AJC > Sports > Highschools > Blog > Archives > 2007 > January > 15 > Entry

Still waiting for basketball explosion


He blogs about statewide preps, whether you like it or not.

“Atlanta is ripe to explode on the national basketball scene,” the promo for the PrimeTime Shootout touts. I’m not exactly sure what that means.

Is that talking about talent? If so, Atlanta isn’t ripe to explode. The explosion has already happened. If you want to see a little of the fallout, the PrimeTime is one place to look on Saturday.

Colleges across the country know about the A-T-L when it comes to basketball. ESPN has discovered it, too. It wasn’t long ago that Southwest Atlanta Christian vs. Landmark Christian, two metro teams, was a game featured on the national network.

It wasn’t long ago that Dwight Howard was tabbed the No. 1 pick in the NBA draft, straight out of high school. It was earlier this season that Norcross held its own with national powerhouse Oak Hill Academy before falling short, a game that also played on national TV.

Though the PrimeTime doesn’t feature female players, I defy anybody to find a national stage on which Collins Hill’s Maya Moore or St. Pius’ Kelley Cain can’t hold their own — and maybe some of yours, too.

So, talent-wise, the Atlanta area takes a back seat to nobody. Everything else about the Atlanta and the national basketball scene may have some catching up to do, though.

The Georgia High School Association still is looking for a place to play the Class AAAAA North quarterfinals. That’s a venue problem — and one that would never ever happen if we were talking football.

The PrimeTime Shootout was originally supposed to be at Georgia Tech. It has downgraded to Norcross — the result of a venue problem that flies in the face of that same promo which also mentioned “bright lights, big cities, major stadiums.” Norcross is a major player in the state basketball scene, but it doesn’t play in a major stadium.

To say Atlanta is ripe to explode in the fan sense is wishful thinking in some marketing genius’ mind. This is football territory and, unless there’s an immediate mass migration from Indiana and Kentucky, football territory will it be for a long time to come.

Some blame a lack of media coverage for basketball not being more popular — which is only backward thinking. Media coverage does not build interest in a sport; it responds to the interest already there.

People have been talking about soccer becoming the next great sport here for the last 30 years. If only we could get more media coverage, they say.

To twist a line from “Field of Dreams:” If you build it, it will come. For whatever reasons you choose, basketball isn’t rooted in Southern culture. When it is, only then will that explosion come.

Permalink | Comments (4) | Post your comment | Categories: Mad Maxie

Comments

By MJ

January 15, 2007 05:15 PM | Link to this

I love basketball to death but basically in the south from VA to Texas football is king

By Murdock

January 15, 2007 10:40 PM | Link to this

I understand the shootout was moved from GA. Tech to Norcross HS. Can you tell me what teams are participating. In order for ATL to become a traditional basketball power in it’s own state you need to have a few team that are always considered to be national powers not just city and or state. Not just one year wonders, i.e. South Gwinnett. However, in saying that I hope it does explode because I for one am a huge fan of HS basketball.

By bluedevils50

January 16, 2007 10:00 AM | Link to this

Primetime Shootout: 1:00, Dunwoody vs Pinecrest (Ft. Lauderdale, FL) 2:45, Columbia vs Leflore (Mobile, AL) 4:30 Wheeler vs American Christian (Aston, PA) 6:15 Norcross vs Arlington Country Day (Jacksonville, FL)

By jsleazy

January 16, 2007 08:48 PM | Link to this

Basketball does take a backseat to football in this state, and I still can’t figure out why. Name one state in the past five years that has had a HS player get drafted into the league. One that has had not one, but two who were chosen #1. You can’t because their isn’t. In Dekalb and Gwinnett alone, you can find at least 10 high D1 level players who are going to play in BCS leagues next year. Those two counties have produced a ridiculous 7 state titles in the since 2000, and don’t let throw in Cobb and Fulton too. The statewide media needs to get their weight up about this basketball thing, because there missing out.

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