duncan228
03-25-2010, 04:58 PM
Nice piece on Gasol, from the March 29 Sports Illustrated. It's long, hit the link for the rest of it.
http://i.cdn.turner.com/sivault/si_online/covers/images/2010/0329_thumb.jpg
The Power Of Pau (http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1167642/1/index.htm)
A philanthropic, opera-loving, multilingual former medical school student, Lakers power forward Pau Gasol has a game that is as refined and varied as his tastes
Lee Jenkins
Sports Illustrated
Pau Gasol walked out of class on Nov. 8, 1991, not sure where he was headed. It was recess at Escola Llor, the private school he attended in suburban Barcelona, and students were starting a soccer match. Gasol wandered the perimeter of the field as if in slow motion, neither playing nor watching, enveloped in a fog that was emanating from a foreign metropolis 6,000 miles to the west. He tried to comprehend the words and letters he had just heard in class: Magic Johnson and HIV. "I was deep in thought," Gasol says. "I was trying to figure out what it meant and what I should do. It was one of those moments that sticks in your mind and stays there your whole life."
For many of today's athletes, too young to have seen a president assassinated or remember a space shuttle falling from the sky, it was the first such moment. When the fog finally lifted, Gasol came to a conclusion about his future. He did not decide then that he would move to Los Angeles and play for the Lakers and lead them to a NBA championship.
He decided that he would become a doctor and try to cure AIDS. He was 11.
Keep Reading (http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1167642/1/index.htm)
http://i.cdn.turner.com/sivault/si_online/covers/images/2010/0329_thumb.jpg
The Power Of Pau (http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1167642/1/index.htm)
A philanthropic, opera-loving, multilingual former medical school student, Lakers power forward Pau Gasol has a game that is as refined and varied as his tastes
Lee Jenkins
Sports Illustrated
Pau Gasol walked out of class on Nov. 8, 1991, not sure where he was headed. It was recess at Escola Llor, the private school he attended in suburban Barcelona, and students were starting a soccer match. Gasol wandered the perimeter of the field as if in slow motion, neither playing nor watching, enveloped in a fog that was emanating from a foreign metropolis 6,000 miles to the west. He tried to comprehend the words and letters he had just heard in class: Magic Johnson and HIV. "I was deep in thought," Gasol says. "I was trying to figure out what it meant and what I should do. It was one of those moments that sticks in your mind and stays there your whole life."
For many of today's athletes, too young to have seen a president assassinated or remember a space shuttle falling from the sky, it was the first such moment. When the fog finally lifted, Gasol came to a conclusion about his future. He did not decide then that he would move to Los Angeles and play for the Lakers and lead them to a NBA championship.
He decided that he would become a doctor and try to cure AIDS. He was 11.
Keep Reading (http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1167642/1/index.htm)