Inside Wooter Apparel: Hargrave Featured In New York Knicks Charity Game, Wooter And Aquille Carr Team Up, Wooter Football Hits Hard With Aliso Niguel High School

Inside Wooter Apparel: Hargrave Featured In New York Knicks Charity Game, Wooter And Aquille Carr Team Up, Wooter Football Hits Hard With Aliso Niguel High School

Go inside the latest news and updates from around Wooter Apparel, featuring Haron Hargrave competing in the upcoming New York Knicks alumni charity game, Aquille Carr representing Wooter, and how you can help give back with the new collection honoring the late Mac Miller…

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Inside The Fan Shop: One-on-One with Shirod Icne (3PBL Founder & General Manager)

Inside The Fan Shop: One-on-One with Shirod Icne (3PBL Founder & General Manager)

On June 3, the 3PBL and Founder/GM Shirod Ince tip-off the 2018 Wooter League at the Henry Street Settlement on the Lower East Side, but that's only part of the story. The rest of this basketball tale details the journey of an NYC coach committed to helping kids get better, all while re-investing into the same community and courts that raised him…

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Wooter Apparel - Top 10 Uniforms and Jerseys - Spring 2018

Wooter Apparel - Top 10 Uniforms and Jerseys - Spring 2018

No one said compiling a Top 10 list was going to be easy. After launching the company four years ago, Wooter Apparel has customized and designed the freshest jerseys and uniforms in the sports game today thanks to a very talented group of designers around the world. The best part: Wooter is just getting warmed up.

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Master P And Wooter Apparel Help Bring Hope To New Orleans At 2017 Essence Festival

 

Weeks before a 1,000 basketball fans, community leaders and local supporters flocked to the Xavier University of Louisiana Convocation Center on a Thursday evening in New Orleans, Percy "Master P" Miller stood moved.  

It was early June when the hip hop mogul and No Limit Records founder learned about the passing of a 7-year old boy in Louisville, Kentucky, Dequante Hobbs, Jr., who was struck by a stray bullet and died in late May. It was then that the New Orleans native and father of seven felt compelled to reach out to the family to provide some solace and hope.  

That feeling came to life as part of Master P's NOLA Celebrity Basketball Game at the 2017 Essence Festival on June 29th, which tipped-off with a peace rally prior to the game aptly named, The National Day of Peace. The goal: to raise community awareness about violence plaguing a number of inner cities around the US including New Orleans. In an event that featured Silkk The Shocker, Mystikal, Juvenile, Dallas Cowboys tight end Rico Gathers, former NFL wide receiver Jacoby Jones, former NBA players Caron Butler and Ben Gordon among a host of other athletes and celebrities, it was Master P's own son -- musician and actor, Romeo Miller -- who honored young Dequante by wearing the red and black number 7 jersey as a tribute.  

This was a proud moment for everyone at Wooter Apparel, who teamed up with Master P to outfit players and coaches on the court with jerseys and gear for his NOLA Celebrity Basketball Game.  

This was more than just another charity event.

Way more. 

The game served as a valuable reminder of how communities can come together for the greater good of investing back into its youth, as proceeds from the contest went to benefit the scholarship fund of Team H.O.P.E. NOLA. 

Late last year, Master P and New Orleans Pelicans assistant coach Robert Pack launched Team H.O.P.E. NOLA (Helping Our Players Excel) as a way to help at-risk youth in New Orleans and provide them with the resources and information to keep them off of the streets, succeed on the court and more importantly in the classroom. The 20 players selected to take part in the Team H.O.P.E. NOLA program range from age 12 to 15 years old and are selected from area schools. By the end of the program, the players will be equipped to make educated decisions and choices as they prepare for college, careers, and hopefully opportunities to one day be mentors or community leaders themselves.  

Since then, Team H.O.P.E. NOLA has remained active in their community, from helping raise donations, to assisting at senior centers and sharing their message about focusing on education and overcoming obstacles in life. 

Both Master P and Coach Pack know how important mentorship and leadership is, on and off of the court. The two grew up together in New Orleans and played on the same AAU squad, long before Pack played 13-years in the NBA and Miller rapped his way to stardom and launched his own record label.   

Now, the two life-long friends are focused on giving back and paying it forward with Team H.O.P.E. NOLA, with the 2017 Essence Festival and Master P's celebrity game yet another example of how change and hope truly starts at home.