- Slug: Sports–Native American Basketball Scholarships. 691 words.
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By Jorden Hampton
Cronkite News
PHOENIX — Amid the fierce competition and colorful pageantry of the largest all-Native American basketball tournament in North America, some numbers stood out.
There were 196 teams representing 180 tribal communities playing in the 21st annual Native American Basketball Invitational over five days last week, the tournament beginning on the 13 courts of Grand Canyon University and ending with Saturday’s girls and boys championships at the Footprint Center.
But the games were also the backdrop to some life-changing moments.
Keon Talgo, a 19-year-old Native American basketball player, always dreamed of going to college, but needed assistance to turn his dream into reality. Everything came together during an unforgettable and eye-popping moment at the NABI.
Talgo, dressed in a black dress shirt and gray slacks, received a $10,000 scholarship during halftime of the boys’ championship game in downtown Phoenix. Talgo belongs to the San Carlos Apache tribe and will attend Cornell College, a private liberal arts college in Mount Vernon, Iowa, in the fall to study engineering.
“I’m feeling great right now,” said Talgo, who helped lead Gilbert Christian High School’s boy’s basketball team to the 3A State Championship in February. “It really helps my family a lot financially to have this scholarship and I’m really grateful for NABI for selecting me.”
Continue reading “Hoops and scholarships: Native American Basketball Invitational provides intense competition, life-altering moments”