I don't have a lot to say about this. I don't really follow the world of sports -- basketball or otherwise -- so I'd never heard of Manute Bol until that Slacktivist piece and another article, posted just a little while before he died. (Sadly, I lost the link for that one; it included more in the way of quotes from Bol, giving his feelings on basketball and the Sudan and the intersection of the two).
But I wanted to post this because I don't get the impression many people knew more than a passing bit about him, whether they follow the world of sports or not. And that's a great tragedy, in my eyes. Here's a guy who didn't spend his newfound wealth on big houses, fast cars, drugs to inject or snort or smoke: he kept enough to live on, and poured the rest into bettering the lives of people back home.
I don't demand that all sports celebrities (or all celebrities of any stripe) wear hair shirts and take vows of poverty for the greater good. But when a guy comes along who sees his fame and wealth as a gift to be shared with others, then I want to do my tiny part to spread his story, as a counter-effect to all the tales of Athletes Behaving Badly.
I hope that, with Manute Bol gone, the good he fought for isn't forgotten.
That's a beautifully written article about a really good guy.
What a lot of people don't know about Bol was that, aside from his basketball skills and his tireless work on the behalf of his nation, he also coined the phrase "My bad."
Apparently, while in practice, when he would make a mistake, instead of saying "My fault," he'd say "My bad," simply because of his relative loose grasp of English. His teammates thought it was charming and they started saying it too, and then the fans picked it up from there.
So there's three things right there worth remembering.
I just wish the mark he wanted to leave had been larger and more lasting.