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Smooth and confident, Obama has hoops game

Presidential candidate using his love of basketball as a campaign weapon

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Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama drives to the basket against the University of North Carolina's Tyler Hansbrough during a basketball game in Chapel Hill, N.C., on Tuesday.
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  Barack Obama and basketball
April 15: On the latest edition of “Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel,” Barack Obama talks about how basketball shaped his life. Gumbel speaks with Matt Lauer about the revealing segment.

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updated 5:41 p.m. ET April 29, 2008

PITTSBURGH - He’s confident and competitive. Superstitious and silly. Admits his mistakes. Shares credit. Always in control. That’s Barack Obama on the basketball court, the hardwood hideaway that helped him adjust to a white world as a racially mixed teenager — and now stands as a sweaty platform for his Democratic presidential campaign.

Hillary may have Bill. But Barack’s got game.

For months, the Illinois senator kept his “first love” under wraps, but suddenly basketball is center court as a political strategy. It’s no accident: Obama needs something — anything — to deflect attention from the re-emergence of Rev. Jeremiah Wright, his bombastic former pastor whose racially charged opinions threaten to widen the disconnect between the Illinois senator and white working-class voters.

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More than that, Obama hopes his passion for basketball helps soften his image as cool and aloof.

“I do think you can tell something about people by the way they play basketball,” he told HBO’s “Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel” this month.

Hours before losing Pennsylvania’s primary to Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton last week, Obama played a pickup game at a well-appointed YMCA in Pittsburgh with several aides, friends and two reporters. No cameras were allowed in that game — part of a private voting day ritual — but Obama hasn’t been so shy since the campaign moved to Indiana and North Carolina, basketball-crazed states that hold Democratic primaries next week.

Last Friday, he scored four baskets — including a 3-pointer — in a Kokomo, Ind., game tied to his voter registration drive. With cameras trained on his every 46-year-old move, Obama scrimmaged Tuesday with the North Carolina Tar Heels.

“These guys,” Obama said, “are lot better than me.”

He was absolutely right.

Still, the politics are smart.

“We’re a very sports-loving country and it would be unusual if our president in one way or another was not sports connected,” said Stephen Hess, a presidential scholar who served in the Eisenhower and Nixon administrations.

Dwight D. Eisenhower played golf, a sport as genteel and patrician as the president who played it. John Kennedy played touch football with the youthful “vigah” that defined his 1960 campaign. Richard Nixon bowled, badly, as he brought blue-collar voters into the GOP fold.

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Hillary Clinton played softball in high school and recalls playing half-court basketball while growing up (only the boys could play full court), but she’s not much of a jock now. Still, the New York senator who was born in Illinois knows the difference between a home run and a political foul.

“Well,” she said of her allegiances in a hypothetical World Series between the Chicago Cubs and the New York Yankees, “I would probably have to alternate sides.”

The sports strategy has its limits. If not, former Sen. Bill Bradley would have been elected president in 2000. The Hall of Fame basketball player shot hoops on the campaign trail.

“Playing ball makes you accessible in a way that neither of them are — Obama and Bradley,” said Eric Hauser, a Democratic strategist who worked for Bradley. “They both deal with the reputation of being distant and cool, and basketball transcends race.”

Growing up in Hawaii, Obama considered basketball as a way to find his racial identity in a diverse community.


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