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Standing Tall: Satnam Singh's NBA Dreams

by VINAYAK BHUSHAN PADMADEO

 

 

The day after his 15-year-old son Satnam Singh came home in Ballo Ke village near Barnala (Punjab) from the U.S., Balbir Singh Bhamara doubled the daily supply of milk to the household.

The 7-foot-2 lad, on the first break of a year-long stint at Florida's high-profile basketball academy, hasn't been able to come to terms with the "low-fat tetra pack" he gets for breakfast in the U.S. - and Balbir was pained by the fact.

"The milk there is thinner. It doesn't taste good. Here, I have been drinking four litres of milk every day," says Satnam happily.

But that's about the only complaint that Satnam has of his new life - which began three months ago. His freakishly long limbs and prodigious ball-handling skills were noticed by a U.S. National Basketball Association (NBA) talent scout earlier this year.

After Yao Ming's move from Shanghai to Houston snatched China's attention, the NBA has been hoping for an encore in India - and its savvy marketers reckoned Satnam's could be the face to draw a billion Sikh, Punjabi and Indian sports fans to TV sets to watch the world's most competitive basketball league.

Local basketball administrators feel the game could leap in Punjab and India should Satnam get a big break. "He is a great prospect. I am sure he will do what Yao Ming did for China. Indian basketball will change in case one of our boys makes it to the NBA," BFI secretary general Harish Sharma said.

But Satnam isn't thinking that far. "I can't say what will happen in the future. If I don't make it big, I have a life here in the village. I have to complete my studies, and I can help my father in the fields. I have improved a lot in the last three months. I am faster, have more power, and I am jumping much higher," he says.

Satnam is getting exposed to a world vastly different from the one he has always known. He is on Facebook, travels with a laptop, even throws in a few English words in his rustic Punjabi - but confesses the sight of a laundromat still leaves him baffled.

"Learning English is the toughest. I have attend additional classes, besides I have an interpreter to help me while on court," he says. His favourite NBA star is Kobe Bryant, he says, but adds there are others whose names he can't pronounce. "Their names are very difficult to remember."

Life at the academy is tough. "They are very strict. We cannot practice if we miss our lectures. Only if you are sick and have a doctor's prescription to prove it, can you be spared," says Satnam.

But father Balbir, himself a "7-feet-plus" who always dreamt of playing top-level basketball, thinks it's all going to pay off. "I didn't get the opportunity ... But look at our destiny, my son is getting the best training in the world. I am sure he will be in the NBA one day," says Balbir Singh.

 

[Courtesy: Indian Express]

January 3, 2011

Conversation about this article

1: Joe Davis III (Washington, U.S.A.), January 24, 2011, 3:19 PM.

Satnam Singh in a new video! http://blip.tv/file/4641129

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