Yi taking game to new heights (China Daily) Updated: 2004-08-04 06:17
First there was Yao. Now there is Yi.
The next big thing to come out of China is Yi Jianlian, a teenager nearly
2.14-metres (7-feet) tall who has already worked his way into the national
team's starting lineup alongside Yao Ming.
"He's better than me at 16. He can jump," Yao said. "If he keeps working
hard, he can make it big."
That potential has already been recognized by China coach Del Harris, an
assistant with the NBA's Dallas Mavericks who was hired by Chinese sports
authorities to help turn the team into a medal contender for the Athens
Olympics.
 Ruben Oscar
Wokowisky (L) of Argentina is fouled by Yi Jianlian Yi of China during
their third place match at FIBA Diamond Ball basketball tournament in
Belgrade August 3, 2004. China lost the match 84-74.
[Reuters] | Immediately recognizing Yi's potential, Harris decided that bringing him
along slowly was not the way to go.
Yi did not start a single game last season for his Chinese Basketball
Association team, the Guangdong Tigers, but he has been lining up alongside Yao
- and even jumping centre for the opening tip - in China's pre-Olympic
exhibition games.
Yi had five blocked shots and seven rebounds in 24 minutes on Saturday during
a 92-78 loss to Serbia-Montenegro in the Diamond Ball Tournament, a warm-up to
the Olympics featuring six teams that will compete in Athens.
On Sunday in the Chinese victory over Australia, Yi had six points and four
rebounds.
"He's a great combo playing with Yao Ming. He's very quick and fast, very
aggressive crashing the boards. He's unbelievable, and if he's 16 he's really
unbelievable. I thought 21," said Serbian assistant coach Igor Kokoskov, who was
an assistant to Larry Brown with the NBA champion Detroit Pistons last season.
"He likes to play the game, that's obvious. I think he's unique."
Kokoskov and many of the Serbian players were shocked to hear that Yi is only
16, although his age is the subject of much global doubt and debate.
Many believe Yi (pronounced Ee) is actually older, and Yi has been
sufficiently coy to fuel the skepticism.
"He's not 16. He's 17," Yao said with a playful smile.
No matter his true age (Yi's date of birth is listed as October 27, 1987), Yi
will not become eligible for the NBA draft until 2006 - or even later if NBA
commissioner David Stern is successful during upcoming collective bargaining
talks in his efforts to raise the minimum age requirement to 19 or 20.
But whenever Yi becomes eligible, he won't last long on the draft board.
"First (overall) is an awfully big statement for anyone, but if he continues
to improve at close to the rate that I've seen him improve in the three months
I've been here, then he's definitely a lottery pick in terms of ability," Harris
said.
"When you're 7 feet and can run and jump like he can, when his body catches
up with the rest of him it could be a really exciting thing."
Yi shot just 2-for-9 against Serbia-Montenegro, missing several wide-open
jumpers. But his offensive shortcomings were easily overlooked by anyone with an
appreciation for how active he was around the basket, fighting for rebounds and
timing his shot-blocking attempts perfectly.
"There's nobody that he's exactly alike," Harris said. "He's got a similar
athleticism as Stromile Swift, and he has some shot blocking ability somewhat
like Marcus Camby. He's got a thin body like both of them, but he's got a big
frame so that he could actually put on weight."
Said Predrag Drobnjak of the NBA's Charlotte Bobcats: "I don't know how young
he is, but he's pretty good. This is just a first impression. If he is 16, you
cannot talk about him strength-wise. You have to wait until he's 20-something
and has worked the weights."
Harris smiles with almost a paternal affection when speaking of Yi, the son
of postal clerk parents who were team handball players in China's
state-sponsored sports programme.
The 64-year-old coach is in the process of circumnavigating the world with
the Chinese team after being selected him from a list of 135 potential coaching
candidates worldwide.
A long-standing relationship between the Mavericks and the Chinese basketball
federation helped Harris get the job, and he has already picked up "a lot of
words and phrases, particularly for basketball," while visiting more Chinese
cities than he can remember.
He is struck by the country's confluence old and new, donkey-pulled carts
sharing the roads with legions of cars and bicycles.
The infrastructure and architecture around Beijing is far beyond what he had
imagined, and the treatment he has received leaves him gushing with
appreciation.
"The kindness and goodness of the players, they won't let me pick up a bag.
If I try to pick up anything, forget it," Harris said. "They have such respect
for age, it puts me in a great position."
Just like the position in which Harris has placed Yi, a prospect nearly 50
years younger than the coach who has thrust him into the spotlight - and the
starting five - for one of the world's most rapidly developing basketball
programmes.
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