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QG: We read about your long and incredible journey to become an NBA basketball player. Your path to success was not easy. It is clear that your strength and determination has come from your experiences growing up in Nigeria. What was the biggest challenge of your life, and how did you overcome it?
Festus Ezeli (FE): One of the biggest challenges of my life was leaving my family in Nigeria at the age of 14. I moved to the US to live with my uncle, in search of greener pastures. But life in America was very different and challenging for me. I missed my family, my friends, my environment and the only home I knew. It was especially lonely because I moved in with my uncle who was a specialist pediatrician in Yuba City, California with a very busy practice – which meant he worked long hours. I had to learn to be by myself most of the time and the loneliness was very hard on me.
In an effort to make friends, I chose to pursue what turned out to be my biggest challenge yet – Basketball. In an effort to assimilate me into my new culture, my uncle signed me up to play ball for an AAU team and also enrolled me in Jesuit High School in Sacramento. Basketball, however, proved to be a bigger challenge than I envisioned. I couldn’t even do some of the basic things that kids younger than me could. I was very frustrated with myself; and in turn, the coaches were frustrated with me as well. The lowest point of it all was when I was cut from my high school team. That lit a fire in me that burns till this day. It made me determined to work harder than I had ever worked at anything to make myself a successful basketball player.
To learn the fundamentals of the game, I signed up for basketball classes at Yuba Community College. I was the team’s videographer because I didn’t know how to play. But even though I wasn’t playing on the team, I was learning the game as I watched others play. The coach, Doug Cornelius, was very supportive and encouraged me constantly.
With the aid of my mentor and Friend, Keith Odister, I signed up on my second AAU team at age 16 – The NorCal Pharaohs. I worked very hard on this team and it was on here that I got a chance to exhibit what I’d learned. The turning point came for me in the summer of 2007, when I was invited to the Reebok camp along with some of my Pharaoh teammates. There were so many scouts in attendance; and they all looked at me like I was Big Foot because no one had seen or heard about me before. I left the camp with about 30 scholarship offers ranging from colleges like UCLA, UConn, USC, Florida, to Vanderbilt, Harvard, etc. I chose Vanderbilt because of its combination of great academics and athletics. This showed that hard work pays.
QG: You recently signed with the Portland Trailblazers, how are you feeling going into the season with a new team?
....
https://theqgentleman.com/2016/09/21/festus-ezeli-trailblazer/
Festus Ezeli (FE): One of the biggest challenges of my life was leaving my family in Nigeria at the age of 14. I moved to the US to live with my uncle, in search of greener pastures. But life in America was very different and challenging for me. I missed my family, my friends, my environment and the only home I knew. It was especially lonely because I moved in with my uncle who was a specialist pediatrician in Yuba City, California with a very busy practice – which meant he worked long hours. I had to learn to be by myself most of the time and the loneliness was very hard on me.
In an effort to make friends, I chose to pursue what turned out to be my biggest challenge yet – Basketball. In an effort to assimilate me into my new culture, my uncle signed me up to play ball for an AAU team and also enrolled me in Jesuit High School in Sacramento. Basketball, however, proved to be a bigger challenge than I envisioned. I couldn’t even do some of the basic things that kids younger than me could. I was very frustrated with myself; and in turn, the coaches were frustrated with me as well. The lowest point of it all was when I was cut from my high school team. That lit a fire in me that burns till this day. It made me determined to work harder than I had ever worked at anything to make myself a successful basketball player.
To learn the fundamentals of the game, I signed up for basketball classes at Yuba Community College. I was the team’s videographer because I didn’t know how to play. But even though I wasn’t playing on the team, I was learning the game as I watched others play. The coach, Doug Cornelius, was very supportive and encouraged me constantly.
With the aid of my mentor and Friend, Keith Odister, I signed up on my second AAU team at age 16 – The NorCal Pharaohs. I worked very hard on this team and it was on here that I got a chance to exhibit what I’d learned. The turning point came for me in the summer of 2007, when I was invited to the Reebok camp along with some of my Pharaoh teammates. There were so many scouts in attendance; and they all looked at me like I was Big Foot because no one had seen or heard about me before. I left the camp with about 30 scholarship offers ranging from colleges like UCLA, UConn, USC, Florida, to Vanderbilt, Harvard, etc. I chose Vanderbilt because of its combination of great academics and athletics. This showed that hard work pays.
QG: You recently signed with the Portland Trailblazers, how are you feeling going into the season with a new team?
....
https://theqgentleman.com/2016/09/21/festus-ezeli-trailblazer/
