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Milwaukee Bucks forward Yi Jianlian (R)
shoots over Atlanta Hawks forward forward Josh Smith in the first half at
their NBA basketball game in Atlanta, Georgia on November 28,
2007.(Xinhua/Reuters File Photo) Photo Gallery>>>
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BEIJING, April 11 -- China's youthful hoop sensation
Yi Jianlian had a roller-coaster first year in the NBA.
He dunked on Dirk Nowitzki and Gerald Wallace, and
his first match-up with Yao last November attracted 200 million viewers in
China. But like most rookies, his year was plagued by problems with consistency
and stamina as well as injuries.
However, his life
will be simpler after he joins the national team training camp in Beijing this
month, and the only target in his mind is to brush aside his Athens Games
nightmare this summer in Beijing.
As China's youngest player to play in the Olympics,
then 17-year-old Yi saw his game deteriorate, even though the team equaled its
best record in history with an eighth-place finish.
The skinny teenager averaged a miserable 2.2 points
and 3.1 rebounds in four games he started against international powerhouses,
leading team captain Yao Ming to publicly slam Yi and his teammates for being
"short of motivation" with "no winning desire at all".
"It was not a pleasant memory for me," Yi told
Basketball Pioneer newspaper. "I was too young to handle the things on and off
the court. I tried my best, but all I could do was get pushed away by those
European big men and I struggled to score a point. I was very disappointed about
it."
Despite cutting his season short due to a knee
injury, Yi said his first NBA journey, in which he averaged 8.6 points and 5.2
rebounds in 25 minutes per game, was a fruitful experience.
"I take the experience as a motivation for me. After
spending a whole season in the NBA, I am a lot stronger and have a better
understanding about the game.
"I am so happy to have a second chance to play in the
Olympics. I think that right now I'm just preparing my heart for it. I'm working
and struggling in practice to get my skills up to be ready for the Games. It's
definitely helping that I'm having this NBA experience."
The 21-year-old from Dongguan, Guangdong province,
spent his rookie season with the Milwaukee Bucks, having been the No 6 overall
draft pick last year. He is the main player expected to help all-star center Yao
in China's bid to improve upon its result in Athens.
Basketball has recently become China's most popular
sport, boasting massive support and exposure and an estimated 350 million fans.
But aside from its satisfying finish four years ago, China has never quite
gotten over the hump on the international stage, and after Yi and Yao, the
talent level drops off considerably.
State media have criticized the Chinese Basketball
Association (CBA) for its low quality and poor management having generated
precious few elite athletes since the 1990s.
The CBA's Most Valuable Player (MVP) Zhu Fangyu only
averaged 5.8 points and 3.3 rebounds per game at the Athens Games. His stats
improved slightly to 7.2 and 3.6, respectively, at the World Championships two
years later in Japan.
But Yi, the fourth Chinese player to join the NBA
after Menk Bateer, Wang Zhizhi and Yao, believes China has what it takes to
reach its Olympic goal of exceeding its Athens finish.
"Though we don't have so many NBA players like Spain
or Argentina, the improvement we made over the past four years gives us
confidence that we are able to play good basketball at the Games," he told
Sohu.com.
"The team played more international games than before
and all the players are more experienced and they have a lot of knowledge about
their overseas rivals. So I think we can be a force at the Games."
NBA experience
After a standoff with the lowly Bucks franchise
following the NBA draft in June, Yi, dubbed an "unofficial ambassador between
China and Milwaukee" by Bucks fans, started the first 48 games of the season,
averaging 8.7 points and 6.1 rebounds as a starter. It was the second-best
scoring average among all rookies, followed only by Seattle's presumptive Rookie
of the Year Kevin Durant.
But his performance suffered a steep decline after
the all-star break, as he was bothered by wrist and shoulder injuries. There was
speculation that he had hit the so-called "rookie wall."
Yi agreed it was a case of fatigue.
"I want to play good and that's what I'm trying to
do," Yi told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (jsonline.com) through his
interpreter. "Right now, the reason I feel I'm playing not so good is that I'm
tired. I've been playing since last summer, all through this season, all these
games without a stop."
Yi's coach and teammates can understand his
weariness.
"I just wanted him to keep his head up and chin up
and keep battling," Bucks coach Larry Krystkowiak told the Milwaukee paper. "It
was just a pat on the back and a reminder that all players go through different
stuff in the league - ups and downs - and to not let it get to him. He's as hard
on himself as anybody, so I was reminding him to have some patience with
himself."
"All rookies go through it, no matter who you are,"
Bucks point guard Mo Williams said. "It's a lot mental now. He has to just
continue to work and get better ... just get better with everything."
(Source: China Daily/Agencies)