Obama Invites LeBron James to Play in White House Court Opener
By Kate Andersen
June 20 (Bloomberg) -- It’s not much of a contest; on
paper, at least. A 6-foot, 2-inch, 180-pound, 47-year-old
amateur against a 6-foot, 8-inch, 250-pound, 24-year-old pro
who won the National Basketball Association’s Most-Valuable
Player award this year.
Except the amateur will have home-court advantage: the
South Lawn of the White House.
In an interview with Bloomberg News this week, President
Barack Obama said he would soon invoke executive privilege to
summon the Cleveland Cavaliers’ LeBron James and possibly other
NBA stars to the White House to shoot some hoops.
“As soon as we get the basketball nets up we’re going to
have some of these guys over for a game,” Obama said.
Asked if he’d be playing, Obama bristled: “Of course.
It’s my court.”
James paid a visit to the White House on June 15. Obama
said he was awed by both the size and skills of the man who
averaged 28.4 points, 7.6 rebounds and 7.2 assists this season
in helping take his team to the NBA Eastern Conference Finals.
“When you get up close to him he’s a legitimate six-
eight, six-nine. He’s huge. Moving that kind of speed? It’s
pretty remarkable,” Obama said. Miami Heat Guard Dwyane Wade
visited the White House yesterday to promote a Father’s Day
mentoring program.
First Court
For all James’ prowess, he may need to break a sweat when
he takes on Obama. The president is the most active athlete to
occupy the White House in recent memory, and he will soon make
history as the first to have his own court.
The venue will be the White House tennis court, shrouded
in pine trees on the South Lawn, which is being repurposed as a
home for the new one-man Team USA. Josh Earnest, a White House
spokesman, said work is currently under way on the project.
Basketball lines are being painted on the tennis court and
removable basketball hoops are being installed.
Ann Smith, the White House liaison for the National Park
Service who is in charge of the maintenance of White House
grounds, said it cost $4,995 to clean and “restripe,” or
paint fresh lines on the court and an “incidental” fee to
cover the poles holding up the tennis net. Earnest wouldn’t
comment on the cost of the hoops.
Obama, a lifelong player, even found time for pick-up
games in the midst of a grueling campaign. In an interview with
NBC’s Brian Williams on June 2, he said he has played “a
couple of times” since taking office in January. “For an old
guy,” he said, “I’m hanging in there.”
Playing Staff
There is no shortage of senior staff itching to keep the
president on his game; senior adviser David Axelrod and
personal aide Reggie Love, a former player at basketball
powerhouse Duke University, like to get on the court. He also
can rely on Education Secretary Arne Duncan, who played
basketball at Harvard University and professionally in
Australia.
Earnest said that while the home court is being readied,
the president occasionally plays at the Department of
Interior’s indoor court, four blocks away.
Obama is not the first president to find “emotional
release” in sports, said Bruce Buchanan, a presidential
scholar at the University of Texas in Austin. Unlike his
predecessor, George W. Bush, who liked to run and ride mountain
bikes, and Bill Clinton, who played golf and jogged, Buchanan
said Obama plays a team sport where hand-to-hand contact is
hard to avoid.
‘Baller-in-Chief.com’
“Basketball is a game where you have to bump into other
people,” said Claude Johnson, 49, whose blog “Baller-in-
Chief.com” links to articles about the president and his love
of the game. Johnson said reaction to the site has been
“explosive.” Though an average player in high school, Obama
had a solid longshot, earning him the nickname “Barry O-
Bomber,” he said. Johnson said basketball has helped Obama
connect to young people and has shaped his character.
“The world is analogous to a pick-up game of
basketball,” Johnson said. “Since you never know whose side
you’re going to be on the next time around, you’re not
interested in destroying teammates.”
There is no shortage of people who want to watch the
president play. A “Barack O-Balla” posting on YouTube, which
strings together clips of Obama playing basketball to a rap
soundtrack, has gotten more than 400,000 hits.
On the campaign trail, Obama had a ritual of playing a
pick-up game on the days of nominating primaries and caucuses.
Two times he broke with that practice by not playing, in New
Hampshire and Nevada, he lost the contests.
Troops in Kuwait
He also played with the University of North Carolina Tar
Heels before the state’s May primary. During a visit to troops
in Kuwait last July Obama made a 3-pointer amid wild cheers
and joked afterwards, “I think that’s all I should do! It’s
going to go downhill from there.”
And in the White House in April the president shot hoops
with the women of the Connecticut Huskies after their
undefeated run in the women’s basketball national championship.
The Miami Heat’s center Alonzo Mourning, who retired this
year, joined Wade at the White House yesterday to be part of
the pre-Father’s Day festivities.
At the event, Obama walked over to Mourning, who was
talking to a group of kids. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood
told the president Mourning was looking for the basketball
court.
‘On My Team’
“I’ve already recruited him,” Obama told LaHood. “He’s
going to be on my team.”
Keith Estabrook, James’ publicist, said the player was
unavailable for comment. Wade’s publicist, Lisa Joseph, said he
also was unavailable for comment.
Obama’s passion for basketball has proved infectious in a
town where access to the president is the coin of the realm and
Washington insiders are already jockeying to receive an
invitation to play at the White House.
“Private time with the president is the Holy Grail in
Washington,” said Michael Feldman, former senior adviser to
Vice President Al Gore and a founder of the Glover Park Group,
a Washington-based public-relations firm. “There’s an awful
lot of people dusting off their high tops and spending a little
extra time stretching.”
There’s a risk to playing such a physical game with the
president, he said.
“You got to wonder if the Secret Service would be
thinking, ‘is that a tough foul?’” he said.
To contact the reporter on this story:
Kate Andersen in Washington at
kandersen7@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: June 20, 2009 00:01 EDT