Page 4 June 13, 2018 More Than a Game C ontinued froM f ront Now I did great but if you can ex- pose them at 15-16-17 years old, that makes it even better,” he said. Bowie, 31, is also an Adidas trainer who hosts his own camps worldwide to train clients from high school to NBA players. “Player development is crucial for your AAU season because in the summer, that’s when you get better at any sport. If you’re just playing games, games, games for exposure it might be ok but you’re not getting better at your individ- ual skills. So that’s what we do too,” he said. Bowie appreciates the support he’s received from parents and some of the high school coaches that he has worked with to recruit participants. Two of his players are from Sherwood High School, located 32 miles southwest of Portland, where Head Coach Ra- him Tufts has been behind them “100 percent,” a rare bid of sup- port among high school and AAU coaches, he said. Providing Insurance and Financial Services Home Office, Bloomington, Illinois 61710 Ernest J. Hill, Jr. Agent 4946 N. Vancouver Avenue, Portland, OR 97217 503 286 1103 Fax 503 286 1146 ernie.hill.h5mb@statefarm.com 24 Hour Good Neighbor Service R State Farm R C annon ’ s r ib e xpress 5410 NE 33rd Ave, Portland, Or Call to Order: 503-288-3836 Open (hours) Sun-Thurs: 11a-8p Fri-Sat: 11a- 9p Cannon’s, tasty food and friendly neighborhood atmosphere. Jamison Guerra, a sophomore at Sherwood, is one of the top point guards in the state, Bowie said , and got invited to the 150 Phenom Invite Only, which is a national youth basketball devel- opment camp that has been known to churn out hundreds of NBA and collegiate players in the past. Guerra will play at the 150 Phen- om game in San Diego in August. Dakota Reber, a sophomore from Wilsonville, and Omari Maulana, a freshman from Life Christian Academy in Tacoma, Wash. have both gotten interest from Division I schools, Bowie said. He said Maulana, who was named one of the top ninth grade ball players in the state of Wash- ington, went from being picked on to getting invited to the Cross- roads Invitation in Indianapolis, an elite basketball camp for high school freshmen and sophomores, in Indiana, where he made it to the championship game. Bowie said he was inspired to help kids reach their hoop dreams from his own upbringing in Kan- sas City, Kan. “Wyandotte County [Kansas] is a rough area. It’s not really condu- cive to get out. And I say that be- cause a lot of people just don’t get help. People that made it before me just don’t really help. And so... with the family backing me, and me making pro, I felt like if I give them the blue print, then those kids that’s playing under me and those kids that I’m training can be better than me and have an easier road to go pro.” Bowie, who developed a pas- sion for basketball at an early age, broke his high school’s scoring record at Washington High School in Kansas with 38 points in a game against Olathe South High School in Olathe, Kan. He went on to play for Colby Community College in Kansas, a Nation Junior College Athletic Association First Divi- sion school where he won numer- his career. The Adidas International Elite 16U team performed in an Adidas Gauntlet tournament last month where they walked away winning three games and losing two. Lat- er this month they will be playing games in Canada, then In July they will be heading to Wichita, Kan., where they will play at the Mullens Invitational competing against the top 32 teams in the na- photo by J eff h inds Tacoma-based ninth grader Omari Maulana, who is part of Nate Bowie’s Adidas International elite 16U team playing out of Portland, was selected as one of the top ninth grade basketball players in Washington, got an invite to an elite Crossroads bas- ketball competition in Indianapolis, Indiana, and has already had interest from college recruiters. ous awards and distinctions from 2004-2006. He then joined University of Central Arkansas’s NCAA Di- vision 1 team in 2006 where he attained further accolades as a high point scoring player before beginning his professional bas- ketball career with the Vancouver BC Titans, in Canada, in 2008. He was mostly known for playing the point guard position throughout tion. After that, they’ll be driving up to Bowie’s home town in Kansas City where they’ll compete in the Verbal Commits Sunflower Show- case, a tournament that has hosts elite basketball players for the purpose of college recruitment. The Elite team members will then go back to their respective high school teams when school ball starts its regular season in the fall.