NBA: Yao Ming among teachers at All-Star Game’s global camp

Agence France-Presse

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NBA: Yao Ming among teachers at All-Star Game’s global camp
Teen players will be shown how to improve movement efficiency, positional skills and shooting, among others

NEW YORK, USA – Retired Chinese NBA icon Yao Ming will be among the instructors at a Basketball Without Borders camp for top global teen players to be staged over the NBA All-Star Game weekend.

The league announced Friday, January 29 (Saturday, January 30 in Manila) that 43 boys and 10 girls representing 27 nations would travel to Toronto for the February 12-14 camp at Mattamy Athletic Centre.

Elite players from the Eastern and Western conferences will meet February 14 in the 65th NBA All-Star Game, the first to be staged outside the United States.

In conjunction with the game will be a teaching session for top high school players from Asia, Australia, Africa, Europe and the Americas.

Yao, a 7-foot-6 (2.29m) center, was the first pick of the 2002 NBA Draft by the Houston Rockets after playing 5 seasons in China. He became the NBA’s first major Asian star with 8 NBA All-Star nods in as many seasons.

Yao averaged 19.0 points, 9.2 rebounds, 1.9 blocked shots and 1.6 assists a game for Houston over his 486-game NBA career. 

He missed the entire 2009-10 season with a broken left ankle and played only 5 games into the following campaign before a stress fracture in the same ankle ended his season and led to his retirement in July of 2011.

Other instructors at the clinic will include Venezuelan guard Greivis Vasquez of the Milwaukee Bucks, Italian forward Danilo Gallinari of the Denver Nuggets and Democratic Republic of Congo center Bismack Biyombo of the Toronto Raptors.

“The BWB Global Camp is a great opportunity for these boys and girls to learn directly from players and coaches,” said NBA vice president of international basketball operations Brooks Meek.  

“The BWB program continues to teach values like leadership, teamwork and respect that have application on and off the court.”

Teen players will be shown how to improve movement efficiency, positional skills and shooting, play games and attend seminars on health, leadership and communication.

Basketball Without Borders has staged 44 camps in 25 cities in 21 nations on 5 continents and reached more than 2,400 youth from 130 nations since 2001 with 37 campers having been drafted by NBA clubs and 21 of them in the NBA at the start of this season. – Rappler.com

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