Letter to My Younger Self by ANTOINE WALKER

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PHOTOGRAPH BY SPORTING NEWS/GETTY IMAGES
ANTOINE WALKER
RETIRED / NBA


Dear Toine,

It’s the summer of 2001 and you’re on top of the world. Michael Jordan is on his comeback tour, and you have spent the summer working out in Chicago with him and some NBA players from the area. You have already won an NCAA title at Kentucky, been taken sixth in the 1996 NBA draft by the Boston Celtics and made it to the All-Star Game … but getting the call from the greatest player of all time? (Yeah, he still is …) That’s about as good as it gets for a kid from inner-city Chicago.

And you have some great days ahead of you. In a few years, you’re going to win an NBA championship with the Miami Heat. You’ll make two more All-Star teams. You’ll be inducted into the UK Athletics Hall Of Fame.

But I don’t want you to focus on that. I want you focus on this moment you’re in right now, because you’re going to remember it as one of the best times of your life.

You’ve reached the highest level of your sport. Your contract pays $10 million this year and you are living very well (a bit too well, but we’ll get to that later). Even better, you’re making life more comfortable for your family. You are doing your part as a father, a brother, a cousin, a nephew, a friend and a son — especially as a son. You’re still proud that you were able to build a house for your mother from the ground up. You’ll never forget the day she moved in. You know she deserves it and much more.

But back to the moment you’re in now: You’re meeting some friends from the league at a restaurant tonight, and it will be another good time. But before you go, I want to teach you a new word, a word that you don’t have in your vocabulary yet. The word is no. I know this won’t be easy for you, so I want you to practice.

Say it: “No.”

Now try: “No, sorry, I can’t.”

And now: “No, I’m going to pass.”

Good … now let me tell you why I’m teaching you this invaluable new word.

Tonight, one of your best friends is going to bring along a buddy. This friend of a friend is good company, a nice guy. He seems to know a lot of people in the league, and he likes to bring them business ideas. He wants to swap phone numbers and stay in touch.



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PHOTOGRAPH BY VICTOR BALDIZON/NBAE VIA GETTY IMAGES



This would be a good time to use that word I just taught you.

Here’s what’s going to happen if you don’t: You’re going to trade texts, maybe run into him from time to time. He’s going to tell you about some real estate deals he’s been working on. The numbers will look good. You’ve been thinking that it’s time to make some money outside of basketball. Maybe you can live on that and set aside your NBA money for the future.

You and your new friend will start a company together. You’ll call it Walker Ventures. Sounds good, right? You’ll invest in commercial real estate, apartment buildings and other income properties. You won’t even have to put up any cash, just guarantee the bank loans with your personal portfolio. You’re playing basketball nine months out of the year, so he’ll take care of managing the properties. That will sound good enough to you at the time.

I want to teach you a new word, a word that you don’t have in your vocabulary yet. The word is no.

It will all go well, at first. You’re buying buildings. The equity keeps growing. No cash is coming out yet, but it will eventually come … at least that’s what you’ll think.

Then the troubles will start. Payments to the banks won’t get made. It’ll turn out that your “friend” has been mismanaging the properties and stealing from you, but you weren’t around to see it.

It won’t be long before Walker Ventures closes. But those loans you guaranteed will still need to be paid. So that’s where more than $20 million of that contract money will go. By then, that will be more money than you have left.

Your “friend” will be heading off to jail, and you will be on your way to bankruptcy court.

I know that this is going to be hard for you to believe, but you’re going to make $108 million playing basketball — $108 million — and a few years later, you’ll be broke. You trusted the wrong person, and you didn’t have anyone else watching the business. You might have been able to work through that, but you handed out too much money to too many people. And the rest, you either gambled away or spent on things that will eventually seem foolish.

So, let’s talk about your spending, how you’re living.

When you’re on the road — LA, Miami, wherever — you can’t take the 10 or so guys you run with to Gucci or Louis Vuitton and tell them to get whatever they want. I know it’s easy to get bored when you’re on the road, but those trips have to stop. You can’t afford it, especially if you’re also taking your guys to the club and spending thousands of dollars night … after night … after night. The clothes, the cars, the jewelry — all of it — you have to use that no word more often.

Sometimes, you even have to say it to yourself.



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PHOTOGRAPH BY DEANNE FITZMAURICE/NBAE/GETTY IMAGES



There will come a time in 2008 when over a six-week period, you’ll run up an $800,000 gambling debt at the casinos in Las Vegas. They’ll turn to a bank account of yours that they already have on file to collect, but by that time it will be an old account that you stopped using a while ago, so there won’t be enough money there to cover the debt. And do you know what happens when you don’t pay the casinos within 45 days? A warrant goes out for your arrest.

That’s when you’ll find yourself standing in front of a judge. And all that talent, all that opportunity … the judge won’t care about that.

The worst part is, this will come at the same time as your real estate troubles. The media will take notice, and they’ll run with it. You’ll see headlines nobody wants to see — headlines with your name, and words next to it like bankrupt or broke, or even lost everything.

You have a good heart, but you also have to use your head.

You’re probably ready for some good news. Here it is: You don’t have to say no to everyone about everything. You were raised to think of your family first. Watching Mom raise six children as a single parent, you know what it looks like to make sacrifices to take care of your family. You want to help, and you should. Even after taxes and agents and everything else, $108 million is more than enough money to live well and take care of your family. So, buy Mom that house. She deserves it. Just don’t spend $800,000 on an indoor pool. She’ll still be very happy and very proud of you.

Here’s some more good news: You are smart enough to learn from your mistakes. That’s where I find myself today, where I’m writing you from. I’m sharing my experiences with college athletes, telling stories about my life — the life that will become yours if you don’t take my advice. And hopefully you can prevent some young athletes from making the same mistakes. Some of the kids I talk to remind me of you — of us. They have talent. They work hard and have bright futures … if they make the right decisions.

You have a good heart, but you also have to use your head. Learn to say no and practice it often. Even better, choose a financial advisor very, very carefully, and put him between you and the people asking you for money. It’s O.K. to try to make some money outside of basketball, but make sure that a third party who is not part of the deal can warn you of the risks. You’ve worked as hard as anyone to get where you are. Protect what you’ve earned.

And tonight … maybe you should just stay home and watch a movie.

Your friend,

Antoine
 
And sadly there are still more than a few of these guys will read this and their immediate reaction will be it will never happen to me.

Good job though Toine.
 
timing couldn't be more appropriate w/ all this $$$ floating around
 
One thing to be broke all your life. .another thing to be broke after being so rich...to waste that much money...that's rough...:smh:
 
The issue is, when you're making that much bread, and you're not willing to 'ball out', you don't look cool. I mean, who wants to hang out with someone frugal? Isn't the point of escaping the hood, and getting rich is to live the lifestyle seen in rap videos? Of course it is.

The good thing is, I do sense that this phenomenon is becoming less prevalent. It has been talked about so much, that its almost impossible for an athlete to not have that in their back of their minds.

Who wants to be that statistic that went broke after accumulating millions?

Naturally some still will. Many, even. But, I expect for players to get smarter because so much light has been shined on this issue. You can't say you aren't aware of the possibility of it all in 2016 and onward.
 
Saying NO was one of the first things i ever learned. I've said it to family, friends, co-workers, and didnt think twice about it. It kills me when i hear people say they are living for today, or you cant take your money with you when you die.......thats a stupid mentality. Yeah he was trying to plan for his future, but this dude went to college, he should have been smarter than that. Who was managing his money that would just let him make those investments? Why didn't the accountant notice what was happening.

Hope he's doing well.
 
The issue is, when you're making that much bread, and you're not willing to 'ball out', you don't look cool. I mean, who wants to hang out with someone frugal? Isn't the point of escaping the hood, and getting rich is to live the lifestyle seen in rap videos? Of course it is.
and thats the thing right there. why are we worried about looking cool? the point of escaping the hood is so you can live comfortably, not foolishly. If your friend dont want to be around you when you not spending money, thats better for you, because that shows they arent really your friends.
 
The issue is, when you're making that much bread, and you're not willing to 'ball out', you don't look cool. I mean, who wants to hang out with someone frugal? Isn't the point of escaping the hood, and getting rich is to live the lifestyle seen in rap videos? Of course it is.

The good thing is, I do sense that this phenomenon is becoming less prevalent. It has been talked about so much, that its almost impossible for an athlete to not have that in their back of their minds.

Who wants to be that statistic that went broke after accumulating millions?

Naturally some still will. Many, even. But, I expect for players to get smarter because so much light has been shined on this issue. You can't say you aren't aware of the possibility of it all in 2016 and onward.
When you don't make that kind of money and don't ball out you don't look cool either, so I don't see a difference. No different from living in a middle class neighborhood where everyone drives a suv and you drive a corolla. Some neighbors will look at you as that guy with the corolla.
 
and thats the thing right there. why are we worried about looking cool? the point of escaping the hood is so you can live comfortably, not foolishly. If your friend dont want to be around you when you not spending money, thats better for you, because that shows they arent really your friends.

Very true, I just think the ability to cut life-long friendships because of expectations people have of your money isn't very common. Hell, everyone around you likely have expectations of your money, so you'll be cutting ties with everybody.

I don't know. Tough situation to be in.

I'm also sure a lot of peopled help out and looked out along the way, and you feel guilty saying 'no' to them. Of course, you should look out to some degree, but to what degree?
 
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Hopefully he tells himself to stop shooting all those horrible fucking 3's. ... and stay away from that big head loud mouth toxic bitch that everybody ran thru.

Well, we all know who that was:rolleyes::smh:...that was as much of a mistake as anything he wrote here. He should have said "Helllll no!" to her! The pussy wasn't that good...was it?
 
The issue is, when you're making that much bread, and you're not willing to 'ball out', you don't look cool. I mean, who wants to hang out with someone frugal? Isn't the point of escaping the hood, and getting rich is to live the lifestyle seen in rap videos? Of course it is.

The good thing is, I do sense that this phenomenon is becoming less prevalent. It has been talked about so much, that its almost impossible for an athlete to not have that in their back of their minds.

Who wants to be that statistic that went broke after accumulating millions?

Naturally some still will. Many, even. But, I expect for players to get smarter because so much light has been shined on this issue. You can't say you aren't aware of the possibility of it all in 2016 and onward.
you said a whole bunch of nothing. who cares what a bunch of broke knuckle heads think
 
Saying NO was one of the first things i ever learned. I've said it to family, friends, co-workers, and didnt think twice about it. It kills me when i hear people say they are living for today, or you cant take your money with you when you die.......thats a stupid mentality. Yeah he was trying to plan for his future, but this dude went to college, he should have been smarter than that. Who was managing his money that would just let him make those investments? Why didn't the accountant notice what was happening.

Hope he's doing well.
Yeah that's a dumb as saying. Blacks need to think about generational wealth,of course you can't take it with you but at least think about your seeds
 
Stay away from Evelyn
Stay away from Evelyn
Stay away from Evelyn
Stay away from Evelyn
Stay away from Evelyn
Oh....... And
Stay away from Evelyn
 
you said a whole bunch of nothing. who cares what a bunch of broke knuckle heads think

Who cares what a bunch of broke knuckleheads think?

Really? Are you really pretending like taking care of entourages has not been the downfall of many black athletes and entertainers. That question is sardonic and rhetorical, because the answer problem is 'Most of them care!"
 
It is tragic what happened to walker but hard to believe he let one real estate company blow through the majority of his earnings.

He will be OK once his NBA pension kicks on but it is brutal to have blown through $120+ million
 
Hopefully he tells himself to stop shooting all those horrible fucking 3's.... and stay away from that big head loud mouth toxic bitch that everybody ran thru.

who was the basketball groupie you talkin bout tho??

oh nevermind it was that chick who left him after he went

broke...

as if she was going to stay and enjoy the pity party...

todays women dont play that 1950 through thick or thin shit..

its thick or IM OUT!!!!
 
It is tragic what happened to walker but hard to believe he let one real estate company blow through the majority of his earnings.

He will be OK once his NBA pension kicks on but it is brutal to have blown through $120+ million

you gotta manage the fuckin leeches as well as yo money!!!
 
He still blames others...... and himself but It's ALL HIS FAULT
He seems to play the victim a lil too much for me
No mention of the trickin' on bitches too.......oddly
It's documented the Eva got 2 million from him then split
 
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who was the basketball groupie you talkin bout tho??

oh nevermind it was that chick who left him after he went

broke...

as if she was going to stay and enjoy the pity party...

todays women dont play that 1950 through thick or thin shit..

its thick or IM OUT!!!!
Women in the 50s had no financial incentive to leave.

It made financial sense to stay.
 
nah those arent leeches then, the leeches are pure parasites!

See, thats where it gets complicated.

What happened if you became rich, and the very people who held you down when you weren't rich, were the very same people demanding too much of you? How do you reconcile the reality that largely why you are where you are is because the people who are now feeling entitled to what you worked hard for, held you up when you had next to nothing?
 
I hope young athletes heed his warning and take his advice. I wasn't an athlete, but I am doing well and my family and friends will tell you that my favorite word is "NO!"
 
I hope young athletes heed his warning and take his advice. I wasn't an athlete, but I am doing well and my family and friends will tell you that my favorite word is "NO!"
I have a cousin who is probably worth over a million. He moved to S.C. to get away from his friends and distant relatives.
 
At least he had it to blow,most won't ever experience that.

He's not finished or over,life has just began for him and I wish him luck.
 
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