It’s a story with so many plot twists it’s almost unbelievable.
Seth Franco became the first Caucasian Harlem Globetrotter since 1942.
That’s the part that captures everyone’s attention. But
that’s not the interesting part of the story.
The story begins simply enough.
Seth, who played basketball at a small Christian school on Long Island,
moved with his family to Brooklyn. He enrolled for his sophomore year
at Abraham Lincoln High School – the school from which Stephon
Marbury, currently of the New York Knicks, graduated. In fact, when
Seth enrolled at Abraham Lincoln, Marbury was a senior.
Abraham Lincoln was a tough school, and Seth, a Caucasian, was a definite
minority. In fact, the coach at Abraham Lincoln took one look at Seth
and said to Seth’s father, “If your son wants to play basketball,
he should probably go to a different school.”
But Seth was used to being underestimated. He was rail thin. At the
time he was short. And no one knew how good he was at one thing - handling
a basketball.
Seth made the junior varsity team as the starting point guard.
The next year his family moved back to Long Island and Seth finished
his high school career in a small Christian school, enrolling at Nyack
Christian College in Manhattan.
Like most kids, Seth had his heart set on a career in the NBA.
But that’s not how this story plays out.
Injured in his junior year, the result of improper bone structure in
his hip, Seth left Nyack, his dreams shattered.
He joined the Richmond Outreach Center, in Richmond, Virginia, and
developed a basketball program for inner-city kids, operating out of
a warehouse.
The little program grew in popularity and gained attention. The Court
Jesters, a basketball entertainment group, discovered Seth, used him
in some of their engagements, and put his picture on their website.
In fact, Seth’s picture is still on their website (www.cjesters.com)
Here’s where the story takes a most interesting turn.
Discouraged, Seth went to find himself. His dreams were lying broken
at his feet, his hip was sore, and life simply was not turning out the
way he had envisioned.
He went to IHOP – The International House of Prayer in Kansas
City. For three months he did nothing but pray and study and read and
wait and listen, trying to find direction for his life.
During the time he isolated himself, Universal Studios began casting
a projected movie, Rucker Park. It was to be the story of the legendary
park of the same name in New York City – the place the pros go
to get their street credibility. Even Wilt Chamberlain had played there.
Directed by Malcolm Lee, the movie was to be about a white kid going
into Rucker Park, overcoming the odds, and coming out on top.
So the people of Universal Studios went scouring the city, looking
for a white kid with extraordinary skills. They looked on the website
of the Court Jesters. There they found Seth.
Now the plot thickens.
Universal Studios called Seth’s home. But Seth, in going to Kansas
City to find himself, had chosen to cut himself off from everything.
He had no phone. He had only called home one time – using a friend’s
cell phone.
His parents, being loving and concerned as parents are, saved the number.
When Universal Studios called, Seth’s parents tried the only number
they had for him – the cell phone of his friend.
When they called, Seth was right there, and was on the next plane back
to New York.
He walked into the tryout, not having practiced for three months. He
had spent most of his days in prayer, and his diet had consisted primarily
of what he could find at food drives.
But this story is about the unexpected.
In a tryout where none of the pros had made it past the first round,
Seth took over. By the end of the night, he was center court, dribbling
with two balls, as the cameras circled him while 100 other guys who
were there to try out simply stood and watched. Malcolm Lee had his
white basketball player. Kenny Smith, NBA player and talent judge for
the movie, was impressed.
“I was totally out of shape,” Seth says. “I hadn’t
even picked up a basketball for three months. There’s no way I
should have been sharp. But I was right on point. It was a dream come
true.”
Seth won the lead role in Rucker Park.
And if the story were to end there, it would be intriguing enough.
But there’s so much more.
The movie plans fell through. Rucker Park still sits as a project at
Universal Studios. And if the project ever comes to completion, Seth
will still have the role. But for now, it’s a dead end.
Such a painful twist to the story. Seth, with shattered dreams, goes
to find himself. His parents almost unbelievably contact him when Universal
Studios calls. Seth miraculously wins the role. Everything is looking
so good. Dreams do come true.
But then the dream is deflated – again.
However…the story continues.
The Harlem Wizards, another basketball entertainment group, had been
at the casting call for the movie. They had seen Seth, and they liked
him. In the meantime, Seth had moved back to New York, almost at the
whim of a buddy. Seth had been contemplating moving back, but didn’t
know where he would stay, when a friend called and almost jokingly said,
“Hey, how ‘bout coming to live with me?”
Seth did.
For two months he played with the Wizards, and was about ready to sign
a contract with them. It looked like everything was coming together.
Every story needs a hurricane, and this one is no different. Just as
Seth was to ink his contract, the hurricane hit, knocking out all communication.
In the meantime, Seth’s father had been talking to a scout for
the Harlem Globetrotters. Seth’s father mentioned that Kenny Smith
had been impressed with Seth at the Rucker Park audition. As it turned
out, the scout and Kenny Smith were good friends. The scout made a call
to Smith, and Seth found himself invited to a tryout for the Globetrotters.
One week later, Seth was at the Globetrotters training camp, guarding
people he used to play on his Nintendo.
10 days into the tryout, Seth was discouraged. His leg was in so much
pain he wanted to quit. In fact, that’s what he did. Or at least
that’s what he decided to do.
He went to find the coach to withdraw from the tryout, but, of course,
the coach was nowhere to be found.
Seth went back to his room, stayed with it, and became the first white
Harlem Globetrotter in over 60 years.
A happy ending to the story?
Not in the way you’d expect.
Seth played with the Globetrotters through their U.S. tour, but left
during their European tour. His leg simply wouldn’t hold up.
So Seth is doing what he feels he’s always been called to do
– serve God wherever he can.
In the 7th grade, Seth had written an essay saying he wanted to be
a basketball player and a preacher.
He’s doing both.
“Whenever God places you somewhere you can find the grace and
strength to be effective right there”, says Seth. “The Globetrotters
were not an end, but a stepping stone to what God has in mind for me.”
Now you’ll find Seth in front of kids, dribbling and speaking.
He impresses them with his basketball skills and then shares his heart.
His message is simple and yet profound. “The most important things
in life,” he says to the kids, “are the decisions you make
every day. True success comes not from what you do with the talents
you have but with the choices you make every day to do the right thing.
“God will take your talents and throw you into places you could
never go on your own.”
There’s so much more to Seth’s story. His grandfather who
was cured of cancer. His trips with his father to feed the homeless
in Brooklyn every Monday night – experiences that Seth wouldn’t
trade for anything – not even his stint with the Globetrotters.
His wife, Sarah, who had a detached retina and received a 100% discount
from the hospital.
And the story is far from ended.
“God is simply walking me through,” Seth says. “And
the cry of my heart is that I want my life marked by the fact I’m
sharing what God has brought me through.”
Look closely at Seth and you’ll see tattoos – except these
are different. They are Bible passages – three of them –
which Seth has prayed over himself for years. Psalm 23: \1 – “The
Lord is my Shepherd”; Matthew 5:6 – “Blessed are those
who hunger and thirst after righteousness”; and 2 Timothy 1:7
– “God did not give us a spirit of timidity, but a spirit
of power and love and self discipline.”
It’s quite a story. And if you ask Seth, it’s not a story
about him.
Breakaway TV is a Christian podcast and television program featuring Christian athletes, faith in sports, Christian music videos, sports ministries, and sports-related testimonies.