The Guardian (USA)

Curry and Lillard hit back-to-back half-court shots as Team LeBron win All-Star Game

- Agencies

Giannis Antetokoun­mpo was named the All-Star game MVP on Sunday after shooting 16 of 16 for 35 points, even making all three of his attempts beyond the three-point stripe.

“I’m just having fun,” the Greek star said. “Sometimes when you’re having fun and not thinking about the outcome, you just let your instincts take over.”

Stephen Curry chipped in with 28 points, while Damian Lillard had 32. At one point Lillard pulled up for a threepoint­er from the half-court line. Not to be outdone, Curry knocked down one from virtually the same spot.

“It was a lot of fun,” Lillard said. “Me and Steph shoot a lot of threes. We shoot deep threes. It was three, three, three, three.” Team LeBron beat Team Durant 170-150 on the night.

Due to the Covid-19 pandemic, this All-Star Game was a one-night-only event, with a pair of skill competitio­ns held shortly before the game and the Dunk Contest squeezed into the halftime break. The players flew in on Saturday

afternoon and were largely confined to a nearby hotel except for their time on the court.

In the Dunk Contest, Anfernee Simons kissed good-bye the competitio­n, nearly locking lips with the rim on a grand finale that was deemed good enough to edge Obi Toppin for the 2021 crown.

The 21-year-old from the Portland

Trail Blazers shared the All-Star Game undercard spotlight with Curry, who needed to make his last shot to edge Mike Conley in the Three-Point Contest, and Domantas Sabonis, who won a battle of big men over Nikola Vucevic for the Skills Challenge crown.

After winning round one of the three-man competitio­n with 95 points, one more than New York Knicks rookie Toppin, the two were allowed just one more dunk to determine the 2021 champion.

Toppin, who had dunked over his father, Obadiah, and teammate Julius Randle to eliminate Cassius Stanley in the first round, completed his finals dunk first, setting the stage for Simons to do better. He did, jumping high enough so that his puckered lips nearly came in contact with the rim as he slammed the ball through the hoop.

In a new scoring system, Simons was deemed to have performed the best dunk in the finals by three judges, while the other two opted for Toppin.

Curry joined Jason Kapono, Peja Stojakovic, Jeff Hornacek and Mark Price as two-time champs in the distance-shooting event. Craig Hodges and Larry Bird won three each.

Adrian Escarate remembers the 2017 Miami Open final very well. That day, his mission was to help Roger Federer prepare for the championsh­ip match against Rafael Nadal.

A Chilean immigrant who had captained the tennis team at St Thomas University in Miami, Escarate spent 30 minutes warming up Federer at center court. And maybe the preparatio­n helped Federer, who went on to win the title.

“I was really nervous,” Escarate said. “He was super nice, the nicest guy ever.”

It was one of the highlights of Escarate’s 10-year career coaching tennis – which might have been impossible had it not been for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or Daca.

Establishe­d during the Obama Administra­tion, Daca helps young undocument­ed immigrants like Escarate stay in the US and find work. Today there are about 650,000 Daca recipients in the country. (They are sometimes called Dreamers – a term that covers all undocument­ed young immigrants in the US, a number estimated between 2 million and 2.5 million.) Sport is part of the Daca narrative. Interviews with current or former Daca recipients indicate that overall the program has helped them find opportunit­ies in sport, and if it survives the latest challenge in court, it can help the next generation of immigrant athletes as well.

Perhaps the first prominent Daca athlete was Miguel Aguilar, who was selected by DC United in the 2015 Major League Soccer draft.

In an essay for The Players’ Tribune Aguilar recalled “how pivotal it was for me to have Daca coming in.” He added: “It allowed me to follow my dream, to finally become what I always wanted to be.”

Aguilar now works for the State of California after his MLS career ended in 2018. He is no longer a Daca recipient having married a US citizen and gained a green card. Yet, he said, the program is “something very near and dear to me. I still follow it very closely.”

Last summer, the US supreme court ruled against the Trump administra­tion’s attempt to rescind Daca. The Biden administra­tion issued an executive order in January calling to preserve and fortify Daca and an immigratio­n bill is currently in Congress, but Texas district court judge Andrew Hanen is scheduled to rule separately on the program, leaving advocates fearful.

“It might be that he declares the program unlawful and so the program goes away,” said Juliana Macedo do Nascimento, a Daca recipient who is a state and local policy manager for the organizati­on United We Dream.

“It’s tough, right?” Aguilar said of the impending court case. “Because it would decide the lives of [650,000] people. Because let’s not forget, we talk about Daca, we talk about people like me, from many places, all here doing something with their lives, something positive.”

When Daca was enacted in 2012, it helped fellow Aguilar’s fellow Dreamer, Escarate, become a respected tennis coach. The recent college graduate got a social security number and a driver’s license, and found employment coaching at prestigiou­s Miami venues like the Biltmore Tennis Center and the Salvadore Park Tennis Center.

“When Daca began, it opened doors for me,” Escarate said. “I was able to breathe a sigh of relief … It catapulted me into opportunit­ies.”

Arguably the biggest opportunit­y was working with Federer at the Miami Open. “It was amazing,” Escarate said. “I still can’t put it into words.”

From 2017 to 2019, he helped other top profession­al players get ready for the tournament, including Kei Nishikori and Grigor Dimitrov.

“There were one or two instances when a profession­al player’s coach asked me if I was playing on the pro tour,” Escarate said. “He saw how well I was playing, that I was trying to make it as a pro as well. I wasn’t [playing on the pro tour], because of my immigratio­n status. I needed to make money, needed to teach tennis. I couldn’t really go travel, even in the States. It was going to be a financial burden to do that.”

Escarate taught a few lessons to his then-congressma­n, Carlos Curbelo, a tennis enthusiast who invited him as his guest to the 2018 State of the Union address. Although many Daca recipients were invited that year, Escarate was the only one invited by a Republican. He gained an appreciati­on of working across political divides, although not when it came to Donald Trump.

Trump said that “[he] was willing to work with Daca legislatio­n in exchange for billions of dollars for a border wall, in exchange for all these negative bills that would be attached to Daca legislatio­n,” Escarate remembered. “Poison pills to ramp up border security, ramp up deportatio­ns, get rid of family-based visas … I was not on board with that.”

Trump’s speech also frustrated Nicolle Uria, a Daca student-athlete from Virginia who attended that State of the Union address as well. At the time, she was a standout player for her high school volleyball team.

“Volleyball did help me come out of my comfort zone sometimes,” Uria said. “I was able to really expand my energy through volleyball. It helped me so much in high school to deal with the fear of either losing my Daca or students who knew I had Daca and bullied me about it. I loved playing volleyball.”

After she shared her immigrant journey with the Washington Post, the resulting article got the attention of her congressma­n, Gerry Connolly, who invited her to the State of the Union.

“I met Cory Booker, Nancy Pelosi, people who are really in favor of Daca, who support Daca,” Uria said. “It was so awesome. At the same time, it was a little bit scary ... Multiple people messaged me with mean stuff.”

As for the president’s speech, it was a letdown for her and fellow Dreamers she sat with.

“He said we were gang members, a menace to society,” Uria said. “Some Dreamers were so disappoint­ed. It was very sad that he would say something like that right in front of us.”

A Bolivian immigrant, Uria first learned that she was undocument­ed when her father explained why she could not get a learner driver’s permit as a high school sophomore. She initially kept quiet about her status, unsure of how people at school would react.

But the next academic year coincided with the 2016 presidenti­al campaign. Trump disparaged undocument­ed immigrants and called for a border wall with Mexico. His sentiments were reflected in jokes Uria heard while sitting at a volleyball award ceremony, listening to teammates who did not know she was a Dreamer.

One step toward recognizin­g her ability to be vocal was winning a leadership MVP award at a tournament.

“It really helped me feel like a leader to my peers, all my team, the girls playing with me,” Uria said. “A lot of times, I did not have that confidence playing volleyball when people started to find out I had Daca. A lot of my friends stopped being friends with me … One teacher said there should be a wall [because] Mexicans were crossing the border. There were lots of jokes. I had to come out and educate my peers.”

Sometimes, acceptance replaced animosity, including when she won the leadership award.

“Our coach was super-happy,” she said. “My teammates hugged me. It was so great getting all this lovely support from the community, teammates, classmates after coming out on being a Daca student.”

Daca has “awesome benefits that helped me so much,” she said, including in-state tuition for college. “It scared me that I would not be able to pay.”

She is currently attending Northern Virginia Community College and working several jobs to help pay tuition. Before the Covid-19 pandemic, these included teaching volleyball to children at a local community center. She played college volleyball in her first semester, but had to stop because of job commitment­s. She is hopeful that if stronger protection­s emerge for Daca recipients, tuition can come down and she can visit her home country – something she was unable to do this past year when her uncle in Bolivia died from Covid-19.

As for Escarate, he got his master’s in communicat­ions from St Thomas in 2019 and began looking for full-time work in that field. He found a position in the Bay Area, working for the nonprofit Define American, which seeks a fairer depiction of immigrants in the media. He has become its deputy chief of staff and still teaches the occasional tennis lesson.

“I think sports and immigratio­n are intertwine­d in every way,” Escarate said. “There’s immigrants, immigrant youth, immigrant athletes I’m sure are out there who have Daca.”

For Daca recipients looking to make it in sports as he once did, he said, “keep a positive outlook on things … try not to be let down or hindered by what happens with their legal status. Keep at it, stay positive, stay involved.”

 ?? Photograph: Brynn Anderson/AP ?? Stephen Curry celebrates one of successes from long range.
Photograph: Brynn Anderson/AP Stephen Curry celebrates one of successes from long range.
 ?? Photograph: Adrian Escarate/Courtesy of Adrian Escarate ?? Adrian Escarate greets Roger Federer after warming up for the 2017 Miami Open final.
Photograph: Adrian Escarate/Courtesy of Adrian Escarate Adrian Escarate greets Roger Federer after warming up for the 2017 Miami Open final.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States