News
Haiti in need of Dalembert's greatest assist
PHILADELPHIA – They were bouncing on one of those narrow dirt roads, pushing out of the cluttered downtown of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, and out to the central plateau, the poorest part of the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere. The Philadelphia 76ers’ Sam Dalembert traveled home to Haiti over the summer to scout a location for a children’s academy on the outskirts of the city. This was the country where Dalembert walked barefoot as a boy, where his grandmother used to invite his starving, homeless friends for a scrap of food and a night’s sleep on sheets strewn on the floor. This is the most improbable birthing place of an NBA millionaire, the against-all-odds story in a sport where those sprout off trees. A mayor had delivered Dalembert a plot of land for the construction, and the Samuel Dalembert Foundation and a non-profit partner, Mediashare, intended to soon commission an architect to make plans. He wanted it to be a place where the most determined, driven children could aspire to come to take academic and art classes and play sports. Here, there were no roads. No irrigation. People traveled miles to reach drinkable water. Dalembert didn’t return to be a savior, just a loyal Haitian son. “I know I can’t save the world,” Dalembert said late Wednesday in a private moment. “I know I can’t save my country. “But I thought I could save some kids there. …I thought I could give some hope, where there really isn’t any.” Dalembert’s friend Emmanuel was of Haitian descent, but had never visited the island of his ancestors. Apparently, this reaction comes with everyone who visits Haiti. No one is ever prepared for what they witness. How could somewhere so close to the United States be so impoverished, so third-world? Over the summer, Emmanuel walked the neighborhood in Port-au-Prince where Dalembert lived as a child, and his eyes grew wide with the poverty, the hunger, the sickness. Who could survive this? Who could go to a fine American university, make it to the first round of the NBA draft, to an eventual $64 million contract? Beyond the streets of Port-au-Prince, all the way out to the central plateau, Emmanuel kept asking: “Sam, how did you ever get out of here?” Here Dalembert was, 28 years old, and that question washed over him with this odd mix of wonderment and confusion, of gratitude and guilt. “And it made me think … why me?” Dalembert said. “Of all the people … why me? All these countries in the world where they play basketball, where they produce players and this skinny boy from Haiti… “Why me?” He was almost sheepish retelling the story, because it seems silly to ask now. Why him? Well, now Sam Dalembert knows. For this earthquake, this devastation, has sobered him in a way nothing else ever could. Why did he get out, and make it big? Because they would need him now, because they need everyone. He’s never been so sure of anything. This had been the most tortured, cruelest day of Dalembert’s life. He wanted to charter a flight to Port-au-Prince, but it wasn’t possible. His family has mostly moved to the United States through the years, but there are still so many relatives, so many friends. He used his platform to tell the story of Haiti, and he did an endless run of interviews and pleaded for support. In something of a daze, Dalembert played in the Sixers’ 93-92 loss to the New York Knicks and delivered 12 points and 21 rebounds. The game had been over an hour now, and Dalembert had slipped on an “NBA Cares” gold shirt to tape a public service announcement in a side room of the Wachovia Center. When tragedy hits, the NBA is good this way. It had Yao Ming(notes) tape a message when an earthquake hit China, and now the league wanted Dalembert to do it for Haiti. Within hours, the PSA will play everywhere. It will reach the corners of the globe, and in a lot of places, for a lot of people, Sam Dalembert will be the face, the voice, of his anguished, suffering people. Hundreds of thousands could be dead in Haiti, and millions more will need help for sheer survival. “We’re tough people at heart,” he said. “We deal with things the best we can. These people, they don’t do anything to deserve this.” Dalembert left Haiti for Montreal at 14, moved to New Jersey to play high school basketball and ended up earning a scholarship to Seton Hall. His parents and siblings live in Florida, where his grandmother is desperate to know if her old family and friends survived, if anything, or anyone, in their old neighborhood isn’t buried in the rubble. As a young boy in Port-au-Prince, Dalembert grew too fast to stay in shoes. Those feet blew through them, and so he would walk barefoot through jagged streets. He thinks about his grandmother, his parents, about the value they placed on education, about possibilities, and how they gave him a reason to dream even when such despair surrounded him. Throughout his childhood, there was something he always told his friends that made them laugh. Through the pain, he smiled for a moment on Wednesday night and remembered the way they roared at that goofy, gangly kid stumbling with those floppy feet when he’d tell them, “One of these days, I’m going to fit myself into a suitcase, go onto one of those planes, get out of the country and have a better life.” As much as he wanted something more, it still resonates within him that he never, ever thought they had it so bad there. “You would get used it,” Dalembert said. “You can be in a worse place, but have good people around you. You just think this is the way people live until you come to America and go to the market and the chicken is clean over here.” Dalembert didn’t have much in Port-au-Prince, but he always felt like he had a little more. As he rapidly grew, he passed his clothes to friends and watched as they proudly marched around with baggy shirts and pants. “We didn’t think there was anything wrong. …We thought, we have … life. “We were grateful we weren’t sick. We were able to eat at least one meal a day. As long as we have each other, as long as we were there for each other, that was enough.” Here’s the strange irony about Dalembert: Few players in the NBA have done more missionary work with the league. Every year, he travels to faraway places like Africa in the NBA’s Basketball Without Borders program. He’s a basketball missionary. The NBA calls, and he’s on his way. From Africa to New Orleans for Katrina relief, he gives of his time every offseason. When they ask, Dalembert goes. He has been that way for his eight seasons in Philadelphia. He had his agent, Marc Cornstein, on the phone with NBA officials Wednesday discussing ways to raise money and awareness for disaster relief. Dalembert has never been a photo-op do-gooder. He has always been there for the long haul, when the cameras aren’t there to record his every good deed. To say that Dalembert has always honored the most humble of beginnings with remarkable generosity is true, but sometimes his professional behavior could be less noble. He has grumbled about wanting trades. He has complained about his minutes, his role – all typical NBA frustrations. Dalembert played the part of the prima donna for the Canadian Olympic team, and they parted ways before the team ever left for the Beijing Games in 2008. He didn’t try to defend himself and says simply now, “This summer, I finally tried to realize that it doesn’t do me any good anymore to point fingers at anyone when something doesn’t go right.” It was something about that trip back to Haiti, that question that was raised with his buddy Emmanuel that stayed with him. Why him? For too long, it dogged him. As he has promised his friends, he had slipped himself into that suitcase, flown away and made an incredible life. All that, so he could come back again and again. Now, Dalembert desperately wants to get on a plane, and get over there, and that’ll happen eventually. For now, he’s going to be the face, the voice, of Haiti for millions of people, because his feet grew too fast to find shoes, his legs too long to wear his daddy’s old pants. Someday, he’s sure he’s going to build that children’s center, but now his mind, his heart, is on the short-term survival of his people: food, medicine and shelter. It was 10:15 p.m. on Wednesday, in this quiet room in the Wachovia Center, and Dalembert still had so much frustration about why this quake had to happen to a place, to a people, that never, ever stop suffering. Now, they dig them out of rubble, tens of thousands dead and a loyal son of Haiti watched from far away like everyone else. Why were they buried, and why was he an NBA millionaire? The answer will probably always confound him on some level, but this was too long of a day and night for guilt, for that question that chased him over the summer when he tried to make sense of it all amid the poorest of the poor in our part of the world. Why him? Now, he knows. Nothing’s ever been so clear. “I know what I have to do now,” Samuel Dalembert(notes) said. “I know why I’m here.” For more information on how to help with the relief effort in Haiti, visit Dalembert’s foundation at www.dalembertfoundation.org.

Used courtesy of: YAHOO.COM

News Headlines
06-18-10
Dalembert trade official, perfect fit in Sac
(Philadelphia Daily News)


04-19-10
Sixers' Dalembert wins J. Walker Kennedy Citizenship Award
(NBA.COM)


03-31-10
Keep An Eye On T-Wolves' Milicic
(WCCO.COM)


03-30-10
Nenad Krstic: OKC has nothing to lose
(NEWSOK.COM)


03-22-10
Darko Loves Minnesota, Want To Stay in the NBA After All
(Sporting News)


03-21-10
Udrih has 20 pts with career-high 17 assists
(NBA.COM)


01-20-10
Dalembert, Mourning help deliver Haitian orphans to U.S.
(USA TODAY)


01-14-10
Haiti in need of Dalembert's greatest assist
(YAHOO.COM)


01-14-10
For Philadelphia 76ers center Samuel Dalembert, Haiti earthquake strikes close to home
(NY Daily News)


08-15-09
Walsh High On Darko
(NY POST)


08-12-09
Sixers Sign Veteran Center Brezec
(USA Today)


05-30-09
Tabuse takes another shot at NBA
(ESPN.COM)


05-22-09
LeBron: Pavlovic should get more run
(Cleveland Plain Dealer)


12-30-08
Player Watch: Krstic a good building block for Oklahoma City
(NBA.COM)


10-22-08
Kiki Vandeweghe and the Courts of Dreams
(Bergen Record)


10-21-08
Agents Making the World a Better Place?
(ESPN.COM)


07-29-08
Agent: Krstic leaving Nets to play for team in Moscow
(ESPN.COM)


07-21-08
Ex-Nets F Nachbar, Dynamo Moscow agree to 3-year, $14.3M deal
(ESPN.COM)


07-20-08
Roma signs center Primoz Brezec
(Euroleage.net)


07-16-08
Raptors Sign Roko Ukic
(Raptors.Com)


07-10-08
Kings will need Udrih to be leader
(Sacbee.com)


03-13-08
Udrih makes strong case for Kings to retain him
(Sacramento Bee)


03-08-08
Sixers, Dalembert both playing better
(Courier Post)


03-07-08
Dalembert's big effort helps Sixers crush Sonics
(PA SportsTicker)


02-08-08
Nenad Krstic-All Access News
(NJNETS.COM)


01-17-08
Dalembert Having His Best Season
(Hoopsworld.COM)


01-15-08
Nenad Krstic Chat Transcript from NBA.COM
(NBA.COM)


12-18-07
Udrih's emergence at PG creates options for Kings
(Sports Illustrated)


12-08-07
Most Improved Players-Beno Udrih
(Sports Illustrated)


11-27-07
Udrih Spurs An Upset
(Sacramento Bee)


11-01-07
Road opener a homecoming for new Canadian Dalembert
(Philadelphia Daily News)


11-01-07
Kings sign free-agent point guard Udrih
(The Sacramento Bee)


10-31-07
Pavlovic agrees to three-year deal with Cavs
(espn.com)


09-27-07
Batista Joins Celtics
(Boston Globe)


08-25-07
Esteban Batista's 34 points and 15 rebounds led Uruguay past Puerto Rico 82-79
(USA Basketball)


07-18-07
New Griz Milicic ready to prove he belongs
(Memphis Commercial Appeal)


07-17-07
Darko Talks To Grizzlies.com
(www.nba.com)


06-25-07
Sound Sleepers-These underrated gems could make some G.M.'s look brilliant
(Sports Illustrated)


06-18-07
Koponen wows in workout again
(DraftExpress.com)


05-08-07
Pavlovic's Offense Is No Longer His Defense
(NY Times)


04-24-07
Milicic wants bigger role
(Florida Today)


04-21-07
Sasha Set To Make A Splash
(The Chronicle-Telegram)


04-16-07
Dalembert providing more than just 'D'
(Philadelphia Daily News)


04-16-07
Sasha Pavlovic is potential key to playoff run
(Beacon Journal)


02-26-07
Pavlovic's spark is missed by Cavs
(The Beacon Journal)


02-22-07
GLOBAL: Beno Udrih, His Fans and MySpace
(HOOPSWORLD.com)


02-21-07
Ex-Piston Milicic finds Magic touch in Orlando
(The Detroit News)


02-04-07
Pavlovic finally on 'good' side
(News-Herald)


01-15-07
Nets' real-life Borat navigates North Jersey
(Bergen Record)


01-11-07
Nuggets deal Boykins, Hodge to Bucks for Blake
(ESPN.com)


10-05-06
Magic prepared to gamble on Milicic
(Florida Today)


09-21-06
Ilic Looks to Follow in Krstic's Footsteps
(njnets.com)


06-05-06
Nenad Krstic Interview
(Sportski Zurnal)


03-17-06
Magic's Milicic Eyes More Minutes, Shots
(USA Today)


10-13-05
International Basketball
(Sports Ticker)


07-29-05
Milicic's option picked up
(Detroit Free Press)


07-25-05
Dalembert agrees to 6-year deal with Sixers
(Philadelphia Daily News)


06-29-05
Hodge prime choice: Nuggets' top pick comes from 'Pack
(Denver Post)


05-25-05
Julius Hodge Workout
(ESPN.com)


05-24-05
Live From NYC: Lekic, Pupovic Work Out
(ESPN.com)


04-21-05
Milicic is one `happy camper' after career game
(Knight Ridder Newspapers)


04-11-05
Project Greenlight: Primoz Brezec
(Sports Illustrated)


03-21-05
A Knack for Making Good Moves
(The New York Times)


03-21-05
Idaho's Sam Clancy Named League MVP
(Continental Basketball Association)


01-11-05
Time of his life
(Cleveland Plain Dealer)


12-26-04
Faces From Afar: Sixers' Dalembert Is Keeping Haiti Near to His Heart
(The New York Times)


12-21-04
Brezec making the most of opportunity
(USA Today)


12-19-04
Faces From Afar: Finding His Place in Larger N.B.A. Community
(New York Times)


12-06-04
Even Brown admits Milicic is getting better
(The Detroit News)


11-21-04
Faces From Afar: Slovene Center is Feeling Like a Rookie Again
(The New York Times)


11-09-04
Early Signs Brezec was Worth the Gamble
(Charlotte Observer)


11-02-04
Dalembert's motto: Sam I can
(Philadelphia Daily News)


10-06-04
PHILADELPHIA 76ERS? SAMUEL DALEMBERT
(NBA.com)


10-04-04
Darko's Bright Side
(Detroit Free Press)


09-30-04
Charlotte Bobcats Sign Center Primoz Brezec To Multi-Year Contract Extension
(Charlotte Bobcats)


09-03-04
Udrih Leads Slovenia, Named MVP
(WOAI)


08-06-04
Basketball is in Serbia's blood
(Rocky Mountain News)


07-24-04
Beno Udrih- the Slovenia surprise
(Express-News)


07-20-04
Former Pacer ready for his opportunity
(Indianapolis Star)


06-25-04
Spurs Seek Foreign Aid
(San Antonio Express-News)


06-25-04
Draft Report: Spurs at it again
(Kansas City Star)


06-14-04
Beno Plays to Rave Reviews at Chicago Pre-Draft Camp
(ESPN.com, USAToday.com, DraftCity.com)


06-07-04
Point Guards Have Something To Prove in Chicago
(The Sporting News)


06-03-04
Pedja Samardziski Draft Diary: Week One
(USATODAY.com)


06-03-04
Beno Udrih Prepares for the '04 NBA Draft
(USATODAY.com)


05-14-04
Insider Visits With Samardziski
(ESPN.com)


05-12-04
Damir Omerhodzic: "Things are looking good for me"
(HoopsHype.com)


05-07-04
Omerhodzic Impresses
(ESPN.com)


04-26-04
Inside Dish
(The Sporting News)


03-04-04
Haiti's troubles worry Dalembert
(USA Today)


03-01-04
Success is bittersweet for Dalembert
(The Sporting News)


02-18-04
ONE-ON-ONE: Zoran Planinic
(HOOPSWORLD.com)


01-31-04
Predrag Samardziski: "I'm a fighter and a leader"
(HoopsHype.com)


09-13-03
Pistons secure Milicic
(Detroit Free Press)


06-28-03
NBA Draft 2003: It's a whole new world for Jazz first-round pick
(Deseret Morning News)


06-22-03
America beckons Milicic
(The Detroit News)


06-16-03
Milicic might fill tall order for NBA
(USA Today)


06-15-03
Darko's realm
(NY Daily News)


06-03-03
Youthful Serbs take first steps in NBA journey
(USA Today)


05-12-03
Teams are dreaming of Milicic
(The Sporting News)


04-01-03
Serbian teen lost in King James' shadow - Milicic's size, play speaks volumes
(USA Today)


03-23-03
Milicic a better fit than James?
(The Plain Dealer)


03-18-03
Identified foreign objects: Underaged arrive from overseas
(Sporting News)


03-03-03
Denver a 'great place' for Milicic
(The Denver Post)


02-09-03
All Playoff Series Now Best-of-7
(The Boston Globe)


02-08-03
Stern, Hunter show goodwill in decisions
(CBS Sportsline.com)


01-19-03
Age and Ethnicity Hinder a Prospect
(The NY Times)


12-19-02
Can Milos Vujanic Save the Knicks?
(ESPN)


12-17-02
Face to Face with Darko
(ESPN)


12-12-02
Coming out of the Darko
(ESPN)


12-09-02
Top NBA International Prospects
(ESPN)


12-07-02
Milicic, Schortsianides await word on draft status
(ESPN.com)


11-22-02
Savovic's Journey to NBA Not Direct - Yugoslavia to Hawaii to undrafted
(DenverPost.com)


05-06-02
The Cuban Embassy - The Mavs have gone to the four corners - of the earth that is - in search of talent
(Sports Illustrated)


04-08-02
Pinnacle Signs Two NBA Prospects
(Sports Business Journal)


02-12-02
Darko's Agent Has More Tricks Up His Sleeve
(ESPN.com INSIDER)


06-28-01
Sixers pick Seton Hall's Dalembert
(Trenton Times)


06-27-01
He's an unknown quantity
(Asbury Park Press)


06-26-01
Family Has Profound Effect on Dalembert
(The New York Times)


06-24-01
ESPN's Outside the Lines: Rush to Judgment
(ESPN)


05-10-01
Dalembert Commits By Signing With Agent
(ESPN.com)


05-10-01
Dalembert Might Go Pro
(The Daily News)


05-10-01
Seton Hall Basketball: Dalembert Quits Seton Hall to Enter Draft
(Newark Star Ledger)


03-11-01
In Search of the Next Big Thing
(The New York Times)


08-09-00
7-2 Slovenian among first crop of visitors
(The New York Times)


07-19-00
N. Ariz. Sharpshooter owes aim to his Dad
(NY Post)


07-15-00
Pacers' 7-1 draft pick starting to make inroads
(The Indianapolis Star)


07-07-00
Pacers plan for future with Brezec
(The Indianapolis Star)


07-06-00
Ambassadors Win One by Land
(NBA.com)