spurscenter
07-21-2007, 02:45 AM
Good for him, enjoy it.
Kevin Gray: The ubiquitous Mr. Bonner
http://www.theunionleader.com/uploads/media-items/2007/july/716c1matt.jpg
http://www.theunionleader.com/article.aspx?headline=Kevin+Gray%3a+The+ubiquitous +Mr.+Bonner&articleId=96741853-b39d-4e75-8823-606346032a71
By KEVIN GRAY
Staff Sports Writer
Monday, Jul. 16, 2007
MATT BONNER has reached the point in his career where he needs an entourage. Or at least a personal assistant to keep everything straight.
There is only so much time to direct a basketball camp, promote a charity concert, and spend an evening with the Manchester Wolves -- and that was only a sliver of Friday's schedule.
Since returning to New Hampshire earlier this month, Bonner has shaken more hands and logged more face time than Hillary Clinton, who might've bumped into the NBA champion over the weekend.
Everyone else has.
Bonner, who recently signed a three-year contract extension with the San Antonio Spurs, has thrown out ceremonial first pitches for the Nashua Pride and New Hampshire Fisher Cats. Friday night at the Wolves football game, he was toying with Nancy Clark of North Conway in an on-field free-throw shooting contest.
Matt Bonner (DAVID LANE)
Matt Bonner gestures to the crowd after making a no-look over-the-shoulder basket during an exhibition at Friday night’s Wolves game at the Verizon Wireless Arena in Manchester. (DAVID LANE)
►Bonner brothers, Concord’s basketball superstars, host a charity rock show
►Bonner stays with Spurs
►The NBA Life: NBA ring a first for NH
►NBA Life: 'It's a circus' in the NBA finals
►NBA Life: Bonner, Spurs look ahead to NBA Finals
His inaugural charity concert, "Matt Bonner Presents: Sneakers & Speakers," hosted three bands at the Capitol Center for the Arts in Concord on Saturday. The headlining act, Okkervil River, brought the younger crowd to its feet on a memorable night for the Bonners, whose grassroots concert drew about 400 fans.
Today, another weeklong camp begins at Plymouth State University.
Ah, the offseason.
"I'm losing my mind right now, actually," Bonner said. "I wish I could clone myself so I had a few more of me to get through these last two weeks.
"I'm probably going to sleep for about three days after this is all over."
The thought of a personal assistant is laughable to Bonner, a fiscally savvy shooting forward who inked a reported three-year, $9 million contract extension last week. He relies on family, friends, phone calls, e-mails and text messages to help sort out the madness.
Parents Dave and Paula Bonner, along with brother Luke, are all busy working basketball camps, and Luke has been a partner in the concert business.
"It's a lot of work, but when it's something you're passionate about, you don't mind putting in all the time," said Luke, who helped conduct a free basketball clinic yesterday at the Concord Boys and Girls Club, the beneficiary of the concert.
What's a day in the life of Matt Bonner? Consider this two-day stretch he said was typical of last week:
Awake at 6:30 a.m. in Concord, spend 45 minutes preparing for camp, loading the car with shirts, balls, photos, etc. Drive to WTPL-FM in Bow for radio interview. Drive to Derry and spend the day working at the SportsZone for camp. At 3:15 p.m., drive to Concord and drop off tickets for concert. Go home. Shower. Drive to Newmarket and serve as a judge for Granite State Songwriting Contest. Program new iPhone and sleep at hotel on the Seacoast.
Catch your breath before reading day two:
Awake at 6:30 a.m. Visit WHEB studios in Portsmouth for "Morning Buzz" interview. Back to Derry for camp. Drive to Concord and secure hotel rooms for band members. Drive to Kinko's and order banners for concert. Back home. Shower. Catch up on e-mails. Back to Kinko's to pick up order. Back home and sign 300 photos, in addition to more preparation for camp.
Naturally, a hands-on approach to daily tasks only adds to the busy schedule. The NBA champion probably could've had a friend pick up the banners and posters at Kinko's, but Bonner had to make sure they were perfect.
"I always feel like I'm from New Hampshire. It's a small state, and I know so many people here. I would feel ridiculous if I had someone doing all this stuff for me. Just call me if you need something. You don't have to go through someone else," he said.
Friday afternoon, Bonner gave his last words of wisdom to 180 campers in Derry. He also thrilled the kids by handing out official NBA championship hats and shirts -- exactly the same gear worn by the Spurs during their on-court celebration.
It was a good week to hang out with the Red Rocket, whose messages ranged from the recycling to rebounding. Casey Woodring, a 13-year-old from Darien, Conn., went home with a new outlook on improving his game. And work hard.
"Whenever you're not working, somebody else is," Woodring said. "If you want to sleep in Saturday morning and play video games, there's always going to be somebody working on their game to get better than you. That's the biggest thing I've learned, and that's why Matt's in the NBA."
Since returning home, the 27-year-old Bonner has maintained a fitness level through swimming and weight lifting. The former valedictorian at Concord High vows to take a much-needed break next week after his camps are finished.
Of course, he's also planning an off-season conditioning program that involves running up Loon Mountain a few times per week.
On those days, catching up with Bonner isn't quite so easy.
http://www.spurscenter.com/images/mattbonner.jpg
Kevin Gray: The ubiquitous Mr. Bonner
http://www.theunionleader.com/uploads/media-items/2007/july/716c1matt.jpg
http://www.theunionleader.com/article.aspx?headline=Kevin+Gray%3a+The+ubiquitous +Mr.+Bonner&articleId=96741853-b39d-4e75-8823-606346032a71
By KEVIN GRAY
Staff Sports Writer
Monday, Jul. 16, 2007
MATT BONNER has reached the point in his career where he needs an entourage. Or at least a personal assistant to keep everything straight.
There is only so much time to direct a basketball camp, promote a charity concert, and spend an evening with the Manchester Wolves -- and that was only a sliver of Friday's schedule.
Since returning to New Hampshire earlier this month, Bonner has shaken more hands and logged more face time than Hillary Clinton, who might've bumped into the NBA champion over the weekend.
Everyone else has.
Bonner, who recently signed a three-year contract extension with the San Antonio Spurs, has thrown out ceremonial first pitches for the Nashua Pride and New Hampshire Fisher Cats. Friday night at the Wolves football game, he was toying with Nancy Clark of North Conway in an on-field free-throw shooting contest.
Matt Bonner (DAVID LANE)
Matt Bonner gestures to the crowd after making a no-look over-the-shoulder basket during an exhibition at Friday night’s Wolves game at the Verizon Wireless Arena in Manchester. (DAVID LANE)
►Bonner brothers, Concord’s basketball superstars, host a charity rock show
►Bonner stays with Spurs
►The NBA Life: NBA ring a first for NH
►NBA Life: 'It's a circus' in the NBA finals
►NBA Life: Bonner, Spurs look ahead to NBA Finals
His inaugural charity concert, "Matt Bonner Presents: Sneakers & Speakers," hosted three bands at the Capitol Center for the Arts in Concord on Saturday. The headlining act, Okkervil River, brought the younger crowd to its feet on a memorable night for the Bonners, whose grassroots concert drew about 400 fans.
Today, another weeklong camp begins at Plymouth State University.
Ah, the offseason.
"I'm losing my mind right now, actually," Bonner said. "I wish I could clone myself so I had a few more of me to get through these last two weeks.
"I'm probably going to sleep for about three days after this is all over."
The thought of a personal assistant is laughable to Bonner, a fiscally savvy shooting forward who inked a reported three-year, $9 million contract extension last week. He relies on family, friends, phone calls, e-mails and text messages to help sort out the madness.
Parents Dave and Paula Bonner, along with brother Luke, are all busy working basketball camps, and Luke has been a partner in the concert business.
"It's a lot of work, but when it's something you're passionate about, you don't mind putting in all the time," said Luke, who helped conduct a free basketball clinic yesterday at the Concord Boys and Girls Club, the beneficiary of the concert.
What's a day in the life of Matt Bonner? Consider this two-day stretch he said was typical of last week:
Awake at 6:30 a.m. in Concord, spend 45 minutes preparing for camp, loading the car with shirts, balls, photos, etc. Drive to WTPL-FM in Bow for radio interview. Drive to Derry and spend the day working at the SportsZone for camp. At 3:15 p.m., drive to Concord and drop off tickets for concert. Go home. Shower. Drive to Newmarket and serve as a judge for Granite State Songwriting Contest. Program new iPhone and sleep at hotel on the Seacoast.
Catch your breath before reading day two:
Awake at 6:30 a.m. Visit WHEB studios in Portsmouth for "Morning Buzz" interview. Back to Derry for camp. Drive to Concord and secure hotel rooms for band members. Drive to Kinko's and order banners for concert. Back home. Shower. Catch up on e-mails. Back to Kinko's to pick up order. Back home and sign 300 photos, in addition to more preparation for camp.
Naturally, a hands-on approach to daily tasks only adds to the busy schedule. The NBA champion probably could've had a friend pick up the banners and posters at Kinko's, but Bonner had to make sure they were perfect.
"I always feel like I'm from New Hampshire. It's a small state, and I know so many people here. I would feel ridiculous if I had someone doing all this stuff for me. Just call me if you need something. You don't have to go through someone else," he said.
Friday afternoon, Bonner gave his last words of wisdom to 180 campers in Derry. He also thrilled the kids by handing out official NBA championship hats and shirts -- exactly the same gear worn by the Spurs during their on-court celebration.
It was a good week to hang out with the Red Rocket, whose messages ranged from the recycling to rebounding. Casey Woodring, a 13-year-old from Darien, Conn., went home with a new outlook on improving his game. And work hard.
"Whenever you're not working, somebody else is," Woodring said. "If you want to sleep in Saturday morning and play video games, there's always going to be somebody working on their game to get better than you. That's the biggest thing I've learned, and that's why Matt's in the NBA."
Since returning home, the 27-year-old Bonner has maintained a fitness level through swimming and weight lifting. The former valedictorian at Concord High vows to take a much-needed break next week after his camps are finished.
Of course, he's also planning an off-season conditioning program that involves running up Loon Mountain a few times per week.
On those days, catching up with Bonner isn't quite so easy.
http://www.spurscenter.com/images/mattbonner.jpg