of Recent articles about GQNew Orleans Pelicans star Zion Williamson opens about his love when it comesto the point where it becomes the focus of the entire feature.
You might think I’m joking, but only two paragraphs show something like this:
Williamson speaks of Naruto with the same reverence that other NBA players speak of the Bible. This past year has been an unusually turbulent one for any other star’s career, but Naruto was his North Star.
That “tumultuous” year saw Williamson injured, unable to recover, weighing heavily, And his future in New Orleans (and in the league itself) was always in question.zion is clear For real really like when it comesto the point where he appeared at a Comic-Con panel in Hokage robes, and The fact that he takes great credit for it to help him recover and prepare for the next season.
However, what really caught my attention in this feature is this (emphasis mine):
Zion estimates that about 80% of the league’s players are into anime.they just don’t admit itThose familiar with the conventions of the format know that it is difficult to create a genre more suited to professional athletes. (Dragon Ball Z) to fight alien warlords. They are not the same goals that drive athletes.
Its stats are both wild and completely reliable. Most NBA players are in their 20s. By that, they mean that anime grew up far beyond its (often unfair) weeb associations, growing up in a culture that liked Japanese series. dragon ball z It’s not just a piece of furniture, but it resonates with the young black men who make up the bulk of the league..
Now, I’m not going to say Zion is the only NBA player to publicize his love for anime.Here’s Stephen Adams in 2016.
Even more famous is 2018 superstar Joel Embiid. Relaxing pre-match routine:
And that’s before entering the lineup of small but important players. on record to talk about their love dragon ball zlike Embiid teammate Tobias Harris and Cavaliers forward Lauri Markkanen.
But 80% of Zion He’s in his third season in the league and has had enough discussions in the locker room and training courts to at least make a good guess. In the NBA he has 450 players, and in the anime his fan base is in the hundreds instead of the dozens. Pre-fight dance He can, and maybe should, watch a lot more, including routines and post-fight interview quotes. slam dunk, players with nicknames from kill la kill Instead of old DC comics.
Perhaps many players still feel attached to some sort of stigma of looking nerdy and weakened by (outdated and inaccurate) associations. If the two biggest and meanest people in the series can be here like this, anyone can.