've turned down a lot of things over the years," he said.

"Sebastian's just too classy and too sophisticated to get bought by anyone," said Andy Miller, the agent hoping to represent him.

But Telfair was getting tired of the dance. A job in the NBA would end all that, and he would open February with another huge game to be witnessed by executives and scouts from every pro team.

Telfair would face Dwight Howard, the 6-foot-11 center from Southwest Atlanta Christian, in the Prime Time Shootout. This would be a battle between the most famous high school player in America and the best high school player in America. This would be a chance for Sebastian Telfair to prove that a 5-foot-11 teenager could survive and thrive in the land of the NBA giants.

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The Prime Time could brag on two straight LeBron James appearances.

Jeff Hewitson, who ran the Prime Time, made sure he landed Dwight Howard the year after he was through with LeBron. The Prime Time would give Howard a chance to secure his position as the number one pick in the June draft.

The top player in the Class of 2004 didn't create half the stir caused by the top player in the Class of 2003 -- LeBron drove a brand-new Hummer, Howard a 1984 Ford Crown Victoria. But Howard was all Cadillac on the court. There wasn't an amateur player in America, maybe in the world, who looked so much like a center and handled the ball so much like a guard.

"There's no way you can take Emeka Okafor ahead of this kid," said one scout from an NBA Central Division team. "He can do everything, and you can tell he's a good kid. No tattoos, clean-cut, his dad's a state trooper, his uncle's a district attorney.

"Dwight's a slam dunk. He's got the whole package."

He also had braces. That's what struck me when I first met him: his youth. Howard was so big, so good, and so sure to be world famous, I'd forgotten that he was an 18-year-old Finding Nemo fan until he smiled and flashed those braces.

Howard had established goals of becoming the first black president of the United States, of convincing the NBA to make the crucifix part of its league logo, and of becoming a better player than LeBron James.

"I think I can surpass him," Howard said. He didn't sound inclined to waste any time trying.

"I always wanted to be the first pick in the draft," Howard said. "I've worked myself up to where I'm at the 5-yard line and David Stern is waving his hands saying, 'Come on in for a touchdown.' So I don't want to drop the ball."

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Copyright © 2005 Ian O'Connor
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Reprinted from: The Jump: Sebastian Telfair and the High Stakes Business of High School Ball by Ian O'Connor C 2005 Ian O'Connor. Permission granted by Rodale, Inc., Emmaus, PA 18098. Available wherever books are sold or directly from the publisher by calling (800) 848-4735 or visit their website at www.rodalestore.com

Author
Ian O'Connor is a sports columnist for USA Today and the Journal News of New York. He has won numerous national writing honors, including the Sigma Delta Chi Award from the Society of Professional Journalists. O'Connor lives in New Jersey with his wife, Tracey, and son, Kyle.

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