DEDICATION
Slam|May - June 2020
CLASS OF 2022 GUARD SKYY CLARK HAS OFFERS FROM TONS OF BIG-TIME PROGRAMS, BUT HE’S ONLY FOCUSED ON ONE THING: TAKING HIS GAME TO THE NEXT LEVEL.
DREW RUIZ
DEDICATION

GILBERT ARENAS realized Skyy Clark was special very early on. The 12-year NBA vet first caught a glimpse of how special Clark, now a five-star PG in the Class of 2022, was before he stepped foot on a high school campus.

“We lived next to each other, so I got to see him before he started his basketball career,” Arenas tells SLAM. “He was just a young kid playing around. Me and his dad played in a rec league together and we were blowing a team out so bad [and] he went in there and hit four threes.”

Arenas also signed off on Clark using the “Hibachi” nickname, one of the many monikers the three-time All-Star had in the NBA.

“It was an honor for me that a young kid that talented wanted that name,” Arenas says. “I told him if you’re going to be ‘Hibachi,’ you gotta burn these people up and he’s doing it. It’s just an honor that he’d want to carry the name for the rest of his career.”

This story is from the May - June 2020 edition of Slam.

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This story is from the May - June 2020 edition of Slam.

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