Maryland high school basketball stars hope to inspire others

Maryland high school basketball stars hope to inspire others

Basketball has become a way of life for Noah Frayer and Jordan Brown, who are from Anne Arundel County. For as they attend college they have been inspired to be an example to the others. 
 
Both have been playing basketball at junior level and continued to play in high school at Arundel High School. 
 
Brown, like every other basketball player, has admitted to developing interest in the game at the tender age of two years. He began his carrier with first AAU team in third standard of his school. Since then he has never rested the ball again. 
 
Brown got what he expected in a way he make several accomplishments through out his high school he even scored an accumulated total of one thousand points and got several awards. 
 
‘I think as a thousand-point scorer, not everyone is able to do that and not all schools have many of them’, added Brown. 
 
From the eighth grade on, Frayer began picking up a basketball and he never looked back. He admits that his father’s influence in his fondness for the game was a reality since he grew up watching him play lots of games. He has been named in the honorable mentions two times and he was able to score nine hundred and sixty points all together. 
 
In the case of Frayer, he said: “Basketball was the first sport that I loved. ” “That for me would be just to see the improvement in myself and just at the place that I am, doing all the things that I want to do I look back at my story and I am proud of it. ” 
 
You may find it hard to believe, but the two are recent college graduates that are set on taking their passion for the game to the following level. Brown who committed to Darrow School at Albany New York and Frayer who committed to join Spire Academy in Ohio will join the team in the coming season. 
 
“This I would like to have now: to have a good college career now, so after this, I want to be playing overseas, that is my main goal,” Brown said this adding, “I think that is a really great opportunity to travel the world and play basketball at the same time. ” 
 
In the process they contemplate their efficacy in the past years Frayer and Brown once acknowledged that while they enjoy and love basketball they also know they are an inspiration to the young ones. 
 
“Other than that just inspire other people that you know like the position that I’m in now or the position that I will be in in five years you could be in the same position if you put the work in and stay humble,” Frayer said. 
 
“It’s all about being yourself and having passion of yourself/ For instance, basketball or any other thing which one does, other people will be looking at that person as a role model/ So you just make sure that /you just [continue]achieving all that you can,” Brown said. 
 
The life of a student-athlete was not easy for Frayer and Brown. Just as the guys found out that attempting to juggle acceptable grades, friendship with friends and family, and personal training for a basketball game was quite challenging but each of them understood that there was a larger life plan out there for them. Of which some of them responded that discipline and support from their family a lot. 
 
“My siblings inspire me. As simple as waking up in the morning and seeing them smile and my mother who wakes up early in the morning and goes to work and my father also. So that is what leads me to keep on moving forward,” said Frayer. 

When they stand before their new classrooms at Darrow School for their further sports and education, Frayer and Brown said they are ready. 
 
“For me it feels like I am getting a chance and I just feel ready to work, and any chance that comes my way, I am willing to accept it and take all that comes with it In the long run it will make a better person, a better man,” said Frayer.