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Raised
in the ghetto......
A lot of niggaz had it ruff growin' up in the ghetto, but
Allen Iverson out of all, I think had it the worst...I was
searching around for other sites' bio, and Iverson profile,
but could NOT find any better than this biography written
up by the webmaster@allen Iverson Platinum.
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ALLEN IVERSON BIOGRAPHY:
G
R O W I N G - U P - F O R - A I # 3
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Allen
grew up in the projects as the son of a 15-year old single
mother. Their house in Hampton, Virginia lay on top of the
city's sewers. Whenever they burst, the floor would be coated
with sewage. Iverson's biological father who stayed in Connecticut
(where the family lived before Allen was born), never played
any role in his life, and earlier this year, pledged guilty
to stabbing a former girlfriend. Shortly after being born
his maternal grandmother - often the pillar in an inner-city
family - passed away as well.
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D E A R - M O M M A
Mom
Ann had a hard time making ends meet, and the house was often
without water or electricity because of unpaid bills. "She
did whatever she had to do," Allen explains, while refusing
to elaborate on that cryptic statement. Growing up, Iverson
was often responsible for taking care of his younger sisters
Brandy (born 1979) and Iiesha (1991), which was especially
difficult with the toddler, who suffered frequent seizures.
Mounting medical bills pushed the family further in debt.
Ann's boyfriend, Allen's de facto father, Michael Freeman
has been in and out of jail all of his life. After a car accident
got him unemployed once again in 1991, desperate for money
Freeman was caught and convicted for drug possesion with intent
to distribute. "I didn't buy cadillacs and diamond rings,"
Freeman explains, "I was payin' bills." Iverson used to blame
the man who taught him how to play basketball and pushed him
to excel at it. Today he's proud of Freeman. "He never robbed
nobody," said Allen. "He was just tryin' to feed his family.
It would kill him to come from jail and find out how his family
was living. One time he came home and just sat down and cried."
Today he's serving time in the same Virginia jail where Allen
was sent in 1993. Allen said one time he went to visit Freeman
in Newport News Correctional Facilities, the same prison he
was incarcerated at , And Freeman Shoes were so damaged that
Allen took the shoes off his feet and gave them to Micheal
and Allen went home barefooted that day.
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THE BEGINNING OF A THUGSTAZ ERA
Iverson's mom early saw Allen's basketball skills as a ticket
to get out of the projects and live a normal life. She encouraged
Allen to keep playing the game he loved so much.. Every time
his mother saw him to lose heart she told him "go till the
end every time u see the chance".
Despite his rather short and slim body, Allen was never afraid
of challenging bigger guys on the court. At first, when Iverson
started playing ball he was about 9-10 years old. He never
wanted to play ball-he thought it was too soft. One day, his
mum waited for Allen to come home from school - she had bought
a pair of Jordan sneakers. "You're going to basketball practise
today", she said. Iverson cried and didn't want to go, but
his mom made him go. Finally at the court, Allen met some
of his football-teammates and enjoyed the new game. Iverson
recalls from his childhood:"Coming home, no lights, no food,
sometimes no water. Then when there was water, no hot water.
Living in a house where the sewer was busted under the house
and having to watch my sister walk around in her socks all
day because the floor was wet from the sewage. The smell was
making my sister sick." Many NBA players grew up in broken
homes and tough neighbourhoods and were driven to play basketball
with one hope: escape the ghetto.
Few had it as bad as him, though.
Being young Iverson had two role models. His mom and Tony
Clark. Here's what Allen has to say about his relationship
to Tony: "There was this guy, Tony Clark, and he meant everything
to me. He inspired me, somewhat like my mom. He was someone
who always told me I could do something with my life. He made
me believe I could do it and, see, I never had a role model
in my life. I never looked up to no one but my mom. She always
told me I could be somebody and I could do something with
my life with the talent God gave me, and I always believed
it. It was the same with Tony. See, when I skipped school,
I'd come hang out with him. He was six, seven years older
than me. He'd tell my mom what was going on and my mom would
come get me, and I used to cry and scream at him and tell
him I hated him. But he was always doing it because he loved
me and cared about me. And then to lose him, it was wild.
I was like his little man and he used to look out for me,
and he even stayed with us for like two years, off and on.
He was just going through a lot of things with his family
and his girlfriend. And then his girlfriend killed him. I
was 15, and I had no more role model, man. Who replaced Tony?
One of the guys I deal with right now. Andre Steele. Andre's
27 or 28 right now, and he really looked out for me back then."
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- Prison...was it INJUSTICE? - |
In a life that hadn't been a "sunshine
story", Iverson was left standing in the middle of a brawl
between black and white students in a bowling alley. One Valenite's
Day, Iverson and some friends - all jocks and black - walked
into a Hampton Bowling Alley.
Allen was already a local sports hero, having quarterbacked
Bethel High School's football team to the state championship
only two months earlier, and in the process of leading the
basketball squad to the same trophy. He was probably the best
known person in the city that night. Iverson's crowd was loud
and had to be asked to quiet down several times, and eventually
something of a shouting duel began with another group of youths.
The only undisputable fact is that shortly thereafter a huge
fight erupted, pitting the local white kids against the blacks.
17-year old Iverson was tried as an adult, convicted of maiming
by mob, and sentenced to five years for throwing a chair at
a girl. Virginia's first black Governor, Doug Wilder, granted
him conditional release after four months behind bars. The
trial and the verdict set off an national debate on race politics.
Iverson
and his supporters maintain his innocence. Allen cannot be
seen on an amateur video if the incident, and he claims he
left the alley as soon as the trouble began.
"For me to be in a bowling alley where everybody in the whole
place know who I am and be crackin' people upside the head
with chairs and think nothin' gonna happen?" asks Iverson.
"That's crazy! And what kind of a man would I be to hit a
girl in the head with a damn chair? I wish at least they'd
said I hit some damn man." Allen's supporters were enraged
that only four people got charged after the fight - all four
were blacks
They were upset with the media's allegedly biased coverage
of the incident. And they claim the whole thing started when
one of the white boys called Iverson a nigger.
"It's strange enough that police waded through a huge mob
of fighting people and came out with only blacks and the one
black that everybody knew," said
Golden Frinks, crisis co-ordinator for the National Association
for Advancement of Coloured People. "People thought they'd
get a slap on the wrist and that would be the end of it. Instead,
prosecutors used a Civil War-era statute designed to protect
blacks from lynching to charge a group of black teens with
mob violence. And the judge, who was friends with one of the
victims family, first denied them bail and then sentenced
them all four to 15 years on prison." "A Fight!" said Newport
News minister Marcellus Harris. "They were given long prison
sentences because they got in a fight in a bowling alley.
On the other hand, numerous witnesses un-aligned with either
of the two crowds bowling that night testified Allen threw
a chair at the girl. No-one else heard the racial epithet.
"During a break in the fight, the girl went up to one of the
black guys and said: ' Why do you have to make this racial?'"
explained Kristi Alligood, one of the witnesses. "He just
pressed two fingers against her face and pushed her away.
The young man was Iverson."
And a bowling centre employee testified that Iverson used
a different chair to hit him over the head as well. The prosecutor,
a life-long member of NAACP himself, insists that none of
the blacks in the fight wanted to pursue charges, and points
out that several black witnesses also identified Iverson as
the main culprit. What really happened that night in Hampton
will perhaps never be known!!
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- T H U G - L I F E- |
Two things matter more: based on his personality and behaviour,
everyone agrees that it is at least plausible that Iverson
was indeed guilty. "He's one of the most competitive kids
I've ever seen," said Bo Williams, who runs a summer camp
where Iverson used to play. "He's not one to back down, but
that doesn't mean he's violent either, just cocky." And perhaps
at least partly because of his attitude, he was sent to jail,
an experience that would profoundly affect the way he views
the world, and to a large extent the way the world identifies
him. Allen says about going to jail:"I'll always remember
what those people did to me in Hampton. And I think about
it because that's one of the reasons I'm here right now. It
just made me stronger. I don't know if I would be as strong
without that incident. When I was incarcerated, I prayed and
I learned from other guys in there. That's what I did mostly
-- I
just listened. A lot of the inmates in there knew me before
I got there, and when I came there, all of them were just
standing around quiet, just looking at me. And I was scared.
I was only 18 years old, and all of them were staring at me.
And all the older inmates were like, "We're going to take
care of you." And whenever I got around the younger inmates,
the older inmates would tell me, "Leave them alone. They're
bad news, man." And they would tell the younger inmates to
leave me alone, too. And they'd always tell me I was going
to get out, and I was going to do something. And I tried to
keep my head straight. I remember right before I got locked
up, I asked my grandma, "If God knows I didn't do what they
accused me of doing, why is he letting this happen to me?"
And I'll never forget it. She said, "Never question what God
does." And after that, I never did again. " Iverson explained
how life in prison was when talking to The Source Sports this
year: "We had one part of the jail called The Jungle - that's
for all the kids that was my age", he says. "The old heads
didn't want me to be in The Jungle, so I was in the part where
people was on work-release. My dad spent 15, damn near 20
years in jail, so he had made the Iverson-name famous even
before me. I had to walk through the jungle in order to get
to the mess hall. On that side of the jail, it was just crazy:
everybody screamin', shit thrown down from here to there,
motherfuckas settin' shit on fire, all kinds of shit. Real
shit. When I got there, I was like,'Damn, I know ain't nothin'
pussy about me. I know I can handle myself,' but I never felt
I was ever in danger." While in jail, Iverson's friends took
care of his family. That's why he doesn't want to get rid
of them, that's why he'll never let them down. They took care
of them financially and physically.
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- FRIENDZ TILL' THE END - |
One time Allen came home from school, his good friend Andre
Steele showed Allen his beeper. He could only keep 16 messages
on his beeper at a time, and Allen's mom's phone number was
up there on his beeper 16 times. That's how much he meant
to her while Allen was gone. [College prep and college] Sitting
in jail in the spring of 1993, he was justifiably worried
about his prospects. Although extremely bright, Iverson was
never a good student and was falling behind in school. The
notoriety didn't help. "I'm sure some colleges will stay away,"
Iverson said from his cell. "But it'll work out. This has
given me time to think about what I need to do
to succeed in the world." Iverson has made a name for himself
the previous summer. At the Nike Camp in Indianapolis, and
at four others, he earned the MVP trophy as a member of Bo
Williams' team. In fact, Nike continued treating him as a
celebrity during the trial, sending an extra set of plane
tickets so that Iverson would not miss any camp activities
while the trial was in progress. (Prosecutors used this special
privilege to urge jurors to Just Do It to Iverson and Nike,
which they did.) "He's almost an overnight sensation," said
Williams, who also coached NBA stars Alonzo Mourning and JR
Reid on his team.
"With Alonzo and JR everyone knew they were going to be great,
so they could slowly be prepared for the pressures they were
going to face. With Allen, it happened so quickly that there
was almost no time to prepare him." Throughout the trial,
college coaches were still interested. "Unless he's behind
bars, we're recruiting him," said George Washington assistant
coach Eddie Meyers. "It's as simple as that." Allen's mom
felt he needed a strong coach to help him if he got out of
the situation he was in. And Coach Thompson
at Georgetown seemed like the perfect coach for it. And she
went up there and talked to him, and asked him, would he take
Allen under his wing, and he said yeah. And that's why he
ended up going to Georgetown.
The football program wasn't too big at Georgetown, so it was
basketball from then on. Allen once asked coach John Thompson:
"What you think about me playing football?" And he didn't
answer. He just looked at Allen like he was crazy, so Allen
never thought about playing football again after that day.
While
sitting in jail, he lost a scholarship offer from Kentucky.
I'm sure that if Allen had ended up at Kentucky he wouldn't
have been the same player, the same person he is now. And
in the end John Thompson and Georgetown seemed the best bet,
since the coach is renowed for taking risks and giving urban
kids with troubled pasts a shot at division one basketball.
'Cause instead of giving up basketball, Allen went to Georgetown,
the prestigious catholic school that has found it's position
in the projects. There he found
what he had been searching for his whole life. A father. Coach
John Thompson took care of Iverson who needed a protective
coach who could give him advice. After two great years at
Georgetown, Allen left "dad" and announced himself eligable
for the NBA draft. He probably did this to get his family
out of the projects before it was too late. Iverson says:
"If I can leave this planet knowing that my friends and family
are alright, that's good enough for me. That's all I need
to know." The rest of the story remains to be seen. -----
Taken from AI PLATINUM
...BIG SHOUT-OUT!!!!
NOTE: to know further about Iverson's statistics, please click
here.
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