One of the oldest touring sports entertainment teams in the world will entertain people from the Land of Logan Monday night while helping raise funds for
    some of Logan County's youngest sports participants.
    The Harlem Wizards will be at Russellville High School's Jim Young Gymnasium at 6:30 p.m. Monday to play a group of some of the biggest names in recent
    Russellville/Logan County sports history. Profits from the game will benefit Logan County Little League.
    The Wizards website says, “At the Wizards game fans see amazing basketball talent combined with hilarious comedy. The athleticism, tricks, fancy teamwork
    and ball-handling wizardry, plus wild dunks not even seen in NBA games, engage and wow the most avid hoops fans. The comedy is for everybody. The Wizards
    look to push the envelope on fun, combining pre-planned comedic acts with spontaneous humor that fans of all ages will find laugh out loud funny. The
    halftime show with hundreds of kids on the court, plus the postgame interaction with the Wizards who stay until every autograph is signed, is the cherry on
    top.”
    Among the local guys expected to play:
    Bubba Wells was
    the only local player ever drafted by the NBA. After an outstanding career at Austin Peay State University in which he was the nation's unofficial scoring
    leader, he was drafted by and played for the Dallas Mavericks. He later played on the Harlem Globetrotters' competitive team, and he has been a top
    assistant coach for APSU for several years.
    Otis Key
    was Wells' teammate on both Russellville 1992 regional runner-up team and at APSU. He played professionally overseas several years and then was a member of
    the Globetrotters for eight years, including serving as the miked 'Showman' and as the group's promotional frontman. He has also been a championship coach
    in professional basketball.
    Mark Thompson
    is the only local player who has become a Major League baseball pitcher. After leading the Logan County Cougars to the state quarterfinals
    in 1989, he pitched three years for the University of Kentucky before being the second-ever draft pick of the Colorado Rockies. He was the franchises'
    first Pitcher of the Year and saved the first game the Rockies ever play at Coors Field. He also pitched for the St. Louis Cardinals and was in the
    Cincinnati Reds system. He has also coached professionally.
    Mikie Benton
    , a standout in football, basketball and track for the Panthers, was the starting safety for the University of Kentucky Wildcats last year and will return
    for his senior season this fall.
    Craig Bailey, Montez Mason and Lonnie Mason 
    were key players on Logan County's 1993 regional finalist basketball team. Lonnie has also been an assistant coach for the Cougars under a variety of head
    coaches.
    Marcus Mason
    was a standout basketball player for Brescia University in the early 90s after a stellar career at LCHS.
    Jae Allison
    , a member of Russellville's first state championship football team, is the founder of the Givin' Back sports program which helps point local youngsters in
    the right direction.
    Tyrone 'Iceman' Kennedy
    , a key player on Auburn's 1982 regional finalist basketball team, is also in a leadership role with Givin' Back.
    Brent Hinton
    was the only varsity freshman on the 1984 Logan County state championship basketball team.
    Bryan Fuller 
    is a former Cougar who earned ESPN attention for his ironman pitching performance in leading Campbellsville University to a berth in the NAIA World Series.
    Billy Joe Coleman
    was one of the top players on the 1976 Lewisburg High district champions, the last team coached by Bob Birdwhistell.
    Timmy Hampton
    was a key player for RHS football and basketball in the late 80s.
    Lon Sosh
    , the Hall of Fame broadcaster, will announce the lineup for the local stars.
    Trey Turner
    , a two-time Kentucky Nike HoopStar while playing for the Cougars and a Hanover College basketball letterman, will be one of the officials.
    Barry Bilyeu,
    a graduate of LCHS who joined Turner in being named co-Most Improved Official by the Southern Kentucky Basketball Officials Association, will also
    officiate.
    Tickets are for sale in advance for $7 at Roy's Bar-B-Q and Barrow Eye Center. They also can be obtained from Little League players and their parents. All
    tickets will be $10 at the door.
    Logan County Little League will be getting all the proceeds from the concessions and will receive a commission for selling Wizards souvenirs.
    The Wizards, who are involved in Character Education, will make appearances at schools during the day Monday. They will do lunchroom visits at LCHS and
    Olmstead along with assemblies at Lewisburg, Stevenson Elementary and RHS at 1:30 p.m.
    
    The LoJo
    From the Wizards' website;
    The Wizards didn't invent show basketball, but their place in history, as a major player in this genre is undeniable. Started in 1962, by a determined
    sports promoter, Howie Davis, the Wizards continue the tradition began in the thirties of great
basketball, and adding in some hot dog and mustard! Now in the 21st century, the Wizards, led by    Todd Davis, have modernized show basketball, with their version called, Tricks, Hoops, And
    Alley-Oops!
    It is more than just their ability to excel on the court that has fueled their longstanding love affair with basketball fans. It is their utter commitment
    to touching fans, and providing them with a basketball experience that is joyous, astoundingly skillful, exciting and sometimes so hilarious that they
    leave fans laughing so hard that their boots come loose!
    Howie Davis
    felt that although the Globetrotters were legendary, they were not above competition! He felt that he could bring a fire and creativity to the Wizards to
    do it even better!
    Who knew then, that 50 years later, the Wizards would continue to carve out their own basketball legacy, and take the tradition of show basketball, and
    evolve it into the trick-hoops & alley-oops of the 21st century?
    Other than the Wizards and the Globetrotters, no other entertainment basketball team has survived the test of time and made worldwide fans like these two
    storied franchises.
    In 2002, Harlem Wizards "Speedy, "A-Train", and "Mr. Handles" and soon-to-be Wizard "Trikz" appeared in that groundbreaking NIKE commercial, and ex-Wizards
    like "The Main Event" starred with And1.
    But while the Wizards continue to break new ground, they have always had a rich tradition of attracting the games best and brightest. NBA Legends like
    Connie Hawkins and Tiny Archibald have toured with the Wizards. Hawthorne Wingo, Mario Elie, Hollis Copeland and over 25 NBA'ers in total have played with
    the Wizards.
    Streetball Legends like "Sudden Sam" Worthen (Chicago Bulls), "SPEEDY" Williams (Current Wizard), "The Main Event" ,Frankie Bradshaw, Larry "Butterfly"
    Cheatham, Ed "Czar" Simmons, Frank "Shake & Bake" Streety, "Headache", Guy Hughes, Clarence "MUGSY" Leggett and "Tojo" Henderson,(Current Wizards) Tom
    "Sundance Kid" Chapin, Vincent White, James "Peanuts" Woolard and other greats have shown their various skills on tour with the Harlem Wizards.
    THE FOUNDING OF THE HARLEM WIZARDS
In 1943, a Sports Promoter, and at the time, Sergeant and Recreation Director at Wright Patterson Air Force Base, in Dayton, Ohio,    Howie Davis was called upon to provide an emergency 8th team for the World Championship of
    Basketball Tournament in Chicago. In just one week, he put together the Dayton Dive Bombers Basketball team.
    Their first round opponent was the Harlem Globetrotters. Howie Davis, 24, an admirer of the
    Globetrotters and Abe Saperstein's fusion of Sports and Entertainment, was excited by the challenge. In one of the biggest upsets in sports history, the
    Dayton Dive Bombers beat the previous World Champions in their first game ever played!
    However, if Abe Saperstein hadn't refused to shake Howie Davis' hand after the game, would the
    competitive fuel for starting the Wizards ever have happened? One thing is certain, Davis was
    inspired that night, and nearly two decades later he launched his own traveling show team - the Harlem Wizards.
    Todd Davis grew up in Far Rockaway, N.Y. in a sports household. His father scouted for The San Francisco Giants, and owned the Harlem Wizards. Meeting
    Willie Mays, hanging out in the Giants' dugout and playing one on one with Connie Hawkins was all part of his childhood.
    Weekends were usually reserved for traveling with the Wizards, helping out, practicing the tricks, bothering the players, and enjoying the games. At 15
    Todd went on his first International Trip with the Wizards to Israel. Since the Wizards brought the opposition team, Todd was on the New York Stars roster,
    and even made the Stars' first shot in front of 10,000 people in Tel-Aviv.
    He joined his father with the Harlem Wizards after graduating from Albany State University in the early 1980s. He believed that the Wizards were amazing
and he wanted to capitalize on the business side, on their tremendous reputation as a    legendary basketball and entertainment team. In 1992, when his father died, he took
    over the presidents' role with the Wizards.
    H has continued the legacy, and the Wizards now perform awe-inspiring shows for 500,000 fans a year, and counting.