Drugs, Basketball, A Legend: The Tale Of Ed "Booger" Smith

Josh Dhani by Senior Writer Written on September 06, 2009
LOS ANGELES - JUNE 7:  Rafer Alston #1 of the Orlando Magic surveys the court against the Los Angeles Lakers in Game Two of the 2009 NBA Finals at Staples Center on June 7, 2009 in Los Angeles, California.  The Lakers won 101-96 in overtime.  NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement.  (Photo by Stephen Dunn/Getty Images) (Photo by Stephen Dunn/Getty Images)

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Booger Smith

“Booger, man.
Booger the thing.
Won’t believe the handle on the dude.
Booger make your butt look foolish.
Yo, man, Booger be real.”

—Sports Illustrated

Streetball. You just have to love that kind of basketball. It shows the real game of how playing basketball. There is one player that really inspires me. He’s gone down a tough road in life. He has dealt with drugs, basketball, kids, and so much more. But guess what, this guy is just truly a legend.

And here is a story about a man, who dominated the streets, because he was the king of them.

Ed Smith was just an amazing basketball player. With his bantam size of 5′10″ and 180 pounds, his game is mountainous. Passing the rock is what Booger was born with. Nobody could pass better than this amateur. Like StreetBallin.net said, his game is damn near unrippable.

It just doesn’t matter if you have never seen him play or you did, this kid will make your jaws drop lower than an asteroid falling towards Earth. Every play is a highlight from him. It doesn’t even take that much energy for him to be deluxe. Take a look at this kid and what he can do:

In one game during the ‘03 Rucker playoffs, the point guard caught a long rebound and flew up court, directing two team- mates where to run along both sides of him until they both had angles to receive a pass. Two steps past the foul line, Booger faked a pass to the open teammate on his right, jumped in the air, faked another pass to the open runner on his left, and before landing, dumped the rock back to his trailing center, whom everybody had forgotten about. Slam dunk – and just another assist for Booger.

He creates a spark on the court. This guy was just too good for the NBA. It’s just a shame that he couldn’t get there. It would have been one easy step to the Hall of Fame if he were to ever join. But you think I am exaggerating. But with skills like that, it’s impossible for all of that to be one percent of being blown out of proportion.

“I think that when I said that if I didn’t make the NBA I’d be a drug dealer, people got scared of that,” says the now 33-year-old Booger. “But it was a real story. I mean, that’s what I was going to do. Did they want me to lie and say I was going to be an architect or something? I don’t regret saying it. She just told me to be myself, but I never really liked getting too much attention.

“The movie [Soul in the Hole] was cool though. They didn’t know that I was hustling from the time that I was 9. I never disrespected basketball. But on the other side, I had to do what I had to.”

Booger had a tough life. Never ever met his father, and had conflicts with his mother. He was pretty much an orphan who had to take care of himself through his whole life. School never took place in his activity, and sleeping in the park or on benches was an addiction.

Although grades in school was a struggle, SLAMOnline.com said that the teachers would change the grades so Booger can play on the basketball team. That’s just how skilled he was at the game. During high school, Smith dropped out and tried to make a destiny in basketball.

“Booger is one of the nicest kids in the world, but he really always had to take care of himself. When he came to live with me, he was, like, 16 years old,” Kenny Jones told SLAM, who was Booger’s unofficial guardian for a large chunk of his early life. “When we did the movie, I thought it was something that would help get him exposure. I think in a lot of ways, he was afraid of success.”

But success was all he could accomplish. Says SLAM:

“As Soul in the Hole opens, Booger’s high school years are over and the summer basketball circuit begins. He’s lacking a basic plan for the future, having lived in a system that has basically policed him rather than nurture him, for his entire life. He deals with violence and poverty as if it were a part of the lives of everyone his age. Despite his hardships, Booger was one of the top players in the city, possibly even the country, by many accounts. Even with basketball skills that were more of a gift than a talent, Booger couldn’t see past life in his neighborhood.”

Booger started selling crack earlier than age twelve. He would serve it to friends on the basketball court. As I mentioned before, he had to take care of himself for his whole life. Booger said he never hustled for anybody. He was a hustler for himself.

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written on September 06, 2009 Opinion

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