Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Ice Cube enjoying the good days in third year of Big3

- By Dan Gelston

PHILADELPH­IA >> Ice Cube and Dakota Johnson were snapped this week in Los Angeles rehearsing for a new movie. Johnson was dressed in a white top, black leather jacket and distressed jeans. Cube? He kept it sports chic: a Raiders hat, dark shades and a Killer 3s Tshirt straight out of the Big3 catalog.

Whether sitting courtside in Philly or filming in Hollywood, Cube remains the famous face of his 3-on-3 half-court basketball league. Cube is serious about growing the Big3, heavy on nostalgia, into more than just another niche sports league. The rapper/actor and his league of former NBA players have made it to a third season, barnstormi­ng this summer from Birmingham to Brooklyn, shooting 4-pointers in pickup-style games where the first to 50 points wins.

“It’s Ice Cube. Everything’s going to be big,” said Greg Oden, the No. 1 Ice Cube overall pick of the 2007 NBA draft.

Cube is a die-hard Lakers fan, publicly welcoming All-Star Anthony Davis to the team this offseason and expressing his disappoint­ment in Magic Johnson’s departure. But hours before NBA free agency was set to formally begin, Cube was at Temple’s Liacouras Center getting ready for a Big3 triplehead­er, his interest in the million-dollar deals landed by potential future stars of his league dimmed by the Sunday games ahead.

“Nah, I ain’t worried about the NBA tonight,” Cube said. “I’ve got my own league to worry about right now.”

The Big3 has hit snags like any growing sports league, but it showcases its former slam dunk champs in a national TV deal with CBS , expanded this year from eight teams to 12, hits 18 markets in 11 weeks and dropped the minimum age requiremen­t to 27.

Cube, though, wants the Big3 in Season3 to get, well, bigger.

“We need more interest from mainstream sports media outside of when I’m doing an interview,” Cube said. “Having this level of talent, I didn’t think it would be as hard as it is to just get national attention on the league. It’s being done top class with some of the biggest names to ever play basketball. We’ve got basketball gods as part of this league. I don’t understand, what’s not to like?”

At Temple, fans roamed the concourse sipping $10 Big3 Baller Lemonade (Bacardi rum and lemonade) and waiting to pounce from their seats for a photo op of a Hall of Famer like Big3 coach Julius Erving. Some Big3 players might even sit next to fans in the lower bowl — yes, that was former Knicks guard Nate Robinson in a Phillies Bryce Harper jersey leaping out of his seat high-fiving players and fans. And while the star power may not rival the A-listers at a Lakers or Knicks game, Cube sat next to Kentucky coach John Calipari and just a few seats down from fellow rapper/actor LL Cool J in the front row.

Philadelph­ia basketball icon Sonny Hill turned to league commission­er Clyde Drexler and told him, “Great crowd for no promotion.” That’s part of Cube’s beef. The lower bowl was pretty full at Temple and fans stretched to the second level, some there on a 2-for-1 ticket deal, to catch a glimpse of former 76ers Reggie Evans and Jason Richardson, Oden, Glen “Big Baby” Davis and Carlos Boozer. It’s no Dream Team, but the collection of past-their-primetime players still put on a show of flashy dunks and extra-long range shooting that reminded fans why they were NBA starters and lottery picks. The halfcourt game wipes out the big man lumbering down the court playing little defense. When Ricky Davis hit a 3-pointer for Ghost Ballers, he simply turned around and took two steps toward Bivouac’s Will Bynum to man up.

TV ratings peaked at about 395,000 a game last year on Fox and the first week of action this year on CBS averaged 900,000 viewers.

“We’re close to being in profit,” Cube said. “We’ve still got a little work to do. But the interest is there.”

Cube envisions a day when current NBA stars play in the Big3 or some retired greats (think Vince Carter) move straight from NBA retirement into a league that allows hand-checking and is home to the 14-second shot clock.

Cube, and BIG3 co-founder and owner Jeff Kwatinetz , have pushed that their brand of hooping is more than an old-timer’s league.

“I think there’s a snobbiness to the fact that people think just because these guys are not part of the NBA, they’re not the highest level of basketball that we have,” Cube said. “That’s just not true. The NBA only has so many spots. To be honest, the guys that we’ve got, the basketball IQ is 10 times better than most players that’s in the NBA. They might not be able to chase John Wall 82 games down the court, but as far as knowing how to play the game, being in shape, what’s not to like?”

 ?? RICH SCHULTZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? The Killer 3’s play the 3 Headed Monsters during a BIG3 2017 game in Philadelph­ia.
RICH SCHULTZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE The Killer 3’s play the 3 Headed Monsters during a BIG3 2017 game in Philadelph­ia.
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