|
Growing
up in Atlantic City, my favorite game was Monopoly. It’s
not a game anymore.
Brian Davis, on continuing
with such real estate ventures as his West Village development
in Durham |
|
|
|
Brian
Davis
Brian Davis 92 is on the phone
from a hotel room in Washington, D.C. Hes made a name
for himself around Durham as a developer, so it comes as a
surprise when he reveals that he hopes to return to the NBA.
He has spent recent months working out with the New Jersey
Nets, the Washington Wizards, and the Miami Heat. Suddenly,
call-waiting interrupts. Sorry, he says. Im
supposed to be in on this conference call.
Davis, age thirty-one, has covered a lot of ground: growing
up on the hard streets of Atlantic City, four Final Fours,
hoops in France and the NBA, a job in the NBAs New York
headquarters, a wife and new son, and a role in creating West
Village, a development a few blocks from campus.
The partnership between Davis, Tom Niemann, and Daviss
former roommate, Christian Laettner 92, acquired five
former Liggett & Myers tobacco warehouses and converted
them into 243 loft apartments and retail space. Plans are
under way to build brownstone condominiums in downtown Durham,
as well as Soulard Village in historic St. Louis.
The idea for West Village began when Laettner and
I were looking for our own apartment as students and found
a shortage of good housing stock near campus, Davis
explains. One summer, I had an internship in [former
Duke president] Terry Sanfords Senate office on Capitol
Hill. I told him about our idea and he suggested I meet with
his son, who introduced me to Tom. There were a lot of skeptics
who thought we would fall flat on our face. But those are
the same skeptics who thought wed never beat UNLV.
A thirty-point loss to UNLV in front of millions of viewers
in the NCAA final in 1990 inspired Davis and his teammates
to make amends by committing themselves to a vigorous conditioning
program in the off season. In 1991, they got their chance
for revenge in the NCAA semifinal game. In a nail biter, Duke
came away with a 79-77 win over UNLV and a place in the final,
where they defeated Kansas.
Davis, who says the win in the rematch against UNLV was
the highlight of his Blue Devil career, gives most of the
credit to Coach K: He instills in his players that they
can accomplish anything if they set their minds to it. Its
the intensity and organization of the practices, the first-class
way you travel, the attitude around the program. It breeds
success; and you have that feeling in class and after basketball
is over.
Davis was an entrepreneur early on. He made his own business
cards at age nine, and cut grass, washed cars, raked leaves,
and picked blueberries. Before Mike Krzyzewski became Davis
authority figure, there was his mother, who raised four children.
I never knew my father; he had a gambling problem,
he says.
The family moved to Prince Georges County, Maryland,
when Davis was twelve, and he played football and basketball
at Bladensburg High School. He sent his own letter of introduction
to fifty colleges, trying to win a scholarship. I didnt
even make All-County in basketball; I won an MVP award at
an all-star camp and suddenly Duke was interested. It helped
that my high school coach knew Mike Brey [Duke assistant coach]
and that I had a 3.5 GPA and good SAT scores.
At Duke, Davis wasnt a prolific scorer, but he made
the kinds of contributions that dont show up in the
agate type. One especially memorable moment came as a sophomore
in the last moments of the 1990 regional final against Connecticut
in the Meadowlands. Huskies guard Tate George had just hit
a huge turnaround baseline jumper that put Connecticut up
by one point with seconds remaining. Coach K called a timeout
and devised a play in which Laettner would throw the inbounds
pass to Davis, step inbounds, and then get the ball back from
Davis. The play worked like a charm: Laettner hit the shot
at the buzzer and Duke fans were suddenly spilling on to the
court, celebrating another Final Four.
In Daviss senior year, Duke went 34-2, but was knocked
out early in the NCAA tournament when Grant Hill 94
and Bobby Hurley were injured. Davis, drafted as the forty-eighth
pick of the NBA draft by the Phoenix Suns, was released during
training camp. He signed to play with a French team alongside
seven-foot-seven Gheorghe Muresan. Offered a spot with the
Minnesota Timberwolves in 1993-94, he played sporadically
on a team that went 20-62. I found the NBA to be more
about politics and marketing than basketball, he says.
Yet he wants to return. I know the odds, but I think
I can still play on that level.
In August 2000, life took another turn when he married Marsha,
an attorney and former Miss Maryland who runs her own hair-care
products company in Washington. In June, the couple had a
son, Brian Davis Jr. Recently named to the board of the National
Historic Trust, Davis says he hopes to build on his Durham
entrepreneurship and help inner cities by building development
bridges between community leaders and money lenders. Growing
up in Atlantic City, my favorite game was Monopoly,
Davis says. Its not a game anymore.
--Bill Glovin
|