NO MATTER WHERE he goes, former NBA All-Star Shareef Abdur-Rahim is reminded of his brother’s affect.
Whether or not it’s of their hometown of Marietta, Georgia, or so far as 8,000 miles away from the place they grew up, it appears everybody has a narrative about how Amir Abdur-Rahim touched their lives.
“Some man got here as much as me [in China],” Shareef Abdur-Rahim, president of the NBA’s G League, instructed ESPN. “I didn’t know him. He didn’t know me. He was like, ‘I knew your brother, man. He was the perfect.’ What number of occasions I’ve gotten that over this 12 months is unbelievable.”
Amir Abdur-Rahim was simply 43 years previous and a rising star within the faculty basketball teaching ranks when he died one 12 months in the past Friday throughout a medical process for an undisclosed sickness.
Within the 12 months since, the tributes have poured in from gamers, coaches and followers all throughout the globe. Abdur-Rahim was an completed coach. He took Kennesaw State from a 1-28 report in his first season in 2019 to the NCAA event in 2023. And in his solely season at South Florida, he guided the Bulls to the American Convention’s regular-season title.
However when individuals bear in mind Abdur-Rahim now, most of the time, these tales have little to do with basketball. He was a husband, a father, a brother to 12 — and a connector who cared extra about relationships than victories.
“HOW ARE YOU?”
Abdur-Rahim’s spouse, Arianne Abdur-Rahim, shakes her head when she hears this query — she is aware of individuals not often ask it with the intent to kind a real connection the way in which her husband would.
“Most individuals simply say, ‘Hey, how are you doing? How’s it going in the present day?’ and so they’re probably not ready for a response,” she instructed ESPN. “They only need you to say, ‘I’m good.’ And all people goes their separate methods. That’s not him. He actually wished to know the reply. He was actually invested on this reply and simply wished to make individuals really feel seen and really feel higher.
“He had this inherent capacity to make you are feeling seen, to make you are feeling heard, to make you are feeling empowered.”
That was the South Florida group’s expertise with Abdur-Rahim. Somebody’s function on the faculty didn’t matter — he made an effort to construct relationships with everybody he encountered. He purchased Starbucks and donuts for college kids on campus. And after his introductory information convention in 2023, he known as a gathering … with the pinnacle of the coed part.
Abdur-Rahim’s relationship with the Bulls’ soccer coach Alex Golesh was no totally different. Employed inside months of one another, the 2 discovered commonalities not solely in the way in which they wished to educate, however the way in which they wished to be nice fathers.
Golesh — who honored Abdur-Rahim together with his patented phrase “this ain’t the identical South Florida, my brother” after upset wins over AP Prime 25 groups Boise State and Florida to open this 12 months — stated Abdur-Rahim helped him keep the course after a tough begin to the 2024 season, providing him a recreation plan for the street forward as they supported one another.
“It was identical to these texts like, ‘Man, that is what 12 months 1 goes to be, 12 months 2, 12 months 3, 12 months 4,'” Golesh instructed ESPN. “After which we simply acquired nearer and nearer.”
In tough occasions, Abdur-Rahim remained devoted to studying his self-help books and scribbling notes about his visions for the longer term, sharing these goals with the individuals round him — even once they appeared unattainable.
His confidence, in all circumstances, emboldened others. How he made them really feel is core to his legacy.
“He wished to be higher at every little thing he did,” stated Joi Williams, Abdur-Rahim’s pal and chief of workers at South Florida. “He wished to be the perfect and he wished to make it possible for our guys knew how a lot he beloved them. And that was one thing he instructed them.
“At first, a few of these guys checked out him like, ‘You’re loopy. I’m not saying it again.’ However what was actually superb, and I get emotional about it, is that when it acquired right down to the tip, you can see how a lot they had been telling him, ‘I like you.’ And so they’re not afraid to say the phrase ‘love’ as a result of he stated it on a regular basis.”
After leaving Kennesaw State, Abdur-Rahim known as Williams and instructed the then-coach of Murray State’s girls’s basketball workforce that he would name her as soon as he landed his subsequent job. She didn’t imagine him till he provided her the function of chief of workers, a uncommon task for a girl in males’s faculty basketball.
“We all the time talked about and joked about working collectively,” Williams stated. “I stated, ‘Yeah, a variety of you guys say that, however are you actually going to rent a feminine?’ And he was like, ‘I’m telling you. I’m going to do it.'”
As a lot as he confirmed up for others, the energy of Abdur-Rahim’s connections additionally meant he would disappear typically.
Ben Fletcher, his former assistant who succeeded him as interim head coach at South Florida, found that when Abdur-Rahim would all of a sudden depart round lunchtime once they had been at Kennesaw State collectively, he’d normally find yourself at a mom-and-pop restaurant. He had a Rolodex of small-town spots and knew the names of their homeowners. He additionally knew the perfect merchandise on every of their menus. For years, Fletcher hinted that he wished to affix him and felt like he’d hit the lottery when Abdur-Rahim lastly agreed to take him to considered one of his favourite joints.
It was among the greatest soul meals Fletcher ever had.
“I’m like, ‘Man, I’ve been right here for 2 years and I’m simply now studying the place this place is?'” Fletcher stated. “I instructed him, ‘See, that’s improper. You improper for that.'”
As centered as Abdur-Rahim was, he didn’t take himself too critically.
His younger gamers at South Florida would usually poke their coach to get an increase out of him. And it didn’t take a lot. In the event that they instructed him LeBron James was the best participant of all time, the Michael Jordan fan would by no means let it slide.
“He would all the time carry up LeBron shedding within the NBA Finals,” stated Kobe Knox, who performed for Abdur-Rahim at South Florida. “And I’d ship him a little bit graphic about LeBron and his success and the subsequent time I’d see him on the facility, he’d be like, ‘Man, why are you sending me that? I ain’t listening to that.'”
These moments helped Abdur-Rahim earn the locker room’s adoration, however he may promote his gamers solely on potential at first — South Florida had by no means gained a convention championship coming into the 2023-24 season and hadn’t reached the NCAA event in additional than a decade.
Abdur-Rahim, nonetheless, didn’t need his gamers to consider the previous. He wished them to imagine sooner or later, so he introduced a ladder and pair of scissors to follow at some point. Months earlier than his workforce made historical past as the primary South Florida males’s basketball workforce to win a convention title, he ready the gamers in a novel occasion with a net-cutting walkthrough.
“He completely believed it,” Williams stated. “Now, clearly, we had been up within the hunt for a convention title on the time, however he wished them to know do it. He stated, ‘I don’t need you guys to only rise up on the ladder. We wish to present you ways the online is meant to be lower.’ And we really did it. I imply all people — coaches, the gamers, all of the assist workers — all people that was going to rise up on that ladder, we did it.”
GOLESH WOULD OFTEN joke with Abdur-Rahim that basketball coaches had extra time on their arms than soccer coaches — jabs pushed by jealousy and admiration.
“I stated, ‘Amir, I see you’re taking your youngsters to highschool. I can’t take my youngsters to highschool. I’m struggling. It’s killing me. Matter of truth, my child will see you drop your youngsters off,'” Golesh stated. “My son, who is identical age as his daughter, is asking me, ‘Dad, why can’t you’re taking me to highschool?’ And in order that’s why I say [our relationship] is a lot deeper than simply, ‘Are you taking part in zone or man?'”
The conversations, textual content messages and laughs abruptly stopped almost a 12 months in the past. Many individuals inside Abdur-Rahim’s circle didn’t find out about his sickness, and his optimistic reactions revealed little about his state of affairs.
“I texted him like, ‘Hey bro, every little thing good?'” Golesh stated. “He would reply, ‘Every part is nice.’ OK. Our first recreation, he wasn’t there. So, I texted him. ‘Amir, you good?’ He texted me again. ‘Man, I’m nice.'”
His gamers acquired related messages. At the same time as they knew he was struggling, Abdur-Rahim continued to educate and nudge them within the last weeks of his life, telling them what they wanted to work on and the drive required to construct on their earlier season and earn an NCAA event bid.
“He was so vigorous nonetheless, regardless that he was coping with all of that, and he was nonetheless joking round,” Knox stated. “We had follow and he would sit on the sideline and he was nonetheless teaching us.”
His loss of life despatched shock waves via South Florida and faculty basketball which are nonetheless rippling.
The Bulls’ scholar part was renamed the “Amir Abdur-Rahim Pupil Part.” The varsity inducted him into its Corridor of Fame. And the American Convention made him honorary Coach of the 12 months — an award he gained in 2024 — final season, too.
His religion, his love for others, his concern for his gamers, his spouse stated, had been all the time the driving forces in his life and the explanations so many individuals have reached out since he handed.
“I need individuals to recollect his legacy having to do with — it’s simply one thing I inform the youngsters on a regular basis — integrity,” she stated. “And it sounds so cliché, but additionally simply attempting to be a very good individual and attempting to assist different individuals.”
The tales Arianne and Shareef Abdur-Rahim have heard since shedding him have saved his reminiscence alive. And like in China, they usually come from shocking locations.
At Abdur-Rahim’s South Florida Corridor of Fame ceremony, Shareef thanked everybody who attended. Within the nook of the constructing, he observed three younger males who didn’t appear to know anybody else within the room — former South Florida gamers who had by no means performed for his brother, however acquired that relationship-building that Abdur-Rahim might be remembered for.
“All people desires a protracted life,” Shareef Abdur-Rahim stated. “You need longevity, however to have the ability to have an effect is the objective. He had an affect, an affect on individuals, how he made individuals really feel. You might have folks that dwell 100 years and aren’t in a position to try this.”