USA TODAY International Edition

Brogdon takes aim at water crisis

Hoops2o targets poverty in Africa

- Matt Velazquez

The Bucks are undefeated through seven games, making them the only remaining unbeaten team in the NBA. Malcolm Brogdon, the 2016-17 rookie of the year and a key part of the team’s starting unit, is hitting his stride as one of the team’s many dynamic, play- and shot-making options.

Everything’s going well in Milwaukee for the hometown team, which will look to continue its winning ways against the Celtics at 8 p.m. ET Thursday at TD Garden in Boston.

But Brogdon isn’t thinking only about Milwaukee right now. As much as basketball has always been a major part of his life, it’s never been the only thing. There’s always been a wider focus in his life, a higher calling.

“For me, personally, I feel like that’s my duty while I’m on this earth is to serve others and use my blessing to bless others,” Brogdon said. “If I’m not doing that, I feel like I’m not serving my purpose. That’s my goal, that’s my passion and that’s what I intend to do for the rest of my life.”

To strike a harmonious, productive balance between basketball and service, Brogdon announced the creation of Hoops2o, a nonprofit aimed at addressing the clean-water crisis, particular­ly in Africa. He assembled four other NBA players — Justin Anderson and Joe Harris, two of his former teammates at Virginia, as well as Garrett Temple and Anthony Tolliver — to form “The Starting 5” of Hoops2o.

Together, those five players have a goal of raising $225,000 to fund five wells in East African communitie­s. They’ll do that, at least in part, through their “Ballin’ for Buckets” campaign. During November, each player is asking fans to pledge a dollar amount of their choosing to correlate to a statistica­l category. For example, each time a person’s designated player scores or makes a three-pointer that will translate to more money raised for clean water in a community in dire need.

Or as Brogdon more snappily puts it, “Draining buckets on the court and filling them off it.”

Hoops2o is an offshoot of the Waterboys initiative started by Eagles defensive end Chris Long. Brogdon became the first NBA player to join that cause last season and has taken steps to make it grow in the NBA. While Brogdon’s involvemen­t was aided by joining what Long was doing, he’s always known that improving the lives of those in poverty, particular­ly in Africa, was going to be part of his life’s story.

The seed was first planted when he took a trip to Ghana and Malawi when he was 10 or 11 and saw a level of poverty far beyond what he had been exposed to in the United States. Then, when he was 14, he went on a mission trip to Malawi and South Africa with his grandparen­ts that furthered his urge to be an agent of change.

“That really sort of struck it home for me and made me extremely passionate,” said Brogdon, who went on to earn an undergradu­ate degree in history and a master’s degree in public policy at Virginia. “At that point, I knew what I wanted my life’s work to be.”

This past summer, Brogdon spent much of his time traveling the world, visiting places such as Portugal, Colombia, Tanzania and Malaysia and doing charitable work at multiple stops. In Tanzania, he again saw the pressing need for clean water, walking along with women on their miles-long, daily hike to fill buckets with contaminat­ed water. While traveling, Brogdon also put out feelers around the NBA to form his fiveman charitable crew. Anderson and Harris were logical partners as his former college teammates. In the search for other partners in the league, the names of Tolliver and Temple came up as players who have positive reputation­s and an interest in the mission.

“This has always been the plan for me,” Brogdon said. “I wasn’t sure how it would unfold once I got to the NBA, but I knew if I got to the NBA I could then have the platform and have the resources and the connection­s and the people around me that had more connection­s and more resources to help me really impact a lot of people’s lives.”

As of Monday, Brogdon said, he had never discussed his outreach with his Bucks teammates. While many of them are friends and hang out off the court, he chose to keep his two passions separate, instead hoping his teammates would hear about Hoops2o organicall­y from a source outside the locker room. Because of the rigors of the NBA schedule, Brogdon said he plans to talk with his teammates about his mission when things slow down.

For now, though, he’s just happy that both major elements of his life are going so well.

Brogdon’s hope now is, beginning Thursday, the success of both will continue, with all of his actions on the court directly benefiting those off it.

For more informatio­n about Hoops2o, visit www.hoops2o.org

 ?? RICK WOOD/ MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? The Bucks’ Malcolm Brogdon leads drives on the court and now off the court with one to address the clean-water crisis.
RICK WOOD/ MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL The Bucks’ Malcolm Brogdon leads drives on the court and now off the court with one to address the clean-water crisis.

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