There is Valley Green, that beautiful area of Fairmount Park wedged between Chestnut Hill and Roxborough. When Stukes is not somewhere else, working on dribbling and shooting, he's rubbing elbows with hills and dales.
The 6-2, 165-pound Stukes, a junior, is the point guard for La Salle High and among the folks watching him play Sunday in a 71-58 Catholic League win over visiting Bishop McDevitt was John Giannini, La Salle University's coach.
Within the last week, Giannini offered Stukes a scholarship. Albany did so last summer. Also, many Ivy League schools are poking around because Stukes achieved a 3.4 GPA on his most recent report card and his overall number (3.1) is likewise lofty.
"I'm not really thinking about the college stuff too much," Stukes said. "I'm concentrating on my high school season and trying to make sure we have as much success as we can.
"My coaches really want me to go Ivy League because they feel it would be the best situation for me . . . I'm just not sure yet. I do know I want to stay local."
Stukes finished with 17 points, four assists and two steals in a game that was mostly a frolic.
We say "mostly" because La Salle, with a 59-41 lead, began spreading the floor as the fourth quarter opened and McDevitt, now forced to do so if it wanted to see the ball again, finally began to play full-blown defense. The momentum swung, big time, and the Lancers stormed within 61-53 with 3 minutes, 5 seconds remaining. Ryan Winslow's three-point play off a follow created space and the Explorers eased home from there.
"My coach [Joe Dempsey] always says, 'Don't be passive,' " Stukes said. "It's OK to swing the ball around, but . . . We stopped taking good [available] shots."
Amar is No. 2 in the Stukes Brothers' line. Nadir, who starred last year for Engineering and Science, now plays for Rosemont College. Jarrod, age 13, plays for St. Athanasius, in West Oak Lane, not far from the Stukes' home in Germantown (McCallum, near Washington Lane).