How will Trump respond to the Senate’s rebuke on Saudi Arabia?

The war in Yemen began in late 2014 when Houthi rebels from the north took control of much of the country.

Years of conflict have led to what the UN calls the worst humanitarian crisis in the world.

The US Senate has now voted to end all military support to the Saudi-UAE coalition that’s been fighting in Yemen since 2015.

A second resolution blamed Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman for the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

Although it is unlikely the House of Representatives will take up the Yemen measure during this Congress, politicians have vowed to bring up the issue again next year. 

If it passes, will Trump act on his threat to reject the measure?

Presenter: Imran Khan 

Guests:

Fatima Alasrar – senior analyst at the Arabia Foundation in Washington, DC

Hakim Almasmari – political and military mediator, who took part in the recent Yemen talks in Sweden

Natasha Lindstaedt – professor of government at the University of Essex and a specialist in authoritarian governments and US politics

Source: Al Jazeera

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Bulls Trade Rumors: Chicago Has Discussed Jabari Parker with Multiple Teams

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - DECEMBER 10: Jabari Parker #2 of the Chicago Bulls moves away from Frank Mason III #10 of the Sacramento Kings at the United Center on December 10, 2018 in Chicago, Illinois. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement.  (Photo by Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images)

Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images

Chicago Bulls forward Jabari Parker‘s tenure with his hometown team may be over within a year.

According to K.C. Johnson of the Chicago Tribune, the Bulls have discussed moving the 23-year-old with numerous teams:

K.C. Johnson @KCJHoop

Bulls have engaged in talks with several teams regarding Jabari Parker, per sources. There’s considerable interest in Parker the player. Finding right fit financially is next.

Parker has averaged 15.2 points and 6.9 rebounds in 30.1 minutes this season, but according to Malika Andrews of ESPN.com, the former Duke Blue Devil is being dropped from the rotation.

The ex-Milwaukee Buck signed a two-year, $40 million deal with Chicago in the offseason; the second year is a team option.

While the Bulls weren’t expected to seriously contend this season in the midst of their rebuilding phase, the 2018-19 campaign has been a disaster.

The 6-23 Bulls have the NBA‘s second-worst record and point differential, as opponents are outscoring them by 10.9 points per game. Only the Phoenix Suns are worse in both categories.

Chicago fired head coach Fred Hoiberg after a 5-19 start, but a move to interim leader Jim Boylen hasn’t brought much change. A 114-112 win over the Oklahoma City Thunder was encouraging, but the team is 1-4 since the move and lost by 56 points to the Boston Celtics and by 19 to the Sacramento Kings in back-to-back home games.

This isn’t Parker’s fault, of course, as he wasn’t expected to be the Bulls’ savior. However, his placement on the team may not make much sense anymore if he’s only going to play four minutes, as he did in Chicago’s most recent matchup. Paying $20 million a year for someone out of the rotation isn’t ideal.

Parker is a proven scorer and rebounder and can contribute to a contending team, though he ranks 92nd out of 93 qualified power forwards in defensive real plus-minus, per ESPN.com.

The large chunk of money may be hard for a new team to absorb, but given that the second year of Parker’s contract is a club option, any new club wouldn’t be locked in long-term.

Ultimately, a Parker deal makes too much sense not to happen from the Bulls’ perspective. From Parker’s side, he could be a great fit for a playoff-bound team looking for some scoring punch off the bench, but asking him to be a starter given his defensive liabilities is probably too much.

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DOJ spending tops $25 million on Russia probe


Robert Mueller

Itemizing the budget for the latest period, Special Counsel Robert Mueller reported spending nearly $2.9 million on salaries and benefits for his employees. | Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images

Legal

President Donald Trump has claimed Mueller’s team spent $30 to $40 million without offering evidence.

The Justice Department reported spending more than $25 million during the first 16 months of its Russia investigation under special counsel Robert Mueller, according to a government report released Friday.

Mueller alone spent $4.6 million between April and September, a particularly-intense period that included a criminal trial that ended in the conviction of Paul Manafort, the former Trump 2016 campaign chairman.

Story Continued Below

On top of that, DOJ reported an additional $3.9 million in spending during the most recent six-month period on items that “would have incurred for the investigations irrespective of the existence of the [special counsel’s office].”

Overall government spending on the probe into Russian interference in the 2016 election has been a regular point of attack for President Donald Trump, who has called the investigation a “witch hunt” on Twitter while often inflating totals well beyond what’s publicly known.

Late last month, for example, Trump claimed Mueller’s team had spent $30 million and then a couple days later increased the figure to more than $40 million. At the time, the only data that had been released by the Justice Department reflected spending of nearly $17 million.

Itemizing its budget for the latest period, Mueller reported spending nearly $2.9 million on salaries and benefits for his employees, as well as $580,000 on travel and transportation. He also listed nearly $943,000 on rent, communications and utilities associated with his office in Washington, D.C., as well as $311,000 for contractual services, including information technology.

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Miley Cyrus Passionately Calls For Peace With Her ‘Happy Xmas (War Is Over)’ Cover



Getty Images

John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s “Happy Xmas (The War Is Over)” has been reimagined countless times since its 1971 release, but that caaaan’t stop, and it woooon’t stop Miley Cyrus from taking a whack at it.

On Friday (December 14), Miley shimmied down the figurative chimney and delivered a special gift for fans: a cover of the holiday standard produced by Mark Ronson and featuring Sean Ono Lennon, which is about the most legit stamp of approval you could ask for. Their gleaming pop version of “Happy Xmas (War Is Over!)” — yes, they added an exclamation point to the title — finds Cyrus passionately pleading for peace while Lennon adds cheery harmonies of “War is over / If you want it” into the mix.

Just hours before the song’s release, Cyrus visited The Tonight Show and told host Jimmy Fallon that the cover came together at New York’s famed Electric Lady Studios. Though the original version was intended as a Vietnam protest song back in the ’70s, the 26-year-old believes its message is still relevant today: “I don’t think anything could speak louder about what’s going on right now than ‘War Is Over,’” she said.

Fallon also asked Cyrus if Lennon sounded like his late father during their studio session. She answered, “I think more than just inheriting the voice, or you know the way he looks or whatever, that it’s about the magic that he has. I think that’s what he’s really inherited more than anything: it’s just this radiant magic.”

The three will perform their new cover on Saturday Night Live this weekend, in addition to Cyrus and Ronson’s recent collaborative single, “Nothing Breaks Like a Heart.” Tune in to feel all the peaceful holiday vibes.

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J&J stocks plunge after report says firm knew about asbestos

Shares of Johnson & Johnson fell 10 percent on Friday and were on track to post their biggest percentage drop in more than 16 years, after Reuters reported that the company knew for decades that cancer-causing asbestos lurked in its Baby Powder.

The decline in shares erased about $40bn from the company’s market capitalisation with investors worrying about the fallout of the report as it faces thousands of talc-related lawsuits.

The stock was the biggest drag on the broader Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 indexes and was among the most traded on US exchanges. About 28 million shares exchanged hands by 18:30 GMT, more than three times its 25-day moving average.

J&J was found to have known about the presence of small amounts of asbestos in its products from as early as 1971, a Reuters examination of company memos, internal reports and other confidential documents showed.

The Reuters report also showed the company had commissioned and paid for studies conducted on its Baby Powder franchise and hired a ghostwriter to redraft the article that presented the findings in a journal.

The company, in 1976, had assured the US Food and Drug Administration that no asbestos was “detected in any sample” of talc produced between December 1972 and October 1973 when at least three tests by three different labs from 1972 to 1975 had found asbestos in its talc. 

In an email statement to Reuters on the news agency’s findings, J&J said, “This is all a calculated attempt to distract from the fact that thousands of independent tests prove our talc does not contain asbestos or cause cancer.”

The company added, “Any suggestion that Johnson & Johnson knew or hid information about the safety of talc is false.”

The company also said Baby Powder was asbestos-free and added it would continue to defend the safety of its product.

10,000 cases

The company has been battling more than 10,000 cases claiming its Baby Powder and Shower to Shower products cause ovarian cancer. The products have also been linked with mesothelioma, a rare and deadly form of cancer that affects the delicate tissue that lines body cavities.

At least two Wall Street analysts said the stock appeared to be oversold on the news.

“In our opinion litigation overhangs are real, and we do not minimize the situation, but the stock pull back does seem over done to us,” BMO Capital Markets analyst Joanne Wuensch said.

JP Morgan analysts said that they “believe it is highly unlikely the company’s exposure to this talc issue will even come close to the $40bn in lost market cap today.” 

They added that talc was not an issue that would resolve quickly for J&J and expect shares to trade at a lower multiple pending further clarity on the company’s exposure to the issue.

While J&J has dominated the talc powder market for more than 100 years, the products contributed to a mere 0.5 percent of its revenue of $76.5bn last year. Talc cases make up fewer than 10 percent of all personal injury lawsuits pending against the company.

However, Baby Powder is considered essential to J&J’s image as a caring company – a “sacred cow”, as one 2003 internal email put it.

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Ariana Grande Would Rather Listen to Miley Than Kanye and Drake’s Beef



ANGELA WEISS/AFP/Getty Images

Last night, while some ventured into holiday revelry and others followed along holding their breath as online drama unfolded, Kanye West aired out his grievances with Drake via a tweetstorm. The entire thing took hours. Kim Kardashian West eventually weighed in, too. And all the while, Ariana Grande was readying the release of her latest single, “Imagine.”

To back up for a moment, Ari’s been downright prolific lately, dropping her fourth album, Sweetener, in August and beginning essentially an entire new campaign with the mega-viral “Thank U, Next” in early November. She’s got an album of the same name ready to go, and “Imagine” was due to be our next taste of it. She was pumped. Everyone was pumped.

And then Kanye tweeted about Drake. Ari, though, was understandably more focused on her impending song, so she sent out a quick reminder on Twitter as the hour approached. “If y’all could please jus behave for just like a few hours so the girls can shine that’d be so sick thank u,” she tweeted. “Imagine” soon followed.

It’s a great song, one that captures a certain kind of affection and attraction and aims to preserve it as the best, most celebratory memory, the kind you want to keep coming back to again and again. Some fans think it’s about Ari’s late ex Mac Miller because he had the word “imagine” tattooed on his right arm. She also called the song the “denial” to the acceptance found in “Thank U, Next,” but later clarified it was meant to be wide open to interpretation among her fans and their own experiences.

Grande’s tweet also shouted out pal Miley Cyrus, who was gearing for a release of her own: a cover of John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s “Happy Xmas (War Is Over)” featuring Mark Ronson and John and Yoko’s son, Sean. Cyrus underscored the point with a quick tweet cosign: “Didn’t they hear the news?! War IS over! Thank you, next!”

Interestingly enough, “Happy Xmas” is indeed a John Lennon cover, while Ari’s “Imagine” is not — it just happens to share the title. Was this planned? A masterstroke of social marketing? A coincidence? Who knows, man. But both songs are out, and you can (and should) listen to them now.

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Chargers Comeback Stuns Chiefs

  • The Checkdown @thecheckdown

    CHARGERS TAKE THE LEAD https://t.co/PKtRhee1pm

  • Adam Schefter @AdamSchefter

    How in the world did the Chargers win that game?

  • Dez Bryant @DezBryant

    Chargers stole that one…
    damn!

  • James Koh @JamesDKoh

    “THE SAN DIEGO CHARGERS HAVE NO CHANCE VS THE CHIEFS, AND LET ME TELL YOU ANOTHER THING…” https://t.co/5IZkdMpUDR

  • Rich Eisen @richeisen

    Philip, last two @chargers national TV appearances:

    Down 16 in Pittsburgh, Week 13

    Down 14 THREE different times in Kansas City, Week 15

    2-0

  • ESPN @espn

    What a way to bolt into the playoffs ⚡ https://t.co/U8PhTHJHcf

  • Los Angeles Chargers @Chargers

    Y’ALL THOUGHT WE WAS FINISHED https://t.co/PGXY3BCo63

  • Los Angeles Chargers @Chargers

    ladies and gentlemen… https://t.co/R9NlnDCrIu

  • Yahoo Sports @YahooSports

    Chargers to the Chiefs fans who thought they were about to clinch the AFC West tonight 🙅‍♂️ #LACvsKC https://t.co/YwhbmOPQLd

  • Earvin Magic Johnson @MagicJohnson

    What a comeback victory for the @Chargers beating the Chiefs 29-28!

  • Marcsupio @Marxsupio

    “cHaRgErS aRE oVeRraTeD”
    “tHeY hAvEnT bEaT aNyOnE”
    #LACvsKC #BoltUp https://t.co/vkHe0wVaKV

  • palmer @dpalm34

    the Chiefs deciding to play no-man coverage on the Chargers’ two-point conversion https://t.co/XuraVxdapK

  • Lindsey Thiry @LindseyThiry

    The Los Angeles Rams and Los Angeles Chargers have each won 11 games this season. Oh my.

  • shannon sharpe @ShannonSharpe

    Who called Chargers victory by one? https://t.co/Hbvd7FG5n3

  • Skip Bayless @RealSkipBayless

    What a comeback by the Chargers. And suddenly anything is possible in the AFC … even Tom Brady finishing with the No. 1 seed.

  • FOX Sports @FOXSports

    The streak is over!

    For the first time in 1,810 days, the @Chargers have beaten the Chiefs! https://t.co/Mnye4iLYww

  • Ian Rapoport @RapSheet

    Every game probably feels like a road game for the #Chargers. By the time you get to Week 15, maybe everyone shrugs off tough environments. Either way… as big a win as it gets in the regular season. Amazing.

  • Jay 🖕🏼 @_champagnepepe

    Chargers: 11-3

    All of Los Angeles: https://t.co/UYBVYwVt5G

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    Statue of ‘racist’ Gandhi removed from Ghana university campus

    A statue of Indian independence leader Mahatma Gandhi has been removed from Ghana‘s most prestigious university following complaints that he was racist against the black Africans.

    The statue, installed at the University of Ghana in capital Accra was removed in the middle of the night earlier this week after protests from students and faculty at the university campus.

    India‘s former president Pranab Mukherjee had unveiled the statue to the global peace icon two years ago as a symbol of ties between the two nations.

    But professors at the university soon began a petition calling for its removal, citing passages written by Gandhi depicting Indians as “infinitely superior” to black Africans and using the racist pejorative “kaffirs” to describe them.

    One of Gandhi’s writings cited in the petition read: “Ours is one continual struggle against a degradation sought to be inflicted upon us by the Europeans, who desire to degrade us to the level of the raw Kaffir whose occupation is hunting, and whose sole ambition is to collect a certain number of cattle to buy a wife with and, then, pass his life in indolence and nakedness.”

    The online protest was one of a number on university campuses in Africa and beyond about the enduring symbols of the continent’s colonial past.

    ‘Victory for black dignity’

    The Gandhi statue on the university’s Legon campus in Accra appeared to have been removed overnight on Tuesday, students and lecturers told the AFP news agency.

    The head of language, literature and drama at the Institute of African Studies, Obadele Kambon, said the removal was an issue of “self-respect”.

    “If we show that we have no respect for ourselves and look down on our own heroes and praise others who had no respect for us, then there is an issue,” he said.

    “If we indeed don’t show any self-respect for our heroes, how can the world respect us? This is a victory for black dignity and self-respect. The campaign has paid off.”

    Student Adelaide Twum said the move was “long overdue”. “I’m so excited. This has nothing to do with diplomatic ties,” she added.

    Another student, Benjamin Mensah, said, “It’s a massive win for all Ghanaians because it was constantly reminding us of how inferior we are.”

    The university authorities refused to comment while an official at Ghana’s foreign affairs ministry said it was “an internal decision by the university”.

    Ghana’s former government had said the statue would be relocated “to avoid the controversy … becoming a distraction from our strong ties of friendship” with India.

    Campaigners in Malawi are currently trying to stop a statue of Gandhi going up in the capital, Blantyre, also arguing that he used racial slurs against black people.

    Though Gandhi is more commonly remembered for his non-violent resistance to British colonial rule in his native India, his legacy in Africa is more mixed.

    Born in 1869, Gandhi lived and worked as a lawyer in South Africa from 1893 to 1915 before he left for India to continue his anti-colonialism struggle.

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    Reporters shooed away as mystery Mueller subpoena fight rages on


    Robert Mueller

    POLITICO originally broke the story in October that Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s team had been dragged into court by a witness battling a subpoena. | Alex Wong/Getty Images

    Legal

    A clerk at the courthouse took the extraordinary measure of shutting down the entire fifth floor, where the hearing was taking place.

    Special counsel Robert Mueller appeared to be locked in a subpoena battle with a recalcitrant witness Friday in a sealed federal appeals courtroom, the latest development in a mystery case that has piqued the curiosity of Mueller-obsessives and scoop-hungry journalists.

    Oral arguments in the highly secretive fight played out behind closed doors under tight security. Officials at the U.S. Courthouse in Washington, D.C. even took the extraordinary measure of shutting down to the public the entire fifth floor, where the hearing was taking place.

    Story Continued Below

    More than a dozen reporters who had been staked out in the hallway adjacent to the courtroom — in the hopes of eyeballing attorneys for Mueller or the mystery appellant’s lawyers — were kicked off the floor and lost their best chance to spot anyone involved in the months-long legal dispute as they were entering or exiting the chambers.

    Journalists relocated to other stakeout spots, but few new details emerged after several hours of waiting.

    POLITICO originally broke the story in October that Mueller’s team — which is investigating whether the Trump campaign coordinated with Russians trying to influence the 2016 election and whether President Donald Trump tried impede the ongoing probe — had been dragged into court by a witness battling a subpoena. POLITICO discovered the Mueller connection after a reporter sitting in the court’s clerk office overheard a man request a document in the case from the special counsel’s office. The man declined to identify himself or his client when approached by POLITICO.

    Another clue linking the case to Mueller came a few weeks later when lawyers for the witness fighting the subpoena asked the full bench of the appeals court to review a lower court decision on the case. A notation in the legal docket said only nine of the court’s 10 active judges participated — Judge Greg Katsas, the court’s only Trump appointee and who had worked on the Russia probe while serving in the Trump White House, had recused himself. During his confirmation hearing, Katsas said he would take a broad view of his recusal obligations stemming from that experience.

    The enigmatic case took another twist when POLITICO Magazine published an opinion piece by former federal prosecutor Nelson Cunningham suggesting Trump himself was the person who had gotten a subpoena and was fighting Mueller.

    “At every level, this matter has commanded the immediate and close attention of the judges involved — suggesting that no ordinary witness and no ordinary issue is involved,” Cunningham wrote.

    Mueller’s office has repeatedly declined comment about the case, and a spokesman for the special counsel did so again on Friday.

    Meanwhile, Trump’s personal lawyers denied in early October that the president had anything to do with the case, and Trump himself insisted he wasn’t locked in any kind of subpoena battle with Mueller when pressed by reporters later that month.

    More anticipation had been building in recent weeks about who had gotten the subpoena after a series of additional tantalizing clues were filed in the docket, including sealed multi-page briefs and sealed letters updating the judges on recent events affecting the case.

    Friday’s long-scheduled oral arguments had long been seen as the best opportunity yet to identify the litigants.

    More than a dozen reporters lined up in the hallway outside the courtroom about an hour before the first of three cases were set to be argued before U.S. Court of Appeals Judges David Tatel, Thomas Griffith and Stephen Williams.

    Reporters and members of the public were free to enter the courtroom during the first two cases. But the secrecy clampdown quickly followed as the court shifted gears to the sealed grand jury case. A security officer wearing blue rubber gloves checked the chambers for any devices left behind. The live audio feed went dead.

    And then the clerk kicked the journalists off the entire fifth floor.

    Determined to keep covering the story, reporters spread out around the courthouse and quickly set up a group email chain to pool their resources and communicate about who saw what in the hallways, elevators, staircases and entrances throughout the building. One television network reporter even stood guard at the top of a ramp leading to a secure parking garage where Mueller’s team has been known to bring in clandestine grand jury witnesses.

    As the media played cat-and-mouse with the courtroom security guards — several reporters were reprimanded for waiting in stairwells — the additional measures undertaken Friday surprised many people familiar with the federal building’s practices.

    “It’s not the norm, that’s for sure,” Manuel Retureta, a Washington-based defense lawyer not involved in the Mueller probe but who is frequently at the courthouse, said as he observed the scene.

    After about 90 minutes, court security officials allowed the journalists to return to the fifth-floor hallway, where the courtroom doors were still closed. A few minutes later, reporters spotted the judges walking back to their offices. No one with any apparent ties to the case were spotted leaving the building.

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    Forgot About Dre Ball

    Frankly, this is what Dre Ball always wanted. Well, sort of.

    For years, his basketball dreams had been connected to his cousins and uncle with the same name: Dre had been classmates with LiAngelo on and off since preschool. He had played alongside his older cousin Lonzo since they were kids. He was set to, in his senior season, share the backcourt with LaMelo. Dre worked out with LaVar, who taught him The Big Baller Way.

    Then, in an instant, everything changed. “I wasn’t a part of [the move to Lithuania]. It was just something they did,” says Dre.

    While the international sports media attempted to make sense of the move, Dre was left trying to figure out what had happened—and what to do. 

    In some ways, he was ready for the challenge. “I always had confidence in myself and my abilities,” Dre says. “I just needed the opportunity.” In other ways, though, he had never experienced the limelight. The pressure of the spotlight, the uncertainty of college recruitment and the burden of continuing his family’s legacy at Chino Hills was his to bear alone. 

    Those who have seen Dre play recognize his potential. “He has been in the shadow, but in three years, that kid will be one of the best players in his class when it matters,” says Clint Parks, a well-known trainer on the grassroots circuit. Dre’s unique skill set and size (he’s 6’7”) has also attracted the attention of pros like Kevin Durant, who believe he is perfectly suited for an evolving NBA—a league in which versatile players who can exploit mismatches and operate in the open floor are highly valued. “Long arms, can guard multiple positions,” Durant said on Overtime. “Everybody gonna need one of those type of guys.”

    Still, Dre finds himself the forgotten Ball. Zo routinely makes headlines with LeBron James in Los Angeles. (He makes fewer headlines as a rapper.) Melo has since returned stateside a 6’5” wunderkind, going viral every game at the Spire Institute, a high school and post-grad academy in northeast Ohio. (LaVar and Gelo are conspicuously present at Melo’s games.) Dre, meanwhile, has never been featured on the family’s Facebook reality show, Ball in the Family

    Now a Pepperdine Wave, Dre hopes that, after a life largely spent on the sidelines as a backup to his cousins, he can forge his own path. 

    (Courtesy of Blake Rovai)

    “I’m not looking to take a backseat to anyone,” he says. “I’m there to put in work to get to where I want to go. The assumptions about my last name never bothered me. I stopped listening to those whispers a long time ago.”    


    Dre was four when his parents, Stephanie and Andre, moved him to Chino Hills. The new neighborhood was only 33 miles east of the family’s previous residence in Lakewood, but the landscape—an overall flatness dotted with farms—felt like a different state. “It was cow country,” Stephanie says. “We used to get off the freeway and then drive and drive.”

    The decision to move was largely undertaken as a matter of practicality: Andre’s six siblings all lived nearby, which meant that there would be after-school care for Dre—whom everyone called Little Andre (never junior)—and he’d grow up alongside his extended family. Stephanie and Andre could still commute to their jobs in Los Angeles, all without worrying about who would watch their son after preschool. “It wasn’t an inconvenience for the family,” says Stephanie, adding, “They were his caretakers.”

    On Sundays, Andre played basketball with his brothers at the Neighborhood Activity Center. The NAC, as the court is known, featured the area’s best runs. He brought young Dre with him; his brothers did the same with their kids. While the older Ball brothers ran full court, the younger cadre did the same on the side court. Lonzo, the oldest of the group at 7, had a refined game, unmatched by anyone his age. Gelo could connect from deep as easily as he could bully his way to the rim. Melo was already starting to showcase an uncanny efficiency from the perimeter. Dre paired an innate quickness with his uber-hops, emerging as a natural finisher for his cousins’ passes—layups at first and then alley-oops as he discovered dunking.

    “That’s all they knew,” says Stephanie. “Basketball was a passion that started with his dad and uncles.”

    Dre didn’t much look like his cousins—his frame was lean and slender, favoring his mother’s side of the family—but he shared their athleticism. Through preschool and elementary school, Dre spent a lot of time hanging with Zo, Gelo and Melo at their house. LaVar, a former Carolina Panther practice squad player who had once dreamed of becoming a U.S. Marshall, was a stay-at-home father and worked as a personal trainer at a local LA Fitness. (Tina, his wife, was a middle school physical education teacher.) So he helped the kids pass time by running hills, lifting weights and playing 3×3 in the Ball’s backyard. “We just looked at how his children were playing, and since Dre was right with them, he fell in line,” says Andre, adding, “My brother said that Dre could ball, and we all agreed it would be good for them to train as well as play together.”

    Through preschool and elementary school, Dre (top right) spent a lot of time hanging with Lonzo (front), LiAngelo (top left) and LaMelo (top middle) at their house.

    Through preschool and elementary school, Dre (top right) spent a lot of time hanging with Lonzo (front), LiAngelo (top left) and LaMelo (top middle) at their house.(Courtesy of Stephanie Ball)

    LaVar insisted that his progeny play against older competition. He believed the experience would make the quartet better and stronger. Failure wasn’t an option for the kids. “They expect success,” says Steve Baik, the head coach at Chino Hills for six seasons. (He coached Lonzo for four seasons.) “And if they fail, they know to get right back up and not feel sorry for themselves.”

    Playing up had other advantages too, like increased exposure. “The more you win, the bigger stage you play on,” Dre explains. Though, as it turned out, the quartet was their own best competition: “We pushed each other every day. There was always enough talent on the court at any time to play each other, and we matched up with everyone.”

    That sort of basketball pressure cooker only helped to further Dre’s game. “There are a lot of good things LaVar did pushing those kids and working them out beyond their limits,” says Dennis Latimore, the head coach of Chino Hills, who played collegiately at Arizona and then Notre Dame. “They all at a young age saw the type of work ethic needed to separate themselves.”

    Latimore adds, “To go against a talent like Lonzo as a first-grader is transformational.”

    Coexisting alongside kids as talented as Lonzo, Gelo and Melo wasn’t easy. Wherever Dre would go, he became known simply as “Cousin Ball.” Still, when it came time to choose a high school, Dre elected to follow his cousins to Chino Hills. “We weren’t completely comfortable with the school, but it was Andre’s decision, so we left it up to him,” Stephanie says.

    Whether Dre seriously considered another path is difficult to determine. “I just play the game, and at the end of the day, they’re just my cousins,” he says. But those closest to Dre told me that the decision to deviate from those he had surrounded himself with his entire life was daunting. “He was a young kid, and he was happy to go with the flow,” says Baik, who coached Dre for two seasons.

    Stephanie adds, “Dre didn’t want to be a dissenting opinion and go outside of what was familiar to him as a kid.”

    LaVar (top left) insisted that his progeny play against older competition. “They expect success,” says Steve Baik, the head coach at Chino Hills for six seasons.

    LaVar (top left) insisted that his progeny play against older competition. “They expect success,” says Steve Baik, the head coach at Chino Hills for six seasons.(Courtesy of Stephanie Ball)

    On a roster already stocked with Lonzo and Gelo (Melo, a year behind Dre, wouldn’t enroll at Chino Hills until the 2015-16 season), Dre was arguably the team’s biggest surprise. Though Chino Hills’ season ended in a double-overtime loss in the state title game (Dre scored seven points), the frosh’s potential enticed college coaches, who not only noted his physical traits but also his surname. “He was a great prospect,” says Baik. “His last name opened up doors for him that wouldn’t have existed if he wasn’t Lonzo’s cousin. Coaches thought higher of him because of that.”

    As Dre entered his sophomore year, Chino Hills was projected to win a national title. Of the four, Dre was the only Ball who hadn’t committed to UCLA, but as the first player off the bench he was still expected to be an “impact guy,” according to Baik. (Dre was one of the few who could consistently catch and finish all of his cousins’ now-famous alley-oops.)

    But a dislocated kneecap sidelined him for a month, and when he returned, the team’s rotation was set. Chino Hills rolled to a 35-0 record without Dre seeing much action.

    The next season was much of the same: a shoulder injury suffered during the summer’s AAU slate morphed into a torn right labrum, ending Dre’s season shortly after the preseason. Lonzo was starring at UCLA, on his way to becoming a lottery pick. Gelo was coming into his own as an assassin from the perimeter. Melo dropped 92 in a game and went viral. Dre missed AAU circuit that summer and stopped training with LaVar, opting to rehab on his own and work out with Andre at a nearby 24 Hour Fitness. “It was lonely for him,” says Stephanie. “He was limited and could only work on his legs, so he was by himself.”


    As the Balls leaped into the national consciousness, Dre remained largely adjacent to the family’s national buzz. His parents sometimes worried their son might feel as if he was being pushed against his will. Did he really want this? His dad would often exclaim, “You don’t have to do this!” But Dre insisted that to achieve something, as LaVar had shown, he had to work for it.

    Then, a series of wholly unpredictable events suddenly thrust Dre into the national limelight. First, he finally got healthy. Then, Lithuania happened. (LaVar proclaimed that Chino Hills would go from “sugar to shit” without his sons on the team. When asked what Dre thought of those comments, Stephanie demurs, adding, “We learned for a long time to take everything LaVar says with a grain of salt.”) Finally, Dre also got a new coach in Latimore, who no longer would have to deal with LaVar on the sidelines. (Baik abruptly resigned in 2016.)

    “Before I got here, there was not a lot of common sense going on,” Latimore says of the relationship his predecessors maintained with the Balls. “No parents dictate what happens with the team.”

    Dre was never dismissive of his cousins’ success. He continued supporting them in private—texting in a group chat or FaceTiming—and publicly on social media. He understood his cousins had chosen their own path, and now it was his turn.

    With his cousins and uncle gone, Dre began training outside the family for the first time, enlisting the help of Clint Parks, who connected with Stephanie on social media midway through Dre’s senior season. The two worked to improve Dre’s comfort level with his left hand and his ability to take advantage of his athleticism and score over smaller defenders in the mid-post.

    Overtime @overtime

    Andre Ball really BEEN ON 😤 @5Andreball https://t.co/7V9cTrj3sw

    Parks worked with clients such as Tony Snell, Kawhi Leonard and Kyle Kuzma—each had trained with Parks at a period in which his skill development was raw, and all were much still learning how to harness and expand on their potential. “I like working with kids who are sleepers,” he says. “Under-the-radar prospects that don’t get the love they deserve, and I help them fulfill their potential.”

    Dre was similar. “He needs work,” Parks recalls. “You don’t want him to be a finished project at 17.”

    That season, Dre flourished, as did his Chino Hills squad, which won 22 of its last 27 games. “Their absence forced him to step up,” says Stephanie, “and he could stand on his own, which was less stressful for him.” In the CIF Southern California Regional Division I final, Dre dropped 32 points versus St. John Bosco, helping his team reach the state championship game on a variety of long three-pointers and drives to the rim. (Chino Hills won the championship, trouncing Las Lomas of Walnut Creek.) “You can teach skills, but you can’t teach a 45-inch vertical and his quickness,” Latimore says. “Dre reminds me of Andre Iguodala, who I played with for a year at Arizona. He has that type of length and jumping ability.”

    After the Southern Regional final performance, Kevin Durant proclaimed that Dre was one of the “diamonds in the rough,” a player whose “game gonna get better and develop” even though he had been “overshadowed” by his cousins. The recruiting floodgates opened—Long Beach State and Pepperdine all offered scholarships. (Dre already had an offer from Northern Arizona and Portland.) “I wondered why he hadn’t been signed yet,” says Pepperdine head coach Lorenzo Romar, who was in attendance at the Southern Regional final. “I was told that people hadn’t gotten the chance to see what he could do.” 

    Dre’s output against St. John Bosco was illuminating for Romar. “His athleticism jumps out at you, as does his length,” he says. “Those are the players I’ve always tried to recruit.” 

    Initially, Dre wondered if he should wait for bigger programs to follow suit. But Andre told him: “If they want you but haven’t called you, are they worth waiting for?” Dre committed to Pepperdine in the late spring of 2018.


    Dre’s potential has overshadowed what has been somewhat of an adjustment to Division I. Through nine games, he has averaged around 10 minutes per game. However, he continues to pique the interest of the hoop world, particularly online. His arsenal of dunks—in games and in practices—frequently earn thousands of views on Instagram. He still has that same versatility too. He should be able to play multiple positions on the Wave’s extremely fluid rotation. He remains eager to show himself, even if those minutes don’t come right away. 

    “Coach Romar tells me to go as hard as I can; it doesn’t matter if it’s wrong,” he says.

    “His athleticism jumps out at you, as does his length,” says Pepperdine head coach Lorenzo Romar. “Those are the players I’ve always tried to recruit.”

    “His athleticism jumps out at you, as does his length,” says Pepperdine head coach Lorenzo Romar. “Those are the players I’ve always tried to recruit.”(Courtesy of Blake Rovai)

    He still thinks back to those days when he first enrolled at Chino Hills, though. “When I played with my cousins, I used to get in my own head and mess up my rhythm,” he says. “It was a mental thing, but since they left, I’ve started a new path.” Back then, he told Baik that his goal was to be the best player he could be. “He didn’t know what that meant,” says Baik. “He hadn’t experienced that level of commitment.” That focus shifted this past year.

    There are advantages that are inherent to being “Cousin Ball.” “What a great time to be Dre Ball right now,” Latimore says. The reality is that Dre may have not arrived at Pepperdine with the same determination and drive if the quartet had remained intact. Which is perhaps why he handled his recruitment without their input or advice. He was on his own, so why shouldn’t he be fully in charge for the next stage of his life? “They were already in Lithuania,” his father says, “so it was just us.”

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