Cretin-Derham Hall senior Daniel Oturu received an interesting message last week from someone representing Lavar Ball, the entrepreneur and flamboyant father of Los Angeles Lakers star Lonzo Ball.
Ball's attempting to launch the Junior Basketball Association, a league that wants to give high-profile young players another route to the NBA besides the NCAA after they graduate from high school.
Oturu, a 6-foot-10 center and four-star Gophers recruit, is among the top 50 players in the Class of 2018. So he was contacted by Ball, along with several other top prospects, about joining the league after their senior year.
The answer was simple for Oturu, basically, "Thanks, but no thanks."
"It was weird, but it was also cool that he wanted me to play in his new JBA league," Oturu said. "I already told him, 'No, I'm going to college and I'm looking to make my state proud.' That's my goal. That's been my dream. Nothing is going to change that."
Lavar's Big Baller Brand is funding the league, which is reportedly to consist of 10 teams playing at NBA Arenas in cities such as Atlanta, Brooklyn, Dallas and Los Angeles.
Ball told ESPN's Darren Rovell in December: "Getting those players is going to be easy," because "it is giving guys a chance to get a jump start on their career, to be seen by pro scouts and we're going to pay them."
Like most ballers, Oturu has dreams of playing in the NBA someday, but Ball's league didn't interest him. That's as far as the conversation went.