I never met Mike, but I'm saddened by his passing. I enjoyed interacting with him at his NBA blog "Kahn Games." His writing was superb and he always took time to respond to comments and questions. Mike was a professional in the truest sense of the word.
Kevin Pelton of Basketball Prospectus shared his thoughts on Mike's passing today and compiled some links from Mike's friends and colleagues.
"It was while Mike was at CBSSportsline that I had the opportunity to work alongside him at Sonics games. He was dedicated enough to the league to regularly catch games both at KeyArena and down in Portland at the Rose Garden.
"The memorials to Mike’s life that have already trickled in have focused on his opinionated nature, and certainly I saw that first-hand as we ate together from time to time before games. I remember clearly there was one general manager in the league in particular (not with the Sonics, for the record) Mike could not believe had gotten a third chance to run a team after striking out two previous times, insisting he could do a better job given how closely he followed the league. The conversations were always entertaining, and Mike was a pro’s pro in a field that no longer seems to produce them in the same numbers."
"Often on the Seahawks team plane he spoke of writing a screen play of a NBA player. He had it all outlined and ready to go but was so deeply dedicated to his work on Seahawks.com he never quite found the time to finish it.
"Mike was ‘old school.’ He was true to his word, loyal to his family and friends and never wasted any time candy coating things."
"I enjoyed hanging out with Mike at Seahawks' practices the last couple of years. We were both in our 50s and mellowed with age, no longer in competition. We came to appreciate our personality differences. I know that I accepted him, and I hope he accepted me.
"We reminisced over lunch last month at the Red Robin in Federal Way. We talked about the Sonics and their glory years and all of the things that happened while we were on the beat. We saw a lot of wins and not many losses. We shared memorable stuff and quite a few laughs.
"Mike frequently imitated Ricky Pierce or Gary Payton when he saw me, and I always got a kick out of that."
"Our first conversation was short, probably no more than an hour. If you knew Mike, you know exactly what I mean. He was like an ankle-biting mutt, each time I said something that could have suggested we needed to talk later he would throw something at me I couldn't resist talking about.
"I swear it's the truth, flying back home to Seattle, I knew that wasn't the last time I'd be talking to Mike Kahn. I had no idea whether management would even talk to him, but we hit it off and I knew at the very least, I'd be talking to him again.
"I didn't have the slightest idea he would become one my best friends, a reportorial brother, one of those few people you ever meet who always seems to understand where you're coming from and vice-versa."
"His interests were peppered with opinions, usually fervent and sometimes fierce. And though he wasn’t shy about sharing any of those opinions in print, he was at his most passionate when it came time to assemble facts.
"Not only did he know who to call, he usually had access to both a primary telephone number and a backup telephone number. He’d knock on doors. If a receptionist for, say, a general manager told him the boss was too busy to see visitors -- why don’t you stop by later in the week? -- he’d wait outside the office, or in the parking lot.
"Decades before the Internet boom would prove him a sage, a sports editor once told me that journalists don’t work in conventional time shifts. If a story breaks at midnight, you’re on the clock. If a story isn’t breaking on your day off, pay attention.
Mike relished that challenge."
---
I encourage you to click the links and read the stories. Again, I don't pretend to have known Mike. I don't have any poignant moments to share. But I always enjoyed his NBA coverage and I appreciate the time he took to respond to my comments and emails. It meant a lot to me.
Team USA overcame a sluggish first half to
defeat China 101-70 in Beijing. The United States struggled from
outside, but were able to capitalize on their superior athleticism and
pressure defense in the second half.
Dwyane Wade led all scorers with 19 points
on 7-of-7 from the field and 5-of-5 from the free throw line. LeBron
James scored 18 points on 8-of-12 from the field, grabbed 6 rebounds,
dished out 3 assists, and tallied 3 blocks. Dwight Howard and Kobe
Bryant paced the US with 13 points a piece.
Team USA shot 38-of-70 from the field, but
connected on only 7 of their 24 three-point attempts. Bryant was
1-of-7 from behind the arc and took at least three ill-advised
three-point shots.
Defensively, Team USA was solid, but not
spectacular. The United States had trouble defending the 3-point line
early, as China opened the contest 5-of-7 from the three-point line.
Team USA’s defensive intensity was good, but their rotations were slow
at times. Wade overplayed the passing lanes twice and gave up three
3-point baskets by failing to stick with his defensive assignment.
The United States was shaky offensively,
but their ball movement improved when Coach K went with his two point
guard lineup featuring Chris Paul at the point guard position and Deron
Williams at shooting guard. Williams applied great ball pressure and
Paul had 6 assists in the contest.
There is plenty of reason for optimism after a 31-point victory.
But I’m still concerned about a few things:
Outside shooting. Team USA is 10-of-42 from the 3-point line over
their last two games. The reason is simple: Michael Redd is the
United States’ only catch-and-shoot threat. The international 3-point
line is 20 feet, 6 inches, that’s roughly three feet shorter than the
NBA 3-point line. Dwyane Wade and LeBron James haven’t fine-tuned
their mid-range games. Kobe Bryant and Carmelo Anthony have perfected
their mid-range jumpers, but both players do their damage off the
dribble or fading away instead of squaring up and measuring themselves
from that distance. The United States can get away with shooting
poorly from outside against the likes of Australia and China because
they can make up the difference with easy baskets off of turnovers.
But Spain, Greece, and Argentina will take care of the basketball.
Spain, Greece, and Argentina will also pack the paint and force the
United States to connect from outside. Kobe Bryant has to take better
shots and shoot a better percentage from beyond the arc.
Carmelo Anthony has failed to get on track. Anthony was 0-for-3
from the field against China. To be fair, Anthony was whistled for
several bogus fouls. Carmelo was also yanked at one point in favor of
Kobe Bryant after he appeared to give an official an earful after being
assessed a foul. Dwyane Wade has done a fantastic job of picking up
the slack by scoring in transition and creating turnovers. But the
United States is going to need Anthony’s mid-range, half-court game
before the Olympics have concluded.
Offensive continuity. Team USA failed to run any semblance of an
offense to begin the contest. The United States started the second
half with two straight pick-and-roll possessions for Kidd and James
that yielded a dunk for Bryant and a trip to the line for Anthony.
Kidd and James are Team USA’s best playmakers. I’d like to see more
pick-and-roll opportunities for both players.
Deron Williams needs more minutes. Williams has been Team USA’s
best point guard thus far. He’s done an excellent job of pushing the
ball in transition and he’s been the best defender out of the United
States’ point guard triumvirate. Paul had 6 assists against China, and
Kidd was effective in pushing the pace, but Williams has the best skill
set for international play. At some point, Coach K is going to have
choose a backup point guard to make more minutes for Michael Redd, he
should choose Williams over Chris Paul.
Much has been made of Carmelo Anthony being the “best player in
international basketball.” But LeBron James was the star today and may
end up the MVP of Team USA. At 6-9, 260 pounds, James can play all
five positions in international play. NBA basketball is about
isolation and specialization. The international game is about
versatility. And with his combination of size, speed, and court
awareness, LeBron is a perfect match.
James had the play of the game — on both ends. Offensively, James
caught an alley-oop pass from Wade and slammed the ball home while
drawing the foul. Defensively, he had an awe-inspiring block where he
skied to grab a shot attempt with two hands before it hit the backboard.
LeBron has also established himself as the vocal leader of Team USA.
All in all, it was an impressive performance for the United States.
But it’s important to consider the quality of their opponent. The
competition will improve over the next two weeks. If the ‘Redeem Team’
is to win the gold medal, they will have to play much better than they
did today.
I've watched
thousands of basketball games. And I'll watch thousands more. Some of
the games I've watched have been more memorable than others. I'll
never forget Team USA's 92-73 loss to Puerto Rico four years ago.
Puerto Rico packed the paint against the United States in that contest
and dared Team USA to fire away from outside. The United States
responded by shooting 3-of-24 from 3-point line. I'm not prone to
emotional outbursts while watching basketball, but I'm not ashamed to
admit that I was screaming at the television during that game. I
remember Puerto Rican guard Carlos Arroyo 'popping' his jersey at Team
USA -- his team up 20. I'm still frustrated and disappointed about
that loss.
Frustrated
because the team we sent to Athens wasn't comprised of the best our
country had to offer. Disappointed because Larry Brown made himself
larger than the team he was hand picked to coach. Team USA couldn't
hit from long-distance because their best shooter was sitting on the
bench. Through six prior exhibition games, Carmelo Anthony was the
2004 team's third leading scorer (behind Tim Duncan and Allen
Iverson). But when Olympic play began, Brown chose to play Richard
Jefferson (who had two of his shot attempts hit the side of the
backboard against Puerto Rico) and Shawn Marion at small forward.
Brown started Allen Iverson and Stephon Marbury in the backcourt.
Iverson and Marbury were incapable of creating for their teammates --
while LeBron James -- Team USA's best playmaker, rode the pine next to
Carmelo.
Granted,
James and Anthony were wet behind the ears rookies in 2004. Even
still, they were twice the players that Richard Jefferson, Shawn
Marion, Allen Iverson, and Stephon Marbury were. Why did Brown ignore
the obvious and play lesser players? Brown shortened his bench because
of his well-publicized disdain for young players. And he didn't stop
there, he also took every opportunity to berate his players in the
media and criticize the player selection committee.
Mark Kriegel of Foxsports.com wrote an article
recently that questioned the importance of winning gold in this
summer's Olympics. Kriegel asked Kobe Bryant, Chris Bosh, Dwight
Howard and Carmelo Anthony if winning the gold medal would mean more
than an NBA championship. All of the players agreed that they'd choose
a gold medal over an NBA championship. Kriegel didn't "buy it."
Kriegel even
admitted to taking "perverse satisfaction in the declining fortunes of
Team USA." He's not alone. Anti-American basketball sentiment has
permeated message boards and NBA related blogs and articles for quite
some time. I know there are a few bad apples in today's game that feed
the arrogant, selfish, stereotype of American born basketball players.
The 2000 and 2004 Olympic teams did little to disprove that
perception. The 2004 team in particular displayed terrible body
language, attitude, and sportsmanship.
That's why
the 2008 games are so important. Basketball may be the world's game,
but it's important that the United States prove that we play it better
than anybody. And that we play it the right way. With humility and
respect for our opponents. In Kobe Bryant and LeBron James, Team USA
sports the two greatest players in the world. In Coach Krzyzewski, we
have one of the finest coaches in all of basketball. There's no
excuses this time around.
I've never
played in the NBA or the Olympics and I never will. But I'm as big a
fan of the game of basketball as anyone. I've watched my favorite NBA
team win championships, lose in the Finals, miss the playoffs, rebuild,
and return to the Finals only to lose again. I've dealt with the highs
and lows that have accompanied each of those moments. But if given the
opportunity, I'd trade every NBA championship of the past and every NBA
championship of the future for a gold medal in Beijing.
Shortly after receiving a verbal
committment from Baron Davis, the Los Angeles Clippers reportedly
offered Elton Brand a five-year, $70 million dollar contract extension.
Instead of agreeing to the extension on
the spot, Brand is contemplating an offer from the Golden State
Warriors that is rumored to be $90 million over five-years.
According to Basketball-reference.com, Brand has made $81,543,136 over his nine-year career. At that point, what difference does an extra $20 million dollars make? How many homes and luxury vehicles does one person need?
Maybe Elton is having second thoughts about the Clippers roster.
That’s understandable. When healthy, Davis is one of the NBA’s top
five point guards. But is he any better than the point guard-shooting
foward combination of Sam Cassell and Corey Maggette? Doubtful.
Maggette and Cassell were the Clippers 2nd and 3rd leading scorers on a
team that came within one game of advancing to the Western Conference
Finals in 2006.
The addition of Davis all but sealed Maggette’s fate. He won’t be returning to La La Land.
That leaves the Clippers with a starting lineup that will feature
Davis, Cuttino Mobley, Al Thornton, Brand, and Chris Kaman. With Tim
Thomas coming off the bench. LA will be good enough to compete for a
playoff birth in the Western Conference. But they’re still far from
championship contention.
There are plenty of All-Star point guard-power forward duos in the
NBA. Deron Williams-Carlos Boozer, Chauncey Billups-Rasheed Wallace,
Chris Paul-David West, Steve Nash-Amare Stoudemire. All of those teams
are searching for that third piece. The Davis-Brand Clippers will be
no different.
Triumvirates win NBA championships. Garnett-Pierce-Allen,
Duncan-Ginobili-Parker, Jordan-Pippen-Rodman, Magic-Kareem-Worthy.
There have been a few exceptions to that rule over the years.
Shaq-Kobe, Olajuwon-Drexler, and the celebrated team work of Isiah
Thomas and Chauncey Billups’ Pistons come to mind. Although I don’t
think anyone would mistake Brand-Davis or the Clippers for those
players or teams.
Still, Los Angeles — with Brand and Davis — would be 2/3 of the way there.
Don Nelson’s system puts butts in the seats. But it won’t win an NBA championship. It's not a system that plays to Brand's strengths either.
Either way, Brand’s career will end with him having made upwards of
$150 million dollars to play a game he used to play for free.
When it’s all said and done, how much of that would he have traded for a chance to win a championship?
Shaquille O'Neal took the mic at a NYC club last night, unleashing a
freestyle verbal assault directed at his arch-enemy Kobe Bryant --
blaming his former teammate for ruining his marriage and imploring him
to "Tell me how my #### tastes." [Read]
As a Lakers fan, I can't wait until LA plays Phoenix next year.
I'm
also happy that Shaquille O'Neal is finally being exposed as the
classless individual he is. It's no coincidence that he's left every team he's played for on
bad terms. O'Neal even took the opportunity to trash Pat Riley and his former Miami Heat
teammates when he landed in Phoenix.
Upon
being traded, Shaq all but promised another ring for the Suns. He
hasn't retired yet but was ousted in the first round by the San Antonio
Spurs. The very same team the Lakers dispatched of in 5 games in the
Western Conference Finals.
The Boston Celtics are the 2008 NBA champions. Congratulations to the Celtics and their fans.
I didn't pick the Celtics to win the NBA championship. I picked the
Lakers over the Celtics in 6 games. But I did pick Boston to advance
out of the Eastern Conference before the season began. I broke down
the teams I considered to be championship contenders two months ago yesterday.
My concerns with the Lakers (inside scoring, defense) came to the forefront versus the Celtics. Pau Gasol wilted under the pressure and Paul Pierce TORCHED Radmonovich and Walton. When Pierce and Allen penetrated the defense, there was no one to protect the basket.
My only concern with the Celtics was their coaching staff. I wasn't convinced
that Doc Rivers was capable of making the in-game adjustments that
would be necessary to win the NBA championship.
I was wrong.
Doc Rivers was more than capable. Not only did he make perfect
adjustments but he outcoached Phil Jackson -- a championship strategist with 9 rings. Rivers was inspirational.
He implored his team to "never stop believing" and to "never give up."
The Celtics were an extension of him. They followed his lead in
fighting back from a 24-point deficit in Game 4. Looking back, the
Celtics won the NBA championship that night.
In total, I missed four picks in the 2008 NBA playoffs. I picked the
Wizards to beat the Cavaliers, the Mavericks to beat the Hornets, the
Magic to beat the Pistons, and the Lakers to beat the Celtics.
But the only pick I regret making was the Mavs over the Hornets.
Honestly, I hadn't watched the Hornets as much during the regular
season as I probably should have. New Orleans was a great team and
would have matched up well against the Los Angeles Lakers. Tyson Chandler and David West would have been
a nightmare matchup for Pau Gasol and Lamar Odom. Especially
considering Gasol and Odom's struggles versus Kendrick Perkins and
Kevin Garnett.
The Cleveland Cavaliers struggled towards the end of the season before
being awoken by the mindless trash-talk of DeShawn Stevenson and
Gilbert Arenas. Arenas' injury didn't help the Wizards cause either.
Match-ups (the Pistons and Cavaliers were better defensively than the
Lakes) played a part in Boston's early round struggles. But the Celtics simply weren't as good in the opening rounds as the team that won 66 regular season games. To their credit, they got stronger as the playoffs progressed -- and they learned to win on the road in the process.
The Celtics won the
first two rounds with only 2/3 of their 'Big 3'. Ray Allen struggled
mightily versus the Hawks, Cavs, and through the first five games versus the Pistons but increased his shooting
percentage in each round. Allen shot 50% from the field and 52% from
the 3-point line versus LA.
Ray was every bit as deserving of MVP as Paul Pierce.
All in all, it was a fitting ending to a season for the ages. With no
games scheduled for tonight, I'm already getting the basketball withdrawals. Thankfully, the Olympics are right around the corner!
Eighteen of those 50 — were players from two franchises — the Los Angeles Lakers and Boston Celtics.
That’s 36%.
Bob Cousy, Dave Cowens, Bill Russell, Bill
Sharman, John Havlicek, Bill Walton, Larry Bird, Kevin McHale, Nate
Archibald, Sam Jones, Robert Parish, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Elgin Baylor,
Shaquille O’Neal, Wilt Chamberlain, George Mikan, James Worthy, and
Magic Johnson.
During the 2008 NBA Finals, I’ll profile (nba.com, youtube, basketball-reference.com) one of those Lakers-Celtics legends daily.
"One of the NBA’s 50 Greatest Players and
one of the most prolific scorers in league history. He owns a career
scoring average of 25.6 points, the ninth-highest in league history,
and ranks 11th all-time in scoring (25,908) in 1,013 career games. The
16-year veteran is a career 58-percent shooter, third-highest in NBA
history, and has led the league in field goal accuracy nine times,
matching Wilt Chamberlain’s all-time record. O’Neal has averaged 11.5
rebounds (21st-NBA history) and grabbed 11,630 (21st) boards as a
member of the Orlando Magic (1992-97), Los Angeles Lakers (1997-2004)
and Miami Heat (2005-2008). The three-time NBA All-Defensive Second
Team honoree (2000, 2001, 2003) ranks 8th all-time in blocks (2,485).
Won three NBA titles with the Los Angeles Lakers (2000, 2001, 2002) and
one with the Miami Heat (2006). A three-time NBA Finals MVP (2000,
2001, 2002). Shaq has pulled down the
third-most rebounds in NBA playoff history (2,401) and blocked the
third-most shots (433). " [Read]
Eighteen of those 50 — were players from two franchises — the Los Angeles Lakers and Boston Celtics.
That’s 36%.
Bob Cousy, Dave Cowens, Bill Russell, Bill
Sharman, John Havlicek, Bill Walton, Larry Bird, Kevin McHale, Nate
Archibald, Sam Jones, Robert Parish, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Elgin Baylor,
Shaquille O’Neal, Wilt Chamberlain, George Mikan, James Worthy, and
Magic Johnson.
During the 2008 NBA Finals, I’ll profile (nba.com, youtube, basketball-reference.com) one of those Lakers-Celtics legends daily.
"Robert Parish played in more games than
any other player in NBA history. A 7-1 center who combined strength,
agility and remarkable endurance, Parish won three NBA championships
with the Boston Celtics in the 1980s and teamed with Larry Bird and
Kevin McHale to form one of the greatest front lines in NBA history. He
capped his career by winning yet another championship ring as a member
of the 1996-97 Chicago Bulls.
Parish, whose signature shot was a high trajectory jumper that seemed
to kiss the banners at Boston Garden before finding its way to the
basket, announced his retirement at age 43 following the 1996-97
season, his 21st in the NBA, and after playing in 1,611 games. Upon his
retirement, Parish ranked 13th in the NBA in scoring with 23,334
points, sixth in rebounds with 14,715, sixth in blocked shots with
2,361 and eighth in field goals made with 9,614.
"He's probably the best medium-range shooting big man in the history of
the game," said Hall of Famer Bill Walton, who was Parish's backup in
the Celtics' 1986 championship season.
The Warriors traded Parish to Boston in 1980, and he enjoyed a
remarkable 14-year run with the Celtics. In his tenure with the club,
the Celtics went to the playoffs 13 times, won nine Atlantic Division
titles, reached the NBA Finals five times and came away with three NBA
titles." [Read]
Eighteen of those 50 — were players from two franchises — the Los Angeles Lakers and Boston Celtics.
That’s 36%.
Bob Cousy, Dave Cowens, Bill Russell, Bill
Sharman, John Havlicek, Bill Walton, Larry Bird, Kevin McHale, Nate
Archibald, Sam Jones, Robert Parish, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Elgin Baylor,
Shaquille O’Neal, Wilt Chamberlain, George Mikan, James Worthy, and
Magic Johnson.
During the 2008 NBA Finals, I’ll profile (nba.com, youtube, basketball-reference.com) one of those Lakers-Celtics legends daily.
“He was basketball’s unstoppable force,
the most awesome offensive force the game has ever seen. Asked to name
the greatest players ever to play basketball, most fans and aficionados
would put Wilt Chamberlain at or near the top of the list.
Dominating the game as few players in any
sport ever have, Chamberlain seemed capable of scoring and rebounding
at will, despite the double- and triple-teams and constant fouling
tactics that opposing teams used to try to shut him down.
As Oscar Robertson put it in the
Philadelphia Daily News when asked whether Chamberlain was the best
ever, “The books don’t lie.”
The record books are indeed heavy with
Chamberlain’s accomplishments. He was the only NBA player to score
4,000 points in a season. He set NBA single-game records for most
points (100), most consecutive field goals (18) and most rebounds (55).
Perhaps his most mind-boggling stat was the 50.4 points per game he
averaged during the 1961-62 season–and if not that, then perhaps the
48.5 minutes per game he averaged that same year.
He retired as the all-time in career
points with 31,419, which was later surpassed by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar,
Karl Malone and Michael Jordan. He is tops in rebounds with 23,924. He
led the NBA in scoring seven years in a row. He was the league’s top
rebounder in 11 of his 14 seasons. And as if to prove that he was not a
selfish player, he had the NBA’s highest assist total in 1967-68.” [Read]
In a four-page letter released Tuesday, Tim Donaghy, said that two
officials conspired to fix the outcome of a 2002 playoff series and
influenced several other post- and regular-season games.
Court documents filed by Donaghy's lawyer detailed the
"inner-workings" of a plot in which top league executives used referees
to manipulate the games. Donaghy claims two referees were "company men"
whose job was to extend a playoff series in 2002 to a seventh game.
The playoff series in question is the 2002 Western Conference Finals between the Los Angeles Lakers and Sacramento Kings.
"Personal fouls (resulting in obviously injured players) were
ignored even when they occurred in full view of the referees," the
document says of the unnamed series. "Conversely, the referees called
made-up fouls on Team 5 in order to give additional free throw
opportunities to Team 6."
Two players from Team 5 fouled out in the game, the document said,
and the "referees' favoring of Team 6 led to that team's victory that
night." Team 6 also went on to win Game 7 of the series, according to
the document.
My advice: Don’t take Tim Donaghy’s statement as truth.
Read the recaps. Study the boxscores. Watch the game again. Look at the series as a whole.
Come to your own conclusion.
For instance, everyone knows that the Lakers owned a 40-25 free
throw advantage in Game 6 -- including a staggering 27 attempts in the
4th quarter.
After fouling out in Game 6, Divac said, "I knew before the game I'd
be out of it. (O'Neal) went out (on fouls) up there (in Sacramento). It
had to be the same down here."
Divac’s explanation is the most logical explanation for Game 6 and for countless other conspiracy theories.
It’s a matter of make-up calls and homecourt advantage.
There were numerous blown calls in Game 5. The Kings received a
33-23 free throw advantage on the Lakers homecourt. The Lakers were
called for 7 more personal fouls. Shaq fouled out with 6 minutes remaining.
Officials are human. They make mistakes. It’s impossible to call a
perfect game. If all the fouls that should be called –- were called –-
the game would come to a standstill nearly every time down the floor.
The best we can hope for is consistency.
But there are bound to be calls where one team gets the benefit of
the doubt. In those situations, the home team receives that benefit –- and rightfully so.
If team ‘a’ receives the benefit from the officiating in one game, you can bet
that team ‘b’ will receive the benefit of the doubt in the
next game.
Tim Donaghy didn’t officiate the Kings-Lakers Game 6. If he had officiated it, his accusations could be substantiated.
Without having been there, I find it hard to believe Donaghy has actual evidence to back up these claims.
Instead, I think this is a sad-sacked effort to drag the NBA through the mud with the hopes of receiving a reduced sentence.
Donaghy is admitting his guilt while trying to insinuate that he's a product of a disgraced system.
Eighteen of those 50 — were players from two franchises — the Los Angeles Lakers and Boston Celtics.
That’s 36%.
Bob Cousy, Dave Cowens, Bill Russell, Bill
Sharman, John Havlicek, Bill Walton, Larry Bird, Kevin McHale, Nate
Archibald, Sam Jones, Robert Parish, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Elgin Baylor,
Shaquille O’Neal, Wilt Chamberlain, George Mikan, James Worthy, and
Magic Johnson.
During the 2008 NBA Finals, I’ll profile (nba.com, youtube, basketball-reference.com) one of those Lakers-Celtics legends daily.
"Once every generation or so, a player comes along who can truly be called a superstar. Larry Bird was such a player.
For 13 seasons with the Boston Celtics, from 1979-80 through
1991-92, Bird personified hustle, consistency and excellence in all
areas of play–as a scorer, a passer, a rebounder, a defender, a team
player, and, perhaps above all, as a clutch performer. Bird was so
self-confident that he was known to waltz up to the opponents’ bench
before tipoff and predict a 40-point performance for himself. He was
such a deadly shooter that he sometimes practiced three-pointers with
his eyes closed. Among Bird’s contemporaries, perhaps only, Earvin
“Magic” Johnson was considered a better passer, a player who he would
inextricably be linked with forever. Few played tougher than Bird, who
would leap into crowds and over press tables for loose balls.
Bird was the embodiment of “Celtics Pride.” He was a classy,
confident, hardworking player who thrived on pressure and inspired
teammates to excel. Like Bob Cousy, Bill Russell, John Havlicek and
Dave Cowens, the low-key Bird force the spotlight upon himself, but
rather one who brought out the best in the players around him. But even
those legendary players didn’t fill Boston Garden, wowing fans and
dominating games as Bird did.
Bird helped rebuild a Celtics franchise that had been suffering from
substandard play and poor attendance in the late 1970s. With Bird as
the focal point of a well-rounded squad, the Celtics won three NBA
titles and 10 Atlantic Division crowns. In addition to his three
championship rings, Bird piled up an awesome collection of personal
achievements. He became only the third player (and the first
non-center) to win three consecutive NBA Most Valuable Player Awards.
He was a 12-time All-Star, a two-time NBA Finals MVP and a nine-time
member of the All-NBA First Team. He led the league in free-throw
percentage four times." [Read]
I love basketball. While many basketball fans enjoy the month of March, I prefer the months of April, May, and June. I look forward to productive chats, heated debates, and honest opinions.