La historia de Lusia Harris se pone cada vez mejor: ahora acaba de ganar un Oscar. Y así como lo hizo Kobe Bryant hace cuatro años en otra categoría, Shaquille O’Neal puede decir que ahora él también es ganador de un Oscar. Con O’Neal y Stepehn …
Y así como lo hizo Kobe Bryant hace cuatro años en otra categoría, Shaquille O’Neal puede decir que ahora él también es ganador de un Oscar.
Con O’Neal y Stepehn Curry, un par de leyendas del basquetbol, como parte de los productores ejecutivos y principales promotores, la película de 22 minutos “The Queen of Basketball” ganó el Premio de la Academia para mejor documental corto este domingo.
Esto se da, aproximadamente, dos meses después de la muerte de Harris, quien fue la primera mujer en la historia del basquetbol de mujeres en anotar una canasta en Juegos Olímpicos y fue la primera mujer seleccionada oficialmente por un equipo de la NBA. Ben Proudfoot dirigió el corto, que educó incluso a algunos de los más fervorosos fans del basquetbol sobre la historia de esta mujer que marcó la historia.
The Queen of Basketball — which delved into the life of Lusia “Lucy” Harris, who won championships at Delta State and became the first and only woman selected in the NBA draft — took home the Academy Award for Documentary short subject. #Oscarshttps://t.co/fwbslinNND
Traducción: “La reina del basquetbol” –que ahonda en la vida de Lusia “Lucy” Harris, quien ganó campeonatos con Delta State y se convirtió en la primera y única mujer en ser seleccionada en un draft de la NBA– se llevó a casa el Premio de la Academia al mejor documental corto. Traducción de recuadro: Luisa Harris es una pionera del basquetbol a quien casi olvidamos. Shaq quiere que… Luisa Harris murió esta semana de forma inesperada. Shaq es el productor ejecutivo de un documental sobre Harris y quería darle la experiencia de alfombra roja…
“Si hay alguien allá afuera que todavía dude sobre si hay público para las mujeres atletas y cuestione si sus historias son valiosas o entretenidas o importantes… que este Premio de la Academia sea la respuesta”, estas fueron las palabras de Proudfoot en la ceremonia de premios en Los Angeles.
Harris forma parte del Salón de la Fama Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, al igual que O’Neal. Pero incluso el cuatro veces campeón de la NBA, considerado por muchos como uno de los mejores de la historia de este deporte, no conocía la historia de Harris.
A principios de este mes, O’Neal declaró que “al principio no sabía quién era ella”.
Muy pocos lo sabían.
Pero la película, y el hecho de que O’Neal y Curry, la estrella de Golden State que a principios de este mes llevó unos tenis con la frase “Queen Lucy”, se involucraran en el proyecto, ayudó a que la historia se fuera contando cada vez más y más.
En la década de 1970, Harris ayudó a Delta State University a ganar tres campeonatos nacionales seguidos y ganó una medalla de plata para Estados Unidos en los Juegos Olímpicos de Montreal 1976. Los New Orleans Jazz seleccionaron a Harris en la séptima ronda del Draft de 1977, pero estaba embarazada y nunca pasó por el proceso de intentar llegar al equipo.
Su familia estuvo presente este domingo en la ceremonia de los premios.
Proudfoot aprovechó el momento de su discurso para hacer un llamado al Presidente Joe Biden para que obtenga la liberación de Brittney Griner, la dos veces ganadora de medalla olímpica de oro y una de las mejores jugadoras de basquetbol, quien ha sido encarcelada en Rusia. A mediados de febrero se reportó que Griner fue detenida a su llegada al aeropuerto de Moscú, después de que las autoridades rusas revisaran su equipaje y encontraran unos cartuchos de vapeo que, supuestamente, contenían aceite derivado de cannabis.
Bajo la ley rusa, Griner podría enfrentarse hasta a 10 años en prisión.
“Presidente Biden, traiga a Brittney Griner a casa,” dijo Proudfoot.
Proper recognition for the achievements of Lusia “Lucy” Harris has been a long time coming, but it happened emphatically tonight at the Academy Awards. The Queen of Basketball, which documents Harris’s unsung accomplishment as one of the greatest …
Kristian Winfield @Krisplashed
Seth Curry is going to play through the pain, but the Nets can’t afford for him to get hurt.
New for @NYDNSports: A look at the shooters on Brooklyn’s roster not named Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving shows just how important a healthy Curry is. nydailynews.com/sports/basketb… – 7:26 PM
Alex Schiffer @Alex__Schiffer
Nets starters vs. Charlotte: Irving, Curry, Durant, Brown and Drummond.
This starting five is 3-1 this season, including last night’s 110-95 road victory in Miami. – 7:03 PM
Dave Early @DavidEarly
“We just gotta do the best we can and manage his health the rest of the way and hopefully he can maintain a level of comfort playing through some discomfort…. it’s not where it’s debilitating.”
#nets coach Steve Nash on managing Seth Curry’s ongoing ankle soreness. pic.twitter.com/FTcLP1d6k0 – 6:11 PM
Dave Early @DavidEarly
Steve Nash says the team doesn’t have the luxury to rest Seth Curry when it might be ideal to. They’ll need to manage his health moving forwards given the ongoing ankle issue. – 5:50 PM
Dave Early @DavidEarly
Nets updates to the Status Report for tonight’s game vs. Charlotte:
Curry (left ankle sprain) – AVAILABLE
Dragic (left knee soreness) – AVAILABLE – 5:45 PM
Alex Schiffer @Alex__Schiffer
Nets status report for tonight’s game. LaMarcus Aldridge isn’t on it and appears available to play: Dragic (left knee soreness) – PROBABLE
Curry (left ankle sprain) – QUESTIONABLE
Harris (left ankle surgery) – OUT
Simmons (return to competition reconditioning/back soreness) – OUT – 1:38 PM
Brian Mahoney @briancmahoney
First time this season, the Nets’ notes for a home game don’t have Kyrie Irving listed here.
STATUS UPDATES: Goran Dragić (left knee soreness) is PROBABLE. Seth Curry (left ankle sprain) is QUESTIONABLE. Joe Harris (left ankle surgery) and Ben Simmons (back soreness) are OUT. – 12:44 PM
Kristian Winfield @Krisplashed
Goran Dragic is probable and Seth Curry is questionable for tonight’s game against the Hornets. This is particularly encouraging for Dragic* because it’s the second game of a back to back. Curry said his ankle situation will linger for the rest of the season. – 12:40 PM
Ajayi Browne @ajayibrowne
FINAL: Nets 110, Heat 92
Kevin Durant (23 PTS, 5 ASTS), Seth Curry (17 PTS, 5 3PM) and the Nets defeat the first seeded Miami Heat. Five players for Brooklyn notched double-digits in scoring, but it was the team’s dominant second quarter that set the tone for the entire game. – 10:27 PM
Ajayi Browne @ajayibrowne
End of 3rd QTR: Nets 96, Heat 68
Kevin Durant (23 PTS, 5 ASTS), Seth Curry (17 PTS, 5 3PM) and the Nets are SPANKING the Heat. It’s like every time you blink Brooklyn forces a turnover and in all they have forced 16 turnovers. The Nets have 21 assists in all right now too. – 10:02 PM
Alex Schiffer @Alex__Schiffer
Service went out. In short, Nets are up 94-57. Curry and Claxton continue to provide good support to Irving and Durant. Curry hitting 3s you’d expect a member of that family to hit. – 9:48 PM
Alex Schiffer @Alex__Schiffer
Nash has staggered Dragic today with Irving and Durant. In there now with Durant, Claxton, Brown and Curry. Nets up 17. – 9:03 PM
Shaquille O’Neal, who became a partial owner of the Sacramento Kings in 2013, announced on social media Wednesday that he has officially sold his interest in the NBA club. O’Neal, 49, who retired from the NBA in 2011 and was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2016, posted on his official Twitter page that in order to pursue a business interest in the sports gambling world, he had to leave the Kings. “As a result of a new business endeavor, I was required by NBA rules to sell my interest in the Sacramento Kings. I want to thank the fans, the city of Sacramento, Vivek Ranadive and the entire Kings organization for our great partnership. I loved being an owner of such a forward thinking organization and I hope to be back someday,” O’Neal tweeted. “I was fortunate to have Arctos help me with this transaction. I’m sure they will be a great partner for Vivek, the Kings and the NBA going forward. -via ESPN / January 13, 2022
The world unexpectedly lost Lusia “Lucy” Harris on Jan. 18, just four days after our interview with her.
The story you’re reading was supposed to be in the works for the next few weeks, maybe even months.
If all went accordingly, maybe you would have read this on Feb. 8, which is when we will learn whether the recent film The Queen of Basketball receives an Oscar nomination for Best Documentary (Short Subject). Or perhaps we would have even waited until March 27 and released this interview in tandem with the Academy Awards.
We had a good reason for the waiting: Lusia “Lucy” Harris, the delightfully charming subject of the doc, had never met Shaquille O’Neal, who signed on to be an executive producer of the doc and has championed it in interviews.
“I haven’t had a chance to talk directly with him,” Harris told me on Jan. 14. “But I have read some of the comments that he’s said, and I am very honored and pleased and overwhelmed. I think his platform can do a lot to promote this documentary. I’m certainly looking forward to meeting Mr. O’Neal.”
We wanted to tell the story of that meeting: Two ebullient basketball legends filling up a room with stories and big, echoing laughter.
Harris, O’Neal and the world were robbed of that moment when Harris died unexpectedly Jan. 18, four days after our interview. Her family – she has two sons and two daughters – was in talks to take their mother on a surprise trip to meet Shaq. Now, they must grieve even as the film about their mother does the work of telling a story that was nearly lost to time.
Harris won multiple national championships for Delta State University in Mississippi, scored the first points by a woman in Olympic basketball and had the honor of becoming the first and only woman officially selected in the NBA draft.
All that came before the WNBA was a wish – the NCAA didn’t even sanction women’s basketball back then – and Harris settled into a quiet, albeit at times troubled, life (she discusses her bipolar disorder diagnosis in the film).
She was one of the most dominant athletes on the planet, with nowhere to play. The game never got to fully see what Harris could have accomplished.
O’Neal wanted The Queen of Basketball (directed by Ben Proudfoot for the New York Times) to help give Harris her flowers while she could still smell them. He spoke about his desire to give Harris her red carpet moment, though he knew it was long overdue. He hoped it would finally help her get the recognition she deserved for everything that she gave to the sport.
“For me, it’s a triumph in resurrecting the career of one of the greatest American athletes of the 20th century,” said O’Neal, who recently spoke to For The Win about the film. “But it’s also tragic because it reminds us of what we had lost.”
Now it feels like we’ve lost that all over again. Harris was 66 years old and finally able to tell her full story. She died four days after we talked. It was her final interview.
***
Harris was born in a small town in Mississippi in 1955. She grew to 6-foot-3 and became a standout high school basketball player who would sometimes literally outscore the entire opposing team. While she hoped to attend Alcorn State University, an HBCU, there was no women’s basketball team. She decided on Delta State instead.
The school enjoyed a 51-game winning streak while she was on the team, handily defeating much bigger programs like LSU en route to winning three consecutive national championships between 1975 and 1977.
Watching her play the game feels like watching an unbeatable titan clashing against anything and everything that stood in its way. During one of her collegiate campaigns, Harris was able to average an absurd mark of 31.2 points and 15.1 rebounds per game.
“When I think about my basketball career, I think about all of the places that I had the opportunity to travel to and the people that I met — my teammates. It was an awesome opportunity to get a chance to travel,” Harris said. “And getting a chance to go to the Olympics and also getting a chance to play in Madison Square Garden — that was awesome.”
Harris did more than just play at Madison Square Garden, though. She scored 47 points, which was the most points that any player — including pros — scored at the arena in 1976. She also did more than just simply go to the Olympics. She was actually the leading scorer and rebounder for the first Team USA Women’s Basketball squad to participate in the Olympics.
The following year, in 1977, Harris won the inaugural Honda-Broderick Cup (given to the top female athlete in college sports, later won by the likes of Katie Ledecki, Misty May and Mia Hamm). It was also the year that she was selected by the New Orleans Jazz in the NBA draft.
“That was a tremendous honor to be drafted in the NBA,” said Harris. “But I think I had other ideas at that time. I don’t think that I was really ready to play against a men’s team. I had my family in mind. I wanted to be with my family.”
Unfortunately, with her college days behind her, Harris quickly realized that she was without a job. She eventually found more stability as an admissions counselor, returning to work at Delta State.
Years later, in 1992, escorted by her favorite player, Oscar Robertson, Harris officially became the first black woman inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.
While it was a nice tribute to everything she did for a sport that she both loved and excelled in, without the infrastructure in place, it’s still difficult to process that Harris was never able to turn the prowess she had for the game into a career or monetize on any of that success.
“The world needs to know that the reason Lucy’s career was stuffed in a box at the back of an archive is simple,” O’Neal said. “Women athletes, especially Black women athletes, have been historically short-changed and denied opportunities.”
***
During her time at Delta State, the women’s basketball team would regularly draw sell-out crowds at home. Attendance would often double what the men’s team would earn.
Though the women’s team might have brought more money back to the university, Harris believed one of the reasons people weren’t as familiar with her story is because the games weren’t televised at the time.
A lifelong champion for female athletes, she was glad that has since changed, especially so she could enjoy watching some of her favorite players, like Brittney Griner and Skylar Diggins-Smith, whenever she wanted.
“Women’s basketball has come a long way, and I think it has a long way to go … For one thing, we get a chance to see women play on TV a whole lot more. That was unheard of when I was playing,” Harris said. “As far as having a long way to go, salaries could be better. Salary-wise, there is no comparison when it comes to WNBA and NBA players.”
Although she lamented the wage gap between the WNBA and the NBA, she said she especially enjoyed watching the United States women’s national basketball team whenever they played in the Olympics.
O’Neal says thanks to individuals like Harris, female athletes have significantly more opportunities now than they did when Harris played the game — which was just shortly after Title IX, prohibiting sex-based discrimination in schools, was signed into law. However, O’Neal also acknowledged there are still vast shortcomings.
“Because she was a trailblazer and had to fight and had to suffer through so many things, sports are a more fair place. It’s supposed to be a place of equality and merit and talent. It’s supposed to be a place free of racism and free of inequality,” O’Neal said. “Now, 50 years after Title IX, maybe it could be a good time to reassess how we’re doing on that.”
***
When both O’Neal and Harris were individually asked what they hoped viewers take away from the experience of watching the documentary, they both shared some enlightening perspectives.
Based on how much it hurt Harris to not play sports professionally like she could have if she were a man, it wasn’t surprising to learn the premium she placed on getting a college degree.
“You can make a living from being an athlete now. Things are different,” Harris said. “But I want them to understand that education is very important. In order to be successful, go ahead and get that education first so you can be able to go on just in case your athletic career doesn’t pan out. You’ll have another career you can make a living from.”
Those are values that she instilled in each of her four children, all of whom were athletes.
Her son, Christopher Stewart, played college football at Notre Dame and played in the NFL before going back to Notre Dame Law School and becoming a lawyer. Another son, Eddie, has a master’s degree. Her daughter, Christina, has a doctorate. Christina’s twin, Crystal, received a doctorate in education from Delta State.
Harris said the documentary did a good job capturing the essence of what she shared with them.
“I was very pleased with the way things turned out and the way it was displayed and the way it was shown,” Harris said. “I was very pleased with it. It really was a walk down memory lane, and to see my children being a part of the documentary, I was very pleased to see that.”
O’Neal took a slightly different approach when asked what he wants people to think about when they watch the film. He wants viewers to reflect on the past so that as a society we can prevent any future athletes from getting denied the chance to earn a living playing the sport that they love.
“It kind of fills a huge gap in the history of basketball by finally telling the story,” O’Neal said. “It’s a story all of us need to think about and consider all of the talents like Lucy who were denied the opportunity to have a fulfilling and enriching career commensurate with their talents because they were women.”
“With Lucy’s story, you have to ask a question,” O’Neal added. “Who are we sidelining in sports today? How can we make sure what happened in Lucy’s time isn’t happening again?”
On this day in 1977, Lusia Harris-Stewart became the first and only woman ever selected in the NBA Draft.
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On this day in 1977, Lusia Harris-Stewart was drafted by the New Orleans Jazz in the seventh round of the NBA Draft, becoming the first and only woman ever selected by an NBA team.
During her four-year career at Delta State University, Harris-Stewart helped lead the Lady Statesmen to three AIAW national championships as she was a three-time All-American. She averaged 25.9 points and 14.4 rebounds and left with 15 team, single game and career records.
Harris-Stewart was a member of the United States national team that won the silver medal at the 1976 Olympic Games, the first-ever women’s basketball tournament in the Olympic Games. She led the team in points and rebounds that year.
She never suited up in the NBA with the Jazz and would later say that she never intended on participating in training camp but wondered what it would have been like to play in the WNBA had it been around at the time. She briefly in the Women’s Professional Basketball League.