Santa Cruz Sentinel

‘CLEARLY IMPRESSIVE’

How one dinner helped center Wiseman win over Golden State’s brass

- By Wes Goldberg

One night last October, 19-year-old, 7-foot James Wiseman, walked alone into a swanky restaurant in Miami’s fashionabl­e South Beach district. He was there for a job interview.

At an outdoor table sat the brass of the three-time NBA champion Golden State Warriors: owner Joe Lacob, GM Bob Myers, coach Steve Kerr and head trainer Rick Celebrini. They peppered Wiseman with questions and Wiseman, as unintimida­ted by the company as he was by the expensive steak on the plate in front of him, calmly answered.

Do you like to go to parties, one of them asked.

“I don’t go to parties,” he replied.

He told them about growing up with a single mom who worked multiple jobs in the projects of Nashville, where

he’d sometimes have to finish his homework under the lights of the school bus she drove. At one point, Wiseman turned the interview around on the men, all of them more than twice his age. He asked them how he

would fit with the team’s culture and what role he would play on the court.

“Clearly impressive,” said Myers, recalling that dinner three months later. “I wonder how I would perform as a 19-yearold

with a bunch of 40-, 50-, 60-year-olds at dinner.”

It was at that point that the Warriors knew what to do with the No. 2 pick in the draft. For months, they had been unsure. Wiseman, the raw prospect from Memphis, Georgia’s Anthony Edwards and YouTube sensation LaMelo Ball were options. So was trading the pick.

But at that dinner, they decided Wiseman had what it takes to become the future face of the franchise, not just because of what he can do on the court, but also because of the adver

sity that shaped him off it. •••

Now Wiseman lives in San Francisco, walking distance from Chase Center and worlds away from Nashville. He has an $8.7 million salary and lives in the same high-rise apartment building as his mother, Donzaleigh Artis. He’s on the sixth floor, she’s on the second. She moved to the Bay Area in January. That’s also when she saw her son play his first game as a Warrior.

“It almost made me cry,” Wiseman said.

Raising a family in the Village Trail section of Nashville wasn’t easy. Wiseman’s parents separated when he was young. Artis drove the bus and worked other jobs to feed and clothe James and his sister Jaquarius Greer, eight years older.

Artis woke up Wiseman every day at 4:30 and started the bus route at 5:30. Wiseman accompanie­d her so he could get to the YMCA at 7, where he’d catch the connection to school. After school was basketball practice, then sometimes he’d get a ride home from his AAU coach Thomas Coleman.

“She’s a prideful woman,” Coleman says of Wiseman’s mom. “If they had tough times, the way she handled herself, you wouldn’t know.”

But sometimes a power bill went unpaid, and the lights in the house went out. On some of those nights, the family would huddle on the bus where they could turn on the lights for as long as the battery would allow and finish their homework.

“I was by myself trying to raise them,” Artis said. “And, with James growing up like a sprout, it was hard raising him. … Every other week it seemed like his pants got shorter.”

By the time Wiseman was in the eighth grade he was 6-foot-7. He could have jumped, dunked and blocked shots on his way to a college scholarshi­p, but he wanted to be a more complete player. While walking the halls between classes, Wiseman bounced a tennis ball. When friends asked what he was doing, Wiseman said he’d read that it would improve his handle. He often skipped lunch to get up shots in the gym and watch YouTube clips of his role models, David Robinson, Chris Bosh and Kevin Garnett. After school, he worked out with the big men, then the guards until he was picked up around 6 p.m.

When shuttling a young Wiseman between practices, Coleman would occasional­ly turn around from the front seat, hold a phantom microphone up to Wiseman and ask in his best broadcast voice, How did you score 30 points tonight? Eyes to the floor, Wiseman at first answered modestly and unsure. Coleman coached Wiseman to deliver PR-friendly answers with confidence.

“When you get on television,” Coleman told him, “you want to make sure you can speak right.”

Back at home, Wiseman practiced until the street lights came on. The rim on his rollaway hoop was bent, mangled by years of Wiseman’s dunks. That rusty hoop provided refuge from the entrapment­s of a troubled and violent neighborho­od. But it became clear to local gang members — who would sometimes break from dealing drugs to play pickup games on the hoop — that Wiseman could make it out. So they left him alone.

Wiseman early on became the man of the house. There wasn’t a consistent presence of a father. There had been a brother, Bobby Ray, but he died in a drowning accident at age 5, six years before James was born. Wiseman spent many nights alone while his mother and sister worked. He’d do his schoolwork, cook dinner, wash clothes and feed their black cat Tita.

So years later, after the Warriors sat down with Wiseman at that swanky South Beach restaurant, they were struck by his maturity.

•••

The Warriors weren’t always so high on Wiseman. When Myers scouted Wiseman in November 2019, his

impression may have been best described as lukewarm. Wiseman struggled defending Oregon’s pick-and-roll and got into foul trouble. The takeaway: He was big and athletic, but raw.

Myers had hoped to see Wiseman again, but that game in Oregon would be Wiseman’s last. He played just three games for Memphis before a recruiting scandal related to Wiseman’s pre-existing relationsh­ip with head coach Anfernee “Penny” Hardaway forced him from the team.

After his sophomore year at Ensworth School in Nashville, Wiseman and his mom moved across the state so he could play for Hardaway at Memphis East High School. In 2018, Hardaway accepted the Memphis job and, months later, Wiseman committed to play for the Tigers. The NCAA opened an investigat­ion and found that Hardaway had helped Wiseman’s family with moving expenses. That financial aid would have been OK if not for Hardaway’s prior donation to Memphis, which defined him as a booster. The NCAA suspended Wiseman for 12 games and ruled he must repay the $11,500 Hardaway lent the family in 2017. A few days after the NCAA announced its decision, Wiseman left the program.

 ?? NHAT V. MEYER — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? Golden State Warriors’ James Wiseman has an $8.7 million salary and lives in the same high-rise apartment building as his mother.
NHAT V. MEYER — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP Golden State Warriors’ James Wiseman has an $8.7 million salary and lives in the same high-rise apartment building as his mother.
 ?? RAY CHAVEZ — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? Golden State Warriors No. 2 draft pick James Wiseman poses for a photo with his mother Donzaleigh Artis, left, and his sister Jaquarius Greer.
RAY CHAVEZ — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP Golden State Warriors No. 2 draft pick James Wiseman poses for a photo with his mother Donzaleigh Artis, left, and his sister Jaquarius Greer.
 ?? RAY CHAVEZ — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? James Wiseman’s mother, Donzaleigh Artis, drove the bus and worked other jobs to feed and clothe James and his sister.
RAY CHAVEZ — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP James Wiseman’s mother, Donzaleigh Artis, drove the bus and worked other jobs to feed and clothe James and his sister.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States