Tragic School Shooting Has Profound Effect On Dwyane Wade
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MIAMI (CBSMiami/AP) — Miami Heat's Dwyane Wade's best game of the season came with a tribute to Marjory Stoneman Douglas High freshman Joaquin Oliver who died in the mass shooting there two weeks ago.
Oliver was buried in a jersey bearing Dwyane Wade's name. Wade's sneakers in Tuesday night's game had Oliver's name scrawled on them.
Marjory Stoneman Douglas High will reopen Wednesday, the first official day it will be in session since 17 students and teachers were killed in a Valentine's Day massacre that only cranked up the volume on the national debate over guns.
Oliver was one of the 17 victims. His parents buried him in a Wade jersey. Wade is trying to meet the family, hoping to thank them, comfort them, listen to them, help them, hug them, and almost certainly cry with them.
"That they thought of me in that process, as something that he would have wanted, is mindboggling," the Miami Heat guard said.
So is the fact that, again, Wade finds himself trying to solve a problem that apparently cannot be solved. He has been touched by countless tragedies in recent years, ranging from the Trayvon Martin shooting, to the death of his cousin in a shooting in Chicago shortly after he decided to join the Bulls in 2016, and now the senseless killings at the school about an hour north of Miami.
In this social media era, athletes have strength in numbers. The voices of people like Wade, LeBron James, Colin Kaepernick and others have more power than they likely ever imagined. Wade insists he isn't going to be silenced about the shooting, and that his friends won't either.
Put another way, no, as one national television pundit recently suggested James should, he will not 'shut up and dribble.'
"Being frustrated isn't going to help," Wade said. "You've got to keep going. You've got to look at the people before you and understand that nothing they did happened even close to overnight. The changes that Martin Luther King were trying to make, it took a long time before we could see them. Changes that an individual is trying to make, you do what's in your heart. When you're long gone, maybe one day it'll take hold."
Wade scored a season-high 27 points Tuesday night, hitting a game winner with 5.9 seconds left to lift Miami over Philadelphia 102-101. On the side of one of his sneaker heels, he scrawled Oliver's name.
"Some due respect to him and his family," Wade said.
(© Copyright 2018 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)