I have more info for the 3rd Annual Frankie Williams Charity Classic. It will be held on Thursday, June 3 at 8 p.m. at the Theodore D. Young Community Center in Greenburgh. Tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for children 13 and under.
At halftime, former NBA star Kenny Anderson will present one of Westchester’s own, Danya Abrams, into Frenji’s Legends Circle.
As for the game, the rosters are stacked. Here’s a look at who’s involved:
3rd Annual Frankie Williams Charity Classic
Thursday June 3rd, 2010
@ Theodore D. Young Community Center
32 Manhattan Ave 0 Greenburgh – NY
Doors Open at 7pm – Game time is 8pm
Admission is $10 adults & $5 kids 13 under
TEAM FRENJI BLUE —
Jayvaughn Pinkston, 6-6, Bishop Loughlin (Villanova)
Brian Voelkel, 6-5, Iona Prep (Vermont)
Mike Poole, 6-5, St. Benedict’s (Rutgers)
Jabarie Hinds, 6-1, Mount Vernon (uncommitted)
Kadeem Jack, 6-9, Rice (uncommitted)
David Samuels, 6-7, Blessed Sacrament (Loyola-Maryland)
Sterling Gibbs, 6-3, Seton Hall Prep (Maryland)
Jordon Bronner, 6-0, Iona Prep (New Hampshire)
Ashton Pankey, 6-8, St. Anthony’s (Maryland)
JJ Moore, 6-6, South Kent (Pitt)
Jose Rodriguez, 6-6, Impact Academy (Maryland)
Jermaine Sanders, 6-5, Rice (uncommitted)
TEAM FRENJI WHITE —
Sidiki Johnson, 6-9, Oak Hill (Arizona)
Chris Manhertz, 6-6, Cardinal Spellman (Canisius)
Antoine Mason, 6-4, New Rochelle (Niagara)
Ashcraf Yacoubou, 6-3, Long Island Lutheran (Villanova)
Joey De La Rosa, 6-10, Impact Academy (uncommitted)
Ryan Rhoomes, 6-9, Cardozo (uncommitted)
Sandra Carissimo, 6-3, Iona Prep (Vermont)
Branden Frazier, 6-4, Bishop Loughlin (Fordham)
Mike Taylor, 6-3, Boys & Girls (uncommitted)
Shane Southwell, 6-6, Rice (Kansas State)
Maurice Harkless, 6-8, Forest Hills (UConn)
Vaughn Allen, 6-6, Lee Academy/Mount Vernon (uncommitted)
Coaches: Danya Abrams, Rashamel Jones, Rasul Salahuddin, Rasaun Young, Otis Hill and Torey Thomas.

20 Comments
Josh,
Not baskeball related can you please look into spring valley and ramapo football joining forces this year. If this is true now what happens with scheduling. Scheduling has already changed twice for class A can we be looking at a third change. What the hell is going on!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
This kid is flat out nasty. Uconn got a gem. I hope Jabarie goes there so they can play together down the line.
Maurice Harkless, 6-8, Forest Hills (UConn)
congrats to coach pat duffy and the varsity stepinac baseball team who won the chsaa bronx/westchester division title today defeating fordham prep 6-2!!!
stepinac baseball division champs:
2005
2008
2009
2010
great job crusaders and good luck in the play-offs!!!
I see Jabari Hinds on one of the rosters. He is still a Jr. and would be playing in a post season contest with players that have used their eligibilty. Jr.s are not allowed to play in all star games.
JOSH,
I’m not sure why you have not responed to the merger of Ramapo and Spring Valley football this year. Section 1 recruiting broke the story but you have not made mention of this unfolding situation. What inpact will this have on class A scheduling. Big story and you seem to have no response very concerning!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Scott and Moose… Fatty going to Fordham.
http://www.nypost.com/p/blogs/zach_braziller/mcmillan_follows_pecora_from_hofstra_2Dq5JFvkkU3dEVL2jwdtUP
Do the winners get to play the Coaches???? Thats a pretty impressive staff they got over there.
HRs – I’d actually heard that this week about Fatty. Pecora stayed committed to Devon and that’s pretty awesome. Here’s to hoping it works out for all involved.
Now, we need some news on Henderson’s grades to see if the Wagner ‘ship is a go.
Pecora bought in some talent very quickly. Great chance for Fatty to play right away. Lets hope he stays there and becomes the player everyone thinks he can be. I meant to ask you about Henderson. Wagner would be a great place for him. I hope those grades come out ok.
@Better Check The Rules
this is more like an aau showcase thing. The rule with all star games only goes for those specifically connected to the high school league like the section 1 all star game for all league and all section players. tournaments like the CYP, this, mcdonalds all american, jordan classic, dont count as an all star game.
every senior gets 2 all star games in play in. this is not an all star game. its a charity game to fundraise money for grassroots basketball. there just happens to be all star caliber talent on the floor. If last years game is any indication of a great event then this lineup will most definately be an immediate sell out event. I will get there early to get a good seat. just like cyp.the frenji guys can stack the deck thats for sure!!!!
Maurice Harkless just continue to go to Forest Hills (Queens) High School because he will be a senior their and he can finish his career their own good note.He will be the leader and captian of the team.He can himself and Forest Hills by staying at the school.Also Kadeem Jack should go to Division 1 school because he may never get that chance again and this he was in the Jordan Brand Classic. In the Jordan Brand Classic he had 21 points and eight rebounds.Also if has know academic deficiencies why go to a prep school?
Jack had a breakout season at Rice this year, averaging a team-high 16.9 points per game. His breakout performance was a 24-point, 20-rebound and six-block explosion in a 71-56 win at Bishop Loughlin in January.
What more training do you need before college you play for Rice High School and the New York Gauchos.All you need do is gain some weight because you are 6’8’’ is which really tall.Since you already 210 pounds you gain 20 pounds so you can 230 pounds like Carmelo Anthony, Kevin Durant ,Lamar Odom,Rashard Lewis, Grant Hill and Shawn Marion.They are 230 pounds and a beast in the NBA unless you want to be 250 pounds like Lebron James.Instead of you using a prep school for extra year before to develope you should go to college and stay for more than one year.
They Put the Clang Into New York City’s Hoops – NYTimes.com
May 29, 2010
Handmade Hoops Put the Clang Into New York Courts
By A. G. SULZBERGER
The old steel rim that presides over this public basketball court absorbs missed shots with an angry clank, sending the ball careening upward and the wood and metal backboard into a rickety seizure.
Like generations before them, the young men who play at the ramshackle court in St. Nicholas Park in Harlem know the rim is so troublesome that they tend to avoid perimeter jump shots in favor of aggressive drives to the basket, where perhaps its vagaries will be less pronounced.
“These are ghetto rims,” said Quaeshawn Berry, a lanky 14-year-old who is a regular at the park. “But I prefer these. I’ve been playing on these my whole life.”
These unforgiving, practically unbreakable orange rims — built so simply that there are no hooks to accommodate a net — are longstanding fixtures of the public basketball courts throughout New York City, where they play a minor, if usually overlooked, role in countless pick-up games.
But largely unknown to even the most devoted practitioners of the city game is that most of the basketball rims on these courts have been individually crafted by a team of blacksmiths who cut, weld and paint each by hand.
Using a century-old method that has long since vanished elsewhere, the half-dozen parks department employees — all basketball players themselves — have forged thousands of rims, each one worked into a microcosm of the local game.
“There are minor differences,” said John Fitzgerald, the longtime city blacksmith in charge of making the rims. “It’s like no snowflakes are exactly the same.”
Working from a hand-drawn blueprint, the blacksmiths use hammers and the horn of an anvil to shape the steel ring that serves as the hoop, welding it to several slabs of metal that form a support bolted to the backboard. The finished product is a remnant of an earlier era of the sport, somewhere on the evolutionary chain between the original wooden peach baskets and the modern spring-loaded breakaway rims used by the National Basketball Association.
Other cities, including those with their own share of contributions to basketball lore like Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles and Newark, buy modern, factory-made rims. New York is among the few places, and possibly the only one, where municipal rims used at more than 700 public parks are still made by hand.
“I’m totally amazed that they still do it that way,” said Dan Shaw, an engineer and sales manager for Spalding and an expert on the history of basketball rims. “I would love to see one made.
“Walking in there would be like watching equipment made 100 years ago when there were no basketball manufacturers, when all the equipment was being made locally.”
There remains something of a cult of personality around the showy offshoot of basketball known as streetball, a pastime marked by elbows-out play, a casual commitment to the rulebook and makeshift facilities. That is particularly true in New York, where the public courts are credited with grooming generations of stars.
And while it is unclear what, if any, supporting role these immutable rims might have played, Jason Curry, president of Big Apple Basketball, which runs clinics and tournaments around the city, suggested that they might be one reason many of the best players who honed their games outside have historically been skilled at driving close to the hoop rather than shooting from distance.
“There are so many different variables that it makes it difficult to become a really good outside shooter on New York City playgrounds,” he said.
A streetball legend, Joe Hammond, who is better known by his nickname the Destroyer, said the New York rims were so tricky that he became focused on having his shots avoid them altogether, refusing to count points if the ball touched steel. “One thing about playing on the rims in the parks: you learn to adjust,” Mr. Hammond said.
But even in New York, the forging of rims may be an endangered art. Some of the city’s most celebrated courts, like Rucker Park in Harlem and the West Fourth Street Cage in the West Village, have made the switch to prefabricated rims, in part because the players there expect modern equipment. And when a new park is built or an existing one receives a full rehabilitation, a prefabricated rim is installed.
The prefabricated rims are not only more up to date, but they are also less expensive — typically costing other cities less than $60, compared with about $90 for the handmade rims, which includes about $65 for labor.
But officials from the city’s Department of Parks and Recreation say the handmade rims stand up better to the demands of New York players, so they will continue to be produced — at least to replace those that have been stolen or, in rare cases, damaged. (The rest of the time blacksmiths occupy themselves with an assortment of other tasks, like repairing park fences and building lifeguard chairs.)
“We have found its more economical to make them because they’re stronger, they last longer,” said Jim Cafaro, the deputy chief of technical services for the parks department. “So it’s cost-effective to do this.”
The design, which parks officials said was of unknown provenance, has been kept in a dusty composition notebook in the center of the cavernous workshop on Randalls Island underneath the Robert F. Kennedy Bridge, where 92 rims were made last year. The blacksmiths are in the process of vacating the 80-year-old building, so production of the rims has been temporarily suspended.
The machinery and tools, including the old anvil, will be moved to a new location. Left behind will be the old hoop that hangs over an oil-stained section of the shop, used for years of lunchtime games. “You have to have a nice touch for them because they’re solid,” said Eugene Desplantes, a metal worker who starred in those daily battles. “They’re not forgiving.”
Even if fewer of these rims are being made, those already in the parks are not going anywhere soon.
Those made with a slightly different design, which features a double rim and straight steel supports, were discontinued years ago but remain a common sight in schoolyards, public parks and small lots around the city.
They have survived endless rounds of slam dunks, and occasionally served as chin-up bars and, for the especially nimble, even as spectator seating. Once, the blacksmiths strung a cable around a rim inside the workshop, which they used to tow a van halfway off the ground. That led them to conclude that their handiwork was, with all due humility, indestructible.
“These are the strongest hoops you’ll ever find,” Mr. Fitzgerald said. “They last forever. You could hand them down to your grandkids.”
This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:
Correction: May 29, 2010
An earlier version of this article contained a picture caption that misspelled the last name of the blacksmith who makes rims for the Parks Department. He is John Fitzgerald, not Fitgerald.
just heard that SPRING VALLEY’S own TAVON SLEDGE will grace the court this Thursday night at the game. Cant wait to see how good he got. Heard he’s the real deal!!!! Wonder how much people will be wondering what life would have been with him in the conversation with Jabarie?
Sledge is the real deal – one of the quickest guards I can remember and the hops are ridiculous!! He’s a must-see. He’s more explosive than Jabarie – but I think Jabarie is more well-rounded, and a better shooter.
Sledge is a great athlete and player. The only difference between him and Jabarie is that Sledge is two years older than him. He has moved around to so many schools and reclassified so many times its hard to know where he stacks up in regards to development. I beleive he is 19 yeras old and still in high school.It seems all these elite players flounder around bouncing from school to school and in the end what happens?
I watched Sledge play all year last year at HHH. He has grown tremendously as a player. He still needs to work on his jump shot, but his explosiveness and ability to get to the rim is top notch.
His stock has continued to escalate and he will have his pick of colleges. I am anxious to see where he lands
Maybe when sledge is 25 he will be a great h.s. playa
Fatty not goiong to Fordham and Marcus Henderson not going to Wagner. SAT’s i believe. Both are going to attend South Kent Prep School.
Good school, hope they do what is necesary to get to the next level.
Mike Mcleod off to ASA in Brooklyn. Big East schools interested im told. Hopefully he can get it together as well.
[...] Basketball: Rosters for Frankie Williams Charity Classic | VarsityDavid Samuels, 6-7, Blessed Sacrament (Loyola-Maryland); Sterling Gibbs, 6-3, Seton Hall Prep (Maryland); Jordon Bronner, 6-0, Iona Prep (New Hampshire); Ashton Pankey, 6-8, St. Anthony’s (Maryland); JJ Moore, 6-6, South Kent (Pitt); [...]