Thursday, January 13th, 2011 at 1:02 pm  |  22 responses

Giant Expectations

Satnam Singh Bhamara: The Big Indian Basketball Hope.

Four months later, Bhamara makes his first visit back home — he was always built with the body shape of an ideal center, blessed with both height and muscle — but he came back looking even fitter and leaner than ever, thanks to the intense training and exercise regimen that he had gone through with his coaches at IMG. He was given a superstar’s welcome in his little village, when hundreds showed up to catch a glimpse of him coming back home.

And then he was back at the National Championship as a minor celebrity, back at the same event he had been errand-boy a year ago.

“I have changed and improved a lot over the past four months,” says Satnam, “but I want to improve even more. I want be an example for other Indian players so they can come forward and see what is necessary to be a complete player. They need to know the importance of building strength to help improve their game.”

Indian athletes, particularly the basketball players, have faced one major criticism in the past: They may have the shooting and running skills, but their athletic ability and strength leaves much more to be desired. More than basketball, the coaches at IMG have focused their early interest in making sure that Bhamara gets into shape to hang with the toughest. Bhamara has followed suit, becoming a gym rat, working on everything from exercises to help improve his forward and lateral speed, jumping ability, shoulder exercises, and lifting weights to get into tougher shape.

But his basketball training hasn’t been left behind. Bhamara notes how his current regime involves focusing on movement — a lot of movement — Satnam Singh Bhamaraso that his size can be complemented with speed to make a momentum nightmare for opponents. Bhamara, who is part of IMG’s youth team, doesn’t hesitate to talk about how his improving inside game and movement has helped his team get some big results.

“My game is basketball,” he says. “The media in America has asked me why I don’t play other games, but I’m only interested in basketball. This is the game that has given me everything I have, taken me from a village to a good education in America. I love playing this game and owe everything to it. That’s why I keep working hard to improve.”

Satnam says that there are two players he looks ‘up’ to, even though both of them are shorter than him. One of them is Punjab State and Indian Senior team star Jagdeep Singh. The other, curiously, is Kobe Bryant.

You can credit (or blame) the over-Lakerisation that NBA audiences in India have been subjected to in the past. Over the last decade, most games NBA games broadcasted in India have involved either the Lakers, Celtics, Spurs and whichever franchise LeBron James shares his talents with. I ask him, Why, despite the difference in size and gameplay, does he idolize the Black Mamba? He answers, “Kobe plays like he has no problems on court; he works hard, but he dominates smoothly, with ease. That is the kind of mentality I want to have.”

And this is exactly the kind of mentality that India, and all those holding a stake for the development of basketball in India, are hoping that Bhamara develops. In an interview with an Indian newspaper a few weeks ago, Harish Sharma, the Secretary-General of the BFI, said, “He is a great prospect. I am sure he will do what Yao Ming did for China. Indian basketball will change in case one of our boys makes it to the NBA.”

And although one talented, tall, teenager alone cannot change the basketball culture in India, the NBA will be hoping that with an idol to look up to, young Indians, just like young Chinese a decade ago, will start believing in basketball. The game is never going to challenge India’s premier game, cricket, but for basketball to score even a minor percentage of the market in a 1.2 billion population will be a heavy number.

Troy Justice, who has been the director of basketball operations of the NBA in India, has been working with Indian talent for several years now, and has kept a keen eye on Bhamara’s ascension. “He is blessed with three things that, combined, have made him into a very special prospect globally — a young age, his height, and his skill set,” said Justice. “He has natural basketball instincts, a strong work ethic, and has become a focused student of the game. I have enjoyed working with him and look forward to seeing his growth as a person and player over the next few years.

“I think he has tremendous potential and a bright future in basketball.”

But Bhamara is adamant that his focus is on the present before anything else. “I’m not thinking too far ahead right now,” he says, “I’m in IMG’s youth team, so I want to play well enough to play for the juniors. After that, I will think about qualifying for the Senior team, and after that, I can think further.”

“If I get a chance to, of course I want to play in the NBA.” Bhamara adds, “If I can make it there, I will be able to do more for other Indians dreaming of making it to the NBA. But I will have no problem if it doesn’t work out. Satnam Singh Bhamara & familyI will come back to India to play for Punjab and contribute to the Indian national basketball system.”

“Right now, I’m only concerned with improving my own game. After five years, we’ll see what happens. Right now, my priority is working on my strength — I know I’ll be playing tougher competition and have two or three players guarding me, and I have to get stronger to face that.”

Bhamara is still too young, and perhaps, still too unaware, to fully understand the implications of his rise as a basketball star. Just like China, who have gone hysterical about hoops over the past decade, India will eventually become a serious basketball market. It is a question of who and when — Yao may have been the biggest star, but he wasn’t the first Chinese to make it to the League (that honor goes to Wang Zhizhi). Bhamara’s potential improvement will determine if he can even make it to that level, much less survive once he gets there.

Right now, he’s just a 15-year-old, except that he’s blessed with a little more size, a little more talent, and a little better training support than the rest of us. He carries a load of expectations a little heavier than the rest of us, too.

So go ahead and doubt him all you want: not good enough, too much hype, too weak, too slow, too soft, too foreign. I doubt if Satnam Singh Bhamara will hear any of it: Right now, he’s just a kid addicted to hoops. And all he wants to do is get better.

Right now, he’s just a 15-year-old, except that he’s blessed with a little more size, a little more talent, and a little better training support than the rest of us. He carries a load of expectations a little heavier than the rest of us, too.

So go ahead and doubt him all you want.

Karan Madhok works as a writer and Communications Officer for the Basketball Federation of India (BFI) in New Delhi. He is also a featured blogger on NBA.com/India. Read more of his work at his blog, Hoopistani.

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  • james

    Does anyone know what schools Chris Washburn’s sons attend?

  • http://www.bulls.com Enigmatic

    Wasn’t there just some tall Indian dude like two years ago who was supposed to be the sh*t too?

  • T-Money

    he looks way older than 15.

  • robb

    Great Khali’s son

  • http://Www.jdbasketball.com jdBASKETBALL

    Eager to see how he turns out!

  • jls

    He’s squatting 90lbs, anybody still remember when Kevin Durant couldn’t bench his own body weight in his workouts,I bet the Blazers still do.

  • http://SLAMonline.com GotHandles?

    awesome. thanks for the article

  • The Dolo

    @Enigmatic i think ur thinking of the same guy. Yahoo ran an article on this same kid about 1 year ago.

  • http://www.fiba.com Darksaber

    Saw him at Nba BwB Asia last summer and he moves like a cross between Muresan and Bigfooot. Not impressed with his skill level either. Didn’t make the all camp squads either. Nice size though.

  • http://www.slamonline.com/online/media/slam-tv/2010/08/video-michael-jordans-love-of-the-game/ notblack

    REPRESENT!

  • http://itsahardwoodlife.blogspot.com omphalos

    What about Sim Bhullar? He’s a 7’4″ Indian prospect and is a year or so older than Bhamara if I recall correctly. This guy apparently has better conditioning and athleticism.

  • fiasco

    They are all horrible, they are just tall as hell. Kinda like a lot of NBA players actually. People would be surprised how different and good their game would become if they were 6’8″ or 6’9″, god forbid 7’1″ at 15 years old. At least he is at IMG.

  • http://slamonline.com Ugh

    fiasco wins ‘Least Coherent Argument’ award for today. Take a bow, fiasco!

  • http://hoopistani.blogspot.com hoopistani

    @omphalos: Sim Bhullar is older and perhaps more talented, yes. But he is a Canadian citizen – Bhamara is actually from India

  • greg

    enigmatic is thinking of sim bhular hes too fat to make it hes like a kenny george but fatter and not as good. this kid has a much better body already and he looks like a much more promising prospect because he will have more attention on him from coaches. personally, i think he will at least be a very good colloge player if he keeps this up and adjusts to the toughness of the players in the hs system he will be fine

  • Raeniel

    OH BALLE! STRAIGHT BESHTI

  • http://slamonline.com COLLOSUS

    A friend of mine plays with him at the academy… Saw the photos of a huge kid on facebook, and seeing this article one him gave me a suprise and answered a lot of questions

  • http://www.slamonline.com AllBall247

    This was a nice article Hoopistani.

  • http://brimartin13@gmail.com Brion

    slamdog millionare

  • http://www.bulls.com Enigmatic

    Yeah, Sim Bhular was that cat’s name. Thanks y’all.

  • hoodsnake

    Well he is tall

  • http://www.slamonline.com Nima Zarrabi

    Nice profile, Karan. @Darksaber: That was epic. Love that you were in attendance at “Nba BwB Asia”. @Brion: LMAO.

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