USA TODAY US Edition

In China, Oden back to basketball

Ex-NBA player happy to get second chance

- Joshua Bateman @joshdbatem­an Special for USA TODAY Sports

On a frigid January night in this city of 1.2 million people, Greg Oden iced his knees in an austere locker room that had no lockers. Playing 31 minutes, he had grabbed 18 rebounds and scored eight points to help the Jiangsu Dragons defeat Jiangsu Tongxi 107-92.

As he exited the arena, Oden, or “Dàdì” (“The Great King ”) as he is nicknamed, was cheered by dozens of security personnel. The opposing teams’ cheerleade­rs swooned in search of autographs, and hundreds of fans swarmed outside to high-five him as he boarded the team bus.

In Mandarin Chinese, Dragons teammate Yahui Liu said, “I think Oden is very modest and easy to get along with. ... He is a very interestin­g and fun foreign player.”

A decade ago, being a foreign player in China was not in Oden’s plans. After his Ohio State Buckeyes lost to Florida in the NCAA tournament title game, Oden was taken No. 1 overall by the Port- land Trail Blazers in the 2007 NBA draft. But because of injuries, he played sparingly in three seasons over seven years.

After knee surgery, Oden sat out his rookie season, played 82 games over two seasons with Portland, sat out three years and made a brief comeback with the Miami Heat in 2013-14. In 105 career games he averaged 19.3 minutes, 8.0 points and 6.2 rebounds per game.

In the Chinese Basketball Associatio­n, teams are allowed to sign two foreign players. Additional­ly, the bottom five teams

“If you’re you’re black, tall and you’re going to be seen. So there’s not that much you can do to try to hide.”

Greg Oden, on standing out in China

from the previous season are granted an exemption for an Asian player.

Whatever circumstan­ces that brought him here, Oden says he is grateful to be playing. “It’s a great opportunit­y for me to come and just play basketball, which I haven’t been able to do for a while,” he said.

Life in China, however, has challenges. About the new environmen­t, Oden said, “I live in the ’burbs in Ohio, so it’s definitely different.” In China, he lives in a hotel, gets around by taxi and watches television shows online.

Attention off the court is another issue.

“If you’re tall and you’re black, you’re going to be seen. So there’s not that much you can do to try to hide,” he said. “I’m just so much bigger than everybody. Half the time I feel like every lady’s scared of me. Every guy, they’re smaller than me, but when they want a picture they start grabbing my arm. Very aggressive. I’ll take pictures, but not if you’re grabbing my arm. Then I’m moving on.”

As for his diet, fellow former Buckeyes Terence Dials and Scoonie Penn, who spent time in China, warned him against eating too much chicken and rice. Oden eats a lot of broccoli and also frequents an Italian restaurant.

One local specialty he is partial to is a crayfish dish slathered in a spicy, garlicky stir-fry sauce.

“That stuff is really good,” he said. “When I first had it, I’m eating just the meat. The second time, I was eating the head. I was eating everything. I like those.”

In China, no animal part is wasted, and Oden’s willingnes­s to sample local offerings differenti­ates him from others.

“Oden is better at adapting to Chinese food,” Liu said. “He has been receptive to some cow and sheep internal organs, which other foreign players have not been. ... In previous seasons, other foreign players just ate at KFC and Pizza Hut. They didn’t eat Chinese food at all. Oden is fairly easygoing about food.

“Relatively speaking, he has adapted to Chinese life.”

Oden has meshed on the court, too, where there is no language barrier. “When you’re on the court with guys that know basketball, it’s a universal language for us,” he said.

He has focused his play on defending and rebounding.

“He has helped our team a lot because previously our inside play was extremely weak,” Liu said. “After Oden arrived, our defense improved significan­tly.”

In 25 games, he averaged 13 points, 12.6 rebounds and two blocks per game. He has had a few minor injuries but says every player deals with them when competing regularly.

“It’s a great opportunit­y for me to come and just play basketball, which I haven’t been able to do for a while,” Oden said. “They got me playing. For me, that’s all I can say. I’ve had a lot of years where I actually just couldn’t play, and this year I’m actually able to be out there on the court and play 25 minutes when I never thought I would see over 20 minutes in a game. And I’m playing three games a week. For me, that’s just something I didn’t even think I would ever be able to do.”

Oden is working to maintain stability in his knee, and this was a promising step forward. That doesn’t mean he’s ready for an NBA return, but he does want to play somewhere next season.

“Everybody would love to get back to the NBA. Right now, I just want to finish out this season and see what happens next.”

Oden was two games away from completing the regular season in China, but on Jan. 31, with the Dragons eliminated from the playoffs, his contract was terminated. In an online video, organizati­on representa­tives thanked Oden for his contributi­on to the team.

MarShon Brooks, a Dragons teammate and fellow former U.S. college star, said, “I will always want to see (him) do well because we’re like brothers.”

 ?? JOSHUA BATEMAN FOR USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Greg Oden averaged 13 points for the Jiangsu team.
JOSHUA BATEMAN FOR USA TODAY SPORTS Greg Oden averaged 13 points for the Jiangsu team.
 ?? CHINAFOTOP­RESS VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Greg Oden poses with fans during a news conference in August to announce his signing with Jiangsu of the Chinese league.
CHINAFOTOP­RESS VIA GETTY IMAGES Greg Oden poses with fans during a news conference in August to announce his signing with Jiangsu of the Chinese league.

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