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Bryce Alderton
NEWPORT BEACH - Jumping up to battle Tony Gonzalez or Sean Rooks
for a rebound isn’t just a fantasy.
It’s happening in Newport Beach this summer as basketball players from
all walks of life - from the weekend roundballers, to ex-college and
professional athletes and those just looking for a workout after work
gather one night a week to play games in the City of Newport Beach Adult
Basketball League, open to anyone.
The city’s adult basketball league, which 10-year league scorekeeper
Scott Amend said have been around for 20 years, has 10-week sessions each
of the four seasons.
Some players play year-round, but Amend said the summer session
attracts the most number of professional athletes from the NFL and NBA.
Professional athletes such as the NBA’s Cherokee Parks, Sean Rooks,
Scotty Brooks and Corie Bluont, along with Gonzalez, a Kansas City
Chiefs’ tight end, lace up their gym shoes every Wednesday for the games,
which feature two 20-minute halves with a running clock.
After a recent Wednesday night game, Gonzalez stood on the sidelines,
sweat dripping off his face as he waved to his 1 1/2-year-old son Nikko.
The 26-year-old two-time Pro Bowl selection and former standout
basketball and football player at Huntington Beach High and then in
college at UC Berkeley, has played in the adult basketball league since
his college days and likes the competition the league offers.
“The competitive juices get flowing. This is not a rinky-dink league,”
Gonzalez said. “You get guys from overseas, young guys just going off to
college, all types. I couldn’t think of a better way to spend a Wednesday
night than play some ball. It also keeps me in shape during the
off-season.”
Some teams, such as the Brave Bunny Intergalacitca, have been playing
in the league since 1985.
Newport Beach resident John Harvey, 42, has dribbled and shot the ball
for Brave Bunny since 1985.
Brave Bunny players wore red cut-off T-shirts one recent Wednesday
night as they played PC II.
Proximity to the beach makes the league a no-brainer for Harvey.
“The gyms are two miles from the beach,” Harvey said. “I swim in the
ocean after I play. It’s a great night out of the house for a Wednesday
night.”
Even though Harvey admits playing with and against professional
athletes such as Gonzalez and Rooks can be intimidating, he said most
players are just out there to have fun.
“All that play here are down to earth. They get exercise and have fun
just like the rest of us,” Harvey said. “Everyone plays at the same
level.”
The adult basketball leagues offer a chance for 40-year-old Greg
Hutchison to reunite with friends who play in Australia, but come to
Newport Beach each summer.
“All my friends from overseas come out and have fun,” said Hutchison,
a Dana Point resident, who played college baseball at Jarvis Christian
College in Texas.
The fierceness of the games doesn’t bother Hutchison.
“I get intimidated by no man,” Hutchison said. “I play my own game.”
Players young and old flock to the leagues, including 50-year-old Mike
Bayer, who plays Tuesday and Wednesday nights and who Amend calls, “The
best old guy in the league.”
Former tight end with the New York Jets and San Diego Chargers Wayne
Stewart has also ran up and down the court in the league.
Irvine resident Matt Zaengle, 27, played four years of college
basketball at Azusa Pacific University, and has played year-round in the
league for four years.
He likes the camaraderie and workout he can count on each time he
comes to the gym.
“(I come for) exercise. It’s nothing for fame,” Zaengle said. “I show
up after work. It’s something I can count on every Wednesday night
instead of going to 24-Hour Fitness.
Amend said the two oldest teams in the league are the Fools and the
Sharks.
Games are played Monday through Thursday at four different sites
including the West Newport Community Center, Lincoln Elementary School,
Ensign Junior High and the Eastbluff Boys Club.
Each one of the 90 teams plays 10 games, one a week.
Amend said he thinks the league has the most teams of any league in
Orange County.
“We have different divisions depending on what time you play,” Amend
said.
Games begin each night at 6, 7, 8 and 9 p.m.
Newport residents pay $550 and nonresidents pay $600, Amend said.The
deadline for fall registration is August 9 with games beginning September
9.
Call Newport Beach Community Services at (949) 644-3163 for more
information.
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