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Kwame Brown's Unsentimental Education
Sunday, April 21, 2002; Page W20 Kwame Brown knows more than he should about some things, such as
certain aspects of human nature, and less than he should about others,
such as nutrition, how to treat a good suit, and when to throw the lob
pass. What Brown knows and what he doesn't is a consequence of his age,
newly 20, and where he's from, the saw grass lowlands of Georgia, where
crook-armed silhouettes of shrimp boats move against the horizon and
misshapen oaks draped with gothic-gray moss line the melting tar streets,
so sticky-hot that the children, Brown until recently one of them, hitch
up their pants and hop from patch of grass to patch of grass. Brown's route to the National Basketball Association has been a
similarly awkward hop, from an overcrowded home with a sagging porch in
Brunswick, Ga., to the $11.9 million patch of grass offered him by the
Washington Wizards last June, when Michael Jordan made him the NBA's No. 1
draft pick and gave him a three-year contract. The presumption behind this
investment is that Brown will become another Kobe Bryant or Kevin Garnett,
the next great young thing. The truth is that, in practice, the hop is too
big: Turning a teenager from a sleepy shrimp port, not long out of
puberty, into a multimillionaire NBA professional is a traumatic process.
And not just for Brown, either. For the adults, too. Brown has been lectured and scolded and instructed, advised. And,
perhaps, warped. The voices have overwhelmed him. They run together, all
of them telling him what is best for him. "Most people," he says, "are
wrong." He is still young enough to have a faintly wounded set to his jaw,
and a reflexive honesty as he considers a rookie season that, until the
very end, was a public humiliation. "There's a part of me that questions,
when your confidence drops like mine did, are you a good ballplayer and do
you deserve to be here, or what?" he says. "You're just scared. Scared to
do anything." Brown is sitting in Clyde's restaurant in Chevy Chase, regarding with
suspicion a chicken sandwich, which has been served to him on unfamiliar
bread. Among the many revelations of his profoundly dislocating and
confusing rookie season with the Wizards are the things that some people
will eat. On a road trip to Boston, the Wizards took him to an elegant French
restaurant. Brown was not just shocked, but outraged, to discover that the
restaurant did not serve French dressing. "Can you believe that?" he says.
"No French dressing. In a French restaurant." Then there was the matter of the salad itself. "It was tree roots," he
says disgustedly. "Leaves. And branches." For weeks afterward, Brown took a bottle of store-bought French
dressing with him whenever he went out to dinner. On this particular day Brown is having lunch at Clyde's with Duane
Ferrell, a retired 13-year NBA veteran who has been hired by the Wizards
to mentor him through his first season, and Maureen Nasser, their director
of public relations. A plate of strangely shaped fried seafood arrives at the table. "Is that like fried shrimp?" he asks. "That's calamari," Nasser says. "It's squid." "You shouldn't have told him that," Ferrell says. Brown looks stricken. "Squid," he repeats. "You should have just let him eat it," Ferrell says with a laugh. What Brown knows, and what he does not, has been a source of continual
surprise for the Wizards, and they have not always been amusing surprises,
either. The fact is, when Jordan, in his role as the team's chief
executive, and Coach Doug Collins decided to make a 19-year-old fresh from
his senior prom at Glynn Academy the No. 1 draft pick, they had no idea
what they were actually getting themselves into. Isiah Thomas, the head
coach of the Indiana Pacers, tried to tell them. "You're going to be
shocked," Thomas said. "He won't know a thing about basketball." Basketball was the least of it. With Brown, the Wizards have found
themselves in the business of child rearing, of caring for a 6-foot-11
baby-man who has required far more careful handling and feeding than they
bargained for. He fooled them. The Wizards' youngest player only looked fully formed.
The problem was Brown's deceptive physique; he seemed so ready-made. He
was beautiful, they all agreed, your eye couldn't help but go to him, in
everything he did, just picking up the ball. He was lightning quick for a
big man, and he could handle the ball, which meant he could make a play
the length of the floor. "Skills people dream about," Collins says. When
he worked out against fellow high schooler Tyson Chandler, he had no
conscience whatsoever, which was what they liked most; he was reckless and
unschooled and he decimated Chandler in one on one, and oh, they'd seen
things like this before, hadn't they, and what it was, well, it was the
real thing. And he seemed so level-headed, smart and self-assured. "If you draft
me, I'll never disappoint you," he told Jordan. "He's mature, articulate, he's 6-11, and got all this talent, and you
think he's ready to help us immediately," Collins says. What they couldn't
see was the inside of him. The lungs that were underdeveloped. The
softness that came from never having been really pushed, from not having
lived alone in a big city, from never having been away from his mother.
"Inside, he's mush," says his youth pastor from Brunswick, the Rev. John
Williams. There was the time they discovered that he was eating Popeyes fried
chicken for every meal, including breakfast, because he didn't really know
how to grocery-shop. The sports management firm that represents Brown,
SFX, assigned Richard J. Lopez, a 36-year-old business manager, to
shepherd him. Lopez found that he essentially became a parent. Lopez took Brown to a Giant supermarket and helped him fill a cart with
food. Then Lopez drove Brown home to his rented apartment in Alexandria
and hard-boiled a dozen eggs for him and put them in the refrigerator. One morning before a Wizards game, Brown called Lopez, and said, "I
have nothing to wear. Everything's dirty." Lopez knew Brown had a closet full of new suits – he had helped hang
them there. "Kwame," he explained, "you have to take those suits to the
dry cleaners." That was fine, Brown said, but he didn't know how to do
that, and he still didn't have anything to wear. Lopez drove over to Brown's apartment, and found the suits in a heap by
the bed. Each time Brown wore one, he would take it off, wad it up and
throw it in a corner. Lopez picked up a suit from the pile, got out the iron, and began
ironing. It was Lopez who helped Brown find his apartment, a four-bedroom condo
in Alexandria. Lopez also got him a deal on a Mercedes S500, and a free
cell phone, and helped him set up his cable service, and get an ATM card,
and all the other things that go with being an adult. At first, Brown's
mother, Joyce, was there to help, and there was a temporary roommate to
keep him company, an acquaintance from Brunswick attending Howard Law
School. But then his mother went home to care for her other children, and
the roommate got a place closer to campus. Finally, the condo was empty, except for Brown and Lopez. Brown looked
at his manager. "Are you going to stay over?" he asked tentatively. Lopez,
stunned, realized Brown had never spent the night alone before. Lopez took
off his shoes. A Man's Job Brown's naivete poses the question once again: Is it wise for the NBA
to make a foray into surrogate parenting of kids fresh from high school?
What's to be done with a Kwame Brown? What is the nature of the league's
responsibility to such a tender rookie? No one is quite sure. "There's a
special kind of care and handling they need," says Commissioner David
Stern. "The overriding issue for me is whether the pressure of life in the
NBA might be too much . . . The question is whether he will suffer any
permanent setbacks by being tossed in the oil too soon." Is it worth the trouble? If nothing else, clubs will take a hard look
at the issue from a market standpoint. Brown was just one of three high
schoolers taken among the top five, along with Tyson Chandler and Eddy
Curry, now playing alongside each other in Chicago. But Duke graduate
Shane Battier has been a far more mature and productive rookie for the
Memphis Grizzlies, averaging about 14 points a game. Even the Wizards' own
Brendan Haywood, out of North Carolina, has offered more immediate
help. Next to them, Brown's floundering has been painful to watch. He has
been benched, placed on the injured list, and staggered by self-doubt.
Only in the last month of the season did he begin to look like he might
someday become the starting power forward the Wizards initially projected
him as. Not even the tutelage of Jordan has been able to ease Brown's entry
into the league. Wasn't Jordan supposed to help guide this rough, raw,
young, incompletely formed player into professionalism? Jordan firmly
contends that Brown is right on schedule. "My expectations for him were
never as high as his, or other people's," Jordan says. "He's never been
taught." But nobody pretends anymore that this is a fairy tale, unless it is a
fairy tale with a cautionary moral. Stern, for one, is convinced that at
least a couple of years of college produce happier young men and more
fundamentally sound ballplayers. And he thinks that others in the NBA are
watching the Kwame Brown saga unfold, and in doing so may find an antidote
to irrational exuberance in the trading of player futures. "In a funny
way, I think there might be a market adjustment," Stern says. "That will
be ameliorative in its own right." Stern wants to know exactly what Jordan and the Wizards expected when
they drafted a 19-year-old straight out of high school. "What we're
finding is that a 19-year-old would tend to respond like . . . a
19-year-old," says Stern. "Who should that surprise?" At least one person, Collins, is ready to admit that he misjudged
Brown's readiness to enter the league. "It's not just the education of
Kwame Brown," says Collins wearily. "It was the education of Doug
Collins." Hard Time Brunswick, population 15,600, is a place of seedy beauty, that
contradictory grace possessed by the Old South, with its decadent residue
and peeling antebellum wretchedness alongside old wealth, all of it bathed
in sublime breezes. Brown's childhood home is a clapboard A-frame with
torn screens and a collapsing sofa on a sagging porch, as if it all had
given way from the weight of holding the eight Brown children and their
single mother, Joyce. Where Brown is from, ordinary career options range from wielding a
sponge at a carwash to a spatula at a fast-food restaurant. These are some
of the jobs held by his brothers. And then there are the murkier and more
tawdry employments that have landed four of them in jail. One of the
earliest elements of Brown's education was simply: Don't do what they
did. "They made every bad decision that you could possibly make, and I saw
the ending result," he says. "So it was almost like a test that I already
had the answer for. All I had to do was fill in the blanks. I just did the
total opposite." Brown's oldest brother, Willie James Brown Jr., 29, is serving a
121/2-year sentence in federal prison in Jesup, Ga., for conspiracy to
sell narcotics, more specifically, for distributing crack. Tolbert Lee
Brown, 25, was convicted of shooting a man and is serving a 15-year
sentence in the Wilcox (Ga.) State Prison for aggravated assault. Two
other brothers, Alton and Tarik, have had lesser difficulties with the
law. Where Brown is from, religion can be a fairly desperate matter, a
begging for some explanation and improbable rescue from the unpayable
bills and empty refrigerators and the illnesses that come from living in
stagnation and deprivation – in the case of Joyce Brown, the gnarling
arthritis, or the kidney disease that left her with just one, or the
degenerative disk in her back from cleaning under all those beds at the
local Holiday Inn. It was at the urging of Reverend Ike, the television
preacher, that Joyce Brown finally left her physically abusive husband,
Willie James Brown, once and for all after 17 years. Joyce Brown met and married Willie, a truck driver from Charleston,
S.C., when she was barely 20. She was born and reared in Brunswick; her
father was a fisherman and her mother worked in a cannery. Willie offered
her a ticket out of town, and to be a father to her first child, Carla
Yvette, who is now 32 and lives in Smithfield, Va. Seven more children
came in close succession, Willie James Jr., Tolbert, Alton, Tabari, Tarik,
Kwame and Akeem. No one in the family could anticipate when Willie would turn ugly and
administer a beating. Joyce Brown is 6-2 and not easily bullied. She tried
to leave, she says, "almost every year. I'd get away, and he'd get me
right back." She would flee to Brunswick, and he would come after her, and
tell her, "These are my children. They belong to me. You might leave, but
you aren't taking them." That was his way, she says, of telling her,
"You're not going nowhere." She suspected he was using speed when she found a handful of
multicolored pills in his pocket, which would have explained his violent
mood swings. "There were some good days and some bad days," she says.
"There were some ups and downs. I had to keep my head. The stuff I went
through, it was pretty bad. Somebody needs psychological help to get
through it. And then, you rely on God. I was raised in the church, so I
had to grab my faith, and I started digging deep for the spirit. Because I
was in a deep need, and I could have just given up." At one point, when Kwame was 5, certain that her husband was coming
after her once again, she was desperate enough to write to the Reverend
Ike, explaining her situation and asking for help. "What should I do?" she
asked. Some time later, she received a reply. As she remembers it, the TV
preacher wrote, "He's going to kill somebody. But it's not going to be
you. When your mother gave birth to you, she gave birth to an Amazon." This time, when Willie appeared in Brunswick, she jabbed her finger at
him and quoted the Reverend Ike. "You're going to kill somebody. But it's
not going to be me." In 1990, Willie James Brown was convicted of murdering his 22-year-old
girlfriend with an ax handle. He is serving a life sentence in the Evans
Correctional Institution near Bennettsville, S.C. Kwame has not seen him
since he was 6 or 7, and says he has no desire to. His father's absence was a relief for everyone. But it left Joyce alone
with a houseful of kids – big, tall ones with large appetites – and no
paycheck. Joyce got jobs cleaning rooms at the local hotels. The work told
on her back. Every day she would have to shove the huge bureaus away from
the wall and vacuum behind them. She would flip the heavy mattresses back
and sweep under the beds. "My mom struggled day in and day out," says Tabari Brown, 22, a junior
and a basketball player at Jacksonville University. "My brothers hated to
see her like that." When Joyce would get her paycheck, she would buy food
and pack the refrigerator with it. The boys would pillage it. "When it was
gone, it was gone," Tabari says, "and it was gone for a while. And that's
when my brothers used to have to do that stuff. They'd go out in the
streets." One evening, early this season, Brown drove to a Wizards game with
Lopez in his Mercedes S500. In the midst of a chat about his halting pro
career, he suddenly started talking about his childhood. Lopez asked him
what his dreams had been. "Did you ever imagine?" Lopez asked. "Yeah," Brown said, "I used to imagine I was full." Joyce pleaded with her sons to stay out of trouble, and badgered them
to go with her on Sundays to the Church of Greater Works. "It was hurting
her, what they had to do to help her," Tabari says. "She wasn't too happy
with any of that, the whole situation. She'd tell them don't do that.
They'd come back at her like, how you think you going to do without it?
She'd cry." Continued on Page
2. Related Links NBA Basics Scoreboard Standings Statistics Injuries Team index NBA Section Previous Columns Growing Pains (The Washington Post, 4/21/02) More Daft Than Draft (The Washington Post, 4/21/02) Woods's Greatness Is Unquestioned, And Unchallenged (The Washington Post, 4/16/02) A Course Without Credit: Hooliganism 101 (The Washington Post, 4/11/02) Jordan Gave Wizards His Best Shot: A Turnaround (The Washington Post, 4/5/02) More Jenkins Columns
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