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Rockets rookie White faces fear of flying

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Houston Rockets first-round draft pick Royce White speaks with the media at a news conference on June 29 in Houston. White already missed the first week of NBA basketball training camp. He has asked the team to help him cope with his anxiety disorder and his fear of flying. (Pat Sullivan — AP)

HOUSTON - Royce White couldn’t wait any longer.

Last weekend, just before the Houston Rockets opened training camp, he called his agent and told him he had a problem. He needed to map out a plan for dealing with his general anxiety disorder and his fear of flying.

It needed to be done before his first NBA season began. Before the brutal cross-country travel schedule kicked in and before the disorder got any worse.

And if the Rockets, who drafted him 16th overall in June, wouldn’t work with him, then he would walk away from basketball - no matter how much money was on the table.

It was that simple.

“It was going to come down to, hey, are they going to do this?” White said. “Or I might have to think about never being able to play anymore. Ever.”

The Rockets were receptive, though, and will allow White to travel by bus to selected games. White stayed in Houston to work out details of the arrangement while the team held its first week of training camp in McAllen, the home of its developmental league affiliate near the Texas-Mexico border.

The team is returning this weekend, and White will rejoin the Rockets on Monday.

The Rockets haven’t commented on White’s absence, other than to say they are “committed to Royce’s long-term success” and will “support him now and going forward.”

Chatting at a quiet park, overlooking a pond near his home in a Houston suburb, White told The Associated Press he doesn’t plan on missing any games this year. He’ll fly when he has to.

But he’s also shopping for a bus, and can’t make any promises about how he’ll react if the team is forced to take off in stormy weather or if a certain flight hits unnerving turbulence.

“If a game isn’t drivable, then I’ll have to fly. And we’ll see,” he said. “I mean, if we’ve got to play and there’s a thunderstorm over a city, am I going to be more apprehensive about getting on a plane? Maybe. Maybe I miss a game. In the end, it’s more important to understand that, as important as basketball is, nothing is worth someone’s health.”

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Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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