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GREECE, N.Y. -
Jason McElwain had done everything he was asked to do for the Greece
Athena High School basketball team — keep the stats, run the clock, hand
out water bottles.
That all changed
last week for the team manager in the final home game of the season. The
17-year-old senior, who is autistic and usually sits on the bench in a
white shirt and black tie, put on a uniform and entered the game with
his team way ahead.
McElwain
proceeded to hit six 3-point shots, finished with 20 points and was
carried off the court on his teammates’ shoulders. |

Eric Sucar / The Daily
Messenger |
| “I ended
my career on the right note,” Jason McElwain told The Associated Press
by phone Thursday. “I was really hotter than a pistol!” |
“I ended my career on
the right note,” he told The Associated Press by phone Thursday. “I was really
hotter than a pistol!”
In recent days,
McElwain’s phone has hardly stopped ringing. When his family went out for a
meal, he was mobbed by well-wishers. A neighborhood boy came by to get a
basketball autographed.
McElwain, 5-foot-6, was
considered too small to make the junior varsity, so he signed on as team
manager. He took up the same role with the varsity, doing anything to stay
near the sport he loves. Coach Jim Johnson was impressed with his dedication,
and thought about suiting up McElwain for the home finale.
His performance was
jaw-dropping: 20 points in four minutes, making 6-of-10 3-point shots. The
crowd went wild.
“It was as touching as
any moment I have ever had in sports,” Johnson told the Daily Messenger of
Canandaigua.
McElwain didn’t begin
speaking until he was 5. He lacked social skills but things got easier as he
got older. He found many friends and made his way through school in this
Rochester suburb, although many of his classes were limited to a half-dozen
students. And he found basketball.
On the varsity, he
never misses practice and is a jack-of-all-trades.
“And he is happy to do
it,” Johnson said. “He is such a great help and is well-liked by everyone on
the team.”
Even though McElwain
was in uniform for the Feb. 15 game, there was no guarantee he would play —
Athena was battling for a division title.
The fans, however, came prepared. One section
of students held up signs bearing his nickname “J-MAC” and cutouts of his face
placed on Popsicle sticks.
The Trojans opened a
large lead against the team from the nearby Spencerport. With four minutes
left, McElwain took the court to deafening cheers.
The ball came to him
almost right away. His 3-point shot sailed completely off course, and the
coach wondered if he made the wrong move. McElwain then missed a layup. Yet
his father, David, was unruffled.
“The thing about Jason
is he isn’t afraid of anything,” he told the newspaper. “He doesn’t care what
people think about him. He is his own person.”
On the next trip down
the floor, McElwain got the ball again. This time he stroked a 3, all net.
He was just warming up.
“As soon as the first
shot went in that’s when I started to get going,” he said.
On the next attempt, he
got another 3-pointer. Then another, and another. In fact, he would have made
one more 3, but his foot was on the line, so he had to settle for 2 points.
Greece Athena won
79-43, and pandemonium reigned. McElwain signed autographs, posed for pictures
and was hoisted by his teammates.
The Trojans begin
sectional play Saturday and McElwain will be on the bench again, wearing his
usual shirt and tie.
It doesn’t bother him.
More important, he said, is “trying to win a sectional title for the team.”
McElwain will soon be
done with high school basketball, then enroll in business management this fall
at Monroe Community College.
“I’ll go on to college
and I’ll try to hoop there,” he said. “I just love it, it’s one of the
greatest sports in the world.”
source:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11526448/