
Willie “Chill Will” Veal Jr. ran the “Chill Diamond Ring” tournament the last 30 years at Malcolm X Park. 
Al “Bean” Brodsky ran the James Bailey basketball league at Washington Park, now Malcolm X Park for 30 years.

The
hosts of the Boston Neighborhood Heroes Awards (from left), Travis
Bogarty, Charlie “Chiz” Terry, “TWalk” Walker and Michael Bivins.
Boston’s neighborhood hoops heroes honored for decades of community service
The echoes of bouncing basketballs, trash talk and encouragement have long filled parks and gyms across Roxbury, Dorchester and Mission Hill. On Feb. 12, those sounds were momentarily replaced by applause.
Community members, former players and local organizers packed The DeWitt Center at Madison Park for the third Boston Neighborhood Heroes Awards, an event dedicated to honoring the men and the basketball leagues that have helped keep Boston’s youth alive during some of the city’s most dangerous decades through the present day.
The ceremony was organized and hosted by Michael Bivins, Roxbury native and member of the chart-topping R&B groups New Edition and Bell Biv DeVoe. To host the event, Bivins worked with childhood friends and business partners including Terry “TWalk” Walker, Charlie “Chiz” Deloatch and Travis Bogarty — all streetball veterans.
Around 150 attendees, a mix of honorees, families and friends, listened to the casual ceremony where humorous stories and moving histories were shared between award presentations. The trophies handed to the recipients were almost as tall as the men who received them, a testament to their long-deserved recognition.
Among those honored were 11 basketball organizers, for building programs that offered structure, safety and belonging. Some leagues were founded during the height of the crack epidemic in the 1980s and 1990s, particularly in neighborhoods such as Orchard Park and the Roxbury and Dorchester sections of Boston.
“These leagues weren’t hobbies,” said Walker, Bivins’ childhood basketball coach. “They were survival.”
Though Bivins is known for
hit songs like “Can You Stand the Rain” and “Poison,” Walker said
basketball — not music — was always his first love.
“Mike liked playing ball more than performing,” Walker said. “Music made him famous, but basketball made him who he is.”
Walker
also said the awards highlighted Bivins’ broader charitable footprint,
including holiday giveaways, youth initiatives and continued investment
in Boston’s neighborhoods.
“Mike never forgot where he came from,” Walker said.
A small world built around big courts
For many in the room it was an emotional day, being honored for decades of service in the community.
Tony “T-Rich” Richards, founder of the “No Book No Ball” (NBNB) program, was
recognized for his more than 30 years of work combining academics with
athletics. Founded 35 years ago, NBNB serves roughly 1,000 youth
annually between its academic year and summer programs. The yearround
program operates seasonally at the Mike Bivins Basketball Court at Derby
Ramsey Park and requires students to meet certain academic standards
before stepping on the court.
“‘No books, no ball’ isn’t just a slogan,” Richards said. “Kids have to show report cards. They have to show effort.”
Richards
said the program’s proudest successes are not only NBA players such as
Bruce Brown and Shabazz Napier who went through NBNB, but most
especially the lawyers, doctors, city officials and firefighters who
came through the program and stayed in Boston.
“That’s the win,” Richards said.
“When they come back and coach, when they raise their kids here.”
Other
honorees included Greg Canzater, founder of the SISRUN girls’
basketball league that creates space for young women who were often
overlooked in neighborhood hoops culture, and Darren Holiday, who
founded the weekday leagues King Court and Strong Ballers. Holiday said
his weekday league model, which ran primarily at Quincy Park beginning
in the mid-1990s, was intentional.
“Guys
had jobs. College kids were home,” Holiday said. “If they had a game on
Tuesday or Thursday, that kept them out of trouble.”
The
same Quincy Park courts also hosted Calvin Redd Cheeks’ Packey Bar
& Grill basketball league, another honoree and staple of Boston’s
summer basketball scene that blended competition with neighborhood
pride.
From Malcolm X Park to Mission Hill
Several honorees were rooted at Malcolm X Park, long considered sacred ground in Boston basketball history.
Willie
“Chill Will” Veal Jr. received recognition for his Chill Diamond Ring
Basketball Tournament, which began in the early 1990s and remains
legendary for awarding diamond-studded championship rings to players
overlooked by the Amateur Athletic Union, or AAU, circuits that are
elite, structured, often brand-sponsored travel basketball leagues.
“Everybody doesn’t get picked,” Veal said. “But everybody matters.”
Veal
described his tournament as a place where rival neighborhoods coexisted
peacefully during years marked by gang violence and instability.
“There was never an issue,” he said. “Respect was the rule.”
Yet
another honoree, Allan “Bean” Brodsky, was recognized for the James
Bailey League, another Malcolm X Park fixture, while Robert Blue was
recognized for founding the Old School Monday Basketball, a league that
drew generations of players to the same court week after week.
Roger
Roberts received a Neighborhood Hero Award for his Score 4 More Save R
Street basketball tournament. Originally launched in 2009 under the
banner “Silence the Violence,” the event includes youth divisions, men’s
open competition and a community game of residents against Boston
police officers.
The
two-day summer event draws thousands. “We feed the whole park,” Roberts
said of the event that began at Jeep Jones Park and later moved to
Malcolm X Park to accommodate the growing attendance. “It’s about
unity,” Roberts said.
Other honorees included Leo Papile for his nationally recognized Boston Amateur Basketball Club’s AAU program,
Geoffrey Bynoe for the Manny Wilson Basketball League & Academy at
the Yawkey Boys & Girls Club of Roxbury, and John Jackson for the
Thomas L. Johnson League, which operates out of the Tobin Gym in Mission
Hill.
The glue behind the scenes
While
the night honored basketball legends, much of the logistical work fell
to Willa Mae Burnett, a 75-year-old Roxbury native who lived in Orchard
Park and proudly calls herself an “original OP girl.”
“I watched these boys grow up,” said Burnett, who knew Bivins as a child.
Charlie
“Chiz” Deloatch, general manager of Bivins’ clothing line Sporty Rich,
was one of the organizers of the ceremony. He said it reflected a shared
history forged in adversity; the recognition is something he’ll
remember for the rest of his life.
“Basketball saved all our lives from the streets,” Deloatch said. “And we’re trying to continue to do that in our neighborhood.”