It seems almost unfair that a player who stands 7-foot-6 should
find his stature growing by the day. Yao Ming served as a
figurative ambassador from China in his first All-Star appearance
in 2003, and here he is again, dusting off the welcome mat for his
adopted hometown.
The NBA has descended on Houston this weekend for its annual
All-Star event and, whether he likes it or not, Yao is again front
and center. He is making his fourth straight start for the Western
Conference and will be joined by a record-breaking five
international All-Stars.
Of the numerous exciting stories here -- Detroit represented by
four players; Flip Saunders flopping over to the Eastern Conference
sidelines; Chauncey Billups, Richard Hamilton, Pau Gasol, Tony
Parker and Chris Bosh all earning their first trips -- Yao still
manages to be in the spotlight.
"The league has been looking for a global face and Yao is just
that," said nine-time All-Star Kevin Garnett, by way of an
explanation.
Yao was admittedly nervous as a first-time All-Star in Atlanta,
and he played verbal ping-pong with the media. Asked then what he
most wanted to do, he answered "I would like to leave this place as
soon as possible," in rapid-fire Chinese.
Flash forward to Friday's interview session, where he was asked
the same question: "Get here for the media on time," he replied in
English.
There is a certain mischief and pride to his words that Tracy
McGrady also projected while seated at a nearby table. McGrady had
planned to skip the media event to deal with "personal family
issues," but apparently relented under pressure from the league.
The two Rockets All-Stars are ambassadors for Houston, which,
though not a destination city, has been a playground for the
sporting world recently.
The Super Bowl, World Series, PGA Tour Championship, and Major
League Baseball's All-Star Game have all happened here in the past
three years. Yao and McGrady were counted on to make this a
basketball city again, similar to the mid-1990s when the "Clutch
City" Rockets won back-to-back NBA championships.
Earlier this season, there was talk of the Rockets challenging
San Antonio and Dallas for Western Conference supremacy after last
year's 51-31 run, but injuries to Yao and McGrady have destroyed
that dream. Though the Rockets initially won seven of eight with
both players back, they stumbled into the All-Star break following
a 109-75 pasting by Phoenix.
So, with little to celebrate as a team, the focus is on Yao and
McGrady. On Houston itself. On the NBA's ever-growing international
presence. All of which seem to lead back to Yao.
He was the league's top vote-getter for the All-Star game with
2,342,738 votes. His mother and father, who live with him in the
suburbs, opened Yao Restaurant and Bar in west Houston early last
year.
Yao recommends "everything" on the menu but says he doesn't have
any favorites.
"I would gain a lot of weight, you know?" he said.
And that, of course, would only make him a bigger spectacle.
(Agency via China Daily February 20, 2006)