Fancy Basketball's Show Team

Founded in 1962, the Harlem Globetrotters (formerly the Harlem Globetrotters) represent the highest level of basketball in the world, and for more than 40 years the Harlem Globetrotters have traveled the globe each year, bringing thrilling performances to millions of fans. Through the perfect combination of basketball, stage presence and unrivaled showmanship, the Harlem Globetrotters are taking basketball to a new level.

The Wizards are home to some of the world's most accomplished basketball players, such as the legendary "SPEEDY," "TRIKZ," "BROADWAY," "D" and "BROADWAY," as well as the legendary "BROADWAY. ", "DP", "A-TRAIN" ...... The talents of these players include jaw-dropping juggling and dribbling skills, dazzling dunks. The biggest difference between the Harlem Wizards Fancy Basketball Team and other street basketball teams is that they represent positive and healthy basketball. In the United States, almost all of Harlem's games are charity events, with all money earned going to charity. They don't have very eccentric attire, just the best basketball skills and humble smiles. They don't turn down any fan autograph or photo requests, and they maintain the best friendships with fans around the world.

If you remember NIKE's "Street Dance Thunder" commercial in 2002, I'm sure you won't forget the dazzling dribbling and spinning skills. In that commercial, in addition to Carter, Pierce, Williams and other NBA stars, the rest of the players are all members of the Harlem Wizards fancy basketball team.

Rock Park, a place that makes New Yorkers proud. It is located on 155th Street in Harlem, New York, adjacent to Frederick Douglass Avenue. Locke is not a park in the usual sense, and for those obsessed with black culture, New York culture, and even American culture, it's a place you can't afford not to visit. Harlem is almost synonymous with street basketball, but it's "Rock Basketball" that is the essence of the culture. It's a shrine to street basketball, and even NBA stars like Kobe have to be humbled when they come to Rock Park. Dressed in a sleeveless gold T-shirt and knee-high shorts, R&B star Mary J. Billedge leans back comfortably in her courtside seat and cheers on her team. It was a great feeling to be able to watch a top-notch basketball game on a leisurely evening.

Is this the front row section of the court at Hollywood's star-studded Madison Square Garden?NO, but it's no less famous than Square Garden, and when a friend asks where Billie Gee is, Billie Gee blurts out through the phone, in proud tones, that she's at the game at Holcombe-Rock Memorial Park.

Biligi, like the other 500 or so spectators, was already on her feet and dancing with excitement. Like a proud mother, she applauded a beautiful dunk by their team's center. The "Mary's All-Stars," named after her, were already well ahead of another team called "Tyson Ricketts.

Passion, for Biligi at this point, is definitely not about grandstanding.

"When I was a kid, there was nothing fun to do, almost nothing to do." Billie Gee spoke movingly of her reasons for sponsoring the tournament, "But Rock Basketball has changed everything, it gives kids fun, it gives them hope and confidence. If you love basketball, there's no doubt that this is the place for you."

She also goes to Plaza Gardens for NBA games, but perhaps it's a preference that Biligi thinks the Rock is more fun: "It's where the real basketball culture is expressed. It's now one of the most famous places in New York where you can see so many aspects of American culture."