Senin, 30 November 2015

basketball stream live Dear Kobe: A Poem From The Rest Of The 2015-16 Lakers Roster

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The remaining Los Angeles Lakers players wrote their own poem in response to Kobe Bryant's poem, in which he announced his retirement.


---------


 


Dear Kobe,


 


From the moment


You started shooting this season


After you had no interest in meeting us


or trying to recruit talent


We knew one thing was real:


 


You need to go. Immediately.


 


Nothing against your legacy


Nothing against you as a person


You just make it so that we can't win basketball games


Therefore our jobs are meaningless.


 


We were six year olds too


Dreaming of winning basketball games


Not being part of a better-paid Washington Generals.


 


We've played through your airballs and turnovers


We've passed you the ball knowing you'd miss


Not because we wanted to


But because YOU kept shouting for the ball


Barking "I got it! I'm Kobe Bryant!"


We did that for YOU


Also because if we didn't, we might get fired.


 


You made us all want to play basketball


and we will always love you for that


But, Christ, you said yourself that you aren't a good basketball player


This season will be garbage because of you


Our fans can take another bad season


The franchise will continue to make money


But OUR CAREERS are dependent on having good stats, particularly


+/- ratings, and you chucking shots, not passing the ball, and blowing


games makes it impossible for us to negotiate future contracts.


 


And that's NOT OK


You need to let go.


You have so much money.


And some of us wont have jobs after this season.


 


And we both know, no matter what we say


You will play out the rest of this season


And take 20 minutes waving to the crowd after shooting 3-45


Zero assists


Or, God forbid, being on the court during crunch time


Ball in your hands


5 ... 4 ... 3 ... 2 ... 1





Stop the bleeding,


The Rest Of The 2015-16 Los Angeles Lakers 


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basketball stream live Michael Jordan Suggests To Kobe That He Try And Enjoy Life

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Kobe Bryant has spent his entire career trying to be emulate Michael Jordan, so it only makes sense that he told MJ about his intentions to retire after at the end of this season before he told everyone else.


For those of you who have been living under a rock, Bryant announced his decision to retire on Sunday via a poem in The Players' Tribune, but the greatest Laker of all time actually told Jordan this past summer of his plans, according to ESPN.


"[Jordan] is actually one of the first people that I told over the summer," he said during a postgame press conference on Sunday. "We've been in frequent contact."


Bryant said Jordan gave him some seemingly simple advice for his final season, too: "Just enjoy it. No matter what, just enjoy it ... Don't let anybody take that away from you, no matter what happens, good or bad. Enjoy it, man."


Of course, it's one thing to tell Kobe Bryant to enjoy an entire season on a terrible team, and another for Kobe Bryant to actually enjoy an entire season  on a terrible team. The Lakers, it goes without saying, lost on Sunday, 107-103. They are now 2-14. 


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basketball stream live Kobe Bryant Retires, Possibly to Pursue Film but Needs to Rewrite Lakers Happy Ending

basketball stream live Thanksgiving weekend came with a twist this year as Kobe Bryant announced his retirement, putting the capstone on a storied career. Asked to speculate what's next for Bryant, journalists Michael Wilbon and J.A. Adande both alluded to the legend's passion for storytelling, hinting at creative pursuits such as filmmaking. With the organization in shambles, now's the time for Kobe the future film mogul to reboot this Hollywood tragedy the same way he has scripted his entire career.

Oddly it all makes perfect sense. Bryant's entire career was built around a narrative he himself had penned, and that he was hell-bent on fulfilling. Now as a new breed triple thread - producer, writer and director, the man with more comebacks than Rocky must pull for a management overhaul and remake the Lakeshow like it was his own Adonis Creed.

In retrospect, the five parts of his career flow perfectly, but the final parts are a work in progress.

Part I: Genesis. It started with overnight stardom as he engineered his own draft day trade as a high schooler taken as the 13th pick in the 1996 NBA Draft where Charlotte sent him to Los Angeles for center, Vlade Divac. Angelenos immediately embraced Kobe despite never really seeing him play. He immediately made the top story on Extra and Entertainment Tonight as he took R&B pop star Brandy to prom.

The first signs of his potential emerged during Summer League as he dropped 25 points per game. The script continued as his unforgiving, old school coach, Del Harris, refused him playing time, as his veteran team lead by Shaquille O'Neal felt he should earn his place. By the 1997 NBA Playoffs, in a made-for-TV moment, he helped get his team to overtime in an elimination game against the Utah Jazz. However, in a surprising twist he proceeded to launch three airballs, dividing fans in regards to his greatness and leaving doubt as to whether he was set to crash and burn. Bryant would either rise like the second coming of Jordan or never be same. A cliffhanger, the likes of which fans would see time and again.

Part II: Star Wars. The following season, Bryant showed he was on the rise and within two years he was the ultimate second banana on a team where he owned the perimeter game as much as Shaquille O'Neal owned the inside game. This made Bryant an equal partner in the team's success while setting up an epic power struggle that would play out in headlines for the ensuing decade.

By 2004, Bryant had already ascended to superstardom racking up three NBA Championships and setting up the eternal debate of whether he was the League's Best or living in Shaq's massive shadow. This was not mere barroom chatter either. The Lakers front office was forced into the frontlines as O'Neal's contract was up and the two refused to coexist any longer, despite their massive success.

The intrigue deepened as Bryant, one of the most beloved athletes, a pitchman for brands like McDonald's, became embroiled in sexual assault charges that held the dire possibility of life in prison. The choices were far from obvious -- but spoiler alert -- the Lakers traded O'Neal while signing Kobe Bryant to a multi-year extension. Sadly, Bryant's victory was pyrrhic as he became one of the most hated athletes in the world.

Part III: The Mamba Strikes Back. In true silver screen fashion, Bryant rewrote the script. More cliffhangers. Following a season lost to injuries, coaching blowups and other miscellaneous disasters, Bryant embraced the part of the villain and entered 2006 as a one-man wrecking crew that would sell out arenas nationwide. He was at war with every team he faced. There were 40-point barrages one after another going for weeks at a time. If that weren't enough, he would drop 63 points on the Mavs, outscoring the entire opposing team in three quarters. Following that performance Lamar Odom was asked what would have happened if Bryant had played the full game in Dallas, to which Odom responded that he would have likely scored 74 points. When Bryant was asked the same question, he responded with a wry smile and an outlandish, "I probably coulda scored 80". Just over a week later he torched Toronto for a record 81 points -- a human video game.

As if to take on the role of his own publicist, Bryant eventually dubbed his new bad boy image "The Black Mamba", taking the name straight from Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill heroine. If anyone could come up with their own nickname and make it stick, it's Mamba. He even changed his number from 8 to 24, which rumor has it, was done as a slight Adidas, a brand he formerly endorsed, that was set to reissue his first signature sneaker without his name - as "Crazy 8's". If ever there was a player who's career was marked by the word "defiant", it's Mamba.

Part IV: The Dark Knight Rises. His narrative lacking the next obvious chapter, an NBA Championship sans Shaq, Bryant began the 2007 season demanding a trade. Although he had mended fences with coach and sensei, Phil Jackson, they reunited on a doormat team that limped into the playoffs solely on Mamba's will power and nothing more. He would never succeed with this abysmal squad and it was clear the front office was satisfied to ride his coattails to substantial profits while reducing team payroll as their ailing owner and fellow legend, Dr. Jerry Buss, planned the succession of the empire to his children.

Bryant went on a summer-long media tirade lambasting the Lakers into trading him to a contender. The Lakers called his bluff, as Buss, a master poker player, knew Bryant would never be able to sit out, even in protest. On opening night against the Houston Rockets, Bryant received a rude awakening as the home crowd booed him mercilessly. The villain was ready for his next chapter.

The season moved forward with no hint of surprise -- but this is Mamba's show. Then February 1, 2008 arrived and in an astonishing move the Lakers landed another, Pau Gasol aka The Spaniard. The team gelled immediately. Batman had his Justice League (re: no Robin references allowed) and went to the three consecutive finals, winning two championships along the way. The complex character Bryant had created found the perfect foil in the Boston Celtics, recasting a vintage rivalry and creating must-watch television. Bryant garnered an NBA MVP award as well as multiple Finals MVPs. With each accolade, Bryant was surrounded by his teammates, where onlookers could not help but be taken by the wonderful chemistry of the team. A man once branded as "petulant" now exuded a certain warmth as "king of the hill".

Part V: Legends of the Fall. Kobe's retirement announcement was a long-time in the making. As far back as 2009 the fatigue of playing heavy minutes, the playoffs and Olympics began to show. In 2011, he spent many practices on the sidelines tending to aching knees which were "bone on bone" as he explained to the New York Post's Peter Vescey. The first hints of attrition.

Much like film franchises that take a step too far -- Rocky V, Star Wars: Phantom Menace - the Lakers came apart at the seams. Believe it or not, the fault did not lie with Bryant. Mercurial Jim Buss, the prodigal son of Dr. Buss, took the reigns of basketball operations, splitting the empire into parts much like the Romans once did -- never a good sign. Despite daughter Jeannie being widely hailed as the logical successor, Dr. Buss let his unfortunate biases get the better of him.

Thus began an exodus. Magic Johnson, league legend and owner, sold his stake. Phil Jackson was offered a return as coach only to be embarrassed as another coach, Mike D'Antoni, was offered the position with the news delivered impersonally via SportsCenter. Jerry West, a former Lakers front office maestro, takes a consulting role with rival Golden State. The list of defectors goes on to this day with names like Derek Fisher, Pau Gasol and Steve Nash all chased off behind the Lakers front office drama. It was a slow burn but Kobe eventually awoke to find his castle in shambles. He tried to carry the load on his own in 2013, again willing his team into the playoffs, only to collapse on-court with an Achilles tendon tear, effectively ending his career.

Though he made two unsuccessful comeback attempts over the past couple of years, resulting in season ending injuries, Bryant has returned for his final season, physically a shell of his former self.

With the organization coming apart, Bryant can no longer command the locker room the only way he knew how -- by imposing his other worldly talent on his team, pulling everyone along with him. This month, he shot 1 for14 during a drubbing by Golden State on national TV, an unwatchable collapse for a legend. He has earned every right to test his boundaries, but playing on a youthful team, far from ready for prime time, he has no one to help him find solid ground. This is a film without a proper ending -- but for a massive implosion then fading to black.

Fans will debate Bryant's place in history, but as ESPN's Adande points out, from 2000 to 2010 the only NBA Finals to garner double digit ratings all featured Mamba. Love him or hate him, he kept eyes glued to screens.

Epilogue: Revolution. This is the critical decision-point for Mamba -- an opportunity to channel his inner Aaron Sorkin. In each previous chapter the lowest moments were in actuality cliffhangers leading to a Phoenix-from-the-flame rebirth. Heroes do not ride off into the sunset through ruins. Bryant is royalty in both the Lakers organization and in the city of Los Angeles. He has the power to lead a revolt. Jim Buss promised to step down if this management experiment failed, which it has. It's time to storm the castle, Mamba.

Demand names like West, Magic, Jackon and Nash return to the fold. Play Rocky in the movie Creed, mentor and architect the Lakers revolution. Do not let this end like the Sopranos, with fans up in arms. This is a team constructed without proper leadership or any semblance of a plan. This is the chance to flip the script in every conceivable way. He can become Maximus in Gladiator, deciding the fate of Laker Nation from the floor of the arena.

Mamba is still a player with vision -- an uncanny rebounder, passer and thinker at shooting guard -- who could usher in change in the locker room as well as the front office. Mamba must once again rewrite the Lakers in his image and cast his successor.

Kobe Bean Bryant has every opportunity to make the last 66 games count for more than a farewell. It's the final scene a great storyteller like Bryant was born to write.

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Minggu, 29 November 2015

basketball stream live Kobe Bryant Says This Is His Last Season

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Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant announced Sunday that this will be his last season playing professional basketball. 


"I'm ready to let [basketball] go," Bryant said in an announcement posted on the Players's Tribune


This is a developing story. Please check back for updates. 

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Rabu, 25 November 2015

basketball stream live NBA Rookie Is Literally Watching His Own Back Thanks To Tattoo

basketball stream live Welp, Kobe And The Lakers May Have Officially Hit Rock Bottom

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With the eyes of the NBA on last night’s record-setting matchup between the Golden State Warriors and the Los Angeles Lakers, Kobe Bryant had a chance to rewrite the latest chapter of his career.  With his stats down across the board in the early going of the season, it would have been classic Kobe to come through when it was least expected -- facing the best team in the league, with the chance to spoil the Warriors’ shining moment and with everyone believing him down for the count. 


"I've seen stranger things happen," Kobe said Sunday.


But it was not to be. Instead, the Lakers, who are now sitting in last place in the West with a 2-12 record, were the personification of a flaming pile of hot garbage. Just really rank garbage. On an evening when the Lakers fell behind by as many as 41 points in the final period, Bryant shot just 1-of-14 from the floor, proving once again that after 20 years in the league, he can no longer will his team to victory or pull off the heroics that he’s been expected to pull off for two decades now.






From Bryant’s vantage point, his numbers should not be the Lakers’ biggest worry -- that should be reserved for the lack of fluidity, chemistry and ball movement amongst those on the floor at any given time. But it is just really depressing to listen to Kobe try to tell reporters he could lead the league in scoring if he wanted to.


"I'm not really worried about [my percentages], honestly," Bryant said. "My shooting will be better. I could've scored 80 tonight. It wouldn't have made a damn difference. We just have bigger problems. I could be out there averaging 35 points a game. We'd be what, 3-11? We've got to figure out how to play systematically in a position that's going to keep us in ballgames." 


Bryant attributed some of his low shooting clip to the difficulty of the attempts he's been taking -- step-back jumpers, contested threes and pull-ups, all of which are “tough to hit at 27” and “very tough to hit at 37” years of age, per Bryant. 




"Frustration kind of got to me," Bryant said. "The fact that -- the way I played, the way I shot, blowing coverages defensively, coming down offensively and not having concept of what we're trying to do. It just kind of got to me a little bit and frustrated me, and it affected my shot … I feel OK. Just pissed. Just frustrated with what were doing. It bothered me. So I got out of my Zen."


Head coach Byron Scott and Bryant have both said in recent weeks that some of the burden is on Bryant's young teammates. His shooting will inevitably slump and suffer as long as he’s put in difficult spots -- given the ball late in the clock on the perimeter, for example. And until the rookies and second-years he’s playing with understand the pace and positioning specific to the NBA game, Bryant’s own play will take the hit.










Meanwhile, a lack of consistency in Los Angeles’ lineup and a lack of transparency in how those lineups are chosen have left little clear even to those in the locker room. Highly touted rookie D’Angelo Russell has been forced to warm the bench for a handful of fourth quarters thus far this year, an extraordinary fact considering the team’s insistence that he is The Future Of The Franchise.


Scott’s taken a good amount of heat for his treatment of Russell this past month. And it got worse on Tuesday, as he admitted that there is no rhyme or reason to when he chooses to sit or suit up the young floor general.










We’re less than a month into the season, and things already seem to be bottoming out for LA. Case in point: Even Nick Young -- Nick Young! -- was preaching better ball movement after yesterday’s disappointing effort. 







With 68 games remaining in the 2015-2016 campaign and no aha! moment in sight, the Lakers are going to need to try something new -- after over 47,000 minutes on the NBA hardwood, their 37-year-old superstar can no longer be expected to make fire out of thin air. And while that, for Lakers fans, is a sad notion, it’s one that is becoming increasingly evident every time the team takes the floor.


 


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basketball stream live Warriors Make History With Win Over Lakers

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Oakland, CA - It was bound to happen. But no one thought it would come this soon. The Golden State Warriors have surpassed some of the best teams the NBA has ever produced. After winning the NBA Championship last season, this young team keeps out-dueling every opponent they face yet there's still sixty-six more games to left in the season.

Tonight the Warriors set the best record in NBA history with 16 wins after embarrassing the Los Angeles Lakers 111-77. A night where one of the NBA's best player, Kobe Bryant shot 1-of-14 for just four points matching the worst shooting performance of his career. But Bryant kept the humor light in acknowledging nothing could be done against a dominant team.

"I could have scored 80 tonight, it wouldn't have made a damn difference," said Bryant.

Golden State has been unstoppable since the season started. At this point no one knows when that first loss will come. Some predict it will be the Christmas game against LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers while others await the San Antonio Spurs. Until then no team has come close to amassing the amount of confidence and determination as the Warriors.

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"If we don't win an NBA championship, who cares about the 16 games?" Draymond Green said. "At the end of the day, it's 16 wins in a month. We set NBA history, in the history books. But, it's still 16 regular-season games."

The goal is another NBA Championship and Golden State knows they did not win that by beating the Lakers tonight. It's safe to say a team with a record of 2-11 prior to the opening tip had no chance against such a peerless team. The Warriors now chase the 1971-72 Lakers who won straight 33 games (which was the longest winning streak in professional sports) or the 1994-95 Chicago Bulls 72-10 season record. Which ever comes first will be another astounding feat.

"There most likely will come a time when we take a loss and have to deal with the emotions of that," said Stephen Curry. "We're probably not going to go 82-0 and we're probably going to lose a couple games in the playoffs."

The reality of basketball is just that, a loss is coming but when? Who knows when that day will come. In the meantime, the NBA MVP and Golden State will continue to get better every game. The Warriors won their 20th consecutive regular season game. They are the sixth team in league history to achieve this while extending their regular season home winning streak to 27 games.

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Selasa, 24 November 2015

basketball stream live We Saw Ben Simmons In Person And Yes, He’s Worth Tanking For

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Before we could start to speculate Monday about what the future holds for LSU freshman Ben Simmons, he had to pass the "alien test." It's a simple, optics-based examination -- the sort of thing "Moneyball" railed against.  The test is this: If an alien came down to earth to watch the warmups for this meaningless game, which player would the alien pick out as the biggest star on the court based on looks alone? 


From my seat at the LSU-Marquette game in the Barclays Center in Brooklyn on Monday, it was clear that Simmons won. Doing lay-up line drills alongside teammates and standing amongst Marquette players, Simmons' body confounded. We love to compare prospects to pros, but Simmons, the 2016 NBA Draft's prospective No. 1 pick, just doesn't look like anyone. He has no comparable and might just be alien himself. The Australian point forward is 6-feet-10-inches and 240 lbs. with a 7-foot wingspan, but, like an NFL running back hitting the gap, he can uncoil, explode and then glide to daylight at a moment's notice -- and he can do so with the ball in his hand. 


WELCOME TO BROOKLYN, BEN SIMMONS.





And while alien life couldn't confirm Simmons' star potential, the 50-plus NBA scouts and handful of GMs in attendance at Monday night's game certainly could. 


"Anyone that doesn't have Simmons No. 1 [on their draft board] should be fired," an NBA GM told ESPN on Monday. 


With LSU alum and New York Giants wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. sitting courtside and a gaggle of New York-based relatives presumably watching closely, Simmons put up 21 points, 20 rebounds and 7 assists. That's an eye-popping box score, but in person, what was even more eye-popping was how effortless it all looked. Rebounding is a gritty, dirty task, and it should take maximum effort to collect 20 of them. But for Simmons, a well-timed hop and full wingspan extension was enough against relative ants. Playing with an unassuming look, Simmons' effortlessness could have been described by cynics as passiveness -- the same critique that once dogged Andrew Wiggins -- but that wasn't the reason here. His team really just didn't run much stuff through him.


Had they, and had his teammates knocked down more of the open looks Simmons created for them (the team shot 37 percent on the night), he would've easily had a triple-double. LSU barely used him as their primary ball-handler. Simmons only took the ball up the court in open, fast break transitions, but oh, my, did he use those precious moments terrorize backpedaling defenders to ooh and aah us. 





Matched up against 6-foot-10-inch freshman Henry Ellenson, Simmons effectively played center all night, which made the inglorious work of rebounding, protecting the rim and setting screens his main responsibilities, which felt like a waste of his supernatural passing genes. That was disappointing, even if it was well-done and protected him from having to shoot from the perimeter (his jumper is a legitimate weakness in his game), because the crowd was itching to see more of this: 





And this go-ahead bucket too. Just give Simmons the ball! 





Simmons had to pace himself to a degree -- he literally played the entire game. But it was almost impossible not to imagine what Simmons would look like with the keys to the offense and more than a "FanDuel Legends Classic" trophy on the line.


It's no wonder why some college basketball types have dubbed him as the game's first "point-center." LeBron James, Larry Bird and to a much lesser extent, Lamar Odom, pushed the "point-forward" tag into our basketball vocabulary, but Simmons is single-handedly inventing a new position. He'll groove the ball through tight spaces for an assist on one play, crash the glass for a board over a big man on the opposite end, and then dunk all over fools for fun. There's seemingly no right way or wrong way to use him, which is why he's pegged as a savior for any NBA franchise. Just slide him in and let him work. 


Simmons told The Guardian in August that he wants to be the 2016 Draft's No. 1 pick, and barring an unforeseen calamity, he will be that guy. He proved that on Monday night in Brooklyn. 


Crappy NBA teams, let the "Break and Bend for Ben" 2016 campaign begin. 


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Jumat, 20 November 2015

basketball stream live J.R. Smith Allegedly Chokes Teenager After Kid Trash Talks Him

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Nov 20 - Cleveland Cavaliers guard J.R. Smith has been accused of choking a 19-year-old student after the teenager jeered the basketball player's trade to Cleveland from the New York Knicks, the New York Daily News reported on Friday.


The alleged incident occurred in the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan at about 4 a.m. on Nov. 13, the newspaper said.


Police said Smith has not been arrested, although they are investigating the reported incident. The National Basketball Association said it was "in the process of obtaining more information" about the situation. Smith's attorney said his client did nothing wrong.


The teen, Justin Brown, was with friends who admonished Smith for ignoring their request for a photo. "That's why New York kicked you out, yo!" Brown remarked, according to the News.


Smith, 30, was traded to the Cavaliers last season.


Brown told police that Smith pushed him against the exterior of the building and put his hands around Brown's neck, police sources told the newspaper.


"The accusation is completely false," Smith's lawyer, Alex Spiro, told Reuters.






Smith has played with four NBA clubs since coming into the league in 2004. He is averaging 8.6 points and 3.6 rebounds a game this season.


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basketball stream live This Black Teen Rock Climbing Sensation Is Shattering Stereotypes

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Sixteen-year-old rock climbing champion Kai Lightner is reaching new heights with his athletic skills as one of a few professional black rock climbers.



Lightner told The Huffington Post that he can't remember a time when he wasn't finding ways to get his two feet off the ground and that he started climbing when he was six years old. 


Eventually, he said, someone at his mom's job recognized his talent and suggested that she take him to the local rock-climbing gym where he soon discovered his passion for the activity. He's won several championships for his incredible ability, but he said his experiences as a black climber has been somewhat of a challenge.


"When I would tell [black] people that my sport was rock-climbing they would look at me funny, and ask 'What is that?' 'We don't do that,'" Lightner said.



In 2013, the Smithsonian reported that 78 percent of Americans who took part in outdoor activities, which included rock climbing, were white. Rock climber and journalist James Mills explained the misperception of black people in outdoor sports and the lack of representation of people of color. 


"It's not a question of whether or nor African-Americans can climb mountains. What matters is as [a] group we tend not to," Mills wrote. "And for a variety of different social and cultural reasons the world of mountaineering has been relegated almost exclusively to white men."


There are structural influences that have barred black people from participating in outdoor sports such as rock climbing, which has kept the majority of participants white. Lightner said he has felt accepted by other climbers, but that he has gotten a lot of grief from other people of color for his participation in the sport. 


Lightner, who is from a predominantly black community in Fayetteville, North Carolina, said he has received comments from other black people that made him feel pigeonholed by their definition of what type of sports black people should get involved in such as basketball or football. 



In 2014, the Outdoor Foundation created an outdoor participation report that catalogued the participation in outdoor activities by race, ethnicity and age. In 2014, it was found that only 11 percent of black Americans participated in an outdoor sport, which far less than the national average of the black population. The results of the report are displayed in the infographic below: 



There are several organizations that are working to change the misconceptions of black people and outdoor activities such as Outdoor Afro, a network which inspires black people to do more nature activities.  





However, Lightner's presence in rock climbing is definitely a step in the right direction to help diversify the sport. Recently, he was featured with other climbers in an advertisement by Cliff Bar (above), a nutrition bar for athletes, that's gaining national attention. Lightner said he is hopeful that the exposure he is receiving as a climber will encourage other people of color to integrate the sport. 


"I really want the sport to expand and not be limited to one specific group of people, gender or race," Lightner said. "I want the sport to be multicultural and for people to enjoy it as much as I do." 


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