Current:Home > FinanceFrom homeless to Final Four history, Fisk forward being honored for his courage -CapitalSource
From homeless to Final Four history, Fisk forward being honored for his courage
View
Date:2025-04-14 04:51:55
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Jeremiah Armstead moved around so much he wasn’t even eligible to play high school basketball until his senior year.
He never lost faith through all the nights his family slept in their car when they couldn’t get a hotel room or into a shelter. Especially that first night at a beach parking lot after leaving Philadelphia for California only to learn their new home had disappeared.
A police officer came by their car that night with no parking allowed after midnight and saw a family of four sleeping.
“He let us stay there,” Armstead said. “So just encounters like that, with, like, everyday good people, it just helped me to not, like, be mad at the world and what I got going on and just wait, which I did. I waited four or five years, and now it’s something finally changing.”
Armstead not only has survived, he has flourished.
On Monday, the Fisk forward will make history as the first player from a historically Black college or university or NAIA school to receive the Perry Wallace Most Courageous Award from the U.S. Basketball Writers Association at their awards luncheon hours before the national championship game.
“I don’t think it’ll sink in fully until I get there to the Final Four and experience everything,” Armstead said of learning about the award, which is named for a Nashville native who made history as the first Black man to play basketball in the Southeastern Conference at Vanderbilt.
His coach, Kenny Anderson, marvels at Armstead.
Anderson played 14 NBA seasons after being the No. 2 pick overall of the 1991 draft. But his family was evicted from their home in Queens, New York, when he was a high school junior. Anderson stayed with a cousin, visiting his mother each morning before school until they got a new place.
“It’s satisfying for me to know that I’m helping someone that’s been in a situation like me,” Anderson said. “So Jeremiah’s, he’s doing a hell of a job just with his family, the situation. And he’s just a good kid.”
The 6-foot-5 Armstead was born in Atlanta and lived in Philadelphia until his mother moved to Long Beach, California, to live with someone close enough to count as family. Except that woman unexpectedly moved to Texas, leaving Mindy Brooks and her three children stranded.
They stayed in a hotel for a couple weeks, then wound up in a shelter in Santa Monica. His mother drove him to school, a 40-minute trip one way so she waited in a parking lot for classes to wrap up to save gas and money.
Shelter time limits also forced them to move around, making even practicing basketball a challenge for a family focused first on surviving. They finally got some stability for his senior year, living in an apartment during his first semester and into the second.
That gave Armstead time to improve his game.
“I could just wake up at 6, go to school, catch the bus and everything,” Armstead said. “I didn’t have to worry about my mom waiting outside in the car all day or anything like that. So the mental fatigue was kind of wearing off.”
Stephen Bernstein helped connect Armstead with Fisk through his foundation, We Educate Brilliant Minds, based in Los Angeles.
Once Armstead arrived in Nashville, he started eating better and got busy dropping at least 30 pounds over his first two seasons.
Yet a school official learned Armstead was sending what he could home to help his family. Even that wasn’t enough as his family kept moving from shelters to a hotel and back to the car. Finally last November, his mother, sister and brother finally moved into their own apartment.
Anderson has worked to help Armstead develop his basketball skills. The forward played seven games as a freshman and 12 this season, helping Fisk go 14-16.
While his family has a place to live, Armstead’s mother is fighting health issues. She also cares for his brother Marcus, 18, who didn’t learn to read and write until he was 13 after being hit by a car as a child, and his sister Armani, 14, will be a high school freshman this fall.
“I have seen the worst of the worst,” Armstead said.
Basketball has been his safe place. Now he is in the best physical shape of his life and majoring in kinesiology and almost halfway to a college degree he never thought would be possible. He turned 20 on March 26, an age he never envisioned reaching, let alone celebrating and planning a future.
“It showed me why ... I should keep doing what I’m doing and keep having faith in God because a few years ago I didn’t think I was going to be here and I’m here,” Armstead said.
___
AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-mens-bracket and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness
veryGood! (5)
Related
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- Woman, 65, receives bloodless heart transplant, respecting her Jehovah's Witness beliefs
- Queen Bey's 'Renaissance: A Film by Beyoncé' reigns at the box office with $21M opening
- Mexican drug cartel operators posed as U.S. officials to target Americans in timeshare scam, Treasury Department says
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Heavy snowfall hits Moscow as Russian media report disruption on roads and at airports
- The Challenge's Ashley Cain Expecting Baby 2 Years After Daughter Azaylia's Death
- Quarterback Dillon Gabriel leaving Oklahoma and is expected to enter transfer portal
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- Heavy snowfall hits Moscow as Russian media report disruption on roads and at airports
Ranking
- How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
- Harris dashed to Dubai to tackle climate change and war. Each carries high political risks at home
- Heavy rains lash India’s southern and eastern coasts as they brace for a powerful storm
- Pakistan arrests 17 suspects in connection to the weekend bus shooting that killed 10
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Ukrainian diplomats negotiate both climate change and Russia’s war on their nation at COP28 in Dubai
- Run, run Rudolph: Video shows deer crashing through NJ elementary school as police follow
- Heidi Firkus' fatal shooting captured on her 911 call to report an intruder
Recommendation
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
Former US ambassador arrested in Florida, accused of serving as an agent of Cuba, AP source says
Dutch lawyers seek a civil court order to halt the export of F-35 fighter jet parts to Israel
Florence Pugh Is Hit in the Face by a Thrown Object at Dune: Part Two Event
Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
2024 NFL draft first-round order: Bears fans left to root for Panthers' opponents
Tiffani Thiessen's Cookbook & Gift Picks Will Level Up Your Holiday (And Your Leftovers)
OxyContin maker bankruptcy deal goes before the Supreme Court on Monday, with billions at stake