AP fileMIAMI - A kid jumped atop a picnic table, threw his tiny arms in the air and let out a loud, delightful shriek.
“Here he comes!” yelled the boy, who couldn’t have been older than 8 or 9.
With that, the 250 or so underprivileged kids crammed in the back of a South Florida arcade began stampeding toward the guest of honor. Their tiny hands smudged the windows he walked by on his way to greet them, and they all began screaming indistinguishably as he neared the entrance.
Later, when asked what he thought of the tiny mob, Dwyane Wade shook his head and laughed.
“That was cool,” Wade said. “Crazy. It’s something that’s very special to me.”
The Miami Heat guard is an NBA champion, a finals MVP for his work against the Dallas Mavericks last June, a multimillionaire and one of sport’s most recognizable faces.
Yet he still marvels about making kids yell when he shows up to throw a Christmas party.
“See, to us, this is what the holidays are about now,” says Siohvaughn Wade, Dwyane’s wife.
It used to be different.
The Wades would do what just about everyone else does Christmas morning: Wake up early, rush to the tree and start ripping into the pile of wrapped boxes.
That was before they could afford to give themselves whatever they wanted.
These days, with Wade in the final year of his first NBA contract — one paying him $3.84 million this season — and less than a year away from entering a new deal that should pay him somewhere in the range of $63 million over the next four seasons, money is no longer a concern.
So how many elaborate gifts are awaiting Wade on this Christmas, when he’ll lead his Miami Heat in a nationally televised afternoon game against fellow superstar guard Kobe Bryant and the Los Angeles Lakers?
Apparently, none.
Wade arranged for his Converse shoes and brand of clothing to be distributed Saturday at his mother’s place of worship, the New Mount Nebo Missionary Baptist Church in southwest Chicago, and soon will be sending another 100 pairs of kids’ sneakers to the same church for another giveaway.
He’s sent shoes to soldiers in Iraq, and to people struggling after Hurricane Katrina.
“It’s about giving. That’s what Christmas means to me more so than anything,” Wade says. “It’s not just giving presents, giving certain gifts. It’s about giving what you can. For me and my family, it’s about giving love, about giving cheers, about giving joy, putting smiles on kids’ faces because they’re the future. Hopefully, when they get older, they’ll pass it on and it’ll keep going down the line.”
This holiday is a pretty important work day for Wade, too.
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