When he hosts about 100 underserved middle and high school students for a vegan lunch break during his Mama Blair Basketball Camp next weekend, former Arizona standout and NBA coach Joseph Blair could use the opportunity to lecture about health benefits or animal welfare.
But the guy known as the βVegan Coachβ says he wonβt go there entirely. These are mostly high school kids, who will be served vegan fare from The Monica but are mostly there to play basketball.
βItβll come up a little bit,β Blair said. βI definitely want to make sure that they understand that what they just ate was a plant-based meal, and Iβll give them a quick rundown on how good it is for their body.
βIβm not saying everyone has to change, but I just want to open their minds and hearts to possibility of a different outlook on what veganism is.β
In various forms, Blair has taken a more outspoken view of veganism since converting fully about 10 years ago. Blair said he became a vegetarian during his final season at Arizona in 1995-96, and continued with it for about nine years as he played professionally around the world β and then became a pescatarian for the final three years of his playing career.
After he stopped playing, Blair said he βstarted eating everything againβ for about three years before shifting to a vegan diet nearly a decade ago.
Since then, heβs noticed plenty of change. Not just increased energy and lower cholesterol but also the explosion of choices.
βThe rise of veganism has been astronomical, and β¦ as the vegan population grows, the demand grows, and so does the supply,β Blair said. βI think the food industry as a whole has understood the marketability of veganism. If you look back when I was vegetarian, and you were trying to get a veggie burger, it was kind of difficult. A handful of restaurants had a black bean burger, but they really werenβt vegan burgers or vegetarian burgers.
βNow you have Impossible burgers, Beyond burgers. Every chain has their own type of burgers. You can go on and on about hot dogs, sausages, everything, all these plant-based alternatives now exist that did not exist 10 years ago when I first started this journey. I always say thereβs no excuse because anything that you want of meat, there is a plant-based alternative.β
Blair says he enjoys making his own vegan burgers, infusing them soy-based bacon, or something with a Mexican twist, such as chickpea ceviche or tacos with alternative ground beef.
On a recent night, βI made some charro beans with some rice and a kale salad on the side,β Blair says. βThen I had a beef steak tomato, and I drizzled some olive oil and balsamic on there with a little bit of pesto. Thereβs tons of ways.β
During coaching stints with the Philadelphia 76ers, Minnesota Timberwolves and Washington Wizards, the team he left after last season, Blair had access to each teamβs dietician, who would provide vegan meals. He also could check out a number of top vegan-friendly restaurants in those three cities and around the league.
But even in Tucson, Blair said vegan options excel. He said he prefers The Monica, Charro Vida, Lovinβ Spoonfuls, Saffron Indiana and Zemanβs Ethiopian restaurants, among others. He even took then-Wizards forward Rui Hachimura to Charro Vida in 2022 when the then-Wizards player was visiting UA coach Tommy Lloyd, who had worked with him at Gonzaga.
βWe had another one of our player development coaches from Washington there, and another one of Ruiβs friends, and they loved it,β Blair said. βWe went for dinner and they went back the next day for lunch. Iβm always super excited to impress upon people the unbelievable n culinary scene in Tucson. I think itβs underappreciated.
βIβm by no means slighting any of the cities in which Iβve lived, but I will tell you this: I have lived in D.C. for three years. I was in Philadelphia. (As a player) I lived in Milan. I lived in France. Iβve lived in Greece. Iβve lived in Turkey. I lived all over the world, and I want to say that Tucson can compete with any of those places Iβve ever been when it comes to the food scene.β
Having left the Wizards after last season and mostly spending the summer in his hometown of Houston while seeking his next move, Blair will get a chance to sample Tucson cuisine again while running the camp.
Run in collaboration with Easterseals Blake Foundation, a Tucson-based organization that provides services for people with disabilities, the Mama Blair Basketball Camp will run Friday and Saturday (July 26-27) at Desert View High School. While it was originally supposed to welcome 70 campers, the total participation number will end up closer to 100.
Already having run youth camps in Tucson during previous offseasons, Blair said this yearβs camp is named after his mother, Judith, a strong supporter of womenβs and menβs basketball at UA before she died in 2019. Joseph Blair has also shared via his social media channels that efforts are underway to renovate the basketball courts City of Tucsonβs Palo Verde Park, 425 S. Mann Ave., in honor of his mother. The βJudith Blair Courtsβ would include new playing surfaces, pro-style backboards and rims, an electronic scoreboard and a shade canopy with built-in lighting.
Blair said heβs bringing along four former NBA or G League coaches to assist with the camp this week, and that he intends to make it an annual affair.
βIβm bringing some high-level coaches to work with these kids as well and give them feedback on their playing,β Blair said. βThe camp is about basketball. We are basically developing players and also developing people. Thatβs part of what the campβs about, bringing in all different classes and people together under one roof to create community.β
And if those campers happen to enjoy lunch along the way, thatβll be part of the education, too.
βIβm excited, especially with younger people that arenβt exposed to what vegan food truly is,β Blair said. βIt can be delicious, and itβs not just salads and tofu. It can be real food thatβs hearty, filling and delicious.β