From Cabrini-Green to GRCC: Basketball player overcomes adversity to excel on and off court

This is one of my first oral history stories I wrote while at GRCC in 2016. I did not take the photos for this story.

By John Rothwell – Collegiate Staff

Greg Fleming_JDL9767
GRCC basketball player Greg Fleming. Photo by Jonathan D. Lopez

After growing up in the Cabrini-Green Housing Projects, on the north side of Chicago, Greg Fleming has found comfort in Grand Rapids, playing basketball for Grand Rapids Community College.

With the gang environment of drug dealing and violence, Cabrini-Green was one of the worst housing projects in the United States in the early 2000’s.

“A lot of people say that Grand Rapids is a small version of Chicago, but that is not true,” Fleming said. “Grand Rapids is a laid back city where you don’t have to walk down the street looking over your shoulder.”

The oldest of three boys, Fleming, who recently turned 20, was raised by a single mother, who took on the role of both caregiver and provider.

Fleming’s mom played a positive role in trying to keep Greg away from the negative people and environment that surrounded him. She got Greg into sports and made sure he was always doing something positive, not just hanging out in the hood.

“Mom always stressed school and kept me focusing on sports,” Fleming said. “She was always telling me to get my education. It will take you further than anything.”

Out of a group of 15 friends that hung out together in middle school, only Fleming and one other made it to college.

“Six or seven have died and most of the rest are incarcerated,” Fleming said.

At first Fleming did not take his education seriously and found himself getting into trouble in school for fighting and disrespecting teachers.

That changed with the help of a mentor, Deepak Deajva, who entered early in Fleming’s life.

Deajva is a college graduate from Texas A&M and showed Fleming what a successful life is. He also taught Fleming life skills and how to be successful in life.

“He is, to me, my father and a big brother,” Fleming said. “I am very glad to have him in my life.”

Once Fleming got a taste of success, he knew it was something he wanted. The adversity of inner city families and an environment full of negativity was something Fleming had to get out of, with the options being school and basketball, or gang banging and selling drugs. Fleming didn’t want to live the lifestyle of the streets, so he stayed motivated and graduated from high school and let his play on the court take him to new heights.

Fleming’s girlfriend, a student at Grand Valley State University, on an academic scholarship, invited him to stay with her last summer.

It was then that Fleming reached out to former GRCC Basketball coach T.J. Carnegie who gave him a tryout and offered him a scholarship.

“Greg is a great kid who came to me last summer and asked for an opportunity to tryout,” Carnegie said. “He impressed me right away with how hard he played and how competitive he was.”

With a successful season of playing basketball for the Raiders behind him, Fleming has been offered scholarships to several four-year schools to continue both his education and play basketball.

“If you surround yourself with negativity you will follow that path of negativity,” Fleming said. “Surround yourself with successful people.”

Controlling his own destiny, Fleming would like to play basketball overseas and then end up working in the medical field.

“Anything is possible, but my degree is a must,” Fleming said. “Even if it takes me 10 years, I am going to get it.”

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Author: johnrothwellblog

John Rothwell currently resides in Grand Rapids, Michigan, where he is a freelance photojournalist and reporter. In December of 2017, he finished his Communications Degree at Grand Valley State University and is currently working on adding a second degree in Multimedia Journalism. In addition to his academic work, he contributes photos, photo essays and local news coverage to The Rapidian, a hyperlocal citizen journalism platform, powered by the people of Grand Rapids. John believes that everyone has a story to tell and that story needs to be told in a medium that best suits the situation, either in photos, video, audio, word or a mixture of all. People must be informed on events happening in and around their lives and have their voices heard.

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