A long road to Houston for Baton Rouge's Lamar Roberson
Associated Press
Updated: July 5, 2005, 3:33 PM ET
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BATON ROUGE, La. -- Lamar Roberson is the first to admit that, while he excelled at basketball, he wasn't much of a student in high school.
"I was lazy," said Roberson, 20. "I was undisciplined and I was mischievous. But life has taught me a lesson."
That lesson involved leaving his home town of Baton Rouge and doing a lot of traveling, ending eventually at the University of Houston, where he begins his first semester as a student.
Roberson's mentor through many of the journeys has been a man named Henry Baptiste.
"Basketball is really that boy's life," said Baptiste, who serves as Southern University's football color analyst. "But he's had to learn the hard way that the sport isn't everything. But it's what kept him out of the streets."
Roberson played as an eighth- and ninth-grader at Southern Lab, where he helped the Kittens win the Class A state championship.
In the first semester of his sophomore year, Roberson left Southern Lab because of unsatisfactory grades and what he calls "disciplinary problems."
"That's when I stepped in," Baptiste said. "I had to make him realize that he needed to graduate. And if he wanted to play ball, he had to step up his game in the classroom."
Baptiste said Roberson got his attention after watching just a few games.
Roberson was sent to Mt. Zion Christian Academy, in Durham, N.C.
Tracy McGrady and Amare Stoudamire are among current NBA players who have attended Mt. Zion.
At Mt. Zion, players are not allowed to curse, listen to secular music, wear jewelry, go on dates or miss church. Those rules posed a problem for Roberson, who was uncomfortable being away from home at such a young age.
"He was young and I thought it was better for him, but it didn't work out too well," said Yvonne Roberson, Lamar's mother.
At 16, Roberson came back home, wanting to return to Baton Rouge, but he could not come back to Southern Lab.
"They said that it was because of disciplinary reasons. He was a risk," Baptiste said. "At the time, Principal Brenda Sterling ran the school with an iron-clad fist."
Also, there were eligibility concerns with his age and his grades.
"All I wanted to do is play basketball. I still didn't get the part about the grades," Roberson said.
Baptiste said he made a decision to find help after Roberson realized that straightening up and getting good grades would be the only way he could play.
The next step was to attend the Louisiana New School Academy in Baton Rouge. The school provided Roberson an academic alternative, but it was not great for starting a basketball career.
Roberson said a friend of his encouraged him to go to Compton, Calif., to attend Dominguez High School, the same school Tayshaun Prince of the Detroit Pistons and Tyson Chandler of the Chicago Bulls attended.
"I was older by then, and a bit more mature, so I went for it," Roberson said. "Besides, I knew I had to get my grades together and I couldn't do it here. The people I was hanging with were some of the same ones bringing me down.
"Everyone here said that I wouldn't amount to anything. I had to prove them wrong."
Baptiste, along with Roberson's mother, said they would not let him give up.
"He got the ball-playing part, but he had to go to California to realize that basketball wasn't everything," Yvonne Roberson said.
Baptiste helped Roberson get to Compton to attend Dominguez. The team won the 2004 state championship and he was named most valuable player in the state tournament.
But after the season, Roberson learned that credits from Mt. Zion didn't transfer.
"I didn't have the grades so I left to go to an academy in Alabama and got kicked out," he said.
Roberson was expelled from Central Park Academy in Alabama for cursing and he still did not have a diploma.
From Dominguez High to Central Park, coaches from colleges like Louisville and Wake Forest were working hard to recruit Roberson. Ever since the 10th grade, Roberson said, Mississippi State had been watching him.
He committed to Louisville and Roberson said Cardinals coach Rick Pitino asked him to go to a junior college first to get his GED instead of a high school diploma. Roberson refused.
"That showed us where their heads were," Baptiste said. "We felt all they (Louisville officials) wanted to do was use kids. Lamar needed a diploma. It was time to send him back to Mt. Zion."
At the beginning of the next semester, Roberson said Mt. Zion accepted him, but not on scholarship because of his history. Baptiste helped him financially to live in Durham, while he worked to get his diploma.
"If I could have done it all over again," Roberson said, "I would have just gone straight to Mt. Zion and stayed."
Just before his graduation in May, University of Houston men's basketball associate head coach Marvin Haralson contacted Roberson.
"He did a wonderful job of getting his grades together and doing what he needed to be done to get here," Haralson said. "Now, he's eligible to play. These days, you need a high school diploma. His talent, skill package and appearance on the court are extras."
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