FIRST STEP
Slam|May - June 2020
THE JOURNEY THAT JOEL EMBIID HAS TAKEN FROM AFRICA TO AMERICA, AS THE FIRST-BORN SON OF STRICT EDUCATION-FOCUSED PARENTS, FEELS LIKE A MOVIE.
YARON WEITZMAN
FIRST STEP

JOEL EMBIID is fond of comparing his life to a movie. The story, in his account, begins with a scout discovering him on the streets of Yaoundé, the capital of Cameroon, where Embiid grew up. It’s a good opening scene, but not exactly true.

The story actually begins with an email.

“Best wishes brother!!!” Didier Yanga wrote to Joe Touomou in January 2011. “I’m sending you pictures of my nephew…Thomas’ son, who is 2m06 tall and 17 years old. He’s in 11th grade.”

Eighteen months earlier, Yanga’s nephew Joel Embiid had watched his first NBA game, a Finals matchup between Kobe Bryant’s Los Angeles Lakers and Dwight Howard’s Orlando Magic. Joel had grown up around sports. He excelled in volleyball, was an avid soccer fan, and also the son of a professional handball player. Yet something about the NBA spectacle was different.

“I had never seen anything like that,” Embiid recalled. “The way they moved, and the athleticism, I thought it was the coolest thing in the world. I had that moment like, I just wanna do that.” He found a run-down hoop nearby and started playing regularly. “Kobe!” he’d shout after each shot. He’d extend his right wrist and freeze it in the air, just like he’d seen on TV.

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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