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Sunday, May 25, 2008

Oregon basketball ace kept off boys team

By TOM HALLMAN JR

The Oregonian
Sunday, May 18, 2008

BEAVERTON, Ore. — Jaime Nared is nearly 6-foot-1 and blessed with Michael Jordan-style skills. In games, the 12-year-old can more than hold her own against the boys, dropping three-pointers and sometimes scoring 30 points or more.

And there, according to her coach, lies the problem.

She's so good, Michael Abraham said, she makes the boys look like scrubs. So she has been told she can no longer play on boys teams at The Hoop, a private Beaverton basketball facility that runs a league in which Abraham's teams compete.

The trouble started last month, when some parents told The Hoop management they didn't like Jaime playing with the boys.

Hoop officials notified Abraham that Jaime, after years on one of his boys teams, was barred. They cited a rule, in a document coaches sign when they enter teams in the league, that prohibits mixed-gender teams.

"I never saw the rule," said Abraham, who has coached basketball, mostly girls and women's teams, for 32 years.

"If I'd known about it, I wouldn't have put any of my teams in the league. Besides, she's been playing on this team since second grade, and she plays on our team when we travel around the region. There's never been one word of complaint."

Neal Franzer, The Hoop's director of operations, said Thursday that parents were "adamant" that their complaints have nothing to do with Jaime's skills.

"They said the problem was the boys were playing differently against her because she was a girl," he said. "They'd been taught to not push a girl, so they weren't fouling her hard, and the focus had shifted from playing basketball to noticing a girl was on the floor with them."

Hoop officials e-mailed Abraham to remind him of the rules.

"The rule may not have been enforced in past years," Franzer said. "We have new management this year. It's policy, and we enforce policy."

Abraham, Jaime and her parents don't buy it. "I think the complaints come from parents who don't like seeing a girl that good playing against their sons," Abraham said.

Jaime, who said she "fell in love" with basketball when she was 8, likes the boys team because boys play a fast-paced game.

"I think the boys on a specific team don't like me," she said. "It doesn't seem fair."

Jaime's mom, Reiko Williams, said the issue boiled over after a particular game.

"She scored 30 points," Williams said. "I remember one play. She stole the ball, dribbled up court and made a behind-the-back pass to a teammate. He missed the lay-in, and she grabbed the rebound and put it in. I think it was just too much for some of those parents."

Abraham put Jaime on the boys team to match her skills and keep her with peers. He has had her play on high-school girls teams, but many travel and "her parents want her to be around kids her own age," Abraham said.

And when she played on same-age girls teams?

"We beat one team 90-7," Abraham said. "At her level, it's like having Shaq on a high-school team."

He said the boys on his team enjoyed playing with Jaime — among a handful of girls to play on his boys teams over the years — because she helped them improve.

"If she were 4-feet-9 and no good, we wouldn't be having this discussion," Abraham said.

"I can't think of one boy that we've played against that's had a problem with her," he added. "Maybe their dads do. Teach the boys how to handle her. Front her, deny her the ball. ... Listen, she's a girl's girl, but she plays tough. She's no cupcake. She gets knocked down and takes a charge."

For now, Jaime is back playing with girls: on a sixth-grade team and a nontraveling high-school team. Abraham appealed The Hoop's ban but was denied.

Jaime, whom he considers the best sixth-grade girls basketball player in the country, is the one who will suffer, Abraham said.

Even so, she's sure to play in college and beyond, he said. Her father, Greg Nared, played at the University of Maryland, and her older sister is headed there in the fall on a basketball scholarship.

Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company

Saturday, May 24, 2008

Fasha Sandha and Datuk S in love

Executive Chairman SNC Associates Group (an IT group), Datuk Shafik Rizaal Saaban (pix below) and top actress Fasha Sandha (pix right) is in love. Shafik the founder of SNC Associates Sdn Bhd, he provides the vision, mission and direction of SNC Group. His passion in IT security prompted him to focus on offering the best of breed IT security solutions to the market. He envisions SNC to become the leader in IT security solution provider by collaborating with leading IT security multinational companies such as A4, Identix and Verity.

Shafik graduated from University of Sheffield , U.K and has lectured at Mara University of Technology (UiTM) in Melaka and with Lim Kok Wing College University of Creative Technology (LUCT), lecturing in animation and multimedia modules. Joining the civil service as a Special Task Officer in ICT Security for the National Security Division (NRD), Prime Minister's Department, he manages several major national security projects.

He married to Norhaslinda Bakar, 28, (pix) his team mate in SNC Group Finance Director. They have two child Aliyah, 6, and Aiman, 3, before divorce December last year.

Shafik today comfirm that he fall in love with Fasha.

Shafik and Fasha and a crew of Jangan Main Belakang film was seen at Shafik banglo at Mutiara Homes, Damansara, yesterday.

Fasha Sandha, a rising star who is creating a name comparable to other great actors. Blessed with good looks, trendy, popular, smart in voicing out her opinions, friendly and her humble attitude have made her welcomed by everybody.

This second child of four siblings started to be noticeable in 2002 while getting involved in the field of advertising and modeling at a very young age of 15 years old. Even though she was busy with her career, she successfully continued her study at the National Youth Cultural Institute.
Fasha also said that: “Jika sudah jodoh dengan Datuk, macam mana nak tolak?".

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Datuk Shafik and Ex Wife Norhaslinda Bakar

 

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