NEWARK, N.J. — Getting a chance to play in the Coretta Scott King Classic has special meaning for Ohio State senior Chance Gray.
Her great grandfather Benjamin Hooks worked with Rev. Martin Luther King Jr and was onetime executive director of the NAACP. Gray remembered when she was young hearing stories from Hooks, who died in 2010.
''He was a civil rights leader, a judge, a lawyer, he was from Memphis,'' Gray said Sunday. ''He worked very closely with Doctor King. There's a lot of history and my family was glad that he was part of that history.''
Gray's team — the No. 14 Buckeyes — faces 10th-ranked TCU on Monday in the opener of the women's basketball doubleheader. Fifth-ranked Vanderbilt plays No. 8 Michigan in the second game.
It's the second year of the doubleheader that's played at the Prudential Center.
''The Coretta Scott King Classic is a testament to the enduring power of my mother's legacy,'' said Bernice King, CEO of The King Center. ''She believed deeply in the transformative nature of education and public engagement, and this event continues to bring that vision to life for a new generation of athletes, fans and leaders.''
Gray got a chance to talk with Bernice King on a Zoom last month and learn more about the namesake of the doubleheader.
''It means a lot to just hear about Coretta Scott King and all the history that she had and how big of an impact she had behind MLK,'' Gray said. ''If it wasn't for her he wouldn't have been able to do all the things that he did.''