film is based on the real story of the high school basketball coach Ken Carter (Ken Carter). As the coach of the California Richmond High School basketball team, Ken Carter sent all the team members who had been unbeaten in 13 games to the bench during the 1999 season on the grounds of poor school performance. His move has also been widely controversial. The Yarichimon High School basketball team is about to usher in their dream basketball championship. Their performance in this season is very good and has remained unbeaten for 13 consecutive games.
On January 4, 1999, the name of basketball coach Ken Carter (played by Samuel L. Jackson) appeared in the "New York Times". The reason was not that the Richmond High School team he led was so powerful. Hong's game results were a decision he made: to temporarily close the training hall, and all team members go to the library to review their homework, and the training can be resumed only if the credits are up to the standard.
At the critical juncture of the upcoming championship, no one would have thought that Carter would make such a decision, because the whole city is crazy for this undefeated team, every game is full of seats, and fans are everywhere. Scream. Asked about Carter's decision, the previous exquisite rhetoric from all walks of life instantly turned into inquisitive interrogation and censorship. In addition to the angry eyes of the players’ parents, Carter also needs to face the opposition from school leaders, because Richmond is a working-class city, and the high unemployment rate makes people pay for poverty and the pressure of life. 45 students who follow Carter to learn basketball Many of the children come from single-parent families. It is the dream of many players to be as famous and rich as Kobe and Shaq. Many parents have regarded basketball as the only way for their children to rush out of Richmond and achieve success, but Carter refused to give in. He felt that he It is fulfilling the contract, because before setting foot on his training ground, all the players have signed a contract that guarantees that they must work equally hard on the court and in the classroom. In Carter's view, winning the game is important, but it is also important to ensure the players' performance in cultural classes and to determine a future with more adequate choices for them. In Carter's teaching dictionary, as a high school basketball player, you need more than just skills, perseverance, discipline and team spirit, and enough credits are necessary for training. He wants to use his own experience and experience to tell the players who are supported by his own hand on the victory journey: It is the education of the school that has shaped and guided him on the right path of life, not just the basketball game.
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