Las Vegas Review-Journal

Still chasing his dream, now with the Vegas Ballers, Roscoe Smith is ‘in too deep’

- By Mike Grimala This story was posted on lasvegassu­n.com at 2 a.m. today.

Roscoe Smith, like a lot of other players in The Basketball League, is in too deep. That’s why he recently went through a tryout for the league’s new franchise, the Vegas Ballers, and that’s why on Wednesday he found himself at the Tarkanian Basketball Academy for the team’s first media day.

Smith, 29, still wants to play basketball.

He doesn’t know any other way.

“Just love of the game,” Smith says when asked why he’s still grinding away, seven years removed from a productive college career. “I’ve invested so much into basketball, I’m too deep into this game. I don’t have a backup plan. I’ve been playing ball since I was six years old. That’s all I know. I’m in too deep.”

The Basketball League has all the do-it-yourself charm inherent to minor league sports.

The fledgling league, now entering its third year, has upward of 30 teams (it’s difficult to pin down the exact number) and this season’s 20-game schedule was set to tip off Friday. The first home game for the Ballers is set for April 16 at Tarkanian Academy, although as of now games will be closed to the public at-large.

At the media day event, players shared one jersey as they took turns posing for team photos. While that went on, regular Joes ran a pickup game on an adjacent court on the other side of a dividing curtain.

And the “owner” of the Ballers? Tenyear-old Jeremiah Williams, the son of NBA veteran and former Findlay Prep coach Jerome Williams (the man who is actually running the team).

It’s small and it’s charming and it’s fun.

But to the players — to men like Smith — this is serious business, even with a league minimum salary of $1,000 a month.

“I’ve been around,” Smith says.

“I played in the NBA. I played in the G-league, the D-league, played high-major college. This is a new league. The Vegas Ballers, we’re transition­ing to a pro team. Everything we do is pro-like as far as our travel, our conditioni­ng, our mindset. We’re taking a profession­al approach to this.”

Smith, a 6-foot-8 swingman, has lived the life of a basketball journeyman. As a freshman he started on Uconn’s 2011 national championsh­ip team. He transferre­d to UNLV for one season (2013-14), where he averaged a double-double with 11.1 points and 10.9 rebounds. He went

undrafted in 2014, but played in the NBA Summer League and subsequent­ly signed a training camp contract with the Los Angeles Lakers.

He was cut before the season began.

Since then, Smith has bounced between four G-league teams and also logged time in the Israeli Premier League and the Greek B League.

None of that has deterred Smith from continuing to pursue his pro basketball dream.

“It’s easy to slip through the cracks,” Smith says. “With the game of basketball, sometimes the situation might not work out for you. You might not be on the right team or in the right situation or whatever the case may be.

You’ve got to be mentally strong.”

Smith’s story is not uncommon. There are a lot of players like him who need a platform, and with the COVID-19 pandemic eliminatin­g G-league and overseas opportunit­ies in 2020, those players were left out in the cold.

“Obviously it’s been tough with the pandemic,” Smith says. “All over the world, a lot of people losing a lot of things. This is a great opportunit­y for a lot of guys right now. It’s a lot of college guys who didn’t get a chance to play in the G-league because of the pandemic. To have this opportunit­y, this is a blessing.”

The Vegas Ballers are doing what they can to make this a legitimate operation. Jerome

Williams has serious NBA credential­s, as does the team’s head coach, James Robinson. Assistant coach Keith Starr was a UNLV assistant under Jerry Tarkanian and also played in the NBA.

They all know how important this is to Smith and all the guys like him in the TBL.

“Once you finish college there aren’t many opportunit­ies,” Robinson says. “Whether you’re trying to get to the G-league, overseas or the NBA, this is a great opportunit­y.”

What Robinson, Starr and Williams also understand — certainly more than the current players — is that the career window for a profession­al athlete is narrow. For someone like Smith, who will turn 30 in May, it’s getting close to now-or-never time.

“You can only play so long,” Robinson says. “Roscoe is at the age, 28, 29, that’s your prime. So he ain’t got much longer. In about four or five years when you’re 34 or 35, the love is still there, but (physically) it’s not the same.”

Starr was 30 years old when he suited up for a semi-pro team in Las Vegas in the 1980s. He performed well, he says, but tore up his knee, effectivel­y ending his playing career.

So Starr gets why Smith wants to stave off his basketball mortality for as long as he can.

“Roscoe still has an opportunit­y,” Starr says. “He’s young enough and he’s in pretty good shape. But there’s going to come a time when he’s going to have to put it down, and then he’s going to have to use schoolwork and whatever to get a job. But it’s hard to give up.”

Smith believes his break could come at any moment. It just takes one coach, one scout, one executive to see him play and give him a chance at the next level.

He is determined to keep going until that happens.

“I’m still young. I’m 29. This group of guys, we’ve got a chance to keep doing what we love to do.”

Smith is in too deep to do anything but keep playing.

 ?? PHOTOS BY STEVE MARCUS ?? Coach James “Hollywood’’ Robinson, center, rallies players Wednesday during the Vegas Ballers media day at the Tarkanian Basketball Academy. The Vegas Ballers are a new profession­al basketball team that will compete in The Basketball League.
PHOTOS BY STEVE MARCUS Coach James “Hollywood’’ Robinson, center, rallies players Wednesday during the Vegas Ballers media day at the Tarkanian Basketball Academy. The Vegas Ballers are a new profession­al basketball team that will compete in The Basketball League.
 ??  ?? Former UNLV player Roscoe Smith, a journeyman profession­al who in 2014 nearly earned a roster spot with the
Los Angeles Lakers, poses during the media day events.
Former UNLV player Roscoe Smith, a journeyman profession­al who in 2014 nearly earned a roster spot with the Los Angeles Lakers, poses during the media day events.

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