The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Obama appears at All-Star NBA Cares event

- By Tim Reynolds

CHICAGO >> Zion Williamson and Trae Young are used to meeting fans who are typically a bit nervous during those interactio­ns.

This was different. This time, they were nervous to meet the fan.

Former President Barack Obama — a huge basketball fan, officially the game’s First Fan during his eight years in office — made an unannounce­d appearance Friday at an NBA Cares event during All-Star weekend in his hometown of Chicago with several of the league’s top rookies, second-year players and coaches. The event was for volunteers to fill several backpacks with school supplies, and that work predictabl­y stopped when Obama walked into the room.

“You’re doing fantastic,” Obama told All-Star Luka Doncic of the Dallas Mavericks, who was seated at a table with Los Angeles Lakers assistant coach Jason Kidd when the 44th president made his way to their side of the room.

Obama gave Kidd a long embrace, then turned back to Doncic: “Don’t listen to him when it comes to shooting,” Obama quipped, clearly aware that Doncic is already a much better shooter than Kidd was in his career.

It was the first of multiple events for Obama during All-Star weekend: He’s scheduled to host a conversati­on with several top NBA players on Saturday, and it’s expected that he could appear at Sunday’s All-Star Game as well. Obama was at the event for more than a halfhour, spending the biggest chunk of that time manning a table alongside Williamson and Young.

They had the same initial reaction.

“It was crazy,” said Young, the 21-year-old Atlanta All-Star guard.

“It was crazy,” echoed Williamson, the New Orleans rookie and No. 1 pick in last year’s NBA draft.

Obama played the game as president and evidently still follows the NBA closely.

He had no need for introducti­ons; he knew who the players were, even greeting Miami rookie Tyler Herro by calling him “sharpshoot­er.”

“It was pretty cool,” said Herro, 20.

Williamson, 19, said it could have been one of his coolest experience­s to date, even topping when Obama came to see him play at Duke last season. The only other experience that could compare, he said, was going No. 1 in the draft.

“For him to have one of the most busy schedules, for him to keep up with all of us, hats off to him,” “I’ve got a lot of respect for him, just knowing us, knowing our stats. He said ‘careerhigh 32,’ man ... crazy.”

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