Sunday, May 1, 2011

From Down Under to Seattle ... Jackson rules

By Mechelle Voepel
Special to ESPN.com
Originally Published: July 22, 2004

Seattle's Lauren Jackson came out of the locker room after a recent game wearing a Border Bandits T-shirt, explaining, "Had it made for my daddy."


It was a new "throwback" shirt representing an Australian club team her father had played for. And then she talked about why the Olympics were so important.


"See, I'm representing my country, and there's a whole lot of history there with my mom and dad," she said of hoops-playing parents Maree and Gary. "So that's my No. 1 priority. That's the best thing you can do. The gold medal would be great, but having to surpass the Americans to do it is a tough feat.

"I think I play my best basketball over here, and I'll have that edge going on to my team, knowing that I've been playing here, working my butt off. That's why I love America so much."

Now, it's important to note, lest you've never heard Jackson speak, that much of what she says is with that wink-wink Australian sense of humor that is hard to replicate in print without the vocal inflection.
But even if you're hearing her, you can't always tell, right off, exactly what level of serious she is.

After all, this is somebody who can answer a question, "Kinda not really. Yeah, sort of."

Clearly, the representing Australia and mom and dad part is very serious. The loving America part we have to ask about.

Does she? Do Australians ever? Don't they just put up with being around us? Does Jackson really have fun here?

"Yeah, I do," she said. "My first two years were really tough, I struggled to get through them and wasn't sure I was going to come back. But I'm glad I did; it was the best thing I ever did."
One big reason is Storm coach Anne Donovan, a 6-foot-9 former Old Dominion star and three-time Olympian.

"Anne's been the best coach for me that I could possibly ever dream of," Jackson said. "She makes me work harder than anyone, yet she's a players' coach."

Plus, well ... America has grown on Jackson. Which is lucky for the WNBA. She's so talented, so much needed in this league. What a shame it would have been if she'd stayed home and American basketball fans would miss out on one of the best big women you're ever going to see.

Too early to say that about the 23-year-old? Nope. Watch her instinct for the basketball, her great hands, leaping ability, finishing touch, range, mobility, body control, fearlessness. Jackson is maximizing the great genetic package she got. And then there's the famous Aussie characteristic of really caring about what she's doing but acting very laid-back about it.

"She just has a presence, offensively and defensively," Seattle point guard Sue Bird said. "She could probably go scoreless in a game, but the way they guard her, it will open everything up for everyone else.

"We look for skip passes more, because they're fronting more, and the person who's guarding the opposite guard really cheats and is all the way down the lane. So we can do a lot of different things. And when she does get 20-30 points? Makes everything better."

Donovan came to Seattle last year, which was pivotal. Jackson did not enjoy her first two years here. She should have been the league's rookie of the year in 2001, but it went to American Jackie Stiles. Jackson's scoring average went up to 17.2 per game her second year, and the Storm made the playoffs, but she was still debating if it was worth missing home to be over here.

Then last season, Donovan arrived and, figuratively speaking, so did Jackson. She was the league's MVP, averaging 21.2 points and 9.3 rebounds. Seattle didn't make the playoffs because of its five-game losing steak that started in mid-August, but Jackson did everything she could in that stretch, notching double-doubles in four of the five games.

And, most importantly for her future, she decided it was OK in the States after all. Donovan, while at Charlotte, had watched and coached against Jackson for two years and had not been sure what to expect.

"The M.O. on Lauren was, 'Get physical with her, she loses her temper. She likes to float out on the 3-point line. She doesn't like to do the work down low and is an iffy 3-point shooter, dangerous but not deadly,' '' Donovan said. "I didn't know how coachable she'd be, how moldable she was. But she's a coach's dream: To have somebody who really wants to get better: 'Show me how and I'll listen to you.' That's been her approach since day one with me.

"She's such a complete player. We've been talking to Lauren a lot about her defense this year and picking that up to a high level, and she's responded and really focused on that. But she can post up with anybody or can step out to the 3-point line and drill it. She's now one of the best 3-point shooters in the league. So it's complete versatility. She does all the little things.

"And the best thing about Lauren is she is somebody who takes a beating and you'll rarely see her complain about a call or a non-call. She has an intensity and a focus about her that's what sets great players apart. They don't whine; they're not looking for calls, just playing the game."

So you ask Jackson about all this, what's she's doing better this season ... you can guess how she responds, right?

"Nothing, yet."

But Anne talked about how you'd improved your defense ...

"Defense? Anne said that? That's interesting," Jackson said, grinning. "She hasn't said that to me. Actually, I think that's worse. But I guess ... trying to be aggressive each day. That's what I'm trying to do."

During a victory over Sacramento, Jackson had a little skirmish with the Monarchs' Yolanda Griffith. You know, a little mouthing off, a little posturing. Jackson sort of rolled back her neck while saying something that we'll leave to the imagination.

I learned that from 'Jerry Springer:' 'Don't go there, girlfriend,' '' Jackson said, laughing.
But it was all OK after the game with Griffith, whom she'll face in the Olympics. It was no big deal, Jackson said.

"She gave me a little (nod) afterward. She's nice .... (stuff) happens."

So we ask if Jackson has sensed that as she has grown fonder of America, American fans have responded in kind to her.

"Since I did the nudie shots,'' she said, "they're loving me."

OK, speaking of "don't go there" ... ah, darn it. I was all ready to just say never mind, ignore it, let's just write about Jackson's play, but ...

Yes, Jackson did some nude poses in the Aussie magazine "Black and White," along with other Olympic athletes from her country. Yes, in typical fashion for the American sports media, that got Jackson way more attention than her great play has. What a surprise.

Yes, I think any time a female athlete takes off her clothes and gives the come-hither stare, that's not "asserting her power." It's pandering, even if unintentionally, to an audience that isn't comfortable with women unless they're sexualized.

Yes, the magazine itself and a lot of people will call it art, and there was the usual stuff from Jackson that female athletes say when they decide to do this: "I take pride in my athletic body..." As if they actually believe that's going to be why most people are looking at the pictures ... you know, to share in that completely aesthetic "pride." It's sort of like admiring a museum piece, don't you know.
Donovan said something about it being a different culture over in Australia ... but come on, naked is naked.

Jackson said she knows in 20 years, she won't have this body so why not "take pride" in it now. One could point out that in 20 years, she might not have the same mindset, either, and then might regret doing it.

But Jackson couldn't have seemed less worried about that ... and it absolutely is her choice.
"We Aussies just have fun, enjoy the moment," she said. "What do you enjoy if you don't enjoy the moment?"

Fair enough. We'll enjoy Lauren Jackson, the basketball player. In the Olympics and the WNBA, hopefully both for a long, long time.


Mechelle Voepel of the Kansas City Star is a regular contributor to ESPN.com. She can be reached at mvoepel@kcstar.com.

Nude Photos of Jackson may stir up a Storm of Controversy

By Jayda Evans
Seattle Times staff reporter
Copyright © 2004 The Seattle Times Company
Friday, June 18, 2004 - Page updated at 08:56 A.M.

HOUSTON — We all know the obsession. Whether you're into men or women, one glimpse of an athletic body performing feats not thought feasible by mortals makes you wonder more about the person.

It's the reason paparazzi exist and gossip magazines thrive.

Storm star Lauren Jackson, after being asked in 2000 and again in 2002, finally agreed to bare all for an artistic Australian photo magazine called Black+White. Jackson appears on the cover, with the title "The Athens Dream," in tribute to the upcoming Summer Games in Greece. Wisps of Jackson's bleached-blond hair dangle over her creamy skin. Inside the magazine, Jackson, 23, reveals everything except her, ahem, down under.

The issue, which will be available at Seattle area bookstores Tuesday, is the third photo essay edition of Australian Olympic hopefuls. It features 35 athletes, including dripping-wet swimmer Michael Klim.

To Australians, it's like being asked to light the Olympic flame.

In America, Jackson runs the risk of being criticized.


"Do you really think it's that big a deal?" she pondered when asked about the nude pics after practice yesterday.

Well, just ask Storm guard Sue Bird if she'd do it and you might better understand American culture.

"Personally, after all the flak I got for the Dime (magazine) shoot, and I was fully clothed, I'd have to seriously think about it," Bird said of her approximate six-hour photo session last summer. She was vilified by media for posing seductively in a Philadelphia 76ers jersey and stating "sex sells" when it comes to women's basketball.

Then there was that whole spanking incident when, in a comedic moment on live sports radio, Bird agreed to bend over a host's lap and shout "Harder, daddy, harder!" on air if she didn't achieve a certain assist-to-turnover ratio by season's end. But Bird, then 22, was thinking competitively, not about battered women, a subject to which the spectacle was linked later.

"They are totally isolated, different incidents," said Karen Bryant, the Storm's chief operating officer, who said she was told of Jackson's nude photos this week. "Sue immediately retracted what she said. Lauren is not going to apologize about this. This is something that she has chosen to do and she doesn't have any regrets at all."

Feeling too young at 18 to participate in 2000 and too busy with her Storm season during the 2002 shoot, Jackson mulled over the idea for this year's magazine with her family in the offseason.

She wasn't paid to pose, but she was flown to Sydney to work with award-winning photographer Steve Lowe and a makeup artist in a private session that took about seven hours. Jackson handpicked her pictures, getting complete control over the process.

After the Olympics, all the photos used in the magazine will be auctioned to benefit charities.

"I feel really comfortable with my body and shape I'm in, and I know I'm not going to be like this forever," Jackson said. "I was really nervous at first, but it was conquering one of my fears. I felt very much empowered at the end.

"It's me all over and I'm really happy with the photos. As athletes you work so hard to get in shape for competition. This celebrates the athletic body and how much work you put in. We do it the right way; we don't starve ourselves."

Jackson said she doesn't view the shots as objectifying women, either. Especially because the magazine, which will sell for $40, is equal parts men and women. Scour the Internet and opinions vary, however.

One fan ripped the idea, saying it continues the idea that women athletes are eye candy and that the pictures would ruin the credibility of the WNBA. The author went on to say that as one of the faces of the league and the Storm, Jackson needs to act responsibly.

"Both of these organizations depend on the support of families in one of the most conservative countries in the world," wrote True Blue 22. "No matter how tasteful the photos are, some of those families will be offended just because they are nude photos.
The Storm and the WNBA have provided LJ with substantial income and recognition and are entitled to ask for a higher standard from one of their marquee players."

Meanwhile, an earlier post on a hardcore Storm fans site didn't think it was up for discussion.

"We like to think of LJ as our Seattle Storm player, and we sometimes forget she's from a different country and a different culture," wrote nellie2034. "I think we as Americans sometimes put ourselves so much above the rest of the world and try and place our values on others too often. She had her reasons, she is an adult and I would hope that people would respect her decision. I just don't think it's our place to discuss whether she should have or not."

Bryant said the team has no control over its players during the offseason and wouldn't share her opinions about the pictures because of her position. But the topic of nude women athletes has been a debate since Los Angeles Sparks center Lisa Leslie was shown artistically nude in a 1998 Nike ad aired during the Super Bowl.

Also, former Storm guard Michelle Marciniak was asked to pose naked for Playboy after winning its sexiest WNBA player contest in 2002, and Sacramento Monarchs guard Ruthie Bolton posed in an itsy-bitsy bikini for "Women's Basketball."

So Jackson's breasts, which will grace the glossy pages of 75,000 copies, aren't alone.
"I really did it with the Australians in mind," Jackson said. "It's a prestigious thing in Australia. Believe it or not, but my mom and dad (Maree and Gary) loved it. My dad saw it the other day, called me and said he was so proud of me."

Jackson's teammates share the sentiment. Bird loved Jackson's hair, and fellow Australian Tully Bevilaqua adored the cover shot.

"She looks sensational," Bevilaqua said. "The human body is nothing to be ashamed of."




Saturday, April 23, 2011

Young Australian hailed as Basketball's Best

11/09/2000

KERRY O'BRIEN: Thorpe, O'Neill, Freeman -- household names and Australia's brightest gold-medal prospects.

But after a torrid basketball clash this weekend between America and Australia, the name 'Lauren Jackson' has emerged as one to watch over the two weeks of Olympic competition.

The Americans may have beaten Australia's Opals but, at just 19, Jackson is being hailed as the best basketballer in the world.

Sean Murphy reports.

LAUREN JACKSON: When I was about two, I think I said to my aunty, I said, "I'm going to play at the Olympics one day," and that's when it all started.

SEAN MURPHY: Lauren Jackson's time has come.

This week, she'll realize her Olympic dream and the world will discover what basketball's best have known for years.

MICHELLE TIMMS, OPALS CAPTAIN: Jackson has the potential to just, you know, blow everyone out of the water.

She could be the Michael Jordan that women's basketball hasn't yet had.

ANDREW GAZE, BOOMERS CAPTAIN: What she's doing here domestically and also what she's done with the Australian team on the international scene is nothing short of phenomenal.

SEAN MURPHY: With rare speed, agility and skill for someone almost two metres tall, 19-year-old Lauren Jackson has become a dominant player on the world stage.

The girl from Albury-Wodonga on the NSW/Victoria border was almost genetically preordained to play basketball at the highest level.

Her mother, Maree, was a champion who captained Australia and played in America.

Father Gary also played for Australia.

When did you first realise that she had something special?

MAREE JACKSON: Well, she went away on the first basketball trip when she was two weeks old, and from then on she's always loved the ball, loved playing with it, dribbling, whatever.

GARY JACKSON: I guess from the age of about six or seven, it was quite obvious that her hand-eye coordination was exceptional for a kid her age.

TV NEWSREADER: Lauren Jackson is the youngest player to be chosen in the Australian team.

SEAN MURPHY: Lauren Jackson first came to the attention of national selectors as a 14-year-old.

Within a year, her exceptional talent brought a move to Canberra's Institute of Sport, and a realization that her dreams would mean personal sacrifices.

LAUREN JACKSON: That was really hard actually.

I think for the first six months, or something, I cried every night because I missed my parents too much or I'd miss my old school -- just little things like that.

MAREE JACKSON: It was very hard.

I've had one day off in 10 years where I work and it was that Monday.

We dropped her off on the Sunday, and it was the Monday I had off!

It was very difficult.

GARY JACKSON: You should have been in the car with her on the way home after dropping her off!

SEAN MURPHY: At home in country NSW, the Jacksons are now content to follow their daughter's career from afar.

Younger brother Ross believes fame and fortune is unlikely to change his sister.

ROSS JACKSON: Last time I was here, she got home, she was laying on the lounge-room floor with a packet of chips in her hand watching the TV and there was nothing different.

Nothing changes very much.

SEAN MURPHY: Two years ago, Lauren Jackson gave notice of her potential with an outstanding performance to help Australia win the bronze medal at the World Basketball Championships in Berlin.

America's 'Slam' magazine then rated her the greatest player in history.

Coach Tom Maher believes it's a lot of pressure for a teenager.

TOM MAHER, OPALS COACH: I mean, the worst thing that we can ever get to is somebody thinking that they have to get 40 points or 40 rebounds just to have a reasonable game.

It's just unattainable.

Or even worse, the thought that, "Well, I'm a one-man team."

LAUREN JACKSON: I guess that's when my friends bring me back down to earth and they're like, I'm just a normal person, because I am, and I've got normal friends and I've got normal family and I'm just me, really.

I don't ever really think about that sort of stuff.

SEAN MURPHY: In Sydney this week, sportswear giant Nike is putting the finishing touches to a 30-storey high advertisement featuring Lauren Jackson.

According to her agent, Leo Karis, the Olympics should make her an international superstar.

LEO KARIS, MANAGER: Once she goes that next level, I think she'll be playing in the States and I think her marketability will be enormous.

I think if Lauren wants to play with the best in the world, she will have to move there.

SEAN MURPHY: Even before the Games begin, Lauren Jackson has had a taste of what to expect from the best the USA has to offer.

And the gold-medal favourite Americans are well aware of Australia's young star.

NELL FORTNER, USA COACH: She has an incredibly bright future and she's doing a tremendous amount for their team right now, which you don't see that a lot in the world for such a young player to do that.

SEAN MURPHY: Lauren Jackson admits she'd like to play in America eventually, but for now, her only goal is to help the Opals win an historic Olympic gold medal.

What do you think it will take to win an Olympic gold medal?

LAUREN JACKSON: I think we just have to keep playing the way we are and getting better and improving and hopefully, our talent will take us there.

We've got a great team now and everything's going really well, so I think that if we just keep plodding along with what we're doing we've got a chance, we're up there.

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