Bhullar
wants to emulate Yao Ming in India
Send a link to a friend
[May 07, 2015]
By Amlan Chakraborty
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Sim Bhullar knows it
is going to be a tall order but the first NBA player of Indian descent
believes that, like Yao Ming in China, he can trigger basketball frenzy
in the country his parents left before he was born.
|
Former Houston Rockets center Yao, an eight-time All-Star, triggered
NBA-mania in China after being selected first overall in the 2002
draft and went on to become his country's wealthiest and most
recognizable athlete.
That is unlikely to happen to Toronto-born Bhullar, who at 7ft 5in
(2.26 meters) is an inch shorter than Yao.
Bhullar, who was not drafted, signed just a 10-day contract with
Sacramento Kings last month and played only three games before
embarking on a tour of India, where basketball is much less popular
than it was in China pre-Yao.
Still, as he conducts basketball clinics in cities across the
country, Bhullar is drawing inspiration from the former Houston
Rocket in his bid to change a sporting landscape where all other
sports play very much second fiddle to cricket.
"Yao did a great a job, being an ambassador and just being the guy
for the youth in China," he told Reuters in an interview.
"I'm trying to get on the path that he did. Being here, it's been
good so far. I'm just trying to inspire the youth and show them the
dream is possible.
"They can dream about something bigger than just being in India and
traveling the world playing basketball. That's pretty much my goal.
"There is so much skill here ... hope I can be a role model."
The 22-year-old turned professional last year following two years at
New Mexico State, where he was a two-time Western Athletic
Conference MVP.
Bhullar initially signed with the Kings last August and played 39
games for their development league affiliate the Reno Bighorns,
where he averaged 10.3 points and 8.8 rebounds per game.
Bhullar admitted having Indian expatriate and software entrepreneur
Vivek Ranadive as Kings owner helped him.
[to top of second column] |
"Me and Vivek have a very good relationship. It's great to have a
guy you can talk to. We're really good friends. It's great to have a
guy like him in my corner."
Together they hope to make Kings the 'home' NBA team for the world's
second most populous nation.
"You walk around and you see a lot of Kings t-shirts and jerseys,"
Bhullar said. "It's great to see here. NBA has been big here, it's
actually growing."
His height poses practical disadvantages -- ducking under most doors
on his India tour -- but the hulking 360-pound center has no
complaints.
"Lot of disadvantages but the advantages are greater," he said.
"Just being a little bit slower than everybody but my height makes
up for it. I guess it works both ways."
(Editing by Nick Mulvenney)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|