Swee'pea
The Story of Lloyd Daniels and Other Playground Basketball Legends
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
“If you care about basketball or about people, you will care about this book.” —(John Feinstein, author of Season on the Brink)
“[Daniels’s] story was quite powerful in an age before the Internet and social media and is a fantastic read for this generation’s basketball players, parents, and lovers of the game.” —(Ronnie Flores, Ball is Life)
In this updated edition of a lost classic of sports writing, authors John Valenti and Ron Naclerio chronicle the life of Lloyd Daniels, one of New York City’s most legendary basketball players.
Lloyd Daniels learned to hoop on the playgrounds of Brooklyn and Queens during the 1980s. “Swee’pea” they called him. His rep on the court traveled all the way to the Bronx, and across the country, earning him enthusiastic comparisons to the likes of Magic Johnson. Swee’pea was sure to make it to the big time and out of a New York City where drugs and violence had gripped many of its neighborhoods. And eventually he did, leaving the city’s asphalt courts for the shiny hardwoods of NCAA programs, minor pro-leagues, and eventually the NBA.
He took with him, however, a drug habit, a learning disability, and a reputation for self-destruction.
With Swee’pea, Newsday reporter John Valenti and celebrated New York City high school basketball coach Ron Naclerio brilliantly capture how an athletic phenom becomes both a product of his environment, and his own worst enemy. Supplementing Daniels’s enigmatic story are profiles of basketball successes like former NBA stars Kenny Anderson, John Salley, and Mark Jackson—and tragedies like Earl “The Goat” Manigault, Richie Adams, and Tony “Red” Bruin—who never made the league.
Timeless, gritty, and hard-hitting, Swee’pea is a classic tale that illuminates why so many of basketball's best players throw away multimillion dollar careers, and a journey back to a time when the humble playground courts of New York City were giving rise to some of the finest players in the world.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
"The con man had conned himself," writes longtime New York Newsday reporter Valenti (with an assist from Naclerio, Lloyd Daniels' mentor and friend) of NYC basketball prodigy Lloyd "Swee'pea" Daniels, who played briefly with the L.A. Lakers and five other NBA teams. In the 1980s, Daniels was a magician on the court. His otherworldly talents gave him numerous opportunities; he was able to play professionally without graduating high school. "Lloyd Daniels can do everything with a basketball except one autograph it," a high school coach observed. The tragedy of Daniels's story runs deeper. As broken promises, drug abuse, and screw-ups accumulated, Daniels' belief in his ability became delusional, even sad. Valenti is unsparing and critical of Daniels's longtime squandering, but he's also sympathetic. He explores the circumstances surrounding the young man's struggle the influence of drug dealers in certain neighborhoods, the way the NYC school system shuffled Daniels (an undiagnosed dyslexic) to the next grade, and the ability of decision-makers in the basketball world to dismiss personal issues when the talent for hoops glows bright. This rerelease of Valenti's 1990 book, complete with an epilogue, unsparingly looks at how basketball serves as a salvation and a prison for kids in New York City's poorer neighborhoods. The poignancy of Daniels's story, and the stories of the other heroes profiled here, are heartbreaking, even when Valenti's editorializing and hard-boiled prose take charge.