July 8, 1968—With the dominant player in the
National Basketball Association (NBA) for the last half-dozen years deciding to
pull up stakes from his Eastern team, the competitive balance in the league
shifted decisively in the direction of the Los Angeles Lakers.
But check that dateline again. It’s not 2008, but
1968. LeBron James wasn’t even born then.
No, it’s Wilt Chamberlain I’m
talking about.
Two blockbuster trades occurred in the league in
1968. The one pulled off by the Knicks in December, bringing Dave DeBusschere
over from the Pistons, was one of chemistry, as several players (notably Willis
Reed) assumed different positions and roles.
But the Chamberlain trade, sending him away from the Philadelphia 76ers, was more
akin to the one bringing Kevin Durant to the Golden State Warriors, creating a
supernova of talent on a team already blessed with All-Stars--and foreshadowing an era when the game's greatest talents had more of a say in both their futures and the fortunes of the major teams.
The Lakers hadn’t won the NBA finals since the
1953-54 season, when they had been in Minneapolis rather than the City of
Angels. They had come agonizingly close with five finals appearances since
their move to the coast in 1961, but, even with the likes of All-Stars like
Jerry West and Elgin Baylor, had never made it to the promised land. But the
old order was about to change with the arrival of Wilt the Stilt.
How he hated that nickname! It was as if it referred
only to his athleticism, he claimed, while discounting his court sense. And
while he was at it, when were people going to start crediting him as a team
player?
By rights, that latter recognition should have come
at the end of the 1966-67 season, when—agreeing to focus less on the scoring
that had made his reputation and more on rebounding and defense—Chamberlain led
the Philadelphia 76ers to an NBA championship, with a thrilling victory in the
Eastern Division finals that ended the Boston Celtics’ skein of eight straight
championships.
Chamberlain had enjoyed great rapport with coach Alex Hannum, who, as he had done while
with the San Francisco Warriors, convinced “The Big Dipper” to buy into an
egalitarian style of offense in which he was used as the passing focal point
rather than the principal offensive weapon.
But the next year, when the 76ers lost to the
Celtics in the playoffs, Hannum jumped to the upstart American Basketball
Association (ABA), and Chamberlain’s relationship with Philadelphia’s front
office deteriorated.
Years later, General Manager Jack Ramsey recalled
that Chamberlain had taken an active interest in Hannum’s replacement when, out
of the blue, he tossed his own hat into the ring. The idea of a player-manager
was not uncommon in the 1960s (indeed, the last one in the NBA, Dave Cowens,
filled the role in 1979 for the Celtics), but this request caught Ramsey and owner
Irv Kosloff by surprise.
After he had had a week to consider, Ramsey decided
such a move could work, and was ready to talk about it with Chamberlain. But
now, the big man told the front office that he had changed his mind. Not only
did he not want to be a player-coach, but he did not want to play in
Philadelphia anymore. If the front office could not arrange a trade to a West
Coast team—Seattle, San Diego, Los Angeles—he was ready to jump to the ABA.
Ramsey and Kosloff might have been angry, but they
could hardly have been surprised. In 1965, after his trade to the Warriors, Sports Illustrated’s Frank DeFord had noted that this was the fifth time that
Chamberlain had used a threat to quit as a bargaining chip. In this pre-free
agent era, that—and now, the presence of the ABA—represented the only available
bargaining chips for a player.
But Chamberlain wasn’t really “a player.” In 1960s
basketball, he was an outsized figure who, like baseball’s Babe Ruth, wrought,
like Babe Ruth, a revolution in how his sport was played. In 1962, he had not
only scored 100 points against the unfortunate New York Knicks but also
averaged more than 50 points per game for the entire season. With no nagging
injuries at this point, he was not beyond going on a similar scoring binge
again.
Rather than simply lose their most valuable player
to the ABA with nothing to show for it, Ramsey and Kosloff decided to try to
obtain as much value in return as they could. The deal they worked out—three
players (in this case, Jerry Chambers, Archie Clark and Darrall Imhoff) for
Chamberlain--resembled the magnitude of the transaction that brought The Big
Dipper to Philly in the first place.
AJ Neuharth-Keusch of USA Today, in an article two
years ago, listed it among the most lopsided trades in NBA history.
Metaphorically, one can liken the trade’s impact on the Western Division to an
earthquake. But you begin to run out of adequate descriptions for this event when
you recall that this was the first time that the reigning league Most Valuable
Player—the winner of that honor for the fourth time, no less—had ended up
getting traded.
No comments:
Post a Comment