Table of Contents
For Al and Roni de la Pea
Dreadlock Man,
with his fierce fists and suspect jump shot, sets his stuff ($1.45 sandals, key to bike lock, extra T-shirt) on the bleachers and holds his hands out for the ball. Its ten in the morning and Lincoln Rec has just opened. Stickys at the free-throw line working out his routine, while all the regulars come swaggering in. Come on, little man, Dreadlock Man says. Give up the rock.
Sticky throws an around-the-back, no-look dime. Watches Dreadlock Man rise into the air with his awful formcalves tightening, dreads scattering, eyes poised on the goaland let go of a sorry-looking line drive. Before he comes back down to the dusty old hardwood, he yells out: Peanut Butter! Says it every time he takes a jumper. PeanutButter! Thats what he wants everyone to call him, but nobody does.
When the ball ricochets off the side of the backboard, entirely missing the rim, he says what any man would say: Hey, yo, Stick, let me get one more.
Hawk passes through the door, from sunny day into old dark gym. A big black man. Wears bright wraparound shades and baggy shorts, the new Jordans on his size-sixteen feet. Hawk has a little money to his name. Hes one of the few Lincoln Rec ballers who does. Some of the regulars say he made a few movies a couple years back. A stunt double maybe or security on the set. If you look quickly, get a fast profile shot, you might think he looks like someone.
Hey, yo, Dreadlock Man, he says, megaphoning a hand around his mouth. I got five says you brick that shot. The whole side of his shaved head flexes as he chews hard at his gum.
Dreadlock Man takes a couple awkward dribbles and rises again. Peanut Butter! This time his ball arcs through the air without backspin. A Phil Niekro knuckleball that thuds off the back of the rim and drops into Stickys waiting hands.
Damn, Dreadlock Man, your shots straight broke. Hawk falls into the bleachers laughing, goes to lace up his new sneaks.
Other dudes come strutting into the gym. Slapping hands. Slinging their bags onto the bleachers and talking trash.
Sticky high-dribbles to the other end of the court, spins in an acrobatic reverse. He points up at an invisible crowd.
Dreadlock Man watches, hands on hips. Yells out: Comeon, Stick, we tryin to shoot down here.
A couple other balls get tossed into the rotation. Everybody shooting short set-shots to get warm, stretching out stiff shoulders and legs. Most of these cats are just out of bed. A couple have pulled themselves off a piece of cardboard on court two, having spent the night where all the homeless stay.
Lincoln Rec functions both as a great place to hoop and a small-time homeless shelter.
Sometimes things overlap.
Sticky comes dribbling down from the other side of the court with his left hand. He goes right up to Dante, whos just walked in carrying a duffel bag, the best player in the gym, and shoots a soft twenty-footer over his outstretched hand. Dante and Sticky watch the ball smack both sides of the rim and bounce off toward the east sideline.
Go get that brick, Stick, Dante says. Bring it back my wayso you could watch a real shooter.
Dante played ball overseas for six or seven seasons; hes slick with both the rock and his mouth. Some cats say, Watchit, man, to newcomers, dude will beat you two times. Then they sit back and clown those who brush off their warning:
Told ya, dawg. Didnt I tell him, Big J, when he walked hissorry ass in here?
Yeah, I heard it, OP. I was sitting right there when yousaid it.
Dantes skin shines black as night, and his hair is scare-crow wild. The devils growth fingers out from his chin.
Sticky skips a bounce pass to Dante, who pats it around his back a little, through his legs some, close to the ground with his tips like a magician, and then fires up a twenty-five-footer that nestles in the gut of the net. You see how I play thestrings, young Stick? He laughs a little and nods his head: Justlike that, baby boy. Thats string music.
Dante struts off the court with hip-hop rhythm, brushes past a businessman (whos stopped in to watch these black guys play: arms folded, subtle smile) and lies down near the bleachers to stretch his thirty-seven-year-old back.
This is Lincoln Rec on a Thursday, midsummer.
Its the best place in L.A. to ball. Some sports mag even did a cover story about it a few years back. Gym manager Jimmys gold-tooth smile spread right across pages seventy-two and seventy-three. The article talked about how one court houses the homeless and the other accommodates the fearless. How Michael Cage sometimes shows up. Cliff Levingston. Eddie Johnson. Bill Walton was quoted saying: Its the sweetest run in all of Southern California. The gym is in the middle of a pretty good-sized park, adjacent to some museums and business offices. The place gets so dark that when youve been in there a while and you go to peek your head outside to check your car, your eyes freeze up and hide like youve just stared in the sun.
Games go to eleven straight up. No win by two here. Fouls are called by the offense. The ball they use is dead weight. The leather has soaked up so much sweat from so many different dudes over the years, it takes a lot of legs just to get it up to the rim.
Other than that, theres a constant sour smell in the air, a NO DUNKING sign that nobody pays attention to, and an unwritten rule that all who step foot through the gym doors with the intention of getting on the court better come with their A-game. If youre gonna run with the big dogs, the article reads, you cant pee like a puppy.
Sticky does what he does every day. He stands on the free-throw line with his ball. Simple as that. It doesnt matter who says what to him, if a ball caroms out his way, or nothing: Hes not moving. He puts his rock between his knees and goes to tuck his shirt in. Pulls his shirt back out and retucks. Pulls it out and retucks. Ball between his knees, watching everybody shoot warm-up jumpers. Pulls out and retucks. Pulls out and retucks. There are eighteen, nineteen guys by this timeshooting around, running a quick game of twenty-one to get loosethis is the only way Sticky can make sure he finds himself balling in the first game. Pulls his shirt out and retucks. Pulls out and retucks. Hes seventeen and white; these guys are men. Even though his game has improved from here to the 405, and most regulars swear theyd make room on their squad, theres still that thought in the back of his head that he might not get picked up.
He cant kick the aftertaste of that first month he started showing up, way back before he was a sophomore. Its only been a year and some change, but any baller would swear its been longer. Hed cruise into the gym wearing all his state-issued gear, a bottle of tap water and bag of granola in his backpack, and the kid wouldnt get in one game all day. Hed just sit up in the bleachers like the thirteenth man, feeling like a scrub, headphones on his ears and basketball in his hands, figuring out on the sly who he could take. Absorbing the rhythms of squeaking sneaks and slapping hands, mouths left running all day and the rap of body against body in the paint.
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