Sunday News

It’s kids’ for NBA’S

Gheorghe Muresan made quite an impression in the NBA in the 1990s. Now he is doing the same for American kids, reports Chris Lyford.

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ONE of the tallest players in NBA history, now a youth basketball coach, Gheorghe Muresan is still unable to play the role of Goliath. He stands 7 feet 7 (2.35m), but at 42, he’s still a quintessen­tial basketball underdog, and every bit a David.

Early on in Muresan’s second career – running the Giant Basketball Academy in Northern Virginia – he encountere­d a camper who struggled for an entire game to score a point. With seconds to the buzzer, the boy was in tears. Muresan stopped the game, took the boy aside, and stood with him until he made a shot. Then two. Then three.

Afterward, Muresan said, something dawned on him. ‘‘I thought, ‘Oh my God, I used to be like this kid’.’’

Muresan founded the yearround, co-ed basketball workshop in 2004, four years after his NBA career ended. He coaches children as young as 6 on basketball’s fundamenta­ls and teamwork skills, regardless of their playing proficienc­y. After nine years, he knows what it takes. ‘‘You need to give a lot from your heart,’’ he said.

Muresan sees parallels between the campers and his own basketball origins. He was hardly destined for NBA greatness: Born and raised in the Transylvan­ia region of Romania, Muresan said he ‘‘had no idea about basketball’’ until age 15, when his height – the result of a pituitary gland condition – caught the attention of basketball coaches at his boarding school in Cluj. With six months of practice, the player who describes picking up a ball for the first time as ‘‘ kind of weird’’ surpassed his best team-mates.

Muresan doesn’t play down the culture shock and insecuriti­es he felt as a 22-year-old basketball novice landing in the United States in 1993 – after the Washington Bullets drafted him in the second round – with little more than a dictionary and a cold sweat. Heisn’t shy about telling students he missed his first shots as a rookie. And how his work paid off: In the 1995-96 season, his fourth and final one with the Bullets, Muresan was voted the NBA’s most improved player.

The chance to draw such parallels are one reason he loves the job, even on days when practices get chaotic.

‘‘Even if you lose a game, you don’t have to be sad,’’ he says. ‘‘If you don’t lose, you don’t win.’’

In 1998 and 2000, in the midst of a series of injuries that would end his NBA career, Muresan’s sons George and Victor were born, kindling a fondness for nurturing children that would serve as the driving force behind his decision to found the academy. Becoming a father, Muresan said, ‘‘was the best thing that could happen to me’’.

In its nine years, the academy has grown to three leagues, which hold practices and games. Almost 80 kids enrolled in clinics last autumn. GBA also offers five-week summer camps that fill quickly. Most practices are held in Virginia public school gyms during offhours, which helps keep camp tuition low.

One aspect of the academy has remained constant: Muresan wants the camp to serve as a resource for beginners, so his classes are restricted to children ages 6 to 14. Since some campers will pick up a basketball for the first time at his academy, Muresan says, he has selected a handful of assistant coaches from

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