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OPINION

Leonard Pitts Jr.: White guys can jump if they try

Wednesday, January 27, 2010
(Updated 4:05 am)

Don Lewis thinks white men can't jump.

What else explains the bizarre statement he issued last week? According to the Chronicle newspaper of Augusta, Ga., Lewis is the commissioner of something called the All-American Basketball Alliance, which hopes to set up shop in 12 cities. "Only players that are natural born United States citizens with both parents of Caucasian race are eligible to play in the league," his statement said.

Yes, we're talking about a whites-only basketball league.

But Lewis, you'll be relieved to hear, is no racist. Shucks no, he says. It's just that white fans are tired of black players (cover your eyes, Kobe, D-Wade, LeBron) who rely on "street-ball" athleticism to make up for their lack of fundamental skills.

The AABA (Affirmative Action Basketball Association?) has an ice cream cone's chance in the Georgia sun of ever becoming a reality or, if it does, of surviving its first legal challenge. A reader on the Chronicle Web site wonders if the players would play in white robes with or without hoods. But this story, silly as it is, affords a chance to make a serious observation about excellence and expectation.

Back in 1997, Sports Illustrated ran a ground-breaking story, "What Ever Happened to the White Athlete?" which quantified the declining prominence of white players in mainstream sports. SI found a creeping sense of inferiority among young white student athletes. Whether they ascribed it to physiological superiority or to being hungrier and harder working, most seemed to accept that black athletes were simply better than they -- so why go out for the team?

The obvious irony is that, well into the 20th century, it was an article of faith in this country that blacks were physically "inferior," lacking the strength, speed and intelligence to compete with white athletes. Now, we come into an era where white kids see themselves as the athletic bumblers.

But the new stereotype is as false as the old. Any list of basketball's all-time greats, after all, would be incomplete without the snow white likes of George Mikan, Larry Bird, John Stockton, Jerry West, "Pistol" Pete Maravich and Kevin McHale, to name a few.

Tellingly enough, if you put together a list of today's white basketball elite, you'd find it dominated by international stars like Manu Ginobili (Argentina), Dirk Nowitzki (Germany), Steve Nash (South Africa, Canada), and Pau Gasol (Spain).

The common denominator, I think, is that they grew up in places where they didn't get the memo that white men can't jump, grew up unburdened by their supposed athletic impotence. Their ability to thrive in a sport where black men dominate suggests that sometimes, excellence is a question of expectation, of how you see yourself.

That should be a message of hope to young white athletes -- and to young black scholars. Their plight, after all, is the mirror image of that faced by the white kid who fears to go out for the team, i.e., an academic achievement gap in which people who look like them are perennially on the short end and there is a dearth of role models to suggest it could ever be otherwise.

One often hears black kids speak in ways that suggest they have internalized the inevitability of academic failure in much the same way white kids internalize the idea that they can't run or jump. Success in any field is not some birthright of skin color, but, rather, a function of how hungry you are and how hard you work -- a function of what you deem possible.

That's why people who expect to fail usually do. So here is the question we should ask our white kids struggling to hold on to the ball and our black ones struggling to master the equation:

What if you expected to succeed?

Leonard Pitts Jr. is a columnist for the Miami Herald. Send e-mail to him at lpitts@miamiherald.com.

Comments

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Sawdust

January 27, 2010 - 7:29 am EST

I've noticed that the race hustlers never demand racial quotas in the NBA. Maybe that's what we need instead of a new league, quotas which would put, at max, two blacks per team. "But that wouldn't be fair. There are more good black basketball players". Yes, I know. But who's to say that, what with young blacks spending all their time on the basketball court instead of the library, there aren't fewer qualified black policemen or stock traders. Qualifications don't matter to the race hustlers outside of athletics, we are supposed to have a work force everywhere else that 'looks like America'.

And can you imagine the uproar if someone made a movie called "Black Men Can't Read"? Pitts says, rightly, that the new league won't get off the ground, one reason being legal challenges. Where is his indignation about the "Miss Black America" pageant? Hypocrisy, thy name is Leonard Pitts.

Get A Clue

January 27, 2010 - 8:08 am EST

Sawdust. What an appropriate name. The dust left over after the good parts have been used. Do yourself a favor and ponder this statement:
"Success in any field is not some birthright of skin color, but, rather, a function of how hungry you are and how hard you work -- a function of what you deem possible."
Now stop projecting your insecurities and make something of yourself.

Sawdust

January 27, 2010 - 9:06 am EST

Your little quotation does not hold true everywhere: http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2010/01/everything_old_is_new_again....

Ethnic quotas on the march (again)

Panacea

January 27, 2010 - 8:29 am EST

You're really stretching to find ways to dislike Pitts today.

You completely missed the point. The point is, people can achieve whatever they want if they are willing to put the effort into it, and plan for success--and race has NOTHING to do with it.

Pitts tries time and again to point out that we need to stop excusing failure based on race, and you come along and reinforce the same old hatreds and mistrust.

Sawdust

January 27, 2010 - 9:14 am EST

I'm just stating the facts. And you, apparently, don't like to acknowledge facts. I'm not responsible for blacks criticizing other blacks for "acting white" when they do well in school. I'm not responsible for the 70% illegitimacy rate among blacks, which pretty much dooms a good number of them to economic disaster, unless they can play basketball. I'm not responsible for their drop-out rate, or the high crime rate. Let's try to have a "Miss White America" beauty pageant, see how far that gets.

See, the deal is, the "War on Poverty" has pretty much decimated the black family. And they keep on voting for Democrats. I can't figure that one out.

rfium

January 27, 2010 - 8:37 am EST

Sawdust, in Richard Bach's Illusions, he says "Argue for your limitations and they will be yours". How appropriate. Leonard Pitts, I believe, is saying the same thing. Let's not limit potential by any false claims of superiority in any field. Let's celebrate excellence. That is the key to our future.

DaveW

January 27, 2010 - 10:54 am EST

Pitts was basically saying that it is environment and culture(US)that makes certain ethnic groups think that they can or cannot do certain things well.Note: he means environment and not heredity.

dcolin

January 27, 2010 - 5:37 pm EST

You forgot carpenters.

mamaboilermaker

January 27, 2010 - 12:23 pm EST

An excellent, balanced column by Mr. Pitts. People tend to live up to their expectations, high or low. Shame on us if we let our kids believe anything is a foregone conclusion simply on the basis of skin pigmentation. About the only thing skin pigment should predict is sunburn/skin cancer rates.

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