T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
144.2 | | CAM::WAY | That mean mannish boy.... | Thu May 02 1991 12:09 | 12 |
| Well, I'd bet on the following scernario.
Magic and Larry are pretty good friends. They came into the league together,
and I'd be willing to bet that they leave the league togehter.
Imagine the last Lakers-Celtics game of the season they both quit. Well,
there'd be two, actually. Last in LA, last in Boston.
Don't tell me that the FantasticBall NBA will milk THAT for all it's worth....
'Saw
|
144.3 | | CSC32::J_HERNANDEZ | Gladiator, Roman 69 expert | Thu May 02 1991 12:17 | 2 |
| Saw you forget that Magic was woulda been a jr his rookie year, while
Lawwy was a 5th year Sr when MAgic pasted him in the NCAA finals.
|
144.4 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu May 02 1991 12:17 | 11 |
|
> They came into the league together,
> and I'd be willing to bet that they leave the league togehter.
Don't think so, unless Magic decides to retire with plenty of
basketball left in him, or unless Larry makes like Kareem and hangs on
past any and all usefulness. Magic is three years younger not to
mention healthier, right?
glenn
|
144.5 | Without basketball what will become of Larry Bird? | RHETT::KNORR | ACC: Conference of the 90's | Thu May 02 1991 12:18 | 5 |
| Didn't Larry just have a Triple/Double the other night? Injuries
not-withstanding the guy can still play.
- ACC Chris
|
144.6 | | CAM::WAY | That mean mannish boy.... | Thu May 02 1991 12:25 | 10 |
| I thought I'd heard some murmurings that Magic was thinking about hanging
up his pumps.
I know that there is a disparity in the ages. Larry is gonna be 35 or 36,
and Magic is like my age (32 or so).
Oh well, it was just a thought....
'Saw
|
144.8 | | LIMPID::TESSIER | | Thu May 02 1991 12:42 | 2 |
| Just to clear up this discussion on ages -- Magic is 31, Bird
is 53.
|
144.9 | | COBRA::DINSMORE | Keep me away from those cupcakes | Thu May 02 1991 12:46 | 2 |
| WOW, LARRY looks great for 53 :)
|
144.10 | Bird's contract | WORDY::NAZZARO | Pursue, capture, incarcerate | Thu May 02 1991 12:53 | 12 |
| Bird has an option year left on his contract. It's not a bad option.
He can retire, and collect $4.87 million. Or, he can play, collect
the $4.87 million, PLUS earn a $2.25 million salary for playing.
Since Bird practicallyt has the first nickel he ever made, I expect
him to be back around CHristmas next year, after his back operation.
Whether he can play or not remains to be seen, but I think he'll try.
Magic has a good three years left in him, more if Jerry West could find
him a decent back-up.
NAZZ
|
144.11 | | ANGLIN::SHAUGHNESSY | Mandingo | Thu May 02 1991 13:00 | 8 |
| The reason Kareem Jaboring hung on so long is that he handed his
money over to a crooked financial handler who jobbed him of nearly
all his dough... he was broke, had to play to recapitalize.
What a sad spectacle it was to see him toiling for the green backs
down the stretch there.
MrT
|
144.12 | Still had a skill which kept him in there | VAXWRK::SCHNEIDER | Sununu escaped from Animal Farm | Thu May 02 1991 13:14 | 9 |
| >What a sad spectacle it was to see him toiling for the green backs
>down the stretch there.
Hey, it wasn't that sad! I know what you think of the DH, but Kareem
finished as more or less the designated post option. And still a very
viable post option. It's a wonder that more players haven't tried to
learn the sky hook.
Dan
|
144.13 | Jabaar is one player I just never liked. | RHETT::KNORR | ACC: Conference of the 90's | Thu May 02 1991 13:32 | 6 |
| Didn't Kareem lose a bundle when his house burnt down? (I know it
burned, but mebee he did it to *make* money, given his financial woes
...)
- ACC Chris
|
144.15 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Dockers�...Pants for |CENSORED|s | Thu May 02 1991 13:46 | 7 |
| Before the Sky Hook there was the hook shot. I'm surprised
more players don't use it. Magic added it to his repertoire a few
years ago and it's a lethal scoring option. I know it's boring compared
to slam dunks etc. but the hook is tough to stop even if you're
not 7' 4".
/Don
|
144.16 | Anyone know his contract terms ? | FDCV07::GARBARINO | | Thu May 02 1991 14:42 | 20 |
| Is the '91-92 season Bird's option year ? I thought the option was
'92-93 or '93-94.
My feelings on the Celtics aside, I'll miss Larry Bird. You gotta
love a player who gives his all every time on the court, and has
such a passion for winning. He is the ultimate competitor.
On the bright side, I've been waiting for his retirement for some
time. After moving here in 1980, when Larry's gone I should finally
be able to get my first tickets to an NBA game, without having to
know somebody, or pay scalper's prices. Maybe even very good seats !
re: Magic
He's definitely got *at least* 3 more years in him. His leadership
and crunch-time abilities are unsurpassed. If they could stretch
Jabbar as far as they did, they'll do the same with this guy.
Magic will still be a star when Bird is just a memory.
|
144.17 | Im sure its a celtic but who has the most rings and how many ? | VLNVAX::MBROOKS | | Thu May 02 1991 14:52 | 6 |
| Just Curiouis how many rings magic has compared to bird...I think magic has 2
more but that doesnt seem right ...:-)... I dont think bird will get another
ring in his career although I do think that in the 1994 Magic gives up 3/4 of
his salary to sign some key players and The Lakers win the championship and
magic retires and makes a 1,000,000,000 in endorsments..(Second only to Jordan
2,000,000,000)
|
144.18 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Dockers�...Pants for |CENSORED|s | Thu May 02 1991 15:27 | 5 |
| Bill Russell's got 11 rings. More rings than fingers. But
that's when it was *easy* to win championships, or so some would
have you believe. 8^0
/Don
|
144.19 | Larry and his second fiddle | VAXWRK::SCHNEIDER | Sununu escaped from Animal Farm | Thu May 02 1991 15:31 | 7 |
| >I think magic has 2 more but that doesnt seem right ...
You're right. It shouldn't seem right. The refs stole one in '84 and
gave it from Magic to Larry, otherwise it would be 6-2. As it is, it's
"only" 5-3.
Dan
|
144.20 | The World According to Schnied. HAHAHAHAHA� | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Dockers�...Pants for |CENSORED|s | Thu May 02 1991 15:33 | 1 |
|
|
144.21 | | EARRTH::BROOKS | I saw Marvin Gaye yesterday ... | Thu May 02 1991 15:35 | 7 |
| Yep ... jsut like a Jee-Haad member - don't bring up rings in the
Bird-Magic 'comparison' (so-called because Magic wins hands down of
course), but mention Russell, and watch Slusher and Penny Rieu have
woodies mentioning those 11 rings back in the days of a weaker, smaller
NBA ....HAHAHAHaHAAAAA !!!!!!!!!!
Doc
|
144.22 | | CHIEFF::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu May 02 1991 16:39 | 3 |
| re Magics health: Hasn't he been gimping along on a bum knee and bad
hamstrings over the last few years? I know it's not the same as a bad
back, but I'd still question the predictions of longevity in here.
|
144.23 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Dockers�...Pants for |CENSORED|s | Fri May 03 1991 08:51 | 6 |
| Doc, Magic has a 5-3 advantage in rings over Larry. Russ has
an 11-2 advantage in rings over Wilt. If you call that equitable
I certainly don't ever want you as my accountant!
/Don
|
144.24 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Lord of the Woodies | Fri May 03 1991 08:55 | 13 |
|
Bird will be back next year you can bank on it....Like Nazz said the guy has
the first nickel he ever made and when you can come back for 140,000,000
more nickels you come back unless of course it would mean the end of your
life....
when he retire he has his resturant and car dealerships plus I would imagine
some property to substain him....
the good news is that the Doctor who did Montana's surgery thinks that Bird's
will be much the same and he can recover in 7 weeks or so just like Montana..
mike
|
144.25 | 11 Rings...Thats incrediable | VLNVAX::MBROOKS | | Fri May 03 1991 09:12 | 12 |
| 5-3 magic over bird, 11-2 Russ over Wilt...Makes perfect sense to me.
Just like today (compared to the 60's) One man does not a team make.
Wilt dominated the game in his day but it still wasnt enough to win
Multiple championships. Bill Russel and the Celtics were a dominate
team therefore 11 championships. Who is better Russel of Wilt, cant
really be said, russ has 11 rings does that make him better, no, wilt
has more numbers does that make him better no. If Bill Russell played
on all the teams and years that Wilt did he would have had numbers like
Chamberlin. But russell had a team around him to help with the work
load,...Therefore he got compensated with 11 championship rings. How
many does good ol Kareem have ?
M_Air_B
|
144.26 | | COBRA::DINSMORE | Keep me away from those cupcakes | Fri May 03 1991 09:15 | 7 |
| it takes a complete effort on al parts, heck in the clincher
may 2 of the year 1968, Baily Howell added 30 points, and hes wasnt
known for being a big point producer..
dinz
|
144.27 | HA HA HA!!!! | CUBIC7::DIGGINS | Thirst N'Howl Roolz! | Fri May 03 1991 10:16 | 8 |
|
Dinz, keep at it my man, one of these day's you'll learn to type!
8^)))))))))
Steve
|
144.29 | an answer | CNTROL::CHILDS | Lord of the Woodies | Fri May 03 1991 12:45 | 4 |
|
I believe Kareem has 6. 5 with LA and one with the Bucks....
|
144.30 | The Lord of the Woodies is correct... | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Dockers�...Pants for |CENSORED|s | Fri May 03 1991 12:57 | 1 |
|
|
144.31 | | FDCV07::KING | Jesse's Jets! | Fri May 03 1991 13:16 | 12 |
| Karrem has won NBA rings in
1971 Bucks
1980 Lakers
1982 "
1985 "
1987 "
1988 "
I count 6 rings...........
REK
|
144.32 | Couldn't resist--its Friday!!!! 8^) | WMOIS::BARROWSJ | Les Scabitants know GOLF! | Fri May 03 1991 13:21 | 4 |
| REK,
Didya need someone to help you counting that high?? ;-)
|
144.33 | | FDCV07::KING | Jesse's Jets! | Fri May 03 1991 13:28 | 3 |
| No, but where were you when I needed help in counting that high?
REK
|
144.34 | | LUNER::BROOKS | Have software, will travel ... | Fri May 03 1991 15:00 | 2 |
| Lord Of The Woodies ... I'm spitting McLean burger all over my terminal
... (of course that's probably the best place for one) ...
|
144.35 | | LAGUNA::MAY_BR | Graphic sexual innuendo | Mon May 06 1991 21:25 | 4 |
|
Why do the anti-Celts always point to Russell's teammates in
comparisons between him and Wilt, but never point out that Magic played
on a team with 4 #1 draft picks for a good part of his career?
|
144.36 | 8^) | CUBIC7::DIGGINS | Thirst N'Howl Roolz! | Tue May 07 1991 09:13 | 6 |
|
Because it's just simply not true Bruce! Don't you know that by now?
Nothing is real in Hollywood!
Steve
|
144.37 | So sayeth The Doc | EARRTH::BROOKS | Have software, will travel ... | Tue May 07 1991 12:55 | 15 |
| re .35
Probably has something do with the fact that DJ, Parrish, McHale, and
Ainge were all high draft picks themselves.
Ergo : Larry was surrounded with some prime talent too.
Conclusion : Bruce May's contention is a non sequitor.
There was often a much more serious talent/coaching gap between Wilt's
teams and Russell's.
Now why can't the Jihad use more well reasoned arguments ?
Dr Midnight - Again triumphant ....
|
144.38 | Doc's living in his own private Idaho... | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Dockers�...Pants for |CENSORED|s | Tue May 07 1991 13:19 | 10 |
| Okay Doc, Nazz pointed out a long long time ago that from the
1965/66 - 1967/68 seasons Wilt's Philly team had the better record, and in
two of the three years Russ took the Celtics to victory against the Sixers
with them holding the home court advantage. Also Wilt's 1968/69 Laker team
had the better record and home court advantage and Russ lead the Celtics to
victory again. That's four years where the stilt had the better team and
in three of them Russ came out the champion. Bill Russel won when he had
the better team, and he won when he was underdog.
/Don
|
144.39 | Doc 's got FIM disease... | AGNT99::CHILDS | Paris? Hostages? time for IRHeartbeat | Tue May 07 1991 13:23 | 8 |
|
> There was often a much more serious talent/coaching gap between Wilt's
> teams and Russell's. ^^^^^^^^
About time you admitted Red was a genuis....
;^)
|
144.40 | | LUNER::BROOKS | Have software, will travel ... | Tue May 07 1991 15:28 | 2 |
| Red wasn't a genius, Butch Van BredaKoff was a complete idiot that's
all ....
|
144.41 | | LUNER::BROOKS | Have software, will travel ... | Tue May 07 1991 15:31 | 6 |
| Ducker Don ... Russ and Wilt played together from 60-69 ... and you
attempt to seize upon 4 years. Most people will grant you one year - at
most - that Wilt's team was clearly superior.
But those must be some strong Green Bifiocals you've got on - why am I
not suprised ?
|
144.42 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Dockers�...Pants for |CENSORED|s | Tue May 07 1991 16:41 | 14 |
| Once again I has to beat Doc upside the haid with the troof.
In 1966 the Celtics finished a couple of games behind the Sixers,
in 1967 it was at least 8-9 games behind the Sixers and in 1968
at last as much, maybe more. Now if we cain't use the regular season
as a measuring stick what the hail cain we use? Doc's fabricated
system that says poor old Wilt always had boobs surrounding him
while Russ played on a juggernaut? No Doc, the troof will be my
witness. Wilt had the better team four times and won a paltry one
time. His 7th game disappearing act in 1968 in Philly and 1969
in Los Angeles would make old Houdini proud. And remember that
Stilt was there when the Sixers totally collapsed in 1968 from a
3-1 lead in the series, losing twice on his home court.
/Don_"The_Troof"_Robichaud
|
144.43 | The Doctor sets the record straight - Chapter 192 | LUNER::BROOKS | Have software, will travel ... | Tue May 07 1991 16:54 | 11 |
| Let's see ... should I wipe the floor ith you ruthlessly, or with slow
deliberate strokes ?
The latter ....
The 69 Lakers featured their Big Three for a combined total of what 5
games all season ? And were 'coached' by the boob Butch Van Bredakoff ?
And Don-ce, for you to seize on Wilt's game 7 injury as a 'disappearing
act' leads all sober-minded citizens to believe that you have been beat
on the head with something even harder and more blunt than the Truth !
|
144.44 | next will be "Hot Teams on destiny's role" | CNTROL::CHILDS | I wannabe the 1 2 shave trilogy3 off | Tue May 07 1991 18:38 | 6 |
|
WoW A CLEAN KNOCKOUT by the Slasher....anyone who reads .43 can clearly
how dizzy the good Doctor is....I mean he sounds like a_certain other
noter....
mike
|
144.45 | | EARRTH::BROOKS | Have software, will travel ... | Tue May 07 1991 18:45 | 5 |
| Mikey, note .44 of yours reeks with desparation ....the Slash-gasm that
you had in that note is proof postive that I am winning.
Not to mention the fack that your obvious Jihad bias makes your
credibility at best a rumor ...
|
144.46 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | I wannabe the 1 2 shave trilogy3 off | Tue May 07 1991 19:02 | 9 |
|
Doc, credibility? who needs it. credibility is the 50 cents in the
1.50 coffee at the resturant. Personally the buck coffees at DD are
better....
credibility is way overratted....besides the facks(tm) clearly speak
for themselves unlike Wilt at crunchtime of a championship....
mike
|
144.47 | | COBRA::DINSMORE | Keep me away from those cupcakes | Wed May 08 1991 08:59 | 9 |
|
Those sixer teams were good, of course not as good as the celtics,
Hal Greer was one helluva guard..
ditto on the DD coffee mike
dinz
|
144.48 | The real troof' | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed May 08 1991 10:42 | 24 |
|
Russell got to be his own coach for a while. Wilt was never allowed
to be a coach. Clearly, this fundamental difference is what unjustly
led to poor Wilt's downfall with those superior teams and the
public's perception of him vis-a-vis Russell. As a coach, Wilt
coulda called his own press conferences to satisfactorily explain
away any mysterious absences and put the matter to rest before it was
allowed to fester. Additionally, Wilt's coaching abilities and his
recognition of the importance of an unselfish approach to the game
would have allowed for greater ball distribution and the elevation of
his unsung teammates to the status only previously accorded to Celtic
players. Lastly, had Wilt's genius been properly recognized, he
undoubtedly would have foregone those stints with the San Diego
Conquistadores of the ABA and the World Professional Volleyball League,
and rightly rose through the Laker management ranks to be comfortably
seated in Jerry West's current job right now.
A tragedy is what it is, really. Only a horrible transpiration of
events, orchestrated by the likes of Bill Russell, Butch van Breda
Kolff and Red Auerbach prevented all of it from happening. It's time
for the NBA to own up to what it did to poor Wilt and make amends...
glenn
|
144.49 | FREE WILT NOW ! | EARRTH::BROOKS | Have software, will travel ... | Wed May 08 1991 11:26 | 1 |
|
|
144.50 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Dockers�...Pants for |CENSORED|s | Wed May 08 1991 11:51 | 21 |
| One last time and that'll be that. Wilt's "injury" happened after
he lad led the Lakers (who had Baylor, West and Stilt all healthy, who won
over 50 games that year and who had a 2-0 advantage in the series heading
into Boston) to a 20 point deficit. Now with "the greatest player in the
game" on the bench the Lakers got the Celtics lead to low single digits.
One year prior Stilt scored a whopping two points in the crucial fourth
quarter of the 7th game in Philadelphia and after the loss he blamed the
coach, his teammates, everybody in Philly except for where the blame
should've been laid.
Then in 1970 after an awesome 30+ points 20+ rebound performance
in game six against the Knicks he let a cripple who scored a whopping four
points in the game totally intimidate him into yet another 7th game gag and
a Knick blowout. Notice how Doc doesn't dispute that four times Wilt had
the better team and in head to head playoff competition his record is a
less than sterling 1-3, prefering instead to whine and complain just like
his idol Wilt did. Chamberlain in crucial deciding playoff games, went
into the tank so many times he should qualify to draw a pension from the
New England Aquarium.
/Don
|
144.51 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Everyone bow, his Highness goes today | Wed May 08 1991 12:07 | 8 |
|
After last night the legend will grow even more upon Larry's truimphant
return....
glad we got the stinko blowout out of the way early.....
mike
|
144.52 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Dockers�...Pants for |CENSORED|s | Wed May 08 1991 12:42 | 5 |
| I'm not so sure Mike. As a precaution I will stop using my
Dennis Rodman shirt as a substitute when I run out of toilet paper!
8^o
/Don
|
144.53 | /Don's memory = Bob Cousy's enunciation | VAXWRK::SCHNEIDER | Sununu escaped from Animal Farm | Wed May 08 1991 13:19 | 12 |
| >glad we got the stinko blowout out of the way early.....
Nope, the stinko blowout is still out there waiting to surface. Last
night was the "No Real Point Guard, Slow Death game". The stinko
blowout will probably come in game 3 in Auburn Hills, followed by the
not-quite-so-stinko blowout-thanks-to-the-refs-whines-/Don.
Anyone have Chamberlain's and Russell's playoff stats, and if possible
head-to-head playoff stats, so we don't have to rely on /Don's "memory"
of events from the Dark Ages.
Dan
|
144.54 | | AGNT99::CHILDS | Everyone bow, his Highness goes today | Wed May 08 1991 13:32 | 16 |
|
Here we go...Don clearly states the past and all Dan can ask for is Mano
0 Mano stats hahhaaaaa give me a break will ya. Wilt was a choker that's
all there is to it...
the pistons were a thumpin and bumpin and play their bestest defense and
couldn't loose a pathetic looking bunch of Celtics minus Larry and we should
worry Don?? I think not. If we have no Bird and we're down 3-0 then we'll
worry...
If I was you Dan I'd be worried about the return of Mullins to GS' lineup
tonight. Ain't no way heil the Lakers can expect another 27 from flyin
byron which should allow GS to sag the lane and negate some of the Lakers
height advantage...
mike
|
144.55 | | CARROL::LEFEBVRE | TheFewTheProudTheHockeyKrishnas | Wed May 08 1991 13:35 | 8 |
| Celtics are toast. They were toast before this series even started.
To think otherwise is foolish.
Mike, what's this "we" shit?
:^)
Mark.
|
144.56 | I know you're worried, Mike | VAXWRK::SCHNEIDER | Sununu escaped from Animal Farm | Wed May 08 1991 13:37 | 11 |
| >If I was you Dan I'd be worried about the return of Mullins to GS' lineup
>tonight. Ain't no way heil the Lakers can expect another 27 from flyin
>byron which should allow GS to sag the lane and negate some of the Lakers
>height advantage...
Where's the out? I don't see it. If the Lakers continue to dominate
the Warriors, I know you're gonna claim that they've got this easy
schedule and it must be a conspiracy, but with statements like the
above, I don't quite see how you're gonna pull it off.
Dan
|
144.57 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Dockers�...Pants for |CENSORED|s | Wed May 08 1991 13:40 | 9 |
| Sorry Dan, but if someone showed up here claiming to have proof
that the world is indeed flat I wouldn't waste time arguing the
point. You and Doc can use the rest of this note to wax the woody
about how the Celtics stole and cheated their way to *16* World
Championships, what a great clutch performer Wilt was, etc... I
can only guess what a reasonably well adjusted person would think about
it though.
/Don
|
144.58 | | AGNT99::CHILDS | Everyone bow, his Highness goes today | Wed May 08 1991 13:44 | 8 |
|
The out is the obvious Dan, the league and the refs conspired to give the
Lakers all the call....
Markie, I'm not John Hendry, if I want to say "we" about my teams I do. I
respect John's opinion on the subject but I disagree.
mike
|
144.59 | head-to-head playoff performances, Russ vs. Wilt. Anyone? | VAXWRK::SCHNEIDER | Sununu escaped from Animal Farm | Wed May 08 1991 15:14 | 7 |
| > Sorry Dan, but if someone showed up here claiming to have proof
>that the world is indeed flat I wouldn't waste time arguing the
>point.
You scared of objective evidence, Slasher? Yes, I believe you are.
Dan
|
144.60 | | LUNER::BROOKS | Have software, will travel ... | Wed May 08 1991 15:31 | 5 |
| Let's change this note's title to something more apropos :
Leave Larry, just LEAVE !
|
144.61 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Dockers�...Pants for |CENSORED|s | Wed May 08 1991 16:21 | 5 |
| Anyone have the Wilt's box scores for 1968 Game 7 Conference Final,
1969 Game 7 NBA Championship and 1970 Game 7 NBA Championship? A free
David Copperfield ticket to anyone who can provide the information.
/Don
|
144.62 | | CARROL::LEFEBVRE | TheFewTheProudTheHockeyKrishnas | Wed May 08 1991 16:39 | 3 |
| David Copperfield ticket? I get it...now you see it, now you don't.
Mark.
|
144.63 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Dockers�...Pants for |CENSORED|s | Wed May 08 1991 17:34 | 5 |
| Well Mark, I figure if someone can get the information on three
of the greatest disappearing acts in NBA history, that person deserves
to go see one who does that kind of stuff for a living.
/Don
|
144.64 | Watch me pull a rabbit outa my hat. Not again! | VAXWRK::SCHNEIDER | Sununu escaped from Animal Farm | Wed May 08 1991 17:45 | 4 |
| Won't be nuthin' compared to the disappearing act /Don will do if
someone answers my question.
Dan
|
144.65 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Dockers�...Pants for |CENSORED|s | Wed May 08 1991 17:48 | 6 |
| Dan reminds me of Joe McCartney. He used to swagger around
Congress telling everyone about all the "evidence" he had in his
briefcase when all he really had in there was a bottle of booze.
8^o
/Don
|
144.66 | Prove it yourself dan...... | DECWET::METZGER | A day without sunshine is like night. | Wed May 08 1991 17:55 | 9 |
|
The day Dan actaully does some research to support one of his "theories" instead
of begging for it from other people is the day the yankees win the pennant again
:-)
Metz
|
144.67 | Actually, this ties in nicely with my NBA conspiracy theory... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed May 08 1991 18:46 | 13 |
|
> Anyone have Chamberlain's and Russell's playoff stats, and if possible
> head-to-head playoff stats, so we don't have to rely on /Don's "memory"
> of events from the Dark Ages.
Is this then a suggestion that in those years that Wilt did play on the
better teams that he stood tall and proud while the rest of the team
went into the tank around him? Or do we have another theory to explain
how Wilt could be superior and still have his team chalk up excellent
losses?
glenn
|
144.68 | Tho' some might | VAXWRK::SCHNEIDER | Sununu escaped from Animal Farm | Thu May 09 1991 16:40 | 7 |
| The reason I asked for the stats is that the last time this came up,
someone posted 'em and Chamberlain fairly dominated Russell.
I'm not gonna sum up a player's career based on a Green Docker's memory
of 3 games.
Dan
|
144.69 | Wilt leads Russell in playoff scoring; is that a surprise? | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Thu May 09 1991 16:54 | 19 |
|
Playoff stats total (I don't have defensive stats like steals or
blocks, supposedly Russell's strengths; or head-to-head stats):
Chamberlain 160 G 22.5 PPG 24.5 RPG
Russell 165 G 16.2 PPG 24.9 RPG
Wilt's regular season scoring average was 30.1; I don't have Russell's
but I'm guessing it's somewhere close to 16. Wilt's regular season
rebound average was 22.9, Russell's 22.5.
While we don't have anything for the defensive half of the game that
most cite in favor of Russell, it does appear that on the offensive and
rebounding end of the game Chamberlain suffered a drop-off from his
regular season performance while Russell didn't. Draw whatever
conclusions you prefer...
glenn
|
144.70 | Russell was The Man | NEMAIL::LEARYM | | Thu May 09 1991 17:26 | 10 |
| I think the definitive statement was offered by Jerry West after the
Celts beat the Lakers in '69 when he stated basically that Russell was
one of the all-time greatest clutch players and that if the Lakers had
Russell,they would have won the championship. i don't have the facts
just opinion and from what I remember from that era, Russell was
considered by most to be the go-to guy in the playoffs, not Wilt.
I'm not denigrating Wilt, but IMO, Russell was the Man in the playoffs.
MikeL
|
144.71 | Celts prevail | 7210::MGILBERT | Paul Tsongas for President | Thu May 09 1991 18:00 | 5 |
|
Toast wins game 2 - 109-103. Dee brown leads the charge. Series tied
1-1. Bird played - 16 points.
|
144.72 | | BOSOX::TIMMONS | I'm a Pepere! | Fri May 10 1991 08:19 | 23 |
| The *ONLY* stat useful in comparing Wilt and Russ would be the result
of a poll of the players who were active in the NBA during that period.
Why? Because the stats indicating scoring, 'bounds, assists, etc. just
can't measure the value of either player to his team. "Value" can be
defined as leadership, or being the go-to guy when the chips are down,
or the guy who makes the impossible pass or block when the game is on
the line, etc.
Those who can recall actually seeing these two players go head-to-head
will no doubt disregard the stats, unless those numbers happen to
back-up their position or contention.
As in most cases, the numbers just can't accurately define the value of
a player to a team, IMO.
So, numbers aside, Russell was THE man. Period. Of course, my being a
charter member of the "Hate Them Sixers" club has *nothing* to do with
this opinion. :*)
lEe
Lee
|
144.73 | | CAM::WAY | The National Inbreeding Finals -- Sign up NOW! | Fri May 10 1991 09:37 | 15 |
| Also, stats will never show the intangibles.
Some players were BORN for playoffs. They play adequately all year, but
somehow really shine. Others have great seasons, but for some reason
are snake bit in the playoffs.
It all comes down to this overwhelming need to quantify, quantify, and
to prove beyond all reasonable doubt that one is better than the other.
Freud would say that need stems from doubts as to the size of
one's penis (just checking to see if you read this far).
Again, I don't think that you can do that, because there are too many
intangibles....
'Saw
|
144.74 | what more do we need? | CNTROL::CHILDS | Wilt's heart was 2 sizes 2 small | Fri May 10 1991 11:31 | 10 |
|
>It all comes down to this overwhelming need to quantify, quantify, and
>to prove beyond all reasonable doubt that one is better than the other.
11 championships 13 years with better players, with worst players how
much more quantifing do we need to Saw....Russell owned Chamberlain
when it counted. The records say so, I say so, Don says so.....
mike
|
144.76 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Dockers�...Pants for |CENSORED|s | Fri May 10 1991 13:20 | 11 |
| Like I've said million times before nobody is saying Russ was
the better player, but in head to head competition when "champeenships"
were on the line Russ always played better. Wilt had the better
skills, but Russ was the winner. And while I'm reminiscing about
Stilt chokes, the absolute worst happened not against the Celtics,
but against the Knicks, and not in the aforementioned game 7 either.
In game 5 of the 1970 Championship series Reed went down in the 3rd quarter,
I think, and the Knicks put Dave Debusschre at center, all 6'6"
of him and his great play on Wilt led the Knicks to victory.
/Don
|
144.77 | Boggles the mind... | CARROL::LEFEBVRE | Take your instincts by the reins | Fri May 10 1991 13:30 | 8 |
| Slasher, do you find it interesting that when talking about Wilt vs.
Russ, head to head competition and champeenships are not okay. But
when DoctorDoubleGooseEggs talks about Roger vs. Stew, we have to
compare head to head and champeenships?
Interesting.
Mark.
|
144.78 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Dockers�...Pants for |CENSORED|s | Fri May 10 1991 13:38 | 11 |
| You spoiled it for me Mark. I was going to try to bait him
in the Red Sox note with it. 00:00.00 is � right though. I would
rather have Stewart in a "champeenship" game than Roger. Roger
loses his cool and tries to throw the ball as fast as he can with
the expected results.
Dan did you notice the whopping difference between Wilt's and
Bill's stats? The same stats you were crying out for just a little
while ago? 8^o
/Don
|
144.79 | Sure looked sharp, Game 1, 1990 | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 10 1991 14:53 | 15 |
|
> You spoiled it for me Mark. I was going to try to bait him
> in the Red Sox note with it. 00:00.00 is � right though. I would
> rather have Stewart in a "champeenship" game than Roger. Roger
> loses his cool and tries to throw the ball as fast as he can with
> the expected results.
Hell, DrM couldn't even use this for Stew; he'd have to rely heavily on
head-to-head, regular-season results. Stewart himself is one excellent
World Series up, two down-- thank the Lord for the hapless Giants.
Better post-season performance than Clemens, but nowhere near the big
boys of the baseball postseason...
glenn
|
144.80 | Head-to-head in playoffs, Wilt vs. Russ | VAXWRK::SCHNEIDER | Sununu escaped from Animal Farm | Fri May 10 1991 15:00 | 9 |
| > Dan did you notice the whopping difference between Wilt's and
>Bill's stats? The same stats you were crying out for just a little
>while ago? 8^o
Must be the frog hallugeons you've been licking, /Don. Nobody's posted
the stats I asked for. I'll bet either Nazz or bill..g. has them
somewhere.
Dan
|
144.81 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Lazarus,ThePhoenix,Broons | Fri May 10 1991 15:21 | 11 |
| Dan, let's say team A is up by 25 points on team B. Team B has
a center, who for agruement's sake we'll call Wilt. Now let's suppose that
Wilt, the center for team B scores 40 points in the game. But 35 of them
came after his team rolled up the 20+ point deficit and never got closer
than say 20 points. Now the center for team A, who we'll call Bill for
agruement's sake, scores 25 points but 20 of them came while team A was
building the large lead. Now a 40-25 point disparity would seem to
indicate that Wilt was better than Bill wouldn't it? Now wouldn't it be
wiser to look at those two fictional center's numbers in close, deciding games?
/Don
|
144.82 | Wilt's playoff performance reflected in the numbers | LEAF::NAZZARO | Pursue, capture, incarcerate | Fri May 10 1991 15:43 | 13 |
| G FG% FT% PPG RPG
Wilt - Reg Season 1045 .540 .511 30.1 22.9
Wilt - Playoffs 160 .522 .465 22.5 23.2
Russ - Reg Season 963 .440 .561 15.1 22.5
Russ - Playoffs 165 .434 .603 16.2 24.4
Wilt's FG%, FT%, and PPG all went down in the playoffs, while his
rebounding remained about the same. Russell's points went up slightly,
as did his rebounds and FT%. His shooting stayed about the same.
NAZZ
|
144.83 | | VAXWRK::SCHNEIDER | Sununu escaped from Animal Farm | Fri May 10 1991 16:02 | 8 |
| >Now a 40-25 point disparity would seem to
>indicate that Wilt was better than Bill wouldn't it? Now wouldn't it be
>wiser to look at those two fictional center's numbers in close, deciding games?
No, it would be wiser to look at as many games as possible so the
statistical anomalies such as the one you described get washed away.
Dan
|
144.84 | But Dan, there were some many blowouts... | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Lazarus,ThePhoenix,Broons | Fri May 10 1991 16:08 | 1 |
|
|
144.85 | Bet they don't print a rebuttal from van Breda Kolff! Hahahaha | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri May 10 1991 16:34 | 14 |
|
Red Auerbach listed his top 12 alltime playoff performers in this
week's Sports Illustrated and Wilt Chamberlain wasn't even on the
friggin' list! I loved it! To the victors go the spoils!
I didn't so much care about Wilt given his well-documented negative
baggage in big series and big games (clear back to the UNC upset over
Kansas in the 1957 NCAAs-- one of the top 10 college upsets of all
time), but I did think that Elgin Baylor deserved to be on that list
somewhere...
glenn
|
144.86 | thanks in advance | AGNT99::CHILDS | Wilt's heart was 2 sizes 2 small | Mon May 13 1991 09:16 | 10 |
|
Didn't see the list Glenn could you please reprint it. I agree though Baylor's
61 points deserves some ink as well him being just one great all around player.
The only Laker I ever really like except for whinny puss.....
I imagine West's bomb must be amoungst them....as well as Whinny puss' game
6 against philly in his rookie year...
mike
|
144.87 | I have Spoken! | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | Bruins Choke AGAIN!!! | Mon May 13 1991 11:44 | 27 |
| Just got back, and I suppose this note is about Lary's overrated
game in Game 5 vs. the Pacers.
When ALbert compared it to Willis Reed, I almost died! Reed had a
messed up knee, and there is no way he should have played - but he did
and provided the lift the Knicks needed against a great Laker team.
Larry sat in the locker room, crying and whining, when he should have
been a man and been in their all along. And big cahoots - they were
playing the frigging Pacers, not exactly a world-beater.
The Celts would have beat the Pacers by a zillion in Game 5 if Shaw,
Bird, and Lewis had remembered they have a guy named Parrish - who
could score 60 points against the Pacers if they just gave him the damn
ball.
Larry did come back and provide a lift - but I'd say that Isiah's
performance in Game 6 a few years back was bigger, and gutsier. Reed's
was a zillion times more gutsier. McHale's playing on his messed up
foot throughout the whole playoffs a few back was gutsier (as was
Parrish playing with his injuries). Lawwy just got a lot of press
because he's Lawwy.
And despite it all, the Celtics almost lost to an inferior team, on
their HOME court. Not exactly parade material!
JD
|
144.88 | HA!! JD you are too much!! 8^) | KEPNUT::DIGGINS | Thirst N'Howl Roolz! | Mon May 13 1991 11:57 | 7 |
|
And yet another, typically un-biased, objectional reply, from
JD. You just gotta love it!! 8^)
Steve
|
144.89 | rebuttal | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | Bruins Choke AGAIN!!! | Mon May 13 1991 12:30 | 45 |
| Steve,
I can rattle of much better playoff performances than Larry's:
Reed in 69/70
Magic Game 6 his rookie year.
Isiah, Game 6 a few back.
Larry's performance vs. Atlanta (the Larry-Dominique Duel)
Worthy's Game 7 vs. the Pistons.
Bill Russell, a half a dozen times.
Elgin Baylor's 61.
Mchale and Parrish in the series I mentioned.
Cedric Maxwell and the "Jump on my back boys" series - that was
inspirational, and WON a title!
and I could go on.
See Steve, it isn't anti-Larry, it's the truth. When Bird went down I
was in Champions in Atlanta. The two guys next to me were Celtic fans
-
they stated crying and saying that someone must have cheap-shotted
Larry (one guy claimed Person pushed Larry down!!!) I looked at both
of these poor excuses for humans, and simply said "I guarentee that
Bird will be back, and that the Celtics will win. There's no doubt
about it. he isn;'t hurt bad. He'll be back. Bet them a beer - which
tasted good."
Damn, this was the final game, unless he broke his leg, he'd play -
that's a no brainer.
Christ, you have Barkley coming off knee surgery playing his heart out
- being tougher than Larry Legend every game.
Open the eyes, folks. Both Parrish and McHale have sucked it up more
with injuries than Larry Legend ever has.
JD
|
144.90 | | CARROL::LEFEBVRE | Take your instincts by the reins | Mon May 13 1991 13:04 | 3 |
| JD, how did the B's choke when they were beaten by a better team?
Mark.
|
144.91 | I'll be waiting ... | EARRTH::BROOKS | Have software, will travel ... | Mon May 13 1991 13:30 | 12 |
| re .63
Slasher, why don't also come up with the stats on Russell in Game 7 of
the 1958 series vs the St.Louis Hawks ? You know the one where Bob
Pettit scored 50 points to led the Hawks to a title ?
Or how about Game 5 of the 1967 semis Philly vs Boston ?
Or Game 5 of the 72 title series vs. the Knicks ?
People, you haven't SEEN selctive vision, until you've seen a Green
Docker in action ...
|
144.92 | Revisionist history by the Doc, as usual! | INTER::NAZZARO | Pursue, capture, incarcerate | Mon May 13 1991 13:35 | 5 |
| As I'm sure you know Doc, Russell didn't play in the 1958 Finals,
due to a knee injury. So Petit's scoring and the Hawks' title should
have an asterisk with them.
NAZZ
|
144.93 | 11 in 13 count em and weep 00:00 | AGNT99::CHILDS | Pace and mind over matter | Mon May 13 1991 13:38 | 22 |
|
> Slasher, why don't also come up with the stats on Russell in Game 7 of
< the 1958 series vs the St.Louis Hawks ? You know the one where Bob
> Pettit scored 50 points to led the Hawks to a title ?
Wilt wasn't in this series. I thought this argument was Wilt vs. Russ?
> Or how about Game 5 of the 1967 semis Philly vs Boston ?
Which makes the colaspe of the 68 Sixers' team to the Celtics after
holding a 3-1 lead with the same team evem more of a downer for
heartless Wilt...
> Or Game 5 of the 72 title series vs. the Knicks ?
Russell already retired by then...
Geez Doc you're reaching very badly here. keep it up and the whitecoats will
soon be by....
;^)
|
144.94 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | Bruins Choke AGAIN!!! | Mon May 13 1991 14:03 | 18 |
| Mark,
The Bruins had a better record than the Pens, hence the home ice
advantage. Once again, the Bruins aredepicted as underdogs, when they
were favorites. They choked Mark, plain and simple. Just like lasted
year, and year in, year out lately. They get the ice advantage, then
choke, ala North Carolina, and the Broons fans praise them....
HAHAHAHAHAHAHA (TM)
DOC:
Re Wilt in Game 5 in the 72 finals. Big deal. Willis Reed was hurt
and the Knicks didn't have a real center - they had Jerry Lucas and
some journeymen playing Wilt. In the two finals Wilt played against
Willis, Willis was MVP and the Knicks brought home the ring.
JD
|
144.95 | And a good morning to you to! 8^) | CUBIC7::DIGGINS | Thirst N'Howl Roolz! | Mon May 13 1991 14:12 | 8 |
| Whoa! JD on the loose!! I knew that the Bruins losing would make your
year! BTW, I was only joshing you in my lasted reply, didn't mean to
get your Irish up, although we know just the mere mention of Terry
O'Reilly can do that! HAHAHAHAHAHA(tm)
Steve
|
144.96 | | CAM::WAY | The National Inbreeding Finals -- Sign up NOW! | Mon May 13 1991 14:18 | 13 |
| As you all know, I'm NOT a Bruins fan.
But, I don't think that they choked. Plain and simple, I think they were
outplayed. Somewhere along the line, they stopped skating. (I know about
that because I'm a Whalers fan, you see, and that's the Whalers' cardinal
sin)
The Pens then put on relentless pressure. (Moog is human and can be
overcome)....
That's the way I see it....
'Saw
|
144.97 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | Bruins Choke AGAIN!!! | Mon May 13 1991 14:21 | 15 |
| Saw,
They stopped skating cuz it's hard to skate well with two hands around
your neck. When they weren't doing that, they were slashing or choking
the chicken.
Just the title of this note makes me laugh. Larry Legend.
Sanctimonious Celtic fans can do that crap, but God forbid if Magic,
Michael or the rest are called legends. Larry has been the most
overhyped athlete since Mohammid ALi, but at least Ali accomplished
more than Larry did. So, when was Larry's last ring, anyway? Seems
like a lONG time ago.....
JD
|
144.99 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Homey The Man | Mon May 13 1991 14:32 | 1 |
| DOCillogic� is rampant in this note. It's even affecting JD!
|
144.100 | Who cares? They're playing Detroit now, as it should be... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon May 13 1991 14:37 | 24 |
|
JD, you forgot the part where you're supposed to say with a straight
face, "You see, I'm a Boston fan from waaaaaaaay back so I can
deliver outrageous criticisms with total objectivity and complete
credibility..." You're slipping bigtime, bud. ;-)
Honestly, I don't recall anyone saying that Bird's effort in Game 5
versus Indiana was one of the alltime greatest in playoff history or
anything, nor that the Celtics accomplished anything that momentous in
taking out the Pacers in the first round. It was accorded the proper
recognition and perspective both in Boston and nationally: a guy who's
been hurting all year and will require major back surgery immediately
after the season probably had his best game of the year, when the
Celts most needed it. No big deal; it was a game that should receive
attention but won't require Larry's uniform and shoes to be shipped
to Springfield either...
Oh, and by the way, Chuck Person *did* intentionally shove Bird to the
floor in that game, but it wasn't when he got hurt. It was at the end
of the third quarter, I believe, and in typical Bird fashion he shook
it off and no mention of the incident was made later.
glenn
|
144.101 | Would explain alot! | CUBIC7::DIGGINS | Thirst N'Howl Roolz! | Mon May 13 1991 14:40 | 7 |
|
I think when JD was a little kid, some guy in a Celtic jacket stole
his lunch money.
8^)))))
|
144.102 | | CARROL::LEFEBVRE | Take your instincts by the reins | Mon May 13 1991 14:40 | 8 |
| Glenn, hafta disagree with you on the media blitz on Larry's
performance in game 5. It was the lead story on many of the news
broadcasts, and the Glob and Herald both overdid it as well.
Sheet, Channel 7 even had a camera follow Larry from the locker room
out onto the Garden floor to the cheering Jihad masses.
Mark.
|
144.103 | That play not whistled 99 times out of 100 | VAXWRK::SCHNEIDER | Sununu escaped from Animal Farm | Mon May 13 1991 15:00 | 13 |
| >Oh, and by the way, Chuck Person *did* intentionally shove Bird to the
>floor in that game, but it wasn't when he got hurt. It was at the end
>of the third quarter, I believe, and in typical Bird fashion he shook
>it off and no mention of the incident was made later.
If we're talking about the same play, I saw Person lay a pretty clean
backpick on Bird, the kind of pick that gets set and executed probably
10 times in every NBA game. But Bird did the flop, perhaps justified,
perhaps acting, and the floor was parquet so the whistle went off. It
wasn't mentioned because it didn't deserve mention except as yet
another example of a homer call.
Dan
|
144.104 | As concerns the Celtics, there'll always be complaints... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon May 13 1991 15:01 | 22 |
|
> Glenn, hafta disagree with you on the media blitz on Larry's
> performance in game 5. It was the lead story on many of the news
> broadcasts, and the Glob and Herald both overdid it as well.
Yeah, I agree that it was the media story of the day, the week,
whatever, and the mindless local TV news especially eats that stuff up.
But the entire week before Bob Ryan was writing about how the Celtics
are old and tired and that Celtics fans *should* be worried because no
myth was going to carry them through this time. Then Bird did go out
and play his best game even after smashing his face, and the Celts
ended up needing every bit of the effort. That *did* deserve
recognition, no matter how much we want to rant and rave about the
overkill, and I'm sure most Celtics fans will remember the game.
The game will not, as far as I'm concerned, join the handful of
greatest games in Celtics' history. In the short term to sell the
newspapers and attract the viewers, it gets hyped, but I haven't heard
any reputable writer yet suggest that it was Larry's finest hour...
glenn
|
144.105 | *That* was a homer call? Now I know what I'm up against | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon May 13 1991 15:08 | 15 |
|
> If we're talking about the same play, I saw Person lay a pretty clean
> backpick on Bird, the kind of pick that gets set and executed probably
> 10 times in every NBA game. But Bird did the flop, perhaps justified,
> perhaps acting, and the floor was parquet so the whistle went off. It
> wasn't mentioned because it didn't deserve mention except as yet
> another example of a homer call.
I don't think we are talking about the same play, unless your
definition of a backpick involves extending the arms and pushing the
man in front of you who's breaking up the floor after a defensive
rebound...
glenn
|
144.106 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | Bruins Choke AGAIN!!! | Mon May 13 1991 15:51 | 16 |
| Glenn,
I've been out of this note for about 2 weeks. I read this note's
title, and few of the recent replies. In my first reply I said I
assumed that this note was harping on Larry's performance in Game 5 -
and I disputed it as an all-time great game. (Which you seem to agree
upon.)
I will say taht the national news sources and even the local Atlanta
paper were praising Larry. And the Celts fans in Atlanta were ranting
and raving about it.
I'm glad you don't think it will be considered an all-time great. It
was average, In my eyes. I've seen Larry have many better games.
JD
|
144.107 | putting an opponent at a disadvantage = foul | HAVASU::HEISER | melodius volumeus maximus | Mon May 13 1991 16:10 | 3 |
| > -< That play not whistled 99 times out of 100 >-
especially when performed by a Laker
|
144.108 | You're up against a realist | VAXWRK::SCHNEIDER | Sununu escaped from Animal Farm | Mon May 13 1991 16:15 | 12 |
| >unless your
>definition of a backpick involves extending the arms and pushing the
>man in front of you who's breaking up the floor after a defensive
>rebound...
You've been listening to too much Tommy Heinsohn! Person's NBA-average
backpick surprised the back-pedaling Bird making it appear much worse
than it actually was, especially once Larry went into the slo-mo flop
forward onto his knees. (Hint: most players really shoved in the back
will have to break their fall with their hands, not their knees.)
Dan
|
144.109 | | CHIEFF::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon May 13 1991 16:29 | 8 |
| � I've been out of this note for about 2 weeks. I read this note's
� title, and few of the recent replies. In my first reply I said I
� assumed that this note was harping on Larry's performance in Game 5 -
I suggest that you go back and read the earlier replies. You'll find
yourself very much mistaken. I believe the note was written before
game 5. I know the note was written by a Celtics fan who wants Larry
to retire before he tarnishes his image by playing too long.
|
144.110 | in the forum 1983 or so | AGNT99::CHILDS | Pace and mind over matter | Mon May 13 1991 16:34 | 18 |
| <<< Note 144.108 by VAXWRK::SCHNEIDER "Sununu escaped from Animal Farm" >>>
-< You're up against a realist >-
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
hahahahahahahhahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaa
I'm giving your name to the cleaning crew for when they get done with this
office....Man the coke and cookies are everywhere....
JD, thsi note for the record started out with the noter who started it asking
Larry to retire this year and for go his 2 year extention. It also started
right around the beginging of the series if I'm not mistaken and not after
game 5......
Larry's best game that I remember was a 36 point 21 rebound 5 assists
dismantling of the Lakers way way way back when.....
mike
|
144.111 | Be honest, Dan, did you even see the game? | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon May 13 1991 16:45 | 22 |
|
> You've been listening to too much Tommy Heinsohn! Person's NBA-average
> backpick surprised the back-pedaling Bird making it appear much worse
> than it actually was, especially once Larry went into the slo-mo flop
> forward onto his knees.
First off, I hate Tommy Heinsohn's brand of "announcing", and have said
so repeatedly in here. Since many of the games are broadcast
simultaneously, I watch TNT whenever possible to avoid the man. Second
of all, as I said, the play I saw had Bird running down the court on
the break, not back-pedaling, when Person pushed him from behind and
sent him sprawling, no intentional flop required. Larry got to shoot
two, but I was surprised that a technical wasn't also called.
Was I hallugeonating or did someone else without a grudge against a
once-great but still proud player see this play? (Dan must have spent
some quality time in the bathroom or something, as first he had no idea
that Bird did some serious scoring inside driving to the hoop, and now
this...)
glenn
|
144.112 | ;^) | AGNT99::CHILDS | Pace and mind over matter | Mon May 13 1991 16:52 | 8 |
|
Another point Glenn, is that it was a sunday national tv game no Tommy H.
to be heard. You're correct. Dan's tuning up the keyboard just in case
the Lakers advance to the finals against the Celtics....
Dan, I think they call those Wet Dreams.....
mike
|
144.113 | .0 was written before Game 5 | STAR::YANKOWSKAS | You made me play second base! | Mon May 13 1991 16:57 | 7 |
| re .109, .110:
The basenote was written on 2-MAY-1991. Game 5 of the Celtics-Pacers
series was Sunday May 5th.
py
|
144.114 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Mon May 13 1991 17:22 | 14 |
|
Listen, Dan, I guess I should apologize. Turns out you really do know
your Celtics hoops. I mean, just look at this gem of a prognostication
after Game 1:
> Nope, the stinko blowout is still out there waiting to surface. Last
> night was the "No Real Point Guard, Slow Death game". The stinko
> blowout will probably come in game 3 in Auburn Hills...
Right on the money! Can you tell us what's on tap for tonight,
Danny son-of-Sheridan? ;-)
glenn
|
144.115 | Dan is Carnac! | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Dockers�...Pants for |CENSORED|s | Mon May 13 1991 17:27 | 1 |
|
|
144.116 | | LUNER::BROOKS | Has Homey sold out to The Man ? | Mon May 13 1991 18:33 | 10 |
| re .99
Nazz, would you please post Wilt's all time **head-to-head** playoff
numbers against Russell ?
Slasher is in the throes of his Russ-induced wet dream, so he hasn't
noticed that those are Wilt's numbers for his whole career. I seem to
remember Wilt scoring less as he became older, since he had better
offensive options to go to... but I'm sure Don took that into account
...yeah suuurrrre ... HAHAHAHAHA ....
|
144.117 | | WMOIS::RIEU_D | Read his lips...Know new taxes! | Mon May 13 1991 23:17 | 5 |
| <<< Note 144.106 by RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO "Bruins Choke AGAIN!!!" >>>
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
This from a guy who's favorite hockey team hasn't won anything in
what? 50 years!!!
Denny
|
144.118 | The Realist was a game late with his insightful prediction | VAXWRK::SCHNEIDER | Sununu escaped from Animal Farm | Tue May 14 1991 12:33 | 24 |
| >the play I saw had Bird running down the court on
Maybe it wasn't the same play, then, since I don't remember anything
like your play occuring. I do know that there was a play in the 3rd or
4th quarter that Bird did draw a foul from Person on a clean back
pick.
>as first he had no idea
>that Bird did some serious scoring inside driving to the hoop
Gee, again this reference to serious scoring inside. I've gotta
question if you guys saw the whole game. I think he took 19 shots in
that game, and I'll bet that about 14 of them were pops from the
outside.
By the way, last night the Lagging Legend scored 13 points, 6 rebounds
(maybe 1 in any kind of traffic) and 4 assists (one pretty bounce pass
was notable) all squeezed into 44 minutes. It's a good thing the
officials were being kind and sent him to the free throw line 5 times
or it would have been single figures. Rodman gets all ball with no
body contact whatsoever, and Larry ends up shooting a pair. Life as we
know it.
Dan
|
144.119 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Dockers�...Pants for |CENSORED|s | Wed May 15 1991 10:34 | 2 |
| Doc, you're reaching so far your shoulder is going to pop out
of its socket.
|
144.120 | You disappoint me ... | EARRTH::BROOKS | Say it ain't so Homey ! | Wed May 15 1991 12:43 | 4 |
| Slosher, is that the best you can do, after ducking the issue for how
long now ?
Sigh ....
|
144.121 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Dockers�...Pants for |CENSORED|s | Wed May 15 1991 13:12 | 5 |
| Doc, Doc, Doc... Everytime you've made a ridiculous statement
in here I'm around to correct it. What issue am I ducking? Please
enlighten me. I can use another good long laugh...
/Don
|
144.122 | I'm veeeeeeerrrry disappointed... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed May 15 1991 13:45 | 9 |
|
I think Doc should invoke some of that enlightened "if you don't have
anything good to say...if you wouldn't say it face-to-face..."
philosophy with respect to his shabby treatment of a tired, crippled
old man like Bird who's just trying to scrape together an honest
living. Shame on you, Doc!
glenn
|
144.124 | The only stat that counts | WORDY::NAZZARO | Pursue, capture, incarcerate | Wed May 15 1991 14:53 | 4 |
| Sorry Doc - my reference material doesn't list any Wilt vs.
Russell stats, except for the number of championships won. ;-)
NAZZ
|
144.125 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Dockers�...Pants for |CENSORED|s | Wed May 15 1991 14:54 | 4 |
| � every single cut he ever printed in here about Larry "gooney" Bird
� would be uttered face-to-face, right Doc? :-)
More like face-to-kneecap Hawk.
|
144.126 | I have dignity, what's your excuse ? | EARRTH::BROOKS | Say it ain't so Homey ! | Wed May 15 1991 15:25 | 7 |
| re .125
And how would you Jihad members utter remarks to Laaarrwy ?
face-to-buttocks (smooch smooch) ?
HAHAHAHAHAAAAA !!!!!!!!!!
|
144.127 | Edge to Wilt | EARRTH::BROOKS | Say it ain't so Homey ! | Wed May 15 1991 15:27 | 9 |
| re NAzz,
I remember BAsketball Digest having an atricle about the statman in
Philly who has stats for the number of lightbulbs used in the Spectrum
:-), and he took the effort to complie all Wilt vs Russell stats in
head to head comp. Supposedly it was something like 28 ppg, 28 rpg for
Wilt and 15 ppg/23 rbg for Russell ...
Doc
|
144.128 | | FDCV06::KING | Jesse's Jets! | Wed May 15 1991 15:37 | 4 |
| Hey Brooks, if your memory is as good as Dan Sch. then its time to
take a memory course....
REK
|
144.129 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | Dockers�...Pants for |CENSORED|s | Wed May 15 1991 16:17 | 1 |
| ...still ain't answered the question as to what "issue" I am ducking.
|
144.130 | | CAM::WAY | Jose, did you diddle Madonna? | Wed May 15 1991 16:56 | 8 |
| One of the guys I've met somewhere along the line here at DEC (probably
through a notes file) actually met Larry one night at banquet. They
were in the bar afterwards, and he bought Larry a pitcher. I guess they
talked together for quite a while afterwards.
THAT'S how you'd talk with Larry - down to earth, with a beer....
'Saw
|
144.131 | Hey, that's Larry: a drinkin' man's man... | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed May 15 1991 17:00 | 7 |
|
> THAT'S how you'd talk with Larry - down to earth, with a beer....
Just don't stick him with the tab-- or he might take a swing at you!
glenn
|
144.132 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | The Pidgeon will FLY tonight!! | Wed May 15 1991 17:56 | 16 |
|
Saw that guy was me!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I have pictures for doubters. I met
Larry at the Picidilly pub in westboro at a charity benefit for Jim Nance
after his heartache. Bobby Orr was the guy who put it together and also in
attendence that night was John Havlicek.. Bird spend about 20 minutes with me
and my gang as we had the table with the most pitchers of beer on it. :^)
rather humble he scrugged off a reference I made to his 36 point 21 rebound
game against the Lakers as just another night's work...
at one point he was talking to one of the girls in our group and noticing that
his beer was just about empty I refill his glass to which he replied
"You know what ole Larr likes..."
mike
|
144.133 | | CAM::WAY | Jose, did you diddle Madonna? | Wed May 15 1991 18:05 | 13 |
| Damn!
I was sitting here trying like hell to figure out what notes file I'd been
in. I thought...Giants?....nah.
That was about four years ago you told that story... I was impressed.
Say, with the luck I've been having, maybe one of the SPORTS noters is
the guy who told about meeting Kevin McHale in the paint store, and how
Kevin's arms were so long....
'Saw
|
144.134 | From the good days of great hotline seats | VAXWRK::SCHNEIDER | Sununu escaped from Animal Farm | Wed May 15 1991 18:13 | 14 |
| I met Kevin and Larry together once...at a Grateful Dead show in the
Centrum. They were on the left side of the stage, and I was in the
front row sort of in front of them. Apparently Kevin has some sort of
relationship with Mickey Hart, one of the Dead's drummers, who got him
the passes, as Mickey was wearing a Celtics sweatshirt for the show. I
no longer hold that against him.
I remember making some comment about being a Laker fan to them
(couldn't help myself) and they declined to get me a beer from the keg
just off stage. What was really odd was since they were standing on
stage, my eyes were about even with their shins. That's when people
look really tall!
Dan
|
144.135 | He's ugly up close... | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | The sea lions are back... | Wed May 15 1991 19:31 | 16 |
| Saw,
I met Kevin McHale and his wife at Jamaica Pond - I was cutting through
the pond finishing off a 16-miler, when I saw Kevin and his wife. I
said hi, and asked him if he was going to the Knicks (this is around
the time the Knicks did an offer sheet to him, and the Celts made one
for Marvin Webster and someone else...) - he said nah - and asked if
that made me happy - I said no, cuz I was a Knicks fan, so now I'd have
to keep on 'disliking' him - he laughed and asked how far I had run. I
told him and said I was crazy....
I saw him a few times walking near the pond after that, but never
stopped to talk to him. I figured he must get stopped a dozen times
each time he goes out for a walk.
JD
|
144.136 | NBA at its best | HAVASU::HEISER | melodius volumeus maximus | Wed May 15 1991 23:33 | 9 |
| > -< He's ugly up close... >-
yeah kinda like Herman Munster without makeup ;-)
I talked with Bird and McHale when they came to Phoenix one year. Got
both their autographs and Kevin gave his shoes to my boy (last game of
the west coast swing).
Mike
|
144.137 | | CNTROL::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu May 16 1991 10:33 | 1 |
| We saw flashes of vintage Bird in the 4th quarter last night.
|
144.138 | | CARROL::LEFEBVRE | Exhuming McCarthy | Thu May 16 1991 14:15 | 3 |
| Yeah, especially the trey he clanged with time running out.
Mark.
|
144.139 | A reputation is all you need | VAXWRK::SCHNEIDER | Sununu escaped from Animal Farm | Thu May 16 1991 15:27 | 5 |
| >We saw flashes of vintage Bird in the 4th quarter last night.
Yes, the bricks reminded me the '85 and '87 finals.
Dan
|
144.140 | Man was that bad ... | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Thu May 16 1991 15:53 | 11 |
| > flashes of vintage Bird
The thing that amazed me was that gawd-awful 3-pointer he put
up with 16 seconds left and the C's down 2. If you miss that shot
and don't get the rebound the game is over, and that's not the
kind of shot that enhances offensive rebounding.
*Horrid* shot selection.
- ACC Chris
|
144.141 | Unless it goes in | WMOIS::REEVE_C | | Thu May 16 1991 15:56 | 1 |
|
|
144.142 | Disagree. | RHETT::KNORR | Graphics Workstation Support | Thu May 16 1991 16:25 | 4 |
| A bad shot is a bad shot, even if it does go in.
- ACC Chris
|
144.143 | talk of extending contract too!!! | CST17::FARLEY | Have YOU seen Elvis today?? | Thu Aug 22 1991 15:07 | 20 |
| Word all around beantown today is that Larry's back is
doing very very well. He's been doing his walks on the beach, playing
tennis and doing good rehab stuff.
Since he feels so good (relativley speaking (?)), word has it that he
has favorably replied to the Olympic US basketball selection committee
that he's interested in playing on the Olympic team. I understand he
hasn't officially said he will/wants to play but would "consider it"
which is a long way from he's "won't" 6-9 months ago.
Jihad members are saying that this is indicative of how good he's
feeling and that the upcoming NBA season he'll be the "Larry of old".
If he's picked for the team (No tryout's BTW, just a selection
process), it looks like he'll join OOwing and Magic.
comments ?
Kev
|
144.144 | | HPSRAD::RIEU | Read his lips...Know new taxes! | Thu Aug 22 1991 15:16 | 2 |
| Parade in August!! Even Thompson could coach these guys!
Denny
|
144.145 | but could Baywhine????? | CST17::FARLEY | Have YOU seen Elvis today?? | Thu Aug 22 1991 15:19 | 1 |
|
|
144.146 | maybe I'm all wet, but... | STAR::YANKOWSKAS | Paul Yankowskas | Thu Aug 22 1991 15:26 | 12 |
| I've got mixed feelings about letting professionals participate in the
Olympics Yeah I know times change, but the sentimentalist in me would
still prefer to see the Olympics remain an amateur event.
At the very least, things should be consistent -- either all events
should allow professionals to participate, or none. The way things
stand now, Isaiah Thomas could take part in the Olympics, but Frank
Thomas can't...I'd prefer to see it one way or the other across the
board.
py
|
144.147 | 'nother romantic sentimentalist here 2!!!! | CST17::FARLEY | Have YOU seen Elvis today?? | Thu Aug 22 1991 15:59 | 14 |
| Paul,
I agree with you 100% on the sentimentalist side since I've chosen
my rose colored glasses which show the Olympics to really be an amateur
event (although in reality.....). Personally don't want the
pro's there, especially in their chosen specialty. I mean,
IMO it's OK for Isaiah to compete in say, gymnastics or water polo
but not BBall.
Likewise, Mr. Ed (~/~) WOULD be eligible for the equestrian
competitiion.
Kev
|
144.148 | | RDOVAX::BRAKE | A Question of Balance | Thu Aug 22 1991 16:16 | 24 |
| This is an old argument, for sure.
But how can anyone be so naive to think that the Olympics are being
played by amateurs?
In basketball, players who play in pro leagues in Yugoslavia, Italy,
Brazil, etc compete. How could anyone say that the USSR, Czeck or
Sweedish hockey teams are amateur?
Point is that our society makes a distinction between an athlete who
competes in scholl or for fun and the athlete who competes for money.
Europe and South America don't.
So, should not the aim be to gather the globe's best athletes and let
'em have at it?
However, on the other side of the fence, if this practice goes into
effect, it will deprive us of the wonderful feeling of seeing a gang of
college kids beat the USSR in hockey like in 1980.
I am inclined to allow the athlete to decide whether he/she wishes to
compete - not some committee.
Rich
|
144.149 | Too much money, bickering, and Ben Johnson-like episodes... | GUSHER::WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 23 1991 13:20 | 10 |
|
Whatever the difference is, I know that as a naive kid I lived and
breathed the Olympics when they came around every four years. Right
now, I have absolutely no interest in them. They mean little more
than something like the NBA All-Star Game to me. When the time comes,
I'll probably be scanning the channels for a baseball game to get
away from the hype...
glenn
|
144.150 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | Sheain'tpretty,justlooksthatway | Fri Aug 23 1991 13:34 | 27 |
| You can trace some of the 'pros' in the Olympics to false patriotism in
the good ol' USA. Folks used to love having amateurs play - because we
won every dang time. Even in 72 when we lost to the Ruskies - we were
gyped. It was only when we started to lose internationally that the
real cries were heard.
I don't care one way or another. I like the OLympics, but my two
favorite sports are Track and Field and Swimming. In both sports the
folks make money - but not at the level of the Jordans, Birds, etc...
And those sports have world championships that mean much more (or are
at least equal to) the Olympic competitions.
After seeing the fiasco of the Pan_am games (especially in the
officiating in the T & F) and the propoganda uses of 'victory over the
Yanquis' by the Cubans, I say let the pros play.
Fair is fair. So the US kicks butt in hoops and baseball. We give
other countries for their chance to have a "Do you believe in
Miracles" type memory.
I mean, its got to be kind of hollow to beat the USA's 'best' in
Olympic hoops, when you know that the real 'best' are playing in the
NBA.
JD
|
144.151 | | CNTROL::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Aug 23 1991 14:52 | 1 |
| If you want to follow a true amatuer sport, follow Rugby Union.
|
144.152 | | LAGUNA::MAY_BR | Need one of those endolphin rushes | Wed Sep 04 1991 22:52 | 5 |
|
I think the US has nothing to win by letting pros play. If they do
win, it'll be "so what?", if they lose whoever wins can then really
beat thier chest. I'd rather get excited by some college kids playing
together and defeating the other guys' pro teams.
|
144.153 | | RDOVAX::BRAKE | A Question of Balance | Thu Sep 05 1991 12:00 | 6 |
| Actually, I have no problem with the pros. When we play Yugoslavia or
Italy or Brazil those countries put the best players from their nation
on the floor. I see no reason why we don't.
Rich
|
144.154 | | CSLALL::TIMMONS | THEY MUSTA SEEN ME AT THE Y! | Thu Dec 12 1991 12:10 | 7 |
| Hey, has anyone tried reading the first few replies in this note
without choking?
Ha ha ha ha ha, Leave Now, Larry. Right! :*)
Lee
|
144.156 | BIRD IS 36 YEARS OLD - HAH-HAA ! ! ! | HSKAPL::MTUUTTI | | Mon Dec 16 1991 07:38 | 3 |
|
|
144.157 | | QUASER::HUNTER | Bad_Boy of ::SPORTS | Mon Dec 16 1991 14:15 | 3 |
| And He Still Has A Big Nose !! ;^)
Big GAme
|
144.159 | | QUASER::HUNTER | Bad_Boy of ::SPORTS | Mon Dec 16 1991 14:52 | 3 |
| Skawk... I bet you got a big Nose too... ;^)
Big Gamw
|
144.160 | Add another chapter to the legend | AXIS::CHAPPEL | Nyuk, Nyuk, Nyuk, That's a pipen ! | Mon Mar 16 1992 09:57 | 1 |
|
|
144.161 | Poor kid! | SCHOOL::RIEU | Support DCU Petition Candidates | Mon Mar 16 1992 10:03 | 5 |
| Right Chap, great game yesterday. Portland shoulda won but free
throw misses killed 'em!
I hate to say something like this but Connor Bird Looks like he's
gonna have his dad's looks instead of his mom's.
Denny
|
144.162 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | Go Fordham Rams! | Mon Mar 16 1992 10:30 | 9 |
| I loved it yesterday. Especially after Scottie Pippen buried Bird in
the media, saying he was washed up, and should retire (in so many
words) after Bird's (and the Celts) destruction by the Bulls last week.
Yo Scottie, about the only thing you have on Bird is you are uglier and
a better vertical leap. Other than that, you can lick the dirt from
the bottom of his sneakers. Here's hoping that on 4/5/92 Mr. Bird
shows Scottie something.
JD
|
144.163 | Money back guarantee ??? | SCNDRL::HUNT | Atlantic Coast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament :== Ge | Mon Mar 16 1992 10:32 | 3 |
| Yes, but will SI recall all the Larry Bird videos now ???
Bob Hunt
|
144.164 | What a show! | SASE::SZABO | | Mon Mar 16 1992 10:49 | 15 |
| Ha ha, JD, only your dislike of Scottie Pippen could entise you to
write such great praise of Larry! It would be the end of the world,
total destruction, if Dock does likewise... :-)
Amazing how when Bird gets that shooting stroke, he makes it look so
smooth and so easy. It's been a good long time since I've seen that
from him...
Oh, and to remind you all (it's been a while):
Larry Bird is GOD!
|
144.165 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | Go Fordham Rams! | Mon Mar 16 1992 11:37 | 10 |
| Hawkster -
I've praised Sir Larry before. Remember, I've never doubted or
denigrated his hoop skills. I've said if I had five guys to pick for a
game to end all games, Mr. Bird would start at one forward position.
Larry Bird is pure Wisconsin Cheddar, while that Pippen fellow is Kraft
imitation.
JD
|
144.166 | It's Dock's turn... :-) | SASE::SZABO | | Mon Mar 16 1992 11:42 | 4 |
| I know, JD. But the note was great nonetheless...
Hawk
|
144.167 | | BSS::JCOTANCH | | Mon Mar 16 1992 11:43 | 3 |
| His foot was on the floor before he released that 3.
Joe
|
144.168 | | COBRA::BRYDIE | Julie's in the Drug Squad | Mon Mar 16 1992 11:48 | 6 |
|
>> I loved it yesterday. Especially after Scottie Pippen buried Bird in
>> the media, saying he was washed up, and should retire (in so many
>> words) after Bird's (and the Celts) destruction by the Bulls last week.
Just what EXACTLY were those words ?
|
144.169 | Larry RULZ! | FRETZ::HEISER | maranatha | Mon Mar 16 1992 11:56 | 3 |
| Are there any doubts now why Portland is called a "stupid" team?
|
144.170 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | Go Fordham Rams! | Mon Mar 16 1992 12:16 | 11 |
| Tommy -
I don't have the paper in front of me - it's in hte recycling center
already. Pippen did go on about it was painful to watch Bird, and
that he should know when the time has come to hang em up, etc...
I thought Bird was playing good hoops since he came back - and had a
bad day agains the Jor..Bulls. IMO, Pippen is vastly overrated. He's
good, but he's behind a few forwards on the NBA depth list...
JD
|
144.171 | Here ya go Hawk ! | EARRTH::BROOKS | Money don't matter 2 night ... | Mon Mar 16 1992 12:24 | 30 |
| Larry is ...Larry is ..... Larry is ....
UGLY !!!!!! AND THE CELTICS STILL 'TSIP' POND SCUM !!! THE JIHAD HAD
BETTER ENJOY THESE FLASHES OF REFLECTD GLORY WHILE THEY CAN, BECAUSE
THEY STILL ARE GOING TO GO DOWN DOWN DOOOOOOWWN !!!! GAMES LIKE
YESTERDAY ARE SPASMS - LIKE BREAKING WIND INTO THE COOL, CRISP,
FRESH (CELTIC-LESS) ATMOSPHERE OF THE TRUE REALITY OF THE HIGHER NBA
CONSCIOCNESS (SP) !!!! SO THERE !
HAHAHAHAAAAA !!!!!!
And that is a fact.
Love,
I remain,
Celtic-Basher-In-Chief, (tm)
Dr Midnight
p.s. I hear it was a hell of game. I only saw a small part of the 2nd
OT - work prevented me from seeing much more ... :-(
It seems like the 2 OT thriller will be a seasonal event at the Garden
(lasted year, the Celtics and Bulls hooked up for a 2OT thriller, won
by the Bulls) ...
BTW, I don't seem to hear anybody bashing NBA basketball today ... :-)
|
144.172 | | SCHOOL::RIEU | Support DCU Petition Candidates | Mon Mar 16 1992 12:28 | 3 |
| ...and let's not forget the TD pass to Rick Faux that Larry made
from UNDER the backboard! Length a the court and sidearm!
Denny
|
144.173 | | COBRA::BRYDIE | Julie's in the Drug Squad | Mon Mar 16 1992 12:28 | 7 |
|
Gee JD, saying it's painful to watch Bird and that Bird'll know when
it's time to hang 'em up is a hell of alot different than calling the
man "washed up" and saying that "he should retire". It isn't exactly
what I'd call 'burying' Bird in the media either.
|
144.174 | ;-) | FRETZ::HEISER | maranatha | Mon Mar 16 1992 12:33 | 2 |
| Pippen couldn't carry Larry's jock, even if he's the best player in
Chicago.
|
144.175 | I'll remember that Dock, next time you ask advice about anything! | SASE::SZABO | | Mon Mar 16 1992 12:34 | 6 |
| Hey Tommy, so JD stretched it a bit. Made for a great note anyway!
:-)
Hawk
|
144.176 | | EARRTH::BROOKS | Money don't matter 2 night ... | Mon Mar 16 1992 12:45 | 1 |
| But Hawk, it's true !
|
144.177 | | SASE::SZABO | | Mon Mar 16 1992 12:54 | 6 |
| > But Hawk, it's true!
Yeah, and so was Larry's sweet J yesterday!
Hawk
|
144.178 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | Go Fordham Rams! | Mon Mar 16 1992 13:07 | 6 |
| Actually, I didn't stretch it. Pippen said everything in both my
notes. It was evident from his quotes that he considers Bird finished
and probably not worthy to be on the same court as Scottie. It was a
fairly long Bird attach by Ben Vereen...
JD
|
144.179 | Not bad for an old man | VIA::SMEGOL::COHEN | | Mon Mar 16 1992 13:37 | 14 |
|
Well, despite his unbelievable performance yesterday, Bird still might retire this year.
It's hard to believe that he can recover quickly from the pounding 54+ minutes will cause. The
injuries just seem to keep coming back. I think McHale is in a similar situation.
AND despite OTHERS' wishes to the contrary, it's easy to see why Larry Legend is one of the best
NBA players of all time.... Almost like he pulled the Celtics out of their funk single handed.
(I guess Wilt did that all the time....)
Clyde Drexler is also pretty amazing too. To his credit, he didn't pout about Bird's "controversial"
three pointer...
Bob Cohen
|
144.180 | | TNPUBS::MCCULLOUGH | Lindsey's gonna be a sister!!! | Mon Mar 16 1992 14:43 | 2 |
| Bird's foot MAY have been down yesterday, but by NBA standards, they also COULD
have called a foul on the play.
|
144.181 | Sure is quiet in here today... | BSS::JCOTANCH | | Wed Mar 18 1992 13:11 | 1 |
|
|
144.182 | | LUNER::BROOKS | Money don't matter 2 night ... | Wed Mar 18 1992 14:34 | 2 |
| Ya know how it is with 'Legends' - they never stand up to the harsh
light of reality and truth ...
|
144.183 | kinda like Magic | FRETZ::HEISER | maranatha | Wed Mar 18 1992 14:40 | 1 |
|
|
144.184 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu Mar 19 1992 09:36 | 1 |
| Larry and the Legends dumped the Cavaliers last night.
|
144.185 | Celts are awesome.. NOT | HYDRA::HAUSRATH | BearCATS >>> Buckeyes | Thu Mar 19 1992 12:46 | 8 |
|
> Larry and the Legends dumped the Cavaliers last night.
Come on Mac, a 2 point home victory against the Cavs with only 2 of 5
starters playing and Mark Price shooting like Johnny Clang can hardly be
considered a dumping. Just be glad the Celts escaped with a W.
/Jeff
|
144.186 | | USCTR2::NAHEARN | | Thu Mar 19 1992 13:13 | 13 |
| FWIW,
I've never considered the term 'dumped' as a synonym for 'blew away',
'smoked', 'wiped out', 'dominated', etc.... I always thought it
simply implied 'BEAT'!!!
Some of you 'antis' out there seem a little too quick to jump on people
who are making a non-confrontational statement...IMHO.
HTH,
Nelly
|
144.187 | | ROYALT::ASHE | We finally got a piece of the pie... | Thu Mar 19 1992 13:35 | 2 |
| How can you say such a thing? (haha)
|
144.188 | Heinson's the biggest cry-baby I ever heard | HYDRA::HAUSRATH | BearCATS >>> Buckeyes | Thu Mar 19 1992 15:09 | 11 |
|
Nelly, how can the statement be viewed as anything other than a
confrontational one. The note had no substance, and if Mac didn't put
it in there to stir up the blood of the Cavs faithful, why is it
there.
I'm taking the heat at work today.. but for the life of me I don't
understand why.. I thought the Cavs played a hell of a game
considering the make-shift lineup they had out there.
/Jeff
|
144.189 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu Mar 19 1992 16:39 | 15 |
| � Nelly, how can the statement be viewed as anything other than a
� confrontational one. The note had no substance, and if Mac didn't put
� it in there to stir up the blood of the Cavs faithful, why is it
� there.
Nelly had it 100% right, Jeff. If the Celts had played another team
last night and won I would have said the same thing. The only way it
could be construed as confrontational is if you're an oversensitive
Caveliers' fan.
As to why it was there, check out the reply before it. The one that
was quick to point out the Celts loss to Milwaukee on the road. My
comment could be taken as a compliment. The Celts did manage to beat
one of the top teams in the NBA recordwise.
|
144.190 | With a final THREEEE!!!! | VIA::VIA::COHEN | | Thu Mar 19 1992 20:19 | 6 |
|
Larry's status is more than complete... Yes, I suppose he can't win
EVERY game singlehanded anymore.
What does he have to do? Collapse and die on the court???
|
144.191 | | HYDRA::HAUSRATH | BearCATS >>> Buckeyes | Fri Mar 20 1992 09:13 | 9 |
|
OK, Mac, I'll expect to see a note from you after every Celts game,
then.. Win or Loose.
Nelly started the whole "confrontational" thing, not me... you claimed
dumping, I rebuted it, plain and simple.. then Nelly jumped down my
throat as being over-reactive, Whatever.
/Jeff
|
144.192 | Oh ye of little faith... | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue Mar 31 1992 12:24 | 0 |
144.193 | only made the decision within the last 2-1 days | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Megabucks Winner Wannabe | Tue Aug 18 1992 13:07 | 12 |
| Monitoring a live tee vee broadcast:
Larry has retired, effective today, due to injuries (back for those
freshly out of a cave).
His new job is "Special Assistant to Dave Gavitt".
I remain,
occasionally yer travelling reporter,
Kev
|
144.194 | | SCHOOL::RIEU | Read his lips...Know new taxes | Tue Aug 18 1992 13:16 | 4 |
| sheesh, first we have Midnight, Dinz, and Hawk leaving DEC, now
THIS! What's next? KO leaving? A polish Pope?!!
Denny
|
144.195 | 1 down, what if 2 more go? | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Megabucks Winner Wannabe | Tue Aug 18 1992 13:20 | 14 |
| This probably belongs in the ::Celtic_Lovefest note but I hate
smoochie smoochie......;*)
Wouldn't it be something now that Larry's ancient history AND the
Celtics aren't really condendah's this year if Kevin AND Da Chief
announced their retirement within the next(ed) week or so?
The C's bite the bullet for the season anyway. Why not make it a
"rebuilding year"?
I remain,
tangentally yours,
Kev
|
144.196 | Leave as a legend, Jihad | SHALOT::HUNT | Heartbreak Motor Oil and Bombay Gin | Tue Aug 18 1992 13:23 | 19 |
| BOSTON (UPI) -- In an emotional press conference held today near a park bench
in Boston Commons, the ultra-reactionary organization known throughout the
SPORTS world as the "Larry Bird Jihad" officially disbanded. Citing the
retirement of its jump-shooting hero, the Jihad tearfully acknowledged that
it had no more reasons left to live.
The Jihad organization, once one of the most vocal support groups, has been a
feeble shell of its former self over the last several years as they have seen
the slow sad decline of their hero's fortunes. Jihad finances are said to
be in such poor shape that the only parting gift they could afford for Bird's
retirement was a free copy of a dictionary for use in his new career as a
public speaker.
Distraught ex-Jihad members were said to be contemplating a form of ritual
suicide in order to ease their collective grief but instead decided to attend
a nearby Red Sox baseball game where a spokesman said they would feel just as
bad all the same.
Bob Hunt
|
144.197 | Ode to Larry | RDOVAX::BRAKE | | Tue Aug 18 1992 14:17 | 70 |
| Willie Mays hung on too long and went out looking bad. Ditto Gil
Hodges, Babe Ruth and, to a lesser extent, Hank Aaron.
Sandy Koufax went out, perhaps a year or 2 early and our last
impression of him was as a superb pitcher.
Julius Erving, Mickey Mantle and Ted Williams went out gracefully as
age slowed them somewhat but natural ability made their final
appearance noteworthy.
Jim Rice lost it. Larry WAS losing it, fast. I think we must not lose
sight of the fact that, in his day, Larry was one of the top 3-5
players in the NBA. He elctrified the home crowd and galvinized the
city of Boston behind the Celtics. His Number "33"" adorns Celtics
jerseys and caps not just in Boston, but across the country.
He was a white superstar in a sport dominated by black men. He was not
the token white in a heavyweight championship bout. He earned his
place at the top of the heap although he could neither run, jump or
pass with the likes of Magic or Dr. J.
Unfortunately, he will also be at the center of discussions about the
racism that exists in Boston and was correctly pointed to by Bill
Russell as devastating to black athletes. And the question of whether
Larry Bird would be the icon he is in Boston if he was not white will
continue to be debated.
But, when one removes one's self from the local chatterboxes of the
Globe, Herald, WBZ, Clark Booth, etal, Larry Bird is recognized as one
of the greats by national publications to inner city kids. His guts and
devotion to hard work should serve as a model for aspiring players in
any sport everywhere.
The cynical view of Bird will pervade more in Boston than anywhere
else. I find this ironic because it was on the boards of the venerabel
Boston Garden that Larry Bird electrified sellout crowds with his
diving, hustling and shooting. His desire to win, his intolerance of
imperfection, his presence - will be missed by not just the Celtics and
their fans, but by fans of the game around the world.
One need only have witnessed Bird's reception in Barcelona by rivals
and fans to get a feeling for the reverence he commands. He stands atop
a pedestal together with Magic Johnson as the men who caused thousands
to aspire to excel in basketball.
Here is a man who lacks charisma and who speaks what's on his mind. He
cannot solve the crisis in Yugoslavia and he doesn't know much about
the economy. But Larry knows basketball. He loves it. He breathes it.
By example on the court, he demonstrates it. That's all he does...pur
and simple.
I don't consider myself a member of the mythical "Jihad". I consider
myself quite lucky that I was able to see Bird perform in person 2
times. I saw him play his 46 minutes, turn pink, run the other team in
circles and win a couple games.
He looked awkward. He didn't show the grace of an Oscar Robinson or the
strength of an Elgin Baylor. He couldn't dunk with the pinache of
Michael Jordan or pass with the flair of Magic Johnson. But, somehow,
when the game was analyzed, Larry Bird was at the core of reasons why
the Celtics won or lost.
I'll miss Larry Bird. Yet, I am glad to see him go out on the crest of
an Olympic Gold medal and not laying prone on the sidelines of a
basketball court in Salt Lake City wincing with pain.
Good Bye, larry - and thanks for the memories.
Rich
|
144.198 | great note Rich! | JARETH::YANKOWSKAS | Up, down, up in the sky... | Tue Aug 18 1992 14:44 | 1 |
|
|
144.199 | Denny, here's your answer! :^) | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Megabucks Winner Wannabe | Tue Aug 18 1992 14:56 | 15 |
| Denny,
Ya asked what's next?????
Well, I'll tell ya. Although not cronologically accurate Wang
Laboratories filed for protection under US Bankruptcy laws, Chapter
11, this morning at 9:30 but since it wasn't posted here before Larry,
I quess this is whot's next!
hth,
I remain,
glad I don't have any of the $0.73 Wang stock!
Kev
|
144.200 | | SCHOOL::RIEU | Read his lips...Know new taxes | Tue Aug 18 1992 15:01 | 4 |
| I heard a bit on the news lasted night: "If you had $1 million worth
of Wang stock in 1985, yesterday it was worth...
$15,000!"
Denny
|
144.201 | | MCIS2::DHAMEL | Tired, poor, and wretched | Tue Aug 18 1992 15:13 | 7 |
|
How can it get worse you say? Wayne Newton's filed bankruptcy too!
Tsk, tsk.....all my heroes.....
Dickstah
|
144.202 | | CAMONE::WAY | Crucial Taunt | Tue Aug 18 1992 15:21 | 15 |
| I too have had the pleasure of seeing Larry Bird play, albeit not on
the parquet floor of the Gahden.
Larry was a working man's type of basketball player. Hard work, solid play,
no glitz, just quality production -- the kind of stuff America was built
on.
I'll never forget Larry's Converse Weapons commercial with Magic, nor
his line "You know what ol' Larry likes" to Mike Childs....
Thanks Larry for some of the most exciting sports memories of my life...
'Saw
|
144.203 | only other guy I can think of who wanted it as much | CNTROL::CHILDS | If Bush was a horse, you'd shoot em' | Tue Aug 18 1992 15:42 | 20 |
|
Not only did I have the pleasure of watching Larry, belong to Jihad etc, I
did have the priviledge of meeting Larry in person at the Picadilly Pub in
Westboro at a benefit for Jim Nance. While Larry was talking to a few of the
other folks in my crowd I noticed his beer was a little bit light so I refilled
it for him and that's where Saw got the quote "you know what ole Larry likes"...
He was fairly humble despite all the trash talk I hear he delievers. I told
him that I though that his 1983 game against the Lakers in LA where he scored
36 pulled down 21 rebounds and handed out 5 assists was one of the most
dominate one man performances I had ever witnessed and he blushed. Given that
most of the folks there at the Pic that night were there to be seen (much like
the garden crowd) I think Larry real enjoyed us party animals. He must have
spent 30 minutes with our crowd and downed 5 mugs in that time. Heck he
probably would have stayed with us all night if the bartender hadn't dragged
him around the bar to pour a pitcher of beer.
He will always be 1A to Russell 1 in my book.....
mike
|
144.204 | | SA1794::GUSICJ | Referees whistle while they work.. | Tue Aug 18 1992 17:07 | 27 |
|
From where I sit, it appears that the NBA might be in a little
trouble.
First Magic, and now Larry. The 'era' has officially ended and
with it goes a lot of interest in the NBA IMO.
What made the 'era' special was the fact that both were considered
the best at that time and both played the rival game to the hilt. For
the most part, much of the success in the NBA over the last 12 years
is due to these two men. Now without them, the rivalry dies, and so
does interest. Who is there to pick up the slack? I don't see any
big rivals left in the NBA. Jordan is there but he needs a
counterpart.
After the dreamy-team, I can't see how these guys could really play
(hard) against each other. From all reports, they all became such good
friends that they will probably find it difficult to play hard against
each other.
As for Larry, he gave me plenty to enjoy over the years. I hope
he can cope away from the game which I feel Magic is having a difficult
time doing.
bill..g.
|
144.205 | | CAMONE::WAY | Crucial Taunt | Tue Aug 18 1992 17:10 | 12 |
| > After the dreamy-team, I can't see how these guys could really play
> (hard) against each other. From all reports, they all became such good
> friends that they will probably find it difficult to play hard against
> each other.
I heard that Larry and DrJ were fairly friendly, yet they had some
very heated moments on the court.
Perhaps they got friendly later in J's career, I don't know...
'Saw
|
144.206 | They will still play hard | SALES::THILL | | Wed Aug 19 1992 11:45 | 12 |
| I don't think because guys are friendly off the court or have been
teammates in another situation would prohibit anyone from playing hard
against each other. Players get traded all the time and play against
guys who were close friends as teammates.
I don't know if Barkley would make a good counterpart/rival for His
Airness, but he's certainly the type of high-profile player that could
pull it off. Problem is they would only play twice a year with Charles
in Phoenix now. Who else might be able to do this? Isaiah's act is
getting old, and the bad boy Pistons seem on the downside....
Tom
|
144.207 | More ... | SHALOT::HUNT | Sing Do Wah Diddy | Wed Aug 19 1992 12:59 | 17 |
| � I don't know if Barkley would make a good counterpart/rival for His
� Airness, but he's certainly the type of high-profile player that could
� pull it off. Problem is they would only play twice a year with Charles
� in Phoenix now.
The East-West split didn't stop Bird and Magic. Barkley and Jordan could
indeed square off in a battle of superstars. A couple of Chicago-Phoenix
matchups in the NBA Finals and it would be so.
� Who else might be able to do this?
Three possible candidates ... Shaquille O'Neal, David Robinson, and Larry
Johnson. They all have marquee value and have the potential to raise
their teams to better levels. But it won't come without effort. There
is no automatic passing of the star torch in the NBA.
Bob Hunt
|
144.208 | They don't miss a beat, do they ??? | SHALOT::HUNT | Sing Do Wah Diddy | Wed Aug 19 1992 13:35 | 27 |
| BOSTON (UPI) -- In a stunning turnaround, the former members of the now
disbanded organization known as the Larry Bird Jihad announced today that
they have formed two new fan support groups each dedicated to the worship
of individual Celtic basketball players.
The two new groups will be known as the Fox Brickade and HezBarry. The
first group, composed mostly of masons and throat surgeons, proclaimed its
new allegiance to Rick Fox, the Celtics' 2nd-year forward with a severe
propensity for errant shotmaking. A spokesman would neither confirm nor
deny the rumor that the organization's first meeting ended in a near-riot
when dissident members started a "Kansas, Kansas" chant referring to Fox's
abysmal performance in the 1991 NCAA Final Four.
HezBarry is dedicated to the exploits of the Celtics' 1992 first round
draft pick, Jon Barry. Barry, son of NBA great Rick Barry, was a
surprise choice for the Celtics and is still not signed to a contract. A
spokesman for the new group expressed optimism that he would soon sign a
lucrative deal with the Beantown team although he also admitted that the
group has no idea what value Barry brings to the team aside from his
bloodlines.
Both groups were said to be considering fund-raising events. A Fox
Brickade spokesman said they might hold a three-point shooting contest
with a curious twist ... low score winning ... meanwhile HezBarry was said
to be planning an underhanded foul-shooting event.
Bob Hunt
|
144.209 | A proud Jihad member | CTHQ::LEARY | Chainsaw: Possible ND convert? | Wed Aug 19 1992 13:42 | 46 |
| While I've never seen Larry up close and personal, never mind meet
him, I was fortunate enough to witness several games in the Garden
especially in the early 80's when I had connections to ah, pad the
attendance figures. Two games I will always remember and I'll start
with my second favorite:
1. Spring, 1984, Celts and Knicks at the Garden in the 7th and deciding
game of their semifinal series. Both teams winning at home and the
opposite superstars, Bird and Bernard King, excelling in his team's
wins. In this game 7, Bird came out like a house-a-fire, knocking
the Knicks into oblivion by the first half. He was dominant in all
phases; rebounding, passing and scoring. He was possessed!
Me and my buds had standing room "positions", perfectly sangwiched
between the beer stand and the men's room. Heaven! Twas a dude
sitting a coupla rows in front of us with a shirt that read, " Hubie
Sit Down!". Every time Brown got up to complain, this guy would
stand up and shout, "Hubie Sit Down!" Musta been inspired by the
brews as well as Larry's play.
2. My all-time favorite. Warm spring Sunday afternoon at the Garden,
Game 7 of the 1981 Eastern Conference finals between the Sixers and
the Celtics. The Celts had just wrested games 5 and 6 from the
dreaded Philthy's to climb back from a 3-1 deficit to a 3-3 tie.
Would this be a repeat of 1968? The place was abuzz with nervous
anticipation before the game and the roar that greeted the Celts
when they came on the court was deafening and gave ya goosebumps.
I was lucky enougfh to have seats right next to the Celtic bench.
Man was everyone hopping! And the game was as great as its billing.
The ebb and flow of the game was momentous. Everyone was on edge.
And I'll forever remember this moment as to this day I can replay
it in slow-motion; twenty seconds or so left, the Celts rebound
a missed Sixer shot with the score tied 89 all. The Celts bring
the ball downcourt away from our end of the building. Everyone is
on his feet. Larry dribbles down the left sideline and slows
down to ready his shot. At that moment all you could hear was the
collective 15,000 intake of breath as he went up for the shot.
Man when that ball banked off the backboard and through the net,
there was pandemonium in the fablec old wreck. I'll tell ya,
the earth was shakin' my mind was quakin'. And when the final
buzzer sounded, that place rocked even more. And outside the
Garden and subsequentially Faneuil Hall was even more crazy!
Thanks, Larry.
|
144.210 | | SCHOOL::RIEU | Read his lips...Know new taxes | Wed Aug 19 1992 13:50 | 7 |
| I was at that 7th 6ers game too Mike. Also, the final regular season
game that same spring. It was for the division title and home court vs
the 6ers. Just as exciting!
We used to buy obstructed view and stand in the 2nd
balcony. I was also at the 5th ("See you Sunday"!) game that series.
By far the best and most exciting spring in years.
Denny
|
144.213 | Whoops there goes anudder coupla mill, Wade | CTHQ::LEARY | Chainsaw: Possible ND convert? | Wed Aug 19 1992 14:12 | 12 |
| Draw your own inferences from this, but it sure seems consistent,
Wade Boggs on Larry Bird, " He overcame a lot of obstacles. People
said he couldn't jump, couldn't shoot. From the stuff I read and
heard, he was never supposed to play a day in the NBA. They said a
lot of that stuff about me- I'd never play a day in the big leagues."
Well this "people" says you could have omitted the last sentence,
chicken-breath.
MikeL
|
144.211 | | MSBOS::BRYDIE | The last gang in town | Wed Aug 19 1992 14:15 | 16 |
|
I'm just glad that I was around during what will surely be looked
upon as the Golden Age Of Basketball. For Celtics fans (and yes,
Laker fans too) the '80's had more chills and thrills than a one
night stand with Tina Turner and Larry was a BIG part of the reason
why. I've read in here more than once that sports is a microcosm or
a mirror of life and I never agreed with that sentiment. The roller
coaster without brakes excitement of key games, the highs and lows
of big wins and big losses are things most of us will never experience
in our all too mundane lives. So, we live vicariously through athletes
and that's why we held Larry so dear. Most uf us will never have a 96"
vertical leap or be able to outrun a two legged dog but we can appr-
eciate that it takes hard work and discipline to achieve a desired goal
and that's what Larry was all about. Thanks for the mammaries.
|
144.214 | | CAMONE::WAY | Crucial Taunt | Wed Aug 19 1992 14:16 | 9 |
| Wade Boggs couldn't carry Larry Bird's jock.
The thing I liked about Larry was his workmanship. He worked hard at
what he did, shooting, shooting, shooting. Like any other guy, he'd
take two weeks off, and off-season or not, he'd be shooting hoops....
'Saw
|
144.212 | | SA1794::GUSICJ | Referees whistle while they work.. | Wed Aug 19 1992 14:17 | 29 |
|
I think you guys missed my point a little about rivals. What we
saw between Bird and Magic is one of all-time proportions.
Think about it. Wilt-Russell, McEnroe-Borg, etc. As some papers
have said, there are pleny of great players, but few if any great
rivalries. Boston/LA was unique simply becaue of Bird/Magic and that's
why a lot of 'casual' NBA fans will turn off the tube when faced with
Chicago/Portland.
The same can be said for teams. I'm not a hockey expert, but
has the Boston/Montreal rivalry been the same since Orr left? I
can only relate to the last 20 years, but in football,
Pittsburgh/Oakland was a great one along with Pittsburgh/Dallas among
a bunch of others. But the key in all these were the rivalries between
the stars. Bradshaw/Stabler, Bradshaw/Staubach, Namath/Lamonica and
on and on.
What Bird and Magic had was special and something that doesn't
come around that often. They were able to elevate their games when
playing against each other and yet keep it from getting personal. Pure
competition and that is something I will miss. And I don't see
anything in the near future in the NBA that would lead me to believe
that another rivalry equal in magnitude to Bird/Magic is near.
bill..g.
|
144.215 | The man is jerk | MSBOS::BRYDIE | The last gang in town | Wed Aug 19 1992 14:19 | 6 |
|
re .1788
You could ask Wade about the situation is Republican Convention and
somehow he'd manage to work what a great guy he is into the convers-
ation.
|
144.216 | | SA1794::GUSICJ | Referees whistle while they work.. | Wed Aug 19 1992 14:24 | 24 |
|
re: Bird
The absolute best story about Bird's work ethic to me is the one
involving Mike O'korn who played for the Nets.
Anyone remember that on one visit to the Garden, O'korn decided
to get to the 'gym' before Larry and shoot around seeing that Larry
had already established a legend about him arriving before anyone else
and shooting around for an hour or two.
True to form, O'korn shows up a couple of hours before tip-off and
walks into an empty Garden except for one guy sweeping the floor.
O'Korn walks up to the guy and says something to the effect.."How do
you like that, I made it to the gym before Bird." The sweeper turned
and said, "what do ya mean? Bird's already been here and finished
his warmup." O'Korn was said to just turn and shake his head in
unbelief.
I love that story..
bill..g.
|
144.217 | | FSOA::JHENDRY | John Hendry, DTN 297-2623 | Wed Aug 19 1992 14:57 | 5 |
| Boston - Montreal rivalry has been every bit as intense as it was since
Orr has been gone. Perhaps it's even more intense since the Bruins
have beaten the Habs 3 or 4 of the last 5 playoff series they've had.
John
|
144.218 | | RDOVAX::BRAKE | | Wed Aug 19 1992 15:08 | 38 |
| Bill G hit the nail on the head concerning the impact of the Bird/Magic
rivalry nearly transcending the game itself. TV tried to do the same
this year by focusing on Clyde and Michael. It was a failure. They have
tried to do it with Thomas and Dumars - no dice.
The fact that Magic and Bird came into the league together and had such
an awesome impact - immediately, has not been matched by any pair of
players since. Remember Magic playing center in the finals against the
Sixers? Remember how Bird redefined the role of the forward position
(Gee, a tall guy that can dribble and pass - what a novelty!).
When Bird did something, it was compared to Magic. When Magic did
something, it was compared to Bird. They made the triple double a
household word to NBA fans.
Finally, one cannot forget the fact that these two guys faced off
against each other in the NCAA finals. They lived up to the hype. They
were projected as college superstars and they came through.
Yet, Bird and Indiana State must be examined closer. The Sycamores are
by no means a basketball powerhouse. If you could imagine Reggie Lewis
taking his Northeastern team to the NCAA finals - that might help you
understand the enormity of what Bird did. ISU had Bird and that
was it!
The media will try to create another rivalry. As will the NBA. But
Stern knows that the NBA is in trouble now. The Dream Team helped it's
image a bit but one player (Jordan) can't pull the entire load.
Robinson is a nice guy. So is Malone. League savers? NOT.
Barkley is a heck of a player. I'll take him on my team. Yet he lacks
the charisma of a Johnson or the small town image of a Bird. Kids wanna
be like Magic and they wanna be like Bird. Can't say I sense the same
ardor about Barkley, Mullin or Pippen.
Rich
|
144.219 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | If Bush was a horse, you'd shoot em' | Wed Aug 19 1992 15:48 | 12 |
|
Rich, I think alot of kids are going to want to growup to me like Grandmama
Johnson.....
Haven't forgotten you Bob, one of these days I'll get it to you....
The next great rivalry could be Jordan/Ewing. Both dominate their teams
and opponents and have already squared up against one another. Long range
and potential to be a great one is Shaq/Alonzo. Of course Shaq will have to
work hard to improve his foul shooting plus find a jumpshot....
mike
|
144.220 | | CAMONE::WAY | Crucial Taunt | Wed Aug 19 1992 16:30 | 26 |
| I read an article one time in SPORT magazine that delved into just how
much Magic/Larry "made" the NBA into what it is.
Their rivalry from college, and into the pros is unparalleled in other sports.
Personally, I don't think a rivalry like that is going to emerge for a
long time. It pulled the NBA out of a slump, and that in itself makes it
special.
Plus, Larry and Magic were solid players, but not fancy players like
Jordan. Nowadays, the fancy players seem like individual stars with
their slam dunks and stuff like that.
Magic, to me, seemed to be the assist king, always setting up the others,
and while Larry was always the clutch guy (I mean, honestly, name one
player other than Larry who you'd want to have the final shot), he was
by nature not a fancy guy.
No, I think you'll see the team rivalries continue, but like the great
Air Aces of WWI, with their mutual respect in battle, an era has passed.....
JMHO,
'Saw
|
144.221 | | SCHOOL::RIEU | Read his lips...Know new taxes | Wed Aug 19 1992 17:03 | 4 |
| I remember somebody saying back in the early '80s that if Indiana
State didn't have Larry they never would have been able to get past a
team as powerful as even a Merrimack College!
Denny
|
144.222 | | SALEM::TIMMONS | Where's Waldo? | Thu Aug 20 1992 07:59 | 12 |
| A comment heard on the radio this AM:
"Local therapists and counselors have reported a marked increase in
people requesting their services.
They blame this increase on the local economy, the present high level
of unemployment, the wet and damp weather, the playing of the Red Sox
and the retirement of Larry." :*)
lEe
|
144.223 | my fondest memories of Bird | FRETZ::HEISER | cross-dressing Democrats | Thu Aug 20 1992 16:34 | 26 |
| The locals point to the Celtic's visit in 1983 as one of Bird's most
memorable moments. My wife and I were at that game and managed to get
the Legend's autograph afterwards.
Boston was at the end of their west coast swing when they came into
town. A pumped Suns team ran out to a 20 point lead by halftime. In
the second half, the Celts whittled away at the lead led by Bird and
Tiny. By the time the 4:00 mark of the 4th came around, the score was
tied. The teams fought back and forth until the closing seconds.
Larry Nance tipped in a shot with 1 second on the clock to give Phoenix a
102-100 lead. Boston called a timeout and the crowd was going wild.
The Gorilla was dancin in the aisles. The locals thought they had
slayed the mighty Goliath.
Celts came out with Cornbread inbounding the ball. Bird looked to the
Phoenix bench and mouthed the words "It's over." Alvin Scott took
Larry's fake, Cornbread got him the ball, and Bird launched a
3-pointer, never stopping to watch the ball. He immediately started
walking to the locker room. As the ball swished through, you could
almost hear a pin drop, except for the few jubilant Boston faithful.
Bird seemed to hit at least 40 everytime he came into town. Thanks to
Nazz, I had the honor of seeing Bird in the Celtic's home shrine where
he drilled Seattle for 40 points.
Mike
|
144.224 | | ACESMK::FRANCUS | Mets in '92 | Fri Aug 21 1992 02:08 | 18 |
| To be perfectly honest I won't shed any tears about Bird retiring. Even
the last few years when he was in a game he could somehow find a way to
beat you. So as a Knicks fan I don't mourn his leaving.
On the other hand as a basketball fan it won't be quite the same when
the clock is down 1 tick, the Celtics are down by 2, and the ball gets
inbound to Bird ... Truly one of the greatest to ever play the game in
every sense of the word. Could score 40 when needed, make the passes, or
get the rebounds. But more importantly raise the level of those he
played with.
I asked Saw to post a request for Wednesday's Globe (got a copy)
because whatever the articles said Bird deserved it; this is unusual
for the Boston media and it was a chance to see biased reporting that
was actually deserved. Nice job by the Glob.e
The Crazy Met
|
144.225 | | CUPMK::DEVLIN | Je voudrais boire quelque chose. | Fri Aug 21 1992 09:51 | 30 |
|
L is for Legend. You certainly were.
A is for arrogance, your fans had it.
R is for rebounding, a workingman's feat
R is for retiring, you are doing it with grace
Y is for yokels - the garden was full of em
B is for beautiful, your game was that
I is for I, a word you didn't know
R is for retching, your fans made me do that
D is for desire, you were chock full of it.
Larry, its too bad that many of your fans saw the need to put you on a
pedestal that you didn't want, and didn't feel comfortable on. Its too
bad they just couldn't appreciate you as a great ballplayer and a regular guy.
Thanks for never accepting the God title, too bad that dude in Chicago
doesn't have an ounce of what you have.
Larry, thanks for some fantastic hoops. You'd make the all-JD team every
year. After early bumblings, you turned into a real professional, and left
the whiners and wanna-bes to do the stupid things. YOu didn't get caught
up in the star thing - and that's what really made you great.
I'll tip a brew to ya. You and Magic made the NBA rekindle its appeal. I'm
glad you are getting out now. You never were Madison avenue. Thanks for that.
Ta-ta Larry.
JD
|
144.226 | | MSBOS::BRYDIE | The last gang in town | Fri Aug 21 1992 10:43 | 11 |
|
A New Yorker calling Boston fans "arrogant" ? What's next Dan Quayle
calling Marilyn Vos Savant a bimbo ? Don King calling the Rev Billy
Graham a crook ? If there was a tv show "America's Most Arrogant", New
Yorkers would occupy nine of the top ten slots. Donald Trump, Leona
Helmsley, Ed Koch, George Steinbrenner... when it comes to arrogance New
York is the standard by which the rest of the planet is measured.
This is the Larry Bird Note. You want to take swipes at Bostonians and
Michael Jordan please do it elsewhere.
|
144.227 | | CUPMK::DEVLIN | Je voudrais boire quelque chose. | Fri Aug 21 1992 10:47 | 11 |
| Tommy -
I praised Larry Bird. That's what this note is all about, right?
And in all my travels, I've never met more arrogant fans than Celtics fans.
Never. Ever.
But why sully up Larry's note. He was great. I'll miss him. But I won't miss
his fans' gushing over him.
JD
|
144.228 | Now I'm REALLY confused! | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Megabucks Winner Wannabe | Fri Aug 21 1992 10:47 | 13 |
| JD,
Nice tribute. You been hanging around the Chainsaw for inspiration
alot or did somebody invade your account?
Sheesh! Just when I was beginning to think you and MAC were one and
the same.......
;^)
Kev
|
144.229 | | MCIS2::DHAMEL | Flower child gone to seed | Fri Aug 21 1992 11:03 | 9 |
|
Awright, awright, I guess I'll just have to admit it. I thought it
wasn't me, but I guess I'm just like the rest of 'em. I'm a Celtics
fan and a Red Sox fan. I'm arrogant. I'm a yokel. I think I know it
all. I just sip. Thanks for helping me face the reality so maybe I
can seek help and change my ways.
Dickstah
|
144.230 | No Bird, No Bugs | SHALOT::HUNT | Sing Do Wah Diddy | Fri Aug 21 1992 11:04 | 5 |
| The best tribute I can make to Larry Bird is to just say "Thank you!".
Without Bird and Magic lifting the NBA to undreamed of heights, the
Charlotte Hornets do not even exist.
Bob Hunt
|
144.231 | | MCIS2::DHAMEL | Flower child gone to seed | Fri Aug 21 1992 11:06 | 4 |
|
Oh, I forgot to include that I'm a mindless sheep. I need help in that
department, too.
|
144.232 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | If Bush was a horse, you'd shoot em' | Fri Aug 21 1992 11:08 | 5 |
|
Bob, you should also thank Larry for the mass of material he provided for
your book "The Celtician Verses"....
;^)
|
144.233 | Wrong subject | SHALOT::HUNT | Sing Do Wah Diddy | Fri Aug 21 1992 11:12 | 4 |
| Larry Bird was *NOT* the inspiration for "The Celtanic Verses". The
Jihad was.
Bob Hunt
|
144.234 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | If Bush was a horse, you'd shoot em' | Fri Aug 21 1992 11:16 | 2 |
|
but there's be no Jihad without him.....
|
144.235 | YESSSSSSSS! | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Megabucks Winner Wannabe | Fri Aug 21 1992 11:18 | 9 |
| AWRRIGHT!!!!
Finally we've elevated ::Sports to that good ol' timeless discussion
of the Chicken and Eggs - Who came first!!!!!
I remain,
getting hungry now!
Kev
|
144.236 | Am I hearing correctly? | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 21 1992 11:59 | 10 |
|
Waitaminute. All of a sudden the perpetrators of the anti-Jihad
intifadah are engaging in the same activity that they condemned Jihad
members for, namely, praising Larry Bird to the extreme (can you
imagine the outrage if a *Celtics* fan had made such a brash statement
as "no Bird, no Charlotte Hornets"?). I think the intifadah needs to
get a real hard-liner like DrM back in here, and quick...
glenn
|
144.237 | My name is Dick Hamel and I'm a yokel. | SHARE::DERRY | Bush: vegetable or noxious weed? | Fri Aug 21 1992 12:01 | 1 |
|
|
144.238 | | MSBOS::BRYDIE | The last gang in town | Fri Aug 21 1992 12:07 | 12 |
|
Well JD, it's a free country and you can say whatever you
want [no shit] but in that note where you "praised" Larry
I counted no less than five swipes at Bostonians. Why ? You
may personally feel that Boston fans are the most arrogant
fans going but maybe that's expected of a New Yorker because
Bostonians feel that way about New York fans. If there were ever
any fans in all of sportsdom who were more arrogant than Yankees
fans when they were on top (way back when) or Giants fans after
they had won just one Super Bowl, I haven't seen 'em. I guess it's
all in the eye of the beholder.
|
144.239 | EXTRA, EXTRA: Dickstah on the Road to Recovery | ACESMK::FRANCUS | Mets in '92 | Fri Aug 21 1992 12:21 | 6 |
| Dickstah, that is a very good step. Remember that the toughest step
towards recovery is admitting the problem.
The Crazy Met
|
144.240 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | TabooIX-StarringWoodyAllen | Fri Aug 21 1992 12:59 | 5 |
| Don't worry fellas. JD's driving to the Swamplands with me
this weekend. By next Monday he'll be apologizing all over the
place. 8^)
/Don
|
144.241 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Aug 21 1992 13:05 | 4 |
| � Sheesh! Just when I was beginning to think you and MAC were one and
� the same.......
Huh?
|
144.242 | | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Megabucks Winner Wannabe | Fri Aug 21 1992 13:42 | 3 |
|
~/~
|
144.243 | | CUPMK::DEVLIN | Je voudrais boire quelque chose. | Fri Aug 21 1992 14:23 | 6 |
| Tommy -
I'll agree with ya on one thing. Yankee fans are extremely arrogant. In fact,
it is to Yankee fans that I mostly compare Celtics fans with.
JD
|
144.244 | | ROYALT::ASHE | I shot da sheriff, didn't get da boycott... | Fri Aug 21 1992 14:47 | 2 |
| Doc sez Bird couldn't carry Julius' jock...
|
144.245 | Big difference | SHALOT::HUNT | Sing Do Wah Diddy | Fri Aug 21 1992 14:53 | 20 |
| � All of a sudden the perpetrators of the anti-Jihad intifadah are
� engaging in the same activity that they condemned Jihad members for,
� namely, praising Larry Bird to the extreme (can you imagine the outrage if
� a *Celtics* fan had made such a brash statement as "no Bird, no Charlotte
� Hornets"?).
Not. C'mon, Glenn, get wif da program. I was the founding father of the
pre-Doc anti-Celtic movement in this forum way back in 1986 when Larry
Bird could do absolutely no wrong. The stated goal then and now was
never to bash Bird himself but instead to bash his blinded flock of
faithful terror-sheep. Hence, the name Larry Bird Jihad.
Bird, together with Magic Johnson, were responsible for the explosive
growth the NBA enjoyed in the Eighties and they, in turn, provided the
momentum for the birth of four new expansion teams. That much is
indisputable fact.
What the Jihad members passed off as fact was mostly air.
Bob Hunt
|
144.246 | | MSBOS::BRYDIE | The last gang in town | Fri Aug 21 1992 15:11 | 7 |
|
Sorry, I don't see the difference. Folks are bashing Celtics/Larry
fans for putting him on a pedestal and yet those same folks admit he
was one of the all-time greats and along with Magic helped save the
league. If Larry and the 'Tics played for anyone of those folks home
teams they wouldn't have behaved any differently than Bostonians did.
|
144.247 | | ACESMK::FRANCUS | Mets in '92 | Fri Aug 21 1992 15:18 | 13 |
| > Sorry, I don't see the difference. Folks are bashing Celtics/Larry
> fans for putting him on a pedestal and yet those same folks admit he
> was one of the all-time greats and along with Magic helped save the
> league. If Larry and the 'Tics played for anyone of those folks home
> teams they wouldn't have behaved any differently than Bostonians did.
Sorry buddy, but Bird was deified in Boston in a way that no sports
figure I can think of was in their home town. Great player,
unquestionably; Boston fans gave new definition to hero worship and
deification, you betcha.
The Crazy Met
|
144.248 | Give credit where it's due | SALES::THILL | | Fri Aug 21 1992 15:37 | 27 |
| This day and age with players movig around the way they do, its very
rare to see a player who had as much impact on the GAME as Bird, who
played his entire career with one team. Also the countless times Bird
won games inthe last seconds is legendary. It's one thing to talk
trash, but to be able to back it up the way Bird did is quite another.
Bird was unique in this respect.
One of my favorite Bird stories was from a mid-80s playoff series in
Detroit (when the Pistons were a year or 2 away) or Cleveland, and the
Celtics just lost the 4th game, but now had a 3-1 lead. Game 5 was in
Boston and the 6th game was to be played that Sunday. Some guy yelled
"Hey Larry, we'll see you Sunday!" Bird replied, "You got a better
chance of seeing God!"
When Dr. J retired, fans made such a big deal in every city. Certainly
he deserved to be recognized as the great player he was, but it got a
little out of hand at times. The Hawks, of all teams, retired the uglee
lime-green jersey that Erving wore in training camp for the Hawks before
they shrewdly traded him to the ABA NY Nets for a minor league hockey
player. Can you seriously BLAM ! Celtics fans for wanting to acknowledge
one of the greatest players ever at his retirement?
Bird will fit in nicely in Celtics lore with his 33 up on the rafters
with all the others. He will also be a 1st ballot HoFer. Give credit
where it's due.
Tom
|
144.249 | | ACESMK::FRANCUS | Mets in '92 | Fri Aug 21 1992 15:39 | 11 |
| Thanks to whomever sent the section from Wednesday's Globe on Bird's
retirement.
re:.248
Credit is being given where it is due - to Bird.
Disagreement os over the Boston fans - nothing new there.
The Crazy Met
|
144.250 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Aug 21 1992 15:43 | 4 |
| � This day and age with players movig around the way they do,
With the salary cap restrictions and very limited free agency, it is
rare for a basketball superstar to change teams.
|
144.251 | | MSBOS::BRYDIE | The last gang in town | Fri Aug 21 1992 15:45 | 19 |
|
>> Sorry buddy, but Bird was deified in Boston in a way that no sports
>> figure I can think of was in their home town. Great player,
>> unquestionably; Boston fans gave new definition to hero worship and
>> deification, you betcha.
Namath didn't own New York when he played there ? Michael Jordan
isn't 'deified' in Chicago ? Elway bends over for the soap every
time he gets to the Super Bowl yet until recently he was Denver's
favorite son may still be for all I know. I think the real problem
here is that we all work for a company based in the Boston area and
the preponderance of 'Tics fans in here just grates on some folks. I
don't deify any athlete but I will acknowledge that Larry was a great
one and he brought excitement back to the Garden just as Michael is
doing in Chicago and Montana did in San Fran.
BTW - the name is Tommy not "buddy".
|
144.252 | | CTHQ2::LEARY | Chainsaw: Possible ND convert? | Fri Aug 21 1992 15:53 | 9 |
| Yo Craze,
That was a beaut! Dontchya remember you NooYawkas fawnin' all
over the so-called Knick dynasty fellas? Swoonin' all over Willis
and Clyde.
To quote Dapper, " It's enough to make ya sick!"
MikeL
|
144.253 | | ACESMK::FRANCUS | Mets in '92 | Fri Aug 21 1992 15:56 | 14 |
| Maybe Elway in Denver, the others you mention? nope not the way Bird was
treated in Boston.
You do have a point about the preponderance of Boston fans does grate
on the nerves, that does not mean that the observations people make on
the lunacy of some of the things that go on in the Boston sports -
(that include teams, media, fans) world is incorrect.
re: name thing
Geez and I though SPORTS was all about camraderie :-)
The Crazy Met
|
144.254 | Hey TommyBuddy, I agree with you 100%! | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | TabooIX-StarringWoodyAllen | Fri Aug 21 1992 15:56 | 1 |
|
|
144.255 | | SALEM::TIMMONS | Where's Waldo? | Fri Aug 21 1992 15:57 | 23 |
| Well, I am going to miss seeing Bird out on the parquet. While his
performance in the past few years wasn't what he wanted, I think most
Celtic fans were hoping that somehow his ailments would deminish to
where he could at least reach his "normal" level of effort. That's
what I always enjoyed, his effort.
To see a player of his stature diving for loose balls, sliding into
chairs, flying over tables, is something that one usually sees from a
rookie who is trying desperately to impress the coaching staff. Rarely
will a player of his ability take the chance of receiving an injury for
just a loose ball.
This is the type of basketball that I witnessed while watching Kerrie's
playing years at Haverhill High. It's the type that was taught by
Kevin Woefel, and it was also the type that many of the kids wanted to
play. Why? Because they say Larry do it. If he wasn't afraid to
dive, they why should I be?
I'm thankful that I got to see Larry Bird, Bobby Orr, Ted Williams, Yaz
and John Hannah play. There'll be more great players, but they will
have to be of their own style, 'cause none of these guys can be cloned.
Lee
|
144.256 | | ACESMK::FRANCUS | Mets in '92 | Fri Aug 21 1992 16:00 | 9 |
| re: .252
From what I recall the Willis and Clyde thing never approached the Bird
craze in Boston. In all fairness though I did follow the Knicks in the
early 1970's I was a bit on the young side so any Willis and Clyde
craziness - whatever it was - would have been a bit before my time.
The Crazy Met
|
144.257 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Fri Aug 21 1992 16:08 | 25 |
|
The question remains that even if Bird was "worshipped" (in the sports
context) for the qualities that even non-Celtics fans are now so
willing to extol, what is wrong with that? What is the harm in even
going so far as to believe, as a devoted fan of Bird (which I
personally am not), that he was the greatest basketball player of all
time, if even detached and more objective observers can't completely
discount that possibility?
Frankly, I think this kind of respect for greatness in an athletic
figure is a whole lot more proper and commendable than the much more
fashionable cynicism that is directed at great contemporary athletes
like Michael Jordan, or Roger Clemens, or any number of others. Given
the choice between the slightly overexuberant appreciation of a great
athlete, and the even *more* emotional and subjective put-downs that
are prevalent amongst today's sports fans, I'll gladly take the hero
worship. It's more appropriate and a lot closer to reality than the
knee-jerk slurs and detractions.
In any case, is Bird unique as the most worshipped American athlete
amongst his fans and in his town? I don't think so. I'd make a case
for Mickey Mantle as the indisputable #1...
glenn
|
144.258 | | MCIS2::DHAMEL | Flower child gone to seed | Fri Aug 21 1992 16:19 | 6 |
|
How could you forget about Babe Ruth, lEe? Tell us about when you saw
The Babe play for the Sox.
Dickstah
|
144.259 | 8^) | CTHQ2::LEARY | Chainsaw: Possible ND convert? | Fri Aug 21 1992 17:09 | 10 |
| re. .256
TCM,
Maybe the Clyde and Willis craziness never approached the Bird
craziness because Willis and Clyde never approached Bird.
HTH,
MikeL
|
144.260 | Phoenix remembers Larry | FRETZ::HEISER | cross-dressing Democrats | Mon Aug 24 1992 15:46 | 38 |
| "I don't know how many great games Larry had at the Coliseum, but it
was too many. Every time he was here, it seemed like he had a great
game. It seemed like he beat us every time with the final shot."...
I had the great privilege of watching the Dream Team play its last
couple games in the Olympics. I was at some of the informal functions
that were going on, and there were conversations and speculation he may
not be coming back (this season). So, in watching him play those last
few games, especially the last game, when he went in for the last time
in the second half (against Croatia in the gold-medal game), I
instinctively felt this is the last time I'm going to see Larry Bird
play. I was a little emotional at the time. I'll cherish the thought
that I happened to be there." - Jerry Colangelo, Suns President
"I'll never forget the shot. Coach MacLeod told me in the huddle to
make the inbound pass go to the middle of the court and away from Larry
Bird. But I went for the fake and Larry go the ball. Not only did my
heart sink, I felt like I let everybody down." - Alvin Scott on Larry's
3-point winner here in 1983.
"Larry has been my idol since I can remember watching basketball games.
I've always looked up to him. I'm glad that I had a chance to compete
against him and always felt that we had a good match-up. I wish him
all the best." - Dan Majerle, Suns Forward and NBA's best 6th man
"When I was with the Knicks last year, I remember a game when he didn't
do very much in the first half, then came out and lit it up in the
second half. I remember thinking, 'Oh man, this guy hasn't lost
anything'... And how can a guy who's not supposed to jump very high do
all that rebounding and scoring inside like he did? He was amazing." -
Jerrod Mustaf, Suns Forward
"He had a long career that really is almost unmatched by anybody in the
league. Sooner or later, it always comes to an end at some point or
another. But this is a changing of an era. I have an enduring picture
of him as the guy that wasn't afraid to take the last shot when the
stakes were the highest. Not only wasn't he afraid, he hungered for
it." - Paul Westphal, Suns Head Coach and a decent scoring machine in
his day
|
144.261 | Larry on the covers..... | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Megabucks Winner Wannabee | Wed Sep 30 1992 00:29 | 24 |
|
Yabbut (a phrase in vogue) I gotta comment about (imo) dweebs
Stopped in a stationary store on my way home tonight and mohzied over
to the magazine rack hoping to find somethang on college Basketball.
Nuttin there but there was a few rags.
Peterson's mag had 2 versions on the rack, one yellow and one orage,
each color had a different "hologram" of Mike Jordan glued on but the
thing that got me was Larry on each cover!!!! Title cover had title
banner something like "Ageing Celtics last title chance?" or something
like that.
'scuse me but don't those jerks know about a few recent trades and the
retirement of a certain B-Ball player in a green uniform?????
Talk about "timely journalism"....!
Sheesh!
I remain,
relatively current on current events.
Kev
|
144.262 | | SCHOOL::RIEU | Read his lips...Know new taxes | Wed Sep 30 1992 08:40 | 3 |
| Hey Kev, they usually keep 'Hustler' behind the counter, not on the
rack!
Denny
|
144.263 | | FSBIC::JHENDRY | John Hendry, DTN 297-2623 | Wed Sep 30 1992 09:25 | 15 |
| Those magazines have such a long lead time for production it's not
really timely information. For example, Bob Ryan once remarked he was
asked to do the NBA preview for Sport Magazine in June.
This is what gave rise to the SI jinx, by the way. They used to have
the same production problems as the monthlies and annuals, so they'd
very often write the bulk of an article (for example, a team profile)
way before the issue was to appear. Things would change between the
writing of the article and the appearance of the article.
If you look at the early years of SI, they featured lots of covers of
champion dogs, marching bands and so forth - not the breaking news we
are used to today.
John
|
144.264 | No excuse for old news | SALES::THILL | | Wed Sep 30 1992 10:23 | 18 |
| Yabbut, magazine production has improved a LOT with each new wave of
technology. Sure, in the early days of SI, it took them 2 weeks to
produce the cover, so it often was a guessing game.
From having been a managing editor at a magazine, depending on your
staff and budget, it can take only a month or so (maybe less) to produce
and print a full color 64-page issue. If a BB magazine was new on the
shelf today, certainly the Bird story should have made the deadline, but
I dunno about later moves such as X-man, Pooh Richardson, Chuck Person,
etc.
As for the story "Aging Celts Last Shot at Title?", that story
could have been written even 2 years ago. Does anyone (other than the
greenest of all Jihad members) really think the Celtics have a legit
shot at winning it? Sure, they could win the Atlantic, but any more
than 2 playoff series wins would be an unexpected surprise.
Tom
|
144.265 | | NAC::G_WAUGAMAN | | Wed Sep 30 1992 10:32 | 13 |
|
> This is what gave rise to the SI jinx, by the way. They used to have
> the same production problems as the monthlies and annuals, so they'd
> very often write the bulk of an article (for example, a team profile)
> way before the issue was to appear. Things would change between the
> writing of the article and the appearance of the article.
That still didn't explain all those people dying within the year,
though. *That* was the real birth of the SI jinx, and it's moved on to
less serious downfalls since... ;-)
glenn
|
144.266 | steel no eggscuse! | CSTEAM::FARLEY | Megabucks Winner Wannabee | Wed Sep 30 1992 10:40 | 24 |
| Yabbut if SI has the technology to report Sunday footaball results in
the issue I get on Thursday in my mailbox, as well as other "timely"
events, howcum the generic rags cain't?
Week-in, week-out, SI (as a prime example) probably prints several
hundred thousand copies. I agree that a certain percentage of the
articles, like the up close and personal's, are probably written
weeks/months in advance but many pages are written only a few days
before they go to press.
If I was a managing editor of Peterson's (no small publisher btw) I
never would allow an issue to go to press if it had as many
inaccuracies as I perceive these to be. The major trades have
significantly effected the balance of the league and these issues
should reflect those changes! I mean, did they have a deadline to
meet? Nope. So why (here comes the stupid question) did the
journalists sacrifice accuracy?
BTW, although only the covers are different (orange and ???), the
holigraphic rendition of His Airness is also different. I guess they
want folks to pay 2x for the "Complete Collection"!
Kev
|
144.267 | The guy didn't even offer me the job! :-) | SALES::THILL | | Wed Sep 30 1992 12:19 | 29 |
| >Note 144.266 Leave as a legend, Larry 266 of 266
>CSTEAM::FARLEY "Megabucks Winner Wannabee" 24 lines 30-SEP-1992 09:40
> -< steel no eggscuse! >-
> If I was a managing editor of Peterson's (no small publisher btw) I
> never would allow an issue to go to press if it had as many
> inaccuracies as I perceive these to be. The major trades have
> significantly effected the balance of the league and these issues
> should reflect those changes! I mean, did they have a deadline to
> meet? Nope. So why (here comes the stupid question) did the
> journalists sacrifice accuracy?
>
> Kev
Funny you should say that, Kev. I had a recent converstions with a guy
who is in charge of a monthly magazine, "USA Soccer International" and
expressed the same sentiments. (BTW, I filled out a card for a free
subscription to this mag and I never really cared for anything other than
the photos.) For the issue that came out in late July, the BIG story was
on Yugoslavia being banned form the Euro championships in June. Mind
you, this all happened in early June, and nothing even mentioned the
actual tournament, which Denmark had won almost a month before.
Bottom line is if you are well organized and know what you are doing,
the magazine production process, from writing to design and printing, can
be reduced dramatically. The bottom line is that people won't buy
shoddy products, and even though you can sometimes get away with these
things, it will cot you in the long run.
Tom
|