You didn't clarify. Once you realized what you said you tried to cover up by lying (this is what happens when you get carried away, you end up talking out of both sides of your mouth). Saying "
he had literally no experience playing", is quite literally you saying he had no experience playing hoops before coming to the US. You even followed up that statement by saying all his amateur play was in this country too.
Both points are 100% inaccurate.
He quite literally played in an organized environment whilst he was in Cameroon, hence his father signing papers for him to join a local team, which I referenced in a previous post.
That is a fact. It's a trivial matter (because it ultimately doesn't mean anything), but it is still a fact.
Again, he's an international player (he's going to play for France). He played organized ball in Cameroon. Once he plays in the Olympics for France are you going to recognize him as an international player, if so, what's the point in digging your heels in over this? You're the one who doesn't know what they're talking about because you didn't even know he played in Cameroon. Stop projecting.
And here come the strawman arguments.
Nobody said he's played an international game, just that he's an international/foreign player. Nobody is saying he didn't primarily learn to play the game in the country. Neither of these points were ever in contention. This thread is about "internationally born" players, which Embiid is classified as. He also classifies as being an international player because he hasn't and won't be playing for Team USA. He also played hoops prior to coming here.
The fact you want stats from over a decade ago from a teenage local league of a third-world country, tells me all I need to know about you.
Why is this not enough for you to acknowledge that you're wrong -
"Joel Embiid is fond of comparing his life to a movie. The story, in his account, begins with a scout discovering him on the streets of Yaoundé, the capital of Cameroon, where Embiid grew up.
.........
In February, Thomas [Embiid's father] signed paperwork allowing Joel to join a local team led by a coach named Guy Moudio. Moudio gave Joel a tape of Hall of Fame center Hakeem Olajuwon to study. He used a medicine ball to build up Joel’s strength. Moudio had to teach Joel some of the game’s more basic skills, but he was impressed with what he saw and how Joel, despite being a novice, seemed to have an innate feel for the game".
- he joined a local team in Cameroon
- he studied tape of Dream
- he developed basketball habits and practiced basic skills
- he showed he had an innate feel for the game.
All of this was before moving to the US.