While warming up on the court, Lewis briefly scanned the seats for celebrities who had promised to be there, including the rapper 2 Chainz and the N.B.A. The scene was like a video game come to life. As rap music pulsed and video screens flashed on all four walls, he burst through a curtain of smoke. Instead of studying for the SAT on the last Friday in October, he was inside a new 1,200-seat arena in midtown Atlanta, where Overtime Elite is based, with eight teammates from around the United States and overseas. In July, he signed a contract with Overtime Elite, a fledgling league for teenagers with N.B.A. Berkeley seemed sure to follow.īut Lewis won’t be playing basketball at any of those schools. Offers from Duke, North Carolina and U.C. His success on the court and in the classroom hadn’t gone unnoticed the list of colleges recruiting him hard included Michigan, Georgetown, Vanderbilt, Stanford and U.C.L.A. Last May, following his sophomore year there, ESPN’s rankings placed Lewis second nationally among the class of 2023. Bishop O’Dowd had a strong academic reputation and had sent several players to the pros. Davis, promised to help, but only if Lewis studied as hard as he played. Ahlee, whose own basketball career ended after three seasons at U.C. He shuttled him around the region for practices and games.īy third grade, Lewis had expressed a desire to play in the N.B.A. A recruiter for a medical-device company, he used his salary (plus a chunk of financial aid) to enroll Lewis at Bentley, one of the East Bay’s best elementary and middle schools. He played him classical music and Baby Einstein videos. His father, Ahlee Lewis, dedicated himself to raising his son. Lewis’s mother, Tiffany Massimino, died of breast cancer when he was 2 months old. “Knowing they knew I was smart made me feel good,” he said. In those subjects, especially, he was determined to show his classmates that he was more than a jock. But I also liked showing people in class that I could answer the tough questions you wouldn’t usually see an athlete raise his hand to answer.” Lewis has a knack for math and science. “Everyone knew that’s why I came to the school. “Obviously, I’m tall, and I can play,” he told me recently. In his freshman season, 2019-20, Lewis helped his team to the brink of a state title, until the pandemic came and shut down the tournament.īeyond the basketball, Lewis also enjoyed his classes. Students he had never met would call out his name on the mornings after basketball games, raising a triumphant fist or extending a palm for a hand slap. Jalen Lewis liked high school, and why not? At 6-foot-9, with a bird’s nest of hair on top, he was instantly recognizable in the hallways of Bishop O’Dowd, in Oakland, Calif.