Rucker Park Diaries: Vince Carter's Rain Delayed Debut<\/a>.\"<\/p>\nSo the rumors of his Rucker Park debut echoed throughout the city\u2019s entire summer basketball community. The Vacant Lots team was undefeated that summer, headlined by Charles Jones, who\u2019d led the nation in scoring for two consecutive years at Long Island University. They opened the game by scoring ten consecutive points and despite the standing-room-only crowd, the mood was relatively subdued because Vince Carter was nowhere in sight.<\/p>\n
But two words would bring the drenched fans to their feet in unison: \u201cHeeeeeeeee\u2019s Heeeeeeere!\u201d<\/p>\n
With that utterance, the crowd became instantly frenzied as Carter came jogging through the locker room doors attired in a white and brown Black Hand uniform. He waved at the crowd, which included Jay Z and his fellow NBA brethren Ron Artest and Stephon Marbury, and ran directly to the scorer\u2019s table.<\/p>\n
More concerned with fitting in than taking over during the early stages of the game, Carter did nothing to distinguish himself in the first half. But at the beginning of the second half, he alerted air traffic control that he was ready for takeoff. His first bucket came with under nine minutes left in third quarter, when he grabbed an offensive rebound and elevated for a two-handed dunk in the paint. Within a matter of seconds, he drained back-to-back three-pointers from way beyond the arc.<\/p>\n
Journalist Vincent Mallozi, a veteran playground hoops aficionado and avid fan of the New York City summer asphalt scene, was in the Gauchos Gym that night. As Air Canada began warming up, this is what he wrote for the Village Voice<\/i>:<\/p>\n
\u201cWith 6:28 left in the third, Air Canada broke into the open court, slipped past one defender with a right-to-left, behind-the-back dribble, whipped a behind-the-back pass to a trailing Prime Objective (the Washington, D.C. playground phenom whose real name is Lonnie Harrell), pointed north, and as an alley-oop pass came falling out of the sky, turned his body 180 degrees in midair so that he was facing the opposite basket, caught the rock, and threw it down with a force that literally shook the Rucker faithful out onto the floor in celebration.<\/p>\n
Shortly after order was restored, Air Canada took off again. With 54 seconds left in the third, he rose to catch another alley-oop pass with his right hand along the left baseline about five feet from the rim, and, still airborne, slammed windmill-style over the outstretched fingertips of two opponents. It was perhaps the greatest dunk in the history of Rucker.\u201d<\/p>\n
At this time, I was running the most popular Vince Carter fansite on the web (GotVinsanity.com) and when I heard about this game, I had to have a copy of it so I could share it with the rest of the world. Lucky for me, the EBC was selling VHS copies on Ebay and it remains one of my favorite Vince Carter collectibles.<\/p>\n
<\/a><\/p>\nHere's some of the best highlights from the game, which includes the famous windmill alley-oop dunk and him and teenage Adrian Walton aka Whole Lotta Game going at.<\/p>\n