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The Basketball Diaries

Rob Masters Remembers

142

Playing

W

hen Rob MasteRs

walks into a surgical suite

as a trauma consultant,

he brings a wealth of

knowledge about the

high-end stainless steel and

titanium prostheses his

employer, Synthes, has crafted for the repair of shattered

human bodies, specifically their hips, wrists and ankles.

“It’s a 24/7 type of job,” Masters

said. “Terrible car crashes and other

violent accidents that grievously injure people have no

timetable. That’s why I’m always

ready and on call.”

When Masters enters that surgical

suite, he also brings a lifetime of

preparedness, much of which he

learned on the basketball court.

Folks who have lived in the

Lowcountry for a few years won’t

take much prompting to recall that

Masters was a star shooting guard

for a Porter-Gaud team that went to

the state finals. To this day, Masters

is convinced they would have

captured the title if another of their

outstanding players, Mark Pearson, had not been out with

a torn ACL.

Masters went on to play for three years at the College

of Charleston under the tutelage of legendary coach John

Kresse. But the basketball story that he believes helped

chart the course of his life began many years earlier.

Masters, who grew up on Sullivan’s Island, started

shooting hoops at the age of 3. By the time he was 5, he

was participating in recreation leagues, coached by his dad,

who played ball at the College of Charleston and Baptist

College – now Charleston Southern University. When

he was 10, he was a starter on his school’s team and at 13

became eligible for AAU play.

“That changed everything,” he recalled. “AAU

basketball was played all summer long. So together

with my school teams, the sport became a year-round

commitment.”

By Bill Farley

www.MountPleasantMagazine.com

|

www.iloveMountPleasant.com

|

www.BestOfMountPleasant.com

Commitment isn’t the only lesson Masters soaked up

on the basketball court.

“I learned discipline, teamwork, respect for my coaches’

authority and putting the team before myself. Those are a few

reasons why playing a sport can benefit any kid,” he explained.

At the College of Charleston, his basketball career

taught Masters even more about sports and about life.

“I was lucky enough to attend on an academic

scholarship, which meant I had to keep my grades up.

Many of my teammates weren’t from as fortunate a

background as my own and knew that staying in school

and playing ball was their only chance for a better life,” he

said.

“No matter who we were or where

we came from, the challenges were the

same,” Masters added.

There were rewards as well, some

of them obvious, such as the team’s

trips to other cities and to compete in

tournaments in Alaska and Hawaii.

“We were in Hawaii five days,” Rob

remembered, “and think I was on the

beach for 20 minutes.”

Some rewards weren’t immediately

obvious, but friendships with young

men he otherwise might never have met

have stood the test of time. He remains close with many of his

former teammates, and three of them served as groomsmen at

his wedding.

Now married to wife Megan and the father of a 3-and-

a-half-year-old daughter, Masters believes his basketball

career helped prepare him for life.

“The discipline that underpinned everything in

basketball has helped me strike a balance between my work

life and my home life,” he said.

Masters said basketball might not be the right choice for

every person, but a positive sports experience can do more

than keep a young man or woman busy, off the street and out

of trouble. It can form a solid base for the rest of their lives.

For tickets to basketball games at the College of

Charleston this season as well as a full schedule, visit

www.cofcsports.com/tickets.

Photo courtesy of Rob Masters.