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NBA All-Star Kenyon Martin
Joins Sports Legends Who Stutter
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
For more information, contact:
Jane Fraser
(202) 686-4494
info@stutteringhelp.org
Kenyon Martin, the Denver Nuggets basketball sensation who was named
to the NBA’s All Star Team in 2004, joins other famous people who
stutter in a new brochure. The brochure - which unfolds into a small
poster - is available free of charge from The Stuttering Foundation.
The poster is intended to give children and adults who stutter
inspiration as they grapple with their speech disorder.
Martin is featured alongside other sports legends who stutter, such
as Bill Walton, Ken Venturi and Bob Love. He is the 16th famous person
added to the poster. Others featured include actor James Earl Jones,
Marilyn Monroe and Winston Churchill.
Martin, who has struggled with stuttering since he was a child in
school, says the speech disorder was a catalyst that propelled him to
the highest levels of basketball. He was named National Player of the
Year in his senior year playing for the University of Cincinnati
Bearcats.
As a 6-foot, 9-inch power forward with the Denver Nuggets, he
averages just over 15 points per game.
In a recent interview, Martin said stuttering has haunted him since
his childhood in South Dallas. He endured teasing from classmates and
refused to speak in class.
Later, as a basketball star in Cincinnati, his fear of being teased
was replaced by the fear of speaking to reporters; and he tried his best
to avoid interviews.
Then, when he was named Player of the Year and became the No. 1
college player in the NBA draft in 2000, Martin resolved not to let
stuttering get in the way of his success. He confronts his stuttering
head-on and he doesn’t worry what others think.
“Kenyon Martin will be a great source of inspiration to young people
who struggle with stuttering,” says Jane Fraser, president of The
Stuttering Foundation. She notes that speech therapists, school
clinicians, teachers and others often hang the posters in a prominent
place in their office.
For a free copy, call 800-992-9392 or visit www.stutteringhelp.org.
(Click on Brochures.)
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