Sunday, June 20, 2010

Manute Bol dies at 47; towering NBA player provided aid to his native Sudan

"Sudan and the world have lost a hero and an example for all of us," Prichard said.

Bol was a 7-foot-6 curiosity when he was drafted in 1985 by the then-Washington Bullets. He was so thin that during his NFL New York Giants ookie season then-Dallas coach Dick Motta told the Washington Post that Bol would "break like a grasshopper … an arm here, a leg over there" once he ran into a typical NBA opponent.

But Bol lasted 10 seasons, playing for four teams. His enormous wingspan made blocking shots his specialty, and he set a record with 397 blocks his first season.

"He made a career out of something that people saw in the beginning as a circus act," Chris Mullin, a close friend and former teammate, told the New York Daily News in 2004.

Bol's most lasting legacy may be his efforts to use his celebrity to improve conditions in war-torn Sudan.

"God guided me to America and gave me a good job," he told Sports Illustrated in 2004. "But he also gave me a heart so I would look back."

He was born Oct. 16, 1962, in Gogrial, Sudan, and had a biography unmatched by the backgrounds of any of his fellow NBA players. A member of the Dinka tribe and the descendant of chiefs, Bol NFL New Orleans Saints nce killed a lion with a spear while herding cows.

Don Feeley, who coached at Fairleigh Dickinson University, found Bol in 1982 at a coaching clinic in Sudan. The then-San Diego Clippers drafted Bol in 1983 before he had even played in college. Bol eventually enrolled at the University of Bridgeport, a Division II school in Connecticut. He played one season and then signed with a summer pro league in Rhode Island before being drafted by Washington.

As a rookie in Washington, Bol got a chance to play regularly when starting center Jeff Ruland was hurt. He started 60 games that season, which would be a career high.

Bol spent three seasons in Washington before being traded to the Golden State Warriors. After two seasons there, he was dealt to the Philadelphia 76ers, where he played for three seasons. Bol spent the 1993-94 season with Miami, Washington and Philadelphia. He played five games for NFL New York Jets lden State in the 1994-95 season.

He used his NBA career to support his extended family and relief efforts in Sudan.

"I don't like war," he told the New York Times in 2001. "I used to, but not anymore."
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