a classic
Halfway through an alley
smoke & a classic third
quarter Knicks collapse,
the kid upstairs who shit
plastic as an infant & woke
our whole building & now
leads Whitney Young’s varsity
squad asks “Who you
like here?”
Before he was
born the Rockets
tore my heart
out. I recount Ewing & Hakeem
in the pivot, how a police chase across
the country interrupted my burgeoning
hope’s dousal, how I once knew Chicago
as just the Bulls horns fading to Sears Tower
antennae cause Jordan was as nasty as the old-
heads claim. It’s the first time I’ve spoken to him,
engaged deeper than an adoration of youth,
seen him as more than a totem
for temporal hope. “Both these teams suck.”
Ja Morant is his favorite, lingering
adolescent lisp softening the ‘r’ into a cherubic
’w’. We agree when available he’s the absolute truth,
capable of explosive grace the league
gravitates around. We wonder if he can leap
with the same altitude & agility
he has in transition to over-
come demons. I learn his name is Malachi
& the local ball he saw growing
up taught him how not to play, modeled
the demise of a team forced together
by circumstance, by powerful men with-
out a plan unable to bridge
difference. He wants to stay out
of trouble, get a scholarship, earn
the life he was told he could. I’ve sat
with his mom over a cig. She wants
her ashes scattered down Division,
from DuSable to Melrose
Park, to cover the
sense of here she’s expanded
through displacement & called
home for 40 plus years.
I ask what he thinks
of the current Bulls
& we
again agree, they’d be in
the mix with Lonzo
healthy. Sometimes you got
the wood, just need glue. He
admires steals & blocks & can
cite advanced analytics.
There’s an adult in his life
he still loses to 1 on 1, crafted
footwork putting a fake
hip into his torso to make space
for sky hooks, an adult who’s cared
religiously. “You gotta work &
credit will come.” I can’t help
but recollect the sweat fly
off Charles Smith’s frame
as he bricked a series of shots
every Joe in every borough could
hit up & over four defenders,
how Starbury was deemed
selfish playing with panache
guys get respect for today,
how Anthony Mason got
dissed postmortem by a local
I can’t believe they still allow
at MSG. To dedicate your body
to the win is to accept that one
day you’ll get dunked on.
Even my mortal knees
will never be the same.
All passion is monastic
decontextualized, saved us all
from something. I just hope
the game keeps paying him
back, that he’s seen
as more than a product. I send
Malachi upstairs with a pop
after a bushel of missed free
throws sink the best Knicks team
I’ve seen since I was his age & kinship
is solidified. He continues roasting
me while ascending our wooden
fire escape. “Small guards
can’t lead a team in the playoffs
man…& you better stop smoking
if you wanna defend me!” Zeke
grew up just south of here. I wonder
if people are still bitter he won
with the Pistons instead of
at home. His name’s never come
up & maybe that’s my answer.
ALEX WELLS SHAPIRO (he/him) is a poet, artist, and organizer from the Hudson Valley, living in Chicago. He serves as poetry editor for Another Chicago Magazine, and co-curates Exhibit B: A Literary Variety Show. He is the author of a poetry collection, Insect Architecture (Unbound Edition, 2022), and a chapbook, Gridiron Fables (Bottlecap Features, 2022). More of his work may be found atwww.alexwellsshapiro.com.