The Palm Beach Post

New game in town: NBA 2K tips off with draft

- By Brian Mahoney

NEW YORK — Dimez slipped on his draft hat, shook hands with NBA Commission­er Adam Silver, and began life as the No. 1 pick in the draft. The video game draft. Dimez is Artreyo Boyd’s gamer tag and no he doesn’t run or jump like LeBron James or shoot like Stephen Curry. But he is a star at NBA 2K, and Wednesday he was the first player chosen in the draft for the NBA 2K League, the first official esports league operated by a U.S. profession­al sports league.

The NBA is serious about its latest venture, having seen how esports has grown from a hobby among youth to an activity that sells out arenas, one that financial analysts say could grow into a billion-dollar industry in the next few years. So the NBA 2K League joined the WNBA and NBA G League as the fourth league in the NBA family.

“We view this in the same way as those other leagues as something that we’re going to develop over a very long time, and we’re building this as a league that’s going to be around forever,” Silver said.

The league will pay gamers $35,000 for six months, with housing and benefits paid. That’s comparable salary to a new player in the WNBA or G League.

Dimez, a 23-year-old from Cleveland, emerged from a field of 72,000 players to get the call from Mavericks owner Mark Cuban that he was the choice of Mavs Gaming, one of 17 teams in the league.

The inaugural season opens in May, and Silver hopes all 30 NBA teams could have entries in three years. He even talked of having overseas teams, figuring the popularity of “NBA 2K,” the highest-selling and toprated game in North America, with nearly 10 million copies of “NBA 2K18” already sold this year, combined with the NBA’s ability to make stars of its players — athletes, as Silver stressed — should ensure the league is successful.

Dimez sits in a chair playing video games almost all day long, the kind of activity that gets kids yelled at by their parents. He plays the game well — his gamer tag comes from his point guard’s flair in dishing out assists, known in basketball as dimes — and the Dallas Mavericks organizati­on took him with the first choice in the draft at Madison Square Garden.

“Everybody always asks me how much I play,” Dimez said. “I don’t really have a specific time but I play every day, all day.”

To be eligible for the league, players had to win 50 games in January. The NBA expected that would yield around 10,000 candidates and instead there were 72,000. The gamers then went through a combine-style format of competitio­n and interviews to eventually reduce the pool to 102 players for Wednesday’s draft, which consisted of six rounds.

Teams had to draft each of the five positions — point guard, shooting guard, center, power forward and small forward — and one player of their choice for what will be 5-on-5 games. It was set up like the actual NBA draft, starting with a lottery last month, a full evaluation process by teams, and a media circuit the players had to walk through after exiting the stage.

Games will be played at a couple of central locations in the first season, though the NBA hopes of eventually having esports teams compete in NBA arenas in front of their home fans.

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