(From The Huffington Post)

WASHINGTON — LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, Carmelo Anthony and other NBA all-stars joined President Barack Obama on Sunday to entertain wounded troops.

The basketball superstars were joined by some retired legends, including Bill Russell and Magic Johnson. College player Maya Moore of the Connecticut Huskies women’s team also played.

The game was played for a group of “wounded warriors” – troops injured in action – and participants in the White House’s mentoring program.

The action took place at a gym inside Washington’s Fort McNair, a short drive from the White House. The president was inside the gym for about two hours.

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(From Kiki Ryan for Politico.com)

Most past presidents have had a sport of choice: Richard Nixon loved to bowl and installed the White House bowling alley; Bill Clinton played golf; John F. Kennedy liked touch football; George W. Bush was a mountain biker. And while basketball may be thought of as President Barack Obama’s main game, a look at the first 18 months of his presidency (and a little bit before) reveals that he’s quite the athlete-in-chief — his wife and kids are pretty sporty, too.

Here, POLITICO takes a look at the Obamas’ sporting life.

President Obama shooting hoops.Basketball:

Obama, a power forward, often shoots hoops on the South Lawn of the White House, where he had a basketball court specially installed. He’s played with his staff, including former Duke basketball player Reggie Love, his daughters, and members of his administration — like the 6-foot-5-inch Secretary of Education Arne Duncan.

The family has taken in a number of basketball games as spectators, too. Obama was at the Verizon Center in January to catch the Duke-Georgetown game (he even visited announcers in the CBS booth). Shortly after moving into the White House, he caught his hometown team, the Chicago Bulls, play the Washington Wizards at the arena. More recently, Obama had a basketball double-header: he caught Washington’s WNBA team, the Mystics, at the Verizon Center with Sasha (who wore the team’s jersey) after playing a game of his own with an Army team at Fort McNair.

Obama’s love of the game is apparently contagious. While in Los Angeles in June, the first lady took her mother and daughters to watch the Lakers play in Game Six of the NBA Finals. (Sasha and Malia brought home a jersey signed by Lakers coach Phil Jackson for Father’s Day.)

And don’t forget Obama’s brother-in-law, Craig Robinson, the head coach at Oregon State University. The entire family watched the Beavers take on George Washington University in November.

Tennis:

Both FLOTUS and POTUS like to volley.

While appearing on “The Jay Leno Show” last October, Michelle told Leno that there’s nothing about Barack that bothers her, calling him “perfect.” Except for one thing: when he beats her at tennis. “He beats me quite often,” she said. “That gets to be pretty annoying.”

The competition between the couple most certainly comes out on vacation. Last month, while vacationing in Maine, the first family visited the Bar Harbor Club to hit the court. During their vacation last summer on Martha’s Vineyard, the family played on the private tennis court nestled into their rental property. In Hawaii last Christmas, the first couple played at the Kailua Racquet Club, too.

Daughters Sasha and Malia resisted tennis at first, Michelle Obama recently told Ladies’ Home Journal. “But now they’re starting to get better, and they actually like it,” she said.

When not playing with the family, Michelle has also played on several occasions with her chief of staff—and pal—Susan Sher. (And since we’re on the topic, her garden even contains tennis ball lettuces.)

Baseball:

Safe to say Obama’s arms are better at throwing up three-pointers than tossing out pitches. In April, President Obama threw the first pitch at Nationals Park “a little high and outside,” as he described it. Last summer, at the All-Star game, he also threw a ceremonial pitch: the ball barely made it to the plate.

Still, he’s a fan. Obama frequently wears Chicago White Sox gear—even when the Nationals are involved. He wore his Sox cap for his pitch in April; in June, he cheered on the South Side Chicago team, again wearing his cap, as they played the Nats.

Michelle Obama seems to like the sport too. She and Jill Biden joined Yogi Berra as he threw out the opening pitch at Game 1 of the World Series last year. FLOTUS has also visited Camden Yards in Baltimore, where she pitched and caught and hung out with kids at a “Let’s Move” event.

Golf:

Obama may not be as golf-crazed as some presidents, but as of last month, he’d played 41 rounds since taking office. During a two-month stretch earlier this year, he played golf eight out of nine weekends. While in Washington, he heads to the course at Andrews Air Force Base, often with White House Trip Director Marvin Nicholson. And as with tennis, he uses his vacation time to play, too. He hit the green multiple times in Hawaii over Christmas and last summer in Martha’s Vineyard.

Soccer:

It’s fair to call Obama a soccer dad. He and Michelle are frequently spotted on the weekends cheering on both daughters, who play here in town.

Bowling:

Actually, let’s not go there. Who can forget Obama’s dismal game during the Pennsylvania primary, when he bowled a 37 with repeated gutter balls? That’s one sport Obama should drop.

(More Photos.)

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(From The Huffington Post)

President Obama with daughter Sasha

President Obama and Sasha were able to work in some daddy-daughter time this weekend (before she heads off to Spain with mom), attending an WNBA game on Sunday. They were joined by one of Sasha’s girlfriends and president of the Washington Mystics Sheila Johnson. For those wondering, the Mystics beat the Tulsa Shock, 87-62. Check out some pics of Barack and Sasha watching the game, and the president presumably explaining the facts of basketball to his youngest girl.

(PHOTOS at original article)

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(From the Associated Press Online)

Image: Obama
President Barack Obama speaks with Washington Mystics owner Sheila Johnson, far right, during a Washington-Tulsa WNBA game on Sunday. Obama’s daughter, Sasha, is in the middle. (JIM WATSON / AFP – Getty Images)

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama checked out the WNBA’s Washington Mystics on Sunday after spending the morning shooting some hoops himself.

Obama, his daughter Sasha and a friend of Sasha’s had courtside seats for a women’s basketball game between the Mystics and the Tulsa Shock at the Verizon Center in downtown Washington. Sasha and her friend, whom the White House declined to identify, both wore Mystics jerseys.

The crowd at the arena roared when the scoreboard showed the president’s arrival. Obama chatted during the game with Mystics owner Ted Leonsis and team president Sheila Johnson.

Obama and his party left the arena a few minutes before the end of the game, which the Mystics won, 87-62.

After the game, Mystics player Marissa Coleman told reporters: “The only two times I’ve noticed who was courtside was when LeBron (James) was here, and obviously today. And today’s was even worse. It’s just kind of a surreal thing to look over and see the President of the United States sitting courtside.”

Earlier Sunday, Obama played basketball against an Army team at Fort McNair in the District of Columbia.

Obama has attended basketball games at the Verizon Center before. In January he had front-row seats for a Duke-Georgetown game, and even sat in with CBS’ announcers for about seven minutes. Last year, he saw his hometown Chicago Bulls lose a game to the Washington Wizards at the arena.

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(From Sean Gregory for Time Magazine Online)


Craig Robinson, head basketball coach at Oregon State University
Melissa Golden / Bloomberg News / Getty Images

Craig Robinson was thrust into the national spotlight two summers ago after he introduced his sister, Michelle Obama, before her speech at the Democratic National Convention. Though he receives plenty of attention for his family ties, the first brother-in-law has built an impressive career in his own right. Ten years ago the former investment banker left a high-paying finance gig to chase his dream of coaching basketball. Now, Robinson is head man at Oregon State University, where he has led an impressive turnaround of what was once a sad-sack program. Robinson talked to TIME about his family, his career, and his new memoir, A Game of Character.

A significant portion of the book is dedicated to describing the lessons you learned from your father, Fraser, who passed away in 1991. What was it like, emotionally, to write about him?

I wanted to pay tribute to the lessons he taught us. A good example was my dad’s relentlessness. He was a guy who worked a shift job, sometimes double shifts, and he still had the energy to come home and play with his kids, whether it was on the floor, with the dolls with my sister, or throwing the ball around.

How do you think your parents’ example has helped your sister, and perhaps impacted her relationship with the President?

I don’t like to speak for her. She has her own way of managing things, but it’s really nice is to see her as a mother. It’s like watching my mom raise her kids. I think both she and Barack are very grounded. I love the give and take and [their] partnership. Everyone’s relationship should be like that. It has to be a partnership. One person can’t be the friend, [with] the other person being friended all the time.

What was the relationship like between your father and President Obama?

It was brief. My dad was the kind of guy who could get along with many different constituencies, many different intellects. He was never worried about station in life when it came to having a relationship with [someone]. He got along with Barack just as well as he did with everyone else in the family.

How did your dad influence your decision to become a basketball player at Princeton?

I was fortunate to have a couple of offers. One was from the University of Washington, one was from Princeton. But Princeton doesn’t have athletic scholarships. So I picked the University of Washington because I thought it would save my folks like $4,000. So my dad did what dads do when you make the wrong decision. He sort of did one of these chin rubs, looked down and said, “Why don’t you think about that?” And I went to bed and thought about it and realized that I did want to go to Princeton, I just didn’t want him to have to pay. And as soon as I said that he said, “Ok, you’re going to Princeton.” That showed sacrifice. 

You and I both played basketball in college for Pete Carril, the Hall of Fame basketball coach who won over 500 games at Princeton. Characterize his impact on your life, and give me your favorite Carril story.

When I came to Princeton, I was your typical city kid who already thought he was a basketball player. Thank goodness coach Carril wasn’t one of those coaches who would just shun you if you didn’t agree with what he thought. He was tough and he made sure I knew that I didn’t know anything about the game. He rebuilt me into a player. I always tell people I really learned to play from him.

My best Carril story was I came back from Europe, where my team in England had allowed me to do some coaching. It was the first time I thought I wanted to be a coach. I was thinking, ‘I’m good at it and I love teaching, talking about the game of basketball.’ So on my way home to Chicago I stopped off at Princeton to say hello to coach Carril. I said, ‘coach, I know what I want to do, I want to be a coach.’ And he said ‘you don’t want to be a [blank] coach’ — and you can fill in the words — and I was stunned. But later on, when I sat back and thought about what he was saying, he wasn’t being malicious. He just saw this kid from the south side of Chicago work his way through Princeton, and get this opportunity to play in Europe, then he’s coming back and he’s going to be all basketball. He wanted me to have some other experiences.

Coach Carril wasn’t afraid to be critical of his players. What was the one thing he harped in on with you?

He thought I wouldn’t run as fast as I could all the time. So he called me “Grandfather Time.” Not “Father Time,” but “Grandfather.” Only he could take Father Time to the next level.

Your sister enrolled at Princeton two years after you did. What was that like?

It was a lot of fun having a familial support system there, although she probably had fewer boyfriends because I was around. Not because I chased them off, but you know how it is. If your big brother is around and you’re in college, it’s different. She was probably glad when I left.

On a scale of one-to-10, where do you fall in the “boyfriend interference” department?

I was like a three; I didn’t have to interfere. She could take care of herself.

Perhaps the most interesting part of your biography is your decision to leave investment banking to take a relatively low-paying assistant coaching job at Northwestern University. So many people want to chase their dream but don’t do it. How did you manage that?

It was a tough decision but it wasn’t a difficult decision. I had always thought, at some point in my life, I would work at a Wall Street firm, save enough money to send my kids to college, and go teach seventh grade and coach high school basketball. When I was thinking about leaving investment banking, I had this inflated sense of what my kids thought that was. They had no idea what investment banking was. All they knew is that I would get up and go to work in a suit.

So when I was making the change to coaching, I discussed it with them. And if they had any kind of reservations, if they started to cry, I might not have done it. I said to my son, ‘Listen, I might be changing jobs.’ He thought for a minute, and said, ‘Huh. What are you doing?’ I said I was going to be a basketball coach. He paused, and he said, “Does that mean your office is a gym?” And I said, ‘No, not exactly. My office is going to be next to the gym.’ And my daughter, who was 3 at the time, says ‘Do they have a pool?’ I said, ‘Yes, they do.’” And that was when I knew I could make the change.

You grew up playing basketball in the parks, and people often lament that today, kids don’t just go out and play. Is that good for basketball?

I don’t think so. You learn stuff playing outside, where there’s some ramifications to losing. When you come into the gym, you’ve got 12 guys, you just play. If you lose, who cares? If you went to the park, and it was the only court and you lost, you were off for an hour-and-a-half. Then you played harder. You got better.

How has your connection to the First Family helped your basketball team?

People like to talk about it, therefore they like to hear from the coach at Oregon State. So we get a little publicity from that. But elite high-major basketball players never pick their school based on who the coach is related to. They pick it on ‘How is this guy going to get me to the next level?’” So it helps us from a brand management and marketing standpoint. But to get kids to come, we have to prove to them we are going to be a winning program, that they’re going to get playing time.

You were out on the road campaigning quite a bit during the ‘08 election. What did you take away from that experience?

What I learned from that is you can’t assume people have a specific political vision based on who they are, where they live, what they drive, where they work. I was surprised to see how many people were willing to listen to new ideas. I never would have thought that if I didn’t get the opportunity to get out there and meet those folks.

Do you speak to the president often?

Not as often as I would like. He does call me after big wins, so I know he is paying attention. That’s all I can ask for. I talk to my sister more often.

Have those conversations changed since she’s become First Lady?

Not really. The conversations are what you think they would be among close members of a family. We talk about the kids, we talk about the schooling, we talk about how each other is doing and that’s pretty much it. We try to keep it as regular as it can be.


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